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Oshawa Times (1958-), 22 Jun 1965, p. 3

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4 (TEACH YOUR CHILD TO 1 - SWIM - 6) : ee eens LO tt esto ==) \ Ek | » Here is the sixth lesson showing how to teach your As your child progresses, of The Times' 10-part series child to swim. p remember to make sure that each step is thoroughly mastered before proceeding to the next. af Take the child into the water to a depth of about 14 inches, let him put his hands stomach, If he's relaxed, his body on the bottom and lie on his will float. Have him pull himself along with his hands and as he's doing this, tell him to p himself a long puli by putting gliding along. Practise until he does it ut his head down and give his hands by his side and properly. Then have him go out to waist depth, face the shore, push off with his feet, hands out in front and relax as though he were lying.on a bed. Keep practicing this until he can do it 'to.a count of 10. a nomen lof pasture" for livestock. Spring - planted grain crops Horsburgh Was Victimized PCs Draft Education Plan As Future Platform Plank THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, June 22, 1965 3 '|Horsburgh, a TORONTO (CP) -- Russell former United Church minister in Chatham, was convicted of contributing to juvenile delinquency on the ba- sis of tainted evidence, his law- yer said Monday. Horsburgh's counsel, Charles Dubin, was opening an appeal before Mr. Justice Eric Moor- house in the Ontario supreme court. Horsburgh, 46, was sentenced last Nov. 16 to a year's im- prisonment after a trial in which 14 teen-agers testified he aided and abetted them in hav- ing sexual intercourse in Park Street United Church where he was pastor. The trial was held in Chat- ham juvenile court last Septem- ber and October before Judge W. H. Fox of London. Horsburg, who resigned his pastorate two days after his conviction, served 10 days in jail but has been free on $2,500 bail since November. He en- Lawyer Tells Appeal Trial Jail in Chatham Monday to await the outcome of his ap- peal. FACED 8 CHARGES The information sworn against Horsburgh last July al- leged 24 -acts of contributing to juvenile delinquency with the previous year. He was tried on eight charges and convicted on five. Teen-aged witnesses testified Horsburgh encouraged them to have intercourse and knew they had intercourse in the vacant janitor's apartment in the church and in the church par- lor. Horsburgh denied all charges. Mr. Dubin said the 14 teen- agers were actually accom- plices, at least they were tainted witnesses. He said the youths could have been charged with carnal knowledge of girls between the ages of 14 and 16, and one youth of his own testi- mony could have been charged with rape. tered custody in Kent County All of the teen-agers "were of the lowest character,' Mr. Dubin said. He said they them- selves "were involved in the very crime which they tried to blame the accused for." SHIFTED BLAME He said the witnesses "tried to exonerate themselves by blaming the accused." At the. time of the trial, he said, none of the Crown wit- nesses was charged with of- fences in connection with activi- ties revealed in their testimony. He said he intended to argue that the trial contained funda- mental errors of law "of such character and nature that the convictions cannot stand." He said he was seeking an outright acquittal for | Hors- burgh, or direction for a new) trial. | The questions of law involved will not require a lengthy re- view of the trial evidence, he said | Judge Fox treated the teen- jagers as adults of good repu- |tation, Mr. Dubin said, "It is a By STEWART MacLEOD OTTAWA (CP)--A group of Conservative members of Par- liament are working informally together to draft a party pol- icy on higher education which would become a major plank in any future election. | The package of proposals probably will go before a party caucus within a few weeks. It has been indicated for some time that the question of financing higher education would be a key issue in the next Conservative election campaign. Party speakers have been ad- vocating an increase in univer- sity grants to $3 from $2 for each student and making muni- cipal taxes paid by home own- ers a deductible expense for fed- eral income tax. When Gordon Aiken (PC-- Parry Sound - Muskoka) advo- cated in the Commons last Thursday that part of the loans made available under the stu- dent loan plan be written off as a reward for scholastic achieve- ment, he was representing the views of a group of the party last