Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 13, 1956, Image 9

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    TORI
COIF
TO
ADO PULLS TO THREE-FRAY
ERENCE LEAD; FIRST CLUB
GAIN TOURNAMENT BERTH
SOUTHERN" OREGON'
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
W
Medford ..... 8
Klamath Falls 5
Grants Pass - 2
Ashland . . 1
Pet
1.000
.625
.250
.125
The Medford Black Tornado
got off to a good start, slowed
and cooled in the middle por
tions of the ruckus and finished
with a rush that stemmed a
Grizzly challenge to crush the
Ashland high hoopsters 65 to 49
Saturday night and take a three
game lead in the Southern Ore
gon Conference campaign.
Medford, first A-l cage con
tingent to qualify for state tour-1
nament play, ran its unblem
ished conference record to eight
wins Saturday night and got
help from the Grants Pass Cave
men . in opening the three-fray
gap over the second place Klam
ath Falls Pelicans. Grants Pass
nipped the Pels 47 to 46 to stay
in the running for one of the two
District 6 tourney berths.
Klamath Falls comes to Med
ford next-Friday and Saturday
and the Black Tornado needs
only a series split with the Pels
; tb gain its second successive
league diadem.
Big Night At Free Lane
Against the Grizzlies at Ash
land Saturday, the Tornado was
warm in its first quarter shoot
ing but turned 'cold from the
field during the . next two
periods. But Medford had a big
night at free toss line and got
hot from the field in the final
stanza to win by its substantial
16 points.
First panel count favored Med
ford 21 to 10. At halftime it
was 30 to 19 and Ashland closed
up to 42 to 35 in the third
quarter.
At Klamath Falls Allen Drews
sank a hook shot from - under
the hoop for Grants Pass to break
a 45-all deadlock with six
seconds to play. Lee McGill of
the Pelicans got two free shots
with one second left but made
only one of them. Klamath led
through most of the fracas and
was ahead at the half. Tom
Bernet had 16 points for Grants
Pass and Donn Taucher of KF
and Drews 12 apiece.
Bob Tisdel was the only Med
fordite who found the hoop with
real regularity at Ashland. He
had half of Medford's 20 field
goals and seven free shots for
27 points. Dick McLaughlin
sighted in for five fielders and
had 17 points for the night.
Medford Stalls
The TornadS' shot 20 "for 56
for .357 for the evening from
the field. A seven for 16 first
quarter and nine for 17 last
stanza built up the average. Med
ford got only two goals in 12
shots in the second period and
just two for 11 in the third.
However, at the gift stripe the
loop leaders made 25 of 33
tosses.
Action in the second period
was slow as Medford fought to
bring the Grizzlies out of their
zone. But Ashland outfought
Medford in the battle for ball
and played a steadier game in
the third chukker.
Second period play was
marked by a two minute stall
on the part of the Tornado. Dick
Copple stood holding the . ball
with a slight grin on his face.
The Ashlanders refused to come
out after him. A Medford time
out halted the dead stall and the
Tornado passed the ball about to
control it in the last seconds of
the half.
The Tornado kept the lead
in the game for good after Dick
McLaughlin made it 2 to 1 on a
close in bucket with lVfc minutes
played in the game. The margin
was upped to 30 to 15 in the
second quarter.
Gay Closed To Five ,
A free shot by Copple and' a
jumper goal by Tisdel were the
only Medford scores in the first
'fi our minutes of the third quarter.
AsAand in the meantime put
in two field goals and five free
markers to slice the Tornado ad
vantage to 33 to 28. That's closest
the Grizzlies came. Medford got
seven free shots and a field goal
to Ashland's three fielders and
one gifter to lead by 10 to seven
tallies during the remainder of
the quarter. , . ;
In the first four minutes of four.
I BOX SCORE:
the fourth quarter, Medford
picked up four, field goals and
five free shots while Ashland
got four points to make the
score 55 to 39. "Wildest Medford
bulge of the'night was 19 points,
65 to 46. ;
Tisdel was able to collect his
high total despite sitting out
about eight minutes of action be
cause of his third and fourth
fouls.
Rebounding in the game fav
ored Medford. Copple and John
Foust headed Medford with nine
retrieves each out of a total of
31. Ashland picked off 21 with
no Grizzley grabbing more than
Medford
Copple, f
McLaughlin, f .
