Evening Star Newspaper, February 7, 1930, Page 34

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c-=2" Sharkey-Scott Victor Not Viewed as King : Carnera Still Is a Question Mark BASE BALL'S BIGGEST “FIRSTS” A Series Describing the First Record of the Biggest Play. By John B. Foster OTHERS INRUNNINE, DEMPSEY BELIEVES Jack Is Attempting to Match Schmeling and Griffiths for 'Chicago Scrap. FRANCIS J. POWERS. BY HICAGO, February 7.—The win- ner of the Miami Beach squall between Jack Sharkey and Phil Scott may be the heavyweight champion to the New York Boxing Commission and the Madison Square Garden crowd, but not for Jack Dempsey. John was king of the heavyweights long enough to know the qualifications for wearing the imperial crown at the proper angle, and one of them, he be- lieves, is a victory over either Max Schmeling, the Black Uhlan of the Rhine, or Gerald Ambrose Griffiths, who also is known as “Tuffy.” So Dempsey is planning to stage a duel between Schmeling and Griffiths in one of Chicago’s outdoor arenas dur- ing the coming Summer, if it is possible for him to arrange such a contest. And there are many reasons why the two | may be elected to fight under the| Dempsey banner. Schmeling still is geeting frowns from the New York Boxing Commission and has almost forgotten the feel of nicely minted marks. Grifiths and his manager have & real peeve at the Madison Square Garden promoters and with good rea- son. “Tuffy” fought and defeated Johnny Risko in New York for con- siderably less money than if the bout had besn held in Chicago, because he believed it would entitled him to first shot at Sharkey in the Miami Beach brawl. To say he was chagrined when Phil Scott was elected as th: Boston Gob's foil is putting it very mildly. Dempsey will make a serious effort to stage the Schmeling-Griffiths fight and may stage a heavyweight elimination tournament. There still is the chance that Demp- sey may return to the ring for one more bout—perhaps with the winner of the Schmeling-Griffiths fight. - Jack has not said he would fight again, nor has he said he was through with the gloves. As one of his close friends puts it: “No man knows Dempsey’s mind, and per- haps ke does not himself.” SATURDAY DUCKPIN SLATE WELL FILLED Duckpinners will wind up a busy week tomorrow night with many con- tests. Sweepstakes are scheduled for | several alleys and an inter-city clash also is on the program. The big Masonic sweepstakes, with more than 200 entries, will get under way at Convention Hall. Five games | are to be rolled tomorrow night and as_many more the following Saturday. Men'’s stakes will be bowled at both King Pin drives and at Northeast Tem- | {l: alleys a sweepstakes for District ague members will be staged. A women's sweepstakes will start at the Arcadia. The big King Pin team will go to Baltimore to conhclude a home-and- home' engagement with the Recreation Happy Five., The Washington team will carry a subktantial lead into the final block of the match. About the biggest match on tonight's program is that between the King Pins and Temples at Northeast Temple, It will find Temple getting virtually its last shot at the District League leaders, and if Temple takes a licking it will be out of the running for the title. At Lucky Strike tonight the conclud- ing block of the Times’ brother doubles tourney will be rolled. The Hiser broth- ers, Oscar and ‘Henry, of Hyattsville are in the lead at present, but are pressed | gue)y by the Krauss boys, Lonnie and | arTy. Man bowlers of the Health Center drives of Alexandria are to compete with | Lorrame Gulli's all-star women’s team | tonight on the Convention Hall alleys, | starting at 8 o'clock. Burroughs and Isherwood bowlers wil start a special match tonight on the Northeast Temple alleys. The final block will be rolled next Friday at Mount Rainler. | EBBETTS AND CHASTAIN WILL BATTLE TONIGHT CHICAGO, February 7 (#).—Hal “Ebbetts, New York middieweight puncher, and Clyde Chastain of Dallas, Tex., will meet tonight in the 10-round feature of Promoter Jack Dempsey’s sixth box- ing program—an affair Dempsey will operate by remote control. The semi-final will be not more than 10 rounds between Joey Medill, Chicago lightweight, and Spug Myers, Pocatello, Idaho, whose two previous meetings re- sulted in close decisions for the former. Comedy relief is expected in a 4- round “special” between George Trafton, lone conqueror of Charles Arthur (the Great) Shires, and Battling Criss, Rock- wood, Mich., heavyweight, a Shires’ vietim. CUYLER GETS TWO-YEAR | CONTRACT WITH CUBS| CHICAGO, February 7 (P)—Hazen | “Kiki” Cuyler, fleet right flelder of the | National League champion Chicago | Cubs, has had his new contract revised | to read “two .years” instead of “one | year.” Cuyler, in Chicago with his Pontiac, Mich., _semi-professional basket _ball team, had agreed to terms offered by President William L. Veeck, but wanted a two-year term—and got it yesterday. SONNENBERG IS VICTOR OVER FREBERG ON MAT| MINNEAPOLIS, February 7 (#).