Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Jan. 21, 1955, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page Two The Chapel Hill Weekly gum es K. Awwpt um vww*L V - Tto Water Fnilm la in u Tto State Tkaa Other Maltera That At* fttaarnng Mart AtUntiem An arouse by Percy B. Loveil about Ne» j Jerseys water supply. that 1 have bee: readme ir the Moorer-owr. N J, Newt Cirocick would be mtereetmg a? ary tune be*. it is especial:? mterestmg to me sow became cf tae aaciAnty cf New Jersey s water supply protweat to taoee s at North Carousa. The uae of water x New Jersey aver a|et 110 razors per person per Cay ard it growing rteediiy -trjrer A smg»* x»r. factsmng company ir New Brunswicx use* IjKKMWO raises a Cay There are 16,000 wells ir. tae State The tew re quires that a perm: * obtained fdr every ] well driver, and tier: the wtl i flow of ' water and otter pertinent fact* aoout it have to be reported to the state lovers- j meet. Well* vary widely it flow; in one district the flow stay not more than ' 50 y* ■**--> a minute, in another it may « 15,000 |klku a minute. There are important differences be tween New Jersey and North Carolina in respect to water resource* Weil* are depended on there more than they are here. Bcante* the Delaware, which Down aiaf Ha anttn boundary, separating It * from Fteuyivana, New Jersey does not have any rivers that compare in sine and length with the rivers in North Carolina. This state ha? many more pun c* than New Jersey has, and the number of these ponds a increasing at a remarkably rapid rate, i There is a parate-i between the two stele? in the need fur water for manu facturing, and each slate has reason for deep concern over the certain future in crease in this need. but the most important parallel is that in both the states there has come to be a keen awareness of the need for protect ing and conserving the water supply Mr. Lovell telb of scientific surveys in New Jersey that will be the basis for action by the legislature to prevent waste and develop new resources. Here in North Carolina the late Governor Cinstead ap pointed a Water Resources Advisory Com mit tee to study the water problem, and it is expected to issue a report within the next few weeks. "Water is one of the few fundamental resources for which there is no substi tute,** said Governor Hodge* in his mess age to the legislature. “It is basic to life itself and to most activities which pro duce our necessities. The problem is ex ceedingly complex—in part because water is usually moving about, as water vapor in the air, in streams, and as ground water. It falls on one man's property and moves to another's. Many of man's uses of water do not consume or destroy it, but do often render it unfit for users down stream “North Carolina is Messed with abund ant water, which, if properly used and conserved, is sufficient to supply all our needs in the foreseeable future. During the last four years, however, every sec- i tkm of the State and every segment of our economy has been seriously affected by droughts. This shortage has retarded in dustrial growth, reduced agricultural pro duction. and limited municipal usage to an The report of the Water Resources Advisory Committee wifi in all likelihood, suggest legislation on the subject.** The severe droughts that depleted the inter supply of many cities and towns, inter firms communities that had water In gp—i this condition is so recent that it fa fresh j» everybody's memory, and the people of the state routim that some- > thay ought to he done to prevent each calamities Os comae the bask action to provide wkqniTr municipal water sup pbe* is far municipalities themselves to take, bet the state can give a great deal of help by providing expert advice and working out picas for joint water supply ' sources and. possibly, interlocking distri- The water mpf? problem is far more important scene of the problems be fore the iegatoture that are getting a < great deal more anetxe. —L.G. WUNC-TT Has a Sshd Ihginmg This writer was most anxious for WUNC-TY te get started. Being a sports fan of the first order. 