Their Cup Ruuneth Over

Titan sWa deTh roug h
Lake rs; Ump qua Nex t
by RALPH KRUMDIECK
A trio of LCC Titans scored
in double figures to crush previously unbeaten Southw~stern
Com:.1 ·:nity College
Oregon
Lakers (37-60 on Saturday, Jan.

Forward Ken Tannler led the
Titans with 14 points wbile Dave
Naessens collected 12 and Rob
Barnes 11. Frank VanLoo of the
Lakers le::l all scorers with 19

points.

JEF.RY FOS1ER photo

11.

Titan Coach M1~l Krause was
obviously please::l with his team's
performafli"!e. "This win proves
that we will be competitive with
the other teams in our league."
It was the _.,:~·:!on:! .;traight league
victory for the Titans, who are
now 4-1 overall, and the first
loss in three starts for the
SWOCC Lakers.

Ke n T a n n I e r , L a n e • s
top scorer wi t h 14
The Titans throttled the Lakers
with a potent zo;ie defense the
entire gam,~ while they ·c olleded
on 41 per cent of their field
goals. The scrappy Lakers fought
back continually, however, and
enjoyed a 29-20 halftim,~ advantage.

~ppr9ximately 500 people turned out to see
Al I
Lane ' s fourth victory in five starts.
LCC home events aree free of charge .

! .,, .• I• •

•.I•

'•,

••,

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,,,

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Season

DENTAL HIGIENE
STUDENTS NEED
TEETH TO CLEAN

Jan,

14,

1939

Starlet/

With P{{ Loss I
Lone Now 4-/

Our Titans started the season
dismally with a loss to PortTi.1e P.::.:.•ajental D3partm t1nt land Com:-:m mity College 35-76 on
will b,3gin taking patients for the Decemher 20.
It was the Titan's only loss
dental hygiene stu jents to do
an oral prophylaxi.s (cleaning and to date as they went on to smash
scaling of teeth) during, ap;>roxi- Salem Technical Community Colmately, the w•3ek of January 13, lege 98-49 on December 30.
The first n~w game of the new
according to Dr. John Dickinson,
year brought a special sweetness
departmt!:lt head.
Prior to that tim~ it will be to the Titans as th ?y avenged
necessary to screen patients. their earlier loss to Portlanj
This will be done Thursday morn - Community College with a 75ings betw.'}•3n now and that timr! . 67 win.
On January 7 the Titans ruJled
T,ose wishing to take advantage of the above mt'!ntioned s:~:-- over Concordia 93-73 and their
vice please can the dep1rtmt1nt !ates~ gam: was an impressive
secretary, Mrs. Hoffman, at ext. 67-60 victory over previously
266 and s 1 ':! ·-v:ll arrange a tim ~· unbeaten Southwestern Oregon
on a Th·1 rsday m0rning for you Commt:nity College last Saturday.
to be Sf~e.:! .1.11.~d.
RALPd KRUMOIE~K .
1

I''

That ' s the way it
went al I night.
Both teams were
penalized heavily.

UFO Expert
To Lecture
On Monday

THETORCH
No. 11

JERRY FOSIBR photo

Coach

Mel

Krause

But in the second 113.lf the
Titans broke the game open using
a fast break and went ahead by
10 points mi1way in the seco".l.1
half. "We ran a lot better ln
the second half," said Krause.
"The first half was lackluster
because of all the turnowvers,
because of all the turnovers,
but we played real good in th•=
second half." John B:irge and
Rob Barnes pro 11ided rebounding
stre:1i;th while the Titans used
ball control for the last two
minutes of the gam2 to ~roted
their lead.
Tonight at 7:30 p.m, the Titans will face a too team in the
Oregon Community College Athletic Association when they play
host to Um;,qua Community College at the LCC gym .

