Oshawa Times (1958-), 14 Aug 1962, p. 4

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' @ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, August 14, 1962 POPULAR SPOT IN AJAX Church Music By Quartette By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT BROOKLIN -- The guest preacher at Sunday morning worship held in Brooklin United Church was the Rev. Reginald 1|C. White of Newtonville. Special music was provided by the quartette of 'Mrs, Albert Cooper, Mrs. Norman Alves, Mrs. Gordon Cook, and Miss Chrissie Simpson. Mrs. Mathew Agar, assistant Civil Servants' Strike Question By JOHN E. BIRD * OTTAWA (CP)--Can federal civil servants go on strike to enforce demands for wage in- creases or other benefits? The question came to the fore here last week after the government announced it was deferring action on salary in- creases for 50,000 of its 130,000 employees. eee The answer from a practicai point of view is no. There's no law establishing strike procedure for federal government employees although there's no law prohibiting them from taking strike action. Working conditions of federal) government workers are gov- erned by the provisions of the Civil Service Act. It contains ne ban against strikes or provision for such action. Recognized bargaining. units of workers falling within federal jurisdiction are governed by the industrial relations and disputes investigation act, MAKES PROVISIONS This act makes provisions for legal strikes after certain con- ditions have been met. The workers involved in such strikes cannot lose their jobs or suffer| other penalties. | However, federal civil ser-| vants are specifically excluded from the Federal Labor Act. Its provisions under which legal strikes may be staged do not apply to government workers. Under the common law a civil servant--or any other worker-- has the right to withdraw his services. But in taking such) action he is not protected} against dismissal by his em- ployer. : Legal officials here say that if federal workers went on strike they would be exercising their common law right to withdraw their services. | They say the government) likely would regard such action as a breach of a worker's con- tract or absenteeism without church organist, was the ac- companist. AUDLEY | Enniskillen CGIT just cause. Employees involved or subjected to other penalties. could be suspended, dismissed. The three major civil service bodies--the Civil Service Asso- ciation of Canada; the Civil Service Federation of Canada and the Professional Institute of the Civil Service of Canada-- are opposed to any form of strike action by government employees. Under the Civil Service Act,|3 these organizations may consult with the government on wages and other working conditions. They have urged consistently that there should be provision in the act for arbitration with the decision of arbitrator bind-|8 ing on both employees and the government. Spokesman for the three or-\cap ganizations say this position has not been changed by the gov- a ernment's. decision to defer consideration of salary in- creases. They say they will con. tinue to press for a system of arbitration so that questions of working conditions and salaries will not be political decisions. "We are not seeking the right to strike," one official said. "All we want is a system of| arbitration." Hold Annual Picnic By MRS. RUSSELL GRIFFIN Correspondent ENNISKILLEN -- The annual CGIT picnic was held at Geneva Park, Columbus, recently. It also included the Tuxis Group. Fourteen girls and eight boys attended. The sports committee--Misses Laura Griffin and Lois Ashton-- led in games and selected win- ners in the special dances. | The afternoon's program be-} gan with a swim and was follow- ed by games. rs Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Irwin and |Rodney were Sunday callers at) \Mr. and Mrs. Norman Scott's,| | Newtonville. Mr- and Mrs. H. E. Ashton, Clare and Douglas, Mrs. E. C. Ashton, Mrs. 0. C. Ashton and PERSONALS Miss Helen Alves, physio- therapist at Kingston General Hospital, spent the weekend with parents, Mr. and Mrs. 3 | Norman Alves, Mrs. John McKenney, King- ston, was a guest over the = |weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Kay. Mrs: Pearl Robson, of To- ronto, visited over the week- rnf with her sister, Mrs. Arthur J. Cook. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Blight, on Thursday, Aug. 23, will observe their 52nd wedding anniversary. Sympathy of the community is expressed to Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pilkie, Queen street, on the death of his brother, Thom- as Edward Pilkie, of Clare mont, who passed away on Thursday, August 9 at the Rose- BY MRS. FRED PUCKRIN AUDLEY -- Ronald Matheson, Pickering, will be in charge of the- church service this Sunday, August 19. Sunday school will follow at 10.45. The Rev. M. But- tars will be back in the pulpit the following Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cox and family have returned from a motor trip to Alberta. While there, they visited relatives of Mrs.. Cox. Mr.' and Mrs. Walter Gale, Kimberly and Craig, Alderwood, recently visited their uncle and aunt, Fred and Mrs, Puckrin. Susan Richards is vacationing with her cousin Heather Rich- ards, of Scarboro. Walter Fowlie, Bay Ridges, visited with his niece Mrs. C. Clemence and Mr. Clemence, bank Convalescent Home, in his 79th year. also other relatives, on Satur- day. Hs, Ajax Community Memorial Swimming Pool is a popular place these. days, and safe for children too, Periodically a whistle blows and every- one must leave the pool. pretty Ajax lifeguard, 20-year- old Pam Vickers keeps an ever - watchful eye on the smallfry as they splash and play in the clear cool water. | | Symbols Queried In New Zealand This is one of the safety measures at the pool to make sure no one is in trouble. In the above photo, this 86 FILE Folders Filled By Screwballs Teor By BERNARD GAVZER _|letters that were not routine. I) At the same time challenges NEW YORK (AP)--At NBC,/noted the date and also circled|have been launched against it's the "86" file. |the full moon. It seemed to me|both the New Zealand ensign ABC tags it the "full moon"|that a few days before or after/and the New Zealand national folder. ja full moon there are people| song. CBS calls it the 'decline of/who have a compulsive need to! Officially, the national anthem civilization" file. | write. lis Gow Save ,the Queen but a While the labels differ, the} 'This idea is not so strange/distinctive work of several contents are pretty much the|because it follows observations) verses, God Defend New Zea- same: _|made by others," says Mrs.\Jand, is designated as the na- Screwball adn crackpot mail.|Mackinnon. 'My brother is ajtional song. The screwball is typified by|captain-detective in Baltimore|CRITICS PAN IT the man who volunteers to doand told me that police, fire! Lately God Defend New Zea- something for ABC, stating that!departments and hospitals haveljand has been roundly con- he is different than anyone else|director of program practices,| qemned by critics, both musi- because he has been dead more trouble than usual near|cajly and poetically. The song ye me the full moon." was written by 19th century e crackpot is the woman }poet Thomas Bracken, but is who accuses CBS of being: pro- gh i earn ee cps rarely heard. One critic de- Communist because it telecast usually gets that network's off.clared "the words are banal a commercial that featured nail 4 land the music beneath serious lish called "red cavair." beat mail. 4g Po : : | He takes the view that the) Notice. There is one woman WhO rea} sick writer goes on day| Many people complain that writes ABC every day of the|after day and year after year,|the song has failed to capture week. virtually untouched by current|Public support or affection and She has no complaint, de-jevents. These are not versons that God Save the Queen con mands nothing. She just likes who are moved to write as the|tinues to serve on nearly all to tell how