Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Mar 1962, p. 3

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BALLOTING AT SUD Insp. E. Loyer of the On- tario. department of labor carries a ballot box after first voting period by em- ployees of the International 's |liquor and seven days for driv- Thursday to settle their future | ter Workers (Ind). or go into bargaining agent. They are | the Canadian Labor Congress deciding whether to retain the | affiliation via the United Steel- strife torn . International | workers of America. Union of Mine, Mill and Smel- CP Wirephoto Nickel Company at Sudbury. He is followed through Frood Mine gate by union scrutineers. Employees of the company complete voting Unloaded Gun Not Firearm Court Rules BOWMANVILLE (Staff) -- Two Toronto youths pleaded not guilty in Magistrate's Court here Tuesday te a charge of illegal possession of a firearm. John Wright, 24 and Charles Doull, 28, were found not guilty as chargéd when His. Worship ruled that the gun did not come under the definition of a fire- arm. "The gun was a German made automatic but there was no clip for it and this particu- lar make has to have a clip to fire," said Constable Bruce Tillson. Wright was jailed three months for driving while his licence was under suspension, fined $10 and costs or three days on illegal possession of ing while intoxicated. The sen- tences are to run concurrently and were dated back to Feb. 20 when he was remanded for of a CNR freight train jumped the tracks Wednesday at near- This was the scene after three locomotives and 13 cars sentence. John Doull was found guilty jof being drunk in a_ public a ed CNR FREIGHT TRAIN DERAILED IN LAURENTIANS no one was injured in the wreck. CP Wirephoto by Garneau, 70 miles west of Quebec City. The cars were | carrying general freight and jplace, and was t to jseven days which was dated back to Feb. 20. OBITUARIES VALUE DEBATED Pickering Township To Host Employees By ELSA STORRY UXBRIDGE -- Councillor Mrs. Nellie Kydd advised Coun- cil at a recent meeting that committees for various boards Welfare Officer Uncovers Errors jemployees are a secondary con-| "The township has grown to| were in the process of being By MRS. ELSA STORRY BROUGHAM -- In discussing! a township dinner, such as those) held in previous years, Picker-| ing Township Reeve J. S. Scott| said recently that such an event was important to make mem-| bers of council acquainted with department heads and members of other township boards and committees. When Councillor Harvey) Spang expressed his disapproval of. using taxpayers' money for the dinner, he said he did not believe just selected employees should be asked to attend, stat- ing that he believed "that the) road department employees have just as much right as the other people'. | "Unless we get 100 per cent) support of the employees of the township," he said, "I doubt) whether it has served a pur- pose." "It Is not primarily for the) employees," said the reeve,) "but for the various boards and| committees of the township. The always attend." sideration. Perhaps we have no|such an extent that it has be-jset up, and that the Park obligation to them." come a large deal," said Coun-|/Board was not yet completed. "We have had a dinner for cillor Spang. | Deputy Reeve Gould. recom- the past three years," said' «phe cost is some four or five;mended that the Park Board Councillor Ross Deakin. hundred dollars, and we are try-|be appointed by bylaw. 'Sins ieee Loop ar ol ing to control expenses." | aienppaiatod," valde "could. boards and committees who do not know who they are working with, and who do not know the members of council. Some do not get paid anything. The municipality should show inter- est and appreciation of their work. "I think the primary object is to have one occasion during the year when various boards and some of the employees can get together. In a municipality like ours, spread out over a large area, I think there is con- siderable value in _ having) something like this.' « sooner see the event held has until in good weather in the} all could be accommodated. "Tt might be we should have a} The Park Board has _ been picnic for the staff," the reeve| comprised of remarked. from the various service clubs. A resolution was passed that a township dinner be held injning Board members the near future to show appre-|Moore and