Evening Star Newspaper, January 3, 1935, Page 17

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SPORTS. Steady Growth in College Sports in 1935 Forecast by N. C. A. A. President FOOT BALL AGAIN DUE TO SET PACE Peak Year in Basket Ball Likely—Pick-Up in Track Interest Predicted. (This is the third of an exclusive 8eries of stories, written for the Associated Press by sports leaders and discussing the new year’s out- look in all principal branches of athletic activity.) BY JOHN L. GRIFFITH, President of the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association. HICAGO, January 3.—In order to hazard a guess as to what is in store for us in 1935 so far as college athletics are cancerned, it is necessary to consider what has already happened in 1934 85 & basis for future predictions. The man on the street measures interest in a given sport by attendance fig- ures. This is per- haps a fair index so far as team games are con- cerned, but it is not satisfactory when we are thinking of games such as golf, tennis, swim- ming, hunting and fishing. These ties just men- dohn L. Grifth. 4 oned, however, are not primarily college sporis. Tennis and golf are growing very rap- | idly in the colleges, both as intercol- legiate and intramural sports. Swim- ming, likewise, has become recognized as a major intercollegiate sport activity. 1t is safe to state that more col- | lege students play tennis annually than take part in foot ball. Golf, tennis, swimming, boxing and wres- tling are on the increase as judged by the numbers compeiing, and it is safe to assume that they will con- tinue to grow in the institutions of higher learning. Foot Ball Growth Steady. E USUALLY think of foot ball, basket ball, base ball and < track as the major college sports. More boys play foot ball each year in the schools and colleges than did thre year before. In 1935 we should see an increase in player par- ticipation in this great Autumn sport. From the standpoint of public in- terest, college foot ball remains the great American game. The colleges for the most part limit their sched- ules to eight games per season and yet the attendance annually at school and college foot ball games, even with limited schedules, bulks larger than the attendance at any other games. This year, for instance, a number of university teams attracted season to- tals of over 300,000 spectators. In the Big Ten Conference, although some of the universities are located in comparatively small cities, vet well over a million people this last year witnessed the games played by these | 10 institutions. ‘There are more than 60 college con- ferences in the United States. It is estimated that the attendance this year at college foot ball games was at least 15 per cent ahead of the attend- ance in 1933, Unhurt by Weather. ‘~~OLLEGE games are seldom if ever postponed on account of incle- ment weather. This year at the Army-Illinois game heavy rain fell throughout, and yet 3,000 people pur- | chased tickets between 12 and 2 o'clock the day of the game, and these | 3,000 ticket purchasers, along with some 45,000 others, sat for two hours in the driving rain watching tHe game. A capacity crowd of 79,000 saw the Army-Navy game, regardless of a ter- <3 rific downpour. No one who is con- versant with the facts will suggest that college foot ball has lost its hold on the American people. Basket ball for a number of years has been steadily increasing both from the standpoint of player par- ticipation and attendance at the games. Last year the attendance at college basket ball was fully 10 per cent ahead of the attendance in 1933. It may be predicted that 1935 will be the peak year to date in this indoor ‘The Olympic stars in track and fleld are now being developed in the schools and colleges. Each year the records fall. Last June the N. C. A. A. track meet in Los Angeles brought together an unusually fine class of track and fleld stars and at this meet the gross receipts from ticket sales was $32,398.64. Olympics Boost Trade. \RACK for the most part is not a P 1 profitable sport and yet the col- leges maintain track and field and annually pay the deficits. With Schedule for TONIGHT. 