Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 23, 1963, Image 9

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    MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON
Barrett To
Face Borne
Thursday
Irish Paddy Barrelt, t h c
flashy redhead who made a big
hit with local wrestling tans
when he held Nick Kozak to a
draw on the Thanksgiving night
card, returns to the Medford
armory mat next Thursday
night and will appear in the spe-
, 4
MONDAY, DECEMBER 23, 19S3
PADDY BARRETT
Favorite Coming Back
cial event of a four-match slate
featuring some of the top pro
fessionals in the northwest.
Barrelt, who showed a f i n e
knowledge of the finer points of
wrestling, will have his work
cut out for himself this time,
however, for he meets loud
mouth Tough Tony Borne, who
is considered to be one of the
toughest of the heavyweights.
Borne left here in a huff two
months ago after losing his title
to Nick Bockwinkle and it took
considerable prodding on the
part of Matchmaker Elton Owen
to get him to come back.
The opener, scheduled for the
mat at 8:30 p.m., will introduce
Frenchy Tillet to local fans.
Tillet, who comes from Texas
with a reputation as a rough
and tough character, goes
against Ki Lee, the spectacular
Chinese judo artist, who made
his initial appearance here on
the last card.
The main event sends The
Destroyer in with Luther Lind
sey while Bockwinkle collides
with Maurice "Mad Dog" Vach
on in the semi-windup.
Ringside reserved seat tickets
are available at Lamport's
Sporting Goods store.
SPORTS
Mustangs High
For Duck Game
DALLAS (UPI) - Coach Hay
den Fry likens his Southern
Methodist Mustangs to the Mar
ine Corps, his service alma mater.
'We have Esprit De Corps
after the SMU defense once had
a chance to readjust, the going
got real sticky.
Linebackers John Hughes and
Jim Sitton, guards Ronnie Cos-
pcr and Marton Cude and tack
he says of a Mustang squad that es j0hn Knee and Bob Oyler
probably stacks up as the best exploited their stunting quick-
4-6 record team in the nation
Fry and his Mustangs are not
a bit ashamed of the record they
will take into the Dec. 31 Sun
Bowl game at El Paso, Tex.,
against Oregon. They feel the
team as earned it, losses not
withstanding. SMU commanded the rapt re
spect of all its opponents the
past season despite the fact the
1962 Mustangs won only two of
10 games.
Seven of those eight losses
were by seven points or less and
the same pattern prevailed this
past tall when four of their six
setbacks were by a touchdown
or less.
The reason was fundamental
ly team spirit and desire be
cause the Mustangs seldom
could match the opposition in
manpower.
"I would like to play jaw to
jaw football, but we don't have
the people," Fry declares. "Our
defense stunts so much because
that is the only way we can get
past our bigger opponents.
"Like the Marine Corps, we
have Esprit De Corps. It's eas
ier to keep a small squad hap
pier when you aren't winning
than a large one.
The Mustangs always seemed
happy and their record of close
ones bears out the fact they
were aggressive.
Their slim list of victories in
cludes a 32-28 defeat of Navy,
the memory of which the Mid
dies would like to erase in the
Cotton Bowl against Texas, and
a 10-0 blanking of Air Force's
Gator-Bowl bound Falcons.
And, the team's defensive stal
warts are sorry they won't get
a chance to try their shackles
on Oregon's Mcl Rcnfro, who
hurt a hand and then signed a
pro contract prior to the Sun
Bowl announcement.
The opposition made SMU look
bad early in most games, but
St. Mary's 70-63
Victor Over Saints
St. Mary's of Medford, manu
facturing a 13-point margin dur
ing a 29 - point fourth quarter,
surged to a 70-63 basketball vic
tory over St. Francis High of
Eugene here on Saturday night.
The win gave the Crusaders
a scries sweep. They beat the
Saints 87-81 on Friday evening.
St. Mary's applied a pressing
game over the second, third and
fourth slamas in their Satur
day night ruckus. For the sec
ond night the Crusaders had a
troublesome first half. The press
hurt them a little in the second
quarter but they stuck with it.
In the third session it began to
gain results and it paid real
dividends in the fourth.
First quarter score was tied
14-all. St. Francis went in front
31-22 in the second canto and
led 43-41 at the end of the third.