week that by April 1 a to- tal of 41,284 loans had been made under the program. Mr. Aiken proposed that stu- dents gaining a clear pass should have 25 per cent of the loan "'forgiven."' And those in the top quarter of their class should have an additional 25 per cent lopped off the loans. He also advocated that the loans be extended to post-grad- uate studies, and that the re- payment period be extended for students, such as medical and legal, who must serve an "ap- prenticeship" after graduation. The. Canadian 'Universities Foundation has. estimated that the proposals made by Mr. Aiken for the student loan fund would cost about $79,000 a year, based on existing university population. APPLY RATIO | The figure was teached-- by! taking the enrolment total for! the University of Toronto in 1962, then establishing the num- bers that earned a clear pass and those in the top quarter of their classes. The ratio was No Appeal On Cramp Acquittal From Attorney-General Wishart TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Arthur Wishart said Monday his department will not appeal last week's acquittal of former Orillia mayor Wilbur Cramp on three_ separate charges of municipal corruption in the granting of a Northern Ontario Natural Gas company franchise. : Mr. Cramp was acquitted Wednesday on charges that he accepted shares in NONG for a Mr, Wishart also that no further action would be taken against former mayors Wanda Miller of Gravenhurst, Glen S. Coates of Bracebridge and Leo Landreville of Sudbury, the latter now a justice of the Ontario Supreme Court. Similar charges against them stages before it was deci there was insufficient evidence to warrant a trial. consideration for granting the Orillia franchise to the com~ pany in 1956; That he accepted _NONG shares to block a fran- chise application by a_ rival firm; and that he conspired in these dealings with Ralph K. Farris, then president of NONG. FEW REDS IN MIDDLE CALCUTTA, India (AP)--In- dia's third Communist party has been set up by 100 West Bengal Communists who repudiate the beliefs of both the pro-Russiar and pro-Chinese parties. Announce New Healing Substance... Shrinks Piles, Checks Itch Province Wilted, Dried Up Drought Condition Grave OTTAWA (CP) -- Many Ot-jrings in an attempt to save tawa Valley areas remained in|their crops. the grip of a prolonged crop-' Gq, w. Robertson, chief of the wilting drought Monday -- the/agro.meteorological section of first day of summer. the federal government's _ex- Below - average rainfall has| perimental farm here, said less plagued eastern Ontario coun-than a half--inch of rain has jpeared to be among the hard-|tive weeks. jest hit. The .46 figure is the lowest In nearby Lanark County, J. . ' Ontario govern-for this period since records 1 gn . e first kept at the farm in | t riculture representa-| Wer" i peg 'aid the first 1965 hay|1890. In a statement, he said g0. WORSE THAN OTHERS 8 . Over Indians--Claims Boddy jatar ate a ata rola, see By RONALD LEBEL OTTAWA CP)--Revised leg- islation to set up the long-dis- cussed Indian claims commis- sion was introduced in the Com- mons Monday and immediately drew arrows from the opposi- tion. | New Democratic leader T. C. Douglas accused the govern- ment of offering Canada's 210,-! 000 Indians a sop in the man-} ner of the "'land grabbers' and "whiskey pedlars'" among early white settlers. An NDP spokesman said his party will vote against the bill unless the government declares its willingness to accept several major amendments in commit- tee. | Citiznship. Minister Nichol- gon said the five-member com- mission will deal with old In- tian claims in justice and fair- ness and with more flexibility that was possible in courts of iw, He expressed the hope that) bitter Indian grievances, some dating back more than a cen- tury, would be settled. OFFER CRITICISM | Spokesmen for all opposition) parties urged a strong commis- sion that could redress . all forms of official . injustice] against Indians. They criticized) several features of the legisla-| tion for being too restrictive. | The new agency would go out) to build a 12-mile spur line near Sarnia, received first reading. --A motion to re-establish the special committee on con- sumer credit also was de- bated but did not come to a vote. The Indian claim bill is ba- sically the same as an earlier proposal introduced Dec. 14, 1963, and later withdrawn in the face of stiff criticism from In- dian leaders and _ opposition MPs. Three made, however, changes have been bands. The revised bill provides that one of the five commissioners must be a