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The Atlanta Constitution from Atlanta, Georgia • 21

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Atlanta, Georgia
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Grantland Rice -W. O. McGeehan Henry McLemore Alan J. Gould Walter Trumbull Ralph McGill, Sport Editor Clarence Nixon Jimmy Jones Walter Wilke Roy E. White THE ATLANTA CONoTl i I iuw -r 'Br FIRST SPORTS EACH DAY ATLANTA, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 18, 1931.

Tulane 1 Vandy OVols 25; Tide Q--Nofre Dame 63; Drake 0 it it it it it Vr it it it it GEORGIA ROUTS CAROLINA; AUBURN BEATS; TECH Here Are 12 of Auburn's 1 3 Points All Collected for You! TIGERS OUTPLAY rrwfPK h. I TARHEELS SCORE ON SECOND TEAM EARLY IN GAME Georgia Backs Again Shine in Crushing De JACKETS TO WIN FIRSTMCE 19 Hatfield, Hitchcock and Phipps Lead Attack on Tech Here. C1 vji feat of N. C. U.

By Jimmy Jones. Staff Correspondent. CHAPEL HILti, N. Oct. 17.

3 IVsva "I I tinrhn mi i 4ke thia affAV. jioon those sturdy Tarheels of North Carolina knew what it was like to be ahead of the Georgia team that conquered Yale. They heard 17,000 voice acclaim them as they scored the game first touchdown and for an entire quarter and part of another they rode the Croat of elation that comes to the underdog who ly gets on top. i They guarded that precious lead like soldiers protecting a hard-won advantage, and after vieldinz one touendown to liuster Alott, clubbed Constitution photographers got both of Auburn's touch own 42-yard line. Brown left the game shortly after this ort iurthcr efforts ot a struggling Georgia second team to overhaul that 7-6 margin.

Then Georgia's old guard the veteran campaigners who usually remove the doubt from em-4 barrassing situations came on the scene to override a stubborn defense and rush onward to a 32-7 conquest for the Red and Black. Chuck Collins, their roach. trotted out one of those proverbial dark bronchos in the person of Ift Halfback Bill Crnom and he almost ran away with that football game. He spurted through the Georgia team for yards and score noon after the opening kick-off and he came back a Hill. I.

i I in white with upraised arms is Referee Darwin, indicating the touchdown. These two pictures account for 12 points. Hitchcock added one by placement after the first score. Photos by Kenneth Rogers, George Cornett and Bill Mason. downs Saturday- at Grant field when the Tigers beat 13 to 0.

At the left Tom Brown is shown over the line for the first touchdown after the Tigers had marched from their with a broken rib. The picture at the right shows Phipps over the line with the ball in Auburn's second touchdown. The larger figure in white is Boozer Pitts, umpire. The figure IRISH RUN WILD I pass to the wing-heeled Rip Slus-J ser that put the ball on Georgia's jve. rrfe.

i AND WIN, 63 TOO Pent-Up Notre Dame L. fc- m'n imrry aienre rurnHi 10 mac faithful old guard that has pulled him through many a near Waterloo. He told his 11 crsck broncho husters to gm out there and put a halter on Fury Breaks Lose in Scoring Orgy. Vanderbilt Beaten By Tulane, 1 9 to 0 Commodores Ousted From Conference Race By Strong Attack of Greenie Squad. By Freddie RusselL NASHVILLE, Oct.

17. Vanderbilt's hopes for an undefeated season and a Southern conference title were dashed on the rocks Saturday as the roaring Green Wave from Tulane University surged across Dudley field for a 19-to-0 victory. After shooting their scoring wad by failing to push over a touchdown when fumbles presented the opportunity early in the first quarter, the Commodores were caught without their life-preservers and were dashed on the rocks by the Olive Tide that thrice swept over the stadium terrain. Halfback Bill Crooi.i. He told his bard-riding four horsemen Downes, Pickens, Key and Roberts to lasso SOUTH BEND, Oct.

