Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Oct 1963, p. 2

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27 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondoy, October 21, 1963 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN DON'T FORGET UNICEF HALLOWE'EN DRIVE Did you kféw that more than 6,500 children participated in,the Oshawa Hallowe'en night drive for UNICEF last year? + They represented 20 Public, six Separate schools in the Cify.and several school groups inthe counties of Ontario, ' D&rham and Northumberland. The sum of $5,234.61- sent to national headquarters included proceeds of a tag day in Bow- Manville by the. Busi and Professional Women's Club. _, This is of importance as plans are being formulated for this yéar's drive on Hallowe'en. bd The history of UNICEF in Oshawa actually started in 19$5 when the children of Dr..and Mrs. Claude Vipond organ- ized 24 youngsters, including themselves, for a neighborhood "ghell out' on behalf of the fund, The North Simcoe (now tHe Dr. §. J. Phillips): Home and School Association sponsored tite campaign the following yeat with 300 children participat- ing -- $372.42 was collected. | UNICEF is currently assisting 459 projects for children aftd mothers in 115 countries and territories, and 14 regional or. inter-regional projects. TLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE HEADLINE OF THE WEEK DEPT.: "Power of Woman is Unlimited" (The Oshawa Times, October 16, 1963). So what's s0 fléwsworthy about that? ... John Weir, a Toronto lawyer, told the finth annual convention of the Ontario Association of Urban-Rural Municipalities last week that the pressure for more and better education, social services, recreation ahd other services facing every municipality is almost certain to bring changes in the structure of municipal government. Mr. Wéir said: "The cost of most services are rising and only public works budgets can be cut, but a council which cuts public works in the face of today's demands is not likely to succeed itself.I think you are becoming ready ROMs to,recognize that regional government may mean consolidation of local municipalities, the development of larger units of government and even a general reduction in the over-al namber of councillors and officials. This will involve sacri- tiges." BUILDING PERMITS DRAG AT CONVENTION TIME &. The following self-explanatory letter arrived by mail last Fiiday: Dear Mr. Gearin: >. I am an Oshawa home-owner. " On October 7, 1963, a firm of contractors applied at City Hall for a permit to allow me to renovate my house. Up to the time of writing, October 17, this permit is sitting on sineone's desk at City Hall. + The contractors and myself are waiting for approval. a phoned the appropriate department and was told that thé official concerned directly with this matter had left for ai convention this week. He would not be back until Mon- day, October 21. ' 1 asked if someone else could not authorize the issuing of, such permits. I was told "no". gi phoned Mayor Lyman Gifford, who promised to look into it Monday morning in. company with the contractors. | 'S It seems like a needless waste of time and money when e(ptractors and home owners must wait this length of time tobe told that the ycan improve their own property. '= If there is such an overflow of. mail in this City depart- njent, do they not need more help to issue permits, or, if the backlog of applications was so great why was this desk left empty while the one person authorized to issue permits léaves for a convention. = 1 wonder how many people in Oshawa are wailing just ¢ mé@ for a slip of paper to be signed at City Halli? Sincerely, e jleft the continent when word wyn Lloyd, leader of the House of Commons; Edward Heath, secretary of state for Prime Minister Lord Home. Left to right: Richard Austen Butler, foreign secretary; Sel- These men figured as the major changes in the new British cabinet named by MAJOR CHANGES IN BRITISH CABINET trade; and Anthony Barber, health minister, --(AP Wirepioto) Extremi QUEBEC (CP) -- Premier Jean Lesage, speaking at the end of a Liberal party meeting which saw occasional sparks generated by English-French friction, promised Sunday the Quebec government will con- tinue to treat the province's minorities well. And to solid applause, he con- demned acts of terrorists and extremists in the