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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 24, 1958)
Coast Teams Talke Thumping (From Tough SlH 3d -Westerners United Press International Pacific Coast basketball teams take two days off be fore jumping back into the cage swim Friday. From the looks of Tuesday night's re sults, the rest will be welcom ed. California, Stanford ' and Seattle took thumpings from Grizzlies Snap Oregon's Triumphs, Down Ducks 82-75 Eugene -CPU- The Montana Grizzlies snapped a four-game winning streak for the Ore gon "Webfoots here Tuesday night by downing their hosts, 82-75, in an intersectional basketball game. After a 34-30 deficit at halftime, Montana roared back with 52 points in the second half, 24 of them on free throws. Dan Balko and Dave Shelby paced the late Montana attack with Balko picking up 17 points in the second half and Shelby hit ting 12, eight of them on foul shots. OSC Favored To Win Far West Classic Corvallis-flJPD-Oregon State found itself in the favored - role today to win its own Far West classic for the third straight year. The Beavers were thrust Into the "spot" by their 73-69 win over defending Big 10 champion Indiana last Satur day night. Coach Slat Gill's men have won the last two classics here . . Competition opens Satur day night with Oregon State meeting Air Force in the first game and Iowa clashing with Wyoming in the second. The winners play Monday night. In addition, four high chool teams will meet in an afternoon version of the Clas tic. Beaverton plays Roseburg at 2 pjn. Saturday and Marsh field plays North Salem at 3:45 pjn. Gill is only four games away from his 500th coach ing victory. SpOrt y5f7r oscar fraley Parade aSs&c Spom w,it" VII UUC SS7L United Press " ' Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.' By OSCAR FRALEY United Press International New York (UPD The fact that the mighty Casey didn't strike out but that the New York Yankees were the first team in 33 years to come back from a 1-3 deficit and win the World Series was the number one sports story of 1958. That - comeback surge swept the perennial world champions into the top sports spot of the year. It took a lot of doing, too, because this was a year replete with muscular headlines. ' . The - top 10, from here, were: 1. The Yankees' series come back. 2. Roy Campanella's near fatal auto accident. 3. Silky Sullivan's buildup and fall. 4. Columbia defeats Sceptre In America's Cup. 5. Jimmy Bryan's win and Pat O'Connor's death at In dianapolis. 6. Herb Elliott's 3:54.5 world record mile. 7. Tommy Bolt's U.S. Open win with subsequent proba tion. . 8. Ray Robinson regains middleweight crown from Carmen Basilio. 9. Rafer Johnson's Moscow decathlon world record. 10. Terry Brennan fired at Notre Dame. Other Good Ones There were a lot of other good ones. There was the opening of major league base ball on the Pacific Coast and the rhubarb at Los Angeles over the short left field fence. There was Ashley Cooper's tennis triple and the football Giants beating the Browns in the pro football playoff. Floyd Patterson made news by knocking out built-up Roy Harris; Tim Tarn's broken leg ruined his Triple Crown bid; Archie Moore kayoed Yvon Durelle in the best brawl since Dempsey-Firpo; Russia, sent two horses to the Wash ington international; the New York grand jury probe of boxing, and. Dow Finster wald's PGA victory over Sam Snead. But the way in which the Yankees clawed their way back to a seventh world championship in 10 years put Midwestern quintets as the combination of good foes and enemy courts proved too much for the top coast squads for the second successive night. The Bears lost a 55-43 de fensive battle to St. Louis Un iversity in a battle featuring 6-foot-10 giants Bob Nord- Montana was off to an 8-3 lead in the first four minutes of the game but the Ducks fought to a 26-15 advantage with six minutes left in the half to retain the lead at the half. After halftime Oregon kept in front for the first three minutes but Shelby and Vince Ignatowicz scored reg ularly to give the Grizzlie a 41-39 lead. The score see-sawed and was tied several times before Montana grabbed the lead for good on a driving hook shot by Balko which made it 54-52 with nine min utes to go. The Grizzlies then slowly increased the margin to the end. Montana shot .422 from the field for the game, but a tor rid .560 in the second half. The Webfoots hit .304 in all, The Grizzlies outrebounded the Ducks 57-39, with Shelby collecting 18 of. them. Shelby, an ' Albany, Ore., boy who was enrolled as freshman at Oregon, led the scoring with 24 points and Rask was high for Oregon with 20. THE BOX: Montana 82 Roberts Screnar Shelby Balko Ignatowicz Dunham 0 r p t .4 1-3 2 9 . 