Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / June 5, 1953, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two Hie Chapel Hill Weekly Chapel Hill North Carolina JSC Ew bMVT Tekofcmr >-1271 - 1 - 1— - PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY' asss= 1/tIS GU*tS Owner amc Editor J«K. JOKXF A**tttar.l Editor LIVKNOi CaJSFWEX Printing Sttpormtonden; •> am**- imm mmtir FtUnmry » !«* »: tb. pWlififi rn Choe. HiL Sf-u. Cfttuib**. tfcr *r-. «ts Macrcfc t. 3*7*» _ SUBSCRIPTION RATES b Oi*ag* Coaxrty. Yea- RS-W (C month*. XT ?5 : $ months.. $7 .at* < Outside of Or»ng* Cotatr by the Year: See of N. C, Va_. az>c S C £ « Ojaes- Slates and Dist. of Columbia A W r mmnm MeX:CC. South AttrCTiCS ®-®® Etmme «■ * ADVERTISING RATES National. for age-gue*. 70c col met through Sept. SL 15*52: Sic beginning October 1, 15*2. • occasional. 60c; regular. 59e . Cinsr.fseC. payable it advance, minimum. 50e for 12 words evrrj additional word. Sc . . Lrga. and tabular, 1 ::»♦ 70c per jack.: 2 time*. 65c: S or more time*. GOt . . . “Reader*,'' separate free, readme matter anc clearly marked “adv..” 70e. Political (m ao easc* i, 70c. A Dedarmtion by Jotuk A Charlotte business mar. heard that a Government official with whom he had dealing's for many years was to be dis missed because of the change of admin istrations. The name of the official is not giver, here. For convenience call him John Smith, The Charlotte News quotes from cor respondence between the business mar. and Congressman Charles A. Jonas, a Re publican, who was elected to Congress last year in the Eisenhower landslide. "I am told that Smith’s job may be in jeopardy because of the charge of ad minis-trations,” wrote the business man. “While devoutly grateful for the afore said change, and having no wish to meddle in business that isn’t mine, and without the knowledge or request of the individual concerned, I would like to say that Smith has done a good job. ... I have found him reliable and earnest and effective. I dislike to see a good man put out.” Tine Congressman's reply was (in part; as follows: “I am in receipt of your letter in which .you sav you have been told that the job of John Smith may be in jeopardy because of the change of administrations. Your letter is the firs;t intimation I have had to this effect, and I will look into the rumor right away. “Your favorable reaction to Smith’s work is of interest, and I am glad to know that you think he has done a good job. I have not heard any criticism of his work myself and, as above stated, did not even know there was any question about his job. “As you perhaps may know, or should at least suspect from the public statements I have made on the subject, I am not a spoilsman and have no interest whatever in patronage other than a desire to see that good men are appointed to represent the Federal Government in all positions. “Wherever we have a good man on the job who knows his work and is doing it in a satisfactory manner, I am not inter ested in trying to have him displaced simply because there has been a change of administration. Os course, this would not apply in the case of a man who holds a strictly political job and who will use his position to further the interests of his own party against the present ad ministration.” Charles A. Jonas is held in high regard by North Carolinians and other j>eople who know him. Their good opinion of him will be confirmed and strengthened by this declaration of his belief that honest and capable public servants should not be dismissed because one political party has succeeded another in control of the Govern ment. The Language of Television People who read newspapers are called newspaper readers, and people who listen to radio broadcasts are called radio lis teners. What is the word for people who attend a show on television, who are look ers and listeners at the same time? I put the question to three persons one day this week. Earl Wynn, chief of the University Cemmunication Center, said these peoplejvere called television viewers. My neighbor, Mrs. Oscar Hamilton, who iuis a television, hesitated a moment, evi dently not having given the matter any thought before, and said: “I suppose you’d call them watchers, wouldn’t you?” An other TV*owning neighbor, Kay Kyaer, said the word was televiewers. This com pressed version of Mr. Wynn’s phrase With this issue the Weekly changes from a 7-column to an 8-column page. This ovtr-aii change is effected by the fol lowing three changes: (1» the