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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 21

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Tttinoi Nebraska Downs Warriors, '14 to 0 MEMO WASHiNGTWO PAPK 6RAMDS7AJt 3 rVWotfY fe. XD TIME'S SA Soccer SMSo) optAK low. SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1925. RIDE ROUGH-SHOD OVER POMONA, 80 TO 0 TROJANS JUST Hera's Morton Kaer on. his way A PART OF THE TROJAN 'PARADE to a touchdown in the third qua rter of yesterday's earns with Pomona at the Coliseum.

Howard El- Hot. the real Trojan star, was so get a picture of him yesterday. Kaer was almost as speed but I IGHTY "RED" IS COMPLETELY STOPPED stopped once or twice and was snapped. Notice all the interference howing 'em down right and left yesterday and that's one reason for which has aided Kaer on his jaunt. The Trojiin athletes were the big score.

fast that the photographers failed to A A Cornhuskers Rise to Superpower and Humble Bob Zuppke's Proud Men in Memorial Stadium ELLIOTT IS BRILLIANT STAR OF GRID TRIUMPH Makes Four Touchdowns as Trojans Hang Up Largest Score in History of Institution BY BHAVKN DYKlt Showing more offensive power than a flock of runaway locomotives the U.S.C. gridders rode rough-shod over Pomona College at the Coliseum yesterday afternoon, the final reckoning being 80 to 0. It was the largest score ever made by a Trojan eleven and In addition was the worst beating ever received by a Sagehen outfit. The scoreboard boys were kept so busy hanging up the numerals that they both went to the psycopathic ward for a slight rest following their afternoon's toil. Standing out as prominently as tBT A.

P. NIQHT WIRE CHAMPAIGNE (111.) Oct. 3. Out of the mist hanging low over Illinois' $2,000,000 Memorial Stadium, a revengeful Nebraska football team, smarting under defeats of 1923 and 1924, rose to superpower today vanquishing Illinois, 14 to .0, and accomplished what no other football team has been able to do- completely stop Red Grange, America's outstanding covered with mud from head to r- -X" yr 1 Grange, heretofore unstoppable was nailed almost In his tracks virtually every time ha started. the flam ing red head ht the 50,000 spectators cheering to their feet when he broke away on a left-end run, but he was chased out bounds after iprln ting 15 yards, his most spectacular ef-fort of the Grange, making his 1925 ebut.

carried the ball nineteen times for a total gain of 62 yards. Then he was thrown back for a loss of 2 or 3 yards and once for a yard. However, he heaved a pass that netted 18 yards, making him responsible for a total gain of 80 yards. Grange, unable to pierce the magnificent Nebraska defense, and topped In his efforts to circle the ends, was taken out of the game few seconds the start of me rourtn ptiiod broken and erusnea As the noted player CARDS DEFEAT BRONCHOS Stanford Eleven Shows Improvement Over Last Week and Wins 20 to Backs Fumble Often BY PAUL IXJWRY "Times" Staff Correspondent IEXCLUSIVE DISPATCH STANFORB UNIVERSITT, Oct. 3.

Pop Warner's Cardinals had several minutse of good football in their system today and knocked over the bucking bronchos of Santa Clara by a score of 20 to 3 in the Stanford stadium here this Cf fNDAl 'l? VJ Ll Hi I fY Li LLt RF A TFN RY J-f Af V7 l-i-iJl HTM Ltl U.S.C. Peagrecn Football Team Wallops Prep Eleven in 47-to-O Game The Trojan frosh furnished the preliminary fireworks to the varsity-Pomona game In the Coliseum yesterday afternoon, and rewarded the spectators with a neat 47-to-0 victory over the Glendale High outfit, last season's prep champions. Porter. Thomas and Elliot flourished In the Babes' backfield. The contest was largely a Une-plung ing, end-running affair, with ev erything favoring the Trojan babes.

Olendale was unable to do any thing on the offense and the de fense was also weak. Wells, fullback, plunged through tackle for the initial tally of the frosh season, early in the tfirst (Continued on Page 8. Column 8) GRANGE foot, walked to the sideline, tears gathered in his eyes and he fell into the waiting arms of his com- rades. In Justice to Orange it must be said that he started the game suffering pain irom a sprained wrist sustained practice and unable to heavi forward passes with his usual skill. The stopping of Grange waa chiefly due to the deadly tackling of Capt Ed Weir, of the Ne braska eleven, himself an all-American star.