7:30 P.M. L. G. Halley. . W. Ranson. 3 5. . E. Hoyer. . Cavanaugh. 3 SEmgt fa 5 SRan K. Beck. . Gingell. €57 % Axern. D. rly. . Lempiris. Joseph Kronman. TONIGHT, 9:15 P.M. Alley. .F 8man 12 Robert Micelotto. . N. Glasco. Robert Courbat. artin McCarthy. oran. . Vita. rris ro. - Qienauser 1 P T e o E e . O'Brien. Jenkins. L 3 E. Hurd, (Alleys 6, 27 and 28 assigned to Clarendon au ;l.) s o L] . ¢ SPORTS PARADE [ | i activi- | | | tion of his time. seconds just & year ago. | | Tingle . |w 1K A | w | E. Blakeney Ed Laake... F. Mogre Lee R« |R.C. M WU Wy Major Kobl 3. Mooney |W.G. Ellw'er 12 108 103 13 AR 113 06 04 93 21 109 4 94 111 98 115 1 s 2> OISR O R g= =2 agumEmEOR0D §ges2a0 > 2 | E ey IR0 8233285538 83n08S Espey_ . : 13 . A. Mitchell Woods. . . | the Olympic games less than two years away interest in this sport should continue to increase through- out 1935. College base ball in 1934 staged something of a comeback. There is no game that the boys really enjoy playing more than base ball. Dur- ing the depression it has been dif- ficult indeed for the educational in- stitutions to finance this game and yet the players in the athletic de- partments have carried on and 1935 should be a better year. All in all college athletics rest on a firm foundation. They are admin- istered by men who have the in- terests of the boys at heart. They are supported by the fathers and mothers of the boys who play and there is every reason to believe that prove year by year, both in quantity and quality. Evening Star Duckpin Tournament Finals SATURDAY. 7:30 P.M. Alley. 8 Alle‘, 1P 8. . Fellinger, . Trilli. P> X QIO . Howder. Wor Mathews, b Miller. . Sullivan, ‘Weinbers. gnes Rubin. Pisher. o HE¥ B Paul_Clark. Lee Rothgeb. . MeCauley. H Lanier. J Li) nt D. ’ The First_of the Greater Milers. (Copyright. SR 2 YO school and college athletics will im- | O. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 3, 1935. By Grantland Rice to hack away at old mile records with incredible results a young fyer by the name of John Paul Jones, from Cornell, was the sensa- Back in 1911 Jones broke Tommy Connefl’s old record by running the mile in 4 minutes 15 4-10 seconds. Two years later, in the intercollegiate games, he ran the distance a second faster, a record that stood until Norman Taber of Brown came along. Jones and Taber were supposed to be close to the limit of human speed and stamina for the mile route, but their best time fell six or seven Here is Jones' finishing sprint. TWENTY years before Cunningham, Lovelock and Bonthron began —International News Photo. 1938) . Wolst'lme 148 00 11 . 118 105 18 B0 98 KE—5066 gz & 65—501 1R &R 04 T0—580 06 100 128 85—571 10115 99 4:1—5R5 5 AR— 2353 ooz =heotxeSloxe! EECES R . G Harrison. . E 1Ehn'! EAZ Iz DE - T b e 5555 el i SEzRE 0 g2 gt 2E=Est 1! 23233 22 p10lio 22 D g AL T D e e ST R P O R e R oy oSSl E 2R EEERORRER eSS 3 EEEpE 20005 £ = BERRE TS R W et e bR Sttt mTDEEoREDRe EoSkonisssesenonls S5 3 HAGE IS EXPERT SHOT. Victor Hage, 1439 Ives places south- east, has qualified as an expert rifle- man in the junior division of the National Rifle Association, one rank below the highest grade of distin- guished rifiemen. Hage is a member of the Eastern High School Rifie Club. GRID CROWDS INCREASE. ATLANTA, Ga., January 3 (@.— With a few exceptions attendance and receipts during the 1934 gridiron sea- son in the Southeastern Conference increased strikingly. At least nine of the 13 schools reported greater totals than in 1933. Mat Matches By the Associated Press. NEW YORK.—Charley (Midget) Pischer, 172, Milwaukee, threw Curley Donchin, 175, New York, 38:31; Leo Wallack, 176, Germany, threw Maurice Lachappelle, 178, France, 59:01 CHICAGO.—Everett Marshall, 225, La Junta, Colo., threw Abe Coleman, 205, Brooklyn, 16:26. HOLYOKE, Mass—Ernie Dusek, Omaha, defeated Farmer McLeod, Tows, straight falls. LOS ANGELES—Ed (Strangler) Lewis, 250, Los Angeles, defeated Hans Steinke, 241, Germany, two out of three falls. PORTLAND, Oreg.