treaty Indian. The government may give financial aid to bands to prepare and pursue claims. And the dead- line for filing claims is ex- tended to three years from two. MAY ORDER PAYMENT The full-time commissioners, who would be required to live in the Ottawa area: could order cash payments to Indian bands when they accepted claims fall- ing in any of five classes. The claims are classified as follows: Lands taken from Indians by agents of the Crown without any agreement or undertaking to provide compensation; lands on Indian reserves that were bring them around. \1904-15 period and the other Mr. Steele said Lanark ap-|from 1929 to 1936. Precipitation |frew county to the North, Carle-jlatest long dry spell began, is ton: County has been hard hit|47 inches below normal. among the three clustered) The amount that fell in the around Ottawa. past five weeks is some three 'SOME FACE RUIN inches below normal. Many farmers on the Quebec; fyerett Biggs, deputy minis- jside of the Ottawa River areiter of agriculture for Ontario, also suffering. Officials SaY}was quoted as saying Monday some face ruin. lthat prices of some farm pro- Some Renfrew County farm-|duce could go up if the drought lers are purchasing irrigation|continues. | ecanasecigeomn wes, et! $2. Million Fraud Hearing of the requests from Indian] Opens For 3 Developers LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Masses;Island Building Supplies, all of|.stitute motherly care, may of documents and exhibits were/Toronto. admitted as evidence Monday| Special prosecutor Mayer Ler- at the opening of a prelimin-jner said he would attempt to ary hearing of three meniprove the trio--all of whom charged with fraud and conspir-jhave elected trial by judge and acy to defraud a governmentijury and have elected no pleas lagency of almost $2,000,000. |--unlawfully conspired with Charged are London devel-jeach other and with various oper M. Peter Robinson, 34, de-|firms to produce exaggerated veloper Richard Ross Bird, 35,|sub trade -costs in preparing of San Diego, Calif., and Tor-|their estimates for the housing onto real estate businessman|corporation's loans. John William Brackett, 38. All, Such action, he said, would are free on bail--Robinson onjhave given them a greater loan $25,000, Brackett $12,000 andithan the project merited and Bird $4,000. would also have realized a The charges involve twojhigher capital investment and loans, one for $934,374 and the|return from the project than other for $949,035, made by|the terms of the loan allowed. |rule of. law that if the witnesses jare of unsavory character then "\the judge must take great cau- M\tion in accepting their testi- }mony."' | He said Judge Fox erred in finding that certain charges |were corroborated. On some accounts, which al-| members whbd are unofficially working on the education plat- orm. Mr. Aiken's proposals would create a bursary system within the loan plan. |LOAN PLAN BEGUN The student loan plan, begun last year, makes bank loans i ey a new-effort on bring-'ing and discomfort in lleged Horsburgh . counselled) teen - agers to have sexual in-| tercourse, the fact that sexual) intercourse took place was not} the witnesses' jwhen 'two witnesses same thing. "But one accomplice cannot corroborate another accom- |plice,"" he said, | testimony said the} LANSING, Kan. (AP)--Two ithe assistant minister at Park| hanged early today for one of} Street Church, who defended| Seven murders they admitted) cers, they listed the following committing. Once they boasted that they | did their victims a favor "by! Horsburgh in the trial. | 13} b N ds | putting them out of their mis-| |pears to be better off than Ren-|since September, 1952, when the| a y Pe jeries in this rat race. Each went to his death at the | state prison in solemn repent- Warm Touch | yam There was none of the care-| : free bravado that had charac-} lavas Assia ae Fe render: terized their arrests, when both | F | j 7 j /) jthe most important things i looking forward jean do for a baby. Ny . For this soft skin is pened cee. ara aeanie gh lle thie way he does hig: first great house on the prison grounds. Warnihg About ils, simenge. Cut: Latham, 23, was executed first. |side world, a psychiatrist said) Lathemis' last words were: ee skin - learning, or lack "I'm not mad at anybody." oft can anparentiy be terribly) lead. "CS" atau of the joo AN in how the baby gallows unfaltering, with Rev. grows up, said Dr. Sidney Co- James Post, former prison men at Ee ere chaplain, at his side. It's generally considered that lack of a mother, or good sub-|'GOING TO HEAVEN' York, 