Weir smashed through the Illinois interference, spilling the players in every direction and brought Grange down with gains of 2 or 8 yards. Three times- he ran Grange out of bounds. The Nebraska line charged furiously and quickly, getting away faster than the Illinois backfield players and brought them to earth almost before they could get under way. Grange lacked the superb Interference of 1924 when he amazed the gridiron world in his sensational flights across the chalk marks. He missed Wally Mcllwain, Hall and Britton, his shock troops of last year.

Britton did not start the game today. Neither did Hall. They were rushed into the fray in an attempt to give Grange a help- (Continued on Page 8, Column 1) he hud hfiAn huiiiu being dumped by a Nevada player. Summary: Novd (0) Callfomli (54) Thitriivr Ru iUUrr "oltrln Hiit)r Bleirett Griffin IT. rnworth I.twvn Rn (C.) Gilbert Blim Wilthtn Guttsroo Frost Sulllrin Allen r.T.

IG. c. RO R.T. R.K. T.Qn r.h.

lourtff SCORB BT QUARTERS a CilifornU Ji fln, fw VfHin. Point', fn n. try ifter tomtom; Blenetl. sum ETtlif un.Pt. Hu.l.

Tim, of pwlodi. OrieM mlnutw A drnn lriu Wuv it wcbi wiae oy a uiego fumbled on her 18-yard line and Redlands recovered the ball. The Redlands' line was unable to make holes. "a try at tor. ara raiiea and McGilbra in his drop kick.

The line-up was: failed BMtiDdt. Bill Rntalrett Kflrn BntinKauth Wt MHJIIbr Tnrl K'lMffMld Wll Sta IXtga gut. LB. 1T. L.O.

C. ao. T. e. It H.

II. F. Ruh Snillh Artry BamM Pill. Vml MORS BT QIARTKK8 Tm. fBlUr Ttl.

I 1 Si- lli i RffM. hunnlpfhaa usptr. EtnTr Kllfl.t tlil MiR Ttltm 1r4'rrm tm rr Braoth. Bmm- let Ward Bnimhuxh. Thmui 1oT Jhn" imma tar flrmd- mm, uuu rr HamA.

tm. 't for RnM: B'jffa fr Hur. Robfe BRUINS TRAMPLE NEVADA Sagebrushers Noire Dame Shift Powerless Against Heavier Bear Team; U.C. Wins, 54 to 0 IBT A. P.

KIGHT WIRE BERKELEY. Oct. 8. The California University football eleven perating. with machine-like precision, completely outclassed the Ne-tada University team here today and won 64 to 0.

XT.i "r-v GRIZZLIES BEAT LA VERNE "Mercury' Cy Walton Stars for Branch in Second Victory for Bill Spaulding Eleven Headed by "Mercury" Cy Walton a 100 per cent Improved Grizzly team swept aside the La Verne Farmers In the fourth period to win a grudge battle by the score of 16 to 3 on the California tanbark yester- VWV YALE ELEVEN BEATS MIDDLEBURY BADLY BT X. P. NIGHT WIRE) NEW HAVEN (Ct.) Oct. Yule, minus the services Captain Joss, defeated Middlebury 53 to 0 this afternoon. Using three complete backfields, the Blue team made an impressive showing making eight touchdowns.

The visitors completed only three iirst downs, two on short forward pass, the oth-' er on a Yale penalty. The Yale backs showed skill in passing, open Held running and line plunging. DEBRA TRIUMPHS IN R-CLASS YACHT RACE The fifth of the fall series of yacht races for the California Yacht Club championships was won in the -class sloops yesterday by the Debra. sailed by Syl Spaulding. the Alert III finishing second.

Claire Nuner sailed the Alert, and Sterling Jeffers sailed the Canuck, which finished third. In the star class the Mala crossed the finish line first and was sailed by Harry Fisher. AG A KHAN COPS CENTENNIAL IBT A. P. NIflHT WIRE NEW YORK.