Jamt~s Moseley, Am•~rica's
foremost expert on flying saucers
and other unidentified flying objects, will be a guest lecturer
at Lane Community College Jan.
20, at 8 p.m.
Moseley wm speak in the large
lecture hall in the forum Building on the new cam_:Jus.
Cons id erect the most know ledgea::ile a:.1d articulate authority
on UFO's, he has com.~,leted extensive research and evaluated
all posible evidence to determf.ne
the reality of the Saucer Mystique.
(the
Founder of S11.UCERS
·saucer and Un~xplained Celestial Events Research So:!iety),
Moseley is also editor of Saucer
News, which is credited with being the most authoritative source
of information on the subject.
Throughout the history of the
world, thousands of m:,sterio'l.5
''flying" objects have been see;i
in the sky and reported. How•~ver,
public knowledge of this subjed
is som tiwhat limf.ted.
He is a graduate of Princeton
and is the author of several articles for popular magaz-ines.

CAMPUS RADIO
TO COVER GAME

will broadcast
KLCC-FM
tonight's basketball gam,~ with
Umpqua Community College,
Roseburg, according to Rozer
Houglum, station manager. He
did not know who would announce
the play-by-play action.
Gamt~ tim: is 7:30 p.m.; KLCC
is located at 90.3 Mc.

TWO EXTRA WEEKS
GIVEN TO DROP
Students at Lane Community
College will be given an extra
two weeks in which to make up
their mi.nds about withdrawing
from winter term classes.
The last day for full tuition
refunds for winter term has been
changed from Jan. 24 to Feb. 7.
Stu 1ents who withdraw before the
seventh are eligible for full refunds on tuition. The reason for
the change is to give students
m3re tim•~ to "sample" classes
before deciding to drop a class
or stay in.
Dean of Students I.S. Hakanson
explained, "W,~ want the students
to have ample time to see what
the course has to offer them be fore they are forced to decide
whether or not to withdraw,
Changing the refund day fo,:- tui tion makes it possible for stu dents to get som1~ of their money
back if th9y do decide to drop
a course."
Students are actually given
seven wBeks to voluntarily with draw from ,~lass, but unless they
drop before Feb. 7 they will not
be elegible for a tuition refund.

THE TORCH Page 2

I
I

Letters to the Editor
Student Vomits
in reading the college newspaper, "THE TORCH", of the latest
issue, I have had a compulsion to go stand in a corner and vomit.
The issue priour to December 16, 1968, were billed with assorted
bits of garbage, but I would like to call your attention to an article
that appeared in the Dec. 16th, issue of the Torch. It seems that
Cathy Hass, in writing her brilliant review of "STOP THE WORLD
I WANT TO GET OFF," LCC's first musical, has missed the whole
point of the show. It seems a shame that she had to pay money to
go and watch Nicola Crafts blow a line, or lament about the circumstances in which it was performed. Cathy love, that isn't the
point.!
The story is told both through action and dialogue, and it takes
a person who has a little imagination to injoy it. Do you have any?
It seems very evident that as a theatre critic you have very little
knowledge. I personally am very thankful that LCC had firstly,
a person like Edward Ragozzino, who fought all the way and made
"STOP THE WORLD" a possibility, and secondly, the cast - who
through their hard work and talent, made the show a success.
I feel sorry for people like you Cathy Hass, who, through their
own ignorance miss-inform many people.
I would think that a college newspaper would have a higher
quality of people than you have. Good luck in the future, you are
going to need it.