22, when asked for his last words, said: "T"ve nothing to say except I'm glad to be going home to heaven, and I hope to meet you people up there. have a serious and lifelong im- pact on a child's character, he jtold the American Medical As- sociation. This is known as mafernal deprivation -- even by a reali "| know it won't do much mother who is cold or detached good to say I'm sorry, but I --and is a complex matter, he| know God has forgiven me and said. 2 |I hope you people can see fit Cohen focussed upon just one! te do the same." jaspect of it--little or no skin. york, of Jacksonville, Fia., stimulation, : and Latham, of Mauriceville, For one thing, he said, the) tex. were convicted of killing] |nerve endings for touch, tem-| Otto Ziegler, 62 an Okaley, |perature and pain are the first| Kan railway. worker, jto develop insulating sheaths--| Wallace, Kan., June 9, 1961. available to students with guar-|people. An estimated seven per|inflamed tissues, jantees from the federal govern-|cent of Canadians of university) One hemorrhoidal case history ment. The Commons was toldiage actually go to university. ~ |after another reported "very strik- corroboration of the allegation.| Bl sade a as " gently relieved . . . | He said Judge Fox felt he a K ll T LE ds ual reduction or retraction |could find some corroboration 00 7 1 Ing Tal n \(shrinking) took place, As Two Dropouts Hanged Mr. Dubin is assisted in his| high school dropouts: James; killed one, we might as welllwas maintained over a period of J I } as ! m wks G ts ; i f normai.|the current drought si part of a J i ougl 0 aha rl lone Veuaes ce "elie OH dry spell that began 13 years|appeal by C. E. Perkins, son of| Latham and George York, were| keep on'"' York said later. j : le near| = long before the infant develops|ney were not tried for the effective nerves of hearing or) deaths of six other persons in seeing. then applied to Canada's '178,000 students. Conservative members are A d h has jalso discussing various forms of found a unique healing substance federal - provincial machinery with the ability to shrink hemor- |that might be established to co-|rhoids painlessly. It relieves itch- an ing university education to more|speeds up healing of the atierg ing improvement.' Pain was | Among these case histories were ia variety of hemorrhoidal condi- |tions, Relief even occurred in cases jof long standing, and most im- joortant of all, results were so "We thought as long as we chorough that this improvement Exclusive healing substance proven to shrink hemorrhoids... and repair damaged tissue, many months. This was accomplished with « new healing substance (Bid-Dyne) which quickly helps heal injured cells and stimulates growth of new tissue, bs pba is offered in oint- ment and suppository form called Preparation H. _ In addition to actually shrink- ing hemorrhoids, Preparation. H lubricates and makes elimination peo agar It helps prevent in- fection which is a principal cause of hemorrhoids. Just ask your druggist for Pre- paration H Suppositories or Pre- paration H Ointment (with a special applicator). Satisfaction or your money refunded. In statements they gave. offi- killings: | May 29, 1961--Mrs. Althea Ot-/ tavio, 43, and Mrs. Patricia| \ Your Mone CENTRAL ONTARIO Anne Hewitt, 25, both of Val- dosta, Ga., strangled while va- eo near Jacksonville, A: June 7--John A. Whitaker, 71, a railway porter, shot at Tulla- homa, Tenn. June 8--Albert E. Reed, 35,/ railway lineman of Litchfield, Ill., shot and robbed of a pistol and his car. Martin Drenovac, 69, operator of a service station at Granite City, Ill. beaten to death. | June 9--Ziegler shot. | June 10 -- Rachel Marian) Moyer, 18, maid at a resort ho- tel, shot near Craig, Colo. York and Latham were cap- tured near Gransville, Utah, | June 10, 1961. Feet Hot...Sore... Perspiring? Daily foot care with Dr. Scholl's Foot Powder helps keep feet dry, cool, com- fortable. Special medicated protection helps prevent Athlete's Foot, dispels foot odour, and relieves soreness. we ae $d22 a UU SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 9 to 6 Friday 9to? Saturdoy i. 339 | B97 Earns More At TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION pp 4 on Savings Accounts. Paid Wd compounded quart- erly. on Chequing Accounts V. from the day the account is opened. Paid Querter- ly on minimum monthly balance. No charge for cheques written, *Yearly Rate' Rarer? Head Office: 19 Simcoe St. N. Oshawa Tel. 723-5221 of existence in 10 years. Bands|sold or granted to non-Indians Florida, Tennessee, Illinois and would have three years to sub-| by the government without pay- mit claims in writing, setting|ing compensation or when the out the particulars 'with rea-| compensation was "so inade- sonable certainty and details."