The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1920, Page 34

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sRaehaaee ¢ westel e au lightweight “have for a long World otherwise. of the lightw: even bis bi ‘poundage. ‘Aghting ‘With an ambition lightweight his Eat oe a = pt Tae the def issued pb; "What. happe } @ third, Leonard's weight sent through- the country by his erstwhile man- Jimmy Johnson, was included in fight Leonard at the ltr although the weight ‘has never proven a hindrance in some matches. Then came Welling. be fight for the championship 195" “Lead me to it,” jp Of Joe's reply. And so it happens that at the Garden t ‘Welling will be the one to take i in the ceremonies bringing Leon- ard back to his own class. & the ring ‘ scheduled inted in ;disappointed. Some ring followers are dicting that Welling will be doing if he goes ten rounds, ENNY LEONARD returns to the | Madison Square Garden. don't know positively that he ever ‘Deft them, but a lot of other people oeey had outgrown the class. Only ‘Pecently did he or his manager, Billy 4 Gibeoh, try to convince the sporting ‘what we wanted to about the weight tht champion and not her knew his exact Benny went around the country lightweights, @ven middieweights, and.as he always this gave impetus to the rumor rather to the belief that Benny was ng to « title which he couldn't when nailed down to thé| it limit of the class, Ldghtweights, so calle contenders, | } Began a newspaper tirade against ‘him. They challenged him incessantly, eslculating to make his life miserable, jf t© create the impression that he was ff @fraid of them, and didn’t dare take ‘@ chance with them at the limit of the division recently (RING of this propaganda and de- termined to “‘call the bluffs” of challengers, Leonard challenged them all, with no | exceptions, ,and—at the The pestiferous Lew ‘Tendler, most persisting of the challengers, offered the chance he so long | ‘Willie Jackson, another who considerable publicity through oft-expressed desire to meet Loon- Was offered inducements and Joc ? for a chance to win a cham: i ip, Jackson, tendered a $25,000 pee; found he was too infantile, too ELLING and Leonard 1 rounds to a decision, {}means that i¢ Leonard is even out- opinion of the judges | Leonard Defends Title Against ig ay the Only Lightweight Bi Enough to Meet Him. | ranks to-night at We while believed that ‘They let us think welters and to succeed Leonard, | pre: re- lightweight whose bullyragging Leonard, Tendler wamed class was the substance ight are fitteos | which | to box THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMB | MORE. THRILLS THIS WEEK TONI6HT FOR Me FIRST TYME UNDE R THE NEW STATE Boxing LAW BENNY LEONARDO Wicd STAKE HIS TILE AGAINST- & REAL OPPONENT ' JOE WELLING : “ FOOTBALL RESULTS. FAST. 28 0 Pennsylvania Pittsburgh W. and J... as a Ta ‘oxin 9 Fane Will Pa $1 00, 000 , Micplona 2034 By Neal R. 0’ Hara. g y a ee To See L d- Welling Battl emg acral tod bein Poon Yomi Gs. Cs Sear Yams rion ute ‘o See Leonard- Welling Battle: West, - Detroit ......27 Rutgers By John led 3 % verve. 2 a J ‘ m i eopet a8 More than a million years ago the world was created in pix. days. bd Ri eh ha laa sare Gnaden Meee IE ecionay Mineur=: “Z| Nowadays It takew that much time to settle a bleycle race, ‘Showing | lonard, titleholder, and Joe Welling, the Chicago contender, totalled Cinclanati 2: @ | that the world has progressed a lot, with the accent on the coaster | $72,000 early to-day. ,A long line of fans was in front ofthe Garden Bt. Xavier Maskell’ tndinys 7 | brake. Six days 1s ope more day than the painters work and six more | box office at noon, and indications pointed ‘oward fans paying Drake». 7 | {han.the miners toll. The cyclists certainly have their labor troubles. | over $100,000 to witness the first title bout held in this clty since the “— In addition to working a twelye-hour day they work a twelve-hour night. f ; u peo ea ey The rest of the twenty-four hours is set aside for sleeping, shaving Walker law went into effa@t North Caroline, @ | and snatching nieals There is no doubt that Leonard will enter the ring a full-fledged Clemson. . . . . 