Foust, c
Cearley. g
Tisdel. g
Perkins
Reinking .
Stearns
Slessler
Puhl
Totals
Ashland
Woods, f
Sword, f
Parent, c
Johnson. g
Locke, g .
Fherhart
tt
0
-. 5
2
1
-10
0
.. 2
0
.. 0
.. 0
ft
2
7
6
0
7
0
3
0
0
0
Pf
4
3
2
4
4
0
3
0
0
0
20 25 20 65
Green '.s
Baker .
H
..: 2
1
. 4
2
2
2
0
2
Pf
1
2
3
5
3
0
4
1
Totals .
15 19 19 49
Referees Jim Bocchi and Harold
Douglas.
Medford.
.Tribune
IPdDLMT
CRATER CLIPS PHOENIX
AGAIN; ILLINOIS VALLEY
RECORDS FIRST VICTORY
ROGUE LEAGUE STANDINGS
W L
Phoenix ; 8 2
Crater 7 3
Eagle Point 4 6
Illinois Valley 19
Pet
.300
.700
.400
.100
Syracuse Trims
Knickerbockers
By UNITED PRESS
The defending champion Syra
cuse Nationals started to close
in today in a playoff berth in
the National Basketball associa
tion as Vince Boryla, New
York's new coach, started to
discover the headaches that
plagued Joe Lapchick.
The Nats, buried in last place
in the Eastern division, came
through with a thumping 101-74
victory on Sunday and pulled
to within two games of the
third-place New York Knicks
who bowed to Boston, 116-108.
In other Sunday games, all
day affairs, the Fort Wayne Pis
tons increased their Western di
vision lead to six full games by
beating Minneapolis, 82-78, and
the Eastern division leading
Philadelphia Warriors downed
the St Louis Hawks, 87-79.
Crater high was only one
game back of first place and Illi
nois Valley had its first win of
the 1955-1956 basketball season
when the final buzzers sounded
on Rogue league games Satur
day night.
At Central Point the Crater
Comets came from behind in the
fourth quarter -, to boom by
league-leading Phoenix," 49 to
46. At Cave Junction the IV
Cougars got by Eagle , Point 54
to 53 for their initial hoop vic
tory in 17 conflicts.
The Comets, adding the Sat
urday night verdict to a 72 to
54 win on Friday, took a series
sweep over the Pirates and
stayed in the running for the
conference diadem. Illinois Val
ley, which dropped a 41 to 39
Friday game, got a week end
split with the Eagles. . .
Eagle Point's bidi for at least
second place in the final loop
standings was ruined and week
end results insured first round
byes .for Phoenix and Crater in
the southern division tourney of
District 6 A-2.
Cornels Warm TJp . .. . .
In their Saturday engagement
the Comets warmed up in the
second half after being cold in
the first. They fell behind in
the early moments of action and
never caught up until the
fourth quarter when Dick Cal
ender's jumper made it 40-all.
Callender followed .with anoth
er jump bucket for 42 to 40 and
Crater kept on top from there
Phoenix had intrmission leads
of 12 to 8, 23 to 19 and 36 to 34
IV's Cougars were a fired up
team Saturday. They held 22 to
12, .32 to 25 and 46 to 38 margins
at the quarters. Eagle Point
surged up in the third quarter to
knot the score at 32-all. The
Cougars pulled away from there
and had an eight-point lead half
way through the fourth quarter.
The Eagles closed in but couldn't
quite overtake the Cave Junc
tion squad. After climbing to 53
to 54 Eagle Point missed its two
final tries from the field.
The Crater-Phoenix fuss was,
over all, a defensive struggle
and for the second night in a
row the Comets' Fred Herrmann
did a fine job in holding down
Bill Madden, tall center of the
Pirates. Madden accumulated
only 10 points.
Most of Crater's shooting op
portunities were good ones and
the Comets swished them in the
second half where they didn't in
the first. The Comets had 20
field goals to the Pirates' nine
in the skirmish and put in just
nine gifts while Phoenix got 18.
Phoenix headed by one to
three points much of the fracas
and opened a nine-point gap in
the third period.
"Ray Dahl of the Pirates got
17 points and . Herrmann, Bob
Gray and Nathan Douthit of
Crater each 12.