Rae Ferguson has ciation to the boards and com-/expired. mittees for the work they were each year from Council." Mrs. Kydd. It was agreed that they be contacted to find if they would act on the board for another three-year term. against the resolution. Deputy Reeve Mrs. McPher- Councillor Spang recalled that son wished to abstain from vot- he had voted against the dinner|ing, but was advised that a every year since he had been on councillor was not permitted to council, although, he said, "J/do this unless a conflict of inter-' WELFARE OFFICER lest was apparent. | Councillor C. F. Steward re- CAPSULE NEWS Toronto Police Adding 150 Men TORONTO (CP) -- The addi- tion of 150 men to the Metropol-| itan Toronto police department,| was provided for Wednesday with the approval of an $18,500,-| 000 budget by the Metro police commission. Strength of the| force now will rise to 2,469. | APPEAL RULING VANCOUVER (CP) -- The! province - owned B.C. Electric| launched an appeal Wednesday) against a court order that it} ogg on the a cage PEs Re d Fix ers' y the new Welfare cer, Told To Halt Mrs. Sheehy, stating that she had discovered a few previous MOSCOW (Reuters) -- The men who cut through Soviet red Mr. Spang said that he would)«They have no control of their|must be completed by 9 a.m. money with everything going oe through the town office here. "wide open spaces', and then phey receive a grant of $2,000) which would give a person un- representatives| The three-year term of Plan- Bert) "I would like these two men doing. Councillor Spang voted|to stay on that board," said) Complainant May Pay $10,000 Costs ST. CATHARINES (CP)--Jo- jwhich included 16 new dwell-|seph Lament, 39, whose unsuc- jings. cessful damages action against | three local police officers ended (BeLaW OBSOLETE early Wednesday, may face lt A letter fora LG ro ging costs of up to $10,000. ormer town clerk, asked coun- : ; ; lcil to pass a new bylaw for wt ore a ~ |snow shoveling, stating that a/Tec'e ' pe ty S De gssesse \bylaw made in the past was a) eee not now applicable to t oday's|, A six-man jury absolved Sgt. \needs. Victor Dawson, Const. James Kirkpatrick and Const. Douglas ALLAN RALPH CAMPBELL Following a long illness, Allan Ralph Campbell, son of Ralph and Beatrice Campbell, RR 4, Bowmanville, died at the Bow- |manville Memorial. Hospital jearly today. He was in his 20th year. Born in Toronto, the deceased lived all his life in Bowmanville and attended the Cerebral Palsy School and Clinic for crippled children, at Simcoe Hall. The funeral service will be held at the Morris Funera' Chapel, Bowmanville, Saturday, Fraser of blame for any injur-|March 3, at 3:30 p.m. Rev. W. ies suffered by Lament in July,|K. Houslander will conduct the 1960, when he was arrested for|service . being in charge of a car while! In lieu of flowers, donations impaired. : ito the memorial fund of the The jury said Const. Kirkpat-|och rick who had used a headlock oN | Palsy Parent Council for Crip- Lament, had used excessive! * force in continuing the hold 5 cca paris would be appre- side the police station. When Lament was released he collapsed on the station floor. Doctors testified that a weak-| ened artery wall ruptured, dam- aging Lament's brain and leav- ing him partially paralyzed and|ora) Hospital Sund i mentally deficient for life. Ac-|feb, 25 was held ct the Me.| cording to other medical evi-| 4 | dence the headlock alone could! 5+ 9 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 28. not have caused the rupture. | Rey, L. Wesley Herbert, min- The jury ruled that Lament's |ister of King Street United condition gave the officers every|Church, conducted the services. reason to believe he was im-| Entombment was in the Osh- paired by alcohol. awa Union Cemetery Mauso- leum. The pallbearers were Fred Douglas, Harry Palmer, Wesley Elliott, E. O. Phillips, Alex Mc- Donald and Roy Flintoff. t t t The old bylaw states that jsnow shovelling on sidewalks t Mr. Remion suggested a dead- jline ot 12 hours after a storm, | able to do arduous tasks time to awa and district Cerebral apply for assistance. This request was turned over jto the bylaw committee. | A letter from Hon. F. 4 |Cass, Minister of Municipal Af-| |fairs, congratulated the mayor on his appointment, stating that the head of council has a heavy responsibility. | Mr. Cass outlined a couple of steps in council