St. Mary's took the lead at 47-45
on a jump shot by Randy Cor
liss. The Crusaders, who gained
their third win of the season
without a loss, extended to 67-54
with three minutes left to play.
Batzer Scores 2S
John Batzer ran up 26 count
ers as four Crusaders scored in
double totals. Corliss had 13, Ron
Roberts 12 and Mike Soran 11.
Mike Kehoe put in 25 for the
Saints and Scott Taylor 11. Cor
liss cleared 11 rebounds and
Kehoe 10. St. Francis had 31-30
team edge in retrieves.
Twenty of 35 shots from the
free line made the scoring dif
ference for St. Mary's. The
Saints of Eugene hit nine of 14.
St. Francis shot .422 from the
field on 27 of 64 and St. Mary's
.349 on 25 of 72.
SM Coach Dick Paup declared
that he was real pleased with
his whole Crusader group both
games. He praised the club for
lots of hustle. He said he was
especially pleased with Dennis
Rose who is "really coming
along" in his rebounding and
also his shooting.
The Eugene club is now 2-2
for the season with the Oregon
School Activities Association de
termining that their game with
Pleasant Hill was a victory.
The question was whether SF
won 68-67 or 68-66 or tied 68-all.
St. Mary's will play in the
holiday tournament this Friday
and Saturday at Cave Junction.
ncss to the utmost to keep the
enemy off balance.
SMU's offense, however, had
only sporadic moments of glory.
Against the Navy, the Mustangs
sprang converted track star
John Roderrick loose for some
tremendous sprints around end
and quarterbacks Danny Thom
as and Mac White kept pump
ing away with their passes to
clutch player Billy Gannon. It
was SMU's finest night.
"We were truthfully not that
good," Fry says of that Navy
victory. "Only our hustle kept
us in the game. We won because
we wouldn't give up."
That is the same esprit de
corps Oregon will have to watch
for against SMU, which hasn't
been to a bowl game since it
beat Oregon 21-13 in the 1949
Cotton Bowl.
Basketball
SATURDAY'S COLLEGE SCORES
, By United Press International
EAST
Cornell 76, Columbia 74
Drcsel fiO, Upsala 50
Uttca 8!t. Brooklyn Poly 74
Army 83. Manhattan 5H
St. Bonaventurc 87, E. Ky. G3
iLaSnllc 58, Niagara M
Hofstra f)l, Wagner 80
Oswego 81. Queens 68
Syracuse 100, Valparaiso 66
C. W. Post 76. Alfred fi8
Fordham 84. Dartmouth 31
Adelphi 04. Hunter 53
Temple 65, Pcnn 55
Canisius 84. Connecticut 5R
Boston Coll. 04, Los Aug. St. 83
Long Island 04. Clark 76
Marshall 102. St. Francisf Pa. I &1
Geneva 64, Carnegie Tech til
Boston U. 80. Maine 70
SOUTH
Tennessee 81, Va. Tech 60
Maryland 75, Louisiana St. 65
Fla. Southern 102, Tenn. Wes. 01
Brcklcy loa, Shenandoah 7fi
Davison 105. E. Carolina 77
Ga. Tech 06. Georgetown DC 71
Spwanee 07. D. Lipscomb 85
Florida St. 107. Tampa fil
Ky. Weslcyan 82, So. Carolina 74
Alabama 80, So. Mississippi 74
Memphis St, 08. Mississippi 78
Tulsa 86. Florida 82
Vandcrbilt 01. Louisville 82
MIDWEST
Ohio St. 78. Wichita 60
Michigan 83, Duke 67
Notre Dame 70. Northweilern 68
Minnesota 64, Drak. 51
Detroit 02, Hillsdale 48
Akron 72. Kent St. 70
DcPauI 00. Marquette 6!)
Ball St. 78, Buffalo St. 66
Washington (Mo.) 56. New Mex.