7 5-5 4 19 . 7 10-12 3 24 . 8 7-7 5 19 .2.4-6 3 8 . 0 1-2 11 . 1 0-O 1 2 .0 0-0 0 0 .0 0-0 1 0 27 28-35 20 82 G F P T .6 2-3 3 14 : 3 7-9 3 13 .5 0-0 5 10 6 8-9 5 20 3 2-2 5 8 2 0-2 1 4 1 2-2 O 4 O 0-0 O 0 O 0-0 0 0 0 2-2 0 2 0 : 0-1 2 0 Miller Allen Ruegsegger Totals Oregon 75 Strickland Herron Robertson Rask Kuykendall . Anderson Ronquillo Englund Newton Klmpton Hayes Totals 28 23-30 24 74 Halftime score: Oregon 34. Mon tana 30. the icing on the cake. They were counted out, trailing three games to one, but then stood the Braves and the na tion on their collective ear by winning three straight.' Campanella's plunge into paralysis on an icy road stunned the sports world and his battle to regain the use of his body was a continuing story of alternate .hope and despair. Silky Sullivan's buildup as a Cinderella horse amounted to a national fren zy, tailing off as he ran 12th in the Derby and dying com pletely in the Preakness. Year-Long-Epic Columbia's defense of the" America's Cup against Bri tain's Sceptre was a sea-going Silky Sullivan tale, the Ameri can boat winning four straight from the invading craft, at Indianapolis marked the annual 500-mile race won by Jimmy Bryan. Elliott was a fantastic per former whose feat of running 10 times under the old four minute barrier; capped by his world record, was a year-long epic. Bolt's saga stretched over -a period of time, too, as temperamental Tommy won the Open and then was put on indefinite probation for un becoming conduct. Robinson, already a ring im mortal, proved himself again by regaining the middle weight crown again from Basilio. Johnson went to Mos cow for a head-and-head bat tle with Russia's Vasily Ku znetsov, who had broken Ra- fer's world mark, and the big Californian got the mark back with a dazzling 8,302 point world mark. And Terry Brennan's dismissal as head grid coach at Notre Dame raised such a riot among the alumni that it figured to have repercussions into the new year. Which will have to go some to match 1958. . . BASKETBALL Tt'ESDAY'S COLLEGE SCORES United Press International East COP 67, St. Peter's (N J.) S3 Midwest - Akron 70. Seattle 63 Illinois 71, Stanford 62 St. Louis 55. California 43 Bradley 50. Dartmouth 44 Southwest Tulsa 60. N. Mexico A&M 58 West Montana 82, Oregon 75 Portland 78, North Dakota 49 niacin and Darrel Imhoff. But it was St. Louis' Bob Ferry, a "mere" 6-foot-8 who led a second half spurt after the Bears had closed the gap to two points in the third quar ter. No Top-Ranking Club No Bear had over seven points. It was the second loss for the Bears, and it left the coast without a team thus far worthy of high national ranking. Once beaten Illinois was never hard pressed in down ing Stanford 71-62. The Illini opened up a 61-40 bulge mid way in the second half. Stan ford's Dick Haga led scoring with 24 points but the Illini cashed in on 41 per cent of their shots in a fine team ef fort. Seattle gave Akron a scare before succumbing 70-61. Ak ron clung to a 51-49 lead with 11 minutes to play but then widened it quickly to 61-53. Charlie Brown led the Chief tains with 19 points. The loss left Seattle with a 6-2 mark. Elsewhere, Coast fans could smile a little. Tigers Roar Dave Klurman had another hot night as his 26 points gave College of Pacific a 67 53 win over St. Peter's of New Jersey. Idaho got a surprising bat tle from Kent State before winning 60-54. It was 27-27 at half and 43-43 at the three quarters marks before Idaho foul shooting proved decisive. The win gave the Vandals a 5-2 record thus far. Montana bumped Oregon 82-75 with a 52-point