George Plumlee was the big
shooter for the Cougars on Sat
urday with 28 tallies, 19 in the
first half. Gary Foran did
good job of holding Plumlee
down during a big share of the
opening half but midway-in the
second quarter was sidelined
when he bit through his lip.
Jack Greb was the Eagle high
point man with 22. .
. Rebound retrieving was about
even in both Saturday games. .
Rogue league play winds up
this Friday , and . Saturday with
Phoenix meeting Illinois Valley
and Eagle Point playing Crater.
LINE-UPS:
Illinois Valley 54 53 Eagle Point
Pickle 6 f 22 Greb
Preston 4 f 10 Christian
Plumlee 28 c 6 Foran
Kennedy 11 g Friend
Simington 3 .' g 10 Veach
Substitutions For Illinois Valley:
Camp 2. Smith, King; for Eagle Point:
Boren 4, Tresham 1.
Crater 49
Shama 5
Herrmann 12
Gray 12
Lefler 2
Douthit 12
46 Phoenix
17 R. Dahl
4 Wall
10 Madden
6 Brood
7 Korth
Substitutions For Crater: Callender
6, Goyette; for Phoenix: Wallace 2.
Ray Drake Picked
Over Small wood
New York U.R) Handsome
Ray Drake . of Far Rockaway,
.N.Y., is favored at 7-5 to beat
Hardy (Bazooka) Smallwood of
Brooklyn tonight in 7 their .TV
middleweight 10-rounder at St.
Nicholas arena.' -
' Drake, 25, is favored because
of his skill and ruggedness al
though he lost his last two bouts
to Peter Mueller of Germany
and slugger. Tony BaldonL
Fay Crocker
Golf Winner
Miami Beach, Fla. (U.R) Fay
Crocker of Montevideo, Uru
guay, had her educated putter
to thank today for a second
straight triumph' in the $3,500
Sebring Women's Golf Tournament-
, . -. '.:
Miss Crocker, Women's Open
champion, won the tournament
yesterday when she outputted
Patty Berg in the final, round
to finish with a 36-hole total of
144. Miss Crocker sank a seven-
foot putt on the final green for a
par four and a 73 while Miss
Berg faded on the final three
holes.
Cathy Cornelius of Lake
Worth Fla., Betty Dodd of San
Antonio, Tex.; and Ruth Jessen
of Seattle, Wash., tied for third
with 148s. ,
Howling
BANTAM BOWLING LEAGUE
Team , W
Rainbow Cafe ...... 18
Bud Wilson's Chevrolettes 16
Hudson's Pharmacy
Kiwanis ..
V. F. W
Cummings Agency .
W. O. T. M -
Ginn's Flower Shop
Hawthorne Market
Grabow's
Wilson's Chev. 2 -
David Wilson 129
Ken Wise 208
Jim Yoder 177
Pl'kenh'n (abs)200
Handicap
262
976-
16
15 i
15
13 i
13
11 ,
9
8
Ginns 1
Larry Little
THrk Bvrd
Edmonds(abs) 164
Norm Olson 188
Handicap 226
961
L
9
11
11
lli
12
13 '.i
14 v
16
18
19
168
215
Kiwanis 3
Ed Floate
Carol Booth
Karen Haas
D Popow(abs) 106
Handicap 446
163
182
118
Hawthorne Mkt 9
D C'tianson 154
Mike Wright 124
B Stroh- (abs) 122
Bud Lee " 112
Handicap - 362
1015
874
V. F. W. 3
Jobie Kellogg 164
Ron Bauman 121
Darrell Floate 101
D. Bauman 222
Handicap 402
1010
Hudson's 0
B Andrews 163
Mike Higday 151
J Tompkins 152
Beverly Lenz 194
Handicap 266
926
Cummings 3
Jim Wise
Hichard Lenz
D Bohannan ,
Mike Florey '
Handicap
174
148
175
220
118
953
Grabow's 0
Cliff Roberts 212
Mike O'Neill 70
Bob Edwards 173
Calvin Lenz 161
Handicap 160
! 936
Rainbow Cafe 3
Ralph Goode 223
Mary Elrod 148
M Jantzer 170
Mike Jantzer 180
Handicap 123
W. O . T. M. 0
Jack "Webster 233
Cora Ravenor 137
Karen Hunter 58
Rick Newland 154
Handicap . 366
967
948
ROGUE ROLLERS LEAGUE -
Vivian Knox of Ralph's Res
taurant took high game and high
series in Rogue Rollers Bowling
League Friday night with scores
of 210 and 524. It and M. Shell
had high games series, 796 and
high team series, 2297. Doris
Hickson of Clave Construction
picked the 6-7 split.