province. Mr. Lesage was speaking at the close of the three-day an- eral Federation which approved a string of recommendations aimed at changing the functions of legislature members and civil servants, The meeting also rejected, after 90. minutes of closely watched debate. a suggestion that would have allowed Que- bec Liberals to support another party in federal politics, The rejection was immedi- ately followed by the public resignations from the party of a former Liberal candidate and his wife, 'Wheat Demand Top Prizes Wen 'Stays Strong | By 6 Canadians ' OTTAWA (CP) -- Returning from a week in Europe, Trade Minister Sharp 'said Sunday By THE CANADIAN PRESS winning it," said Mr. Leck, an jnight there has been no lessen-| Nineteen Canadians \ing in demand there for Cana-/Dartmouth, N.S., to Victoria, | tion Limited. 'I'm going to take dian wheat. B.C., won more than $1,400,000)i) easy for a while." He said he made the trip in|Saturday when their tickets in) among the more nonc jview of concern among tradit- the last Irish Sweepstakes of the| actions was that of Montreal |f@nal Canadian customers over|year paid off on the first three] rinting shop foreman Tom jthe record Russian wheat sale.|horses in the Cambridgeshite/tHyni, a $30,000 winner, who "We assured them that. we/Stakes at Newmarket, England. aig jt was better than win- are doing everything possible to| Six Canadians won top prizes|ning a gol' game." = / see that they get their regular|of about $150,000 each on Com-| yy A Edgar, Weston, Ont., supplies this year," he said, |mander-in-Chief, winner of the), countant who was the only | But would they? asked a re- English racing classic. Two of|,ig winner in the Metropolitan " * gai i' xty-year-o) . jnews calmly, Mrs, Eagar sa er ea he fotnd nen ot Peterborough rusted, home| yer ioyear-sld daughter, ANN, lropean grain interests were re.\{tom work when told that he/naq asked her parents to buy lieved at the settlement of the|had won $150,000. Then he an automatic dishwasher with St. Lawrence longshoremen's|ietly sat down when he re-itheir winnings, and "I think strike, which threatened to halt;memberd he had alm9stir go along with that." grain exports, ithrown his ticket stub away. TANT | However, he said he had just| He said that when he received SECURITY IMPORTA) | his o'ficial receipt for his ticket,) The two ee aa | Iwi s, were s. came of the walkout.by the Sea. |number NAB ves " wong hf ub) 'etioue husband, tether farers' International Uni "fehl ela il aaa crcl i ere Cahade " nion of eceipt away. of two and grandfather of one, Talkin ; : | "Something made me pick upjis a $350-a-month orchid sales- ig with grain traders,/the paper," Mr. Hewitt said.)man, and William Lewis, an Mr. Sharp said, he learned that)«when | opened it I found. the/electrical company employ the demand for wheat in the So- ticket stub inside." Mr. Bushby, who had been buy- viet Union is likely to continue! : ling. sweepstakes tickets for 30 beyond the end of the current LIKED NAME years, said '"'security means a crop year expiring July 31. An employee for 19 years in a great. deal especially at my The record sale of 227,500,000|factory that preduces a choco-|,-2% and added that he plans bushels of wheat and fiour to|!ate drink, Mr. Hewitt said there| | Continue working. the Soviet Union covered only|/Was "something about the name) wir Tewis, who earns $120 a up to July 31 although Mr.|of the horse' that made him), .o¢° said: "I'm taking off Sharp has said more might be|think he'd be a money-winner. | 1.1, "my wife and two kids sold hetece then if Canada's; He org ---- wget right away. I don't know where su ines could lay i to spen e money, but is ' at A sing dv inte wage living in his comfortable Abie separ blll tong {rOm) aircraft fitter at Fairey Avia- | Pontiff Makes | Plea To China. | ROME (Reuters)--Pope Paull VI Sunday expressed "trepida- tion and intimate pain" at the situation of the Roman Catholic jchurch in China. He asked the Peking rulers to "consider the condition of our halant| Children with an eye of equity."