blitz in the second half, spelling 'the Ducks' , doom. Dave Shelby scored 24 for the Grizzlies and dominated board play. Other highlights Tuesday night: Dick Jolly dropped in 22 points as Portland whip ped North Dakota 78-49 . . . Sterling Forbes tallied 27 points as Pepperdine made it five out of seven with an 89 69. win over Redlands . . . Hawaii snapped a six-game losing streak at Santa Bar bara with a hectic 73-71 over time win over Westmont. Kuharich Faces Irish Quandary South Bend, Ind. - (UPD -Joe Kuharich, Notre Dame's new football coach, doesn't know what kind of a won and lost receord he needs to keep the job, and he can't foresee the undefeated season the Irish old grads expected when they pressed the dismissal of Terry Brennan for winning six out of 10 games. He said he hadn't seen Notre Dame play last year and his knowledge of person nel was limited to what he could learn in a few film clips seen on television and what Brennan's assistant coaches might tell him. Before he returned to Washington, where he gave up four years remaining on his contract to coach tlje Red skins, he met . with all of Brennan's assistants, except Bernie Crimmins, and he picked up films of the Irish 1958 games with Purdue and North Carolina for future study. , Crimmins, former head coach at Indiana, skipped meeting with Kuharich be cause he wants to get out of football if he can arrange a career in private business. Later, Kuharich will deter mine whether he will keep any of Brennan's assistants. Kuharich said he regarded the Notre Dame coaching job as a "challenge." Holiday Games Set for Locals Medford high school has the only casaba quintet seeing ac tion during the holiday week end with basketball games scheduled Friday and Satur day nights on the home floor with Corvallis. Medford - will be trying to keep its pre-conference record of three wins and no losses. Their conference slate starts in January. Corvallis so far has won four and lost two with the losses coming from Spring field (57-38) and Beaverton (72-70). Corvallis victories have been over McMinnville, Mo lalla and two from what was supposed to be a strong Rose burg team. Pasadena, Calif. -(UPD- Rival Rose Bowl coaches found time to kid each other about the January 1 classic, but there was nothing . funny today about the Iowa practice ses sions. Berkeley -UPD-The Univer sity of California Bears worked out for two hours and 20 minutes Thursday and wound up with a 30 minute of fensive scrimmage. MEDro)TSIBUrlE STOMP g Bradley Scoreless Last 1 6 Minutes But Wins 50-44 United Press International How can a team be held scoreless for 16 of the last 20 minutes of a modern college basketball gam and still win? - That's what happened to undefeated Bradley in an in tersectional game against in vading Dartmouth Tuesday night. However, the Braves struggled to a 50-44 victory to extend their season unbeaten streak to six games. Dartmouth, the Ivy league's defending champions, fell be hind 40-31 at intermission so went into a zone defense with the start of the second half. Bradley didn't score a point for the next 16 minutes. But Dodgers Give Up Top Rookie Los Angeles. -(DPD- The Los Angeles Dodgers turned the other, cheek today on their "youth program" when they gave up prize rookie George Anderson. - . Rip Repulski, one-time flash of the St. Louis Cardin als who managed to sock 13 homers for Philadelphia in 1958, will take up the assault on the shallow 250-foot left field screen at Memorial Coli seum. The Phils gave up Repulski and two farmhands, pitchers Gene Snyder,' a left'hander, and right hander Jim Golden, to get Anderson, who had a brilliant minor league record at . second base. He's only :24,; seemingly in keeping with the Dodger youth program which . has seen the club spend large sums to get prize rookie tal ent. ... But E. J. (Buzzie) Bavasi, the Dodger general manager, said "with Charlie Neal, one of the best second basemen in the business, we just don't have a spot for George." Portland Nips N. D. Portland -UP0- The Univer sity of Portland crushed North -Dakota, 78-49, here Tuesday night in a college basketball game. The . Pilots led most of the game