—Paul Boesch, 220, Brooklyn, N. Y., and Jack Fors- gren, 220, Vancouver, British Colum- bia, drew, each winning a fall; Tony | of Louis Catalino, 220, Chicago, beat Baccagalupi, 230, Hollywood, Calif., two out of three falls, BONTHRON “RUNS" FIRST FOR AWARD Well in Van for Sullivan Trophy—Eastman, Three Swimmers Follow. By the Associated Press. EW YORK, January 3.—The James E. Sullivan Memorial Trophy, which escaped Wil- llam R. Bonthron by the narrow margin of one vote in 1933, was in possession today of the for- mer Princeton University track cap- tain as the result of his being voted the athlete who contributed the most to the cause of amateur athletics and sportsman- ship in 1934. Bonthron’s greatest foot-rac- ing campaign, during which he established a world record of 1,500 meters and beat Glenn Cun- ningham in three out of five mem- orable races, car- ried him to vic- tory by a deci- sion margin over Benjamin B. Eastman, former Stan- ford track ace, in the test of ballots. Cunningham won the award last year, but was declared ineligible this year after ranking high in the pre- liminary balloting. In the Nation-wide ballot, conducted by the A. A. U., Bonthron led in the preliminary voting and then piled up | 1,072 votes in the final test after the fleld had been cut to seven. “Eastman ran second with 929 and then came Ralph Metcalf, Marquette University's | Negro sprinter, with 413, and Glen Hardin, Louisiana State University, with 285. Three swimmers trailed the track- men. Pa., received 262 votes; Jack Medica of Seattle, 169, and Katherine Rawls, Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 154. PIN STANDINGS MASONIC LEAGUE. 2 (] Congress Naval 3 West Gate N_Jerusalem Silver Spring Harmony .. Stansbury Anacostia . . Chillum Pentalpha Barrister. . .. sani oppa B Pike. . > St John's Centennial . . Dawson .. Harding.... King Solomon 9 Records. Hish tesm games—King David. 630; National. 620: banon. 602 High team sets—King David, 1.710 Lebanon. 1.702: Potomac. 1.601 High individus] averages—Phillips (King David), 116: Billheimer (Joppa), 115-2 Homer (Petworth). 114 High individual zames_Billheimer (Jop- ‘fi-l 168: Phillips (King David). 16%; ouse (Potomac). 164 | 7 High individus! sets—Bilineimer (Joppa). | 448:" Stevens (Potomac), 39%; (Petworth). 307, High strikes—Gray (Naval. 28: Voor- hees (King David). 2X: Guerrier (Takom 27. Raum (Lebanon). 5. Ta: (Co: Gress). 5. Homer (Petworth). 25; Hare (La Payette) 25 “ugh spares—Billheimer (Joppa), 117; Phi"ng (King David), 110; Homer (Pet- wo, 108 kly games—Pratt (Petworth), man (La Fayette). 143. RODIER'S THURSDAY NIGHTERS. W.L HG. HS. Pct Rice's Ripsnorters. 14 13 406 1.227 51K | Gruver's Gingettes 13 1% 455 1.337 481 Season Records. High game—Little. 156, High set—8upplee High average—Supplee. 109-2. High strikes—Webd. 15 High spares—Stanford. 60, Individual Averages. Potomac. . Whiting Lebanon King David Takoma .. to! TEYT o i e 1 3, S 33 Western Elec. 1.. 3 f | Capital Transit ight . 2! | Western Elec. 2 | 14 2 17866 5 Doubleday-Hill El. 1524 18,843 5. Season Records. 4 Eigh team game—Western Electric. No. * High team set—Capital Transit. 1.757. High Individual game—Roller, 156. High individual set—Overend, 308. averages — Clements, 116-12; 115 R. Bryant. 115-15; ; 8. Lawhorn, 111-21. strikes—Evans. 30; Clements. 29: Overend, 29; Mi E. tiler. 2 Lawhorn. 24. High ' spares—Clements n 110; Moger. 107: Overend, 103; 5. Lawhorn, 102 M. Brown. 