addition of half ar. inch in the width of the sheet of paper for the page, making the width 16 J « inches against the former 16: (21 a slight reduction in the width of the margin on each side: and (3) slightly narrower rules between the columns. These three changes together make it possible to increase the number of columns from 7 to 8 with such a slight narrowing of each column that nobody except persons specially attentive to the technical aspects of newspaper-printing would ever notice it. The change was worked out by our printing boss. Lawrence Campbell, with the help of several other Chapel Hill printers. The Weekly now has the same number of columns or. a page as the Durham Herald, the Raieigh News and Observer, the New York Times, the New York Herald Tribune, the Christian Science Monitor, and other standard-size papers (standard-size meaning not tabloid-size), but it has a wider column than any of these papers. Or. the right, below, are shown the three widths above and below one another. The Weekly’s readers may wonder why the change is being made The best way to explain it is bv an example. A 12-page issue with 7 columns to the page contains 84 columns. A 16-page issufe with 7 columns to the page contains 112 columns. Some times we have 12 pages, sometimes 16. Last week we had 16 pages. The reason we had 16 instead of 12 was that we had more advertising than we could find space for in 12 pages. But — and mind this, for it’s the main point—only a little more. In this 16-page issue there were 65 columns of advertising and 47 columns of reading matter. If we had had 3 or 4 columns less of adver tising we could have printed a 12-page instead of a 16-page paper and still had plenty of room for reading matter. (Some people may ask: why not a 14-page issue? The reason lies in the difficulty of the printing operation. We won’t go into that here. To explain it would take too long.) So, because w<- had 3 or 4 columns more of advertising than we could get in a 12-page issue we had to add 28 columns. That meant a tre mendous addition to the volume of both the edi torial and the printing work that had to be done. Take my word for it, the strain that such a situation as that forces upon th*- -taff of a small-town new-paper is something truly fright ful. If you happen to have kept your last week’s issue, look at it and see what a large volume of seems to me a good solution. It fits in with the general fondness for short cuts. There is a pleasing colloquial flavor about the word watch. You watch a foot ball or baseball game, or a horse race, or a parade. But when you go from the action, watch, to the agent, watcher, you are on less familiar ground. Keats wmote of “some watcher of the skies,” and some times you hear of sky watchers, but I don’t think of any phrase containing the word watcher that has become common except bird watcher. Every new invention or new enterprise develops a special language of its own. It has been that way with the railroad, the telephone, the automobile, the airplane, the motion picture, and the radio, and now it is that way with television. But, as might be expected, the television has taken over to a large extent the language of the movies. For example, in television as in movie production, “dollying” means the moving forward of the camera, toward the person or the object being photographed. The TV fraternity speaks and writes of “kinescopic recording,” and this has been abbreviated to “kine” (pronounced “kinney”). Then, for the recording instrument used in TV, there is “video recorder.” Mr. Wynn told me about these instances. My talk with him was somewhat hurried because he was getting ready to leave for Washington with Controller W. I). Carmichael, jr., to file with the Government an application for an educational TV permit. Some day when we have more time I am going to get him to give me a more extended TV glossary. Proper Treatment for Hoodlums The Raleigh police and the Raleigh city court deserve praise for their action in the caae of the so-called “panty raid” by State College students at Meredith College. Whatever may be the normal conduct of these young men, on this occasion they were hoodlums, and the police very proper ly treated them as such. And when they came into court they found themselves facing a judge who showed no disposition to regard their jjerformance as excusable college-boy pranking. About four hundred students partici pated in the raid. They were so violent in The Weekly Changes Its Form THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY reading matter had to be written, set in type, and proof-read. The newsprint, the blank paper, used in last week’s issue cost $54.29. This was $13.57 more than the newsprint for a 12-page issue would have cost. And there was a substantia] increase in other elements of cost —ink. power and light, metal-melting, etc. If we have an advertising volume large enough to justify 16 pages, naturally we don’t object to that. We like it. It is when we have too much for 12 pages, but not nearly enough for 16. and haw to print 16 pages anyhow, that we are put on the rack. Having 8 columns to the p*age—that is. 12 more columns in a 12-page issue—should enable ms to put in a 12-page issue the same volume of ad vertising that has often forced us to go to 16 pages and still leave plenty of room for reading matter. Os course if I had another linotype machine, and another linotype operator, and another man or two cm the news-gathering and writing and proof-reading staff, the difficulty of getting out a 16-page issue would be much less. But if I had enough money to pay for all that I would have enough not to have to get out a news paper at all. This shows the width of a col-! uran in the Chapel Hill Weekly. The printer’s measure is the em, which is one-sixth of an inch, and the width of this column is 11 hi em*. This shows the HU -ems-wide! column in the Durham Herald,) the News and Observer, the' New York Times, the Christian Science Monitor, and many other papers. It is the commonest of all width* among daily papers. There are some (the Greensboro News is one of them) which have a slightly wider column. This show- the lO’/a-emt wide column of the New York Herald Tribune. Jt is the nar rowest column seen in any pa per that comes to the Weekly office. resisting orders to leave the Meredith campus that the jgjiice had to use tear gas. Some who stood off at a safe distance yelled taunts at the police. There were accusing shouts of “Gestapo!” The young men arrested were put in busses borrowed from the i.State prison authorities, tak en to j/*!ice headquarters, and charged with participat ing in a riot. They were re leased on the guarantee of a State (>*llege dean that they j would appear for trial. In the city court Judge jDoub acquitted some of the students because of lack of evidence and sentenced oth ers to a 30-day road term suspended on payment of a SSO fine and court costs. The jcostx varied according to the number of charges. The charges included (1) par ticipating in a riot, (2) mov ing toward an object with destructive intent, (3) cre ating a disturbance at a woman’s college, (4) unlaw ful assembly, and (5) resist ing arrest. Some defendants found guilty on four charges had to pay $44.20 in costs plus the SSO fine. Comments by the Raleigh News and Observer: “Many of the students seem con cerned about the firm meth ods adopted by the Raleigh police: One fact, however, is unescapable. The police did not start the raid and were not responsible for the by standers who flocked to it. And it must be admitted that if the police had not used stem methods they would have been overcome by the raiders. The court has upheld the police in those cases in which the police were able to present sufficient evidence to warrant a conviction. . . . One thing which should be apparent to all by now is that these panty raids are not funny. When they were started last year and spread to colleges all over the coun try they were at least new. Ijist year they may have seemed funny to the partici pants, the onlookers, and per haps some of the girls de signed to be the victims. The novelty has worn off. There is no more sense in reviving panty raids now than there would be in bringing back marathon dancing or other fads which had their brief day and passed on.” A Culpable Nation (Robert C. Ruark* The story of Bill Oatis, I think, has not received just evaluation. The story is that for a couple of years he has sat in a minor-league jail while supposedly the great est country in the world could n’t get him out until the head man finally made a publicity gim mick out of Oatis’ wife’s plea to turn him loose. This the lad did .with great magnanimity curi Sously coinciding with the love |thy-neighbor campaign the Reds were turning on. I suppose it is possible that Oatis was working as an informal spy, since almost anyone who works abroad will answer a ques tion or so that his country asks. him. I suppose Robert Vogeler was, too. But the