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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 46

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FortySix THE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE NOVEMBER 5, 1950 (She- MAm Sttrala late enn T7 Tn Tf T7 Depth-hubd ir A 'jr i i "4 fi I 1 Notre Dame Twice, Beats Rebounds Navy, 19-10 Cadets Throttle Bagnell; Filipski Sparks Offense By JERRY NASON PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 4 Army outmaneuvered and utmauled Pennsylvania's fire eaters throughout four periods of give-and-take football, played with a mutual dis-; regard for life and limb on Franklin Field this afternoon. The game was settled, 28-13, in Army's favor because Penn i was obviously shortchanged in the department of personnel. Statistics at Cleveland Notr Dame Navy First down II 12 Rushing yardage 133 assing yardage t'ass 72 19 Pase attem nntert Pa Pa Dieted anses com Pussei Intercepted .200 20 Pirnts Puntin avpracs Fumbles loot Yards penalized 15 The vindication of the 13 'point odds was authored mid Statistics at Philadelphia Army Penn temporarily halted proceedings as the Irish recovered. Then Bill Powers intercepted a CLEVELAND, Nov.

4 (UP) Out of the despair of one of their blackest seasons Notre Dame and glory became working partners again today at wind-swept Municipal Stadium where the Fighting Irish rose in their best tradition and twice came from behind to sock down high-pitched but luckless Navy, 19 to 10. Beaten three times, the Irish were not to be denied today as 71,074 rain-drenched fans cheered them on. It was All-America quarterback, Bob Williams, who came through with two touchdown passes with a wet ball on the rain soaked field to direct the forces to victory. Williams' pass on the 26-yard line and returned it to the three. Zas- urn ijowns 10 Rushing YardaKe 272 Passing Yardage 59 Passes Attempted 11 Passes Completed 4 Passes Intercepted 3 Punts Punting Average 37 Fumbles Lost 4 Yards Penalized 05 through the final quarter Gene Filipski exploded through a right-tackle aperture 'and fled 73 yards through Penn's weary pickets for Army's fourth 'touchdown and.

the only breakaway run of the game. The chronological progress of the Black Knights to No. 26 in their undefeated streak was: trow plunged for the score and kicking artist Roger Drew con verted to give Navy a 7-0 lead. Notre Dame, in turn, needed a pass interception to tie the score. David Flood snatched a Zastrow i First Period.

Army 7-0; sec-J pass on the Irish 40 and fullback Jack Landry, the running star of the game, made a 54-yard dash off tackle to the Navy 10. On fourth down, Williams passed to Billy Gay in the end zone and Joe Capara Williams Passes Click The battle was bitterly waged, all Oklahoma Sets Record by 27-18 Win BOULDER, Nov. 4 (AP) Oklahoma's great fct-ball wrecking crew ran Into fierce resistance from a courageous Colorado team today, but the Sooners slashed through, 27-18, to set a modern-day gridiron record of 27 consecntive victories. The Sooners, who haven't tasted defeat since the first game of the 1948 season, got a scare in the first period when. Colorado's hrazen Buffaloes crashed to the first touchdown, and Oklahoma didn't have a really comfortable moment the rest of the day.

Two touchdowns In the ond quarter put Oklahoma out in front, 13-6, but thereafter the hard-pressing Colorado team matched the mighty Sooners score for score to keep record crowd of 29,500 constantly up on its toes. Today's victory enabled Oklahoma, the nation's third-ranking team, to surpass the modern mark of 26 straight victories established by Cornell in 1921-24. Claude Arnold and Billy Vessels led Oklahoma's attack, each accounting for two touchdowns, but Colorado's powerful fullback, Merwin Hodel, gave them a battle for top backfield honors as he outshone Oklahoma's All -America fullback candidate, Leon Heath. the way as both teams fought to salvage something out of their poor down when they apprehended him. Vic Pollock bucked it over on the next effort, and Al Pollard converted the first of four points which seem to fumble automatically off his toe.

Penn retrieved all but one point, as earlier mentioned, and yas still in the ball game at intermission, 7-6. But Army swarmed all over them in the first eight minutes of the third quarter. Gil Reich ran back Penn's first punt 12 yards and Army gulped the intervening 41 yards in nine plays. The key was Blaik's 16-yard pass to John Weaver, enormous left end, to the Penn 15, Gil Stephenson, on a pitch to the fullback going wide to the left, made nine yards then Blaik faked to the flank with a pass which ultimately converted to tie the score. Navy went ahead in the third on a 19-yard field goal by.

