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BIRDIES LAST TRID FOR 37-HOLE WIN Young Homebred Sinks Long Putts to Beat McLean, Invading Scotsman. (Continued From Pirst Page.) dumped in by the new champion on the thirty-sixth and thirty-seventh greens of this historic course this afternoon. Neither putt would have gone by the eup 2 inches had it missed. Both barely dropped into the can, so fine was the putting touch of the new champion as he came dowa the stretch to win. Hampered by Lame Ankle. Handicapped by a sprained left ankle, received on the thirty-second hole of his semi-final match against Goodman in the hurricane of Friday afternoon, Fischer limped through the final match, gritting his teeth with each step, and fighting to keep going @s his taped aakle swelled. For the third nine of the day after he turned two down at the luncheon interval to a brace of finishing birdies from the smoking clubs of the clean- hitting Scotsman, Fischer resembled a third-flight golfer in an {nvitation tournament. He three-putted three greens, made & couple of terrible chip shots and actually shanked a short pitch from behind the seventh green, getting a half when McLean went charitable and three-putted, missing a two- footer. But when the checks finally were down, facing the stretch run, John Fischer looked the part of the true champion he is. One of the most courageous stands of this or any other golf tournament found the lanky lad from Kentucky, inept as an 85 shooter on the third nine, suddenly turn around and be- come a great shot maker in the pinches. It doesn't come to every man to hole consecutive putts of 12 and 25 feet with a national title depending on the roll of the. ball. McLean “Winner” at 27th. McLean had the match laid away facing the final nine of the long day. He had played the first round in 76 to Fischer's 80, found John short with his chip shots, and generally inept around the greens. The immaculate, smooth-hitting Scot wound up the round with two birds for a 2 up lead. Fischer won the twenty-first hole when McLean pushed a tee shot out of bounds, only to bounce it back to McLean by taking three from the edge of the twenty-second green. John 8ot down a 25-footer for a half on the twenty-third and got away with halves on the twenty-fourth and twenty-fifth, despite & hooked tee shot at the twenty-fourth and a shanked pitch at the twenty-fifth. Right there McLean turned Philan- thropist. He looked careless as he blew a 2-footer on the seventh green, the twenty-fifth of the match. But Fischer handed him the twenty-sixth by three-putting, they halved the twenty-seventh in par 4s, and Mc- Lean again three-putted to give Fischer a half on the twenty-eighth, missing a 4-footer on the slippery skating rinks that pass for greens at Garden City. As they went to the twenty-ninth McLean still was in that philan- thropic mood, for after a fine iron shot to the green at this 418-yard hole he missed a 4-footer for & half in 4 when Pischer chipped up stone dead. That left Johnny 2 down and 5,000 people, sensing a possible turn in the match, trouped through heavy rough and across bunkers to watch the thirtieth. They halved in par 3s. But again McLean, apparently a little jit- tery with the strain, putted poorly the thirty-first to give Fischer another win when John missed his birdie try from 8 feet. Fischer Misses Squaring Putt. THEY halved the thirty-second in par 4s, with McLean making one of the great shots of a great match from a pot bunker at the-right. One down with four to go, Fischer caused & lot of gallery groans when he chip- ped 5 feet past from the edge of the thirty-third green and missed the putt thit would have squared the match. But John Fischer is a lucky gent. Any champion has to be. Trying boldly for a 30-footer at the thirty- fourth he slipped four feet past and missed the putt for the 4. But he laid McLean a dead stymie after Mc- Lean's ball had rushed past the cup and lay only 10 inehes away. It was one of those breaks that decide golf matches. Argue as you will that the stymie is a stroke of #kill, as the thing turned out, it cost McLean the match. He boldly tried to jump the ball dead in his path to the hole, but he jumped over the cup and got down a 3-footer for a halt. % They played the thirty-fifth like champions. This 488-yarder is one of the tougher stretches st Garden