I

RING STOLEN

II

How can anyone be so cruel.
Not only do you break into P.E.
lockers, but you steal the one and
only possession which has any
meaning to my husband besides
me. You stole the ring I gave
to him for a weddin5 pres'3nt
four months ago. The ring will
never fit you. It's a size 121/2 and you will never be able
to get it fixed in the State of
Oregon because I have sent
letters to the thousands of jewelry
stores in this state in order to
prevent it. I have also contacted
the Lane County Sheriffs office.
You're right in your thinking that
it's probably worth some money.
It is worth at least $300. $300
Sincerely,
can be replaced Mister Thief but
Ken Hamilton, Performing Arts
the heart break you have caused
us is irrepairable--. Don't you reaEDITOR'S NOTE:
lize that a ring like that is 'custom
made. No one else has one like
to registElr them all without hav- it. My husband was in the U.s.
Lane's student-operated Torch
ing each one wait in line for Army Airborn and, buddy, they
is far from perfect, and we don't
an unscheduled,
hit or miss get some good training es mind admitting it because we
c_hance at a counselor, who, on pecially when they w·aigh well
are learning. Cathy Hass, innothe basis of a two-second intro =- over 200 lbs. So let your imacently showed the much-heralded
Stop the World performance was duction presumes to advise and gination go to work for you now.
assign the would be student to Can you imagine what he will
not perfect either.
a list of classes which may be do to you when he sees someone
But so what. Few people are the foundation of his scholastic
wearing a ring of this descripconcerned with your dramatic or economic future. The idea that
tion? And what else could you
perfection because most realize this kind of counseling can poshave possible stolen it for? You
you are learning too. Amatuers sibly be of real assistance to
can't give a 1/4 carat man's
are not expected to be "per- either the student or the school
diamond ring size 12-1/2 away.
fect." That goes for the Torch is preposterous.
Who could possibly wear it. Extoo.
Without mention of the frayed cept my husband.
Miss Hass, having never writ- nerves of those with other apCan't you find a little goo:l
ten this sort of thing before, was pointments who wait an hour in
in your heart and return the ring
told by her English prof to look line only to finally arrive at a
to us. A.11 you have to do is
for these things, so she did. desk and be informed that the
stick it in a little box and addPersonally, Miss Hass enjoyed counselor is just leaving for
ress it. You don't even have to
the play very much.
lunch, the student certainly is not put postage on it. Send it C.O.D.
As for our college newspaper getting the proper counseling so
if you want. But please, please,
having higher quality of people, important to him at this stage
please sent it back to us. We
baby, our people are students by such an impersonal, mechaniwill probably never know who you
no professionals.
cal method.
are and unless you return the
As for our college newspaper
As the student is to meet with ring to us we will probably never
having higher quality of people, a faculty member before comsee it again. Put youself in our
baby, our people are students pleting his registration anyway,
place. Surely you have some posnot profes~ionals. ,. .
why not set up a schedule of session (not stolen) that means
appointmtmts ahead of regis- very, very much to you. If you
tration with someone in his own have any decency at all please
major area who will get to know send the ring back. NO ,~UESthe student and his needs and who TIO:NS ASKgD!
is also aware of the academic Sincerely,
requirements in that area. Sure- MUS. GLEN CAIN, 299 Blazer
ly, if this is not the best metho:l Avenue, Eugene, Oregon, 97402,
Dear Sir:
it would at least be an improve- 688-0917 eves. 342-5116 days.
With all the fine attributes and ment which would make better use
innovative ideas enacted at Lane of time for both student and counCommunity College, I fail to selor and assure the student of
PROFESSIONAL GU _ITAR
understand why the school in- greater satisfaction with his
INSTRUCTION
sists on following such an in- course work.
Classical, Blues,
efficient, antiquatod system of JEAN EDWARDS
Rock , Jazz ~ etc~
registration. In handling some
344-0078
4000 plus students one would think
Leave name & address
some better means could be found

REGISTRATION
ANTIQUATED

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~VEA}T\ALBLE IMMEDIATELY
2½ Bedroom hons~

II

Letter to a thief:

I
I

& ~ - l ~ k J.•

Carp e

e ~--";"

un f u:r n i sh e i ''' ::

Springfield 154 Nortb37tb

C!h FOUNTAIN ·R~ALTY

:

3 4 2-:- 3 3 6 3 mo r 1 0 gs
345-7914, anynme

II
II

;:-,:', _

0

i _raH~mnow~~~• ~-- 11

t na 11 t~t.illl<-$'-»~'-

I

I
I

YEAR •ENo sHo-=1
-CLEARANCE

to 75o/o Off

,. \

Save now on this season'~ smartest styles!
All the looks you like in round and square
toes, chunky or new higher heels, and
colors that blend or accent beautifully.
Take advantage of the low prices now
to complete your shoe wardrobe!
F L AT S :

I

were 8.00-17.00

Now4.90
LOAFERS:

NOW

were 10.00-14.00

5.00:- 7.00

LITT.-LE HEELS,
dress and sport shoes: were 10.00-28.00

NOW

FOX HOLLOW CHALET
1 and 2 bedroom apartments
Pool &
Rec. Room

Close to LCC
TV cable & all appliances

Completely carpeted

5.00-13.50

All Re.mainin6~BOOTS

25o/o OFF
All of our Famous Names Included! Villager,
La Piuma, Jacqueline, Connie, Fredelle, Golo,
Customer aft.

