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* . -4w • - ' • ; - , • IMMI ilmingtmt fUnntmg£tar |f5l VOL. 76.—NO. 311______WILMINGTON, N. C„ TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1944 _FINAL EDITION ESTABLISHED 1867 4th War Loan Drive Opens; Rally Is Set $4,859,000 IS GOAL Retail Stores Will Open Today At 10 a. m.— Premier Slated Netv Hanover county will start steps to reach its goal of $4,859, 000 today, as the Fourth War Bond campaign formally opens with a “kickoff” bond premier movie at 8 p. m. tonight at the Bailey thea ter. Having accepted a major role in this great bond sale undertak ing, the city’s retail merchants and their employes are expected to set the pace of the campaign by offering unqualified support at a mass meeting at 9 a.m. at the Bailey theater, when Judge Hen ry L. Stevens, of Warsaw, presid ing at superior court here this week, will deliver a war bond __ + 1 All city retail stores will open ai 10 a.m. Tuesday, in order for employes to attend the mass meet ing. where it is expected that each store worker will accept for himself a goal of $200 worth of bonds or stamps to be sold dur ing the campaign Jan. 18-Feb. 23. The premier showing of the motion picture, “Destination Tokyo,” will be the formal “kick off’ to the bond drive and bond leaders expressed the opinion Monday that it will be a “sell out." Tickets to the movie may be secured free .'rom any bond issuing agent for the purchase of an extra war bond. Atmosphere for the official launching of the drive at the Bailey theater will be supplied by mili tary equipment which will be dis played from 1:30 to 8:30 p.m. along the east side of Front street, between Market and Princess streets. Both sides of the street will be blocked off by police. A concert by the 141st Army band from Camp Davis will be played outside the tlyeater from 7 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., and the baHd I will move inside later to play for (Continued on Page Two; Col. 7) -V nnt < m a ■■ a baa a. mi UK rAVUKS NEW STRIKE BILL WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—W— Senator Vandenberg R.-Mich.) de clared today that Federal legisla tion outlawing ‘in unequivocal terms” all interruptions in war production would be preferrable to the national labor draft act pro posed by President Roosevelt. (Citing a government tabulation showing 3.737 strikes in 1943, Vand enberg said in a statement insert ed in the Congressional Record: "Organized labor gave us a not able 'no strike” pledge which has been widely kept. Unfortunately, however, it has also been abused. It makes no difference in net re sults that this ‘abuse’ has often been ‘unauthorized’. The government figures tell us that there were 3,737 total strikes in 193. which is twice as many as the 1927-41 average, and that we lost 13.947,557 man days of pro duction as a result. It makes no difference that over-all production figures minimize those figures. An eight-ounce heart can stop a 200 pound body. "If the President, at long last, is now ready to face this problem Unequivocally, I want to cooper-1 ate- But I am unable to under stand why we must regiment every adult male civilian and particular ly every adult civilian woman in ecder to achieve the desired re sult. "In tny view, such a remedy j blight become worse than the dis •ase. I prefer to outlaw all strikes tr lockouts in defense production w services for the duration. Of f if. I To Mount Far Beyond 500 In Andean Town BVENOS AIRES, Jan. 17— Latest government reports from quake-stricken San Juan ^id tonight the loss of life 's expected to mount far be >'°ad 500, with 900 to 1,000 seriously injured and 4,000 less seriously hurt. The government press bur eau said it was too early for an accurate calculation of the Material loss but estimated it ■Jould reach at least S75.000 000. The task of removing the ®**d from the rubble and ad ministering to the wounded ''eul on amid huge piles of ebris which still blocked most 1 repls in the once picturesque "'"untain city of 30,000. Rcs llp squads cremated scores of “"'dentified bodies at the or-N j er* of health authorities. I Southern Governors Say Dixie Is Still Democratic Believe Disputes Can Be Handled Better By Democrats — Broughton Is Present WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—(A1,— The South may not be entirely happy about its treatment under the Roosevelt administration but it is still dependably within the Dem ocratic party fold. Southern gov ernors agreed today. The governors expressed this view in advance of a White House tea to which they were