point is that while our great, nation declares war against Charlie Chaplin and Korea, it held very still for a tin pot satellite to imprison one of our pressmen without even threatening to send a gunboat in reprisal. The United States, in my book, was heavily culpable in the Oatis affair. Jaycee*’ Fishing Trip The Chapel Hill Jaycees held their anual fishing trip to Hark er’s Island last weekend. Those who went were Henry Bryson, Thayer Lloyd, George Bullock, Ernest Neal, Bill Pritchard, Gra dy Pritchard, Bob Boyce, Bill Stewart, John Hoenig, Wallace Williams, Frank Blocksidge, jr., John Linney, Walt Baucom, Hank Koon, Claude Wheeler, T. C. Moore, Bill Meade, Roland Giduz, Buster Ogburn, Charlie Phillips, Herbert Wentworth, and Harvey Bennett. Sommer at Art Conference Clemens Sommer of the Uni versity’s art department served as chairman of the art history section of the Southeastern Col lege Art Conference at its annual maeting at tha University of Ala bama. Chapel Hill Chaff (Continued from page 1) seated around a table all except one. That one is seat ed on a throne at one end. He wears an air of complete ly happy dominance. At the other end of the table a di rector. whispering behind his hand to another director, is saying: “You’ll notice that old Thompson makes quite a thing of his 51 per cent.” The reason this reminded me of Watts was. of course, that I had been reading about the Erwin Mills stock buying contest. The next day I got a let ter from Watts saying that, only five or ten minutes be fore I telephoned, his son ;had walked into the office with a copy of the New Yorker and had handed it to him opened at page 19. Watts, jr., had blacked out the name Thompson and in serted Grier. (Grier is the name of the Abney Mills officer who has been buying Erwin stock with the apparent purpose of gaining control of the company. Watts has been buying stock, and getting as surances from stockholders of his acquaintance that they would not sell their stock, in order that the stock would remain widely distributed and that control would not pass to an “alien” owner. Alien, in this case, meaning an owner probably not con cerned with keeping the Erwin Mills identified with Durham and the other com munities where the company has plants.) In his letter to me Watts, replying to my assumption about his ambition, said: “This is one time you guessed wrong. Evidently you had not seen my letter to Erwin stockholders dated May 19, a copy of which is enclosed. Look at marked paragraph.” The marked paragraph in the letter to the stockholders says: “The Hill family does not w'ant control of Erwin Mills, but would like to see the stock as widely distributed to as many stockholders as pos sible.” Methodists Plan Bazaar Mrs. William L. Sloan has been appointed chairman of the Methodist church’s annual bazaar, to be held in December. Com mittee chairmen to assist Mrs. Sloan, appointed recently by Mrs. Karl Slocum, president of the church’s Woman’s Socciety of Christian Service, are as follows: Needlework, Mrs. H. B. Sharpe; food, Mrs. Wallace Patterson; | aprons, Mrs. C. L. Merritt; dolls and doll clothes, Mrs. Olin T. Mouzon; jewelry, Mrs. A. K. King; plants atid Christmas deco rations, Miss Jofcie Pritchard and Mrs. J. E. Wadsworth; white elephants, Miss Virginia Dunlap; tea room, Mrs. M. H. Stacy and Mrs. H. M. Wagstaff; bargain table, Mrs. Ralph Felton, and publicity, Mrs. William Aycock. ■ 1 Mcknight Outstanding Athlete I.loyd Mcknight, co-captain of the Chapel Hill high school foot ball team this past year, and also the leading hitter on the baseball team, has been awarded the Carolina theatre trophy for being the leading four-year ath lete of his class. The award was given to him at a special school as sembly program last week by Coach Bill Grice. Mcknight was chosen on the basis of a vote of (he 60 high school athletic mono gram winners. Thirty-six athletic monograms were awarded to boys at the program, 17 for football, nine for basketball, and ten for baseball. Twenty-three letters were awarded for girls’ sports— -10 for softball, and 13 for basket ball. Ellen Brauer to Edit Procottian Ellen Brauer will be editor of the Chapel Hill high school bi weekly newspaper, the Proconian, next year. She will succeed Doro thy Greulach, who was graduated this year. Bibb Latane, a rising senior, will be the associate edi tor, succeeding Jim Kelso. Other members of the staff will be chosen from the school's journal ism class next fall. WUNC Graduate* Chapel Hill