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SDnips
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By JIM
INCHON, Korea (ff) A
prisoners of war bound for Formosa'Tammed into a small land
ing craft Thursday and jpilled 24 American Marine guards to
icy death in Inchon's outer harbor. j
It was one of the greatest naval disasters of the Korean
War period, surpassed orily by a turret explosion in the cruis-
0IEEDDB
India turned 21,809 prisoners
of war who refused repatriation
to Red China and North : Korea '
over to the U. N. command on
January 20th and nothing hap
pened. Nothing, that is, from the
Communist side. The jubilant
POWr streamed from their xamps
to the U. N. side and were wel
comed in camps set up tor them.
They are to be turned loose on
Jan. 23rd in compliance with the
terms of the armistice. The Chi
nese will be ferried to Formosa;
the Koreans will be absorbed in
South Korea.
j The emphasis should be on the
point that "nothing happened."
The Reds had protested the Indian
proposal to turn the prisoners
back. They claimed it was a vio
lation of the terms of the armi
stice, and that any unilateral ac
tion with regard to the prisoners
of war was "absolutely impermis
sible. But when the Indian
guards opened the gates and the
POWs evacuated the camps where
they had been for over three
months the Reds did nothing.
I The fact that nothing happened
Is quite revealing. It certainly
shows that the Reds were bluffing
when they denounced the Indian
action, although in the opinion of
U. N. officials the turn-back of
prisoners was premature, the ter
minal date for detention being
Jan. 22nd. Had the Reds wanted
to renew hostilities they could
have made this an excuse and
launched an attack. But they
didn't In other words thenar for
them is over, too. I
j In prospect is continued stale
mate. Maybe the conference at
Tanmunjom to plan a conference
wyi get back on the track. jMaybe
It. will not. If the peace confer
ence is convened there seems no
(Continued on editorial page, 4.)
CAA Grounds
Pilot Godfrey
NEW YORK un - The Civil
Aeronautics Administration
Wednesday .grounded Arthur God
frey for lack of a medical clear
ance to fly. It also asked that he
be kept on the ground for- a while
as reckless flier. i
The Civil Aeronautics Board
in Washington was asked 'to sus
pend Godfrey's pilot's license fori
as long as necessary, in Jpunish-
ment tor a wua Jan. v mice on j
i rom Teterboro, N.J., airport. .
Godfrey blamed a crosswind for
his nearmiss of the Teterboro con
trol tower in his private DC-3 air
plane. He said he did not deliber
ately buzz the tower, although he
was displeased with his j takeoff
instructions. His plane sent tower
personnel ducking for covey.
The maximum penalty fer reck
less flying is revocation of a pilot's
license or a $100 fine. The CAA,
however, recommended only a sus
pension for Godfrey a temporary
grounding.
Godfrey is entitled to a hearing
before the CAB if he requests it.
The CAB sets aviation policy; the
CAA enforces it. j
21 DIE IS TRAIN WRECK
ISTANBUL; Turkey (. 4 Twenty-one
persons were killed and four
were injured Wednesday ihen a
passenger" train collided .with .a
freight train near Adanai South
Turkey,' according to press reports
reaching here Wednesday night.
Today's Statesman
SECTION 1
Mrs. Lord's speech 1. 2
Editorials, features 4-- 4
Comes the Dawn I. 4
i Society, women's j 6-8
SECTION 2
( Sports I. 1, 2
f Farm news L 4
Valley news 5
Our Valley ... j. 5
Radio, TV I 6
Comics i 6
Animal Crackers
Bv WARREN GOODRICH
: "Wait a minu, I think I've got
BECKER
troopship loaded with Chinese
er St Paul and the mine-blasting
of, a minesweeper. "
The Navy! said 18 men were
fished from i the icy, choppy wa
ters. They included 14 Marines, 2
American soldiers and 2 Koreans
who were manning the landing
craft j
. The Navy isaid the blunt, tower
ing bow of the troopship crashed
into the side of the smaller vessel
and rolled it over on its side.
The Marines, carrying heavy
combat gear( pitched into the chill
waters. Their craft sank almost
immediately.;
The rescued men were rushed
aboard the hospital ship Consola
tion. They jwere suffering from
shock and exposure.