1 was Woking for ward to seeing Camima athletic teams perform at the confines of zv living room. I have seen parts of the first two Caro lina basketball games oc TV and I have been impressed I have already, however, come to realae that sports are going to be but a small part of the programs that 1 will come to enjoy oc WUNC-TY. The newscasts, sportcasta, programs on music, on finance, oc problems facing the farmers, oc ahaost every phase of activity in the three institutions, have already seen featured These programs have gives me a new insight into the value of higher edactuw. They have re-introduced j me to severa. of my owx college professors.! There are oar; protJem* facing those f in charge of WUNC-TV. but with such a suid beginning these can » little doubt that this new phase cf University educa-, tkm will i€»v* :te mark all over North Carolina. —O-C. A Bad Mw«e in Front of the Pout Office j Nothing is erase complained about than tne shortage of parking space* on our main street, ye* here comes the town government and forbids the use of a space, long enough for two cars, that has been used by more people, and has been snore of a cocxecience. than any other j parking pace in Chapel Hiii; that is, the space m fr». r.t of trie poet office just north of Henderson street. A nas been set up on the curb, with it? sn*>uth toward the roadway, and parking has bees banned here so that drivers may come aiongaidt the box and I reach out and mad letters without leaving ! their car*. Now that the space has been criss crossed with yellow line*, meaning keep off, it stays vacant and useless most of the time. Formerly it was used in the ; course of a day by hundreds of people who came to the post office to get their mail and transact business at the window*. It was the perfect example of the proper use of a parking space oc. a crowded street. A car would stop, its occupant would get out and go into the post office; and in a few minute*, frequently in no longer time than it would take him to go to his lock box or buy some stamps, he would return to the car and drive off, leaving the space for the next comer. A mail-tax at this location is not needed, because mail-boxes, from which regular fjlkction* are mads, are scattered all over town. At my request Postmaster Cheek has given me a list of these taxes. There are 359 of them, at the following places: Fast Fi tekiin and Hillsboro, 500 North, North Boundary and Fast Rosemary, Davie circle. Fast Franklin and Park place, Gimghowl road and Ridge lane, near Grimes dormitory, near South Vuilding, Swain hall. C ameron avenue and Pittsboro, Cameron and Bastught, McCauley and Ransom. l*iit?taro and McCauley, Tri angle on Westwood. Memorial Hospital. West Franklin and Kenan, West Franklin and Building and Loan Association, Whi taker and Nunn. Carr and Church, West Franklin at high school, Franklin and Col umbia. and Fast Franklin at Service Plants LuiteLng And in Victory Village and elsewhere outside the corporate limits: Mas*>n Farm road and Bagley drive. £25 Jackson circle, north end of Maxwell road, south end of Maxwell road. Maxwell and Hamilton roads, end of Hamihua road, and Lanark road. A driver who wants to go to the poet office to get hi* mail or fur any other purpose often finds no vacant parking space oa either Franklin or Henderson street. It wand to be that, for the few minutes hr would be in the post office, he coaid park m the space I have described, just north of Henderson street. Now he is ordered not to use that. If a person wants to take his letters to the post office instead of dropping them in a mail-box near his home, it is very little trouble for him to get out of his car and take them into the post office. That causes him only a small fraction of the jmeanvaahmce that is caasod to a person who waats to go into the peat offtfce and' THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY OapdffiKMT