3 . o °, . lightweight, according to the State Commission's rules, which call for Misaissippl A. It seems impossible that bike laborers should work s ¥ eems impossible that bike laborers: shoule So long. But a eadaae contin safe Mree tent: "Baan araleneahine ; Lonisinan State TAR S4LEE Ios LENE CLOUT late Cae EI See cae 135 pounds eight hours before a contest. Benny weighed in at an early Hiles Hermie Wi sinisay anar 4Oumds ohoa iovae UF Ue hho Ate fm hour to-day, and the beam was set qt 135. When the champion stepped case of accident, but there Is no clause to permit any walking. A on the scales he did not tip the beam guy that sits on a bike saddle for twenty-four hours doesn't feel much | Whather ORChGb thls eight will hare Leonard's chances andion uss like walking, anyway feed fend | < him to enter the ring in a weakened condition remains to be 8 In Calais Oavaeieiaclot thse being: ap year, New York xets twe six-day bouts Leonard has engaged in during the past year he has always races this year, ‘That is more ry any other city in the country gets, | weighed in the vicinity’of 140 pounds, Cornell Badl and establishes the place as a coming community. Chicago has no six- To-night's bout will answer the Jong and unanswered question day race, depending on snappy race riots Instead, Philadelphia has a | ws. peonard a real Hahtweight titleholder, and can he p ae six-day race when the ball season starts, At the end of six days the anos ehear teeateed . ; epee CANS REAP AD TEy Coat: eaten y Penn race is all over so®@far as Philly's concerned. pion’s fight at the stipulated weight for his class I - ee) 16 A l G New York's first six-day race is now in the process of being,settled ° | AM ANNUAL GAME) 5, Nive Eiken out pedals Heenses kno accent waurace. | Pittsburgh an BOWLING NEWS. - The insurance policy awanls a six-day racer $1,000 for the loss of a . eee acon PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 26.—In their} €s and sixty cents for losing bis head, He gets 500 bucks for losing P. St t "tHe proke cut on the sith annual battle here at Franklin Field| ® arm, or two arma for $760, cut rates, He gets paid for the loss of enn Ate Ut |r h hundred or mote. bor any part of him except a lap. }dining “in the adjoin Cornell went down in a tangled heap before the grim surety of a well-han- | dled Pennsylvania attack was 28 to 0. It was only a repetition of what has! Penn-Cornell | spectacle of a contide: nt) Cornell team that, according to form, | || or reteree Sox fe lose his title, but no- | Past performance “and other fallacious ij body ie expecting such an occurrence, Hin fact, if Benny doesn't win, and ‘decisively at that, the crowd will be | 01 |wone before in iron lore; the | mediums of comparison, should have won but didn't, ne Kames in a possible twent The score Penn, all told, has now won twenty six, | Staggering array of adverse decisi Yet it is quite probable that exactly Yelling, however, isn't going int ring to be knocked out if he can it. He hasn't made any fool! that they cannot lose, ims, but he isn’t afraid. things considered, he has bl e thé most of it. Welling is a good fighter of the old school type. Some say that n : to order for Benny ore effectively. ut he is too deliberate in wi is a reminder of the fight to stand up straight, He has a good left ‘his fists around each other and one or the other go. me kind of a fighter—a Willie | Mitchie, for instance—his style would interesting from ndpoint, but » darting cing out of range not likely to a against in and shine trying, nevertheless, HE biggest Walker law went into effect is expected at the Garden | ight, for the event has the import- lance of belng Leonard's first genuine | tense of his championship under | house since e law governing the sport. An in- resting preliminary to the Leonard- HWelling bout is that bringing out Jett , who cashed at the Common- | th A. C. last week by knocking! his opponent like a Jack Demp- in forty-five seconds. \ 4 of Frisco, rated as.a bear- it, was matched with Duify, very conveniently took sick Tt will be