City. Out of bounds at the right, a bewildering array of bunkers leads down s narrow fairway to a green rolling and double terrace. From the right edge of that green John Fischer whose chips shots had been leaving him 5 and 6 feet away, nearly knocked the flag out of the cup with a chip that stopped 5 inches away. Mec- " Lean replied from the left edge of " the green with one just as good. They " halved the hole in birdie 4s. hole, with the championship rapidly slipping from him, Fischer stuck & No. 6 iron shot 12 feet to the left of the pin as 5,000 frenzied fans crained their mecks to look at what looked like the final hole of the - tournament when McLean knocked his tee shot 24 feet past the pin. The Scotsman putted down a foot away. Pischer stood, lanky, lean and . solemn-faced, never & quiver of the " herves in evidence as he canefully of that 12-footer. test hitch in his putting ', Page B-8.) 3 Cops rescue hero. When an excited crowd, agog over Johnny Fischer’s extra-hole defeat of Jack McLean for the United States amateur golf title at Garden City, N. Y., yesterday, almost mobbed the new champion, policemen stepped in and carried him on their shoulders to the club house. NEAR-JOLT GIVEN TOWEST VIRGINIA Beats Waynesburg by Only 7-0in Closest Thing to Grid Upset. By the Associated Press. HE opening whistle sounded for the 1936 foot ball season today after a few minor preliminary skirmishes Priday night and such “big” teams as began their cam- paign ahead of the crowd performed successfully their tasks of “tuning up.” Only in the South and Southwest were any of the major gridiron pow- ers listed to play and the high-pow- ered conference teams came through comfortably ‘against their lesser rivals. ‘The East's biggest game brought the nearest thing to an upset when a veteran outfit from Waynesburg held the West Virginia Mountaineers to a 7-0 victory. Two of the strong smaller college teams, Trinity (Conn.) and Spring- field, meeting in an opening game which ordinarily would take place in midseason, battled to a 6-6 tie. Run Up Big Scores. THE two Southeastern Conference teams to lead the rest of the cir- cuit into action, Kentucky and Mis- sissippi, rolled up a pair of the largest scores. Kentucky’s Wildcats downed their traditional opening-game rival, Maryville, 54 to 3, while Ole Miss rolled up a 45-0 count against Union University of Tennessee. In the Southern Conference South Carolina rolled over Erskine, 38-0, and the Citadel, playing its first game as a conference member, trounced Newber- 1y, 33-0. Scores of other games were smaller, due in some cases at least to the coaches’ efforts to get a line on their new players. Clemson won from Presbyterian, 19-0, and Virginia Military defeated Wofford by the same score. Hunk An- derson's North Carolina States Wolf- pack collected only two touchdowns from litle Elon, winning, 12-0. ‘The Virginia Tech Gobblers had an unusually stiff struggle with Roanoke, pulling out a 16-to-7 decision. In the Southwest Rice Instituie helped pry the lid off the season for conference teams by ripping through Texas A. and I, 33 to 0. OLYMPIC COACH SHIFTS. ST. LOUIS, September 19 (#).—Dee Boeckmann, coach of the United States woman's Olympic track team, announced today she had obtained & year’s leave of sbsence as director of athletics at Loretto Academy here to accept a similar position at the WASHINGTON, D. C, Fischer, Ankle Sprained, Stages Thrilling Finish to Earn Golf Title In Wake of Fischer’s Thrilling Amateur Golf Triumph the U. S. G. A. Py the Associated Press. ARDEN CITY, N. Y., Septem- ber 19.—Lawson Little, who saw 24-year-old Johnny Fischer crowned as his suc- cessor today, characterized the Cincin- nati boy's subpar finish as “the great- est I've ever seen.” “I can't visualize anything being more dramatic,” said the burly Cali- fornian,” who relinquished the crown when he turned professional. “I wouldnt’ be surprised if Johnny stays up there a long time.” Sandy-haired Jack McLean, the 25- year-old Glasgow whisky salesman, a hard time concealing his sorrow when he reached the dressing room and was surrounded by his Walker Cup team companions. * Whisky Salesman Orders “Pop.” “Pmfl! get me a bottle of what the Americans call ‘pop.’” said the youngster who peddies stuff stronger than that. “Pischer’s the toughest guy I've ever played,” the Scot said. “But