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The Daily Item from Sunbury, Pennsylvania • 14

Publication:
The Daily Itemi
Location:
Sunbury, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

14 THE DAILY ITEM Sunbury, 18, 1976 Pjffs DOfSett gCNtlS 227 yardS Sophomore stars for Oklahoma (Sports scoreboard Pro football standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE F.aatera Division Bv The An I I Fo AMERICAN Eastern Bait 5 New Eng 3 Miami 2 Buff NY Jets 1 Ceetral Cincl 4 Hstn 4 Cleve 3 Pitts 2 Western Oakld 5 Diego 4 Denver 3 KanCitv 2 Tpa Bay 0 oriated Prof ttball League CONFERENCE Divliioa Pci. PF PA 1 0 .133 183 114 2 0 .600 131 US 4 0 .333 11 130 4 0 .333 115 117 4 0 .200 43 131 Division 2 0 67 144 19 2 0 .667 127 76 3 0 .500 127 170 4 0 .333 131 1 16 Divliioa 833 136 137 667 143 120 .500 136 67 333 124 178 .000 36 133 Lou 5 1 0 .633 164 1 19 Dallas 5 1 0 .833 ISO 81 Wash 4 2 0 .667 127 1 14 Phlla 2 4 0 .333 85 128 NY Gnts 0 6 0 .000 76 138 Central Divliioa Minn SOI .917 121 60 (hgo 3 3 0 .500 93 72 til Bav 3 3 0 .500 100 130 Dtrt 2 4 0 .833 87 84 Westera Divisiaa Fran 1 0 .833 141 63 1, A. 4 11 IIS 90 Orlns 2 4 0 .333 101 145 St le I 5, 0 .167 98 163 Atlan 1 5 0 .167 64 1 18 Monday's Game New York Jets at New Eng-hi il i i need it," said Stanley. "It's supposed to simulate a sweep right and everybody's heading for the tailback. He looked up and saw I was all alone on the left side." Jeff Logan rushed for 113 yards, set- ting up two touchdowns each by Pete Johnson and Rod Gerald as ninth-rank- ed Ohio State downed Wisconsin1 30-20.

Texas Tech, ranked 10th, got two' touchdowns on short runs by Billy Taylor and negated a 272-yard passing assault by intercepting the nation's No. 1 passer Tommy Kramer three times in beating Rice 37-13. Placekickers. shared the spotlight with the runners, passers, blockers and tacklers. Abilene Christian's Ove Johannson, -with a 16-mile-per-hour Wind at his back, unloaded a 69-yard field goal, longest in college or pro history in a 17-0 triumph over East Texas State.

That breeze wasn't quite a Texas blue norther but it also aided Texas up with a 24-yarder. then set a major college record with a 64-yard kick in the second period of the Aggies' 24-0 whipping of Baylor. That mark lasted all the way into the third quarter, when the 170-pound Franklin drilled one 65 yards. scoar one of his three touchdowns just seven seconds before halftime that gave Pitt a 22-0 lead. "I always thought I was going to get a chance." said Yewcic.

That's why I hung in there for four years." Dorsett's output made, him college football's second runner. With five regular-season games remaining, needs only 152 yards to surpass Ohio State's archie' Griffin as the all-time career ground-gainer in college football. Besides Kansas, three other members of The Associated Press' Top Twenty lbst. Seventh-ranked Missouri continued its proficiency for the unexpected by losing 21-17 to Iowa State, which got 214 yards and two touchdowns cfrom sophomore fallback Dexter Green. Louisiana State and Mississippi, which were tied for 16th place, were the Other losers.

LSU dropped a 21-7 decision to Kentucky, Coach Charlie Mc- Clendon's alma mater, on Dallas Owens' 56-yard interception return and two touchdowns by Rod Stewart. Ole Miss bowed to South Carolina 10-7, blowing a chance to win when Reg Woullard fumbled at the Carolina one-yard line with 1:35 left. Elsewhere, top-rated Michigan rolled over Northwestern 38-7 as Rob Lytle gained 172 yards and scored twice. It was a school record 12th consecutive loss for the Wildcats. Third-ranked Nebraska clobbered Kansas State 51-0 as Vlnce Ferragamo tied a school record of four touchdown passes for the second time this season.