Daring Loading
The tragedy struck during load
ing of Chinese prisoners of war
aboard huge; LSTSf (landing ship,
tanks) for transport to National
ist Formosa! The POWs were re
turned Wednesday, from India's
neutral custody.
The Navy jsaid the Marines had
been ordered to guard the POWs
during the Formosa trip.
The Marines, bound for outward
service, were fully armed and
equipped, carrying heavy rifles
and wearing heavy servicg boots.
Navy and Marine officers feared
the heavy j weight may have
dragged many to their deaths
when they were pitched into the
harbor. j
Little Ilope j
The Navy; said it had little hope
for the missing men.
Nineteen of the survivors were
taken aboard the hospital ship
Consolation and five others were
carried aboard the transport Gen.
John Pope, i
Three bodies had been recovered
by 3 p. m. Marine officers said a
fourth man was known dead. The
bodies were taken aboard the Brit
ish freighter Newcastle.
The Navy1 said it believed the
smaller craft had cut across the
course of the big LST and was
struck amidships by the LST's
blunt, towering bow.
The scene was about IVi miles
from the Inchon docks where the
14,000 Chinese had been loading
for their four-day Formosa voyage.
Tipped on Its Side
Witnesses said there was a rend
ing crash, and the LCM was tipped
up on its side, hurling the Marines
into the water. The fate of the
crew was not known immediately.
The LCM 'then sank stern first
until about two thirds of it was
under water.
A radio message from the Gen.
Pope said boats were lowered im
mediately for rescue. Within 10
minutes, the area was "covered
with boats."
Apparently the heavily loaded
Marines sank quickly.
Three of the rescued still were
unconscious at 1 p. m.
Store Employe
Raises Hands
Try w
lOllCS LiClllCCi
A telephone tip that Orcutt's
Market, 4200 N. River Rd., in
Keizer District, was being held
up Wednesday night sent city,
county and state police cars roar
ing to the scene.
Police quickly discovered that
the well-intentioned caller had
apparently seen an employe with
his hands in the air directing a
truck that ) was backing up to
the store, i
Eugene Vetoes
Purchase of
Parking Lots
EUGENE 1 11 A proposal that
the city of j Eugene acquire and
operate off-street parking lots was
overwhelmingly defeated in a
special election Tuesday.
The vote fas 4,479 to 707 in the
biggest turnout for a special elec
tion in history here. Twenty-five
per cent of those eligible cast
ballots.
The vote! was on whether the
city should j buy -and operate the
lots to relieve downtown parking
congestion and on a $750,000 bond
issue to finance the start.
Opponents contended that pri
vate operators were well able to
provide and handle any off-street
parking faculties.
PORTLAND WORKER DIES
PORTLAND l Alfred T.
Anderson, about 60, a workman at
a wool scouring plant here, fell
12 feet from a machine at the
plant Wednesday and died of a
skull fracture.
Do You Drive a
Car or Herd It?
Question; Does the car to the
right always have the right-of-way?.
Answer: No. , The law says
that's the way right-of-way is
decided when two cars approach
a point inan intersection simul
taneously. But traffic experts
agree this doesnt mean a driv-
KU Vl till VU&lft Ul UU-
marked intersection completely
ignoring the traffic to his left
103RD YEAR
2 SECTIONS-20 PAGES
All-Day
Relaxes
I Salem bundled xup Wednesday
against an all-day freeze and the
Coldest temperature since 1952
an 18-degree reading at 7:30 a.m.
But warm air moved in from
the south Wednesday night to
surprise even the weather fore
casters with a 39-degree midnight
temperature.
The weather station at McNary
field forecasts rain for today and
jFriday, with possibly a little snow
snow mixed in today,
j The mercury is expected to
stay above freezing most of the
day, so freezing rain is not ex
pected here as it is in the colder
Portland area, the forecasters re
ported.
Starts Rising
j After the temperature dropped
to 18 Wednesday morning, the
mercury rose 10 degrees by 1:30
p.m., stayed at 29 or 30 until 6:30
p.m., then began rising,
j Over the state, weather stations
consistently marked up the cold
est weather of this winter, and
in neighboring Idaho, where Ore
gon State College's basketball
team is heading, Moscow report
'ed 21 degrees below zero.
22 Degrees Below
Meacham, Ore., had that beat,
at 22 below, early Wednesday.