Team
Ralph's Restaurant
W
22
16
16
16
15
Brooks Electric
B-B Auction
Darrell Miller Co.
H and M Shell
Women of the Moose 14
Rogue Sportsmen 13
First National Bank 13
Clave Construction 9
Chris Drug 6
12
12
12
13
14
15
15
19
22
W.O.T.M. 2
R. Wad'.ow .. 408
S. Coulter 374
D. Finley 321
M. Fordyce 380
E. Olson 431
Handicap 321
Kalnh's Rest.
V Knox
F Doty
R Edmonds
K Smith
M Clark
534
450
370
405
503
1914
2252
B-B Auction 1
J McCready 409
A Zohnow 318
M. Tremblay 331
H Culy (sub) 424
V Findley 457
Handicap 457
Brooks Elec. 3
P Braack . 380
E Sessions 383
G Riggs (sub) '.85
J Barnum 452
G Hayse 409
1993
I
2109
Clave Const. 0
D Hickson
M McNeel
F Clave
A Hoffman ,
J Tresham
Handicap
419
383
365
404
364
265
H-Rl Shell 4
G Blind (sub) 503
E Lenz 467
A Bohannon 349
E Baker 481
D Christenson 497
2200
2297
F.N.B. 4
H Read
J Davis
V Schmidt
M Martin
CSelleck '
Handicap
418
320
278
378
355
159
1879
..Miller Co. 0
N Roberts 407
M Tremblay 341
A Zenor - 403
P Carmony 315
- O Wyatt .'1'ir347
1813
Rogue Sptsmen 0
G Ludwig
D Paul
D Webster
E Johnson
A. Frost
Handicap
431
405
353
372
358
83
2002
Chris Drug 4
E Doty
T Tolles
G Russell
A Walton
V Corby
432
459
39 7
439
406
2133
St. Mary's
Eyes Title;
Defeats SH
St. Mary's high of Medford
will be intent on "capturing the
Jackson County B League bas
ketball pennant Tuesday night.
The Crusaders have to win
only one of their remaining two
games this week in the circuit
for a clear cut title to the flag
and tomorrow evening they are
hosts to Jacksonville, last place
team in the loop. :
Other Tuesday night scraps
take Talent to Rogue River and
Prospect to Butte Falls. The
regular league seasons ends Fri
day with Jacksonville at Butte
Falls, Rogue River at St, Mary's
and Talent at Prospect.
St. Mary's all but put Talent,
only remaining contender, out
of the running last Friday. Tal
et's hope at best is a deadlock
in the final standings and a play
off for the mantle but the Bull
dogs must win two and Cru
saders must fall twice for that
to happen. And the concensus
establishes that -possibility as a
major, miracle.
The Medford parochial quint
is undefeated in eight league
hassles . while Talent has lost
twice, both times , to St. Mary's.
St. Mary's of Medford defeat
ed Sacred Heart high of Klam
ath Falls 59 to 43 yesterday in a
basketball fracas at Klamath
Falls. : '-.-'
The home club Trojans were
on top 11 to 8 at the quarter and
25 to 23 at the half but the Cru
saders of Medford fought ahead
41 to 32 in the third quarter.
Dick Paup of St. Mary's and
Rick Wicklein of Sacred Heart
each scored 16 points.
- The Trojans are- the second
place team in the Klamath Coun
ty loop and St. Mary's leads the
Jackson circuit.
St. Mary's ' won the jayvee
prelim 50 to 43.
LINE-UPS:
-, 43 Sacred Heart
f , S Michaeiis
f 1 4 Depuy
c 6 Durreil
g - 16 Ri. Wicklein
g 6 Ro. Wicklein
Substitutions For St. Mary's: Flak-
u's 2, J. Darland 3. Birmingham, Pru-
ltt, Bechardt; for Sacred Heart: Sari 2
Conforti, Ambers, Jackson.