that stymie on the thirty-fourth was a killer. No, it didn't break my hear*, but it made me sore, downright mad. Don't misunderstand me, I have no ill feelings toward Johnny, he's a grand boy and a grand golfer, but it-seemed unfair for him to get & half on the hole by that stymie when I should have been 2 up. I wouldn't have minded it so much is I hadn't made & miserable first mm that w: 4orb feet past the cup.” Pischer was disinclined to !.llk about his lame left ankle. He hobbled through the last five holes of the Ursuline College for Women at New Orleans. She will leave here Thurs- Radio Bring By the Associated Press. INCINNATI, September 19. —The calm that prevailed in the John W. Fischer, ar., household throughout s week of golfing conquests for Johnny, jr, new United States smateur champion, finally gave way late today to intense excite- ment, but only momentarily. “Oh, it was wonderful,” said Mrs. Fischer, beaming on friends who hurried to her modest second-floor apartment to congratulate her on the victory. “That sure was wonderful,” she repeated. “Of course, I was excited. It doesn't hAppen every day.” morning round and through the same stretch in the afternoon. “I had to favor it on my drives, es- took the beating standing up, but had | SPORTS SECTION he Sunday Star “Greatest I've Ever Seen,” Is Lawson Little’s Tribute To Fischer’s Subpar Finish pecially,” said Johnny, “but I got so excited toward the end there was no feeling in the foot at the finish. Sure, it bothered me, but Jack gave me plenty of chances when his putting faded from the twenty-third through the twenty-eighth hole.” Johnny wouldn't discuss the stymie, accepting it as one of the breaks of the game, but Dr. William Tweddell, captain of the British Walker Cup forces and the man who carried Lit- tle to the thirty-sixth green of the 1935 British final, declared, “It was a shame.” “Hopeless” Against Americans, 'OU know,” he said, “I've become & fatalist. You Americans are too hot. It's hopeless. We can't beat you. I thought I had Lawson Little on the run last year when he drove into the rough on the last hole, but he smacked the ball onto the green to get a half in fours, and he won, 1 up. Today Johnny Fischer played the last three holes in 1 under par each. It's just impossible.” Fischer and McLean were acclaimed by a crowd of several hundred after the match, when John G. Jackson, president of the United States Golf Association, presented the champion- ship trophy to the Cincinnati player. “Jack and I gave holes back and forth to one another until finally we decided to settle down and go to work,” sald Fischer. “And then I got lucky on the finishing holes.” TRAINING RACE TODAY. ‘The second training race of the Mike Lynch series will be started from the Fifth Precinct Boys' Club, Fifth and E streets, at 11 o'clock this morning. Post entries will be accepted. s Joy to Fischer Household Father, Mother and Sister Listen in on Johnny’s Sensational Victory Irma May as the ‘report of Johnny's 37-hole final victory came in. The three Fischers had started the day calmly enough. The father trod his mail route as usual; the mother dusted and cleaned, and the daughter washed the dishes and helped with the housework. “Johnny 2 down at the end of 18 holes,” they heard. ‘That was bad. The three Fischers hugged their radio more closely for the afternoon 18 holes. McLean went 3 up at the end of 27 holes. John Fischer, sr’s brow showed wrinkles. He admitted he was & cut McLean's lead to two holes— then to one—and finally, on the thirty-sixth, the match was even. Came the word that Johnny's 20-foot putt for & birdie on the first extra hole had dropped. The three Fischers leaped from their chairs; uttered a low exclama- tion of joy. “Wasn't it wonderfull” they al- Fischer, the 24-year-old Cincinnati law student, here is shown being presented with the sliver cup emblematic of the amateur golf championship, by John G. Jackson, president of Jack McLean (right), whom he vanquished, applauds. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. How Fischer Won Amateur Crown By the Associated Press. GARDDI CITY, N. Y., September 19.