the | again when the sponge was tossed] rour-yard line, on the fourth down. yesterday after He thipks, | aa etary, With pechape An labs ay Bight S 5 in. Both fighters weighed 146 : | 4 hyatl eh Pe ation Aly Uaviptiad bn adver day Fight Shows. pounds, | Redmond, a clean, straight | This gave Penn State the ball and] {y "wines the ‘cones a fair chance, and he intends to! only slightly altered in the telling. | BURT ber Draven soo Bush Sab ne for-| @liminated the danger, The New York ber) aaa gh ee me ch r Cornell optimi: 5 elgner, vho BOR St 10 ing re- > a 5,000 cold yedecked men | t¥° 4! rapa Ccotral wilt i ee SNR a da cs pence By Robert Boyd. quired by a capable boxer except a} More than 35,000 color bedecked men | grok Wey are aang. alk all I, , ¥ a » fei pig! pd physique. and women, the largest crowd in the! Mend 1000. akes| point to the lank, austere figure of| [JN the featherweight elimination | rugged physiau 4 j He stands | Gilmour Dobie a# he stood on the side|.f/ tournament being conducted, at} 1m the other bouts of the evening] history of Forbes Field, witnessed the) | owing. to the inabliiy, of the committee consist raight and is not a moving target | lines and watched Cornell go down.|* the Plonecr Sporting Club, Tom-|Pddie| Anderson of Wyoming out-| pattie, which was a fight to a stand-| is, bite ch the wees Johnny Dundee, but he punches; He saw it go down many times and|my Noble of kngland, former holder | fought Young Hickey of South Af-} fin fiom the start until the final| Alle duicd for nest Mon noted with kindling eye a marked dis-|of the English bantamweight title,/Tica, but now a resident of Green. | ages pa are eWeek, @ and a right which is damaging, | inclination to arise for more Jand Sammy Belzer of New York,| Wich Village, winning the decision of | whistle. Neither Penn State nor PHY au, tags amertoan Howling Clup, which m ng it es eas fought fifteen rounds to a draw; the, the jndgoy at the end of the ‘sixth| has been defeated on the gridiron) Sehumacher's Bowlmny Alleys, Brooklyn. ‘who * two judges agreeing on that verdict.|Tound. John Maggio, a bantam,| this season Winny tulaaaen foiled ear head oe fearlessly | S#iivan Over Walker 1M) Whey the bell rang in the first| Stopped Larry Goldberg in the first ws Hen e MAN, round the fighters walked to the cen- | Tound, Referee Erhardt stopping the] Fumbling merred the game, for the| paces im the Chtoazo Bowling, Association tour Against the| At the Second Regim tre of the ring and spent the first | bout after Goldberg had been sent] ficld was soft and the ball muddy, | mament. whieh Bilzaboth Jimmy Sulliv Y half of the threo minutes feinting | the floor three times. The backs found it hard to keep their | doubles and 2.3. eee ee eae en weet ction: |each other; eagh waiting for the fect ‘and the going slowed up such|sasamin: "7m “Met Sr Supls of ibe apectator's | eeored, tis twenty x seen other to lead, /Noble was the first! Tn the Thanksgiving matinee bouts | 50.4 A He | : the swift |hard-hitting Mickey Walker of Tliza- | (0 lead, git judgment of distance | at the Commonwealth Sporting Cluby| 8P¢¢d boys as Davies and Way Lcotiplas lowthae Waseda Lena's rend Can out, and, beth in the feature twelve-round bout. | Was pod failed to hit cleanly,| Charley Beecher, the rugged little] Pitt threatened to score twice and | (olay Mating lise ? Leonard, Joe Bally Pol hl Jett, Band roved te be i New York featherweight, cleanly out- | oy!) did Penn State advance to!) ———— HOT “be io treite soon tie tiem tana: tere apping with the open! fought Dutch Brandt of Brooklyn, in| within spriking distance of the goal |boxer ‘versus. the. fighter, with r owas just as guilty a8) fifteen fast rounds, gaining the/In cic iirst period, State played an and cleverne of ‘the forme i eho, both preventing judges’ decision by a comfortable} open game, but Pitt resorted to the id's amateur champion carrying hi. r chane here was for clean | margin. raig foo Ubu d close fo! right Nuhting by their uncouth hitting. |" Brundt'was an eleventh hour sub-| Maye ophe par ee ee ae et en | —_—_—_ 4 oT ne the early rounds Noble - ne > ure 4 iy = | vel Purine | stitute, taking the place of Barl Pur- | the eight-yard line when the period vai BOWIE SELECTIONS. [started piling up_m lead by beat. | year, a Western bantam, who failed to| ended. At the opening of the second Virat Nace Rhinestone, P. 7, |i Seliger to the pinch, “He would| appear. ‘Thia in the second time| pig iis ing ee mg ne eeons eavatin tavan ak u then close in and work both} within the last three weeks that the pemabt but the hall BP bil Second Race—Tamarisk, Explo-| "ands to the New York boy's body.