Oct 3. The Be-lair Stud Agakhan won the centennial handicap for 8-year-olds and upward, $4000 added, at a mile and a furlong, feature race at the Jamaica track today. Daa-zler of ttie Green Tree stakle was second and Dangerous, third. The time was 1:52 4-6. DISPATCH ac i xi cuu ine iirsi ten miii Wonderlich held the front posi tion with an average of 104.S miles an hour, with Calrens and Hill crowding him so close that a saddle blanket could be thrown over the speeding trio.

At the end of the eleventh lap Bennett Hill took second place away from Calrens and the leaders lapped Jimmy Hill on the next lap. Fo five laps the Fordhum University boy trailed Wonderlich and on the back stretch in the sixteenth he passed hlni. In his twenty-second lap Peter De Paolo rolled to his pit and was announced out of the race with a broken supercharger, a board from the track having smashed against De Paolo's engine. At the end of twenty laps Leon Duray had crowded Wonderlich back to fourth place, and the score read Bennett Hill Calrens and Duray, with an average of 104 miles an hour. In the next lap Jimmy Hill (Continued on Page 8, Colnmn 1) (t tr0 uame snirt wasplaced in the second period after 1 1 It was an afternoon of good, bad and indifferent football, but there was enough good to make the Card supporters for get the other kind, particularly.

when the Stanford warriors got under way in the last quarter and scored two touchdowns in rapid succession. The last score was the result of some -brilliant work on the part of the Stanford reserves, who re placed the regulars when Nevers practically cinched the game with the second touchdown. From mid-field Hyland rifled a pass to Don Hill of Long Beach who caught it while running at full speed and hoofed it 25 yards to the goal with not a man in reach. Warner stuck burly Ed Walker in at quarter to start the game, but the Cards looked like a ship without a rudder for an entire period under Ed's direction and Pop was forced to substitute Solomon. The latter got the Card machine functioning on all cylinders and the first touchdown was the result of as nice a concentrated attack as has been seen this season.

NEVERS THE DEMON "Mike Murphy and George Bogue were the heroes of the Stanford backfield along with Ernie Nevers, X.he demon fullback, who was called upon to lug the ball about five out of every eight times while he was in the game. Saita Clara contested 'bitterly (Continued on Page 8. Column 2) tVSNW NE.VE.RS day afternoon. It was a game that quickened the pulses of 6500 foot- ball hungry fans. The final score was ever in doubt until the last min 4 HAW KEY ES WIN OVER ARKANSAS Game Uncovers Brilliant Sophomore Halfback on Iowa Eleven nr a.

winnj IOWA CITY (Iowa) Oct. Nick Kutscli, sophomore, proved that he ts probably one of Iowa's, moat brilliant football players when lie led the Hawkeye's offense to a 26-to-0 victory over Arkansas here this afternoon. Kutsvh plunged off tackle and skirted the ends for two touchdowns, made I point after touchdown and made place kick for a total of the 17 points that Iowa amassed. In addition to tlmt he threw pome of th prettleHt passes that lu the opinio nof veteran sports writers ever have been hurled on the Iowa field. The first Iowa touchdown was the result of a long forward Kutseh to Schlrnier.

The latter had to run fifteen yards to the goal line. The oilier two touchdowns were the result of line smashes and end runs. A heavy rain let up Just before, the opening whistle blew and left the Held a sea of mud1' which nuidc an effective aerial attack impossible. At the ojioning of the second half Coach Ingwersen sent in a number of reserves, Dauber taking Kutsch's plane and Hogan supplanting Schlrmer in the backlield. The two teams battled on nearly even terms during the second half, Iowa being on the defensive much of the time.

PRINCETON BEATS AMHERST ELEVEN BT A. P. SIGHT WIRE! PRINCETON (N. Oct. -Princeton defeated Amherst today, 20 to 0.

scoring all its points In the second half. During the flTst half the Tigers were within a short distance of scoring, only to be held for downs. The Tigers scored once in the third period and twice in the final. Dignan accounted for two of the touchdowns and fitagle for the other. The latter also scored two points aXtsr touchdowns out of three tries.

MICHIGAN WINS OVER STATE TEAM (bt a. r. NCHT WIRE ANN ARBOR (Mich.) Oct, 3. The University of Michigan today defeated, Michigan State College, SO to 0, before a crowd of 30,000. a record assemblage at Ferry Field for an opening game.