5477 Donald St.

Phone 343-3A20

~AH.
ON

!IP.Sf

CAMPUS

. - - :>·--·

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THE TORCH Page 3

GERMAN LUNCH
HOUR ATTENDANCE
URGED BY RESHKE
A German Language Hour •is
held daily from ll:30-12:30 p.m.
in the Health Building, rm. 116.
It is open to any student or
staff mr::-mher who Iias a knowledge of German. Native Cermari
students or staff are encouraged
to drop in and enjoy conversaOffice Equipment /
tion with other persons who speak
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _..,,
and are interested in German.
SALES-RENTALS
SERVICE
Students in the German classes
Rentals to Apply
are also encouraged to come and
to Purchase
share in a conversation hour
ALL. TYPES :OFFICE
w:hich will be an informal time
M~tJ~~%t-r-o
to speak and learn about German.
Herr Reshke, German language
Authorized Hermes Dealer
. instructor, urges those attending
fi to bring their lunch.

343-9112

c(JIII.

'7c;rc

\

o.d

Tore~
Q.tc

REWARD OFFERED· Please return the Marine Corps DI helmet
that was taken January 8 out of the 'SS Chev. Bring
it to the Adult Education Office in the Administration
Building at any time. Thank you . .

etis

1o

Patricia Park, 2091 McMillan
(near South Willamette). Tues.
and Thurs. afternoon classes
from 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

Stay Warm & Dry This Term.
1955 Buick Century. Radio, heater, Power Steering & Brak~s.
Wide oval whitewalls, clean body .
$175 (part cash) Jim, 344-3243

The Titan gymnastic team will
host Cottage Grove High School
today at 4 p.m. in the Auxiliary
Gym. Coach George Gyorgyfalvy's squad will be competing in
its first home appearance of seven scheduled contests this year.
Leading performers to date
have been John Laptad, Harold
Summers and Steve Blair.
Mr. Gyorgyfal vy has also been
working with the following men in
preparation for the opening competition today:
Michael Bush
Galen Lee
Roger Piper
John Spiering
Mike Lyons
Duane Patterson
Billy Jordan
Jim Weber
Students desiring to turn out for
the gymnastic team can contact
Mr. Gyorgyfalvy in the Health and
Physical Education office.

WRESTLERS OPEN
WITH UO FROSH

Wally Blood will be wrestling
at 123 lbs. today when the Titans
meet the U of O Frosh.

CLASSIFIEDS GET RESULTS

... ho.ve

The Intramural Basketball
League begins today, Tuesday, in
Gym 2.
The following games are
scheduled: Corky Howard vs.
Larry Fullerton at 4:15 p.m. and
Lynn Johnston vs. Jim Purscelly at 5:15 p.m.
On January 16, Thursday, the

the. desire.
to rr,o_ke

$

,

CONTACT DEBBIE JENKINS
Phone LCC Ext. 253
or home: 343',._0835

Short sales staff meeting Thursday, Jan. 16

BABY SITTING EXCHANGE
CONSIDERED AT LANE
r

Nurses Receive
Test Scores

Would you be interested in an Exchange Baby Sitting Service
on the LCC campus?
A plan is being developed that would involve a 1 or 2 hour adult
ed. class, plus time in the child care center, in exchange for:
•
2 or 3 hours of baby sitting per day.
If you are interested in participating in this type of program,:
complete the following form and turn it in to Jack Carter's office. •

in the Torch Office, Health Building

L!KE

IRON

ffltt ( ~~----~--- ·~

.••

.

••
•
•••
•••

• EXCHANGE BABY SITTING

Sll ITS

WF4R

following games will be played:
Mike Raz vs. Paul Johnson at
4:15 p.m. and Dave Raines vs.
Joe Ray at 5:15 p.m.
The remainder of the schedule
will be printed in next week's
edition of the Torch.

