Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Feb 1963, p. 2

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©Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, February 25, 1963 aw GOOD EVENING i -- By JACK GEARIN x Y Nuclear Arms ~ SCHROEDER TO HELP NDP CAMPAIGN As an indication of the importance of the current Federal 'election campaign in Ontario 'riding, the Canadian UAW is sending Allen Schroeder here ,.. to assist with the campaign "of the New Democratic Party candidate 4o be named to- night at a nomination meetifig ** in the R. S. McLaughlin Col- "* legiate and Vocational Insti- _ tute. Miss Aileeri Hall is the "overwhelming favorite for the honor. Mr. Schroeder is Educa- tion Director of the Canad. . jan Region UAW. with head- quarters in Windsor, Ont., ** and supervised the - recent : UAW Education Seminar here .,, &t UAW Hall on Bond Street. ~ He expects to be on full-time duty here for the last three weeks of the campaign. He will also be here for brief - periods before that. ALLEN SCHROEDER : Mr. Schroeder taught school in Saskatchewan during the , early 1930 depression years and then boarded a freight train for Ontario in 1932. He had a successful fruit and vegetable . business which enabled him to attend the University of: To- .. ronto and study Political Science and Economics. Mr. Schroeder learned about politics the hard way--he sought election as a CCF standafd-bearer no less than five "times and almost defeated Charles Daley, former Provincial minister of Labor in 1943. He has been a member of the official UAW staff since . 1951 and has held his present position since March, 1961. He also is a past-president of the St. Catharines and Ottawa Labor Councils. LITTLE NOTES FROM HERE AND THERE oa Dr. C. C. Stewart is still acting as City MOH on a tem- porary basis although he resigned full-time last November. Applicants are difficult to find despite some concentrated ef- forts by City Hall in this direction. . . . Chairman Sam Jack- son of the Oshawa Harbor Commission will be in Miami ~» for two more weeks. . . . Members of the Sergeants' Mess, " R.C.A.F., Toronto, will. be the guests. of the Sergeants' Mess of the Ontario Regiment at a Special Night in the Armories March 23... . years of service with the Band of the Ontario * Regiment and has reached the age of retirement. Jack, a . Trombone artist, will still participate in. the Band's- concerts but he has been retired from the official list' "HEIR PORT" AT OSHAWA GENERAL Len Riley, president of the Oshawa and District Qld Country Club, reports that he saw the following two-word sign in the waiting room of the Maternity Ward-on the fourth floor of the Oshawa Genera! Hospital: "HEIR PORT"... The PC's now report that they will have their Federal elec- tion committee room open in the old Toronto-Dominion Bank offices (in the Alger-Building) on King street east March 4. CIT¥ PC'S TO-HEAR WALKER TUESDAY Dr. Claude Vipond is scheduled to return to Oshawa with his family July 1 from Penang, Malaya, to resume his medi- cal practice -- authority for this is John E. Harris (Oshawa lawyer, subdivider, industrialist) who visited the Viponds ~. two weeks ago. Mr. Harris described Penang as "One of the > most beautiful places I have ever visited." . . . The City = of Oshawa Progressive Conservative Association is allowing " no dust to gather under its feet in anticipation of an early Provincial election -- it is planning-for a large turnout at its monthly meeting Tuesday, February 26, in the Hotel Genosha. Guest speaker will be Albert V. Walker, recently- elected Party candidate for Oshawa riding. COMMISSION HELD COSTS DOWN The Oshawa Arena Commission is now defunct, butv it deserves a bouquet for one of its last acts, That was its solid determination to hold the cost of the recently-completed Arena annex to the amount budgeted for = by the City, : The Commission bluntly refused to go along with pro- posed costs of approximately $24,000 for the project last Oc- tober when the tenders were received. Some. Commissioners -- like Bill Kurelo and Robert Wilson -- protested loudly that the City had only budgeted $17,000 for this purpose (the project