St. Mary's 59
Walsh 8
G. Dariand 11
Miksche 8
Meunier 11 '
Paup 16
Portland Evens
Seattle Series
Portland - (U.R) Portland
evened up its two game series
with Seattle University here last
night, handing the Chieftains a
97-84 setback in a rough and
game marred by
Monday. February 13, 1956
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE NIKE
Southern Oregon Sweep?
Series From OCE Wolves
By UNITED PRESS
Portland State, the pace setter
in the Oregon Collegiate Con
ference, faces a "make-or-break"
week as the Vikings go to the
post three times in what could
virtually clinch the league toga.
The Viks have a pair with
Southern Oregon on the week
end, all on their home floor.
Action the past week didnt
hurt the Viking standing any
either as their nearest rival,
Eastern Oregon had to be satis
fied with an even split with Ore
gon Tech.
Owls Win . "
The Owls won the opener at
Klamath Falls Friday night, 74-
55, only to see the Mountaineers
rebound for a 70-67 decision in
the Saturday night tangle.-
Southern Oregon" two-timed
Oregon College to maintainat
least a mathematical chance at
the league title. Friday night the
Red Raiders coasted to ah easy
80-64 win and followed up Sat
urday with nearly as easy 78-
63 verdict at Ashland. " ".
The Raiders hopped to 8 to 0
advantage at the start Saturday
but halfway through the , first
half the Wolves went on top 19
to 18. SOC came back to head
32 to 30 at half time.
Margin for the victors was 67
to 50 with five minutes to play.
Southern Oregon shot 26 for 56
Rodgers, f ....
Zitek, c
Hoy, g .
Buss, g
Baker, f
Totals
2-2
0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
13-23 19
soc
Hoffine. f
Hollingsworth. f
Titus, c
Crandall, g
Bates, g
Munsell, c-f
Tenney, g
Carlile. g .
Biddington, g .
De Puy, f
Lowrance. c
fg
... 4
...10
1
4
5
... 0
... 1
... 0
... 1
... 0
... 0
It
4- 5
5- 8
4-6
3-4
6- 6
0-1
2-2
2-2
0-0
0-0
0-0
Pf
4
4
4
0
0
1
3
1
0
0
0
63
tp
12
6
6
11
16
0
4
2
2
0
0
Totals 26 T6-34 16 78
for .464 from the field
made 25 for 70 for .357.
BOX SCORE:
OCE
Adams, f
Jones, f .-.
Young, c
Girod, g ..
Miller, g
Milton, g ....
Summers. g
OCE
'. I
. 4
1
. 7
. 2
- 1
ft
u-0
0-1
6-12
0-0
3-4
0-1
2-2
Pf
0
3
3
1
2
0
1
tp
'Cats Subdue
sngton
Husky Fund
Does Exist
Seattle, Wash. (U.R) The ex
istence of "a "downtown fund"
for aid to University of Wash
ington athletes was confirmed
Sunday night-by its proprietor
but he denied it was used to pay
"salaries" to football players.
R. C. (Torchy) Torrance, Se
attle businessman known asthe
chief recruiter of football talent
for the . university, said the
"downtown fund does exist." But
he said it does not contain the
$75,000 widely rumored. '
Torrance made his remarks in
a radio-television broadcast set
up to answer . the charges of
ousted . Football Coach Johnny
Cherberg that Torrance was part
of an "unhappy triumvirate"
which brought about Cherberg's
firing.
Heard Rumors
Just about everyone knew
about the fund, . Torrance said,
except top university officials,
and "they've heard rumors." -
"Every conference school and
every other university of any
consequence knows of such
funds," Torrance-said. '
Cherberg told a committee of
the Washington state legislature
Martinez Grade
Cagers To Play
St. Mary's Five
Martinez, Calif., division
championship . basketball team,
in the 85 pound class, from St.
Catherine's parochial school,
will be in Medford, Saturday,
Feb.; 18, to play an exhibition
game with a St. Mary's squad.
According to the Rev. Nicolas I
Deis of St. Mary's, the Martinez
team plans to visit the Medford
fire, and police departments and
tOUr tlie VariOUS newspaper, ra- that. Tnrranne trnt Viim IrioUoH
dio nd television stations. One out because "Tm-ran was
afraid he would lose control of
stipulation in the request for
the trip here was that they be
taken to Crater lake. The St.