—Here’s how Johnny Fischer won the United States amateur golf . championship: Defeajed Eddie Meister, Cleve- land, 6 and 5; Carlin Short, Akron, 5 and 4; Chick Evans, Chicago, 3 and 2; Willlam Breault, Detroit, 3 and 2; Gus Moreland, Peoria, i, 1 up; Russell Martin, Chicago, 6 and~4; John Goodman, Omaha, 2 and 1: Jack McLean, Scotland, 1 up, 37 holes. WILL KEEPREDS, N Rickey, Reported as Buyer, | i Says Rumor “Complete Fabrication.” By the Associated Press. INCINNATT, September 10.— Denials followed quickly to- day s published report that the Cincinnati Reds might be sold to Branch Rickey, vice president and general manager of the St. Louis Cardinals. . Powel Crosley, jr., president of the Reds, said at his farm home at North Vernon, Ind., “I cannot deny that too emphatically. I don't know how that report got started, but one thing is certain—the Reds are not for sale.” Rickey at St. Louis described the report as a “complete fabrication.” He added a denial of & parallel re- port that he had taken an option on the St. Louis Browns by saying: “I am not interested in the Browns or any other club, except the Cardinals. I am perfectly contented and happy where I am.” Several Clubs Interest Him. Tmnamwnedm-ummw reports. “Before I spike these reports too hard,” he said, “I want to say I may have participated in casual conversa- tions about Cincinnati, the Browns and other clubs; bui-I have never en- gaged in negotiations for any of them.” ‘The reports were published a few hours after Larry 8. MacPhail re- signed as vice president and menl manager ot the Reds. Saying the resignation “was abso- lutely Vfll\mtlr! B Omhy said he un- derstood MacPhail some other terests. 'Tmmmmklnmmm s explain the possible source of the | Eos SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 20, 1936. COLLINS” 4TALLY PINGH HIT HEROIC Brings Cards 9-6 Triumph Over Cubs, Sends Them Into Second Place. By the Associated Press. HICAGO, ~September 19.—A story book home run by Pinch-Hitter Jim (Ripper) Collins with the bases loaded in the seventh inning today carried the St. Louis Cardinals to a 9-to-6 triumph over the Chicago Cubs and back into second place in the National League. While the Gas House Gang was making an uphill battle to conquer the Cubs, to whom they yielded second place yesterday, the onrushing Glants polished off the Brooklyn Dodgers. The combination of events left Bill Terry's team with a 5'3-game margin over St. Louis. The Cubs were headed for a second straight victory today until Larry French, seeking his nineteenth pitch- ing decision of the season, fell apart in the seventh after weathering pre- vious storms. Trailing by 5 to 3, the Cardinals, starting after one man had been retired, disposed of the Cub southpaw with consecutive singles by Art Garibaldi, Pepper Martin, Joe Med- wick and Johnny Mize, scoring two in the process. Davis Falls to Rescue. (CURT DAVIS was called in fo French's rescue, but didn’t come close to having what was needed to stop the Gas House boys. He walked Leo Durocher, and Don Gutteridge was safe on a fielder's choice, filling the bases. Collins was sent out to bat for Catcher Brusie Ogrodowski and re- sponded with & booming shot into the right-field bleacher portion of a crowd of 12,866 spectators. A single by Frank Demaree in the second inning, followed by Stan Hack's double and a wild pitch by Recruit | Right-Hander Bill McGee, who started for the Cardinals, gave the Cubs two runs. The Cards went ahead with three in the third, achieved through singles by McGee, Mize and Durocher, mixed with doubles by Garibaldi and Medwick. The Cubs tied it up in their half of the third on Augie Galan’s single and Billy Herman's double, and moved out in front again in the fifth. A single by Billy Jurges, French's sacri- fice, another single by Galan and a flelder’s choice stirred up one run. Hartnett Gets Homer. GABB\’ HARTNETT slammed a home run over the left-field wall | in the sixth, giving the Cubs their two-run edge. They worked on Me- | Gee after the big Cardinal seventh, | but the best they could do was one | run in the seventh, when Johnny Gill, batting for Davis, doubled and came home on Galan’s third single. A single with none out in the ninth | by Ethan Allen and a walk to Ken ODea, who batted for Clay Bryant, third of the Cub hurlers, caused McGee to be excused. Ed Heusser retired the last two men without damage. McGee, who gave up 13 hits, was the winning pitcher, while French was charged with the beating, his eighth of the ump‘l;n PSR- | enseusmoomme® P O PRUPPRP— SOMOS MM Totals-_41 16 $Batted for osrodowski in seventh. 