55
Evansville 110. Purdue 84
Butler 82. Toledo 61
Dayton 86. Murray St. 71
Iowa St. 103. So. Dakota SI. 50
Indiana St. 71, St. Cloud St. 58
St. Louis 72. Missouri 65
W Mich. 106, No. Illinois 78
So. Illinois 74. S.W. Missouri 68
SOUTHWEST
Ariz. St. (Tempel 71, Calif. 66
Mich. St. 118. Oklahoma 100
Tex. Western 61, Win. & Mary 51
Arkansas St. 84. Tulane 77
Tex. Christian 64, Arlington 61
Oklahoma St. 60. Texas 53
WEST
Colorado 80, Wyoming 71
Colorado St. 06. Wash. St. 60
Utah 70, Rice 72
Montana St. 72, Bemidjl St. 52
Utah St. 64, Arizona 60
Humboldt St. 70, Oregon Tech 65
Baylor 79, Long Beach St. 67
Oregon St. 56, Indiana 32
San Francisco 75, Kansas 58
Fresno St. 100, Adams St. 62
Stanford 72, St. Mary's, Calif., 37
Pacific U. Cal. 76, San Fran. G5
USC 79, Nebraska 64
Lewis & Clark 90, Pac, Luth. 70
Pepperdine 02. Pasadena 76
Puccl Sound 86. Linficld 83
UCLA 95. Creighton 79
Weber St. 116. Chicn St. 62
California Western 64, San Diego
Marines 59
Hamilton AFP. 77, Whittier fil
Wayland 69, Navy Phibpac 62
LINKUPS:
St. Francis 61 Kehop 25. Tay
lor It, Mav . Thomas 8. Maison,
Schmitz. O'Neil 2. Hcrold. Welch
7. Lathrop. Gallagher 1.
SI. Marv's TO Corliss 13, Soran
11. S. Cook 2. Roberts 12, Batzer
26, Scott 4. Rose 2.
MEMO:'
TO MEN ONLY
Oi, fudUnft- UtAj&mAh jjvdpjmy- efa
$5-00 Saf-Oum (hpt irym. SINGER
SEWING CENTER, tW. Jltt bn (4jfMt hip
Ot faity tyn& of 101 rW,SINGER caal.
1
D
3 r&
111 Ent Mtin Street Optn 'til 9 Mon.-Fri.
Medford 772-7 IS) Grnn Pin 474-4343
A 9
SCOR1CS IN OVERTIME Jim Consbruck
(53) of Phoenix High starts down after put
ting ball up for field goal in Saturday
night basketball game with Myrtle Creek.
This score was in the overtime. Consbruck
was fouled and added the gift shot to cut
a Myrtle Creek lead to 40-39. Phoenix went
on to win 47-44. Score at the end of regular
time was 36-all. Myrtle Creek players identi
fied are Dennis Bircnbaum (at left) and Bob
Beanblossom (55). At right in Ron Williams
(52) of Phoenix.
West Coast Basketball Teams
Gird For Tourneys This Week
By HAL WOOD
UPI Sports Writer
Kentucky Invitational
Al Lfxlncton, Ky.
Final
Kentucky flB, Wake forest 7S
Consolation
Princeton DO, Wisconsin 87 (o.t.)
Sunday's Collcsc Score
ScatUc U. Q2, Portland B?
This is the week of the big
test for West Coast college bas
ketball teams.
There's the Los Angeles Clas
sic in the southland, the Far
West Classic at Portland, the
West Coast Athletic Conference
event in San Francisco, and an
All-College Tournament at Ok
lahoma that attracts three
Western teams.
But unbeaten Stanford shies
away from all tourney compe
tition and tangles with Kansas
tonight, Southern Method
ist Saturday and Arizona State
Dec. 30.
"By then we'll know just
what we may be able to expect
from our team when the con
ference race opens Jan. 3,"
said Indian coach Howie Dall-
mar. "We've only played four
games so far and really haven't
had a chance to find out too
much about our club."
The Indians waxed St.
Mary's, 72-37, Saturday night
lor their lourth triumph in
row.
Competing in the Los Angeles
Classic where undefeated
UCLA and USC act as co-hosts,
will be Michigan, Illinois, New
York University, Pittsburgh
West Virginia and Yale.
The Bruins won their sixth
slrrght on Saturday night by
drubbing Cremhton, 95-79, on
the strength of Walt Hazzard's
26-point performance.
And Southern California
warmed up for the big one by
whipping Nebraska for the sec
ond straight night, 79-64.