and held a 31-24 halftime margin. Dick Jolley paced Portland with 22 points and was high for the game. Wally Panel -collected 16 for the Pilots. For North Dakota, Gene Keller was high with 14. Ern ie and Jerry Krause both had nine points. Portland hit .375 from the floor, or 33 field goals in 88 attempts. " ' Brown Signs Contract Cleveland, Ohio -(UPD- Paul Brown, professional football's most successful coach, signed a new contract with the Cleve land Browns today, insuring him of his job for at least the next 10 years. Brown's signing extended his present contract, which has four years to run, for an additional six years.. In the 13 years since the Browns were organized, Brown has coached his teams to 137 victories, while losing only 34 and tieing five-by far the best record In pro football. Portland-(DPD-Horst Rickert; assistant coach at Jefferson high school, Tuesday was named new head football coach at Cleveland high school. Rickert, a graduate of Dubuque University in Iowa, succeeds Hub Shovlin who re signed because of ill health. AUTO 4 345 North Central STORE HOURS: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Saturday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday when Dartmouth suddenly re verted to a , man-to-man de fense, the Braves connected on six of six free throws. Bradley Us Zone Then Bradley went into a zone of its own to protect its lead to the finish. Billy Joe Mason led the Braves with 22 points almost half of his team's total while Rudy La russo scored 15 for Dart mouth. St. Louis university, anoth er Missouri Valley conference representative, also posted an impressive intersectional vic tory, rolling to a 55-43 tri umph over California, co champions of the Pacific Coast Conference last season. This was another slow-down exhibition, with St. Louis holding only a 26-21 margin at halftime. The invading Bears moved to within two points of St. Louis shortly after the. intermission but Bcb Ferry, who scored 16 points pulled the Billikens out of danger. Sophomore Dave Voss' field goal gave Tulsa a 60-58 vic tory over New Mexico A&M; Illinois gained a 71-62 victory over Stanford, and Akron pulled away in the final min utes to defeat Seattle, 70-63. Set Up Voss Tulsa Overcame a six-point deficit to tie the score with two minutes remaining, but the Aggies then guarded the ball until they were able to set up Voss for the winning basket. Moments earlier, Voss engaged in a fist fight with Tulsa's Charley Clark. Illinois opened a 40-27 lead over Stanford at halftime and then fought off a mild second half bid by the Indians. Dick Haga of Stanford was the game's high scorer with 24 points. Alex Adams tallied 16 points ' and teammates Ray Pyear and Fred Golding add ed 15 each in leading Akron to its victory over touring Se attle. The Chieftains tied the score at 43-43 early in the sec ond half by Py ear's sniping enabled Akron to open a com fortable 61-53 bulge with six minutes left. Elsewhere, Dave Klurman's 26 points paced College of Pa cific to a 67-53 victory over St. Peter's N.J., Montana turned back Oregon, 82-75, and Portland whipped North Dakota, 78-49. Crusaders To p Small Colleges . New York -(UPD The Whea ton, . 111., Crusaders remained first today in United Press In ternational's small college basketball ratings, but led un beaten Tennessee State A&I university by only 21 points. Evansville, Ind., and Steu benville, Ohio, remained 3-4 in the latest balloting by the nationwide Board of Coach es which rates the small col leges for UPI. Southwest Missouri State was fifth and Western Illin ois was sixth. Louisiana Tech was seventh. South Dakota, Idaho State and Texas South ern completed the top 10 in that order. West Virginia Tech, St. Mi chael's, Vt., McNeese, La., Chapman, Calif-, Kentucky Wesleyan, (Grambling, La.), Akron, Ohio, Pacific Luther an, Fresno State and South Dakota State rounded out the top 20. 