Drew, but here Williams and company, who had tasted victory only twice before today's game, went to town, starting the 78-yard drive that put them ahead to stay with Landry driving for gains of 26 yards on four tries. Fred Wallner of Notre Dame and Bob Lowell of Navy, their tempers frayed by the playing conditions and the rough battle, started a fist fight near the end, but officials ejected them before the brawl became general seasons, and it erupted into a fist fight before the final gun. With the score 10 to 7 against them, the fired-up Irish put on a 8-yard march to a touchdown early in the third period to go ahead for the first time. Williams threw three passes in the downfleld parade wafting the last one to end Chester Ostrowski in the end zone on fourth down from the 12-yard line. VP (AP WirePhoto) TIGERS POUNCE Brad Glass (78), Princeton tackle, pounces on the ball after Colgate's Armand Allaire (left foreground) fumbled in the first period.

Going after the ball with Glass are two- other Princeton players. That was the key moment of the reached Weaver, again, in the end zone. ball game, but Notre Dame made NOTRE DAME Le. Ostrowski. S.

Hel- 1 1 K-tvnn KarnjKn b. nurns. end. n-e, ana zi-o; 21-13 and 28-13. i Tricky Fm Brings Score The Army got the "jump" by subterfuge when Frank Fischl.

halfback who hadn't thown a competitive forward pass since two years ago on Franklin Field, triggered a south-paw throw on the run which city-Jlickered the Penn defense for 26 yards, Capt. Dan Foldberg receiving to set up a touchdown. Mr. Blaiks militant operatives thereafter performed with the confidence of state cops at a boy scout jamboree. Having been only one false step from defeat in three preceding contests with the coked-up forces of Pennsylvania, the Army discounted th caprices of fate as a more contributing factor in this critical game.

They unloaded, like two tons of bttuminous. and broke the back of Fenn's resistance in the third period coring the first two times they possessed the ball. As solidly favored as the 49 team, which escaped with its life by a point conversion, and the '48 military edition, which was rescued from the embers when Arnold Calif-fa found John Kent with a touchdown pass with merely 35 seconds to play, Army today battered Penn to the point of exhaustion, physically Unable to summons the speed to overhaul the Cadets. Penn captured two Army fumbles, and marched them right up the middle of the Army line for 32 and 47 yards touchdown approaches first time Army's horny-handed defensive specialists have yielded a pair of six-pointers In 60 minutes of play this season. B.

U. Recovers From Early Setback its margin more secure when the Green-shirted boys got going on another scoring march in the fourth period. Notre Dame captain Jerry Groom started it out when he blocked a Navy punt and a host of Notre Dame men fell on it on the Navy 17. Johnny Landry engineered things the rest of the way, with three straight plunges, the final one being good for five yards through center for the touchdown that made Epstein; c. Groom; rg.

Wallner. Ale-sahdrini. Boji. Stroud: rt. TonofT.

Dunlay. Zambroski. Weithman: re. Mutscheller. Kelly.

Kapish. Meschievltz; qb. Williams. Mazur; lhb. Gay.

M. Johnson, McKtllrp; rhb. Marchand, Bush. Flood; fb. Landry.

Cotter, Caprara. NAVY Le. Treadwell. McDonald. Wilson; It.

Davis. Tetreault; 18. Dave. Fischer. Denfeld.

Pertel: Bryson, Botula. Ku-kowski; re. Steele. Lowell. Owens.

Seiver. McCowan: rt. Gragg. Hunt; re. Bakke.

Gurski. Baldinger, Carson; ab. Zastrow. Cameron; lhb. Hauff.

Kane. Brady; rhb. Powers. Adorney. Sundry; fb.

Franco. Wilner. Bannerman. Drew. Score by periods 1 2 3 4 Total Notre Dame 0 7 6 6 19 Navy 0 7 3 0 10 TO.

Gay. Ostrowski. Landry. Zastrow. PAT.