invited by President Roosevelt. Summed up, their general attitude was that quarrels, over freight rates and States Rights can be handled bet ter within Democratic ranks rath er than with a Republican admin istration. Governor Prentice Cooper of Tennessee, chairman of the South ern governors conference which is sponsoring Interstate Commerce Commission cases containing the South’s freight rate adjustment pleas, said he felt ’’only hostility is evident” from GOP leaders to proposed rate parity with the in dustrial east. With one partial exception the Southern governors expressed firm belief the Solid South again will be strongly Democratic in the No vember election, wheth< Roojevelt is a fourth ter < i date or someone else j Democratic colors. Only do. y: Ellis Arnall of Georgia expre^ the idea the South may bargain for its political suppbrt. ‘I’m more convinced than ever that Southern Democrats ought to get what we are entitled to from the party before giving our un qualified support,” Arnall de clared. Arnall quickly added, however, that Georgia will ‘vote the ticket” this fall and added that Mr. Roose velt is ‘a swell fellow and I like him personally.” Governor Spessard Holland of Florida gave reporters an opinion reiterated by most of the execu tives : ‘There will be no break away from the party by the South: we’il ;settle our own affairs.” Holland said that if the election finds the war still going on most Southerners will forget an inclina tion against a fourth term. On (Continued on Page Two; Col. 6) j i KtYINULDD BAUD INC(_CEILING Sen. Maybank Vainly Tries To Get Tax On Oleo Repealed WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.— UR — Senator Reynolds (D.-N.C.) advo cated a post-war tax ceiling of 25 per cent on individual earnings to day as the Senate entered its sec ond week’s debate on a $2,275. 600,000. revenue bill. “It is absolutely impossible to do it now,” he told the Senate, “but as soon as this war is over we’ve got to begin thinking about tax reduction.” Reynolds supported the pending tax bill, denounced by the Ad ministration because it falls far short of the $10.500,000,000 revenue goal set by the Treasury. Presi dent Roosevelt said last week the bill fails to pass the test of a “realistic tax law.” The Senate’s drive to pass the lew tax measure stalled today be lind a day-long fight which wound ip in defeat for an attempt to abolish for the war’s duration a tax of 10 cents a pound on the sale of yellow colored oleomar garine. Senator Maybank (D.-S.C.) Drought the repeal attempt into the fax debate and stirred an immedi ate outburst from dairy state sen ators who argued it was an effort ;o give oleomargarine equal stand ng with butter on the nation’s din ner tables. Maybank’s proposed re pealer was defeated 55 to 23 on a roll call vote. “This tax is not to raise re venue.” declared Senator Shipst»ad (R.-Minn.). “It is a regulatory tax to prevent fraud and decep tion.” “Oleo can now be colored any :olor except yellow without paying the tax,” shouted Senator La Fol tette (Prog.-Wis.). “But its manu facturers want it to look like but ter and smell like butter. They’d (Continued on Page Three; Col. 2) •_v_ LEGION SUPPORTS DRAFT OFLABOR HIGH POINT, Jan. 17.—US— Warren Atherton of Stockton, Calif., commander of the Ameri can Legion, said in a speech here tonight that enactment of the Na tional Service Act “can shorten the war and save lives." Addressing the closing session of the North Carolina Department's Post Officers conference, Atherton said the Legion had urged enact ment of a universal service act for the last 20 years and essen tially this was the same legisla tion which the President recently said was needed to win the war. 'He commended the loyalty of the American workers who aided in making production hit an all time peak, but called “traitors” those who “defied our commander in chief, and their own . leaders, who turned deaf ears to the pray ers of mothers whose sons are in action, and stopped production.” He said strikers were .“prolong ing the war and the blood of Amer ican boys will forever stain their hands.” Future peace, he declared, de pended on the continuance of friendly relations with nations of this hemisphere. Atherton told his hearers that the producers of “the arsenal of democracy are beginning to turn the tide of battle,” but that the war is far from over. He predict ed that at the present rate of casualies, "there will be 800,000 killed and wounded between where we are and the ruins of Berlin (Continued on Page Three; Col. 8) WALLACE SPEAKS TO DIXIE HEADS Vive-President Denounces New York Money Market WASHINGTON, Jan. 17.