j real estate agent and teM 1 him she was looking far a ; .small sample, inexpensive apartment in a quiet part as town. He said: Tve got. just what you want." Half sc hour laker she was at the boor cf this house on Phtchs Place. She was greeted by the janitor, a criimg. good-, mannered Negro. He toldjj her he was trace her own* state of North Carolina, and ;, it turned oct they had ms-.. tuai acquaintances. He goad- . ed her to an apartment on the third (which is the topi floor. It was cieen, it had plenty of light, and trees pressed against the windows. She knew, on the minute, that she was exactly where, she wanted to be. One of her friends on the; block is the poet and por trait painter who appears in Who’s Who m America as Edward Eetiin Camming* ‘ bat whose came is familiar,, to the public in the tower-; cap form. e. e. camming*. After having read his aato-:< tiography m the Atlantic she bought it in book form. • A few weeks ago he wrote! ksb the fly-leaf a cordial in- j scr.pt »oc.. His poetry a *c subtle, or .something, the great oa- : jonty of people are incapable of understanding it, and Mrs. Rosseil is one of that great majority. She and Mr Camming* are good friends and frequently en gage in free-and-easy ban ter. On the day when he in serted the autobiography, somehow his poetry came xto the conversation and »he remarked that she couldn't get a glimmer of what it meant. “He laughed and seemed pleased when I said that," ehe told me “I suppose may be he was amused at hear ing socnetady make such a confession of right to his fare." The houses oa fiijffpt Place are among the aidant in New York. They wore built in C olonial days, long before furnaoa hast was What May Be ia Stare Far The Average Hamaa Bemg lN«W>t »n«f to t The First Industrial Re volution was the devaluation of the human arm by the competition of machinery. There is no rate of pay at which a United States pick and shovel laborer can live which is low enough to com pete with the work of a steam shovel as an excava tor. The Second Industrial Revolution is similarly bound to devalue the human orain, at least in its simpler and more routine decisions. Os course, just as the skilled carpenter, the skilled me chanic. the skilled dress maker have in sonar degree survived the First Indus trial Revolution, so the shift ed scientist and the skilled j administrator may survive the Second. However, taking the Second Revolution as accomplished, the average human being of mediocre attainments or less has nothing to sell that it is worth anybody's money to buy. I W A-OO ** * Properly used, the achievements of the Second Industrial Revolution advance by'many years the realisation of man’s age-old dream of an economy of abundance. Improperly used, for narrow and selfish pur jwse*, they can create a social and economic night mare in which men walk ifie and hungry—made otinolrfr as producers because the mechanical monsters around them cannot replace them as consumer* is forbidden to use the onjy vacant parking space any where near. A 10-miaute limit oa puk ing in front of. the post office ia all right. A complete ban mt larking there to> ass wtong.—L. G. y - - known, and there was a fire-1 place on every floor. So,P when they were converted iato apartments, every! apartment had a fireplace. This makes for delight •hen a fire is burning bat for distress when the fire-, wood has to be paid for. For. , is frightfully ex jmste a New York; you ; save to pay two dollars for: [about a donee sticks. When Mrs. EosseL. on a visit to relative m Rutherfordloc, , toad this to as old friend of the Mesas* family. Kenneth * Tastier, the textile macu- • - iactsrer. he said: “You don't have to bay firewood. 1 have plenty of it , •on my place and you can ; 'have all you want." | “Bet how can I get it to [New York?" ! “No trouble at all about , [that,* he said. “We have . ’truck? gotsg to New York’! [ail the ttern." i So it happens that every* 1 'tew days a truck that has ’ [come from North Carolina : : -naded with textile products j oraw* up ic front of the * souse wnere Mrs. Ro&seli lives and the dnver delivers ■ ‘to her severa. canons of fire wood. hhe tas a surplus of 1 K pued is her storage com- ! partment in the basement. . Letter to a Boy U Bj J «wr» > «W Ckw»f Uuh .