| Westerner has disappointed the] Prony artery ‘this erty it” dae sive, Mollie Barnes, It ,earned him a comfortable lead | patrons of the club, Me Rarer Becca a hake’ dea Third Race—Jay Bird, High Class, |Seiger fought much better as the! Notwithstanding that Brandt outs | tis. blow ceed te dohuwete the he Goesan. SRR |fight progressed, He cut his oppo- | weighed Beecher by eight pounds, the | eleven for a while, but as Byers, who purth Hace —Amackassln. Arthur | nent’s left eye In the ninth round and | New York boy eartied the fight to his | replaced him, playéd a great game, th ang Free Ws: ue Hone. Mo. bombarded him with a fuxilado of| heavier and rugged opponent and | team braced’ and again began. to bom. Rageatt, War Nee Me- lefts and rights that brought him on! scored repeatedly with his clean hard| bard the Blue and White goal line ‘Sixth Race—Tuscan Maiden, Siren jeven terms at the twelfth round. | punching with both hands, | wh He Way find 3 Jnes Were the in- Jack Mc-) Maid, Sandy Beal. | From then on it was nip and tuck, Beecher entered the ring ¥ SIWGWe round gainers for Fenn Biats. . ae B but the Pett tacklers saw to it that the Seventh Race—Little Hd, Ameri- nth round Nob {120 pounds. Despite this welg | Aashy little quarterback “Bid pa’. wet pat can Boy, Waukeag. e lump on the New Ye ference Be boxed his jaway in a ken teld for any long sim aa ssieteiibenioe lbut Seliger stood toe to toe long range and outfought the Broo! runs, Penn State went through the. uggel his way until the bell lyn veteran in nearly every round. [game without a — substitution ~until itgomery, the Irish middiewel = good fighter, will take M ‘This looks like a case“ amateur, and among the boys he {beat is Joe Benjamin in two rounds, place. one fistic fireworks. this time should his lam, yy or Monte, » went East by Leach to his Sam. Leach, always a good Wallach family is still rep-| resented | the boxing world, it by Leach Cross, it by @ brand new know one when he on him. This new- one year from to-day, the same red- gvia-| but 01 jerseyed horde will bear down on the] Penn rendezvous telling one another! ‘break of the war he He also won decistons jetty In the Nate iplonship at Boston in 1917 outbreak of the war he enlisted a first Meutenant in the aviv becam ation ops, Baird is @ natural though if necessary can pounds. He is an intelige: man, has every appearance husky and game. From hear he is of the tough and aggre ive type. He is entitle show fis wares in N. over Mitchell and Charlie Beecher of this al amateur cham- was boxing Pi At 14-pounder, | make nt of b what young eae va Cl 88) the m Wh Nkle | roots greet In betw and § subst “| jndg not ai 122 Jac stopy the Ahird round bout. minutes and fifty Weinmark’ | Pioneer that the judges had ag was declared a ‘dra a FieLp OF Mud SHOULD FAVOR. HE CADETS THEYVE EM PRACTICING ie ENOUGH OF IF FORGOTTEN THE TRIMMING THE YOUNG SALTS HANOEO (IT TONIGHTS —=s THE ARMY HASNT LAST YEAR. "VEX" RickaRoO WILL PRESENT THE WINNER OF EMBROGLIO WITH & DIAMOND STUDDED BELT BER 26, 192 26, 1920. The winners of a six-day race win a cup but their sleep, which gives them an even break with the spectators. The first six-do seven-year ‘Noble and Sieger Box Draw; Beecher Wins sponge | figh and Commonwealth ubs Put on Good Holi- oiling, en th In th nnouncement was made | Harry and hisses mingled with cheers | rounds ed the verdict | from the semi-final of eight rounds | siv Larty Reagan of Etzabeth | Robins ted Monroe of Yonkers, who |ing the {tuted for “Red Cap" Wilson, the | to decid and Referee Erhardt could | upon a winner and the bout) ure