nice it is to appearjresult of resumed nuclear tests\occasions. They have lately on ABC every night with Stevelor stock market crashes or|been putting forward the view Allen, talking to him and sing-|supreme court decisions. that it is time New Zealand ing with him. As Mrs. Mackinnon puts it:;had a -_ of its own which "These are people who have|commanded general support. HEARS DOORBELL ___|a personal involvement with! Now critics have begun to call "I must ask you to stop using television. Their set is like an-|also for a change to a more chimes on The Price is Right other person to them. When they|distinctive New Zealand flag. show," insisted a man writing write, they are not writing to|The present ensign carries .a NBC, "It sounds like my door), performer or an executive,|Union Jack in the corner with bell and I always answer the'they are writing to a television|a four-starred representation of door and no one is there. set or a radio." |the constellation Southern Cross Such letters arriving at NBC, 'sq cpg will get a letter from/on a blue background. go to Mrs. Kathryn Cole, 44 man complaining that he is| The objection' has been voiced grandmother, who cOnSi&NSibeing watched by his TV set,|that this flag is too much like them to her "86" file. How did) 9; NBC will hear from an irate|the Australian ensign, which is such a label come about?" woman demanding that the net-\almost the same except' that! It's a restaurant term, work clean its transmitter be-|the Southern Cross on the Aus-| In the other picture, an Ajax boy performs a_ jack-knife dive for the photographer. shawa Times Photo | By J. C. GRAHAM |Canadian Press Correspondent | AUCKLAND (CP) -- Perhaps| because of unrest. and un-| easiness over the future of the) Commonwealth in the light of; European Common Market de- velopments, a trend of criticism) of established links and symbols} has appeared in New Zealand. For almost the first time a serious discussion on the merits of joining the United States has been proceeding in the press in brisk correspondence lasting) says Mrs. Cole. "When a waiter or a cook wanted to say something was out, they'd say it was 86,/ meaning that there was none| left. In time, this was also used) to describe a person who was cause the picture has a smudge in the center, REGAL RETREAT LONDON (CP)--Emily Neller| tralian flag shows five stars. MEASURE EMOTIONS LONDON (CP)--British road safety experts have developed considered not to be quite allihas retired after cleaning the|an "emotion meter" 'designed there. And that about describes Operations Room at the Admi-|to test a driver's worries at the the writers of these letters." Mrs, Ellen Mackinnon is care- taker of ABC's "full moon" file. ralty for 31 years. To mark the occasion a Rolls-Royce carried) wheel. Two electrodes con- nected to the driver's fingers register his reactions to differ- "I did a little survey," she|the 73-year-old "char" back tolent situations on a meter in- says, 'and kept a record of all) her home in Kent. |stalled in the back seat. Charles were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. May at their summer home on Lake Bernard near Sundridge. Miss Kathryn Slemon has been assisting with swimming during the past week at the Bowman- ville Guide Camp, Pigeon Lake. Mrs. T. M. Slemon and Mrs, Norman Woodley returned home |by plane on Sunday from visit- jing relatives at Saskatoon and Calgary. Mrs. Slemon spent a month with her sister, Mrs. W- Creighton, and Mrs. Woodley, a school girl friend of Mrs, Creigh. ton joined her and spent-a week with the Creightons. Miss Diane Avery spent the weekend with Miss Wendy Cox, Orono. She also enjoyed Wendy's birthday party. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hetz, Fairview, Penn., visited Mr. and Mrs. L. Lamb and family and Mrs. Hetz, Mrs. L. Lamb, Mrs. S. Lamb and Donna and Mrs. Cecil Wilson of Nestleton attend- ed the Lamb reunion at Fenelon Falls. Mr: and Mrs. Orville Orchard, Applegate, Mich., Mrs. Mabel McKee, Marlette, Mich., Mrs. Calling in Parliament for a) change in the flag, N. E. Kirk.