\«»i Tk.* -» «*« jcsktr vt • s»j- I# *a». c £ tWc] wkijt - f ;*!nt;Bg kc ea. * v«.• tl'jtrsjj**.. be*r S«a*. Y*a UuxX JW. xre » g»*k tetver, *»S pert «« Ba.: I<e -a* j... v. ii«- la a tag w-aK %£ yasr *U>li li." jsg i* <A*rr st'ittorjK*. | AsjV*!} tas. *iocg tr» as fast ail as rirrjm.) as: }tt« »tn Ism * IK tnd Is* iXa:--si» u» tart art xaoec wj*k a&l pack ap—Oat: mmz *e» I a a!ra?e Iwt natal*; 'ia: « •>.- ay alert**** <Ja: pevutWi as Oea: «* *JOt t&J, *<« yomm. Aui <dt* tnv«r u* *a> aipraarkiag us *-s*» kaC :» sra** aa4 * i* «jtO*s '.i savn jtjr Jfe 1-4 kis. It j» E‘it jk<w ts o*a- : | tent* tkat kas k*f% >-o. t-.x* a> |«ag as tku». mi u» fjraOrue* xaarf p6J_t*<j*s* «T adke* ■w.t .g-.ils tax* s»»t trac-rgr u. utir, *w4 wUi a?»e «*!.>• xS >»3f , ***'Mrta»iw*. 1 wtak ;t »«rr* pa>]W t* .at t» )<m Ual ytna L.K xJ ixg S 4 a>«ex..ig tc. lac war.-: asm —a t» iM Iwrtjf. «j* fcCv«r.- tsrMis «r acaais Siif-pasw jwt rac. firm a cronnS «d I’jwrt, pwatuag ft- m/t «(; , l-ur waj. k*atfc.*g jara age* oat -if U-ta» uac> aafi asekarg dul-< t -itea let-, tk* giAV-ir. U tat »<.i..c ke a*. k***«r or WM-.i aWoot UxaT *; NfiUit*. «l nane IV* »k> 1 *• J'** tiat eavug 2,ew> ’ if *e*»i uiitt pan nak«? .tv** j Vrtttrr 1 * IV;*i noLkaacj [ t« V yr-wk <rf at «j:vb* fats-] . «*r MCM 4* Ual li t a fnr as ewaarkn v Un*m «iVi m cwwraga. J S*r»«a* >■-•* teal aw at tk* I • getaway, w«* iv ISIS'* What - kaea lUt prow’ Vml i/, «■* | rapt tkat tk* rmr ]«x V-a*tt i< | k [ aster. Tea CsOrl X- T j- •, . a caataacrewl para Sort Arxw j . '--a* fcaj om iX* it «*4 ar.yVa4) ] bn* «Mk a aw,r»: ! itf»i for safety ! S» t take at) pr jS< a j«w i I AaUty wnapAtaml Area t •*» *» o*ao aAerate aatf ptL* I «wd takes ekaawaa awiy atea n «*»«V »!»• kwa Vote ar.4 eeia-j k «*ear» tad wet for w. <*r tte | highway, aaooe as aA, it's oa-r t* J**® :k» an fna tk* ktj* lot'. tk* ■>»« bxt t* sm tk* boy>' 1 fre« vs* rawefHanr as vtetr k fwiftsk aari ae«4Vss keaxaSo i Coker Scholarships r j Aa iwhwnl aanta as <7M . awarA. tk* V«aw OaaWn Cater artekantep*. tea* U*r 1 ertakteteU at Cater Coikgr m Hartavvhe, S C. kry Mrs WJUaw Clatter I Cater as Ctepri H»U aa a tewnrtal ka ter At* baa 1 tea< «to aa* toad as the totaap’ dtparttaw* as Um luxmilj Tto m« arkahnlai, wtetfc; at* the trgaaa ante *. •frrad at tto rategw. »« tegia with tk* MM« wradtaw p*ar. Tto ftaau ar* •**• oa . «*».j will atrik tfaaa te to ropa w tewi! Sfa^SiM w*w£ter"te! | .4 Lmmk mi rvl Kdwcatinaal TV ia oa tie air ■m N«rtk CanxUna. aad tie term : tteataai TV.” toners a ad-] jotte as aas*. It alsc covers a; ande rasgc cf exceUect pro-: pan, sc-roe xaformatsve, soot «*terta Eir-c. and soat downngfct Kkctarti Bardic*.. executive pradacer far tk* Cocsobdatad • Us:varsity TV afire, has a Mon day evetusg prograt over S CMC-TV oa charnel 4 exiled *1 Hear Aawxi Sisging.” 1 wbaaad tea defect oa January 10, set I caaght tte sfeoar last Mott aay <t pa.) and vratefeed it witk Mr. Bcrdkrk s a polished actor, aws tto pnftaa requires sack :a pararw. It n a one-man show, with Mr. Burdick discussing piaios-upescai ideas and reading fraaa vanocs literary selections that strike fc-s fancy. Has thesis last Monday was that cactemporary drama, con trary V* popoar belief, does, .faery important messages. More: ageateaiiy, he said, there ar* a] r timber of plays that carry' >tr«Bg messages of world peace, tolerance, and netghboriinesa. To pews* tea point to read from I “Tto Time of Year Life.” “The. Hasty Heart.' “Johnny Johnson. - i “Harvey." aad “Darkness at Soon,” ail with appropriate dia-j sects aad gaataiea. Tto dialect he employed for the' first ve.ect.or. the Saroyan piece,, got kirn off to a bad start, I t.:. Out he made up for it 1 .alec In Paul Green's “Joklmy Jotnsor..' Mr. Bardkk did a bit more