101 01. Turkey winners—Overend (4), 402; House (7)., 135. — PACINI BOWLS SANTINI Italian Stars Meet Tonight in Washington 8ingles Loop. Ollie Pacini and Tony Santini, probably the best Italian bowlers in the city, will clash tonight in a Wash- ington Singles League match at Con- vention Hall. Santini leads the loop. Jerry Cowden, in second place, will meet Oscar Hiser, who is third, on the same drives. The schedule: At Georgetown—Talbert vs. Kraus and Megaw vs. Pricci. = At Convention Hgll—Cowden vs. 0. Hiser, Brown vs. Wolfe, Walson vs. Geib and Santini vs. Pacini. At Arcadia—TIsemann vs. Woods and Gochenour vs. Miller. * At Columbia—Weidman vs. sons and Schroth vs. Campbell. CALP, RIVERS MATCHED Will Meet in Prelim in Tuesday’s Show at Auditorium. Calvin Calp of Baltimore, who was soundly whipped recently at the Rid- ing and Hunt Club by Norment Par- fornia Joe Rivers for a six-round pre- liminary to the ‘Petey Sarron-Eddie Burl bout next Tuesday at the Wash- ington Auditorium. Rivers is a hard-hitting feather- back by technically knocking out LeRoy Dougan. Only a four-rounder will now be added to the card, which also includes and Jimmy Jones, wel- and terweights, tween Irving, middleweights. Lenore Kight of Homestead, | Deputy | Quarles, has becn matched with Cali- | Gur weight, who debuted here a few weeks | i an eight-rounder between Bob Lowry §."‘1 Wi 'BI BATTLES of the CENTURI Here is another of a series of ar- ticles depicting the great fights and fighters of the days when pugilism was young. BY TOM HENRY. FTER his terrible battle with Hyer on the shore of the storm-tossed Chesapeake, Yan- kee Sullivan no longer could claim the championship of America, but he still was the champion of the Irish. Even this title soon was to be taken from the rapidly aging fighter. In the days of the Yankee's glory, one of his coterie at the Sawdust House was a powerful young bartender from Troy named John Morrissy. He had gone to California and there acquired considerable fame by beating on Mare Island near San Prancisco, an Eng- lishman named Bill Thompson, Who had been Hyer's trainer. Thompson lost on s foul, which, he said, he had made deliberately when Motrissy’s friends became so obstreperous he feared they were going to lynch him. - Morrissy came back to New York, looking for a fight with Hyer. The champion again demanded a $10,000 guarantee. So the challenger turned his attention to his old friend, Sulli- van. The battle was held at Boston PFour Corners, in the picturesque Berkshires, just over the New York line. “When the two entered the ring,” says a chronicler of the day, “it looked like father and son.” Sulli- van was 41 years old. Morrissy was 27. The Yankee was 30 pounds lighter and 3 inches shorter. Backers in Brawl. UT, in spite of this difference, it B looked for a time as if Morrissy was badly beaten. By the tenth, “his face had the appearance of raw beefsteak. In the ninth round alone, he took 13 heavy blows on the head, | which he could not return. They fought on to the thirty-third, when| the challenger's knees were buckling. During the thirty-sixth, his mind Was | wandering and, although the taller | man, he could not get his guard high | enough. But, in the thirty-seventh, | “his wonderful powers of endurance seemed to have taken a new lease.” He rushed Sullivan against the mpes1 and pounded him about the head.| The Yankee was unable to fall and end the round—the old trick to escape punishment which he had learned from the Tom Crib School—because | the ropes held him up. | Finally he managed to “slip under.” | | Morrissy’s second contended he had | | fallen without a blow. This brought on a fight between the backers of | the two men. They broke through the ropes and into the ring, punching | at each other. Morrissy leaned against the ropes, exhausted. Sullivan pitched |into the fight. The referee called “time.” The Yankee was too busy fighting a half dozen of Morrissy’s | men to heed the call. Again the call, “time,” after 8 seconds. Still Sullivan | | was fighting. The referee then waited 2 minutes béfore calling “time” again. | Sullivan still was busy fighting. The | battle was awarded-to Morrissy, al-| though he was so exhausted that he | probably could not have cuntmued‘ any longer and his opponent was as; fresh as ever. | Prize fighting was a crime in Massa- | chusetts. Both Sullivan and Morrissy were arrested by the Berkshire County | sheriff and thrown in jail at Lenox| after