Favored Oregon State meets
Louisiana State the first round
of the tournament at Portland.
The Beavers, with seven wins
out of eight starts this year,
knocked over Indiana twice
during the weekend, with a 56
52 score on Saturday night. Oth
er teams competing in this
classic are Iowa, Colorado
State, Brigham Young, Seattle,
Oregon and Washington State.
University of San Francisco
hosts the WCAC tournament.
The other teams entered are
Loyola of Los Angeles, Univer
sity of Pacific, Pepperdine, St.
Mary's, San Jose State, Santa
Clara and Santa Barbara.
The Dons, who are favorites
to win the conference champi
onship this year, are off to a
rough start. They dropped three
games in a row on the road,
i dropped the finale of the Sun
Devil classic at lempe, Ariz
on Saturday night to host Ari
zona State, 66-71.
Washington, which was idle
during the past week, meets
Colorado Slate tonight, then
plays in the Oklahoma tourna
ment along with Idaho and
Montana Stale from the West.
In the Holiday Tournament at
San Diego, California Western
won the championship by de-
SPORTSCASTS
BREAKS OWN RECORD
MOSCOW (UPD-Lidia Skob
likova of Russia broke her own
world speed skating record by
one-tenth of a second Sunday
when she covered 1,000 meters
in one minute, 34.6 seconds, it
was reported by Tass agency
from Chelyabinsk, Siberia.
STANFORD PLAYS KANSAS
STANFORD, Calif. (UPI) -
Stanford announced Friday it
will play Kansas in an inter
sectional football game at Stan
ford Stadium, Sept. 23, 1967.
Stanford travels east that year
for a game with Army in New
York on Oct. 28.
fcaling San Diego Marines, 64-
59.
In a big Sunday battle, fire
house guards Charlie Williams
and Poller Phillips led Seattle
to a 92-87 victory over Port
land. It was the Chieftains'
sixth consecutive win without a
loss.
Williams hit 25 points lo lead
the winners' scoring, while big
Steve Anstett had 34 for the
losers.
Crater High Tops
Lebanon Warriors
To Split Series
Chargers Top AFL In West;
Boston, Buffalo Tie in East
By NORMAN MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
It figures to be a michtv cold
day Saturday when the Boston
Patriots and Buffalo Bills meet
in the American Football
League's Eastern Division play
off but the winner can expect
a warm reception one week lat
er in San Diego.
The San Diego weather should
be sunny and the San Diego
Chargers hot.
The Chargers clinched the
Western Division crown Sunday
with a 58-20 rout against the
Denver Broncos and now have
two-week stretch in sun-
soaked California to prepare
for the AFL's title playoff
against the Eastern Division
winner at San Diego, Jan. 5.
the Bills and the Patriots.
who ended their regular season
last weekend with 7-6-1 records,
clash next Saturday afternoon
at Buffalo in temperature that
undoubtedly will be freezing.
uoacn bid Uillman and h s
Chargers will be waiting to
thaw out the winner.
High Scoring Game
The Chargers weren't the only
Blades Gain
WHL 2nd Spot
By United Press International
The Los Angeles Blades had
second place all to themselves
today in the Western Hock
ey League.
The Blades opened a 4-0 lead
against the third-place Seattle
Totems Sunday night and then
held on for a 4-3 victory in the
nights only game. That in
creased Los Angeles second-
place advantage to three points,
but left the Blades still a dis
tant nine points behind the pace
setting Denver Invaders.
The Blades opened with a
three-goal flurry in the first pe
riod and added another marker
in the second period before Se
attle came storming back with
three goals in the final period.
hot team tn the league on the
final Sunday of the regular sea
son. The Oakland Raiders edged
the Houston Oilers, 52-49, in the
highest scoring AFL game ever
played. Despite the win, the
Raiders failed in their game try
lo overtake San Diego. The
Kansas City Chiefs drubbed the
New York Jets, 48-0 in Ihe oth
er game played.
In winning the Western Divi
sion title for the third time in
four seasons, the Chargers fin
ished with an 11-3 record, one
game ahead of Oakland. In
their first two playoff ventures,
in 1960 and '61, the Chargers
lost both times to Houston.