1Batted for C. Davis in seventh. iBatted for Bryant in nlnlh 000 800—0 - 0% 0 100—6 in, Med- i Bacri " Hack. nl-n—mrnch!r 10 Blrlblldl to Hlu Herman_to Cavarretta. Left on uis, 8: ag Bases ol ble itch lru—Meurl- Blrr. oran lnfl Pinel ORIOLES STOP BUFFALO. BALTIMORE, September 19 ().— The Baltimore Orioles gained their | Ssc first victory of the final International | ie3d to Ba League play-off series tonight, scoring three runs in the ninth inning to de- feat the pennant-winning Buffalo Bisons 5 to 4. Buffalo won the first two games. Official Score aoeno-»-;»-o!‘ b. Totals - 1Qne out whep winnjng ¢ m-md 10: M'O“;‘Afl uhel su:mn ! i’robable Hurlers In Majors Today By the Associated Press. PRDIABLI pitchers in the Illl' Jor leagues today: American. ‘Washington at New York (2)— Cascarella and Appleton vs. Go- mez and Ruffing. Boston at Philadelphia (2)— Grove and Marcum vs. Pink and Gumpert. Chicago at St. Louls (2)—Ken- nedy and Lyons vs. Andrews and Hogsett. Cleveland at Detroit—Allen vs. ‘Wade. National. New York at Brooklyn—Fitzsim- mons vs. Prankhouse. Philadelphia at Boston (2)— Mulcahy and Walter vs. MacFay- den and Chaplin, L:t. Louis at Chicago—Dean and Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (2)— Davis and Derringer vs. Lucas and Blanton. HUBBELL'S STRING RUNTO T3 IN ROW Yields Dodgers Only 4 Hits in 9-to-1 Game, His 25th Victory of Year. By the Associated Press. ROOKLYN, September 19.— The season’s greatest pitcher, “King Carl” Hubbell, all but hurled the New York Giants into the National League pennant to- day by stopping the Dodgers, 9 to 1, with four hits for his fifteenth straight twirling victory. While his mates were firing a 10- hit attack, which included homers by Mel Ott and Jojo Moore, at Van Lingle Mungo, Dodgers’ ace, Hubbell stopped the Brooklyns cold in every inning but the second to chalk up his twenty-fifth victory of the cam- paign against six defeats. The win stretched the Giants’| league lead to five and one-half games over the St. Louis Cardinals, who climbed back into second place by defeating the Cubs The Giants now have to play less than .500 ball through their remaining nine games to take the flag. Fifth Inning Tells. FOR four innings Mungo gave as good as he received, and actually outpitched the masterful Hubbell. But the Giants fired & five-run bar- rage in the fifth and from there on were never in danger. Mungo, however, fanned 10 of the New York batters to bring his sea- |son's total to 231, virtually assuring | him of the big league leadership in his speciaity. Moore, as has been the custom for the last two weeks, paced the Giant batting attack, getting two singles as well as his homer to drive in four runs. Each club scored once through the | first four innings, the Dodgers get- ting their lone tally in the second on & hit batsman, Jimmy Jordan's single and Mungo's fly, and the Giants hit- | ting the scoring column in the third with Moore’s homer—inside the park. Start With Two Out. "THE big £th inning for the Giants didin't get under way until two | were out. Then Burgess Whitehead g0t on base when one of Mungo's slants caught him in the elbow. Hub- | bell's grounder went through Lonnie Frey for an error. Moore's single brought one run in; Bartell's two- bagger sent two more across and Ot | blasted his thirty-third homer for the final two. The Giants kept it up in the sixth, getting two more runs on White- Moore wound up the scoring. Bklyn. ; b o 3G [Ty ] Haa-1h 0O orommooma® »l omosoosommmm 1 8] misonraSonmed o muonmwocsss® E " 2l seco Totals 381027 7 “Batted for Radtke in ninth. New York _ Brookiyn Runs—Moore (2). l-mlL te, lnnenw ). Whitehead i2), nnnuuorn Er- i—Jackson (2), Prey, Mungo. Jordan. ted m—-h oore ' (4), Bartell (2). Two-base hiteBartell Donble 1875— White- ‘Terry: Hl:!"lo Jordan itehead). sru—uenu. lem Tim Passed h-u—nmp- Magerkurih, Parker and PLAY AT GAITHERSBURG. Sllver Spring Giants, who will face Gaithersburg diamonders today at Gaithersburg, Md., at 3 o'clock, are requested by Manager Brooké Grubb to meet at Dudley’s Drug Store at 1:15 o'clock. HOMERBY DICKEY BEATS NATSIN9TH Errors Fatal as Lead Is Blown Along With Sec- ond Place Chances. BY FRANCIS E. STAN, Btaff Correspondent of The Star. EW YORK, September 10— With the same finesse which has marked their every other refusal to answer opportu- nity’s