included such things as " mew dressing rooms, lobby, etc.) and it was determined to keep the bill under that figure. "We can't spend sums of money that have not been approved by City Council,' protested Mr. Wilson, a man who gets upset by any signs of municipal waste. The Commission won out, too, The architect started chopping here and there as requested until the total bill was brought down to the more impressive total of $15,189.30. The architect's fee was $900. He did not charge for his original drawings. SUPER ER ERE RR RES S '= ANOTHER "KIN" PROJECT DEDICATED AT SARNIA a Jack Lambert, manager of Zellers IAd. at the Oshawa ;~ Shopping Centre, was in Sarnia last week to attend the '™ dedication of the Sarnia Kinsmen's New Hope School for 1 Retarded Children, a $30,000 gymnasium wing. He is a for- mer member of the Sarnia club. The School was built in 1959 at a cost to the Kinsmen o f more than $60,000. Since that time, and including the new wing, the building has cost , & total of $103,000, Those Kinsmen sure are eager-Beavers when it comes to promoting such worthwhile projects. READ SS ALDERMAN DAFOE REGISTERS A BEEF Alderman Finley Dafoe complained today -- as he has on s0 many previous occasions--about what he calls "the slappy condition of the roads in downtown King street, especially through the busi- ness area". He points out, and rightfully so, that debris and slops are allowed to ac- cumulate around the curb instead of being removed by the Board of Works crews. Downtown merchants are certainly entitled to better service than this, but they are paying, of course, for lack of organization and rep- resentation on City Council. Downtown King street has been a deplorable mess 'for years, as Mr. Dafoe has poin- te Le ted out. People like Dean Kelly and Murray Johnston ALDERMAN DAFOE have done much to call at tention. to such things, including failure to remove snow, but they need more vociferous support. Let's hope that the situa- tion is corrected by the new Director of Operations. Per eeee ee By THE CANADIAN PRESS | T.C. pe national leoeer i of the N emocrats, empha- | wan BS gout 'Bosclstina a sized NDP\opposition to nuclear Parliament, is being vigorously|¥ &@ Pon ip his campaign ion speeches. debated now on the election Me wil a Varion: S.C en. hustings across Canada. ldience that nuclear we > apons in With the April 8 federal elec-\Canada could ignite a chain re- tion campaign barely off the)action--with Russia- giving nu- = ee on, cet arms to Poland, the sypesceiagee pat t in| United States countering with or -- | rhe yong Re rwngs 4 ee asking for them, and Israel fol- eaders and other politicians.' |iowing suit. While Prime Minister Diefen-| Between the United States baker was in Britain to pe gle sr Russia, me peat, /, be the freedom of the City n-/equivalent | tons don, his external affairs minis-|for every person oh jearth, he ter, Howard Green, defended|sdid, adding: Debated On Hustings arms for Turkey, then Egypt] Issue "Do you think one or two more missiles--placed. in Can- ada--will add to the deterrent?"' The party leaders are .on the move today -- Mr. Pearson to Trois-Rivieres, Que., for a night rally, Mr. Douglas to "Edmon- ton for a major meeting, and Mr. Thompson to Toronto to make some television films, While the nuclear debate con- tinued in Canada, Prime Min- ister Diefenbaker and Defence Minister Churchill were over- seas, Mr. Diefenbaker will fly back this week and will open his national election campaign in Winnipeg next Monday. the government's wait-and-see| policy on acquisition of nuclear) warheads for Canadian forces. | "At a time when there is less} tension in the world, what sort of lead woul. Canada be giving if it rushed to get nuclear weap-} ons?" he said in Vancouver. Pppos In Montreal, Liberal Leader Pearson drew applause and cheers' from Quebec Liberals) when he declared that Canada} must accept nuclear warheads jto fulfill its commitment for a! defensive nuclear role in the Western alliance. LAUNCHES DRIVE Collective security means, among other things, nuclear weapons, for defence "as: long as the Russian Communist em- pire has them for attack," he said, launching his election 4 Grive at the. annual Quebec Lib-|with Polaris missiles, this idea, eral Federation convention. |raised by the U.S., does not ap- The applause for his nuclear|Peal to Britain and Britain will policy--and the appearance of/Mot participate in it. Liberal Premier Lesage of Que-| However, both Britain and the bec on the same platform--gave| U.S. do agree, he added, that new heart to federal Liberals|authority over any NATO nu- who hope to regain. Quebec|clear force should be appor- seats from the Social Crediters.