Caprara. Drew. FG. Drew. to Down William and Mary it 19 to 10, ktnfictirc at Frnwnv Parle Tne teams slogged around on the statistics ai renway rarK uncertain turf through the first Univ.

Mary 1 period and neither patterned a definite scoring threat. But from its 17 N. C. State Takes Richmond RICHMOND, Nov. 4 (AP) -North Carolina State, a heavy fa Filipski, who was a ball of fire today, ran right tackle for ,27 yards, emerging in bursts of speed from a traffic jam at his Eight tackle, for touchdown No.

4 three minutes later. Army was solid behind a 21-6 lead now. Those two quickies, consumated with lethal precision, made Penn's outlook extremely vague. It got seven points back by retrieving an Army fumble and forcing passage through the Army line for most of the 47-yard journey. Bagnell and Corbo hit behind a terrific line charge for persistent four and five-yard gains, and the only outside stratagem employed was Bagnell's in-and-out run for the touchdown.

Filipski, of course, swung the K. O. punch when, 5lA minutes from the end, he hurtled through a crevice in Penn's left side, caught the secondaries coming up too fast and was out in the clear for a solo of 73 yards. Pennsylvania, like all the rest, could not stand oft this matchless array of Army platoons and played itself into the ground. Its defensive left end, Eddie Bell, a Townie, was an enormous man.

Army virtually conceded that you couldn't get around him or get him off his feet. It was Bell, jamming everything into the line, who almost closed the gap through which Filipski escaped for the fourth, finjjl and flashiest 145 18 12 2 First Downs 12 Net yards gained 268 Forward passes 13 Forwards completed 3 Yards sained, forwards 15 Own forwards 0 riictartr. nf 26 By BOB 1IOLBROOK Refusing to become panic-stricken when their Southern opponents exploded a 77-yard scoring thyust the first time they laid hands on the ball, the Boston University Terriers struck back calmly and finally tasted victory yesterday as they downed the Indians from William Mary College, 16-14, before 3606 faithful at Fenway Park. W. L.

Trips Va. Tech LEXINGTON, Nov. 4 (AP) Washington and Lee ran and passed in the rain and mud here today to conquer Virginia Tech's Gobblers, 25-7, and move to within a single victory of their first Southern Conference football championship since 1934. vorite, moved 48 yards for a second- own 45, Navy suddenly began pushing back the Irish early in the second period with Bob Zastrow showing the way by carrying the ball 26 yards through the middle. The march brought the Middies to the Notre Dame 10 where a fumble period touchdown by fullback Jim Fumbles 2 Own fumhlpc riMVVArH Rourke today, to score a 7-0 vic Penalties 8 9 jrds lost, penalties 36' 45 tory over the University of Rich mond.

goal from the 10 and that was the game. William and Mary covered 74 yards for seven more points one and quarter minutes before the end of the game, but it was too late. everyone as he spun through his own right guard on a delayed buck designed to pick up a few yards and little more. Pino found a hole and crossed the line of scrimmage easily. He Merciful Caldwell Yanks Top Backs, but Princeton Slashes Colgate, 45-7 Still Don't ilave a Passer Bagnell Score Alan Corbo scored the first on a straight fullback buck from Single-wing in the second period.

The publicized Francis J. (Reds) Bag-cell, the Penn captain and key guy, scored the second with a whirl round his right end for five yards In the third period. struck for the right side and gained momentum as he went. In winning their second game of pass from Dick Kazmaier to Georga Statistics at Princeton Chandler made it 25-0 before Colgate had caught its breath. safety; John Connors, raced two feet behind the Terrier fullback.

Armv touchdown. Princeton Colgate ppmv Mimf. Roberts. Murray. 7 Russ McNeil, a second stringer, First downs 25 The combination of Lowell's Titus Plomaritus and Somer-ville's Sam Pino proved too much for the Southern visitors as the Terriers connected for 10 points in the final period to gain the decision on a soggy, wet gridiron.

Pino became the hero of the day when he scampered 75 yards to put the Terriers in front on the first play of the last period. His surge down the right sidelines on a routine line smash gave the B. a 13-7 edge. Plomaritus who attempted three field goals in the drizzly afternoon connected on his last one in the fourth period from the William and Mary 10 and that proved to be the margin of victory But he couldn't catch him. Plomaritus added the point.

dived over from one yard out to Bell, Pfaff: It. R. Evans. Smith; lg, Lemonick. McCann.