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Practical Nurse students who
11111111
- - • • • - - • • • - - • • • • - - • • • • • • • • " graduated in August of '68, received State Board Test Scores
all exceeding the national average.
The class, which is a four
quarter vocational course, began
Septem'Jer '67 with twenty students.
The twenty girls who completed
the course and took the National
Exam in October, received their
scores from New York (the examination center) last Wednesday,
Dec. 4. The results showed the
class average to be 579.9. The
national m.-ian for this test is
only 500, according to a department spokesman. Nine out of the
twenty, scored above 600 and
another nine scored above the
500 mark. The passing score for
Phone
this test is 400.
According to Arlene Under345-1361
hill, "Most of the girls are
at Eugene's Sacred
860 13th Ave~ employed
Heart Hospital. All who wished
employment were given jobs imOregon 97401
moaiately." She said the graduates work "at everything from
Q~~lity Clothes for Men Who Care
N1~urosurgical to the Intensive
Care Ward."
LINDA WALTON

Coach Dick Newell takes his
varsity grapplers to the University of Oregon today to open the
season against the U of O Frosh.
LCC's probable lineup is:
123 lbs. Wally Blood
130 lbs. Randy Crockett
137 lbs. Claude Eberle
145 lbs. Curt Wicks
152 lbs. Kim McKinzie
160 lbs. Rick Hammons
167 lbs. Rick Christensen
177 lbs. Dave Hise
191 lbs. Jess Rogers
Lane's first scheduled match
with Central Oregon Community
College last Friday was cancelled
because of hazardous weather
conditions.
Experienced wrestlers are invited to attend the daily work-outs
from 2:00 to 4:00 P.M. in the
auxiliary gym.

INTRAMURAL HOOPERS BEGIN TUESDAY
AFTERNOON IN GYMNASIUM

* **

9 a.m. • or 4 p.m.

Need a Ride to LCC at 8:30
and from at 3:00. Will share
cost. David McDonald, 345-4608

LCC student needs ride at 1
a.:n. or 8:15 a. ~n. J !"'i. ·:,1,?sda;.,
a!d ir·~111rsdays. Stuj,~nt lives at
West 18th a:.1d CityView Sts.
Please call 344-6879.

GYMNASTS OPEN
TODAY WITH CGHS

~ti

Looking
for Opportunity?

z

Classified

••

Address

•

•••
•
•••
•••
•

Phone
Children

•

How many hours per week do you have need
• for on campus Baby Sitting?

••

.•

How many hours per week would you be able
:
: to devote to Baby Sitting?

••

Would you be willing to spend 1 or 2 hours
:
: per week in an Adult Ed. class that focuses
•on child Ga.re? . .

•••
•
•••
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•
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••••••.. ••••·•••••••••••••a•••••••
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THE TORCH Page 4

Drug Series

Being Aired
On .KLCC.~FN,

Stud ents ,Prog ramm ing
Mak e KLCC ' the Voic e'
Story - and Photos
by Jerry · Foster
Speaking with the well-oiled richness of a California politician, Lane's father of radio talked well over an hour about his
broad,::asting baby.
"KLCC-FM: 90.3 megacycles, Eugane--the voice of Lane Com-•
munity College," as the DJs might say it, is two years old, but
despite its infancy, is nearly ready to switch from monaural
reproduction to broadcasting rich stereo fidelity to the Upper
Willamette Valley.
Roger Houglum, Lane's grand old man of radio for 30 years
said the station is a lab facility for the broadcasting class-a vo-tec course leading to an associate of science degree.
He said his stu.1ents are not necessarily prepared for comnercial jobs in radio, especially the first year students--though
"every May or June they start dropping out like flies."
Are they ready?
"Not really."
According to Houglum: Broadcasting I "familiarizes students
with the electronic equipment, the record library facilities" but
"the most important single skill they'll learn here at LCC is
reading aloud," he said, then repeated--"reading aloud, reading
aloud so well that it sou:id., like you're talking."

the Student Center.
Of the 1500 albums KLCC owns, about three-fourths are semiclassical and popular. He explained the "lighter classics," by
such artists as David Rose or Percy Faith, are considered "more
by the arrangem~•nt than by the title."