Refere of New Redmond York | ed Al W of their six-round| Jack The third round had gone two | colored seconds tossed seconds the McVey. wath be: mittee eae LIVE WIRES y-race fan and the seven- st, goes to bed at night. long counts and was about to aris d on a draw | weights, rope to rape. ness and Jimmy | knockout over Jimmy Jackson when | inmark of Sweden inj from further when rounds, the judges’ verdict going to The losers lose nothing PITTS! year locust are both bugs, sixty From Brandt into the ring. The beaten had been floored twice fc line e semi-final nearly Robinson, fought They Nero Chink and | two-negro middle- ten interesting slugged each other Chink's aggres- stiffer punching on in distress many times dur- ten rounds, moving the judg Je in his favor. Lee, a t guilty On d | score, ntam, scored a| gaining, @ attack of its opponents when the goal | was in danger. A bad pass by C splendid chance for the beginning of the third qi the Panthers had the ball on State's | Killinge: A Furious Tie a standstill neither side was able to score In the play, demonstrated its superiority in ground | t and furthermore checked the |‘ mi Coprright, 1920, by The Prose Publishing Co. (The Now York Evening World) 3URGH, yes ates No’ terds of Vv. burgh Panthers battled Penn State to| th ay, and althoush | th i Howling vy hour after the fire ‘aptain Stein lost a the of much fumbling, the en place, others Da ad lr O'Brien At the Olymple Billy Roche stopped the bout | Shamus O' tric | one punishment, § MeVey and Kid Brown, two lightweights, fought six the \ xe cadena teh Seve ambit r har vies mped off the when the nd, sent in a number of substitutes in the last halt in hopes of bringing about a ut was of Yond in many a day, throughout Teasor fans at the ringside ‘O'Brien earned nine round: @nd one even. in the second round to save Jackson | feated Benny Cohn of Orange, N, of the most sensational houts seen 26. morn $72.0 000 ADVANCE SALE FOR TO- NIGHT’S S CHAMPIONSHIP BOUT a Lek ARR i a ia as na —\ By Thornton Fisher Middies Should Win ue F pee oe — - a AMo ney The Pitts- Pittsburgh hay | score at rter, as Pitt of Rit latter took being | Glenn Warner sadly missed | ers, N. Y., ¢ J. in O'Brign was the © consensus was that) Cobn two. ons $20 ms. Ti the beat yey to firemen cke, Charley 8 tO make which was space. 1 “would ‘cover going on as u was 0) the ouruaMment open on Dec. ¢ re suill an eries of thi Ruddle Pe cine Rider short work located betw damag jal half d. Blalser over tn and of al an with fliteen (oa | game, tpectedly strong st | tegether longer than the C From Army To-Morrow In Gridiron Classic na ® |HOW TO REACH ZONE SEAT If the Sailors Are Victorious} "Twill Even Up Series | , AT THE ARMY-NAVY GAME GATE NO. 1—LOWER LEVEL> With Soldiers. EIGHTH AVENUE. ‘Sections 1 to 24. By William Abbott. : All upper stand sections HE Middies have the best chance . to win to-mbrrow's football bat-| UPPer and lower boxes, 1 to 194. GATE NO. 2—UPPER LEVEL = tle at the Polo Grounds and even the series with the Cadets, _ EIGHTH AVENUE. which now stands Army, 11; Navy,| Sections 1 to 24. All upper stand sections. /Upper and lower boxes, 1 to 194. GATE NO. 3—SPEEDWAY EN- TRANCEQ ‘atl upper stand seats. All upper stand boxes. GATE NO. 4—EIGHTH AVENUE, NORTH OF MAIN ENTRANCE, Sections 41, 42, 43, 43A, 44, 44A, 45 and all field boxes, a GATE NO. 5—EIGHTH AVENUE, NORTH OF MAIN ENTRANCE. Sections 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, and all field boxes. GATE NO. 6—EIGHTH AVENUE, NORTH OF MAIN ENTRANCE. Sections 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, Field Sections 33A, 34A, 35A, 36A,. 