|tioned among member coun- Also in Montreal,' Social|'ries on the basis of eo ore Credit Leader Thompson opened| tributions to = - apanent bis election campaign- with a Money, crews and equip : pledge to help prevent Canada In other words, if a member from becoming.-a_ nuclear country makes no contribution, power it would have no voice whatever "T ot : in the force's operation. I will do all in my power to} avoid Canada becoming a nu-|GOES BEFORE NATO WASHINGTON (CP)--A well- informed Western authority says. Britain and the United States are opposed to the in- clusion of mixed crews in any atomic Polaris submarines they may assign aS part ,of a pro- posed North Atlantic nuclear force. He said also that while some NATO countries may- subscribe to the contributfoh of mixed crews on surface ships armed no: clear nation or having Canada| .They will: be placed before involved in a nuclear war,' he | the NATO. council at Paris told a cheering audience of sev-'where pen nh gry eral thousand. | President Kennedy's special en- His deputy leader, fiery Real| voy, now is engaged in finding Caouette, put the nuclear arms|out how many countries would issue this way: \be interested in a surface-ship "Nuclear arms, bread|or submarine nucléar force and and butter, yes.' |what contributions they would ibe prepared to make to speed developments. Wounds Fatal Britain, which has received a |great deal of secret technical T U S G |help from the U.S., will pene three or four nuclear subma- 0 Un. unner rines and acquire the Polaris Mf missiles from the U.S., equip- n let am jping them with gone Mt Fe ; |warheads. These, the authority Me ogy ole Viet, Nam (AP)--Aostimated, should be ready by se about 1968. died of wounds Sunday after his Because of heavy. costs \in- helicopter was shot down by volved, some NATO countfies Comununisy tre. jmight not be able to build or The gumner was -aboard one buy atomic submarines but of two H-21 troop-carrying heli- they might be able to share in borers shot down Mig oy medical) aintenance and operational a eee 100 miles| costs and in the contribution of The U.S. casualty of Vint Coe ; ; Cong fire was identified only as| Key figures in the U.S. navy ; ict _jand Atomic Energy Commis- a private, Three helicopters as-|® ca i signed to the mission ran into|sion are opposed to the idea o |heavy ground fire and two were| allowing European seamen on \downed. One H-21 crew man-|U-S. nuclear vessels and the |aged to repair the craft on the|Suggestion emerged that sur- |ground and fly it back to base,|face ships might, in some \but the other downed craft was|cases, do just as ne ae |forced to remain. At his press conference las | He was the 25th U.S. service-| week, Kennedy said the surface jman to die in helicopters injfleet "could be probably more | South Viet Nam. American/easily multi-nation-manned." jdead in all total 62. ! WEATHER FORECAST Cold Tonight, Sunny Tuesday -25 -30 -25 5 -15 -25 Forecasts issued, by the Tor-|Kapuskasing ..... onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.|White River... Synopsis: It is clear and cold|Moosonee ........ |throughout most of Ontario.' {Mount Forest..... Lake St. Clair region, Wind-|Sault Ste. Marie.. sor: Clear and cold tonight and|Timmins ...... Tuesday. Winds northwest 15. | Lake Erie, Niagara, Lake| Observed Temperatures Huron, Lake Ontario, Georgian|Low overnight, high Sunday Bay, Haliburton regions, Lon-|Dawson .......... don, Hamilton, Toronto: Clear|Victoria .... and cold tonight, mainly sunny|Edmonton .. Tuesday, Winds northwest 10 to|Regina . 15, Winnipeg .. Timagami, Algoma, Whit-e Lakehead ........ |River, Cochrane regions, North Sault Ste. Marie... |Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie: | White River... Mainly clear and cold. Winds northwest 15, Forecast, Temperatures Low tonight, high Tuesday Windsor .s.ccsocse 5 St. Thomas.. HLODUOR sssescecess ITOFONLO -..ereeee00 \Ottawa .. |Quebec ., |Halifax. .. |IHAWAII leave any day ao YQU wish . | 14 DAYS. | HEAT WITH OIL tie DIXON'S | AS 485.10 OIL BOOK NOW first class hotels, (based on double 313 ALBERT ST. | 24-HOUR SERVICE " "ng er 723-4663 ann ae peas Pg rt Ay OVER PHONE 668-3161 | 728-6201 942-6690 Hamilton . St. Catharines Toronto ..... Peterborough +1 Trenton .secssceee Killaloe ..... Muskoka .... North Bay. Sudbury ....s000. Earlton .... +25 15 15 Mixed Crews Said A more detailed Anglo-Amer-| In NATO ican 'examination of the pro- posals opened here last week with British embassy Minister |Dennis Greenhill and U.S. Sia'e Secretary William Tyler partic- ipating and it indicated that some special NATO body--a board or committee -- would have to be set up. This would Mrs. Margaret Brown affec- tionately displays Sambo, her myna bird whose raucous 'chatter aroused her from sleep during a fire in her apartment in -Arlington, Va., Saturday. Mrs. Brown, a retired govern- ment worker and partially SAVED BY BIRD . crippled by a hip injury, grab- bed Sambo's cage and made a quick exit, suffering only min- or burns. Fire officials said the blaze started from a short circuit in a lamp, --(AP Wirephoto BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Go-ahead news from the auto- motive industry continues to give a flourish to business news. Volvo- (Canada) Ltd., a subsi- diary of Volvo of Sweden, an- nounced that it will produce Cars in a plant ca the Dart- mouth side of Halifax harbor. All-year acces: to the parent plant in Sweden and availability of a work force were factors in the decision to locate in the Hal- ifax area. The choice, however, aso supports the claims of At- lantic provinces spokesmen that in today's trading. world they occupy a central position indus- try has been slow to recognize. Volvo expects to employ about 200 people intially, to start turning out cars in April and to produce about 5,000 cafs in the first year. In another announcement last week, American Motors Canada Ltd, said it will export Cana- dian-made Rambler parts to its Darent compan: in the United States. It expects a volume of about $4,000,000 in the first year. MEANS MORE BUSINESS The announcements mean more business for parts manu- |have to be a matter for the! NATO council to recommend. | A source close. to Greenhill] said the Anglo-U.S. talks were! not designed to- produce any concrete recommendaticns but various suggestions were raised, The hope Js Tiat-some. eon: crete plan may 'be ready for presentation to the next NATO ministerial meeting in Ottawa in May. ; 4 Greenhill is reported to have made 'we = Britain' wants no part of a plan proposed b Gen. Lauris Norstad, sotived NATO supreme commender, who suggested a NATO execu- tive committee made up of Brit- ain, the U.S. and France to handle field control over a NATO nuclear force. Greenhill at first suggested|ond speech of his campaign in that political-military direction|the April 8 general election.| be handled by a body made up| Both speeches have emphasized By DENNIS ORCHARD Douglas, rfational leader of the|! New. Democratic Party, pre-| force. tions. ee tries, including Canada. Sino-Soviet Talks Held }arms. for Canada. He spoke in a high' school) gymnasium, in this B.C. interior} stoke constituency. n turn Israel. e Canada's best dicted Saturday that the 20th|seek establishment of a treaty century will see an effective | banning nuclear tests and work world court -and world police| through the United Nations for Worldwide Police Force Predicted role was to |world order. He said the UN's He said Canada would play| effectiveness had been proved its part by turning its military|in the Middle East, The Congo strength over to the United Na-|and in the Cuba crisis. The NDP leader repeated his It was the NDP leader's sec-|party's support of a planned jeconomy, to maintain the seven or eight per cent annual growth of the 10 larger NATO coun-|his party's opposition to nuclear Necessary to absorb 250,000 '| young people entering the coun- |try's labor market every year. | By.