| a Labor member, complained| that the present ensign fostered) a belief widely held abroad| that New Zealand was just a) province of Australia and noi a. separate independent country.| Kirk declared that New Zea-| land had adopted a "prolifera-| tion of emblems"--for instance,| the four-starred Southern Cross on the flag, the silver fern leaf worn by many sports teams] abroad and the kiwi (a flightless| New Zealand bird represented! in badges and brooches). On the other hand, he said, the maple leaf was the symbol| of all things Canadian and no| ambiguity arose. | He suggested the universal adoption of the kiwi, unique to New Zealand. If the| kiwi was used on the New Zea-| land flag, it could prevent any! confusion with Australia. | So far the government has} not given the idea any support. which. is| Elsie Heddon, Miss Lois Hed- don, Columbus, Misses Loverne and Elva Orchard, Mr. and Mrs. Elwyn Dickey, and Velma, Bow- manville, Mr. and Mrs, C, Stain- ton, were recent tea guests at! Mr. and Mrs. M. Stainton's. Miss Shirley Avery is spend- ing two weeks with the E. Mc- Nairs, at South River. Mr. and Mrs. Angus King, Little Britain, were Sunday din- ner guests at Mr. and Mrs. C- Avery's. Mr. and Mrs. P. Tresise, Arthur Wright, Misses Effa and Annie Wright, Oshawa, were callers at N. E. Wright's. Mrs. R. McGill, Mr. and Mrs. K. McGill, and boys, attended the McGill pienic at Peterboro, on Sautrday. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. R. McGill, Mr. and Mrs- K. McGill and boys visited Mr. and Mrs. F. Billett at their cot- tage on Ohandos Lake. Mrs. T. Taylor, Mrs, A. Tay- lor and David, Enfield, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pearce, Oakville, Mr, and Mrs. Wm. McCabe, Yelverton have been visitors Col Cell Con Bldg w Today's Stock Market Listing TORONTO 11:00 A.M STOCKS By The Canadian Press Toronto Steck Exchange--Aug. 14 Quotations in cents unless marked $. z--Odd lot, xd--Ex-dividend, xr--Ex- rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change is from previous board-lot closing sale. INDUSTRIALS 11 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 1010 6% + % 240 14% 230 Btock Abitibi Atl Sug Alta Dist Alta Dis w Alta Gas Alta. Nat Algoma Alumini 346% 45% $14% 14% 200 230 230 300 $247 24% Wie + % 6% 6 6% $34 34 O34 345 345 35S $58% 58% 58% + % rg C pr Atlas Steel rta 865% $51% 51% 51% a Se 325 30% 11% 16% 16% 51 51 21% 21% 25% 2553+ % 20% 20% 51% 5i% 18% 18% i 9% 30% 11% 9 165 He 15% 59% + % 9 165 10 15 59 12% 12% + % 3614 36% 22% 22% 2 2 =--2 17% 17% + % 390 --5 390 164 --% C Tire A CKP Dev 16 660 Con Bidg 316% Con M § Con Paper Con Gas Corby vt Coronation Cosmos Dist Seag Dofasco Dom Stores 2770 66% 66% + %\h 54+ % -- Inter PL 4|Nor Phone i Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 11:00 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 100 450 450 450 +20 800 «$6 "6 +h 200 $7 7 10 $69% 69% 69% 1565 $11% 11 11% + % 250 $234 23% 23% 20 $14 14 M4 3065 $11% 11% 11% 240 «$9% 9% 9% 100 220 2105 11:00 Net Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge 741 $17% 17% 174---% $32% 32% 32% Stock $e 38 so (50 30% 304+ % 7 7 =--3 |R 150 «150 wm 56 ees =~ & * & - Pt 3 <4 San gun San +20 9 89 9 --10 138% 139% + % ie kg Tr 3% 7 e2ge¥ 260 $5 1580 285 600 240 175 500 25 225 $36 600 73 $90 A 225 $13% OILS 100 710 710 710 615 2 100 500 200 38 420 "un +% SESessezsheshes * & = 2h = +7) = Imp Tob pr Ind Accep Inland Gas I Bronze pr Int Nickel High Bell UI Hud Bay Isnpiratn Iso J Waite Jacobus Kerr Add L Dufault 90 8690 13% 13% 120 295 380 235 Ke Kelvinator Lakeland Lont Cem Lau Fin A Lau F 123 Levy LobCo A LobCo A w Maclaren A MB PR sia. 14 20% $11% 11% 11% $8 8 8 165 160 165 25 $19 19 19 $17%. 