Two touchdowns In the first period and four In the third with three points after touchdown tfdded account for the victory. KANSAS BKATS OKLAHOMA BY A. JtfCHT WtRBJ LAWRENCE (Kan.) Oct. S. The Oklahoma, Aggies lost their first game as a member of tha Missouri Valley Conference) here today to tha University of Kansas 12 to 3.

LA A 171 IE a SURPRISE WIN (BT A. r. WIGHT WIR1 PITTSBURGH, Oct. I. Duplicating Its feat of last season, murh to the surprise of close followers of the game.

Lafayette College this afternoon scored "a victory over the University of Pittsburgh Gridders. XS utes of play when Loren Peake and Cy Walton tore off long gains through the line and around end for the winning touchdowns. La Verne was a hard test ofstarted the fireworks by tearing ootbatt I.OCAIi U.S.C., 80, Ponioua 0. U.S.C. Frosli, 47, Glendale, 0.

Southern Branch, 16, La Verne, Southern Branch Frohh, 27, Southwestern, 0. 1 San Diego State, 10, Redlands, 0. NORTH California, 54, Nevada, 0. Stanford, 20, Santa Clara. 3.

Olympic Club, 34, California Aggie. 7. Washington, 50, U.S.S. Oklahoma, 0. Washington.

83, Seattle A. 0. (Second game.) Washington btato Motnana, u. tionzaga, 45, Mt. St.

Charles, 0. Stanford Froh, 25, San Maleo College, 0. San Diego High, 46, Manual Arts 0. Caltech, 27, Santa Barbara, St. Mary's.

45. Whit tier. Kureka High, 30, Areata. 6. Oregon Multnomah, 0.

Oregon Aggies, 51, 0. GENERA Ii WESTERN Colorado Agsies. 34, Regis, 0. Colorado, 23. Montana Slate, 3.

Western State, 15, Colorado Mines. Haskell Indians. 33. Tulsa. 0.

Arizona. 27. Arl.ona Fmsh. 0. Tempe State, 50, Sacalon Indians 0.

Colorado College. 0, New Mcx- Denver 13, Colorado Teachers. 0. MIDWEST Nebraska 14. lUinois 0.

Chicago 9. Kentucky 0. Notre Dame 69, Ixunbard 0. Kansas 13, Oklahoma Aggies 3. Minnesota 25, North Dakota 6.

Northwestern 14, South Dakota 7. Columbia 14, Wisconsin Mines 6. Missouri 6, Tniane Indiana 81, Indiana Normal 0. Kansas Aggies 16, Oklahoma 0. Iowa 26, Arkansas 0.

Iake Forest 18. Chicago T. 0. Mount Union 13. Heidelberg- 0.

Butler 6. DePauw 6.1 Iiawrence 12. Oshkosh 6. Cornell 3, Grlnnell 8. Wabash 18, Perdue 7.

Oberlln 19, Baldwin-Wallace 6. Kenyon 17, Asniana u. Woost er 1 1, Case 0. Ohio State 10, Ohio Wesleyan 3. Wisconsin 30, Iowa State u.

Michigan 3, Michigan State 0. St. Trjomae 20, Trinity 0. MIDiken 8, State Normal 0. St.

Olar 7, St. John 0. Carltwa 6, lAitheran 0. Yale. 63; Middlebury, 0.

narrard. 18: Rensselaer, 6. Princeton, 20: Amberst, 0. Navy, 25; William and Mary, 0. Army, 31; Detroit, 6.

Holy Crosa. St. Johns, 6. Carnegie Tech, 27; Shlel. 7.

Masjfachusetts Aggiea, 19; Bates, Delaware, 16; St. Joseph. 6. VUlanova, 20; Rutgers, 0. Syracuse, 2ftt Vermont, 0.

Colombia, 47; Johns Hopkins, 0. PemnrylvanJa, 26; Swarthmore, IS. Union, Oj St. lawrence, 0, Ijtfayctte, 20; Pltsburgs, 9. Georgetown, 19; Mt.

St. Mary's, 13. and 72; Marietta, 0. Marquette, 14; St. 0.

Brown. SS; Colby, O. New Hampshire, 15: Norwich, 2. MU Union, 12; Heklelberg, 0. CPVFV IITTOT AS -i j.Auma 4iu BLEACHERS FALL aV BT A.