shouting than the scene ca-jed for or the .ntimate medium :.S TV csms *wa.x«w comfortab-y. , tut the reacirg was well paced, and ta* overa.. effect was good. The shtw opera with the sound !.f sootnisg gu.tar music, some 'what rernsn-scent of the Third Man Theme, aad the camera | show* us Mr. Burdick, seated oc a tall stool behind a lectern He is illuminated by severa. spot-' light*. mn.:h give a dramatic and i impressive Lack-and-white con- Itrast to the picture The light-: ! jag. however, defeated its owr. jpturpus* wees the camera was jtak.ag anytlueg except a close-: .p shot of Mr. Burc,ck * face, ! because the spotlight which hit; j the left side of h»s face burr.ol \ut his features completely at 1 | any sort of ditjjtr.ee at all Only one camera is used for the show, and it nexer leaves Mr. Bundok It move* ic for a cios*- up, it slowly I almost unnoticw* ahiys pwiis back for a kuig shot, xSKditt.) swings to one side, and! comes in for another close up Th»* goes w. .r. ar.d out, back and forth for the length of the: half-hour show One thing can definitely be sard about "I Hear America bulging You Will never see . anything cute lake It on the xx,n me; c .a. stations you ar* ac Taitund to watching It u ar. < iprr.wer.ui show, and the net works seem Ut be neither iiscl.r.e.: r srur finaacia.iy able to eapen arent 1 tr.r.a you'll fine it ir. teles tug » If j Y«o 'lews ow San .V« Yore < n>’» first snow cf the reason last week mapired this 1 little essay in the form of an ';*uivarsal .n the Times: “Wh** .t comes to stk.w the Joyulace u spilt right down the middle, fj “Half of the people cwnaidU r snow a horrid thing, tent from the sky Vo plague those on the ro-ol The s.ght of snow com -tg ever downward means, for . Jhesn, shovels arid skids, mittens j swallowed by snowbanks, wet 'woolens and necks. Gloomily they (State the traffic tie-ups, the net that they must learn to walk aga-n, fur there is a penalty for ’ | aieJes-s steps >-o slippery walks, ‘he cinders and sand that must he spread lb w much longer -nul spring* they wonder in aarprnboii "But there is the other half J the population that feels scow come* to be enjoyed. It means , a country side completely changed drahaeas relieved by aa im maculate whiteness. There are a ;th wwaad n. w sights to see that .challenge the imagination auto* U] tearing like monstrous bogs 1 skew eyelid movements came ‘'from windshield wipers, foot taints to look at over one's longer cement hat now fluff jSnosr means akiia aad sleds. caU [men who stand oa lawns witk coal eyes and the greater pleasure that assy he found sitting by tto hearth. “Yesterday's snowfall did ;t*dhmg. we believe, to heal the i hattsuff Given Tall 1 L a kattoaff, now cm team frwms tto University hers, re remtly spoke ia New Haveu. Coma, to th» Tala Udiventty W iiph| CluAt His topic «aa “tagkc and Mature of -Kteky ' mmthmTmmm I THE GRAY-HAIRED LADY was in the Scuttlebutt on South Corimbcu street. Shews drinking coffee and eating x sandwich. At her feet sat a forlorn-looking black cocker spaswU matching her with the intense interest that T>niy forthcoming food or affection can arouse in a dog. The lady mas not obhrious to the silent canine plea. She carefully tore a piece of crest off her sandwich and looked down at the dog. “Would you rather go to State College," she asked him. “or be a dead dog?" The cocker flopped oxer on hi* back and lay still. After a few seconds of this he bounced to his feet and claimed his tasty reward. The tody turned to the group of admiring spectators standing nearby. “The next tone I see Everett Case,” she explained to then. “To going to puD that trick." She turned her attention to the dog again, “.temi after we do it." she smiled at the loving-eyed toeft, “we've got to rtra like WT IN A LETTER to this column. Richard L. Beard, associate professor in the University’s School of Educa tion, mentions writing a column which got him in hot water during his college days. "In my innocence," he re counts, “I wrote an