the fight. The farmers resented the intrusion of the New Yorkers and saw a chance to “shake them down.” | | Bail of $1,500 was set for each of them—the idea being that neither | could afford to stand trial with the| certainty of a jail sentence and that the county treasury easily could be made $3.000 richer. Morrissy's back- ers, who had won a good deal of money on the fight, raised the money for him. Sullivan stayed in jail. But the beaten man still had a friend in need—none other than his| old enemy, Tom Hyer. Hyer went to New York, borrowed the money and returned to Lenox. There was a long and bitter controversy over the out- come of the fight—curiously like the | debate over the celebrated “long count” in the Dempsey-Tunney battle, but it generally was agreed in the end that the referee had acted fairly. Yankee Sullivan, regardless of what he was doing, should have been back at the scratch in 30 seconds. Actu- ally he had been given 2 minutes and 38 seconds. Vigilantes Finish Sullivan. FTER this defeat Sullivan went to California, looking for new fields of glory. For a time he was em- ployed as a boxing instructor by the American Legion TEAM STANDING. W. L. 22" & Bergt. Jasper 1 20 10 Sttt Walcott 1 i7 10 Costello 1 13 14 Headquarters Season Records. High individual averages (1% games or more)—Kee (Bunker Hill), 113: Brodie (Fort_Stevens). 111: Myers "(Bunker Hill). 110; Zimmer (Lincoln), 109; Butrum (Fort Stevens), 108. ual games—Watt (Stuart - Chase (Bunker Hill). 14%; (Fort Stevens), 144; Connelly (Headquarters). 144. High individual set—Connelly (Head- uarters). High flat game—Chase (Bunker Hill). 95. High te game—Lincoln. 607. 1.629. Hill) Nash eoo Ft. Stevens Bunker Hill v 1 11 Lincoln 4 5] m High team set—Fort Stevens. High strikes—Myers (Bunke! High spares—Zimmer (Lincoln). High team strikes—Fort Stevens High team spares—Fort Stevens, Individual Averages. NASH. 13. G. Ave. G. 107 Madden. ... 2 106 Stotler. ... 6 99 Keech. .. © 13 96 Anderson.. FORT STEVENS. Warren.. ... Miller J.B.Hogan .. Warburton . Halderman Downes . Schrider . Guirick. . Brodie. .. Butrum. ... 2. Sullivan ... I Hile o 3 J1Hogan.. Kee My Chase McCabe Ballenger Zimmer ... Campbell. . \tilne Barcl Flood Taylor. . SERGEANT JASPER. 12 lgl! Ware. . . 3 102 Dibble . 6 100 Flannigan. . . 6 97 Skinn 21 96 Pratt.. .73 93 STUART WALCOTT. 24 108 Carroll . 24 103 £ 6 99 Buell |29 Robertrello . COSTELLO. Von Thoden 21 nnel... 5 &l Connelly. .. 1 wos euw 25—Irish Title Given Allin Foe ‘As Sullivan Fights Crowd ES King of Hawail. He returned to Cali- fornia in time to fal' a victim to the vigilantes. Accoiding to some reports, he was hanged from a lamp post. Others have it that he was found dead in his cell, his throat cut. There was an outcry over it in the East, where he still remained a popular favorite, but it did no good to the man who was dead and buried in an unmarked grave in the Mission Dolores Cemetery in San Francisco. Five years later, in 1858, an English pugilist named Jim Malloy came to Ban Francisco and was outraged at the fate of a man he never had seen but had known only as a fellow fighter. The vigilante fever had died down. Malloy gave a sparring exhibition, for which sporting "Frisco turned out en masse, to raise money for 8 monument to Yankee Sullivan. 8o today the father of American prize fighting, and from all accounts one of the gamest and bravest men ever to enter the ring, sleeps under an imposing shaft in the old Catholic cemetery. (Copyright. 1035 iy North Amaricen aper Alliance. Inc.) PR TALK ON RECREATION Playground and Parks Chiefs to Address Banneker Council. Sibyl Baker, supervisor of the Dis- trict Playgrounds, and C. Marshall Finnan, superintendent of National| g} Capital Parks, will address the Ban- neker Recreation Council tomorrow night at Banneker Center, Eighteenth and Euclid streets, at 8 o'clock. All recreational groups are invited to send representatives. Organized recreation will be discussed by the speakers. 