P. SIGHT WIRE) a TULSA tOkla.) Oct. J. Seven persons were Injured and a score mora received i slight bruises when a tern- porary bleacher erected for tha Haskell Indiana Ur.Iver- sity ef Tulsa football game cnllspscd this sfternoon hile more than 158 pec- taters were waiting for ths gams to start. rwAAAAAAw 4.

Col. Billy Mitchell In the air scan- rial wna fho hrllllant irnrlr noward Einott tn sapping the most elusive pair of legs seen I lung vtii 'c ittD 1 r. hatred sophomore twisted and dashed his way to four touchdowns and all during the short space of twenty-one Howard Jones, Trojan mentor, evidently saw enough of Elliott during that brief period, for with the exception of parts of th'. second and third quarters the Glendale star either sat on the bench or was oft the field entirely. COULDN'T STOP HIM The Sagehens couldn't stop El liott.

Tacklers dove through the air at him and missed. He wasn't there when they aimed at hl ankles. Time and again he started around the end, cut back to the midd'e of the field, dodged a tackier here, sidestepped another there and continued on his triumphant way to the goal. On ton of his own ball-carrying performance the Olendale athlete gavs an almost perfect exhibition of how to direct a. grid team.

He drove tha eleven with speed and decision, snapping out his signals (Continued on Page 2. Column 1) up the turf for a fifteen-yard gain and then taking the batl for a thirty-yard Journey to the Farmer 7-yard line on the following play. Peake smashed through tackle for the touchdown are frost failed to convert. The second touchdown was duplicate of the first. Walton and Peake torn off games and a fifteen-yard penalty gave the Gribbllea first down on the La Verne 5-yard line and Walton went through tackle for the touchdown.

Frost converted for the extra point. Bpaulding's boys used but four plays to gain ground, while the Farmers had a bag of tricks that seemed endless. The Grizzly machine will be a heavy contender for the conference title. That was the general opinion that prevailed aft- (Contlnued on Page 8, Column S) Saints in the middle of the third period, uncorked a worid of speed and made ground virtually every try around the ends. St.

Mary's finished the game with all second-string men in both the line and backfield. The line-ups: St Mwr't. O'Kwr IK1 N.U-K1 LTA WlilitiW. RdMrtwrx Hifrt Wort KM C. RO ITU a.K Q.

IHH a hl, r. Hi-, mrMt I adrrhlll ir.4er (C.l BEAT DAVIS powerless against the heavier Rr team and time and again the Wolf Pack's fast backfield was stopped In Its tracks or thrown for losses. Several injuries marred the game. Gutteron, Nevada's crack quarter, was taken from the field In the second period with a broken leg and possible internal injuries after he had been tackled at the nd of a fifty-five yard run-back of the ball after a California kick-off. A few minutes before Roach, Nevada center and captain, suffered an injured leg and had to be replaced.

Dixon. California's triple-threat naif, and acting captain, was re- the Grizzly prowess and for the first two quarters it looked as If the Farmers would come through on the long end of the score. Mainly through the work of the Brooks brothers, John and Orvllle, the ball was kept under the shadows of the Grizzly goal post. On the tfilrd period the Farmers made their only score of the game when John Brooks stepped back on the Grizzly line and place-klfked the pig-skin between the uprights. Turney, stellar drop-kicker placed his name on the Grizzly honor roll wnen he dropped kicked from the Fwmer 35-yard line to tie the score.

Coach William must have had a heart-to-heart talk wjth his boys because they came out after the half an dmopped up the gridiron with the Farmers. Cy Walton FRED COMER WINS 150-MILE MOTOR CLASSIC AT FRESNO AZTECS BEAT REDLANDS Bulldogs Miss Field Goal and Chance Again to Score Touchdown in First Quarter EXCLUSIVE DISPATCH REDLANDS, Oot. 3. San Diego State sunk tU University of Red. tear here thi8 afternoon und- io-i- vV I baUle frm 8t8rt t0 Diego had very decided edge i the first quarter but in the second quarter Red- ltZlttrlh.

and the ba theVld on end EXCLUSIVE FRESNO SPEEDWAY. Oct. S.paBsed Calrens and took the lead. WHITTIER PREY OF SAINTS Poets Hold Northerners to Two Touchdowns for First Half Only to Fall 45 to 6 tBT A. P.