17 (JF Wild William and bring, him down to earth, AXDTHEY DID IT. The 11 btWBcho busters did as they were -They went in The pent-up fury of Notre Dame's big football squad defeated the valiant there and hurled back four -deter but outclassed Bulldogs from Drake today, 63 to 0. the largest scoring avalanche to victimize them since they started playing the mined thrusts at their goal line defense from the 5-yard line. They let Rip Slusser buck to the 2-yard line Where was there a Paul Revere to saddle his horse on Saturday afternoon and sound the wild alarm that the British were that Hannibal was at the gates, that the dam had bust and all was lost? There was none. And so a mild October, day swung into the shadows of the evening to find that the football-results were the most cataclysmic of this or any other era.

Not all the wrecking crews in the world can clear away all the football debris of Saturday. Not if their shovels sound upon the air night and day. By Ralph McGill. Those fighters from the plains Auburn came thundering up from the wilderness of defeat to the rim of the sun-lit uplands Saturday afternoon at Grant field with a 13-to-0 defeat of Georgia Tech. All the pent-up bitterness of 11 years without a victory over the team from the Flats was wiped out by the -swift legs of Firpo Phipps and Jimmy Hitchcock as they moved behind the screen -made by nine other men working for the common cause.

It was a long wait from the cold fall of 1919 to the chill Oc- tober afternoon of 1931. But when the shadows began to fall about the cold concrete stands at the Flats the bedlam of joy from the Auburn benches indicated that the taste of victory was sweeter for the delay. Only the stubborn courage of the Jackets kept the. score from mounting. They were i fighting with dull weapons against weapons that were edged and sharp.

But they fought it out to the last, bitter moment. The wonder is that the score was not greater. DID THEIR BEST. And when, in the dressing room after the game, Coach Alexander gathered his defeated squad about him and told them they had done their befit, and that on next "Saturday he knew they would still fight through to the end, there was surcease for them in; that moment. Once the Auburn football team drank of thr touchdown tonic early In the game, there was no doubt of the issue.

The better team won. The Auburn team was superior in every department of play. It was a more experienced team than that of the Jackets. It struck with- sureness, with speed and with deadly accuracy. It was a team that sped along like a group of antelopes that blocked hard and well and tackled hard.

SPEED OF ATTACK. It was the speed of the attack which baffled the Jackets. They stopped that attack time after time, rushing here and there to plug up a hole, only to have another open and the attack swarm through. It was a de- fense harassed, by too much speed to cope with. Three times the Jackets hurled back the surging move downfield.

On two other occasions the bolea were there and the snipers from the Plainsmen shot through to wreck the defense and let through the runner to cross the line. Auburn can write high on her scroll of football heroes today the names of 1 two men Jimmy Hitchcock and Fir- po Phipps. HERE'S THE BOY. Hitchcock hitch-hiked his way up and down that field until hia name became monotonous In the metallic voice of the loud speakers. And Firno Phipps was smashing the line or dashing off tackle nr attacking outside the flanks.

There is a player whose name should have been spelled Phitts JSatnrday afternoon. He gave Tech fits. Behind them and with them and In front of them charged Lindley Hatfield, Marion Talley. No-Parking Parker; who intercepted most of the Tech passes Chaitie Davidson and Tom Brown. THAT GREAT LINE.

And in front of them all were those seven men who fought back all Wisconsin had a week before. By all odds they should have been tired and a bit worn. Yet thev were not. They crouched in the line, tense; their hands moving in a sort of dumb-show pantomime, and they struck with great speed. The Auburn line came through, again.

Thinking it over, the game fight of the Jackets becomes all the more remarkable. They were fumbling where Auburn was sure. And the pity of it is that the three or four stands they made will be forgot in the cheers for the victor. It doesn't really The fact that they made them is enough. FIRST SCORE.

Auburn's first touchdown came after Continued an Second Sports Page. Irish. Smarting under the criticism 're in the first play and then they threw Bill Croom back for a 3-yard loss. Bill threw a rtass over the sroal line ceived for failing to score against Riding the crest of the Green Wave Northwestern in the mud of Soluiers was Nome ielts. the married man I.

and it was Georgia's ball. 7. Tha Inanlraul Tarlioela finallv fullback, who plowed through the field last week, the touchdown mak ers of Notre Dame paraded up. and down the field with monotonous regularity. The game wasn't even interesting except for the scouts of rival teams, who confessed that they never week ago "one to pieces by a Vanderbiirs proud Commodores, called a of the greatest McGugin teams," was shot had seen a greater running attack.