|Liberal to support another party he ex-| At the same time, pressed firm hope that the seeds of Christianity sown in \China's "fertile furrows amid tears" would spout one day. The Pope was addressing stu- dent priests at the Missionary |College for Propagation of the |Faith near Vatican City. Earlier Sunday, the Pope con- secrated 14 bishops from mise! jsion areas and other countries) in St. Peter's Basilica. | In an address Saturday, Pope Paul said that 'selfish aims'"--|(CLC) plan to converge on Ot-, Foreign secretary: ja search only for economic profit--may be a cause of fre- quently strained relations be- |tween labor and management. Without singling out one|by the Seafarers' International) Hailsham (unchanged). | |group or the other, he said ev- leryone has the right to fair) Mr. Dodge made his com-); compensation and that no one ee,|should try to get out of work|'rom Beauport, Que., with The by pushing it on someone else. He spoke at an audience he granted to a number of Italian jbusinessmen and working men |who had been in Rome to be decorated by the Italian govern- ment. Construction ee | Magnate Dies |1¥4-storey duplex home with his and I don't know when we'lt be |HANDS IN CARD Pierre Leger, who ran for the Commons in 1962 but refused to run in 1963 because he couldn't support the federal Liberals' nuclear policy, handed in his membership card to Francois Aquin, federation president. Mr. Leger was among those who supported a constitutional jchange which would have lopened the way for a Quebec in federal politics CMU Members | Go To Ottawa © TORONTO (CP) -- William) Dodge, vice-president of the Ca-|/ LONDON (AP)--Here is the full membership of Prime Min- ister Lord Home's cabinet, an-| Secretary for Scotland: nadian Labor Congress, said Sunday severe! members of the Canadian Maritime Union) jtawa today. However, he denied that any) |demonstration was considered |to counter the march to Ottawa) |Union (Ind.). | jments in a telephone interview Globe and Mail. | "We would have preferred no |publicity on this," he said. | "We certainly will not permit) jany clash with the SIU demon- |stration. We do not know what sd CMU men will do when they get to Ottawa. They may just |talk to us and go home." The CMU and SIU, bitier un-/ lion enemies, will both be af- fected by the government's trus- teeship over maritime unions. 332 to 155, ry it had the support of Rene bec's outspoken natural sources minister. A number of federal members were on hand, but did not speak. _~ eee oe, to require a Quebec eral to support the party federally. + danger in rejectin; than -- was blocking "no - nual meeting of the Quebec Lib-|ti , seeeg aca: REPRESENTS ALL oad Speech of the meeting, said sents all the people of Quebec, whatever their language or re- ligion. The government would not "give in to blackmail" from anyone, tions, especially if they come from some activist faction which believes that violence is the only way to change the course of events, show a defeatism and a lack of confidence in democracy, Let those who say they speak for) the people do as we do--let them get themselevs elected." lish- and French-speaking de'- gates at veloped Saturday during debate on a demand that civil servants be allowed to join labor unions and have the right to strike. | | was Frederick Erroll.) sts Blasted By Quebec's Premier Anthony Malcolm, an English- speaking delegate, said civil setvants should have to go to compulsory arbitration and the right to strike should not be given '"'to some damn union leader." i A French-speaking member asked that Mr. Malcolm's ré- marks be translated, '"'not be cause I'm uneducated but be- cause I'm Fredch first of all." REPHRASED REMARKS Mr, Malcolm re remarks in French for "M. Le Separatiste," At the end of the sitting, when ithe suggestion had been adopted by a comfortable majority, a French-speaking delegate strode out saying: "I'm not a separatist but I say that ff any gy ee can't speak French, Jet them shut their mouths." The meeting adopted a. series of resolutions, drafted by the political commission of the Lib- eral federation, demanding im- provement and changes in the status of civil servants and leg- islature members. In addition to recommending junion membership, the federa- ition said the civil service com- mission should be overhauled, that government employees should have the right to express themselves on political questions under certain conditions, that, @ special department be created to look after the growing re- quirements of the civil service, Butler Handles Foreign Affairs But the move was voted down, vesque, Que- re- Mr. Levesque said it is "'arti- There was more the motion because it Mr, Lesage, making his