17% 17% $11% 11% 11% + % $21 21 21 $9 9 9 727 650 500 +" 175 2000 55 55 lS $12%e 12% i2%--% 3 8 18% 18% 184 -- % $11% 1% HKD' i eae te $15% 15% 15% 226 226 1 a 2 oe 14 134 4---% 165 165 165 5 $14% 14% 14% + % 3 34 (35 1 MeWat Mentor Min Ore New Ath Newnor Norlartie Mass F Met Store p M Cont A Mont Loco Moore Nat Drug Nia Wire B Gr Plains Home B HB OIG Medal Midcon N Davies Norean Pac Pete Pamoil Place Provo Gas South Tidal Trans Can | Triad Oil Normetal Northgte Opemiska | Orchan Ormsby Paramaq Patino Cp Pax Int Pce Expl Pitch Ore Radiore | Raglan |Rio Algom 13 45 16 «16 12% 12% 30 «(30% 17% 17% +% 8% 8% $13 $45 $16 . $12% $30% $17% $8% 495 495 495 215 215 215 34% M4 M4A--V 1% 16 317 +2 730 730 730 +5 1 618 18 19 16% Vee +1 9 9 9 46 48 «48 5 ER: OS sf + Oshawa A $28 - Page Hers 519% Penmans pr 210 $114 Phantom 1475 85% QN Ga spr 50 $43% 43% 434% -- % Reid Litho 50 $47% 47% 47% + % 66 152 66 +% +3 -1 1000 1500 400 12 165 54 - 140 ; Gold Still Lure After 30 By JIM WHELLY YELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T. (CP) -- Only a handful of white men have ever had the will or the nerve to spend winters \roaming the barrenlands of the|and sold options "now and) -- Northwest Territories. Sam Otto, Yellowknife trap- per, hunter and prospector, is|thousand dollars sometimes." one of them. "T certainly haven't given up hope of making a big strike," he said. "'There's still chances." At 55, he believes "'it's too late for wages to get me any- where now." "When I came north in 1933 they said it was 50 years too soon, but 30 of them have gone by already. "T have no complaints. I've made a good living. But I had better hindsight than foresight. I could have staked the biggest part of the west shore of Yel- lowknife Bay, and I didn't think it was worth it." Today, this is the richest gold- producing area in the far north. BEGAN AS MINER Mr. Otto was born at Morris, Man., went underground as a miner and then out into the bush to learn prospecting in the Red Lake and Sioux Lookout regions of northwestern On- tario. When he came north, he did his prospecting in summer and spent the winters--from August to April--as a hunter and trap- per in the treeless barrens of the Muskox Lake area, south- east of Bathurst Inlet on the Arctic coast. His dugout in a sandy hill. side has a willow frame and a lumber and sdd roof, It is 32 feet long and 14 feet wide at the front. "'Never came close to starv- ing. It was cold but I was never in danger of freezing. Never been lost that I couldn't find my way back. "My first winter in the bar- rens I got 19 pelts worth $5 apiece. But the air fare to get me out there and back was $501." Since coming north, he has been "outside" four times, one of these trips in 1951. "That year I had 400 traps set and didn't catch a thing but a girl in Edmonton set one trap and I walked right into it." In 1952, he married Myrtle Rit- chie of Edmonton. LURE OF TRAIL Since his marriage, he said. "I've been working on wages sometimes, but I'm prospecting again this summer. .There's lots of places I want to go. "T don't know what's there," and callers at Mrs. Fred Toms', he said with a sparkle in his THREE ADVENTURE-BOUND Bachelor Jack Norris, 50, | Hagen, 22, (left), both psychi-'| the trio's money runs out the and his. two attractive crew- | members set sail for the south seas at the weekend. Donna Bjornson, 21, and Cathy | atric nurses saved for a year ' for their share of the $2,000 needed for the trip. Norris | built the 18-ton 43-foot schoon- | er Aria in seven years. When | Fiten and four daughters, Patsy, 1 ; axils girls will go. ashore to work while Norris will charter the | Aria for fishing trips. --CP Wirephoto | Un Oils Wstates Yan Can 500 200 9900 MINES Abacus 2000 31 30 Agnico 1850 85 83 83 Am Larder 9000 30 28 30 500 9% 9% 9% 17500. 