Catherine's team members have-'i
earned their own money for the
trip and plan to make it a good
will tour.
The exhibition game on the
St. Mary's floor , will be at 7:00
p.m. ' . , r
the fund unless I was out of the
picture." The legislature is in
vestigating the disturbed ath
letic picture at Washington.
, More than -330 reservoirs have
been built in northeastern Brazil
as an anti-drought protection
measure. . " '.
a
ITSOM LOGGERS!
BE SURE TO SEE THE
60
tumble
fouls.
Scoring leaders were made at
packed 40 -minutes as Portland's
Jimmy Winters led the Pilots
with 34 points,' 20 ofthein com
ing from the charity stripe. High
for the . Chiefs - .was Cal Bauer
with 37 and 19 of those were
of the . one . point variety.
Seattle lost-four men via the
personal route and a fifth man
was ejected by the officials for
J unsportsmanlike conduct.
- By UNITED PRESS ,
Action in the Northwest Con
ference resumes on. two fronts
tonight, taking only a one night
breather from, the week end's
action that put the top three
clubs into a real scramble for
the league leadership.;
Linfield hosts Whitman at Mc
Minnville while College of Idaho
moves to Salem for a one game
engagement with Willamette.
Linfield stunned the look dope
sters over the week end by rising I
up to twice belt down the league
leading Coyotes from Idaho: Fri
day night it was a rout for the :
Wildcats, winning 89-51. Satur
day it was more difficult but the
same result with Linfield taking
a ,75-64 decision. " "'.''!
At the same time Willamette
two-timed Whitman, Friday by a
92-56 -shellacking and followed
up with a '59-42 win Saturday
at Salem. ' - -
Lewis and. Clark andPacific
fought out the only close game
in the loop during ' the week
end's action at Forest Grove be
fore the Badgers gained a 64-62
win over Lewis and Clark. '
icier
at the
scrra
ascade logging Conference
Redding, Cal.,F8k IS, 17, 18
For Further Information Contact
CHUCK LEWIS -Phone Medford 2-6745
Cascade Industrial Supply
' Redding
Phone 1195
Grants Pass
Ph. GR 6-7466
Klamath Falls
Phone 3711
Kroll Victor
At Tucson
Tucson, Ariz. (U.R) The best
tournament golf of his career
made veteran pro T'd Kroll, of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., $2,000
richer today as he and the rest
of the touring professionals head
ed into Texas for more stops on
the winter circuit.
Kroll captured the 11th edi
tion of the $10,000 Tucson Open
Saturday with a 72-hole total of
264, the lowest in his career.
Next stop on the tournament
trail is the $20,000 Texas Open
which begins Thursday in San
Antonio.
Finsterwald Bids
In his final five-under-par 65
round, Kroll held off a bid by
Dow Finsterwald.
x Finsterwald shot a 67 for a
72-hole score of 267, three strokes
behind Kroll. '
Gene Littler of Palm Springs,
Calif., finished in third . place
with a 268. Tied for fourth at
269 were Don January, of Abi
lene, Tex., Paul Harney, BelJn,
Mass., and Lionel Hebert, Erie,
Pa.
High School Scores
SATURDAY BASKETBALL
By United Press
Baker 59 Mae Hi 56
Lakeview 65 Burns 62
Seaside 60 Rainier 49
Roseburg 61 Marshfield 50
Cottage Grove 84 North Bend 73
Maupin 58 Moro 34
Culver 76 Sisters 66
Hermiston 59 Wy'east 31 .
Condon 49 Fossil 47
Stanfield 79 Lexington 35
Grants Pass 47 Klamath Falls 46
Medford 65 Ashland 49
Crater 49 Phoenix 46
Cascade Locks 46 Mosier 28
Illinois Valley 54 Eagle Point 53
Huntington 53 Wilder. Ida., 35
Corvallis 74 Redmond 56
GIANTS SIGN PITCHERS
New York tU.R) Two young
pitchers right hander Ramon
Monzant and . lefty Joe Margo-
nen whom the New York
Giants hope will make the club
this spring have signed their
1956 contracts.
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