Paul Lowe scored two touch
downs, on runs of 10 and 66
yards, and gained 183 yards in
17 carries for San Diego. The
Chargers scored Ihe first four
times they had possession of the
ball, yet they led only 26-17 at
halftime.
Don Breaux, rookie Denver
quarterback, hit on eight
straight pass attempts during
the first half to keep his team
in the game. However, George
Blair s 28-yard field goal and
Lowe's 66-yard touchdown run
pulled the Chargers away in the
third period. And wilh second-
string quartei'DacK Jonn nam
taking over for most of the fi
nal quarter, they broke the
game wide open with 22 points.
I' our Records Set
Mike Mercer of Oakland
kicked a 39-yard field goal with
4:37 remaining to beat the Oil
ers. At least four records were
set in the game. In addition to
the 101-point total, Clem Dan
iels set an AFL season rushing
record of 1,098 yards and Art
Powell caught four touchdown
passes. Daniels gained 158 yards
Sunday, giving him two more
yards than the record set last
year by Buffalo's Cookie Gil
christ. Tom Flores completed six
touchdown passes, one less than
the AFL record; George Blanda
who holds that mark, threw
five TD tosses. Oakland gained
407 yards by passing and 181
by rushing for a 588-yard total
offense that also was a single
game mark.
The Raiders, who won only
one game in 1962, closed out the
'63 season with eight straight
wins and a total of 10.
CHARTER
From Ashland
AIRPORT
CHEROKEE 180
AL PORTER
LEBANON-Cratcr High's Co
met cagcrs grabbed the lead at
the slart and stayed in front on
Saturday night to defeat Lcba
non here 49-38.
The outcome evened the score
for a Friday night 52-51 win by
Lebanon.
It was a slow, deliberate con
test with the home team War-
riors playing a control offense
and zone defense. The Comets
worked the ball in for short
jump shots for their field
scores.
Good rebounding and scoring
work by big men Bob Stroh and
Mike Turner, backboard aid by
Darryl Summerficld and scor
ing support from Summerficld
and Larry Pepper figured in the
triumph. And the Comets were
steady with the ball.
Capitalizes on Fouls
Crater had 13-2, 19-12 and 32-
27 quarter leads with a gap once
of 17-2. Lebanon cut the Comet
margin to 28-26 with two min
utes left in the third quarter.
Pressing tactics by the Warriors
as the Fireballs came down the
court with the ball, however, led
to fouls and Crater was able to
capitalize on these to widen its
advantage.
Mike Turner had 15 points and
Stroh 13 for the Comets and
each cleared eight rebounds.
Steve Simpson's 13 points were
high for Lebanon.
The Warriors started to close
the gap in the game as Crater
Coach Lloyd Hoffinc began giv-
inr reserves onnortunitv lo see
but came back to snow under duty.
Kansas, 75-53, on Ihe home Crater free shots brought
court Saturday. OUie Johnson , aboul the scorjng difference in
scorea 4 points, wte uuns now
stand 4-3 for the season.
California's in-and-out Golden
Bears stay on the independent
path during the week spending
a holiday in Hawaii. They
the hassle. The Fireballs pul in
25 of 34 free chances. Lebanon
look 11 gift shots and made four.
Warriors colected 17 field buck
ets and Crater six. The Central
Point club was charged with
just nine fouls and Lebanon
with 22.
Comets made 18 of their free
shots in Ihe second half.
The Fireballs were quicker
on the boards than on Friday
night and had rebound advan
tage in the second game. Mike
Turner looked particularly good
on the boards, as well as in his
scoring. And, hustle by Stroh
paid off for him and for the
Comets.
Crater stuck wilh man-lo-man
defense most of Ihe distance. It
hit .364 from the field.
Hoffinc will hold Thursday and
Friday, morning workouts for
the Comets. They play Douglas
at Central Point on Saturday
night.
ANNOUNCE MATCH
WORCESTER, Mass. (UPD-
Promoter Sam Silverman an
nounced Sunday that Joey Ba
silio of Syracuse, N.Y., will
meet Frankio Cooper of Valley
Stream, N.Y., in an eight-round
featherweight bout al Mechan
ics Hall Thursday. Basilio is a
brother of former welterweight
champion Carmen Basilio.