sec- he Quebec government repre- "We will not permit provoca: "These activists attitudes Some friction between Eng- the convention de- By vm Minister of education: Sir Ed- |ward Boyle (unchanged), «- nounced Sunday: ael Noble (unchanged). Us: Richard! Minister of housing and Bs"! . Butler (previously Lord|government and Welsh affe' Secretary of state for indus- ry, trade and regional develop- ment and president of the board of trade: Edward Heath. (For- mer board of trade president Lord Chancellor: Lord Dil- horne (unchanged). Commonwealth and colonial secretary: Duncan Sandys (un- changed), Minister of Defence: Thorneycroft (unchanged). Lord privy seal and leader of the house of commons: Selwyn Lloyd. (Takes over from Heath, Home.) Sir Keith Joseph (unc Powell). changed). Ri Wood) (unchanged). a portfolio: Peter |rington. (no change in Deedes' There was no immediate word who was lord privy seal, and Lord president of the council) Minister of Ith: i and minister of science: Lord|Barber (formeriy Emch Chancellor of the uer: Reginald Maudling Minister of power: Ltr (succeeds Minister of public bui Ss and works: Geoffrey 'ae Ministers without -- William Deedes and Lond Car- case. Carrington was formerly first lord of the admiralty), on who would be the new first: lord of the admiralty, AN IRATE TAXPAYER (name 4 (EDITOR'S NOTE: City Engineer Fred Crome said last withheld. on request) Fiiday that the above requested permit would be issued today, Mpnday, October 21. He said a two-week period frequently elapsed between the application and issuance of such permits and that this one was within that time.) 'MOOSE BREAKS 'HUNTER'S LEG wife. Five Canadian tickets were drawn on Principal, the horse |which placed second to provide one ticket was in the name of} GERALDTON, Ont. (CP) . jtwo Victoria residents under) Here's a moose story to ri- lthe mortgage on the Gauthier | Another 30-year-old buyet of} TORONTO (CP) -- Percy F. sweepstakes tickets, was Mrs.|Law, 65, of Toronto, owner of Agnes izes 'h |B.C. who won $60,000. Her only|companies from coast to coast, Posh ad oti bln ger immediate plan was to pay off|died in hospital here Sunday. Gauthier of Brunaby,/eight Canadian construction One of Canada's major road builders, Mr, Law took his first! Iain Macleod, who was leader of the house in the old adminis- tration). Minister of transport: Ernest | Marples (unchanged). | Minister of agriculture: Chris- topher Soames (unchanged). OSHAWA'S BIGGEST REAL ESTATE MOVE! House Blast Kills Three MONTREAL (CP) -- Three NAMED DIRECTOR OF MUSEUM » Leon Konarowski, son of Mr. and Mrs. 8. Konarowski of 345 LaSalle, was recently appointed director of the Montreal Hjstorical Board. He was formerly associated with Henry House, Oshawa, and the Toronto Historical Board as curator of Fort York, . . . There is a fine example of legal technicali- tis to be found in the proposed purchase by the City of that Pfoperty on the southwest corner of Prince and Bond streets, currently owned by Z. T. Salmers, an Oshawa lawyer. Mr. Sélmers purchased the site in 1960 for $16,000 -- he now pro- the joint nom-de-plume of Win-/home. ter. Re " ysl " Poy, | Se president of a fruit and vege- Ford Workers Stay On Job table firm, and Mrs. Vivienne OAKVILLE (CP)--More than val any fish story. District forester G. E. MacKinnon told about it in his weekly report. He said: "One of our non-resident | Thompson: hunters had an unfortunate | Seven Canadians collected accident. His party had |about $30,000 each with tickets) downed a large bull mouse |on Hasty Cloud, the Cambridge- and while he was taking |shire favorite who finished pictures of supposed dead jth'rd. moose, it staggered to its | In all, 364 Canadian tickets|?:"" A feet and fell on the unlucky |were drawn on the 86 horses|United Automobile betes daney * hunter. He suffered a bro- [eligible for the race. Only 23,America (CLC), employed a pQses that the City offer him an alternate site, or $40,000 for its He would build an office building. The City would use it as an unloading site for buses. s WEATHER FORECAST 'Showers To End Autumn Drought « Forecasts issued by the} Forecast Temperatures weather office at 5:30 a.m.: Low tonight, High Tuesday. Synopsis: A large high pres-|Windsor .......... 