5TH BOWL APPEARANCE Norman, Okla. (UPD Bud Wilkinson, head coach at Oklahoma who will be mak ing his fifth Orange Bowl ap pearance on Jan. 1, once was an assistant coach at Syra cuse - his New Year's Day op ponent, t - PARTS? PADGETT AUTO PARTS Special! (Mense Set (By Curtice For West Squad San Francisco -4CPB- Coach Jack Curtice, head man of the West squad for the Shrine Classic next Saturday, said today he was attempting to in stall in three days an offense for , the West team that his Stanford club couldn't learn in a whole year. ' Curtice indicated he is go ing to rely a lot upon the pass ing perfection of quarterbacks Lee Grosscup of Utah and Bobby Newman of Washing ton State. Indications are that both sides will have to depend upon the aerial game for the offensive and the defensive will have to pretty much take care of itself. Much of the East ground game may center around Nick Pietrosante, the Notre Dame fullback; and Jon Hobbs, the Two Teams Move Up In Golf Handicap Two golf teams started to move up last week in the Holiday Handicap at the Rogue Valley Country club. The team of Joe Moore and Jim Dunlevy dropped back slightly in standings while Jack Dougherty and Jack Lewis continued the big come back from the week before. Clayton Lewis-Frank Allen moved up to the number one slot in the handicap standings with a total of 22 points. Ken Teeter-Jerry Olson climbed to second with 10 points. Joe Moore-Jim Dunlevy dropped from the first spot of the prev ious week to third with eight points. Clayton Lewis-Frank Allen won 4 points from Glen Fa brickrBob Wells and 6 points from Dr. R. Odell-John Nuich. Teeter-Olson won 4 points from Lee Flink-Homer Sulli van. Moore-Dunlevy lost. 2 points to Clyde Knight-R. R. Parsons and 3 points to Jack Eidswick-Bill Kalibak. Still on the comeback trail from the previous week Lewis-Dougherty won 5 points from Ed Hall-Jay Brown and 3 points from Deane Lambert Jack Mitchell to put them at a standing of plus 3 points after having been down 12 points at one time. Allen and Lewis took six birdies and a bogie on a high low net score , of 32 on the back side for a net of 30 and a combined low net of 62 from the match with Odell Nuich. Standings: Lewis-Allen Teeter-Olson Matches Points 5 Plus 22 10 8 7 6 6 5 4 4 3 3 3 2 1 1 1 0 1 2 2 2 4 ' 4 4 6 6 6 7 7 10 12 13 Moore-Dunlevy 6 Smith-TeuUch 4 Milne-Nulton 3 Nichols-Broylea 5 Pitts-Casey 2 Meyers-Hogan 1 Sears-Mayer 5 Phillips-Gilberts on 1 Conrad-Anderson 1 Dougherty-Lewis 4 Voegtly-Cowning .. 2 Havii'nd-Humphr'y 3 PickeU-Withrow 3 Lambert-Mitchell 2 Kalibak-Eidswick 3 Clark-Mitchell 5 Boals-Miller 4 Schmidt-Lubbers 5 Knight-Parsons 3 OdeTl-Nuich 2 Holmes-Baker 3 Sanborn-Morris 2 Fabrick-Wells 5 Martin-Somers 3 Flink-Sullivan 3 Robinson-Leonard 2 Pope-Travis 5 R'menteria-Barcl'y 2 Getchell-VanDuker 3 Hall-Brown 5 Minus LOW NET BEST-BALL SCORES TO DATE 62 Clayton Lewis-Frank Allen .64 Fred Sears-Dr. Wm. Mayer 64 Paul Haviland-John Humphrey ri n n nmw a December 26 and trA v ic Wisconsin power plunger. Cur tice hopes to counteract this with the work of Nub Beamer of Oregon State and Larry Hickman of Baylor. r "But we have an ace in the hole in this kid Leon Burton from Arizona State univer sity," said Curtice. "He's listed as a 175-pounder, but he never weighed over 127 pounds, sopping wet, in his life. He . is so fast that our blockers can't keep up with him. "So I told them to just get out of the way and let Leon run. That boy really can scamper." The coaches have found some discrepancies in the weights announced by the schools. Hickman, " for in stance, was listed as a 210 pounder at Baylor but on the scales here he adds up to 234. Which is a pretty good size for a back. The double work-outs are expected to continue through Friday but the boys will be allowed to rest on Saturday morning for the afternoon con flict. Plans Made For World Ring Title St. Louis-flJPD-Detailed ar rangements were under way today for the world welter weight title bout to be fought here March 6 between cham pion Don Jordan and former champion Virgil Akins. The fight will be sponsored by the regular Friday night television sponsor but it will be blacked out on screens in the St. Louis area, Eddie Ya witz, Akins' co-manager, said Tuesday. It was rumored that sponsors for the fight were not available because of Akins' poor showing in his last title fight. The bout will be promoted by the International Boxing club and