were pulled down off their high horse and Rill Croom, their dark horse, was reduced from a gallop to a ranter and then to a walk. Rip Slusser eontinned to be a threat for a time, but those Georgia first stringers ruled the field from then on. They tacked on a comfortable margin of points and then the heavy artillery was withdrawn from the battle, leaving the shock troops in there to skirmish and take pot shots at the tiring Tarheels for the rest of the Even the staunchest followers of Notre Dame football fortunes, accus tomed to seeing Drake throw up a Tulane attack and defeated, 19 to o. And how? Was it the fleet set of Tulane backs, the great collection of triple threats, the masterful legerdemain of passes? It was not it was the line attack by a married man of about 29 years of age. Vanderbilt's ends were weak.

Her line was great defense each year, were some what awed bv the rapidity of the Irish touchdown combinations. Fifty-seven players, two more than five afternoon. complete teams, 1 were used in action but still the Huskies from little Drake couldn't stop the attack. The more Tulane went through the line. strong.

substitutes to enter the game, the more bewildering was the rush to ward the Drake goal Notre Dame gained fi36 yards from scrimmage to but 60 for Drake. Of the 28 first downs scored, Notre Dame collected 23 to Drake's 5. Most of the touchdowns came by Ions runs. SOUTHERN CONFERENCE. Auburn IS Georgia 3 North Carolina 7 Tulane 19 0 Tennenee 25 Alabama 0 Syracuse 33 1J Duke 0 Davidson V.

F. 6. and Mary Kentucky Maryland i West Virginia 19 W. I Sewanee 6 Chattanooga 9 Miss. A.

ft 0 Louisiana State, 31 SOUTH. Handolph-Macon 7 6 Xenoir Shyaa 0 Milligaa 15 Presbyterian 0 Wofford 9 Sicbmond Furmaa 34 Parris Island Catawba 13 Southern Methodist II Rice It Baylor 19 7 Howard 96 Killsapa 0 Centenary 7 0 Western Ky. Teh. 13.. Middle Tenn Teh.

0 Morehead Teachers 7 Bennett 0 Tennessee Tech 37 Bethel 0 Kins; 7 Texas Christian Texas A. M. Texas I 0 -Southwestern Xa. La. Tech 38 Greenbrier 38 Kentucky Mil.

0 Lynchburc 0 Eloa 26 Piedmont 12 Appalachian 94 EAST. Georgia won the football game decisively enough. In fact, any team should be contented with a i victory. But the game was not such 'i a cake-walk for the Bulldogs as it appears. They had to Mo some old-fashioned manual labor to get those early touchdowns and the Carolina team fought all the way.

Harry sMehre, the Georgia coach, said after it was over: "It looks easy now but it certainly lacked a lot of being that while It was going on. We had a battle for a while and Chuck Collins had a team out there that knew its business. As for Collins, he thought his boys plaved hard football and showed some 5 1 it. i. v.j which saw the Notre Dame backs blocking beautifully, Except for the first few minutes of play, Drake's defense, which has stopped all teams in the Missouri Val TIDE DEFEATED BY TENNESSEE Alabama Goes Down Before Hard-Tackling Volunteers, 25 to 0.

By Walter Wilkes, Staff Correspondent. SHIELDS WATKIXS FIELD, KNOXVILLE, Oct. 17. Those big bad boys of the southern confer ence Alabama and Tennessee who have pounded unmercifully upon the smaller and weaker brethren of the academy this season, got together back of the schoolhoii.se at recess today and battled things out to a finish. It turned out to be Alabama's finish.

With the great McEver displaying an astounding proficiency as a forward passer, and Allen, Brackett, and Feathers making a show of the hitherto highly regarded Alabama ends, Tennessee's great team swept to a surprisingly easy victory, 25 to 0. Considered by the majority of the experts to have an edge over their rivals, though neither team had been subjected to anything like a real test all season, the Crimson Q'ide never looked like a winning team today. Although they trailed at only 7 to 0 at the half. It was jnst at the fiual whistle, with Leon Long ploughing big holes in the third string Tennessee line which had been sent in, that the big red team from Tuscaloosa came closest to the Volunteer's goal, and even then fhey were 32 weary yards away. At no time in the 60 minutes of savage play did the boys who took their eh a re of the laurels in the Rose Bowl victory last New Year's Day threaten to score this afternoon.