| quate as to be unconscionable," Central Mortgage and Housing) In 20 exhibits of documents) Skin contacts are the first sole Colorado Corporation between 1960 andjadmitted by Magistrate Donald|means "of communicating se-| ~The motive in each case was 1963 for construction of Kipps|Menzies, 11 involved incorpora-jcurity and affection, a need as| robbery, but the youths in state- Lane Gardens here. jtion of companies, most of|great or even more important) ments after their capture ex- Debate opens today on the} Indian funds. that were "im-| The three also are charged on|which_ were formed in early|than the feeding process," C0-| pressed a hatred of society. second -reading- stage, after| properly used" by the govern-|{Wo counts of conspiring to de-|1960. Evidence given 'by G. A.|hen said. "It is evidently relax-|pattooed on Latham's arm which the 33-section bill will be} ment; treaty obligations and|fraud with various firms in con-|McCormack, supervisor of rec-jing and pleasurable to the in-| yore the words: "I hate the referred to a special Commons-| undertakings by. the Crown that(nection with the loans. Listedlords -for the provincial secre-/fant to be stroked, cuddled and) world." Senate committee for public| were not discharged; and any|i" the charges are Ocean De-|tary, said the accused were in-/massaged. Warden Sherman Crouse said hearings and detailed study. {transactions other than land velopments Limited, Hudson's/dividually or together officers) | vork and Latham, U.S. army The Commons processed sev-| transfers where the Crown|Bay Sales Limited, Granitejor directors of seven of these C tR H | deserters, ordered big last eral pieces of legislation Mon-{ failed to act fairly and honor-|Builders' Supplies Limited andifirms. ea rest necelves | meals that included fried quail, | $25,000 Grant day as the drive for a summer! ably toward Indians. . OOS age cope \fried' shrimp and_ barbecued recess continued in 80-degree In other business: C Rid A _ chicken, Montreal Can Ride Again, 22°"... w= = As Two-Week Strike Ends _ Now's the time to add a LENNOX cooling cot to your furnace En holes ce ietbiens More economical thas "room" waits Pat the furnace blower, filter, ducts and to COME work 365 ° yar ta sae for to » thri easy to buy, thrifty to opersie temperatures. --Acting Prime Minister Mar- --Amendments to the Cus-/tin announced Canada has ESCAPED FROM PRISON |Crest Theatre, expressed de-| The two youths took off on toms Act and tariff rates pro-| pledged an extra $4,000,000 in scant . posed in the April 26 budget) an effort with other countries to light Monday night because the| Meir robbery-killing spree alter of Finance Minister Gordon) help the United Nations through Canada Coancll" will hae hel escaping from the army prison jat Fort Hood, Tex., May 24, were given approval and sent/a $100,090,000 debt crisis over} to the Senate. --Third reading was also! given to a bill to increase maximum loans under the Fisheries Improvement Loans} their assessments for peace- | refusal by some nations to pay} | MONTREAL (CP) -- Some|The wage increases will raise keeping costs. {3,900 employees of the Montreal|their hourly rate to $2.77 at that --Mr. Martin announced the Transportation Commission re-|time. $25,000 grant to the theatre for its 1965-66 season. | He said part of the reason for the grant 1961. is tndoubtedly the) public support given the Crest} RCMP is investigating security|turned to work today, ending a) Maintenance men will get 30)last year when it was learned) Their first crime was the rob- bery-beating of Edward Guid- roz, 43, at Baton Rouge, La. Guidroz was left for dead, but 43 KING STREET WEST, OSHAWA 725-3581 Act to $10,000 from $4,000.) survived. The maximum repayment) pee period was extended to 10 from eight years. --A bill authorizing the CNR' of the report's contents. measures around preparation of|city bus strike that began ex-'cents an hour retroactive, 10)it would receive no money from the Dorion judicial report into\actly two weeks ago. cents this July, and eight cents|the council bribery and coercion allegations! But 900 employees of the Pro- next July when the work week! The theatre needed $75,000 to as a result of a purported leak|vincial Transport Company, will drop to 40 hours from 41% reopen this season and $71,- which operates between Mont-|with no reduction in pay. |339.40 was raised from private| real and