~ putting all city, following a nominating| Persons to work, Canada would : convention that picked Mrs, Iso-| increase its wealth production|duction, the company states, bel Pothecary as NDP candi-! by $4,000,000,000 a year, one- | has meant reductions in sug- |date in the Okanagan - Revel. fourth of which would go to the & government in taxes. unemployed facturers in Various centres, and one group of Ontario com- panies last week announced a $2,000,000 contract with Ameri- can Motors. The Volvo develop- .|ment presumably will encour- age component igdwstries in the Atlantic area. Another European automotive them to Turkey, and that -would|Company, Renault of France, is VERNON, B.C. (CP)--T. C,|mean requests from Egypt, and | also reported to be considering production in Canada: In a further aut tive an- Most notably, last week, Car Firms' News Sparks Business to a stop, but it emphasized that the trend is one of levelling and not of decline. The bank, like several other recent com- mentators, notes growing evi- ence of an improved competi- tive position-in a wide range of Canadian industry. ; A number of announcements from other industries, even if less eyé'catching than the auto- motive news, is also on the go- ahead side. The flight propulsion division of the General Electric Com- Pany of the United States has established a purchasing co-or- dinator in Toronto to look for Canadian suppliers of aircraft engine components. Current open oyders with Canadian firms of about $1,500,000 are ex- pected to be 'greatly increased over the next few years," the company states, S CGE DEVELOPMENT Canadian. General Electric Company announced "a devel- opment and marketing pro- gram" for special medical equipment now mostly imported from the United States and Eu- rope, Among other interesting an- nouncements of the week, Do- minion Foundries and Steel Ltd., Hamilton, is considering processing its blast furnace flue dust into iron-ore bri ites. The company has carried out a Success'ul pilot plant test and has a considereble stockpile of the flue dust on -hand.: Last June's surcharges on im- ports were reduced on a further wide range of goods last week and about half of the emer- gency levies now have been wiped out. nouncement, General Motors of Canada says its sales of con- vertibles in the first four months of the 1963 model year are running 54 per cent ahead of the same period a year. ago. This, it adds, is in line with a five-year trend during which its convertible sales have increased from 3,200 units in 1058 to 13,100 in 1962. Five convertible models for- merly impofted from the U.S. have been added to General Motors' Oshawa _ production lines in the last three months, A two-door hardtop model has |also been added. Canadi $100,000 Fire Hits - Downtown Detroit - DETROIT. (CP)--A_ general alarm fire raged out of control: for thore than three hours Sun- day night in downtown Detroit destroying the executive offices of Hygrade Foo¢ Products Core poration. Damage was esti- mated at more than $100,000. The 18-degree weather coated firemen with ice and froze on the streets blocking sewers. The two-story brick building jto $ Mr. Douglas said. United!) States and Russia, the two nu-| cléar powers that count in the world, have between them the) equivalent of 50 tons of TNT for every person on earth. | "Do you think one or:.two more missiles--placed in Can.| ada--will add to the deter-| rent?" he asked. Over Rift LONDON (Reuters)--Chinese Communist and Soviet leaders| held "cordial" meetings in Pe- king and Moscow Saturday amid speculation over the latest moves in the Sino-poviet ideo-- logical dispute. at Pompei form Foreign inis ve| . a so lag ag Pec A id FEARS tpeving i Ambassador Pan Tzu-li, in what The Placing oe the Soviet news agency Tass heads in Canada could set off) called a "warm and friendly|® Chain reaction, he said. Rus- | atmosphere." JOHN WILSON © SIGNS |GENERAL BUSINESS |SLOWER ally. | The current review 'of the |Bank of Nova Scotia says the sia would give nuclear arms to) In