A capacity crowd of 20,000, gathered in honor of Tennessee's homecoming stand against an honored foe, was stunned at first by the ease with which the Volunteer line swept its giant opponents off their feet, but later rose gaily to the occasion and made the great Smoky Mountains ring with their plaudits as the margin of victory mounted in the final quarter to the startling point it ultimately achieved. The utter inferiority of the Alabama line, with the mighty Newton Godfree hopelessly handicapped by a severely injured knee which he suffered in practice Friday afternoon and this in addition to a bad shoulder which was already giving him trouble plus a miserably inadequate defense against smart passing, told the final story. There was only one bright spot In the game from an Alabama viewpoint, and that lay in the superb work of John (Hurry) Cain. His pnnting was uniformly fine, and even with Milton Frank, Bill Saunders and Herman Hickman making a shambles of that Crimson line, it was Cain who fought his way through to the individual ground-gaining honors of the day. Hillman Holley.

up to today "tie leading scorer in the conference, was bottled up all afternoon like grandma's best preserves. In 12 tries at the snarling Orange line, Holley came out with a net loss of 2 yards, 'but Cain, who was watched just as closely and tackled just as hard, rang up a net gain of 55 yards in 15 attempts. For some reason, Leon Long was not sent into the game until the final quarter, but then looked good with 28 yards in four tries. McEver, who was pretty well throttled in his assaults at the line (except when it was a question of 3 yards and a touchdown), played a magnificent game with his diabolically accurate passing, and bis unflagging industry, in backing up the line on defense. There were plenty of other Tennessee heroes.

Hickman and Saunders, great linemen both, playing their final season, were expectd to do well, and they did. Captain Mayer, at center, came through by outplaying his Alabama opponent. Captain Sharpe. It was Milton Frank sophomore guard, who was the outstanding man in that fine rush line. Coach Key-land said, after the game, that Frank ley conference for the past three years, fell apart.

The Bulldogs often got their man after a -few yards' Gold and Black rampart for touchdowns in the second and third quarters. The final score came by the same method late in the fourth quarter, Payne packing the oval. OUTPLAYED THROUGHOUT. Vanderbilt was outplayed all the way by one of the most powerful elevens that ever tread Dudley field. The "Wave offense swept the McGugin men-off their feet.

The defense, a well-planned 6-3-2 formation, was Jerry Dalrym pi, the all-American end. was aocked and battered by the Commodore blockers, but gave the outstanding individual performance of the afternoon with his keen diagnosis of plays, his execution of defensive splendor and covering of punts. Don Zimmerman, heralded as the man to beat Vanderbilt, accounted for repeated short gains, but his inclination to fumble almost proved disastrous to Tulane. GREEN LINE HOLDS. On the fourth play of the game, Zimmerman, after signalling for a fair catch, juggled Robert's punt on his own 16-yard line, dropped it, and Charlie Hughes recovered for Vanderbilt.

In two plays, Jesse Thomas and Chuggy Fortune, had made it first down on the 6-yard line, with goal to go. Rut the Greenie line would not yield. Roberts made 2 yards. Fortune added 2 more. Chuggy lugged it again and was held for 1 no gain.

A wide play was called and Bankslon rushed through to toss Thomas for a 5-yard loss. Zimmerman's second fumble came five minutes later after be intercepted a pass from Roberts. Fortune recovered on the 18-yard line, and in three tries had made it first down on the 7-yard stripe. But the Commodores advanced no more. Haynes crashed through to nail Roberts for a 5-yard loss and Vanderbilt's scoring threat was over.

FIRST SCORE. Tulane's first touchdown resulted from a 59-yard march down the field, started by Zimmerman and Tayne, and finished by the hard-driving Nol-lie Felts. After the leather had been planted on the Commodore's 13-yard line. Nollie crashed for ,7 and 5 yards before making the final touchdown leap. i A' poor straight-np kick by Henderson in the middle of the third quarter gave Tulane posses-l on of the ball on Vanderbilt's 2-yard line Payne and Zimmerman lugged it to the 3 -yard damage, Dut couidn Uang on.