The following freight- companies
will be
CLOSED
Tuesday and Wednesday
December 24 & 25th
Pacific Motor Trucking Co.
Consolidated Freighways
Pierce Freight line
O.N.C. Motor Freight System
Los Angeles-Seattle Motor Express
BOX:
Crater KO
Summ'rlield 1-8
M. Turner .. fi-io
Stroh .... :i-n
B. Turner .. n-2
Pepper H-4
Swnnsnn .... 0-0
Twcdcll 0-0
IT neb. PFTP
Glftwe
While ..
hnrn
Ncufelrl
Rycrnon
. 0-1
. Il-ll
. o-n
, n-o
. o-o
5-7
.1-1
7-10
0-1
0-0
0-0
0-0
2-2
n-n
0-0
Totals I3-J3 25-34 21 9 '19
l.ehalioll
JoHllll
Kpikrr
Mandley .
Brisker
Simpson .
firirve
McchHls
Clnrk . ...
Summeri
Afohott ...
Total
m
i
... o
FT
1-2
0-0
0-0
0-3
0-2
0-0
0-0
o
SKUNK TOP-RATKD
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
United States Polo Association
today rated Robert Skene of
Santa Barbara, Calif., the only
10-goal player in the nation.
Harold Barry of Truscott, Tex.,
Dr. William R. Linfoot of Sanla
Barbara and Lewis Smith of
East Aurora, N.Y. were listed
as the only nine-goal players.
TIKS RUSSIA
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPD
Chuck Stuart scored twice Sun
day to bring about Knoxvillc's
4-4 tie with a visiting Russian
National All-Star hockey team.
Stuart set an Eastern Hockey
League record of 78 goals last
season.
Albany To Have
Freeze-Dry Plant
ALBANY (UPI) -Plans for a
freeze-dry food processing plant ,
here to begin operation next
summer were announced by of
ficials of Oregon Freeze Dry
Foods Saturday.
Ellis Byer, manager of the
project, said the facility will be
one of Ihe largest of its kind in
the country.
The freeze - dry process in
volves freezing foods, then plac
ing them in high vacuum cham
bers where water is evaporalcd
directly from the ice surface,
the finished product retains its
original form and size but is
pourous.
Among Ihe developers of Ihe
process is Prof. Robert L. Smith
a vice-president and director of
the Albany firm. Smith is an as
sociate professor in Ihe depart
ment of food and science and
technology at Oregon Stale Uni
versity. A member of the Slate Plan
ning and Development Depart
ment, William Miller, said in
Portland he was "excited about
the tremendous future" of the
forthcoming project.
O
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IS IT THE ANSWER FOR
YOUR TRANSPORTATION
NEEDS
Leasing a tar or truck isn't the answer for everyone,
but for many small or medium size businesses or for
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of operating vehicles. There are many advantages
of leasing, but four main reasons why you should
LEASE YOUR CAR OR TRUCK FROM SOUTHERN
OREGON LEASE.
1. NO CAPITAL TIE-UP ... At Southern Oregon
Lease we require only the first and last months
lease payment in advance. No deposits are required
for the people we lease to have good credit ratings
and we respect their integrity.
2. NO DEPRECIATION RISKS . . . Unlike some lease
plans, when you lease from S.O.L. you don't have
to gamble on the used car market or have any
resale obligations. The monthly payment we quote
you is for the total lease period . . , you know the
costs.
3. FLEXIBILITY OF LEASE PLANS ... We will lease
you a car or truck from 12 to 24 months with
monthly costs cut to a minimum. Choose a full
maintenance or straight net type lease.
4. FORD AUTHORIZED LEASE SYSTEM MEMBER
SHIP . . . Southern Oregon Lease is a member of
F.A.L.S. . . . the world's largest leasing organization.
Wherever you are in the United States there is a
F.A.L.S. member near by to service your vehicle,
yet we are a locally owned and operated company
and we have the largest service facilities in Southern
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lease period.
Take a minute to discover whether leasing is the
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SEE JIM COLEMAN
SOUTHERN OREGON LEASE CO.
6TH & FIR
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rtu-Miaiwi imwi i&utM inita
773-7591
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