UCLA, ranked fourth, 'buried Washington state 62-3 as Jeff Dankworth, ran for two touchdowns and threw for two more. Fifth-ranked Maryland needed a one-yard run by freshman George Scott and Mike Sochko's 27-yard field goal with 2:56 remaining to edge Wake Forest 17-15. With Green scoring on dashes of SS and two yards. Iowa State built a 21-3 lead over Missouri before quarterback Steve Pisarklewicz, who missed the last three games, came off the bench and rallied the Tigers. The winning touchdown was a 36-yard flea-flicker pass from tailback Buddy Hardeman to quarterback "Wayne Stanley.

"We hadn't even worked on it very much because we figured we wouldn't By Herschel Nissenson AP sports writer Oklahoma found a quarterback am Kansas lost one. Pitt, as it turned out, didn't really need one. "(Thomas) Lott became a footbal player today." Coach Barry Switzer saic Saturday after Lott. a sophomore mak ing only his second start, guided sixth ranked Oklahoma to a 28-10 triumph over No. 15 Kansas by rushing for 104 yards on 19 carries and scoring from 13 and 33 yards.

It was a 10-10 struggle until Nolan Cromwell. Kansas' All-Big Eight quarterbacks, went down and out for the season I with a severe knee injury in the third quarter. Meanwhile, Tom Yewcic, a non-scholarship senior who was a ninth-stringer early in his career, made his first varsity start following injuries to Pitt's first two quarterbacks and directed the second-ranked Panthers to a 36-19 triumph over Miami, Fla. Yewcic did it in unspectacular but solid fashion, mainly by handing off to Tony Dorsett. who rushed for 227 yards on 35 carries and also turned a perfect screen pass from Yewcic into a 40-yard College football scores Shaffer leads Bucknell past West Chester By Jeff Ranck WEST CHESTER Sophomore tight end Brian Shaffer caught two touchdown passes in crucial situations as Bucknell enjoyed its finest offensive showing of the season Saturday, beating the West.

Chester State Rams, 29-14, before a Homecoming Day crowd of 6,000. Shaffer, a 6-foot, 198-pound product of Lewisburg High School, scored the go-ahead touchdown for the Bisons twice in a game that saw the lead change hands three times before Bucknell broke it open late in the third period. His first score came with only 21 seconds remaining in the first half when the teams were deadlocked. 7-7. Quarterback Kerry Snow found the lanky receiver open in the end tone from three yards out and the Bisons led for the first time.

West Chester drew first blood late in the first period on a 66-yard pass from quarterback Craig Atkinson after the Bisons offense sputtered on successive By The Associated Press Saturday's Result! Albright 48, Susquehanna 7 Allegheny 24. Washington Jef 7 Bucknell 29. West Chester 14 Carnegie-Mellon 36. John Carroll 0 Stroudsburg 54, Mansfield St 8 Edinboro State 25, Clarion College 20 Franklin Mar 27, Dickinson Col 17 Gettysburg 28. Maryland 0 Grove City 17.

Geneva 8 Kutztown 34. Cheyney State 14 Lebanon Valley 13. Swarthmore 8 Lycoming Col 14, Juniata 13 Millersville St 20. Bloomsburg 14 Muhlenburg 28, Ursinus 7 Penn State 27. Syracuse 3 Pennsylvania 15.

Lafayette 14 Pittsburgh 38, Miami, Fla. 19 Rutgers 28. Lehigh 21 Shippensburg 7, Loclt Haven 0 Slippery Rock 42. Calif State, Pa. 6 Thlel 10.

Hiram 7 I'psala 15. Delaware Val 9 Villanova 24. Delaware 24. (tie) Waynesburg 17. Flndlay 6 Westminster, Pa.

55, Frostburg-7 Widener Col 26. Moravian 9 EAST Boston Col. 14. Virginia 3 Brown 28. Cornell 12 Canlsius 35.

Oswego St 15 Colgate 17, Princeton 7 Harvard 17. Dartmouth 10 Maine 24. Connecticut 11 Ma a a a 7, Falrleigh Dicksn 1 Massachusetts 14, Rhode Island 7 Mass. Maritime 25, Boston St. 6 New Hampshire 34, Cent.

on a 21. Penn St. 27. Syracuse 3 Pennsylvania 15, Lafavette 14 Pittsburgh 36. Miami.