All Oregon weather stations re
ported at least freezing temper
atures for the day's low. Pendle
ton and The Dalles had 5-below
readings; Redmond 1 below.
It was 18 below at Senaca,
south of Pendleton; 16 below at
Austin west of Baker; 10 below
at Brothers and Chemult in the
mountains.
, At Vancouver, Wash., 3,330
customers of Portland Gas. & Coke
Co. were without gas much of the
day, when high temperature was
25. Ice had formed in a supply
line north of Portland. .
! Gas workmen from as far as
Salem were called to help repair
the line.
Coast Guard
Heliconter
Si .
Crash Kills 5
! PORT ANGELES. Wash. OB
A Coast Guard helicopter Wednes
day tumbled into the Strait of
Juan de Fuca a short distance off
Shore, killing the five men aboard.
r Coast Guard headquarters at
Seattle said none of the bodies was
recovered. A first report said four
men were aboard the plane but a
i-echeck established there were
four enlisted men and one officer
n the crew.
i The 'copter was on a routine
training flight from Port An
geles Coast Guard station when
it fell, about 3 p. m. (PST), break
ing up as it hit the water less
than 100 feet from shore near the
station. . .
I Ira Houck, a railroad worker,
said he heard the craft's motor
sputter and looked up. He said
the helicopter was about 500 feet
Up and that its rear rotor blade
Stopped whirling.
"Then a section of the big blade
broke off and the machine tumbled
end over end," he said. "There
was an explosion just before it
struck and it seemed to fly apart
as it hit the water. There was no
sign of life."
Winter Arrives as
Motilities Change Hats
NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C-U)
Arrival of winter was officially
recognized here Wednesday.
Scarlet-clad Mounties appearing
as witnesses in county court ap
peared' in fur caps instead of their
customary stetsons.
Freeze
State Dickers for Gamp Adair
For Use as Industrial
Gov. Paul L. Patterson and the j
Oregon Development Commission;
are negotiating with the U. S. De-;
fense Department for acquiring
the Camp Adair site for indus
trial use, the governor said Wed
nesday. ':'
The property, located west ot
Albany, and southwest of Salem
in Polk County, consists of sev
eral thousand acres of land. Part
of it now is used by the Oregon
National Guard and the State
Game Commission.
!The land," the governor said,
"is well situated for industrial
use, inasmuch as there are a
number of well constructed build
ings and warehouses . available,
together with a complete water
system with pumping plants and
filtration equipment providing
four million gallons daily ca-
I AUIU
I parity."
I Got. Patterson laid hi under-
4 'owd FsM m
ilf : I V
City's First
frkAJf -r - V fSl
Salem' Businessman Carl William lloxg was surprised and honored Wednesday night when (he was
named Salem's First Citizen for 1953. He is shown above receiving the plaque from 1952's First
Citizen, William L. Phillips Sr. (center), concluding ceremonies in the Marion Hotel. Gov.iPaul L.
Patterson, the banquet's key speaker, is seated at left. (Statesman Photo).
Carl Hogg Chosen
I ; 1 : 1
Salem First Citizen
By JAMES BURR MILLER i
Staff Writer, The Statesman j
Carl William Hogg was named
amidj a tremendous standing ovation Wednesday night by over 250
Salem i citizens, concluding a two-hour, suspense-packed testimonial
dinner program inthe Marion Hotel.
Holding the suspense to a minimum both for the guests and
himself (the winner's name was enclosed in a sealed envelope),
last year's First Citizen William ;
L. Phillips ! Sr., amiably com-;
mended his successor after open-
ing the document. !
Announcement of Salem s
fourth! First ! Citizen followed an
evening's banquet program which
included an address by Gov. Paul
L. Patterson.1 The governor, in a
sterling tribute before a rapt
audience, likened the selection
of a r city's leading citizen for a
year's period! to an annual meet
ing of a small segment of this
country . !. looking back over
a year's civic accomplishments
. . . profittihg by our mistakes"
and declaring dividends to him
who !has worked the hardest"
Hogg stood clutching his new
ly won, plaque before the assem
blage and declared chokingly
that, j TSalem has been good to
Win: 'and me . . ." His first lady,
Winifred .stood by him with a
bouquet of roses presented her
by Mrs. James T. Brand, wife of
the supreme! court justice.