— Gus Sonnenberg, world heavyweight wrestling champlon, won two straight falls from John Freberg of Minneapolis | last night. | Sonnenberg pinned Freberg's shoul- | ers to the mat with flying tackles, the first one in 7 minutes 48 seconds, and the second in 38 minutes 29 seconds. TAKE CUE MATCHES. J. F. Fairbanks defeated L. B. Lam- bert, 125 to 110. and J. Ruppert beat N. L. Sauls, 125 to 107, last night in matches of the billard tournament in progress at Elmer’s establishment. Fights Last Night By the Associated Pres: NEWARK, N. J.—Primo Carnera Italy, knocked out Cowboy Billle Owens Gutlrie, Okla. (2); Buck Weaver, Medi- cine Lcage, Kans, stopped Jack Shaw, South Orange, N, J. (4). HARTFORD, Conn.—Bushy Graham, Utica, N. Y. knocked out Al Rackow, Hazelton, Pa. (3). [UN A SPORTS. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY: 7. 19%. BUSTING INTO BASE BALL “How I Broke Into BY HAZEN S. CUYLER, As told to John F. McCann. HE Autumn of 1921, when I was a minor league player in the Michigan League, was the most eventful of my life, for it was then that I received the news that I had been sold to a major league team OUTFIELDER CUICAGO CuBS and was ordered to report to the Pitts- burgh Nationals. As happy as I was then, I didn't dream three trips would be made to the DOWN T 13 HE great gruous-en to hoist them to sports idols of Am go The fans who the adulation gratefully for what i tality to take its passing with th figure in the national sports; he the passing and the dimming of John J. McGraw, who should be a judge; always will insist that he was the greatest of the pitchers—if not the greatest of the athletes who ever played the national game. He had two quali- ties that are not too common in profes- slonal base ball—character and intelli- gence. Perhaps more than any base ball player he raised the standards of the professional base ball players. He came to the Glants at the time McGraw became their manager, straight from Bucknell College, where he was the fullback of the foot ball team and the pitcher of the base ball team, a campus hero, with all of the excuses for having an inflated ego. But there was nothing of this about Mathewson. He had a sense of values from.the start, and athletic success never spoiled him. Perhaps that was way so well equipped {a cline when‘it came. ‘The greal tribute to the stand- ing of Mathewson as a man and & base ball player came. as an after- math of the celebrated Merkle case. It will be recalled that in a very crucial game, which involved the chances of the Giants for world- series money—for which, as the boys say, the ll{en care quite as much as they cfo or their right eyes—the first baseman of the Giants forgot to touch second. It was the celebrated “boner” of the national pastime, ranking with Anderson’s stealing of second with the bases full. ‘There were conflicting stories of what happened during the confusion that ensued. Both sides claimed everything, as is the custom of the national pastime. In base ball nobody's word is worth a .dime concerning anything that hap- pened®in the process of a game that means anything—for that is the spirit of the national pastime. Newspapers, base ball writers and layers were wildly partisan, It really looked as though nobody was competent to testify as to just what happened. Because that particular game meant a pennant and the participation in the .