—UR— j Vice President Wallace told the | Southern Governors Conference to- j night that the Federal Government \ must break the “monopoly pow-1 er” of the New York money mar-i ket if the South is to achieve eco nomic equality with other sections. Cheering the Southern governors on in their efforts to force a re vision in the freight rates they contend discriminate against their section, Wallace urged them to! join with governors in the West and other areas in support of na tional measures to abolish trade barriers and to decentralize finan cial controls. “Such a program will certainly meet with an enthusiastic response from the governors of Western states and should appeal to any governor of New York who is genuinely interested in the gen-j eral welfare,” Wallace said in his prepared text. He charged that the South had been “kept in a colonial status” by “discriminatory differentials in transportation costs,” by state trade barriers and “because the expansion of Southern enterprises would compete with other busi nesses in which the bankers were already interested.” “In short,” he declared, “the failure of the South to build a balanced regional economy can be told in terms of vested interests seeking to protect uneconomic profits through control of finance, control of production capacity, monopolistic pri-'ng of transporta tion services and control * mar kets.” He proposed removal of freight rate making powers from private bureaus and their lodgment with the Interstate Commerce Commis sion. He said this should be fol lowed by action to establish re- i gional money markets. “At present,” Wallace said, "all industrial developments that must appeal to the capital markets for funds to establish or expand their operations are subject to a veto by the New York money market, whose dominant bankers are al-! ready interested in established en- j terprises in virtually every indus try and who are naturally not ea-! ger to facilitate the establishment of competing firms. “The breaking of the monopoly (Continued on Page Two; Col. 3) ---V bAKDNCK WILL bU TO AIR MEETING H. R. Gardner, county commis sioner, was appointed to represent New Hanover county at the an nual meeting of the Atlantic Coast al Cities Air Service Association in Washington Friday, January 21. at the regular weekly meeting of the Board of Commissioners Mon day afternoon. M. O. Dunning, general counsel, stated in a telegram from Wash ington to Henry W. Lockwood, Charleston, chairman of the group, that this would be the most im portant meeting ever held by the association. Dunning stated that the purpose of the meeting is to elect officers and transact general business. It is expected that the association will arrive at plans for the de velopment of adequate air service, both domestic and foreign for j coastal cities. The meeting will be held at 11 j o’clock .Friday morning in the Pan-j American room of the Mayflower hotel. 1 Nazis Say Entire Eastern Front Blazing Russian Troops Drive Toward Latvia; jr/ Great Britain Accused Of Seeking Peace JJSSIANS SURPRISED Pravda Lables Story As A ‘Rumor’ From The Be ginning MOSCOW, Jan. 17.— (J) — The Communist party organ. Pravda, today published a report which al though plainly labeled as a ru mor from Cairo, amounted to an unofficial accusation that Britain was sounding out Germany on the possibility of a separate peace. Tlie 10-line dispatch, published at the top of Pravda’s foreign news page under a Cairo dateline and credited to “a special correspond ent of Pravda”, said two British officials had met secretly with Joa chim Von Ribbentrop. German foreign minister, with the “aim of finding out the conditions of a sep arate peace with the Germans.” It said “it is understood the meet ing did not remain without re sults”—a phrase which carried to Russians the positive connotation that it had met at least a partial success. TTvnii»rJ infpvpst rmri siirnrisfc were stirred among Russians by the strange and disturbing story. Allied quarters were incredulous. British officials said they could not understand either the report or the publication of it, and that they did not believe it. There was no hint as to the iden tity of the Britons reported en gaged in the negotiations. A Bern dispatch said the Ankara radio had qquited Pravda as saying "two for mer British statesmen” had met Ribbentrop. The Pravda dispatch in its en tirely was as follows: “Cairo, Jan. 12—<By Special cor respondent of Pravda)—According to information from reliable Greek and Yugoslav sources, a secret meeting took place