AasifT; Greenwalt; rg. Krimmei. Weierich. Hovey; rt. Pru- 42 106 17 cap a 68-yard Princeton drive early The chance for Plomaritus to fash in the second period, and the Tigers again had piled down to Colgate'a Rushing yardage, 3o3 Passing yardaae 160 Passes attempted 14 Passes completed 9 Passes Intercepted 2 Punts 3 Punting average 31.3 Fumbles lost 1 Yards penalized 25 dnte.

Goldstrom. McGinley; re. Agocs, Power. Conaway; qb, Horton: Jhb. Bag-neil.

Adams. Warren. Mikovich, Coulsnn; rho. Deuber. Rhoads.

Cook; fb, Corbo. JarTurs. Zimmer. Laino. ion his field goal came a little later when George Schultz intercepted a 6 35 3 2 10 two-yard, line at the half.

Colgate, hitting through the air. went 50 yards for its score soon ARMY Le. Foldberg. Loehlein. Mc- pass on his 45 and" took it to the visitors' 44.

A penalty sent the the season, Buff Donelli's forces proved one thing they still don't have a passer. W. M. totaled 128 passing yards to B. 15.

The difference, therefore, lay in the ground attack, and Pino's individual effort for the afternoon was far and away the 4nost outstanding, He carried the ball 18 times and chopped off 169 yards himself. B. U. amassed 268 yards rushing to 145 for the visitors. Much stress should be placed on B.

refusal to crack before the initial assault of Rube McCray's Southern Conference team. A less confident team could have beer routed. Loqk what happened: B. U. kicked to the visitors on their Shulskis; It.

Zeigler. Shira. Shocker: It. Elmblad, Volonnino, Brian; c. Haas.

Stout. Terriers back to the 42, but Pino after the third period began. A 30- yarder from Ted Stratton to Sam Baise: rg. Roberts, Peyton. Malavasi; rt.

Ackerson, Kimmel. Erickson: re, Conway, Weaver, Krobock, Rowekamp: qb, Blaik, Reich; lhb. Cain. Pollock, Schultz, Grib-ble; rhb. Martin.

Fischl. Filipski. John- Thompson carried to the Princeton on; lb. Stephenson, Pollard. Beck.

Flick. from a morning rain and took to the air for another 106. Colgate's totals were, respectively, 42 and 106. The first downs were 25 and 7. No single back stood out for the victors.

It was strictly a team effort, and it was as deadly a thing as is likely to be seen anywhere this Army 7 0 14 7 28 Penn 0 6 0 7 13 Tt Corbo. Bagnell. Pollock. Weaver, PRINCETON, N. Nov.

4 (AP) Princeton's slashing single-wing attack cut Colgate's defenses to ribbons today as the Tigers racked up their sixth straight victory, 45 to 7, to remain among the nation's undefeated elevens. So lethal was the Orange assault that the score stood 25-0 aftei only 12 minutes of play. One of the most horrific hidings ever dealt out by an Ivy League team appeared in the making until Coach Charlie Caldwell abruptly jerked his rampaging first string backs before the end of the first period. Colgate, previously beaten only by Army, 28-0, was totally unable either to contain the tricky Princeton offense or to launch a sustained drive of its own until the second half, when the Tigers had relaxed the pressure. The outclassed Red Raiders did not register a first down until after the Tigers had rolled for five scores.

But Army murdered the nation-mll-acclaimed put recon. of this, bxuutrious home town boy. They intercepted two of the first three paasea he attended and a total of three for the afternoon or as many "Reds" completed. They gave him a very bad day, having been sufficiently alerted by bis N. C.

A. A. record afternoon vs. Dartmouth last month. Herb Johnson, the young gentleman from Sandy, who personally dispersed chuckin Charles Ortmann of Michigan in October, stole Bagnell passes out of the air at Army's 10 and 35-yard lines in the first half.

Penn thereafter became extremely cautious and refused to run a pass pattern that took a receiver within two voting precincts of Herbie's assigned defensive acreage. If this seems an overly. detailed account of Army's defensive measures, that is the sort of game it was with these genteel dock wallopers forcing and recovering the fumble which got the offensive team into position for touchdown iio. 1, intercepting and thwarting passes, hitting Penn ball carriers with crushing force. Johnson Sna4 Fumble rliipuKi i.