procedure, one of which was not to incur cap- jital expenditures before full re- | quirements of the law are kept. | The minister cautioned that if |this were done it could have negative effects for council nom and officers. FUNERAL OF JOHN B. FEASBY | 'Loose' Lexicon A. W. Cane, welfare administra- recurrent debate on conven- Council. Pickering Curbs Convention Cost By ELSA STORRY BROUGHAM -- A request of tled as budgets would be struck in the near future. Deputy Reeve Mrs. McPher- son said: "I have often attend- ed conventions and do not take the taxpayers' money." LIMIT EXPENSES or, to attend two conventions his year brought to a head a ions by Pickering Township The debate centres around a Councillor W. Mowbray con- proposed policy that only one convention per year be attend- ed by a department head at the township's expense, that a written report be supphed, and a detailed account of expendi- paid by the township was set at $125. speaking of Mr. Cane's applica- tion, said that he believed at- tending a convention had a dis- tinct advantage to the depart- ment. |NOT PURELY SOCIAL The funeral service for John ojaj functions," he said |B. Feasby, 32 La Salle court,'Cane says that it has been of jwho died at the Oshawa Gen-|preat assistance to him in the past." Intosh - Anderson Funeral Home|pray who recommended that a policy be set for all department heads and other responsible em- ployees, so that there would be no question of anyone feeling he was not included. that the question must be set- tended that if the conventions were worthwhile, the council should support them to the ex- tent of providing for the offi- cers of the associations con- cerned. He recommended that a limit be placed on expenses. "TI have attended conventions and you can acquire excellent information, but I know in a lot of cases this information is not acquired," said Councillor Hub- ert Wank. About Mr. Cane, the council- lor recalled that the adminis- trator had recently stated to council that he was overloaded with work, and that two weeks out of his active working period was not in his opinion advis- able. Mr. Wank believed that a written, not verbal, report of all convention proceedings should be supplied by the dele- gate. "Some of us are amazed," said Councillor Spang, "'at the cost of sending anyone to some . of these conventions." Clerk L. T. Johnston was di- rected to prepare a bylaw regu- lating d at conven- tions for department heads, and other responsible employees. A short discussion of council- lors attending conventions fol- lowed, but it was learned that seldom did they claim expenses for their attendance, It was felt ures be included. A limit to expenditures to be Councillor William Greening, "Conventions are not just so- "Mr. It was Councillor M. Mow- Reeve Sherman Scott agreed +4 att e Navy League Has No Connection discrepancies. "She is doing a good job," said the Mayor, "and if she tape and play havoc with the planners' calculations but make sure that goods get from one factory to another as fast as continues to do so until the end of the year, we will be happy." possible have been warned that their activities must stop. were convicted of taking bets from their passengers without having $50 annual tax stamps) --which are issued by the in- ternal revenue service, REPAYS IMF LOAN LONDON (AP)--Britain has announced repayment of £75,- scattered all over the Soviet Un- ion--are called "tolkachi" or "fixers." For years factories and trusts, big and small, throughout the land have had 000,000 to the International Melee beapy a "ee netary Fund -- reducing her|, sents" to beat slow and cum- debt to less than half the SUM /hersome bureaucracy borrowed in the shaky economic : é " Their activities have for long times last summer. A total of act £225,000,000 has been repaid|been officially frowned upon-- These men -- thousands are) Dismays Squares By GEORGE W. CORNELL NEW YORK (AP) -- A big, INSURANCE INCREASED On a recommendation from| Arthur T. Whitney, Insurance| |Agent, insurance was increased | jon municipal liability from the unworthy and the downright outrageous," says author Wilson remodelled word book, Web-| Follett, writing in last month's ster's Third New International) Atlantic Monthly. | |$100,000 to $500,000, and they ' Z owned automobiles otha Po Dictionary of the English Lang-| Among other things, he pro- juage, is