girls who were graduated last Monday from the Woman’s College in Greensboro are Ann Marie Abemethy, Billy Marie Suitt, and Mary Elisabeth Teague. Social Security in Orange County By Mrs. Nina Matthews Manager of the Durham Social Security Office Old-age and survivors insur ance plays an important role in providing security for approxi mately 600 people in Orange County. As of December 31, 1952, monthly payments of approximat !y $20,000 were made to these ; people. This number includes re tired workers and their families and the survivors of deceased in jured workers. This was an in crease cf 31 'U over payments at the end of 1951. The men and women 65 or over who had worked long enough to qualify for old-age insurance benefits made up the largest group of beneficiaries and receiv ed larger amounts than depend ents and survivors. Numbering about 230, they received approxi mately SIO,OOO for the month of December. In the smaller groups, about 40 aged widows and dependent wid owers received approximately sl,- 500, 65 wives and dependent hus bands received $1,400, and about 5 aged dependent parents receiv ed approximately $l5O. Monthly checks amounting to approxi mately $6,500 went to about 250 mothers and children (under age 18.) Changes made by the 1950 and 1952 amendments to the Social Security Act accounted for a con siderable part of the increases, both in the number of people re- THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY is on sale at the following places: Bus Station Lunch, Carolina Inn, Carolina Pharmacy, Colonial Drugstore, Colonial Stores and Dairyiand Farms in Glen Len nox, Danziger’s Restaurant, Eu banks’ Drugstore, Fowler’s Food Store, Jeff’s, Memorial Hospital Hospitality Shop, The Scuttlebutt, Sloan’s Drugstore, Miss Stella Lyon’s news-stand in the post of ; f ice lobby, Sutton’s Drugstore, University Motor Ix>dg*e, the Vil lage Pharmacy, Senter’s Drug store in Carrboro; and door-to door through neighborhood sales men. j STOLEN: ANYONE FINDING red billfold or various ID cards from same, please notify Vivian Andrews, c/o Bank of Chapel Hill. FOR RENT: ROOM FOR GIRL. Cool. Breakfast privileges, Semi private bath. Call 4931 after 5 p.m., or 2801 during day. JUST RECEIVED: NEW SHlP ment of diaper shirts—seersucker and batiste. The Baby Shop. beat/tify YOUR LAWN fft calling Chapel Hill Nursery, Uni versity Heights, 6886. Complete insect eradication. FOR SAI.E: ONE WRINGER type washing machine; cheap for cash, (.'all 9-5708. FOR RENT JUNE 1: THREE-' room apartment. Furnished. Close to town and campus. W. W. Boger, 305 Pritchard Ave. Tel. 8-2931. FOUR ROOM HOME FOR SALE: Two bedrooms; tiled hath; insulat ed; hardwood floors; screen porch; furnished or unfurnished. No. 19. Justice St. Call 9-5576. RUGS. WE CARRY IMPORTED and domestic hooked rugs. Also Klearflax linen and all-wool rugs. Whitehall Shop. FO R REN T: FURNISHED apartment; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large living-dining room, sun porch, kitchen. Good neighbor hood. August 1963 to September 1, 1954. References required. Write M.L. c/o Weekly. FOR RENT FIRST SUMMER school session; Three attractive single rooms to women. 734 Gim-; ghoul Rd. Phone 7616. FOR RENT: ATTRACTIVELY furnished two bedroom house on large, cool, shaded lot in West- j wood. Walking distance from hospital. Garage. Storage attic. Thorough ventilation. S7O in cluding ail utilities. Phone 2976. ANTIQ UE S : FURNITURE, glass, china, decorative items, amps, Blackberry Farm Antiques, Hillsboro Road. Mrs. H. W. Car-) 'roll. SENGRAVED WEDDING INVl .tations and announcements. Uni versity Printery. Under Sutton’s. Call 9-7701. HELP WANTED: MAN OR WO man (must be over 16 years of 'age) to operate ice cream motor | scooter on liberal commission basis. Contact Mr. Savage at the Dairy Bar between the hours of 2 and 5 p.m. WE INVITE YOU TO JOIN THE hundreds of Chapel Hill families who wash the automatic way at our laundry. It is economical, san itary, convenient. Shop at nearby super markets while your laun dry is being finished. Complete drying service. Yes, the Cheshires would like to serve YOU at Rose mary Automatic Laundry, 329 West Rosemary Street Telephone 6121. 