SUMMARY. N0TEE SAME Pes. DRAKE Host Briley Culver Blanck Pierce Bowers Gorman Robertson Olson Harris Xokjohn And the blood-red moon that rose at Knoxville saw a shambles where the Crimson Elephants from Alabama had been butchered to make a Roman holiday for the Mountaineers of East Tennesses. The wise money, the wise, wise money, was on Vanderbilt and Alabama to win. Where are all the old football traditions? What about the one that says a great center and a great guard cannot be lost from a team and have that team come back strong next season? Tulane did.

What about the one which says that a team cannot lose men like Dodd, Hackman, Hug and Brandt and still come back strong? Tennessee did. All our yesterdays have lighted experts the way to dusty death. And what of Ohio State, beaten to a froth by Vanderbilt the week before, smashing Michigan, 20 to And when has history read a score such as Columbia 19, Dartmouth Duke, that conquered Villanova, is snarled in a scoreless tie with Davidson. Harvard beats the Army eleven, the one that was doped to be superior to the one of last season which lost only to Notre Dame and that by one point. There was a warning sounded the day before, of course, when The Citadel defeated Clemson.

But no one was prepared for the crashing of football day-dreams that reverberated throughout the land on Saturday. The bands are playing somewhere and somewhere children shout. But not in Tennessee, where Vandy and Alabama were struck out. It was a sad day, mates. A sad, sad day.

aoxu Cless Goodwin Mahoney Vejer Kcken Cronin Xind strom Wieland Xansrud Bunas F.B.. Score by periods word or praise lor Btuart jnannier, who ran the team at quarter in place of the suspended Johnny Branch. REGULAR SURPRISER. Chuck Collins, it seems, likes to surprise people. He surprised Johnny Branch and Roy McDade, two of bis stars, by dropping them off his football squad.

And he surprised a number of folks up here by dropping Bill Croom into the left halfback slot. Before the game, this Croom. who comes from Burgaw. X. C.

was a very inconspicuous person. He was supposed to be only the punter for North Carolina. In fact, Collins had Jed a number of people to think that. And maybe Chuck Collins wasn't so surprised as he would have one Drake 8 8 8 08 Notre Dame 7 20 21 Is 63 Notre Dame Scoring Tale 97 Tordham 6 ST. T.

TJ. Cornell 33 Harvard 14 Kay 12 Columbia 19 Xehi(h 0 Coast Guard 21 T. Union v33 0 Cross 6 7 0 Army 13 7 Dartmouth 6 Pennsylvania S2 Kew River 0 Hobart 7 Touchdowns Koken 3: Melinkovich (siib for Cronin) Shetketski 1: Leahy fsub for Bhetketski) La borne (sub for Koken) Leonard (sub for Shetketski) 1. Points After Touchdown Koken 4: Xur- rby (sub for Yejar) Jaskwhick (sub for vojst) I. Safety Drake (Rosa).

Continued on Fourth Sports Page. SUMMARY Drake Quarterback Has Broken Ankle. SUMMARY OA. (S2) Tos. CAR.

(7) UK. Uaiker SOUTH BEND. Oct. 17. (ff) Billy Goodwin, star quarterback of the Drake University Bull Dogs," will be lost to the team for the rest of the season, doctors said tonight.

He broke hia left anklein today's game with Notre Dame. Drake plays Ford-ham University next Saturday. Hodses Patterson 1G McWhorter C. Gilbreath Bennett Cooper K.T nderwood Brown Continued on Second Sports Page. Sullivan B.

Chandler handler I H. Croom Pittsburgh 32 Western Reserve 0 tangley Field It Gallaudet 0 Trenton Tech Kutxtewn A Arnold K. T. Aggies West liberty 21 Wilmington Williams 13 Rochester Drexel 12 Westchester Amherst 19 Worcester 8 Colgate 33 Manhattan Colgate Fr. 12 Manhattan Fr.

Yillaneva. 12 Boston College Connecticut Aggies 7 Trinity 8 Bate Rhode Island Kew Hampshire 13 Maine 7 Colby 8 Vermont 0 Lafayette 22 St. Jehn Allegheney 20 Thiel 8 Dickinson Seminary St. Frosh 7 Xavy Plebes 31 Xannassea Academy 8 High Point It American University 8 Drown 32 Tufts 12 Dickinson -10 Penn State 8 W. ft J.