Wi Agocs, foliar a Warriors Trip Superior Rushing B. passing was onerous. They gained only 15 yards on 13 throws. But their rushing was superior to Jack Davison, the Tiger fullback, rushed to nullify the miscue. Bobby Whelan and Luker combined to put it on the 32 for a first down.

Pino drove to the eight. Three smashes at the line proved this wasn't a smart move and it was fourth down on the two when Plomaritus went in to split the crossbars with his field goal. Time ran out on William and Mary but not spirit. With the Terriers in the vanguard, 16-7, William and Mary passed six times and chewed up 74 yards like nothing at all. Lewis hit Paul Yewcic twice and Yewcic reversed things and passed to Lewis.

Pass interference was called over the goal line on end Jim Butcher and that placed the Indians on the one-yard 23. Ed Madgziak passed to end George Heflin who lugged it to the B. U. 27 Madgziak ran to the 14, hammered over for two touch Celtics, 77-68 PHILADELPHIA. Nov.

4 AP three, and Armand Allaire sliced over from there. The final Tiger scoring march in the fourth quarter saw Jack McCandless bullet across from the one after a push of 63 yards. Only 19.000 sat in on the Princeton parade, the word having gotten around that the Tigers were out for red meat. PRINCETON Le. Reed.

Kurrus. Emery; It. Smith. C. Donan.

Doerfler'. Hemminger: lg. Hawke. Zawadsky. Schmidt.

Otis. Mayer; c. Finney. Richel. Hickok.

McClain; rg. Clark. Glass, Brown. Bihl: rt. Urschcl.

Valentzas, Ellis: re. Bunnell. Hrnnon. Chambrlin. Lyons.

Cowne; qb. Kazmaier, McPhee. McCandless. Jannotta: rhb. Klelnsasser.

Piyirotto. linger. Taylor. Prior; fb. Davison.

McNeil. Gortre. Nixon. COLGATE Le. Kluckhohn.

Btenberg. Liggett; It. Stringer. Aneltin. Day: rg.

Morrow. Langan: c. Main. Madden. Lo-manto; rg.

Davis, Stewart: rt. Krisher. Morog, Murdoch: re. Wylie. Owens; ob.

Stratton, McMahon; lhb. Simmons. Allaire: rhb, Thompson. King. Sweeney; fb.

Schirmer. Sheldon, Vedder. The Philadelphia Warriors opened their National Basketball Associa a penalty put W. M. on the eight.

Madgziak hit Vito Ragazzo on the one and a five-yard penalty put them back on the six. Lewis swept his end for a score, kicked the point and all of it within three minutes. downs when the game still was minutes old. All the other touchdowns were singles. Bill Klein-sasser turned in the most spectacular play of the one-sided tussle when he broke away on a weaving 63-yard scoring jaunt just as the third period closed.

tion season tonight with a 77-68 victory over the Boston Celtics before 5603. It was the largest' opening game crowd in the Warriors' B. U. came out of it in the second period and banged 44 yards to score William and Mary and they consequently almost doubled the ground effort of the "boys from Colonial Williamsburg. Va.

William and Mary almost blew the home forces off the gridiron in the first period. They banged 77 yards to a score just as soon as B. U. kicked off. Dickie Lewis swept his own right end for six yards and then added the extra point to stun the Terriers.

It required only two minutes and 40 seconds. B. U. came back with a 44-yard thrust in the second period with John Kasten going across on a sim six points. Irom tne visitors 44, line.

Magdziak smashed across and PHILADELPHIA BOSTON Lewis kicked the point after, Fulks 5 7 niLeede Pino and John Kasten hit for a first down on the 35. Masked marvel BOSTON UNIVERSITY Le. Sulima, Arizin 3 4 11), ousy 113 2 2 Gardner 4 8 stanc.aK I 0 Gorman; It, Barbaaalio, Knignt; lg, sai-vati. TCpane. O'Connor: c.