| world series the national commission had to decide the knotty point. ‘They took affidavits from everybody, from the umpires, the base ball writers, the scorer, the spectators and even the constabulary. The intricate affair was settled in a surprisingly short time, con- TV | sidering the fact that it involved such & weighty affair. The ruling was against the Giants, who subsequently lost that decision, the play-off game and the chance at the world-series money. A member of the national commis- sion afterward revealed that it was Mathewson's affidavit that decided it. He had seen what had happened and testified to the truth, though it cost him and his teammates their prize money. An Unheeded Warning. they had listened to Mathewson the the Black Sox scandal might have been averted. After he passed from active base ball playing it was quite natural that Mathewson should become & manager. He had all of the qualifi- cations for handling base ball players. He preferred charges against a player, who since has been read out of base ball for quite good reasons. While this and went on overseas duty. After the armistice there was a re- vival of interest in base ball and the usual rush to get the best possible teams together. The man that Mathewson had dismissed was one of the of all time at this position. needed to fill a place in one of the teams and a movement was started to have his protest. The man was put back in the game this whitewashing of a notoriously do with the action of the Black Sox. clubs discontented. ~ They when this fellow who has done every- only is whitewashed and restored at a top salary, but is hailed as a returning hero by the fans?” It can be seen that this line of bad reasoning would work on the minds of r.l‘ for all makes ATOR. FENDER AN N. TROUSERS 1809 14th St.. ¥ Doors Té Match Your Odd Coats WITH W. O. A Complete Life. with dignity. That one was Christy Mathewso! wh{ he. facing the inevitable de- | gq, e best players He was him reinstated. Mathewson had not yet | ! returned from Prance and could not file after a hearing. Now persons who know | the working of base ball players’ minds | or who claim to know them, insist that | crooked base ball player had much to| It made weak base ball players in all reasoned, “What is the use of being on the level thing wrong and who is notorious not the Major Leagues.” mljor} before the doors would be opened and I'd be allowed to remain. My entry into the majors occurred late in 1921 at Pittsburgh, but it so happened that the Pirates and the Giants were locked up in one of the most important series of the champion- ship fight, and it was not until the | very last day of the season that I got |8 chance to play. This happened in St. Louls, and I was sent in to play right fleld. Billy Sherdel was the pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals, and I can remember well how he fooled me with his famous slow ball and struck me out. Again, the second trip to the plate, Sherdel used his cunning, and I popped a weak little foul to the catcher. On my third trip to bat, however, I got even and obtained my first major league safe hit. Taking a light bi I went to the plate determined to “la: for Sherdel's slow ball, and, sure enough, | it came. I hammered it back at Milton Stock, who knocked it down, but was unable to throw me out. I remember, too, that in the field one of the balls hit in my territory was one by Rogers Hornsby, which crashed against the wall over my head. It was my first | glimpse of Rogers. | Since it was the last day of the sea- son I had to start all over again the | | next Spring and was shipped away, and | | then again in 1923 I was labeled for another trip to the minors, but I came back that Fall and have been a regular | ever since. Breaking into the majors, you see, | isn't always a matter of just going up, | and if you don't land the first time, it's no sign you won't get there some day | if you keep fighting! (Copyright, 1930, North American Newspaper Alliance.) HE LINE MeGEZHAN erica usually come to some incon- are quick to exalt sports idots and high pedestals are just as quick to tilt them * from their bases and watch with the delight of children the smash that ensues. They say that the national pastime is base ball, but the real national sport is watching a There has been one notable exception, one sports idol popular idol hit the skids. who took t was worth and who had the men- e same grace. He lived a radiant made a full life of it and he took the limelight philosophically and n. ‘weak players who were underpaid and generally in a bad frame of mind. A Successful Man, GING athletes (and they age with exceeding rapidity) usually become resentful and bitter when the plaudits that they used to hear turn to jeers and they hear from the throats that used to scream “Attaboy,” or whatever they screamed, that cruel cry of “Take him out.” And athletes are not the only heroes who have to hear that sooner or later. Or they become ludicrously pathetic, like some of the old prizefighters who want to edge their way into the ring to be introduced when nobody wants to see them any more. Sometimes they