13 West Maryland ,12 Genera, 7 Boston University 8 Long Island 3 Xewell Textile 8 Shepherd State 19 Potomac State 8 Massachusetts State 33 Verwich 8 Xiddlebuy IS Coast Guard 8 Hamilton 8 Buffalo 2 Providence 8 Clarkson 8 Rensselaer 13 C. C. ef Xew York 2 St. Lawrence 8 Miagar 8 XeyeU Md.) 12 Mt. St.

Mary 2 Salle Moravian 8 Fordham, Holy Cross Battle to 6-6 Tie lott II. Slusser Whir F.B. Lassiter McMillin's Aggies Beat Kansas, 13-0 AUBURN (13) (0) TECH. Grant LkE. MfCollum L.T..

Farmer Molpus Kroner Ionian C. Murray hamlIess McKe. Bush Ezell Ariiifi iiim Issscs Davidson Black Hatfield iUH Mc.Vrthnr Hitchcock R.H Barron Brown Peterson Score by periods: Auburn TO. 13 Tech 0 0 0 Scoring touchdowns Auburn, Brown, Phipps; extra point: Auburn, Hitchcock (placement). Substitutes Auburn, Talley for Brown, Parker for Davidson.

Phipps for Hatfield. Holmes for McCoiluai. Searcy for Molpus; Tech, Fincher for Ell. Cherry for BIak. Laws for Kroner, lackey for lerick, McAr-thur for Ferguson, Peterson for Davis, Cain for Tharpe, for Ijiws.

Ezell for Clingan. Siorom for lackey, Tharpe for Farmer, Nebletc for Murray, Jane for McKee. Clin-gin for Ezell, Williams for Isaacs, Ferguson for Black. Peeler for Mc.Vrthnr, Hart for Barron, Cherry for Peterson. AND A LONG, LONG ROAD.

The lot of the Commodores is the hardest of the lot. They have repeated their start of 1930. After beating Minnesota the Commodores came back to be felled in the conference. They have played just one of the tough ones. Consider the Commodores.

Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee remain on the Vanderbilt schedule. The Commodores will be lucky to get an even break in those four games. It is the test of a team's courage and stamina. If they can pick up the loose ends of their game and come back they may yet make something of their season. Tech is in much the same situation, perhaps worse.

The Jacket prospects aren't as good as those of Vanderbilt and the way is just as tough- perhaps tougher. If they keep battling they will keep all they have now which isn't, after all, so much a reputation for winning as it Continued on Fifth Sports rage. Score by quarters: Georgia 7 12 32 Carolina ....7 0 07 Scoring touchdowns Croom, Mott, Ker (2) Dickens, Chandler. Scoring points after touchdown Lassiter, Smith it). Officials Black, (Davidson), referee: Erwin (Drake), umpire: Major (Auburn), head linesman; Brice (Auburn), field judge.

Snbstitates Georgia Smith. Rose, leathers. Hamrirk, Kelly. Downes. Key, Dickens.

Roberts, Perkinson, Maxwell. Thorn, Gaston, Young. Gil-more, Haselhurst Moran. North Carolina While, Daniels, Houston, Fera-beo, Thompson, rbipps, Strickland. NEW YORK.

Oct. 17. Fordham and Holy Cross, ending at least temporarily gridiron rivalry stretching over 30 years, fought through 60 thrilling moments of football today on the scarred turf of the Polo Grounds to a 6-6- tie. A brilliant 70-yard run by Martin Murray, Holy Cross halfback, gave the Purple its touchdown in the second quarter. Fordham scored its marker with a brilliant la't-minnte aerial offensive just before the game ended.

LAWRENCE, Kan Oct. 17. OP) A sophomore battering ram, Ralph (Pepper) Graham, and a bewildering passing attack devised by Coach A. N. (Bo) McMillin, enabled the Kansas Aggies to humble the Big Six champion University of Kansas football team, 13 to 0, here today.

Graham scored a touchdown in the second period on half -a dossen successive drives, and recovered a fumble in the next: period that led to another Aggie touchdown on a pass, Aufcer to Cajjtain Henrj Cronkite. Continued on Fifth Sports Pace. Continued on Third Sports rag..

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