Hurstak: rg, Ilewins Blocks Kick Tom Hewins. an end, started Colgate's downfall when he recovered a blocked Raider pimt across the goal line only two minutes after the opening kickoff. Then followed in quick succession Davison's two 2 4 Sailors Charley Kent (playing with a grotesque looking face guard), raced to the 22. George Luker went to the 0 Walker -'el I 8 19 Donahue, D'Errico, Miller, McBlaney, Berg: rt, Primiani, Czeropowicz, Dobias; re. Capuano, Strom.

Butcher; Kastan, 2 6 Macau ley MoHun 1 Parham 0 Livingston 2 Closs 2 Borsavage C. 0 Senesky g. 4 0 4 Mahnken 7 4 Total I 47 16. Then Kent fumbled and end flam I. whapn: inD.

nan sen. uaiatai. Score by periods 1 2 Princeton, 25 6 Colgate 0 0 TD. Davison 2. Hennon It was Johnson, incidentally, who came up with Penn's first fumble, at 25 First Down The vast assemblage of players used by Princeton piled up 353 yards by rushing on a field muddy 0 Duncan 3 11: Hertzberg Lou Sulima recovered for a gain on Luker, schultz, Ormsby; six-pointers after the recovery of Chandler, Me a less.

Allaire. 7 13 cooper the four, 3 Neil. Klemsasser. McCari' Phillip g. Bobb 2 4 Donham Colgate tumbles, and a four-yard the Quakers' 43 after eight min utes of clay.

PAT. Newell. UngeT 2. Lomanto: Pino hit the line twice and was WILLIAM MARY Re. Hen in, Good-low: rt.

Gehlmann, Rienert, Gonier, Clements: rg. Conier, Poms: Layne, ilar right end sweep from the two. But Plomaritus missed, the point aftpr. and it was 7-6. .25 27 77' Total .20 28 68 Total! stopped.

Luker it once and Wilson. Luno: lg. McNamara. Kreamcheck. failed.

On fourth down, Kasten Cardaci: It, Megale, Shatynski; le. Ragazzo, Mr. Blaik sent the offensive unit etorming onto the field and imme-tiately his boy. Bob, the quarterback, ordinarily the passer, fed the It wasn't until the final period that the fireworks started. Pino's About swept the end from the two and scored.

Plomaritus missed the conversion and it was 7-6. 75-vard gallop down the right side It wasn't until the final period lines caught the defenders napping and nary a hand was laid on him after he broke from the line of scrimmage and puffed into the end Connors, smitn, towung: qo, MarK, Weber, Lupo; rhb. Weber, Flanagan: lhb, Lewis. Mioduszewski. Yewcic; fb.

Magdziak, Kremer. J. Connors. Score by periods 1 2 3 4 Total Boston University 0 6 0 10 16 William Mary 7 0 0 7 14 TD. Kastan, Pino, Lewis, Magdziak.

PAT. Plomaritus, Lewis 2. FG, Plomaritus. Referee, Stanley Ebert, Duauense. Umpire.

A. Paul Menton. Loyola. Linesman. Charles Mackay, Brown.

Field Judge. H. C. Hawne (Lenoir Rhyne). that B.

U. gave the Southerners their whipping. It was nicely done, too. Qates, B. Stricken With Pneumonia As If Coach Buff Donelli and the Boston University team didn't have enough trouble to last It for one season, another player was lost yesterday.

He wm regular end Tom Oates who eame down with pneumonia and was removed to the Haynea Memorial Hospital in Brighton before the came. V0 A Et ball off to Fischl. who made as xl ta weep his left side, then dropped a left-handed pass in the hands of Fodlberg. out beyond the suckered poenndaries. The play gained 26 to the 16.

Fischl whirled out of the arms of three tacklers on the next play, faking the pass and retaining the ball. He was Just short of a touch zone. Plomaritus having sufficient The ball was resting on the B. U. 25 as the period ended.

Pino, a practice with two missed field goals and a missed point after cut the bull-like individual, surprised cross bar and it was 13-7. Plomaritus then added his field ''-iiKfr Fir, miii nti i'T i -i tm -ii- Our method of hair and scalp control is one which has been successful for thousands of men and women over a long period of years. We do not make fanfastic claims for our service, and when you are told that treatment may help, you are being told what we sincerely believe. MORE TK "Mile-O-MeW is precision built instrument that registers the miles per gallon at every speed, and under' every condition. Easy to install In 5 minutes or less.

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