48 46% 49 300 100 100 100 200 400 400 4 50 20 2 2 1000 8 8 500 12 12 12 5500 55 53 53 1300 200 195 199 1000 10% 10% 10% 100 310 310 310 136 600 6 ---3 | Ryanor San Ant Satellite Sherritt Sil Miller Siscoe Steeloy Steep R Sturgeon 30 2 +3 Sud Cont Teck H Tombill }Un Buffad |Un Keno | Violam | Yk Bear Zenmac |Zulapa Years A eyes, "but there's just some |places I have to go back to." |B | He has worked as a prospec-| peicher tor for mining companies on a|Bethim |wages - plus - 10-per-cent basis | Black Bay +2 +% 8 -""% 4 --8 11;00 a.m.: 753,000. +5 | Sales to then" on claims which "'brought ja little money down, a few | e0 | His best strike brought $10,000 jin cash. "But it didn't take long to) blow it. You can do it right here in Yellowknife. I could always blow a strike just as fast here as outside. There's everything you need to spend money on and no place with higher prices." Out on the barrens, while wolves howled in the darkness and his dogs strained at their lines, Mr., Otto became expert with a needle, making slippers, bags and footstools from cari- bou hide. He also took up taxidermy, mounting wolves, plarmigan, Arctic hare and squirrels, hawks and snowy owls, "My basic diet was meat -- lots of it--lots of good fat cari- bou. I'd take in some sugar, lard, flour, some beans and rice and luxuries like that. "For visitors there was the Pellet Lake group of Eskimos, | seven families. Some of them |@ used to come along once in awhile. It was three days for) them to my place. When they got there. they were always short of a little bit of every- thing. PAU ANNE Newman - WoODWAR LINS - CARSON CINEMASCOPE COLOR by DE LUXE: -TALKED ABOUT SUBJECT OF OUR TIME! DIRK BOGARDE SYLVIA SYMS ba MICHAEL RTLPH and BABI DEARDEN'S production TECHNICOLOR TECHNIRAM® tout are ervee DE SICA * usm SORDI MUSIC" SQUVINIR DITALIE" BY MANTOVANI "KS Now Playing DOORS OPEN AT 6 P.M. BILTMORE a mer DENNIS PRICE 'uae (eeuussce at Tek anne oncanitarien purmaeree at ADMITTANCE TO PERSONS 18 YEARS OF AGE On Over Cancer Film Scheduled By Blackstock WI BLACKSTOCK -- Twenty-five ladies and 12 children spent a pleasant afternoon at Cartwright) Community Park recently, when | the Women's Institute held its August meeting. With President Mrs. C. Smith presiding, the meeting opened with the Ode, and Mrs. Mc- Arthur read the Collect. Secre- tary Mrs. R. Larmer read the minutes and announced the ONO will be showing a film on can- cer on Sept. 14. The roll call -- My worst mis- take in cooking -- brought many amusing replies. Mrs.:G. Skelding gave an in- teresting response to the motto -- Man builds the house while woman builds the home. Mrs. Lorne Thompson intro- duced the guest speaker -- Mrs. Wm. Mulligan of Newtonville, District President of WI, who gave an interesting and enlight- ening talk on Intelligent Con- sumers. Mrs. Mervyn Graham read a poem which had been composed by Mrs- Adelbert Beacock on Our Anniversary. There was an excellent attend- ance in the United Church Sun- |day morning, Mrs, Henry Wot- | Show Times 1:30--3:25--5:20 7:25--9:15 BOX OFFICE OPENS 8:15 } SHOW STARTS AT DUSK! |. ° ADDED FEATURE: "DAM ON THE UES., WED. ONLY BRIGITTE BARDOT DIRK BOGARD "DOCTOR AT SEA" dae YELLOW RIVER" NWN JAMES ROBERTSON JUSTICE ALL COLOR PROGRAM! * OSHAWA |Joan, Carol and Norma, sang "Wonderful Love". Rev. Rom- eril took as the subject for his discourse, The iniquities of Holy | Things. The Sacrament of, Holy Com- munion was administered in St. John's Anglican Church, follow-| ing an excellent sermon by Canon Ashmore. Mrs. Phyllis Sinclair, Ralph Strong, Misses Beth Strong, Amnabelle Kelly, Sylvia Kozub, Aileen VanCamp; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Larmer and boys; Rev. 'and Mrs. C. H. Ferguson and Mrs. Cecil Hill attended the dedication service of the Donald Sinclair Memorial Lodge at Quin-Mo-Lac camp. Mr. and Mrs. Neil Bailey, Mr- and Mrs. Jim Marlow and Anne | spent the weekend with Dr. and |Mrs. Jack Marlow and family, | Lively. Mr. Weir Swain, Toronto, |spent the weekend with Mr. and |Mrs. Clarence Marlow. Misses Gertrude Henry and Doris Griffin, Toronto, spent the weekend at home. | Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Dorrell jand girls spent a few days at| | Upper Canada Village. Mrs. W, W. VanCamp spent a |few days with the Ron Drink. |waters, Ottawa. WALT DISNEY'S "CLOCK CLEANERS" COLOR CARTOON ' FEATURE DAILY AT... 2:00 - 4:25 - 6:50 - AIR-COOLED > F2. --

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