many suburbs, as well) 44. Biain said the new. con:\donations. It opened last Dec. BUY YOUR HOME IN... Beau Valley HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. $6. TM ee. eee ig . . not the nicest--the union has year. : ' Ta e S al at | Donat Quimper; deputy labor | cioned with the MTC." | iminister of Quebec, is to meet) . \separately with PTC manaze-| As~ for 'the--continuing PTC; With No Recourse Offered mvt sim cwintttas gute inc ae \The PTC strike is in its 11th}90 commuters on suburban WORASNO (CP) About 6,000! York school.board officials f iday Montreal runs, there have been >P)--About 6,000) York school board o icials hope} Chairman Lucien Saulnier of virtually no negotiations since students pny ty fail Grads ito offset some of the Grade 12,/the Montreal executive commit-|the dispute began. schools this month won't zeta 'aur by holding- summerjtee, MTC Chairman Lucien I'Al-) PTC bus drivers want a re- second chance at the subject| Classes in new math for those|lier, and Yvan Blain, president duction in the work week and next year. Under current curriculum' re- visions in Ontario's 485 second-| ary schools' Grade 12 mathe- matics will 'disappear to be re-| placed by the streamlined new mathematics course Provincial education officials estimate that about 20 per cent of the 52,009 students who at- tempt the present Grade 12 math usually fail in the first attempt. Old mathematics -- algebra, who don't make passing grades.|® The Ontario College. of Edu- cation is also offering courses in Toronto, Kingston and Lon- don Other Ontario cities have in dicated sessions in mew mathe- matics will be made available to students weak in Grade 12 math. * Students unable to make up Grade 12 math failures at sum- mer school probably will be ex- f the Montreal Transport Workers Union, a Confederation of National Trade Unions affil- iate, have all said they are 'very happy" that the strike is \settled. - FOLLOWS VOTE Settlement followed a_ vote Monday by maintenance men of the MTC in favor of a new wage offer. Bus drivers and cepted separate offers in a new ithree-year contract. MTC cashiers had already ac-| jan increase in salary to $15 a \day from $11. t Scheduled meetings today be- tween Mr. Quimper and repre- sentatives of both sides would be the first known effort by the Quebec government to deal with the strike. 24-HOUR SERVICE, 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS | FOR YOU? A SECOND BUSINESS How would you like to owne a sidi no normal overhead, no staff or THAT PRACTICALLY RUNS ITSELF leline business that involves no rent, selling yet can gross $9,700 a year Why ar the lawns in Beau Valley greener than anywhere else ... Because the people are here to stay and have put a great deal of time and effort into beautifying their surroundings ... You would like it here just as others do who live here. even at only half its potential This is a service business with an unlimited morket. Yet it requires so little actual servicing that even the busiest executive or professional man can operate it in his scarce spare time. Your entire investment is approximately $2,628. for self-operating Beauty Aid, Coin-op, Conditioned-Air Professional Hair Dryers guaran- teed by the world's largest manufacturer in this highly respected field, Write today for complete information and a confidential interview at your convenience, without obligation. Please include your name, full trigonometry and geometry --| pected to take the new math; wTc drivers, whose basic will disappear completely from|course in Grade'11 next year.|rate had been $2.12 an hour, the Secondary School curricu-| This will be accepted as equiv-|will get an increase of 30 cents lum after the 1965-66 Grade 13) alent to Grade 12 math. retroactive to last Jily, plus an term. : However, should the student/additional 15 cents this July and Those failing math this year| continue to Grade 13 math, helanother 15 cents in July a year Built by H. KASSINGER Construction Limited Sold by SCHOFIELD-AKER ie aR A will not be able to continue the/ course next year since they won't be familiar with the new math setup. will first have to complete both Grade 11 and Grade 12 new math courses. This would prob- ably mean the loss of a year | However, suburban North! in school, from now. 360 King West... , 723-2265 On' the last day of the con- tract--July 11, 1967--there will be a further increase for the| drivers of five cents an hour. address and telephone number. NORAMERICA GLAMOURAIDS LTD, Suite 4, 450 Wilson Ave., Downsview, Ont.

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