Fla. 19 Rutgers 28. Lehigh 21 Villanova 24. Delaware 24. tie William It Mary 21.

Navy 13 Yale 37. Columbia SOUTH Alabama 20. Tennessee 13 Alabama St. 30. Albany St.

I Austin Peay 21. North Alabama 14 Citadel 20, Richmond 7 Duke 18. Clemson 18, tie Florida 33. Florida St. 26 Georgia 45.

Vanderbilt 0 Georgia Tech 26. Auburn 10 Grambling 20. Mississippi Val. 7 Howard 42. Virginia St.

15 Bucknell harriers win invitational meet LEWISBURG Featuring their trademark, good grouping. Bucknell's all-winning harriers captured first place In the eight-team sixth annual Bucknell Invitational Cross Country meet here Saturday. Bob Braile set the pace for the Bisons, posting a course record time of 25:11.09 for the 5 1-mile route. Five of the first 10 runners to finish were members of the Bucknell squad. Braile time shattered the former mark of 25:15 set in 1973 by Ron Spieres of Rutgers.

Teamwise. Bucknell totaled 27 points lo spreadeagle the field. Millersville. Kast Stroudsburg. Bloomsburg.

Shippensburg and Juniata ranked 2-3-4-5-6 with 59. 68. 79. 146 and 184 points, respectively Pete lleeson of East Stroudsburg finished second in 25:20. Steve Eachus of Cook, pa nolo place 9th, 13th in golf event Bucknell engineered a drive again late in the third period starting at their own 23.

They moved to the West Chester 30 but stalled and this time Horning booted a 47-yard field goal to end the scoring. Homing's kick eclipsed the old Bucknell field goal record of 45 yards held by Doug Marinak. Bucknell Coach Bob Curtis praised the -play of Shaffer. "It was his best game for us yet," commented Curtis, "Up till now he has seen limited action for us. He got out on his patterns, ran well and caught the ball well.

We nominated him for EC AC rookie of the week." On the afternoon, Shaffer caught three passes for 55 yards, and Curtis indicated that under the current Bison offensive set-up, Shaffer would be a regular at tight end for them. Shaffer's performance makes him the first Lewisburg area athlete to stand out on the gridiron in a Bison uniform. Ironically, his performance came against a former Lewisburg High School teammate, Dominic Herbst. a senior at West Chestcrm who served as one of the Rams tr leap tains and saw some limited action in the backfield While at Lewisburg. Herbst was on the throwing end of many of Shaffer's early high school receptions.

Middies whip MIDDLEBURG The Middleburg High booters (12-1-1) will seek their 13th victory of the season Tuesday night when they face intracounty rival West Snyder in another key Tri-Valley Soccer League game on the Harold L. Boluj Memorial Field, Selinsgrove. The Middies, bidding for league honors and a berth In the post-season playoffs, whipped Rothrock High, 4-1, on the losers' field, McVeytown, Friday afternoon. Jan Felker achieved the "hat trick" three goals for the Middies. Sam Shel-lenberger got the winners' other marker.

Middleburg scored in all but the third period. score The losers' finished with a total ollense of Just 52 yards. Dana Aunkst. a reserve quarterback, completed two fourth period passes to sophomore end Greg Moser. BEN is now 3-2 in conference play and Warrior Run is 0-5 in the division.

Summaries: Warrior Hua III! I bald Kaik-Nutans 14 12 II IS II SUM'O wai tin Karat Amu. II Yards gained rushing 10) Ml Yards tost rushing 71 Nrl vardagt S4 Sit Passes Yards gained passing II SI I'asM intercepted bv I I rumbles I rumbles lual I I Penalties 41 Open cond place. It pushed his earnings to 8105.425 and made him the 23rd player to go beyond the 8100.000 mark this season. Bruce Uetxke claimed third alone with a closing 67 and a 275 total. The group tied for fourth at 278 was composed of Dave Hill, with a last round 67 Gary Koch and George Cadle.

who bad closing 70s. and Sandy Galbraith and Al Oiberger. each with a 71 in the cool, breezy weather. Kentucky 21. LSI! 7 Maryland 17.