recently in one of the seacoast Cities of the Pyre nees peninsula between two Eng lish officials and Von Ribbentrop. “The meeting had the aim of finding out the conditions of a sep arate peace with the Germans. It is understood the meeting did not remain without results.” Pravda made no comment, nor lid Soviet officials. Although this story was printed in the official organ of the Com munist party, it did not bear tire weight of a dispatch of the of ficial news agancy. Tass. The newspaper itself was careful to la ael it as a “rumor.” Nevertheless its mere publication ■aised an interesting point at a :ime when Britain, the United states and Russia appeared to lave sealed their United Nations (Continued on Page Two; Col. 2) -V MARCH OF DIMES CAMPAIGN OPENS The eleventh annual appeal for funds with which to carry on the work of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis was begun here Monday, with the quota for New Hanover county set at $2. 900. The Rev. Janies B. McQuere is chairman of the drive, and J- D. Carr, vice chairman. Harry Dosh er, who handled the campaign here last year, was appointed to handle public relations. Dosher started yesterday that the drive here was to effect in no way the campaign of the Fourth War Loan. “After all, “he said, we are only asking for dimes.” Officials of the campaign said that if people who were thankful for the wonderful work carried on by the foundation in previous years would begin saving their dimes two or three months before (Continued on Page Two; Col. 3) -V WEATHER FORECAST NORTH CAROLINA: Fair and warmer Tuesday. Wednesday partly cloudy and continued mild. (Eastern Standard Time) (By U. S. Weather Bureau) y Meteorological data for the 24 hours ending 7:30 p. m.. yesterday. TEMPERATURE 1:30 am, 33, 7:30 am, 32, 1:30 pm. 48, 7:30 pm. 46. Maximum 50, Minimum 31, Mean -40, Normal 46. HUMIDITY 1:30 am, 90, 7:30 am, 94, 1:30 pm, 65, 7:30 pm, 72. PRECIPITATION Total for the 24 hours ending 7:30 pm, 0.00 inches. Total since the first of the month, C.44 inches. TIDES FOR TODAY (From the Tide Tables published by U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey) High Low Wilmington - 3:22a 10:38a 3:37p 11:04p Masonboro Inlet - 12:46a 7:07a 7:27p Sunrise, 7:17 am. Sunset, 5:29 pm. Moonrise. 12:06 am. Moonset. 12:00 pm. Cape Fear River stage at Fayette ville, 34 feet. (Continued on Page Two; Col. S) —. ______ Gable At Carole Lombard Ship Launching Capt. Clark Gable (left) watched as Film Actress Irene Diiim christened the Liberty ship at Wil mington, Calif., named in honor of his wife, who was killed in an airplane crash two years ago. (AP Wirephoto) Poles Awaiting Further Action In Border Row LONDON, Jan. 17—(iP)—Healing of the breach be tween the London Polish government and Soviet Russia appeared to hinge on whether diplomatic relations can be reestablished through the efforts of the United States-and Britain. Poles, who feel the problem concerns all the Unit ---jfed Nations, welcomed the offer JAP SHIP SUNK, 2 ARE DAMAGED ADVANCED ALLIED HEAD QUARTERS, New Guinea, Tues day, Jan. 18.—(Ji—Bombs from Navy Catalina patrol planes sank a 10.000-ton Japanese vessel and set afire two other merchantmen of a six-ship enemy convoy caught off the Japanese base at Kavieng. New Ireland, Sunday night. Allied headquarters announced today. The Allied planes, members of the South Pacific command Black Cats squadron, spotted the convoy of four cargo vessels and two war ships. possibly cruisers, 45 miles off Kavieng. the happy hunting ground of Allied patrol aircraft in recent weeks. Left burning were an 8,000-ton ship and another of 6,000 tons. En emy escort craft put up stiff anti aircraft fire, but none of the Cat alinas was hit. Both of the dam aged ships were observed still burning when reconnaissance planes visited the scene Monday. The Japanese have stepped up their air activity, communique re ports indicated, and Allied fliers continued their blows on enemy bases at Rabaul, New Britain, and along the northeast coast of New Guinea. An attack on the American in vasion area at Saidor. on the New Guinea coast, cost the Japanese 17 fighters and one divebomber, (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) TRIBUNAL RULES IN CARRIER CASE WASHINGTON, Jan, 17.