38A, 39A. 10, and one tie game. The sailors will launch into action a line of dread- nought gtrength, a well ‘balanced backfield and in King a kicke? who'll outclass the soldiers, It was King who conquered the Army last year. The Middies have played a hard schedule and have showr more scor- ing strength than the West Pointers. The Cadets will slightly outweigh theiy blue rivals, Their bacifield star, French, should be the outstand- ing figure on the gridiron, He is one of tbe best backfield men in the East. If the Middies succeed with the d.f- ficult job of stopping French, then ‘8 will be in a tight fix. well, who ‘formerly coached Penn, took ebarge of the sailors ywing the departure of Gil Dobie | o Cornell. The team d.d poorly at the outset of hostilities, due mostly to the absence of several regulars | ( who were returning from the Olym- pie Games. The eleven really didi get together until Princeton which the had hard! rk winning 14 to 0. It was the unex wong of the Navy s for thepr big | the soldi Bob f lecided. White, ve all been Pitzer and taking turns a1 the same position during practice this week, but the chances seem»to favor. White, who has been kept in ionger than the other two candidates, The soldiers made their best show- ing against Notre Dame. West Pain actually led the strong Western cieven_up to the final period, only to still u LSHOW gers At prepared the games. Mose to 17. This game however, “ line is big and aggres-| Was the only @ard game on. f siv at tackle is one of the| Army's schedule, and it is feared by best forwards of the ye Bill| many West Point supporters that the | Roper, the Princeton coach, says King| lack of stiff preparation will tend to and Keck the best tackles he saw | Weaken the team when it gettles on any team ths year. The Middy| down to a gruelling fight with the jends are both fast and-sure tacklers, | other arm of Uncl i e, for Folwell has formed four backfield nothing annual Army- combinations. No one individual has} Navy games productive the ability of French, the Army ace,} of strenuous s but the regular Nav t of backs! have displayed a smoother attack Wola ee toon West Point’ What is more important the sailors have had the advantage of playing ets and thelr Schedule has been better suited for thorough preparation for the one PINEHURST, N second round of th nament Tom Armour, capped by a bad hand Nov. ¥6.—In the utumn golf tour- who was’ handi- was back on hie a game and defeated John D. Chapman hig struggie of the canny ae of Greenwich by 6 up and 5 to play. Annapolis crew his been strongly) aryour went out in thirty-six and Was Grilled in both running plays and the overhead attack. It would not be} surprising if Folwell tried a few sur-|¢ prises on the soldiors to-morrow, The| Middies hifve come easily throw their recent encounter with only simple football and were not forced ro reveal any intricate strategy | While ‘the Navy c to the battle} scene with a finely coached team and booklet. “Foreign Ex- confident of victory the Army ts still change Explained,’ has been raking experiments, “and prob ply issued by us, and will be sent not until the starting whistle blows a canon pag CR® will the recular West Point lineup be post-paid upon request for CR. six up at the turn ALL ABOUT FOREIGN EXCHANGE CONCISE, clearly | written known. There's no _dowbt about the We Cadets’ backfield. Capt. Wilhide will HME “Kenna &Co. start at quarterback, with Smythe 25 W. 459 ST, NEW YORK nd Lawrence at ‘halfback ‘and speed wonder, at.fullback Army line, however, that’s ub) Storck ha a) rench, the It is th been giving tr piayed tack but It now appears ‘almost. certain | at Mulligan, 4 Columbla freshman will take Storck’ the Safloré. Mulligan York lad, weighs 200 and is ERVED SEATS ARMY AND ror type of Hinesman. NAVY GAME an has developed répidly.! nysPRVED SEATS FOK SIX DAY RACE ituting in several games he LEONARD Best Reserved Kingside Seats. pieased the Army coaches, the way Jacob’s Ticket Office te blocked kicks and reinforced his Normandie Hotel, B'way- tae of the line. One end position 1s WELLING BStn' St, Tel. 442 Fitsroy. Originators and Designers of Men’s Hats For the Evening Fashion decrees Long's or Stetson’s Derby or Velour Long’s Hats, $3.50 to $8.00 Stetson’s $10.00 to $35.00 And every hat has the same label, the Guar- antee of Quality, not the sign of a price. LONGS! FRAT S - “WEAR LIKE THE NAME" Broadway at 10th, 27th, 33-d—Nassau at Ann Long's Hat Stores conventently located in New York—Brooklyn— Now Jersey LONG-STETSON Style Booklet on Request §

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