stirring up a storm of OHO 10 9500,000. The Premium) ords across the United States. of the former is now $728.85, "A scandal," say some crit- and of the latter, $35.80. lice SRD REBT VeRREL Gat | An application from Harry rency " R. Hancock to keep hogs from "Accurate," say the book's April to November at the "end egitors. "The language that is of Maple street" was tirned|jceq" over to the Ontario County) 'Ever since the new, 2,662- -- Unit for their considera- page dictionary came out last srs : fall, it has provided a stead |_A letter from Clifford Gray tumult of pl athe pro and pore tests the dictionary's approval | of the usage of various words! proper before -- such as using! for "because of". | The dictionary, the first com-/f pletely revised, unabridged) includes 450,000 entries. Among} them, the editors say, are 100,-| " Lure Of Land Hits Dutchman LETHBRIDGE, Alta. (CP) -- |The lure of the land was greater than the attractions of a big Dutch family textile business in ways widely considered im-|for Alphonse Janssens. "T never learned a thing about wanted armer." "like" for "as if" and "due to"|the textile business," he says. to become a He studied agriculture at uni- Webster's in a quarter-century,|versity and then worked on farms throughout Europe. In 1958 he came to Canada 000 new words or new mean-|where, he says, it's easier to With Reunion In Wednesday's Oshawa Times it was reported that the ex-Sea Cadets in Oshawa will hold a reunion March 31. It was erroneously stated that this event was planned by the Osh- awa Branch of the Navy League. The Navy League has no con- nection whatsoever with this venture, which is undertaken by a group of ex-Sea Cadets in Oshawa. The Times regrets any embarrassment the error may have caused. A meeting of ex-sea cadets was called for March 11, at 1.30 that it was good public rela- tions for the township reeve to attend many conventions. Reeve Scott said that he be- lieved the Ontario Municipal Association convention was probably the best convention for members of council to attend. FATHER GETS 'SHOCK' PITTSBURGH (AP) -- A 32- year-old mother of five boys gave birth to triplet girls Wed- nesday at Allegheny General Hospital. Mrs. Elizabeth Alt- man and her girls were re- ported in good condition. The i f BC. Paar | ' ee ee out of the £535,000,000 borrowed. |but unofficially tolerated. jasking for a refund of taxes be-| The main charze is that the arg jin lacquire land. He arrived in Power Corporation, with docu-| ments needed for a Supreme) Court examination for discov-| ery. | B. C. Power is challenging the} law under which the provincial] government expropriated B.C.) Electric last August. SEEK FOOD LAW TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto} board of health Wednesday re-| quested the medical officer of health to report on the advis-) ability of having all perishable} foods sold to the public either| wrapped or otherwise protected.) "I wonder if, in many of these help - yourself grocery stores, we are really helping ourselves as far as health is concerned," | said Alderman Charles Tidy. | TEST NEW MISSILE SANTA BARBARA, Calif, | (AP) -- An advanced Atlas E} missile, guided internally in-| stead of by radio from. the ground, roared westward over) the Pacific Wednesday toward an undisclosed target. The test was designed to demonstrate operation capability of the new type rocket TRAIN JUMPS TRACKS GRAND'MERE, Que. (CP)-- Three locomotives and 13 cars of a CNR freight train jumped the tracks Wednesday at nearby Garneau, 70 miles west of Que- bec City. No one was injured. | | WOMAN HUGS PHILIP | LA PAZ (Reuters) -- Prince West Berlin police said today, |tee reported that 3,238 fixers|sid he believed Oland was un-|Sources. Philip was hugged by an ex-| cited Indian woman and en- gaged in a confetti - throwing battle with others Wednesday | as he toured La Paz during his! second day in Bolivia. Enthus- jastic crowds, held back by po- lice, swarmed around him when he went to La Paz Stadium to see a program of '"'devil danc- ing." JAIL GAMBLERS CHICAGO (AP) -- Three for-| mer elevator operators in the internal revenue service build-| ing were sentenced to a day in| custody Wednesday for gambl-| ing without a U.S. revenue tax} |said Wednesday. Air lin cause his house was not rented was referred to the Court of The reason for the fixer's suc- jcess is not