NIGHT WIRE SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. J. After holding St. Mary's to two touchdowns In the first half today, the Whlttier College football team succumbed in the last two periods and lost here. 45 to 8.

Whlttier also made a touchdown B. Smith, who went In for the Averaging 102.3 miles per hour, Fred Comer of Los Angeles won the 160-mUe Speedway classic hers today. Bennett Hill, also of Los Angeles, won second place, lng one lap and a few feet behind Comer. Ray Cairens won third and Dr. William Shattuc.

the former Kentucky medico, finished fourth. Jerry Wonderllrh. Leon tun.y, Jimmy Hill and Peter De Paolo finished fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth. A crowd estimated at 20,000 watched the eight drivers take the red flag and dash into the first turn. Calrens had the lead with Dr.

Shattuo'a close second ana Jerry Wonderlich third at the end of the Srst lap. Peter De Paolo, the 1S2 American speedway champion, fresn from the-European Grand PrU at nia. was In the rear rank at tbs start and not once was he able 10 get up among the leaders. Bennett Hil! came up from tne rear and. In the ninth lap, took third place Just a Wonderlich aicijiiDra tried narrow margin.

5 a San Diego came back strong in the third quarter and shoved the ball down the field with a series of line bucks and when held in the shadow of the' goa post, Jtott dropped back and made good a place kick for the first three points. In the last quarter Dilley went around the right end for a long gain and later packed the ball over for the touchdown. Deal kickinr the goal. Redlands did not seem to be playing aa good a game of ball as in the first game last week with the Sherman Indians The line had a harder Job on Its hands today for San Diego's line was much tronger than It was In the game with Southern Branch and the Branch found it a tough line. Redlands' best chance to tcurf Cme in the first omum-V kJ in me iirtit quarter when San a by the aerial route In the first half, but failed to convert.

Strader, St. Mary's fullback, was taken out In the second period and Grant, captain and fullback, was not used at all by Coach Madigan. who gave the impression of holding back his strength when he saw the Saints were not going to meet strenuous opposition. St. Mary's first score came at the end of the first sis minutes of play when the Whlttier safety man fumbled a punt and Bettencourt, St.

Mary's center, picked it up and went over the goal Una. WINGFEET CALTEGH SWAMPS TEACHERS NAVY WHIPS INDIANS IBT A. P. DAY WlKEJ ANNAPOLIS (Md.) Ore S. Navy's hear ler team offset the fine aerial attack of William and Mary College today, and the Middy eleren defeated the Sonilrnerfi.

25 to 0. XrT first count came In the eecond period when Hamilton rEXCLUSIVE DISPATCH SAVTA Ort. The California In-titute of Technology football team defeated the. Santa Rartwrm Teachers eleven by the score or 2" to 7 here today. Although Santa Barbara made nineteen rvt downs to tmhech'a twelre, the latler'a pere for larger iraint.

TIia same vta iktnatnltv t. 1 IBT A. P. NIGHT WtRKl S.VN VRAXCISCO, Oct. The heavier line and hacaPeUl of the) Olymnlc Hub football team was able to run all oter the line of the California AggW eleven and! won t-rr touar 34 lo The Hub leant able to gain ground aiinort at will.

Ttio Aggies? one score can when tteihr, their center, broke through the club line on an attempted forward pass, took, tha hall out of the bands of Needles, the club fullha'k, as be pulsed fur a throw, and ran SO yards for the toacbdowa. Inlewnted a t- and rinted yards to vhhln two feet or the eoal line Two rta ball over. Mia Jler kk-ked goal. In the last qnsrtcr hhapler dashed 80 yanl for another touchdown. The Indf mwwd, awl a parw from Hamilton to Tsjk canted again.

A William and Mary pan Whed their own ia-yard line, paved tba way lor the final score. poals wera kicked la this period. mi -u Rki i-ni i iirt ww it-win titrn other stprehlna; U.e field. Two or the Engineers' were the direct rrwilu of blorker ktcVa. one over the goal Une.

Santa Barbara scored iUt luae atarker abet Aadersoa aailed aJ(Bd end for serea rarda..

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