Coordination of the evening's
banquet was handled by William
H. Hammonfi, president of the
Chamber of Commerce. Gov. Pat
terson jl was j introduced to the
group iby Mayor Alferd Loucks.
(Additional First Citizen de
tails on page 2, section 1).
Portland Police
Raclar Proposed
PORTLAND m Police Chief
James Purcell proposed Wednes
day to use radar in police cars to
check ispeeders here.
The, Traffic Safety Commission
approved his! plans, after he said
he was not planning arrests, but
warning tickets for the drivers.
He! said the radar vehicle would
be marked distinctly. Its speed
findings would be used in planning
traffic; control, he said.
The;: chief jsaid he expects the
radar equipment to arrive in 10
days, ji f
1 1
Site
stands that the government would
deed the property to the state at
no cost !
The government acquired the
site for training soldiers in World
War! t i
The : governor said he and the
development commission ' also are
considering! other projects to
solve i the state's unemployment
problem, j
L.! B. Teeole, Portland, chair
man! of the development commis
sion, -said several industries have
shown an interest in Camp Adair.
"Any new industry coming to
Oregon will mean new perma
nent ijobs so sorely needed to off
set ! unemployment causea bj
shutdown of Seasonal employ
mentis Teeple isaid. !
Gov. Patterson also said he is
looking into the possibility of
using some of 1 the Camp Adair
buildings to store surplus wheat
Th't Ortqon Statesman, Salem, Ortgon, Thursday January
Citizen! Receives
Salem's new 1953 First Citizen
Dutch Ratify
Europe Army
THE HAGUE, The Netherlands
W) The Netherlands Parliament
completed ratification of the Eu
ropean Army Treaty ' Wednesday
when the First Chamber (Senate)
approved the pact.
The treaty now goes to Queen
Juliana for signature. Lower House
approval was obtained July 23 last
year.
The treaty calls for. the estab
lishment of a six-nation, one-uniform
army composed of troops
from West Germany, Italy, Bel
: . . . it rru X 1 1 t i.
g.um France. jThe Netherlands !
and Luxembourg
WASHINGTON) UP) President
Eisenhower Wednesday welcomed
The Netherlandsl Parliament's rat
ification of the- European Defense
Army project as a move toward
"permanent pea.ee and prosper-
ity." I, :
H. H. DeArmond
Enters Race for
State Legislature
BEND W) A veteran Republican
leader Wednesday entered the race
for state representative from Des
chutes County and two incumbent
GOP house members announced
they would not seek re-election..
Harvey H. DeArmond. 69, who
became the county's first district
attorney in 1916 and a frequent
delegate to Republican national
conventions, said he will run for
the House.
Bend Republicans Alva C. Good
rich and B. A. Stover announced
they are giving up the House seats
they held for two terms. Goodrich,
DeArmond's lat partner, repre
sented Deschutes County and Sto
ver a joint Deschutes-Lake County
J' i i I I t - i- i i
aisinci wnicn nas Deen aoousnea
under legislative reapportionment
Deschutes now will have only
one state representative and Lake
will share a seat with Grant and
Harney counties.
Daily Speller
Following are 20 words from a
list of 1000 which will form the
basis for semi-final and final ora?
competition in The Statesman
KSLM Mid-Valley Spelling Con
test for 1954, in which S3 schools
are participating.
moffic television
debate -. mantial
accident carbon
barely accuse
camouflage payable
based ache ;
cancel many
accompany draft
illegible hoarse .
soul ,t 1 groceries
Plaque
Reds Claim
E
Truce Breach
As PWs Freed
PANMUNJOM CP) Thousands
of prisoners of war returned to
the Allies Wednesday from India's
neutral custody sped on Thursday
toward a future offering a chance
to serve in Nationalist China's and
South Korea's anti-CommUnist ar
mies. I
The 21,809 Chinese arid North
Korean POWs who refused to re
turn to their Red homelands will
be freed as civilians by the U.N.
Command at midnight Friday de
spite Communist objections.
At Seoul's port of Inchon, 10,000
Chinese POWs sailed Thursday
morning for . Nationalist Formosa
in a convoy of 10 U.S. Navy land
ing craft guarded by warships and
planes.
Six more landing craft were
hng about 4 200 A
standing by to take on the remain
j authority said they would put out
to sea at 3:30 p.m., also under
escort.