suc- ceed in reaching the center of the ring and clasp their hands together and wave at the gallery, #tting something out of a faint echo of the cheers that used to greet them. Sometimes it would seem merciful to chloroform old prize- fighters who get that way for their own es. Mathewson did not wait to.hear the call of “Take' him out”” When his speed was spent he continued pitching on his intelligence and control, and when that failed him he stepped out of the box, not, of course, without regret, but with the feeling that he had given and gained all that could be’done in that line. His career as an athlete was com- plete and well rounded. He lost the essentials for pitching, but he never lost the dignity that he had worn as a popular idol. His career as & manager and club president was cut short by illness and antimely death. He had intelligence and understanding that would have won him success at anything; but he elected to be a professional base ball player— and he was a truly great one. He rests now within hearing of the fresh young voices from the campus of Bucknell, where his career began. I should cite him as an example of the successful GERMAN AND BRITISH NET MATCH IN APRIL By the Associated Press. BERLIN, February 7 (#).—The Ger- man Lawn Tennis Association an- ounces that the first-round contest be- tween Great Britain and Germany in the European zone of Davis-Cup com- petition will be played April 24-25-26 at a place to be decided upon- later. The following German 'players have been instructed to prepare for the matches: Dr. P. Buss, Dr. W. Dessart, F. Prenz, Dr. H. Kleinschroth, J. Kuhlmann, Dr. H. Landmann and Dr. Daniel Prenn, Dr. Prenn, the national champion, is ranked as No. 1 in Germany. Dr. Landmann is at No. 4 behind Otto Froitzheim and the late Hans Molden- hauer, recently killed in accident. Dr. Dessart is 3 and Buss, FPrenz, Kleinschroth and Kuhlmann in a group just behind him. 12 CARS Commanders an, OLD 13 3—TO CHOOS down 14th St 1928 and 1929 Moder STUDEBAKER d Presil 4-Door—2.. Dm,_a';:::" SHOWS WEAKNESS IN BEATING OWENS Defense Not Good, Although He Scores Knockout in Second Round. BY EDWARD P. DUFFY. EW YORK, February 7.—As & white hope Primo Carnera, the Italian giant, remains a ques- tion mark, despite the fact that he toppled over his third victim in the ring in record time last night when he knocked out Cowboy Bill Owens in Newark in the second round. His three American ring efforts have taken him just about five minutes. He knocked out Big Boy Peterson here in 1 minute and 10 seconds. Elzear Rioux lasted 47 seconds in Ch! cago. Owens went the tremendous dis- tance of one round and 23 seconds of the second round. Cowboy Owens, & colored heavyweight from the West, who had been knocked out several times by George Godfrey, scarcely could be said to have put up a fight at all, and his sudden departure so soon in the engagement lacked the convincing elements of many other knockouts seen in the same ring. There is little doubt that Carnera struck him with a right to the jaw, but to many at the ringside who saw him topple to the floor there was genuine surprise when the fallen boxer did not arise when Referee Gene Roman ounted 10. $ His_condition was not bad, and he waked ‘euily to his dressing room in a hort time. 3 Carnera weighed 276 pounds and Owens 220, yet the latter, big as he is, Jooked small comg:refl to the Itallan, When they got into clinches during the brief bout Owens’ arms when thrown around his opponent’s waist reminded one of ll tlzlld !a)"ln[ to get her’s around a corpulent mother. Ne\“?enhelw Carnera was fast on his feet and quick with his hands, both right and left. He jabbed pretty well and showed it would not take long for competent_instruction to teach him to follow up huge& leads with a damag- ing right-han low. iut ngens revealed what may be con- sidered Carnera's weakness—the - fense. Any first-class hard-punching heavyweight with the opportunities that Owens had might have hurt Car- nera severely with hard, well delivered punches. to the spot Owens found. NEW YORK, February 7 ()—There are no figures to prove it, but the sus- picion grows that Primo Carnert Vene- tian carpenter, will be the highest pald athlete in the United States within almost as short & time as it takes to tell it. The giant Ttalian heavyweight knocked out Cowboy Billy Owens, Cherokee In- dian from Guthrie, Okla, in 3 minutes and 25 seconds of fighting at Newark last night and boosted his total earn- ings in America to something between $40,000 and $45,000. Carnera has made three ring appear- ances since he came to this country and knocked out three men in total ring time of 5 minutes, 22 seconds. ‘That makes his earnings average ap- proximately $8,000 for every minute he spent in the ring. WOMAN’S GOLF TOURNEY LOS ANGELES, February 7 (#)—The last hope of an invader winning the Midwinter Southern California wom- en's golf tournament was in the dis- card today as Mrs. Gregg Lifur and Mrs, Leona Pressler, botk. of Los An- geles, went to the tee for the final round. ‘The tournament became an all-Cali- fornia affair when Mrs. Pressler, who is favored to defeat Mrs. Lifur, elim- inated Mrs. C. J. Woerner of Los An- geles, 7 and 6, and Mrs. Lifur defeated Miss Beatrice Gottlieb, formerly of New York, 2 and 1. REISELT TAKES LEAD. | NEW YORK, February 7 (#)—Win- | ning both blocks yesterday, Otto Reiselt of Philadelphia went into the lead in his three-cushion billiard match with Wel- ker Cochran of Hollywood. Reiselt now leads, 400 to 384. . HOUSTON SELLS MOORE. HOUSTON, Tex., February 7 (#).— Roy Moore, big first sacker, has been sold outright to Greenville, 8. C., of the South Atlantic Association, the Hous- ton Club announced today. Smallpox as Dempsey Sidetrack Comes True ST. JOSEPH, Mo, Februa: b (#)—The superstitious will say*it ‘was retribution. Jack Dempsey was here Tuesday to referee a boxing card. Local ‘managers of the program announced he would visit St. Joseph orphanges. The board for the Home for Little Wanderers disliked to receive a box- er, but did not wish to be rude, so announced Monday the home was under quarantine because of small- pox. Dempsey started away. Now one of the children be- came ill. A physician diagnosed the disease as smalipox. The home now is quarantined. - YESTERDAY at R St. JOSEPH McREYNOLDS, ING, tomed Fraakie Ganaro, siow Yort, iou EISEMAN'S, 7th & F FINAL ALL-CALIFORNIA' No. 7—The Original “Iron Man.” T was 10 o'clock in the morning. He stod In his Toom at the hotel rubbing his arm savagely and groaning. He had been doing it for nearly an hour, but the arm re- sponded so slowly that it began to ap- pear it might never respond. “It's got to come around” he said to himself. So he dashed the power- ful liniment that he was using in a stream over the skin. It burned and burned more intensely as he continued rubbing it into the wind-burne that covered the muscles of the “wing that had to bring the Providence team through to & pennant. By noon the arm began to glow some and by the time the game was to begin “Old Hoss” Radbourne was ready to pitch. He won 60 games in 1884 and he is the only pitcher in base ball his- tory who has gone over the borderland of the fifties into the veldt of the sixties. Babe Ruth's record is great, Cy Young's record is great, many records are great, but here is the record of Radbourne, which stands out above all of the big things that pitchers have done and which compares favorably with anything that anybody has done in base ball. Pitchers of these days cannot win 30 games in a season. Rad- bourne won twice that many in 1884, and the pennant with them. It is true that toward the end of the season Arm was so sore that he could not lift it to his mouth to feed himself in the morning. Yet he Rim Tool 12 Removes any size rim swiftly and easily. Spe- cial opening price. Half pint s One of the fin Peep Peep Horn $1 29 Has that distinctive ‘“‘Desp- peep'” tone. ~Handsomely -fin- ished in black ena: Truck Mirrors, with any handbag. Ideal ironing hose, etc. SPECIALS 30-Minute Bands.......99¢ Chevrolet Lined Brake hoes . +.81.69 Windshield Wiper Tubing.9¢ Tube Patching, complete with cement, etc.......7c Double Windshield Clean- View Mirror, size 5x8 .. 49¢ went through the most painful of lim- | bering up processes because he wanted | to win the pennant for Providence. He pitched 22 consecutive games. for Providence that year. That is another “big first” that some of these modern ! ball players would shrink from. Two) games a week is about the maximum for a pitcher now. Radbourne pitched six a week, and if the week had been longer he would have pitched more, No pitcher ever was so much beloved | by his fellow players. They talked about him until they talked themselves to sleep. Radbourne's reputation went all over the United States. He was| the original “Iron Man"” of pitchers Joe McGinnity was given the title be- cause he could pitch double-headers. but Joe never did quite what Radbourne did in 1884, when he pitched 60 win- ning games, 22 