Adds 400 Records Each Year

Mary Jane in Persp,?ctive is
produced by the National Educational Radio Network and examines th-:! issue of marijuana
through the eyes of doctors, university officials, the Federal
Narcotics Bureau, the police, researchers, and lawmakers.
There are six ~>rogrami; in the
series, according to Tom Lichty
of the electronics department.
Next Thursd :1.y's, the second
(aired each Thursday at 11 a.m,
and 7 p.m .) highlights the com-m•mt of John Sinclair, an advocate of the drug who is about
to stand trial for its sale. He
will, according to Lichty, be sentenced to 20 years if convicted.
The program aired January 9
will be presented again February
20 for those who m~.ssed its first
presentation.
Lichty considers this program
"extremt1ly enlightening" in the
light of a society "where drug
usage is practically of epidemic
proportions."
ri..nother program_. rated highly
by Lichty, is Focus. Heard each
it
w•~ek•jay evening at 7:30,
feature::; a jiverse musical offering running all the way from ~he
classics (Music of the Masters)
to contemporary jazz (Jazz 90).
'' The students who host these
program.,, com1rnmted Lichty,
''do an excellent job of p,anriing
and presenting them." He said
he is "very happy with their product."
These programt: can b-8 heard
.on KLCC-FM, 90,3 me.

Isn't that like CBS's Chicken Rock? Or KUGN-style music?
"Yes. Probably mi.ddle-of-the-road is a better d?scription."
But "nearer to programming like KKL in Portland" --music for
a wide spectrum of tasts, with em11hasis on music. This reflects
on the training program. They must program music.
"you'd be surprised," he said, "how their m,jsic taste has picked
up in the last six or eight w,deks." Houglum •'.!alled this: "rewarding.
All they knew was rock 'n' roll because that's all they'd had experience with."
For those who may thin stereo broadcasting might be sup,~rfluo:is to the educational process, Houglum f!Xplained that "record
companies are going that way. It costs as milch for mlmaural
as it does for stereo," he said. And "stereo adds a great deal
of richness to soun1." It doesn't make any difference in talking,
he added, but it is "incomparably better for music."
All the stereo equipm,~nt is paid for, said Houglum: but we're
lacking one peice. That is a $5,000 to $6,000 peice of reinforced
• alumi.num called a "passive reflector--that m1~ans it doesn't have
to do anything," he said. Its job, atop a ridge North of 30th avenue,
Criticized for Mismanagemen t
is to reflect a m~crowave signal from campus to KLCC's transmitter
KLCC has been heavily criticized in the past by stu'.tents--and on Blanton Heights.
KLCC is currently broadcasting m1Jnaurally via telephone lines.
some professional radio people--who feel the station has been
cannot be broadcast this way.
Stereo
mismanaged by Houglum. Advocates of change suggest the stuprogram"canned
present
dents would be better off without the
ming." Their reference is to KLCC's affiliation with National
Educational Radio, a tape network which supplies som,~ of the
station's programs.
Houglum calls it "wall-to-wall programming."
w,~ (KLCC) are an educational station, says Houglum, and we
are still responsible to our listeners.
But what about the stude:its pushing the buttons for a taped proYour LCC park)ng sticker enLit]es
.,,-ram?
to a 2¢ per gallon of gas discounL
you
They "probably do not get a whole lot out of it," said Houglum.
ADOS UP'
THAT
ANO
said,
Houglum
station,"
rock'n'roll
another
be
never
will
"KLCC
but indicated KM?S, a low power AM station on campus, probably
will.
"KLCC's audience represents 200,000 potential listeners in the
GAS, OIL, and OTHER DISCOUNTS
Upper Willamette Valley," whereas "KMP3's audience represents
to STUDENTS & STAFF
the LCC student body and nobody else." He said music tastes
are much different. And it (KMPS) will provide training in another
3 Ot h Av e n u e Ex i t
area because it fulfills a different need.
p h on e 7 4. 6 - 9 3 2 O
( Ga s o I i n e A I I e y )
At 700 Kc. KMP'3 can be hear~ in the North parking lot and,
• Service with a Smile
according to student Manager Marsti ~ohnson, • wm: t,>~ :\Yfrect 'i~to

~ .............. .
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STALLI.NG'S Tex

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