The first two trainloads'of North
Korean POWs arrived eary Thurs
day at the Southeastern Korean
port city of Pohang where they
were greeted by cheering crowds.
It is there the 7,582 Koreans will
be invited to enlist in the South
Korean Army after Friday. Those
who do so probably will find them
selves side by side again with
many if not most of the 26.000
Korean POWs who were freed last
June by President Syngnian Rhee
while confined in Allied camps un
der South Korean guard.'
The Communists in a broadcast
by Red China's Peiping radio
charged Thursday that the return
of the prisoners had 'torn to
shreds" the armistice, y
"The Americans by overwhelm
ing pressure maneuvered, the In
dian custodian force into adopt
ing the illegal measure of turning
back the POWs so as to achieve
their purpose of retaining the
POWs by force and turning them
over to Syngman Rhee nd Chi
ang Kai-Shek as cannon J fodder,"
Peiping said.
IS
Mahoiiey Named
Judge Pro Tern
Thomas R. Mahoney, Portland
attorney and former stte sena
tor, will serve a pro tern appoint
ment as Multnomah CoUnty cir
cuit judge, j assigned to I the de
partment of domestic relations.
He is one of three Portland
attorneys appointed Wednesday
on a pro tem basis by Chief Jus
tice Earl C. Latourettd of the
State Supreme Court
Mahoney will serve 28 days,
starting Feb. 28; William-J. Craw
ford 28 days, starting Feb. 1;
Pul R. Harris 30 days,! starting
Jan. 25.
Max.
34
Mini recip.
It ,M
191 M
45 i J0O
Salem -
Portland
24
San Francisco SS
hicago S3
411 Jl
35 1 44
New York 53
Willamette River 7.8 leeti
FORECAST' (from U. S.j Weather
Bureau. McNary Field. Salem I:
Occasional rain today, tonight and
Friday, except for aome r3in mixed
with snow tonight. High today near
38: low tonight near 30. Temperature
it U:01 ajn. today was 39!
SALEM PRECIPITATION
Since Start f Weataer Tear Sept. 1
This Year Last Year a Normal
24.U 11M ' I 2342
21, 1954
v
Attfeitotito
Lights, Scale
s , i ! j
Of Peri
! By PHIL SLOCUM I
1 Staff Writer, The Statesman
Four State Penitentiary convicts one of )them a murderer
made a bid for freedom Wednesday night after dousing half the
prison lights, but were caught trying to sneak I back to their cells
when the escape backfired, j
, Most notorious of the foursome was Allen ; Brumfield, 39-year-old
convicted murderer serving life from Multnomah County, who
has figured in previous escapes.
Warden Clarence T. Gladden
gave this account of the escape
try: I
The convicts managed to slip .
unnoticed into cellblock B about j
7 p.m., apparently from the re- j
turning 'supper line.
They climbed to the top of; the
cellblock, sawed off two bars cov
ering a two-foot long, 16-inch wide
ventilator $haft which led to the
roof, if
Douse Lights I .
Descending to the ground via a ;
ladder (used for current construc
tion work) secured to the side of
the cellblock, the prisoners enter
ed a temporary power station in
the basement of the building! and
pulled all he light switches.!
Gladden said the convicts ap
parently thought the switches
would douse all the prison lights.
About half; went out Tower (and
wall lights 'remained on.
The four then climbed to the
roof of thes so-called intermediate
building just to the rear of; the
administration building.
Above Outside Wall
This put them above the out
side wall and about 15 feet away
from it They then attempted to
toss a 3,4-inch cable with a home
made hook; on the end of it over
the wall, f
The warden said the convicts
apparently got scared off when
they failed: to snag the wall with
the hook and then attempted to
sneak back to their cells unob
served, j I
A guard; spotted them as jthey
huddled behind a door leading
into the central control room.
Gladden said extra guards .were
called on duty and an ynmejliate
search started as soon as; the
lights went out
Other Convicts I
Others Jnvolved with Brum
field were Steven J. RindaU, 34,
20 years from Klamath County
for burglary, forgery and larceny,
received in January, 1953; Arvin
G. Gilman,- 23, 10 years for forg
ery, larceny and burglary from
Clackamas County, received Feb
ruary, 1953; and Patrick Fi La
Fran, 25, five years for i two
counts of larceny, received from
Harney County in 1949. j
Brumfield, who was sent t() the
prison in ; November, 1939 j at
tempted ah escape Oct. 28, 1952
with five other convicts which
ended in I two convicts being
wounded and capture of all of
them.