of them in succession, Radbourne was not a big man nor was he frail. He had a peculiar jerky side-arm motfon, and you wondered how he got so much on the ball. Batters wondered about it more than the spec- tators did. - The batters would try to stare Radbourne out of countenance and expressed great hope of knocking the bail into the interior of Africa. They swung with might and “squashed.” ‘That is the way the bat sounded when it hit the ball. Radbourne could pitch such soft curves that a banana was hard by comparison. Sometimes he wore a little black mustache and he grinned under cover of the mustache when big, broad- shouldered athletes twisted their heads into & bow knot trying to hit him. He made batters very mad. The Big Openin, night. It’s been a SAVINGS GALORE. It’s [ they lost their temper, the better his| | Clarkson missed getting the ball within ‘The more | Se; SPORTS. success. “I wonder his arm didn't break off,” said his friends at the end of 1884. It didn't. He was still pitching in 1889 and even then the batters were puzzied as to why they couldn’t hit Radbourne. One reason why they failed was because he had control. He was like John Clarkson in that respect. Whenever a half-inch of where he thought it should be he observed to himself that he was surely failing. District League—Temple vs. King Pin, at Northeast Temple. National Capital League—Lucky Strike vs. Bethesda, at Lucky Strike. North of Washington Ladies' League— Catholic Daughters vs. Woman's Improve- ment Club No. 2, at Silver Spring. h of Washington Men's League: Sec- —Hewitt’s Real Estate vs. Blair Road, Spring ~ Giants vs. Gary-Johnson 2—Blair_Citizens'_Association No. 1 vs. Old Coleny Laundry. Blair Citizens' As- sociation’ No. 2 vs, Colesville, pring. King Pin_Business Men's . League—Olym- plans " vs. Royal Arcanums, at King Pin o, Suburban League_Mutual Cleaning Co. ve. Capital Cigar, & worth. Insurance League—Metropolitan vs. Con- Eaquitable, tinental Casualty, Travelers vs. D. at King Pin No. 1 Naval _Gun_ Factory ~League—Miscellane- ous vs. Foundry, Broadside vs. Sight, Tube vs. Cobpersmith, Radio vs. Outside, B. M. vs. Pattern, Erecting vs. Drawing, at Lucky Strike. Building League_-D. at Silver contractors’ W. Lee vs. Southern Asbestos, B. T. Mc. Dermottvs. ' George A. Fuller Piant, at readia. strict Government League—Sewers No. 1 vs. Public Utilities, Highways vs. Repair Ehop. Manual iners Corporatio; 1. Heal Water 5. “Cehbnfion winds up Saturday itghty fine party so far — with a city-wide event, too, so far as TAUBMAN'S is concerned—which means that all five stores share in the bargains! ‘Another Radio Scoop! *165 Peerless Courier Without Tubes You haven't heard how fine a radio can be—or seen how beautifully designed it can be—until you've heard and seen the beautiful Peer- less Courier, equipped with the famous KYLECTRON Speaker. The courler uses three SCREEN GRID tubes and through the famous Kylectron, it reproduces without dtstortion or any “hum"—every tone of music and every inflection of the human voice. The cabinet is of matched burl walnut with overlays of burl maple—a design that will harmonize with any scheme of interior decoration. Priced at almost )3 the original price tomorrow! Willard A and Turns set B Eliminators 1195 1 any battery operated into_an all electric model. Special Opening Sale price. Radio Logs. . Headphonet Kuprox Trickle Charger Replacement Unit.. . $3.4! 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EW YORK, February 7.—If Frank Hunter is to be stopped in his bid for the national in- door tennis championship the stopping will have to be done by either Perrine Rockafellow, former Colgate athlete; Gilbert Hall, erstwhile Canadian indoor champion, or Jullus Seligson, ex- intercollegiate champion, Hunter, second only to Bill Tilden in the national ranking. was scheduled to meet Rockafellow while Hall clashed with Seligson. Four teams were paired in the semi- finals in doubles today. as follows: Walter Swaybill and Stanley Harte, New York, vs. Rockafellow and Merrit 1, South C. | Cutler, New York. Hall and Kenneth Apj Orange, N. J., Coggeshall and Rich- ard Murphy, Utica, N. Y. The Washington-New York team of Bob Considine and Ernest Kuhn was eliminated in the quarter-finals' by the Rockafellow-Cutler combination, 7- 3, Lord Baltimore Anti-Freeze X’ mj:mcmy tested - 1 A erine positively not harm radiator or motor. One filling lasts the entire Winter. BE ‘With long fold- ing handle. 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