— W — A railroad must make every rea sonable effort to settle a labor dis pute before it is entitled, under the Norris-Laguardia act, to a court injunction restraining strik ing employes from commiting vio lence a gains the road, the Supreme Count ruled today. Specifically, the court held that the Toledo, Peoria and Western Piailroad, a 239-mile road between Keokuk, Iowa, and Effner, Ind., had not made that effort and re versed a Federal district court at Quincey, 111., which granted the car rier an injunction during a strike of 104 employes two years ago. Denial of an injunction, the opin ion added, would not necessarily leave the railroad without a reme dy from the "mob violence” which it charged to the strikers. Damage suits and criminals laws prohibit ing interference with interstate trains still could be effective meth ods. the court said. In another 7-2 opinion, the court laid down the rule that the right (Continued on Page Two: Col. 8) of the United States to help and waited to see whether negotia tions with the Soviet government could be attained in the face of the stern Russian reply to the Polish statement Saturday. The Poles have asked that Washington and London under take to mediate the Pclish-Rus sian dispute and participate in discussion of all outstanding ques tions involving the two nations. It had said that it could not ac cept a “unilateral” settlement from Russia. To this Polish statement Moscow had replied early today that the Poles evidently were unwilling to acept a settlement along the lines proposed by Russia some days ago and that the Russian government would not “enter into official ne- ; gotiations with a government with which diplomatic relations have been interrupted.” . It is believed in London mat a reshuffling of Polish officials to eliminate President Wladyslaw Raczkiewicz; Gen. Kazimierz Sosnkowski. commander in chief of Polish armies in exile; and Lt. Gen. Dr. Marjan Kukiel, min ister of defense; and giving the Moscow union of Polish patriots representation might bring the two governments together. It is understood here that Pre mier Stantislaw Mikola jczyk and Foreign Minister Tadeusz Roni er will discuss the situation with Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden soon and report to the Polish cabinet. In the meantime the Poles feel that purposely avoid ing acceptance or rejection of the Russian Curzon Line proposals was wise because settlement of (Continued on Page Three; Col. 8) GEN EISENHOWER READY FOR TEST Bradley Is Senior U. S. General Heading Yank Ground Troops LONDON, Jan. 17 -r(,7Pf— With good humor. Gen. Dwight D. Ei senhower declared today he had found the pre-invasion machinery rumbling briskly when he reach ed Britain, and disclosed that Lt. - Gen. Omar N. '.frifllki' Bradley was sen .'.fHHBk . ior A rn eric a n general neaamg the great and swiftly - mounting p numbers of U. S. i ground troops in | the United King l dom. Eisenhower, giv ing his first Lon don press confer ence as supreme Allied command er in the west, went no turtner It. Gen. jn defining Brad Omar Bradley ley-g role. but disclosure of Bradley's pres ence was widely accepted as tan- i tamount to announcement that the zero hour would find him com manding all American landing soldiers, just as Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery will head all the British. It was strongly indicated out side the conference that the choice for the over-all American ground command had not been finally, de cided. But Bradley, who proved himself as commander of the sec ond corps in Tunisia and Sicily, has been in Britain many weeks, and seems a logical choice. Even if someone else is chosen for the post, the square-jawed infantry man seems a certain bet for com mand of an army. Choice of the American ground! leader will complete the western (Continued on Page Three; Col. 5) i New Soviet Break-Through Shapes Up As Opening Of Baltic Battle ■ By KIRKE L. SIMPSON ] Associated Press War Analyst A new Rusaiai! b vak-tjipou'.i to cut the Leningrad-Odessa railroad north of Novosololniki . shapes up as the opening of the battle of the, Baltic flank in the east even be-, fore the crisis is. reached on the Black Sea wing of the front. Russian forces astride the Noyo sokoiniki-Dno .link of, the railroad! stand within lrss than 1(H) miles .of Pskov. That is the vital supply, and escape corridor, south of Lake Peipus for all German forces on the - Leningrad*Lake Ilmen-Lovat river front. The site of the new operation, j which Berlin estimates is backed] by at least 1,000.000 fresh Rus-j sian troops, suggests that an at-; j tempt to roll up the Nazi Baltic i ! wing from the south has started. ] ! The new break-through came south j ! of the tremendous marshes of the S Lovat which have guarded the Na zi defense line for 125 miles from Velikie Luki to Staraya Russia, -j / . The Pskov gateway seems the Logical' main objective of the Rus