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| | TIME Magazine Archive Article -- Berg v. Chocolate -- Aug. 18, 1930 |
 | | Holder of no title but conceded by some critics to be the best boxer in the modern prizering, Chocolate's idea was to begin a new campaign by beating Berg, a junior welterweight, then Al Singer, lightweight champion, and so work down to his own featherweight class. |
 | | Whenever Chocolate was free to box he scored points but Berg kept on top of him aggressively. |
 | | Liking Chocolate for his buoyancy, his nerve, and the crafty speed of his wedge-shaped brown body, spare as an impressionist charcoal drawing, the crowd delighted in his onslaughts, scored six of the ten rounds to him, booed when the referee and judges called Berg the winner. |
| www.time.com /time/archive/preview/0,10987,789227,00.html (388 words) |
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