knock-knock your Nationals virtually blew their second-place chances here today by losing & 6-to- § decision to the Yankees. ‘The death blow, delivered by Bill Dickey in the ninth inning, was de- cisive enough. With one out the lank Yankee catcher poled a home run into the rightfield bleachers to end the ball game and, probably, Syd Cohen’s hopes of remaining a big- leaguer. But it was the events lead- ing up to the home run that hurt worse than Dickey's clout. Right off the bat the Yanks found themselves with a 2-to-0 lead without earning a single run. Then the Nats got over their stage right for a spell and presented Jimmy De Shong with a 5-to-2 lead going into the New York half of the seve enth inning. When this frame finally was com- pleted, two more National errors had helped to tie up the affair, paving the way for Mr. Dickey's big bat. Stone “Goat” of Defeat: T.un “goat” of the game, in the final analysis, was not Cohen, who gave up the winning run, but Johnny Stone, who muffed two flies in the flare of a bright sun, the sec- ond of which enabled the Yanks to tie the score. Stone’s chief rivals for the “goat® title were Buddy Lewis and Johnny Mihalic, although Lewis later took the curse off a first-inning error that helped the Yanks to take their early lead. With one down in the first inning, De Shong walked Rolfe and Di Mag- gio grounded to Lewis, who booted the ball for an error. Gehrig then forced Di Maggio, but Dickey and Selkirk singled successively to give the new American League champs a 2-0 lead. After leaving five runners stranded on base in the first two innings, the Griffs began to reach Bump Hadley in the third inning when singles Ben Chapman, Stone and Cecil Travis produced a run. In the fourth inning they nearly chased the plump Mr., Hadley from the premises with a rally that started tamely, but wound up strongly. Lewis and Kuhel Double, MIHALIC opened the frame by beating out a tap in front of | the plate and stealing second base. | After Hogan went out De Shong | walked and so did Chapman, alling the bases. Here Lewis banged a double to right field, his first hit in his last 20 times at bat. It scored Mihalic and De Shong and sent Chapman to third from where he tallied when Kuhel looped a double to left field. ‘This made it 4-2 and in the sixth the Griffs boosted the count again when Chapman singled, moved up | on Lewis’ sacrifice, and scored on an- other single by Stone. After that it was all grief for the | Griffs. Crosetti opened the seventh by singling and moved to second on another hit by Rolfe. Making one of the great catches of the year, Chap- man raced toward the infield and dove to grab Di Maggio's low liner. | Back on his feet in a flash, he whip- ped the ball to Mihalic end Crosetti was doubled up by yards, but Johnny dropped the ball for an error. Cohen Fails as Rescuer. SPURRED by this break, Gehrig singled to score Crosetti and Man- ager Bucky Harris withdrew De Shong |in favor of Cohen, whose southpaw slants were expected to fool Dickey. They fooled him to such an extent | that Bill only made a single, scoring Rolfe and putting Gehrig, the tying run on third base. Cohen then managed to get Selkirk by making him foul to Hogan, but Jake Powell's easy fly to left field was decisively muffed by Stone and. presto. Gehrig was across the plate with the tying run. Red Ruffing batted for Hadley later in this spree, which carried no further except that Lazzeri, batting for Saltz- 9 | gaver, walked. This prompted Joe McCarthy to 7 | wave Johnny Murphy to the box and the ex-Fordhamite did a good job e— | giving up only one hit. That was a double by Travis, who was left stranded in the ninth by Sington and Mihalic. The end came not without warning. First up in the Yankee ninth, Lou Gehrig sent Chapman against the bleacher wall in center fleld for his drive. Then Dickey lined one into the bleachers and that was all. Men! If’s Time fo Have Your Fall Clothes Cleaned & Pressed Get those heavy Fall and Winter cleaged now—but have them dme right by Dupont. It's a fact that Dupont does a better job. All garments carefully and thoroughly cleaned by skilled operators, using only the . no odors. It's Cleaned and anl finest cleaning fluids . Suits, 0’Coats Topcoats worth a few cents more to get the work- manship you demand. 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