50 7 «sure area over northern Ontario|St. Thomas. has pushed cooler air over alll Kitchener - but extreme southern sections|Mount Forest. of the province, A disturbance|Wingham ... over the mid-western United|Hamilton .... States will restore cloud and/St. Catharines...... milder temperatures to Ontario|Toronto Tuesday. Rain and showers in|Peterborough ... advance of this system will/Trenton . likely spread over the western half of Ontario Tuesday and the remainder of the province Tues- day night Ss Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Windsor, London: Tuesday cloudy with rain begin- ning in the afternoon or even- ing. Winds becoming southeast 15 Tuesday. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Ham- ilton, Toronto: Tuesday cloud-: ing over in the afternoon or evening. Winds becoming light this evening. Georgian Bay, Haliburton: Tuesday increasing cloudiness, winds becoming light tonight. Algoma, White River, Sault Ste. Marie: Tuesday cloudy with rain beginning in the after- noon. Winds becoming southeast 15 Tuesday. Cochrane, Timagami, North Bay, Sudbury: Tuesday increas- ing cloudiness and not quite so - cool, Winds becoming southeast- erly 15 Tuesday. | SS AeE DEES tee Kapuskasing . White River Moosonee .. Timmins .....,.... 32 Observed Temperatures Low overnight, High Sunday Dawson .osssesess 35 44 VICIOTIA wc cscceees 49 38 47 Kapuskasing ..... North Bay ... "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6: NEED AN OIL FURNACE . .| cau PERRY OAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 ken leg." started, and holders of tickets|the Ford of Canada plant here, on the 20 who ran out will col- lect prizes: of $1,083 each. Hold-|!® ers of tickets on the non-start-| ers will get smaller consolation Local President E. G. Bruce said the union had made "'prog- lawards, bringing the total Ca-|Tess" in 10 days of talks with u] nadian earnings to more than|Company officials on grievances rivate P| | $1,500,000 jarising from a two-day wi!dcat Dae ee walkout at the plant earlier this TORONTO (CP Senator MILKMAN MISSES month. : : M. Wallace Ad Matta Milkman Ubald Betlefeuille of, But, he said, one major prob- Saturday private welfare agen- St. Francois de Sa'es Que, lem remains--the company has Group Service cies should not be engaged in " offering direct financial assist-|@0 unprecedented freak of ho had two tickets drawn in|threatened disciplinary action luck,|over the recent strike. ance but in providing individual ¢Mded up as one of the consola-| The company has promised to leontract at the age of 16. | He was president of P. {Law Construction Limited, Van- jcouver; Law Construction Lim- lited, Municipal Spraying Oiling Limited and Law Reaity Company Limited, all of Tor- onto; Municipal Spraying and Contracting Limited and Tank | 3,000 members of Local 707,\Lines Limited in Halifax and} nea ye Ready Mix Limited tin Sydney, N.S. | Mr. Law, interested in cattle |agreed Sunday to stay on the/ raising for many years, had his| shorthorns named champions at} the 1950 Royal Winter Fair and ithe Chicago International Fair. He leaves his wife Ethel, a |son and two daughters. | Bandit Grabs Night Deposit KINGSTON (CP) -- A bandit escaped with slightly less than 4persons were killed. and two se- 'verely injured early Sunday in and) an explosion that destroyed a \two storey-building in the west- jend suburb. of Notre Dame de Grace. Dead are Mrs. Sheilah Hau- mont, 44, and her two daugh- ters, Nicole, 16, and Leslie, 10. Mr. Haumont, 41, a French jliterature teacher at Iona Col- Chancellor of the Duchy of) Lancaster: John Hare (previ- ously Macleod). ~ | Chief secretary to the trea- sury and paymaster-general: John Boyd - Carpenter (un- | changed). | Home secretary: Henry Brooke (unchanged). | Minister of labor: Joseph Godber (formerly John Hare). John A. J. Bolahood Ltd. end Lioyd Realty (Oshewe) Ltd. NOW Bolahood Brothers Limited 101 Simcoe' N. 728-5123 jlege in New Rochelle, N.Y., and his son Mare, 13, were in crit:) ical condition. | Fire Capt. Bernard Tobin said) that when he arrived the whole! house was down, "Only the boy's head was) sticking out of the rubble. | Everyone else was buried un- derneath." Cause of the explosion was un- certain. | Mr. -Haumont, a French re-| WHAT'S @® WITH YOUR| wronc BS pancine? Lack confidence ......