Wake Forest 15 Mississippi St. 42, Memphis St 33 Morris Brown 14. Florida 14. tie N. Carolina St.

21. Carolina 13 Carolina Mississippi 7 SW Louisiana 27, Furman 16 Southern U. 20. Jackson St. 6 Tenn -Chatt.

14. Jacksonville St 7 Texas Tech 37. Rice 13 Tulane 23. Army 10 Virginia Tech 14. Virginia 10 Virginia St.

18, Kentucky St. 10 MIDWEST Akron 3. Ball St. 0 Arkansas St. 41.

S. Illinois 10 Bowling Green 17. Kent St. 13 Cent. Michigan 16, Indiana St.

13' Cincinnati 16. Tulsa 7 Colorado 20. Oklahoma St. 10 Illinois 21. Purdue 17 Indiana 14,.

Iowa 7 Iowa 23. Yankton 16 lows St. 21, Missouri 17 Michigan 38. Northwestern 7 Minnesota 14, Michigan 8t. 10 Nebraska 31.

Kansas St. 0 N. Illinois 7. Illinois St. 3 Notre Dame 41, Oregon A Ohio 28, Miami.

Ohio 14 Ohio St. 30. Wisconsin 20 Oklahoma 28. Kansas 10 S. Dakota 17.

Morningside 14 W. Illinois 14. E. Illinois 10 W. Michigan 34.

Toledo 21 Wichita St. 33. Drake 23 SOUTHWEST Bishop 15. Texas Southern 14 Houston 26. SMU 6 N.

Texas St. 10, W. Texas St. 7 Texas Ail 63. W.

New Mexico 2 Texas 24, Bavlor 0 FAR WEST Arizona St. 23. Texas-El Paso 6 Brigham Young 63. S. Mis- sissippl 19 Colorado St.

27. Air Force 3 Hawaii 20. Portland State 17 Idaho 45. Weber St. 17 Montana 17.

Boise St. 14 Montana St. 28, Idaho St. 7 Nevada-Reno 44. Simon Fra- ser 13 Oregon St.

10. California 9 San Jose St. 34. Long Beach St 7 Stanford 34. Washington 28 SW Texas 34.

Stephen F. Austin 0 I'CLA 62. Washington St. 1 I tab St 28. Utah 17 Wyoming 24.

New Mexico 33 Frank Fuhrer of Fox Chapel, Pitta-burgh area, took the title with a 147 aggregate, two strokes less Uian runnerup Rick Cramer, a Hershey High sophomore In addition to Cook and Spagnolo. other District 4 golfers In the tourney were Joe Iwls of Loyalsock Township. Brian Keck of Wellsboro and Steve Car-sun and Dave Dewitt of Towanda High. shot a 163. Keck had a 173.

while Caoon and Dewitt finished with 180 and 181 marks, respectively. Nancy Tomich of I'pper St. Clair High posted a ItiO to win the coed division of the tournament. score Coach Craig Reynolds had words of praise for the Bisons' defense. "They played a perfect game." the coach said.

Goalie Paul Sinnenberg had 14 uvea and the Rider goalie, Bruce Povla, had 10 stops. The Bisons, who face the University of Rochester hooters here Tuesday at 3 had 23 shots on goal to 21 for Rider. The corner kicks favored the Bisons, nine to seven. tics, rambled 70 yards In the final quarter for the game-winning touchdown He then caught a pass from the Millersville quarterback (or the bonus points. Mike Canzler.

BSC frosh quarterback, completed tl of 18 passes (or 220 yards and two touchdowns. Millersville. with Spetcher gaining 167 yards in 22 carries, totaled 282 yards rushing triumphs Valley Football Conference. Brian Unger. who scored the deciding TD lor Williams Valley, led the running barks with 132 yards in 27 carries.

Quarterback Randy Ruaselavage, who directed the winners' stuck, (cored on option runs of one and two yards Snow completed 17 of 28 attempts for 191 yards and picked up 80 yards in 20 carries on the ground to be the Bisons' leading rusher for the afternoon. Curtis wasn't generally pleased with the Biosn performance, and indicated that the Bisons should have won more decisively than they did. He said that the difference in the game was Bucknell's better overall condition. "We just wore them down In the second half," said Curtis. "After they hurt us twice on big plays, we came back and nullified them with sustained drives.