difficult to find. His EASTON, Md. (AP) -- Mrs./opportunities are provided by| Revision. Thomas Jones, 37, gave birth the highly-centralized and often} The Building Inspector ad- to a baby girl Wednesday in/over-planned industrial network|vises that there were 33 build- the same ambulance and at thelof the Soviet Union. Although | ing permits taken out this year same place along the highwayjhe is officially abused, he has| . where her first daughter was/helped the regime flourish. | Pe born 1% years ago. | As a contact man with a gen-| Traffic Charge Appeal Granted CANCEL MAIL CONTRACT. |TOUS expense allowance, he ar- HALIFAX (CP) RCMP jranges barter deals. He ma TAMPA, Fla. (AP)--A con-/eyen work for several preaen tract to haul surface mail be-|tions. His task is to ensure tween the United States andiquick and smooth delivery of Cuba has been cancelled by the|cuch things as raw materials post office department, Tampajand machinery, from one fac-|Const. Ian William Oland's ap- postmaster, J. A. Gonzales, tory to another. peal against conviction of a mo- : ¢ flights) A motorcycle jtor vehicle charge was allowed still run daily between Miami Sverdlovsk, lin a higher court here Tuesday jon the grounds that the officer was intoxicated at the time and unaware that he had been in an accident. Const. Oland, a Summerside, and Havana but future surface|¢; mail for Cuba will be routed to sige age a foreign country, Mexico, for relay to needs building materials such|P.E.I., had been convicted in e ' as bricks. agistrate's court of leaving th NEW YORK (AP) --*A dee ; mae Court OF Iwaving te former Mk go siti Moe aa The fixer seeks out co-fixers|scene of an accident with intent deed ind Brons hbtet Wednes the region and finds out/to escape liability. He was fined day. A knife had been tenet where bricks are available. He $50. into her heart. Police identified 20¢S {0 he brickyard or factory! George Leitch of Halifax testi- the girl as Alma Schulman, |2"4 earns that the workers fied he and Oland had been also known as Toni Tedesco, 20,|°2""%0t buy motorcycles to/drinking Nov. 3 when Oland's They said she had a record of Tevet to = from work. car struck a parked car in near- arrests on burglary, robbery|;. pieacttd bee dl a rong Dartmouth. and narcotics charges. oe B © salistaction! «tT told Oland he had hit some- jof everyone but the central/,,. igi HOLD WEST GERMAN _ [planning board. The motorcycle sate PMS ey ere BERLIN (Reuters)--A young factory gets its tires, the tire . : West sr was cained by|factory its bricks and the brick|!ooked a little under the East German border guards factory its motorcycles. |weather. : Wednesday night and held for| Now the fixers are under fire.| 'Hé was seeing feet when he two hours because he had of-|A recent resolution of the Com-|Was really seeing inches," said fered one of them a cigarette,munist party's central commit-|Mr. Justice Vincent Pottier, who 'REPEATS' BIRTH factory in for example, may lagging because of age. So the fixer probably moves in. He travels to Chelya- Cuba, he /pinsk to a tire factory--and dis- jcovers, perhaps, that it urgently 'GIRL SLAIN aware of the accident and there- fore there was no proof he tried to evade responsibility. called last year on the Magni- BRSED DE togorsk iron and steel plant in LOS ANGELES, Calif. (AP)--|the Urals, the largest in the| REVERSES DECISION gs. dictionary doesn't classify as} The New York Times, in an|Lethbridge in April, 1958, and jslang or colloquial usage manyjindignant bit of editorial irony,|/began working on a dairy farm. |terms that formerly were put injoffered this comment: | Three years later he was p.m. in the Sea Cadet Barrack at Oshawa boulevard north, to discuss the reunion. father, Ralph Altman, a certi- fied accountant, said: "It's a shock." ithat category. | A passel of double + jready to make his dream come | For instance: On the lam.|at the G. and C. Merriam Com |!tue. With money he had saved stickup, con, softsoan and|pany joint in Springfield, Mass.,|2"4,With the backing of a Dutch corny all were down - graded) have been confabbing and yak-|CtCdit union, he bought a three- COMING EVENTS in the old dictionary, but are|king for 27 yea quarter-section near Vauxhall, not in the new. ald finalized ee 'cu 40 miles northeast of here. NOW RESPECTABLE of that swell and esteemed| OB Aly Cnt AATeDee | Rn TANNERY Ladies Auxiliary at the Avalon, Thursday, March 1, 7.30 p.m. Six jackpots. "Bingo"! 