+.. Outdated steps Can't lead see eeeeoeees sistance fighter in the Second World War, was to take his fam- 'ily Sunday to the U.S. to live Can't follow see bere sesee or rgoup services. tion winners, One of his horses,|make a statement on the ma'- Cocky Boy, was not among the/ter early this week. "And that/$7,000 in cash and $3,200 in non- acceptors, and the other, Ear:y|statement could blow the top|negotiable cheques here Satur- to Rise, suf'ered a coughing fit|right off this local,' Mr. Bruce|day a'ter holding up an em-| and was scratched on Wednes- ger . jployee of a Brewers' Retail) jay. le told members the prob'em |Store. Most of the top winners whojof "American domination" and) John Cable, 28, a bookkeeper, were available for comment|work scheduling--two of the/was delivering the cash in two during the day stressed the se-;major issues have been|money bags to a night depos- curity angle of their windfalls. |"licked." jitory of a local bank when the A number ran for cover, in-| Mr. Bruce claimed U.S. ex-/man jumped into his car in a cluding a 32-year-old Ottawa ecutives at the plant had been|quiet suburban district as he| bachelor, army Sergeant W. J.|working with 'complete disre-|stopped his car at an intersec-| McCormick, a $150,000 winner.|gard for the capacity of their|tion, He forced Cable at gun- | His neighbors commented that|workers." He added the com-)point to drive to a nearby park- they hoped he would be able|pay inas agreed to post over-jing lot. now to buy a new battery forjtime scheduling at least 24) At the lot, Mr. Cable was told| s red sports car, which they|hours in advance, instead of|to leave the car, The, holdup have fae helping to push in|two hours as previously. 'man fled on foot recent days. | a ea $150,000 winner Frank G. Leck of Dartmouth, N.S., said he plans to quit his job and take life easy. ? "T never thought much about Speaking to the first biennial) |meeting of the Catholic Chari-| ties Council of Canada, he said |these services would range) jfrom counselling to preventive} |measures in fields such as rec-! jreation and citizenship. "I recognize that government agencies also operate in certain of these fields but private agen- cies can meet special and indi- vidual needs that are bound to fall through the net of. mass public programs,"' Senator McCutcheon, a past president of the Canadian Wel |fare Council, said the responsi-| |bility for direct financial assist-| jance has been assumed by gov- jernments as a result of iegisla- tive programs which "in mg |judgment would have been en-| acted in substantially the same) terms regardless of the party in power." |MuUskOka cossessee 4 | Windsor .. | Halifax . socacse SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial. and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Deoler in your ares. | 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 COF CANADIAN ORDER OF FORESTERS Court Charlene L1750 Are Dedicating a Funeral Service for Your Original CARPET CENTRE Over 50 Rolls of Carpet on Display Select from the largest display east of Toronto, SISTER FLORENCE TIPPETT TONIGHT, MONDAY, OCT. 21 7 P.M. ARMSTRONG FUNERAL HOME N-I-R-C LICENSED CARPET CLEANING 728-4681 NU-WAY RUG. CO. LTD. Expert Upholstering 174 Mary Street with him. U.S, visas were found in the rubble. SKELTON SCHOLAR Charles McMurray, 28, is the recipient of the first Red Skel- ton scholarship to be awarded for study at UCLA's Theatre Arts Department. 'OR PREFERRED ATTENTION PAUL ISTOW 728.9474 R: ALTOR Need practice ......005. SPECIAL RATES DURING OUR 50th ANNIVERSARY Don't let poor dancing steal your popularity. Come to the Arthur Murray Studio mow and <let an expert teacher bring out 'your dormant dancing ability. There Is only one basic step to learn and you can master it in a short time -- even if you have never danced before. Take advantage of Special Rates during our Golden Anniversary, Open 'til 10 P.M. ARTHUR MURRAY W. MARKS, LICENCE 11% SIMCOE ST. 728-1681 Whatever Happened to the 'For Sale' Sign? You rarely see @ 'For Sale" sign on a house any more. There's @ good reason: most desirable homes are now sold through reliable Real Estate offices . . . and most home-seekers pre- fer to save time and trouble by dealing through a broker. In recent years, the tremendous upsurge in realty activity hos kept brokers busy . + + given them the background to serve you 'ar better than you can serve yourself! "Over A Querter Century of Service" SCHOFIELD-AKER 360 KING WEST LIMITED PHONE 723-2265

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