He made; good an escape from
the penitentiary in February,
1946.
Gladden ; said the four Were
placed in the segregation cell
block last night j
Frozen Bridge
Delays Train
LA GRANDE W) --The Unioij Pa
cific's eastbound passenger 'train
No. 18 found the traveling too
chilly Wednesday morning csnd got
out of here- five hours late.
Its big trouble ; was a frozen
drawbridge ! over : the Columbia
River which held it at Hinkle until
a connecting train from Yakima
arrived. Then it spent 40 minutes
at Pendleton, trying to thaw out
a Pullman heating system,) and
repeated that there.
The morning minimum here was
2 degrees below zero.
Indian Guards
Plan to Leave
Rejected PWs
PANMUNJOM I Indian. LL
Gen K. S. iThimayya said Thurs
day be win ask the Communists
once more to accept 21 Americans
and 328 other pro-Red captives
and if the Reds refuse Indian
guards will simply walk, away
from the captives at midnight Fri
day, j . !
Thimayya made his remarks at
a news conference.
"What will happen if they (the
Reds) still refuse?? he was asked.
"First we will have to tell the
prisoners that their owners refuse
to take them back," Thimayya
said. j
"Then we will i open the gate
and we will tell our men to go
back to their line.'
No. 237
Wall
Thwarted
Convicted murderer Allen Brum
field, 39, was one of four State
Prison convicts involved ia an
abortive escape Wednesday
night
Senate Passes
St. Lawrence
Seaway Bill
WASHINGTON ( Supporters
of the St. Lawrence Seaway, aft
er 20 years ;of effort, Wednesday
night won Senate approval of leg
islation to authorize the United
States to join; with Canada in build
ing the controversial project.
Passage ot the bill, which the
pro-seaway forces had been free
ly predicting; since the beginning
of debate a week ago, came on a
roll call vote with 51 senators
voting yes and 33 no.
It was a bi-partisan vote which
gave; President Eisenhower vic
tory in the first major item on his
program to come before the Sen
ate this session.
Twenty-five Republicans and 25
Democrats joined with the one In
dependent, Morse Ind-Ore). to
pass the billj It was opposed by
j 18 Democrats and 15 Republicans.
ine seaway, discussed for more
than 50 years, would be a 27-foot-deep
; waterway in the St. Law
rence River ; from the Atlantic
Ocean to the' Great Lakes jdlow
ing ocean-going vessels to sail di
rectly into lake ports.
The outcome became apparent
after ; the bill's supporters beat
down an amendment by Sen. Long
(D-La) that would have required
the project to be financed through
annual appropriations.
And. when the Senate voted 51
32 against returning the bill to
committee, as proposed by Sen.
Flanders (R-Vt), it was all over
but the shouting.
Fire Truck Run
Brings Collision
But No Blaze
South Salem fire truck collided
with :a car Wednesday night on
the way to a fire that wasn't a
fire after all
No one was injured in the acci
dent which occurred- shortly be
fore 11:30 p.m. at Lincoln and
Commercial streets.
After a few minutes delay! at
the accident scene, firemen con
tinued to the "fire- which was
called in as a car blaze at 240 .
Owens St.
Firemen said the car owner,
Earle Daue, 240 E. Owens St., had
mistaken steam coming out from
under his car for smoke.-
The accident damaged the right
front fender' and bumper of the
fire truck and scraped the side of
the car which was driven by Earl
Wilton, 2735 S. Summer SL
A-Bomb Storage;
Bases Planned !
WASHINGTON I The na
tion's "new look Air Force is .
planning a worldwide chain i of '
storage bases for its special wea
pons j including atomic bombs
it was disclosed Wednesday. .
The plan came to light after
Sen. Case (R-SD). chairman of a
Senate armed services subcom
mittee, announced his group had
approved 11 M million dollars for
construction of "special weapons
storage . . j
PRICE 5c
Douse
Scheme Fails
j 'v4!V-j-- j '
ill ;
it -I
1 , i