Peking, Chinese Commu- THE BEST FOR.LEAST.... You will be surprised when you Call for an Estimate 728-5071 uptrend in Canadian business \has become distinctly slower, if jit has not by now actually come pro- "aa prices of from $399 The buoyant news from the automobile industry is better than that from business gener- was isolated from the compa- ny's two packing plants which were not threatened by the fire. Firemen said the blaze, of un- determined origin, started at the rear of the building on the second floor. INTRODUCED DENTISTRY Dental surgery was intro duced into Korea in 1893 when - a Japanese opened a Western- style clinic in Inchon. S NEED FUEL OIL... i CALL nist party leader, Mao Tse-tung had a "cordial talk" with So-| viet Ambassador S, V. Chervo-| nenko, The New China news| jagency, reporting the meeting, jreferred to the ambassador as} |"comrade" Chervonenko. On Saturday night, Gen. Lo Jui-ching, Chinese vice-premier| and army chief of staff, spoke| of the need for the unity of "the| peoples and armies of the so-/ cialist camp and the unity of} the. international Communist! movement." | _Lo was speaking at a recep-| tion given by the Soviet mil- itary attache in Peking, Lt.-| Gen. V. A. Vasiliev, to mark! the 45th anniversary of the So-| viet Army. A speech on similar was made by Vasiliev, accord- ing to the New China news agency. FRESH, FIRST GRADE AYLMER CHOICE PEAS AYLMER CHOICE CORN AYLMER CHOICE = icr If PEACHES ~ AYLMER CHOICE TOMATOES | AYLMER CATSUP 'STUART HOUSE : FOIL WRAP we have the Knowledge Buyers eo \ JOHN A, J. | BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 2 LBS. 15-02. 6 TINS 15-OZ, TINS 15-02. TINS 20-0Z, TINS 11-0Z, BTLS. 12" ROLLS GLECOFF SUPERMARKET Special for Mon.-- Tues. - Wed. 1.00 (With 3.00 purchase of meat ---4 lb, Butter Limit) 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 Shop and Save at Glecoff's Supermarket OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 10:00 P.M. _ PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443 "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A, LOANS ARRANGED You Will He OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 «= COMING EVENTS West Unit No. 2, SALE of used a 5 Feb, 26, 1 p.m. | RUMMAGE SALE, February 26, 1.15-- | RUMMAGE "fail, King Street United | Church. Sponsored by Del-Mar Unit $. [OPERA "Women Are Like Tha March 1, Tickets $2 - $2.50, Hen- Sokea's 4 to 6 p.m, Monday through - Hall, Bruce E TY. Orange Hall, Brus See slendiy, aboary 25, 6 p.m, Admission 50c, Prizes and lunch, | Sponsored _by Victory LOBA. KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 51 and 55 EARLY BIRD GAMES | KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE 109 COLBORNE ST. W. WOOLWORTHS Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN !! Your Favorite GERMAN CHOC. CAKE Topped with Pecan Cocoanut Icing Woolworth's Famous APPLE PIE «With Flaky Pastry . Special This Week 57-< Special This Week 39 SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK ! ! PHONE BAKERY ORDERS -- 725-3421 BINGO Eastview Park Tuesday twe o'clock. Euchre Wednesday 8.15 o'clock, High monthly score $5, Prizes, Re freshments, A 50 cents. "Free Admission Free 'BINGO AT DNIPRO HALL 681 Edith Street (off Bloor E.) TONIGHT--7:30: P.M. 20 Regular. Games-- Jackpet 53-$180 $20 CON. PRIZE-- SHARE-THE-WEALTH (No Children Under 16 Years) WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos, 50 and 59 TONIGHT--8 P.M. RED BARN EXTRA BUSES RUMMAGE SALE \WED., FEB. 27. at 1. p.m. L- LEGION. HALL Auspices Ladies Auxiliary __Canadion Legion 43 BINGO . St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $200-56 Nos. $20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 52 Nos. $100 $20 Consolation Good Prizes THE ST. JOHN ARE INSTRUCTING IN SENIOR AT ST. GREGORY AMBULANCE A MIXED CKASS FIRST AID - 'S AUDITORIUM SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA ENROLLMENT ON FEBRUARY 25 AT 7:30 P.M. This instruction is invaluable for industry, sportsmen, motorists, construction and all parents, Meet the next emergency with confidence, be a St. John Ambus lance graduate.,

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