innocuous article on the custom of .placing captured amShry pieces in the public parks, sug gesting that if people were really interested in world ‘peace (circa 1929!) that parks ought to be dedicated to something eke. Apparently someone did read my stuff. A representative at the local American Legion post called on me to ask for a retraction of my remarks. With all the ; righteous indigßatKn of youth I refused. One week lata* I lost my job!" ON JULY IK 1954, this column recommended that : the Board of Aidenaee "put < >a 10-minute limit on those ; '(parking) space* directly in front of the Post Office, and < possibly a 10 or 15-minute ‘ limit oc one side of Header- < son street." The purpose : was to provide start-time, parking for persons with 'i brief. Post Uffjee errands, ; such as picking up nutei from . private boxes. I personally , took this matter up with the |( ooard, and, white the alder-: men expressed interest in J ] the proposal, they apparent-:! jly didn't consider it import ant enough to act on. Last week’s board meeting saw a complete turnabout. Post master Paul Cheek suggest ed a 10-nunute parking limit for six ipawi around the Pom oin front jjtfftft Com test w The Mi*i*m<ji*«ii* «*£*£* fir ti-iB cub:vst for i'j&i a* *r»Arr way. Y-/oa< asteagnMte iitH in etji.egv* VXswMuteicft Vte tat lor. compete *ac4 )«*r ft» vte two s6<A> 1 1 u*». StmOrsJß* m efie •."on.—,ii*tatnt l uwmq fiavt woo yrme* Oanac Uw yuafil tww years. The coatest <4*ot£L u* a* Mateh I, ar.tl winners »ui «* auMWMI ■r. the Aifist us.su* ••£ Xmhc moiaeli* m*fa*ise. Aay —mim -r •teryraituaT* urnhrr a tie » regularly earotak ox a Oegrrt- Xrar.tiaar fifxeir* » eigatee. Mar. jjso-ripta of stuctes, wtech •hooiki be 25 iHi Ia 3«tat murUt, m leiiftx, sh .ioat be I'lteriWUirff 4b rectiy te MaUemiiJaeote av St % Madiawc ave&u* ia Xew York. The wianm* »terw» waU be prat ed m the iMpuia s C - •*re Issue. Miss Louise Hutenu «f 1 hapet Hu! ««a fib* pnae fi* **r »i h fcer shurfi sfiary. “TV* • - *t fc**. a. ” She was pvateahte trom the ( orwrsny «a Jaae of *»t year Mrs. llt»» Bents wan he Imnt« »t wnue te* was - itteat *t «b* V'laaaY Ooßtffe a Greeashurw. >b* u« ihsat w < bapei Hi 1 whii* tor VaiVsmrt stages law at «Ve Csimawßy. Hrr first bwk tl tfetr ammo. ' “The I*en;.lw was u*» year Gymnasts Do Well Bill Mvafer, eeark as tfe* Das , versity'* xysraasfis. was hyi.'y plewsexl with hr* hna'i f*sf*ra - sace ararnst Nsrj t rirM« las >■ Abb*po2i» test *o*m 1 thixijfh tto Msfeflwo wea SB-M. ■ | “This was tto beet are** a* enw l ‘ ma4e scassst eifitov fito Xawy ar A "*T. who reery year fiaea omC i tww of tto bee* rywx - ■ - ia tto Mr. Meato saak . bat to teaee ttoa* topa s« *Frart gUhaaa aafl Dick Quarles tel kraal «mi Kea Cottbas was nak rath tto ftw 1 toarate tohra* that ff the* hoA toe* find oa, ra m«ht too* was flrst pbmtette Tariflodte. rteffl* seam. Tto Tto BathTwflfl Ara» w !■— r> 2*. """* Chapel Hid a ora off three T«i raaff to tto ratolrayw* rah Fridny, January a, 1955 and four on Henderson street Without the slight est sign of discussion, the aldermen approved the park ing restrictions and instruct ed Town Attorney John Le- Grand to draw up such an ordinance for passage at the next baud inerting. Which nil goes to prove that legisla tive action, like molasses on a cold morning, is often slow, but if you wait a wfle, it will eventually reach the hoteakes. "IT’LL BE a cold day in when Carolina beats State in the Coliseum.'* a rabid Wolf pack fan assured me tost week. And sure enough, it snowed to beat the band oa Tuesday night. NEVER BEFORE AT THIS LON PRICE! iei2H kiVkiu ; B f JL\/*^v 4L J^*vN M Ik kMI k«k ?l«i ■■ mm 'Spkbl 1W of it !'T¥e nk* aod qu»J fef k« »k MR mk buy pi~A Vkaor tka aqr «*her ick a— ■ a h»c». rv prvw! m —l tr Ik! Oofkn tem +m i -i-ra*«iSrte«Mli!rii|lCnt,> r a*«iSrte«Mli!rii |lCnt,> wnnDnuoK ■CA VKVOB (ttlHS^ i ► . I ■ BB MB g TILL ROT 1
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 21, 1955, edition 1
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