the fighters will split 60 per cent of the pro ceeds. mSSm JIUlli WHAT WOMAN, PRO OV AMATfoM, WAS ATHLCfg OPYBAJtMOTTlMfcS? The late Mildred Dldriteen Zaharla selected a v&nai athlete of theyear five times, in 1932 for track and field and in 1945, inand'MferQolft TOP THIS! To any reader submitting; contrary proot Tip Brady will send a signed, wallet-sized diploma. Write to: BEAT THIS, eo this paper. Box 575, SaussJito. Calit Enclose self -addressed, tamped envelope. - Mi. y- i fnieiu uj Liminrafeeir we id en DM . . and We Extend to One and All i y ivu icuny vuh u3 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or., Prep Scores Willamette 42, North Eugene 26 Albany 61, Dallas 48 Astoria 45, Kelso 40 Milwaukie 70, West Linn 34 Molalla 44, Clackamas 36 Forest Grove, 44, Hillsboro 41 Sandy 60, Estacada 34 - Hudson's Bay 56, Gresham 52 Ontario 48, Vale 45 Coquille 69, Waldport 51 Harrisburg 60, Mckenzie 54 Mill City 52, St. Paul 32 Fall City 45, EddyvUle 42 Illinois Valley 50. Jacksonville 46 Elgin 66, St. Patricks 44 ' Nestucca 56. Keahkahnie 44 , Gaston 59, Sheridan 41 - IV Edges Out Jacksonville By 50-46 Score Jacksonville - After a tied- up first quarter, Illinois Val ley edged Jacksonville 50-46 at Jacksonville yesterday. Illinois Valley took the lead in the second quarter with a margin of 36-23 at the end of the canto. Jacksonville never could get back but managed to whittle down the margin to four points in the last canto. rv were hot with a -.530 bucket percentage tailed by Jacksonville's .320. IVs Don Slanaker and Mike Hanby lead the IV ball snatchers with 13 points each, closely followed by Howard Ollis with 12 points. Ken Perrard, was high point man for Jack sonville with 15 points. . - The IV quintet did far better from the field than from the. free throw line. IV made 6 for 16 free, throws. Jacksonville dropped in 18 for 32 attempted. This was low for Jacksonville which . had been scoring 70 per cent in this department. IV had 21 for 39 in field goals and Jack sonville 16 for 50. NAMED FOOTBALL COACH Brunswick, Maine- (UPD -Bowdoin hockey coach C. Nel son. Corey was named Tues day night to replace football coach Adam Walsh, who re signed two months go. Corey, 43, married and the father of two young sons, was a tackle under Walsh in 1937-1939. He will give up coaching hockey to concentrate on football. Closed Car Driving Weather Is Here! DON'T RISK DEADLY x EXHAUST FUMES! Come In Today For A MUFFLERS AND EXHAUST SYSTEMS $2.50 Value NOW... A Complete Check of Your Exhaust Systeml Inspect entire system for dangerous carbon monoxide leaks. . O Parmantnriy saal all leaky connections with leakproof muffler - and tailpipo sealant. Tighten all muffler and tailpipo connections and clamps. Replace worn, broken or rutted bolts. Carefully test to assure noiseless and leakproof exhaust system. Hurry! Limited Time Offer! STORES 214 So. Riverside iu rx n w SaQray 27 - For Inventory Wednesday, December 24, 1St 9 Crater Frosh Nip Eagle Point Frosh 51-42 Central Point - The Crater Frosh trounced the Eagle Point Frosh 51-42 last night at Crater by outscoring the rival team in most depart ments. While the tight man to man defense of Crater freshmen pinned the Eagle Pointers, John Champ led the fast breaking quintet through four swift scoring quarters. Crater forged to an early lead with 11-9, widened the margin by half-time to 24-16, to 45-28 in the third quarter and piled up the final score at 51-42. Crater maintained tight monopoly at the boards and made 21 buckets for 56 at tempts. The Eagle Pointers made 15 of 56 baskets. Crater dropped a little behind Eagle Point in the free throw de partment by making nine of 20 attempted while the Eagle Pointers made 11 of 17 free throws. John Champ was high point man for Crater Frosh with 14. Eagle Pont freshman Geren was high point man for the opposition with 14 points, closely followed by Wilson with 13. Tom Jeff An horn and Ron Beman follow ed Champ with eight points each. TITLED PLATE Jackson, Miss. -(CPU Missis sippi issued a unique 1959 li cense plate to Mary Ann Mo bley today. It bears her title: Miss America. 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