8th OSHAWA TED FRIEND ROVER CREW J book." to start operations with dairy Many terms not included at)" Ai' 4, 4 li {cattle and then expand into beef all in the old dictionary -- such ese words were listed| EUCHRE Scout Hall, Gibbon at Buena Vista, Friday, March 2, 8 NIGHT OF CARDS p.m. Six 50c. as hotrod, goon, pricewise, ja- in the new dictionary without|20¢_srain. | prizes, FRIDAY, MAR. 2, 1962 ;. |being classified as slang and lopy, yeah, gobbledygook, hip-|.~ ' g ae Bd ate B eeles 44 fully og with no suggestion 'that aaa) The Times noted. | | spectable English in the new Were, anything but standard, PREDICTED DISMAY |So is the beat set's disparag- jing term, "'square,'"' which is de- jfined as: ; i It said that Webster's for gen- "A person who is an outsider erations had been a | or adversary because of the con-| authority" on sound usage, but Pdcaieseee A conservatism or that the new edition was "bound jrespectability of his taste, be-\to cause dismay" "Deerless | | $230 JACKPOT INCLUDED | 8 P.M. CHRIST CHURCH MEMORIAL HALL Refreshments, Prizes, Ad: 50¢ OSHAWA JAYCEES BINGO TONIGHT -- 8 P.M. NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 7:30 at ST. GEORGE'S HALL, (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled Door Prize $15 e Quality havior of way of life: One whojeditors and others _ BINGO Harmon Park Association ST. JOHN'S HALL Corner Bloor and Simcoe FRIDAY, MAR, 2nd, 7:45 P.M. 20 Games at $20. 5 Games at $30. 1 -- $150 Jackpot, 2 -- $250 Jackpots. NUMBERS 53-58 RED BARN Children Under 16 Not Admitted -NU-WAY RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. 728-4681 i "All work done in Oshawe by Quolified Oshawa Technicians" to teachers, | Sia eae | i i is seal is the halimar' jis not in the know: Unsophisti-| good taste in oa ar " of quality in the Rug leated. Dr. Philip B. Gove, editor-in-\W Cleaning Field. As a And this characterization just/chief of the new dictionary,|}\ member of NIRC, Nu- about sums up the publisher's|says the dictionary's aim is to Way Rug Co, Ltd. hove |view of the critics. Gordon J.|"'report the language" as it is,| the knowledge and equip- /Gallan, president of G. and C.|not to prescribe what belongs in|. Tent to do a thorough, Merriam Company, which has|it. professional rug cleaning put out Webster's dictionaries job. for more than a century, says DISMISS CHARGE of the complaints: A careless driving charge "Superficial comments of @ against Edna Lawson, of To- few journalists who are reluc-|ronto, was dismissed in Osh-| tant to admit th=! our language| awa Magistrate's Court Wednes- | has changed rapidly in the last/day. 'The charge was laid after | few decades." an accident on Highway 401 at The objections have come--|the junction of Highways 401) heatedly -- from a variety ofjand 2A, Feb. 5, which caused| an estimated $1,050 damage to| "Webster III has thrust upon|-----= us a dismaying assortment of 'the questionable. the perverse, DR. STEPHEN STOBIE, M.D. An appeal court has nullified a| republic, $65,700 . judgment f= sl ullered, in af 15 OUT OF 100 BOSSES WOMEN suffered in a fall down the A recent survey shows in stairs of a Brentwood home The District Court of Appeal, the "'manager, proprietor, of- ficial" group, 15 per cent are reversing a 1958 superior court verdict, ruled Wednesday that women, When you want to hire there was no proof of neglig- ence by the home owners, Ron- top workers, men or women, Oshawa Times Classified ald L. and Ann M. Buck. "Help Wanted" ads do the job quickly, economically. THREE AMBULANCE CALLS | Oshawa Fire Department re- ported no fire alarms were turned in Wednesday. Ambu- stamp for gamblers. The men,|lances answered three routine Frank Gauthier, 53; John Pig-jcalls during the 24-hour period nato, 54, and Clyde Layton, 56,\ending at 8.30 a.m., Thursday. Dial 723-3492 now to. place your ad. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF AN OFFICE FOR THE PRACTICE OF PSYCHIATRY at OSHAWA CLINIC 117 KING ST. EAST OSHAWA, ONTARIO TELEPHONE 728-1661 ONTARIO COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY SEE YOu cer Saturday Night 8:30 AT THE GET-TOGETHER CLUB Entertainment by the Executives 0.C.V.1. AUDITORIUM DRESS . . . CASUAL ADMISSION--MEMBERS 40c NON-MEMBERS 60¢ AGES 15 TO 21

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