728 13th St. N.W. 911-15 HSt. N.E. SPORTS BASKET EVENT LIST CLOSES JANUARY 11 Boys' Club Affair Includes Five Classes—Two Big Contests Scheduled Tonight. HARLEY REYNULDS, athletic di- rector of the Boys' Club of | ‘Washington, has annonunced that entries in the club’s basket ball league now being reorganized will not be accepted after January 11. ‘There will be play in the 85, 100, 115 and 145-pound and unlimited classes. Each team is permitted 10 players. A silver loving cup will go to the vic- torious quint in each division, with awards also going to each player on these teams. Entries are being received daily, ex- cept Sunday, at the club, 230 C street, from 3:30 to 9:30. No franchise fee is charged, but all players must be members of the Boys’ Club. Olmstead Grill tossers meet the Warwick A. C. quint tonight in the Roosevelt gym at 9:30. _Johnny Sherman will play with the Olmstead five for the first time this season. Last year he held forth with the S8holl team. Sholl's basketers engage the Corr's team tonight at 9:30 o'clock at Central High in a Community Center League game. Heurich Flashes downed the Twin Osak Blackhawks, 42-24, last night to gain the lead in the Roosevelt Com- munity Center Basket Ball League. Other results: Community Center League. Washington Tobacco Co. 65 Internal nue, 18. Katzman Tailors, 33; Millers. 27. Drakes, Natfonal Guards, 18 Basketers. 25: Majestics. 16. Never Wins. 36: Quinn's All-Stars. 18, West Washington, 21: P. H. A.. 13. Southern Methoo Marvin, 33; Asbury. 18. - Independent Games. c Brightwood A. C. League. 19 . 17" 20 Years Ago IN THE STAR. ANAGER CLARK GRIFFITH of the Washington ball club plans to take only 26 players to Charlottesville. They include: Pitchers, Ayers, Boehling, Bentley, Engel, Ehmke, Gallla, Harper, Johnson and Shaw; outfielders, Acosta, Brown, Long, Massey, Milan, Moeller, Shanks and Ron- desu; infielders, Foster, Gandil, Morgan, McBride, Neff and Pick: catchers, Ainsmith, Henry and Williams. In a wrestling match between the Y. M. C. A. and Memorial A. C. teams the former will depend on Buckner, Paxton, Gregg, Wal- ters, Becker and Marsans to gather most of its honors. Memorial's line-up has not been announced. Manager Griffith will give Lamar, Rockville (Md.) boy, a trial in the Spring. He is an outfielder. Miles Taylor, club secretary, won the trophy in the Analostan Gun Club trapshoot yesterday. Others ‘who showed strongly included E. S. Ford, James A. Brown, Joseph H. Hunter, Dr. J. C. Wynkoop, George A. Emmons and W. C. Blundon. PRO BASKETERS START. Washington’s two professional basket ball quints will open their home seasons Sunday when the Heurich Brewers will engage the Get- | tysburg Fleetwings in the George | Washington gymnasium at 3:30 | o'clock and the Rinaldi Tailors t: |to Baltimore to play the Pol | Americans. Y. M. C. A Flashes Presbyterian, 10 Btewart's Pharmacy. 50: Renrocs. 9 | . Northeast Boys' Club. 18: Merrick Boys* Club, 17 Dome 01 Co 8. Mary's Celt 8'A.K. 24, R Georgetown 1 Boyd's Pharmary. 9. ics. A7 Calvary, 22, nald 21 Jewish Community Center's quint is seeking games for Sunday night wiih unlimited quints on the J. C. C. court. Call Jim McNamara at Decatur 1671 between 10 am. and 2 pm 3113 14th St. N.W. OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9 il 4 The ability of these new Truetones to pick up weak and distant programs and to separate stations from each other without interference is exttaordinary. Compare These Out- standing Features With Any Radio, Re- gardless of Name or Price ® Advanced Superheterodyne. ® New type, improved tubes. © Automatic volume control. 10-Tube Console (Upper llustration at Left) Similar to 7-tube except for 10-inch Complete Installed $1.00 Weekly super-dynamic speaker and 10 tubes for increased filtering and consequent liner tone. 49% Easy Payments SSOD $g 2§ Down Woekly Complete, Installed 1» Your Home. ® Improved 8-inch electro-dynamic speaker assuring maximum fidelity. ® Triple-indicator illuminated airplane dial. 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