They weren't able to sustain anything against us." The Bisons are now 3-2 and West Chester's mark dropped to 4-2. Bucknell travels to Gettysburg this weekend for a contest that is traditionally hard fought. Summaries: Score av aerMs: Bucineil 0 13 11 I West Chester 7 6 7 6 14 Stitntm SUC WES Kirst downs it IS Yards sained rushing Itt 164 Yard lost rushing IS Nflt 11 Panes 17 1127 Yards gained passing 191 230 Passes intercepted by SI I Kumhles lost Penalties 0 00 St Eagles Jim Portzline tallied a fourth period goal for Middleburg two goalies had to make only one save as the winners had 44 shots on goal to six for Rothrock. A jayvee game at 6:15 will touch off the Tuesday night West Snyder vs. Middleburg twin bill.

'84 Olympics to BARCELONA, Spain (AP) The message is going out to Los Angeles; come on in and bid for the 1984 Olympic Games. The California city has a year to make up its mind. If it decides to try again, it is sure of a lot of support from the International Olympic Committee. Two years ago Los Angeles applied as host for the 1980 Cames and lost out to Moscow. But it made a strong impression with its plan to stage as inexpensive Olympics, mainly using existing facilities.

Bids for 1984 have to be submitted by the end of November next year. The host city will be chosen at the IOC's annual assembly In Athens in April, 1978. Tehran already has told the IOC it will bid Glasgow. Nice. Algiers, Riyadh and Atlanta have shown But Los Angeles Is considered in Olympic circles as the likeliest rival to Tehran.

Philip O. Krumm, president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, told IOC President Lord Killanin this week be 1 hopes Los Angeles would bid again. "And I am Irving hard to persuade them." said Julian Roosevelt, IOC member for the United States. Politics plays an important rola In deciding the allocation of the Olympics, although the IOC tries to exclude politics i biiiui.

nisi I I I i political maneuvers point in Los Angeles' favor from two directions. 29-gom hit trak Roland Office. Atlanta Brave outfielder, hit in 20 straight National League games last spring. TM WOflO SAJatOUS OUAUTY tASU ttNNII tCMMfMSMT I SPORTS AW lava tvu7 $a-an long drives. The Rams threw a scare into the Bisons early in the secong half when on their third play from scrimmage, Atkinson hit Paul Brown on a 78-yard pass that gave the Rams a temporary 14-13 lead.

Bucknell came right back, however, and sustained a drive from their own 20 and moved to the West Chester 35 on eight plays. From there, Shaffer made a leaping grab between the two West Chester defenders at the 18 and raced down the sidelines to put Bucknell ahead to stay. The attempted two-point conversion failed and the Bisons owned a 19-14 lead. From there on in it was all Bucknell as the Bison defense took charge and forced a Ram fumble at their own 36. In nine plays, the Bisons moved to the West Chester two.

where Snow scored his second touchdown of the day on a keeper around right end. John Homing's kick made the score 26-14. Bloomsburg 25:22 and Bucknell's George Buckheit (25:95) were third and fourth, respectively. Mike McCov (25 401, Lee Edmonds 25 42 1 and Bill Turley (26:061 finished sixth, seventh and 10th. respectively, for the Bisons.

In the coed division. Penn State tupped team honors with 42 points. Lock Haven and Buckneliranked 2-3 with 56 and 68 points, respectively. Chris Bankes of Penn State finished lirsl in 16.38 3 The Bucknell entries, their positions and times were: SueCluzel. 5th M.irv Holing.

10th Ann Bis-( hnlt. Mth (19 55i: Beth Thomas. 17th. 20 15 1 and Peg Ruczynski. 22nd CD 47i.

Brick Township of New Jersey and Stale College took the boys' and girls' titles, respectively. sc ored two apiece for the Panthers. Maggs tallied on runs of 16 and five yards, while Dean Mackey's lone TD came on a 69-yard run through a broken lield in the first period. SementelU tallied two touchdowns in the second period. He caught a nine-yard pass from quarterback Brian Mann early in the quarter.