siatvdrive. Through it run all trans portation feeders for the whole Na zi : Baltic flank except the round about Revel-Leningrad railroad and a highway via Narva. A serious Russian threat to Pskov must force hasty Nazi re tirement from Leningrad, the Vol kov front below it, and from the Lake Ilnien-Staraya Russia rector German evacuation of all north western Russia to match the re treat from the Ukraine and Write Russia to the south may be im pending. While the scope and direction of the Russian attack has not yet fully developed, there are indica tions that .mark it as the start of the long expected major winter of fensive in the north for which the Russians are known to have been preparing for months. The Nazis in the Baltic theater IContinued on Page Two; Col. 41 HAIL CENTER IS NEARED Slaughter Of 2,300 Ger mans Is Claimed By Moscow __ • LONDON, luesday. Jan. 18— 'JR—Northern Russian trops ham mering toward the Latvian fron :ier 70 miles beyond drove to with in seven miles of tjae rail junction of Novosokolniki yesterday, while Ear to the southwest another Red army plunged to within 14 miles af Rovno, an important communi cations hub for all eastern Poland. A Moscow communique early to day said the Russians had killed a total of 2,300 troops yesterday, 1,200 of them in the reduction of five German strongpoints in the north where the Red army’s latest affensive had entered its fifth day. Berlin accounts said, however, that 250,000 Russians were attack ing all along a 250-mile front be low Leningrad. TTC -- „ ___ ntinnlrn were reported continuing in the Uman region of the southwestern Ukraine. The Russians said their troops successfully repulsed all of them, destroying 80 tanks, 16 ar mored cars, six big guns, 200 trucks and other equipment. Uman is 12 miles south of Yaro vatka, where the Russians previ ously had cut the Smela-Khristi Novka railway, one of the Nazi es cape routes leading out of the mid dle Dnieper River area. The capture of Tuchin put Gen. Nikolai F. Vatutin’s forces of the First Ukraine Army only 14 miles northeast of Rovno, and Moscow dispatches said Rovno's capture, an early possibility, would imperil the German grip on a vast area of southern Russia. Soviet troops first by-passed Tu chin. said the bulletin broadcast by Moscow and recorded by the Soviet monitor. Then, ‘'taking ad vantage of the panic that broke out among the Germans, Soviet fighters wiped out about 300 Hit lerites,” and captured several guns, an ammtmition dump, and other booty. Rovno, 40 miles inside pre-war Poland, is an objective of troops attacking on the southern side of an 85-mile Russian bulge inside that territory. It is a junction on Ihe Berdichev-Warsaw and Sarny Lwow railways, and also is astride the hard-surfaced Kiev-Warsaw highway. On Sunday other Russian units (Continued on Page Two; Col. 2) U. S, FRENCH HIT AT GUSTAV LINE ALLIED HEADQUARTERS Al giers, Jan. 17.— Wl—American and French troops, smashing at the Nazis’ Gustav line along a 30-mile front, reached the Rapido River and other points favorable for launching an attack on the key city of Cassino today as their new ccmmander-in-chief. Gen. Sir Hen ry'Maitland Wilson, declared that the Germans would be hit wher ever ana whenever the opportuni ty offers on the Mediterranean front. Rome, itself, is the immediate objective of present Allied operat ions in Italy, Wilson said at his first press conference here, add ing that he was “optimistic’’ that the Eternal City would fail to the Allies before long. He said other attacks might be expected along the southern front anywhere from its western extremity, the Pyre nees, to its Balkan terminus, where the River Maritza flows in to the sea. Promising easier terrain for Al lied troops once they break the enemy’s present defenses before Cassino, the man who has been nicknamed “Jumbo” because of his size said that, given luck, UM Allies might win the war this year (Continued on Page Three; Col. 7) rr r~: m Reynolds becomes /V. C, Recreation Chairman For National Group Jesse A. Reynolds, Recrea tion Director, has agreed to serve as state chairman for North Carolina, for the Sd* ciety of Recreation Workers of America, of which the head quarters are in Washington. D. C. Milo F. Christiansen, chair man of the society, requested in a recent letter to Mr. Rey nolds that h«j serve in tb$ capacity. National committee members of the Society include Jean Barnes, Washington, D. C.; Jacob Fieldman, West Hart ford, Conn.; Robert L. Hom ey, Davenport, la.; and Charles Graves, Atlanta. Ga. : %
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