4«4% INSURED HOME~ LOANS in approved areas of Chapel Hill, N. C.; up to 20 years to repay. Moderate closing costs. Let us finance your new home or re finance your existing home. Tel. 3-4623; J. Obie Harmon, P. O. Box 471, Raleigh, N. C. RELIABLE SERVICE F 6 R television seta, radio car seta, and home radios. Harris Television Service, 604 West Franklin St Phone 9-6906. Friday, June 5, 1953 ■ reiving benefits and in the amounts of their payments. In 1950 the law was changed to in clude millions of people not pre viously covered. Among those newly covered were self-employ ed people, regularly employed household and farm workers, and employees of r.on-profit organi zations. The 1952 changes, effective in September, raised the amount of practically all benefits, gave so cial security credits for military service after the end of World War 11, and provided that an in dividual can be considered “retir ed” even though he is earning as much as $75 a month. Information regarding old-age and insurance may be secured by the Dur ham office, located in Room 216, Post Office Building. Whid Powells Return Mr. and Mrs. C. W’hidbee Powell and their year-and-a-half old daughter Carol Elizabeth re turned to live in Chapel Hill this week on completion of Mr. Powell’s two years’ service in the Navy. He has been in Korea and the Mediterranean during this time and his family has been staying in Norfolk. They are moving into 36-H Glen Lennox. Mr. Powell will take over the insurance side of the Colonial In surance and Realty Company, with which he was associated be fore being called back into the service. T " FOR RENT: LARGE COOL room one block from campus. Au tomatic hot water. Call 5421. BEACH COTTA O E S ANDj rooms: Clean; comfortable; large yards; parking; full ocean view. Write or call Elliott’s Cottages, phone 3473, Carolina Beach; or call Chapel Hill 9-5381. ■D EPEND AB LE WRECKER service 24 hours a day. Poe Motor Company. Phone 6581. ’’OR RENT: NICELY FURNISH ed 2-room and 3-room apartment. Close in. 160 E. Rosemary St. LOCAL AND LONG DISTANCE hauling. I. H. Hill Transfer Com pany, 1904 Markham Ave., Dur ham. Phone Durham 81121. LAWNMOWERS AND TOOLS sharpened. Hand and power lawn mowers machine - sharpened and serviced. We also sharpep axes, garden tools, hedge clippers, ■scythes, scissors, etc. We have moved to the old Carrboro Post Office building. So, for our usual guaranteed results, bring your work *** Tripp’s Shoe Shop and Lawnmower Repair Shop in the | old Post Office building. Phone ) 9-5301 or 9-5643. IMMEDIATE LISTINGS WANTED We have a growing list of clients interested in buying or ‘renting 3 or 4-bedroom houses. Please contact us at once. ! H. W. WENTWORTH, Realtor Colonial Insurance & Realty Co. Phone 5281 Carl Smith Bldg. FOR RENT: 4-ROOM HOUSE on Airport Road. Newly painted inside and out. Call 9-8603 be tween 6 and 7 p.m, FOR RENT: BY WEEK OR longer; water front cottage, Caro lina Beach, three bedrooms, all modern conveniences; furnished. See Herbert Pendergraft, Village Service Station, Phone 9-8311. JAIL ALL OVERSEAS STAMPS to Mrs. Collier Cobb, Chapel Hill, N. C. She will see they reach veterans who collect them. NEW EYES FOR THE NEEDY, Short Hills, N. J. All spectacles or spectacle frames you no longer need. Every house has these laid aside but others have urgent need | of them. FOR SALE: TWO COCKER | Spaniel puppies, five weeks old; | registered; one male, one female; $25 each. Cal! 8-1612 after 6 P.M. FOR RENT COMFORTABLE room in modern home, close in, semi-private bath with shower. Telephone 9-2696, 116 North St. FOR SALE: RHEEM TABLE i top electric water heater. Call 5886. LIVESTOCK FOR SALE: ANG US Auction: 55 head “Piedmont Neighbors” sale, Cloverly Farm, Charlottesville, Virginia, Satur day, June 20, 1953, at 1 P.M. Four bulls; 51 females. All cattle fully guaranteed. T.B. A Bang’s tested. Popular families; cows with calves at side; bred and open heifers. Strictly foundation stock. Features of the sale: outstanding Blackcap Bessie, daughter of Slencamock Eric of Cremona with outstanding bull calf by Eileen mere 1932—4 herd bull prospects. Spend the day with us and meet your “Piedmont Neighbors." Lunch on the grounds. Bring a carload of your friends for a real Angus get-together. All cattle eligible to ship into North Caro lina. Contact R. A. Rucker, Jr., Eastham, Virginia. Phone Char lottesville 3-1817. WANTED: CHILDREN’S~SEC ond-hand swing set, see-saw, or slide. Call 6211 before Monday. FOR RENT: FURNIS HED room. 308 Cameron Ave. Mrs. Phone 7141. room and board offered in return for light services. Stu dent or business woman. Call 4986. WANTED: FULL-TIME MAID, young, alert, for busy household with babies. Call 4986.
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 5, 1953, edition 1
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