Before the half ended he blocked a punt and recovered the ball in the end zone. A 10-vard pass play. Mann to Semen-telli. netted one of the two BEN TDs In the third period Bower tallied on runs of one and 1 1 yards In the final quarter. Greg Kunes kicked three PATs and Reggie Bauman booted one for the winners Warrior Run penetrated the winners' line late in the game but couldn't This theft, worth 825.000 from the total purse of 8125.000.

came on Baird I five-tinder -par 31 on the back nine, a last round of 65 and a 273 total, matched by Barber at 15 under par. Barber, who had rounds of 85 and 70 In the 36-hnle wind-up that was forced by a rain delay that spread the tournament's second round over two days, had some consolation with the 814.250 check for se Redskins clinch LEWISBURG The combination of a 13-0 Redskins' victory over the Packers and a scoreless lie between the Colts and the Rams gave the Redskins the Lewisburg Midget Football League championship here Sunday afternoon. Ilalfbac Jeff Flick tallied both Redskins' TDs on long runs through broken fields Ken Kline ran for the Skins one extra point Panthers hammer winless Defenders HERSHEY Ben Cook of Lewisburg High and Jim Spagnolo of Selinsgrove High, representing the Susquehanna Valley Golf League, placed ninth and 13th, respectively, in the annual Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association i P1AA -sanctioned stale tourney here Saturday. Cook, a senior, posted a 36-hole total of 156 in the two-day event on the Parkview Country Club course. Spagnolo.

a junior and at age IS one of the youngest golfers ever to represent District 4 in the event, had a 159 after firing a first day tally of 78 (' had rounds of 81 and 75. Bison hooters LEWISBURG Mark Elliott's two goals in the last 10 minutes of play sealed a 3-0 Bucknell soccer victory over visiting Rider in East Coast Conference action here Saturday afternoon. Bucknell scored all Its goals In the second half Scott Strasburg tallied the Ice-breaker early in the second-half. Pete DiPas-quale has assists on all the Bucknell goals Tl'RBOTVILLE Still looking for its lirst win of the season. Warrior Run 1 0-7 1 launched drills here this afternoon lor a road tilt vs.

Mifflinburg in division. West Branch Football Conference action Saturday at 8 p.m. The Delenders. who bowed. 52-0.

to a lired up Bald Eagle-Nittany team (3-4) in Mill Hall over the weekend, will pull out all the stops In an effort to break their losing skein in the game in Mifflinburg While BEN. an A division. West Branch Conference club, scored twice in every period on Its home field. Warrior Run couldn't muster any type of offense while dropping its seventh straight game Bill SementelU tallied three TDs and teammates John Maggs and Rick Bower Baird comeback wins Texas Millersville tops BSC SAN ANTONIO. Tex.

(AP) Old pro Butch Baird. who hadn't won an Individual title in 15 years, wai just plugging along, four shots back with seven holes to play and Just trying to make a check, Che 40-year-old veteran scored a hole-in-one with a four Iron on the 182-yard 12th hole at the Woodlak Country Club Sunday and his eyebrows shot up beneath the protection of the broad-brimmed planters hat that has become his trademark on the PGA Tour. "I sa tried thinking. 'Hey. maybe this ii your tournament'," Baird said of his dramatic comeback Sunday in the final round of the weather-troubled San Antonio-Texas Open.

He caught front-running Miller Barber with birdies on the 15th and 17th boles, rolled In a 15-footer to match Barter's birdie on the 18th bole, then stroked in another one. from about 10 feet, for birdie on the first playoff bole for his first individual title since 1961. loop flag BLOOMSBURG Trailing. 7-0, at halftime. the visiting Millersville State College eleven ran for three TDs In the second-half and whipped Bloomsburg Slate College.

20-14. here Saturday afternoon The result dampened the spirits of a Homecoming Day crowd In Redman Stadium Gordy Spetcher. Millersville running back with the top Pennsylvania statis Williams Valley TOWER CITY The unbeaten Williams Valley High eleven used three long scoring drives to whip previously unbeaten Halifax High. 21-13. before 4,009 fans here Saturday light.

The triumph gave Williams Valley sote poaaession of first place la the Twin Hugged defensive play marked the Cults-Hams contest. The Redskins and the Rams posted 1-9 victor in over the Parkers and Colts, re Swtivrly, In the games played on the K( Buffalo Township field. The Redskins art one and one-half games up on the second-place Colts with just one game remaining on tbetr.

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