Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 28, 1957, Image 4

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M ib i4Ukera Orefon
iltMi The .Mail Tribune"
thibUiod Gtaly EMwt Saturday by
YDtUrOKD MUin.NG CO
ZJS Nrjrtn Fir St Phone 2-Hl
Editor
ft&4 Y AdvrtiMo Manager
ORt.AL.Tt LATHAM Bin Manager
ZJtJC AUj,:i JR Jftana?.na Editor
SABl 8 ADAMS City fcOiVr
HAS B CHPMAN Terapn Editor
SeIT 8ARTJ JiiWETT Bdotu Editor
CitJV 87 ARCKiB &ooty Editor
itRlCKSON Circulation Mgr.
AO Ioaepylarit Newspaper
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Mfc-VBER OF A'UDTT BUREAU
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NATIONAL fOITOIIAt
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PUBLISHES
SOCIATION
High! o' lime
Medford and Jackson County
History from the files of The
Mail Tribune 10, 20, 30 and
40 jreara ago.
10 TEARS AGO
June 21. 1947 (Saturday)
State police warn residents of
Jaw which prohibits possession
Of fawn found in forest.
From Arthur Perry's Ye
Smudge Pot column: Reports
persist chefs of some Southern
Oregon eating houses, in the face
of the lingering wartime alleged
shortage of salt pork, are actu
ally u.ing same for seasoning the
prodigious and inexhaustible
supply of string beans.
30 YEARS AGO
June 38. 1937 (Monday)
Neighbors complain that cher
ry growers shooting at birds are
hitting bouses instead.
More than 330 Scandinavians
attend the annual picnic at Hel
mio's Bath in Ashland yester
day. SO TEA IIS AGO
June 21. 1927 (Tuesday)
Grandmother. 81, starts hitch
biking from Chicago to Apple
gate, Ore, to visit grandchil
dren. Two r.en file in circuit court
for possession of Ford car, grand
prize in sprint, opening and
style show in Ashland last
March.
40 YEARS AGO
June 28. 1917 (Thursday)
State highway commission au
thorizes S3EO.000 for work on
Pacific highway in Josephine
and Douglas counties this year.
From Local and Personal col
umn: Several members of Com
pany I, whose headquarters are
in this city, but who are station
ed on guard duty in Roseburg
and vicinity, have accepted em
ployment at the depot of the
Southern Pacific in that city, to
occupy their rpare time when
not on active duty.
Wkafs Your I.Q.7
Nine or len correct 1 superior;
seven or elent Is excellent: live or
six Is good
1. Did the petroleum business
first begin from oil strikes in
Pa.. N. Y.. Okla., or Texas?
2. Is a guinea pig a rodent?
3 Bible: During the Macedon
ian Period were the Jews en
courar.ed to enlist in the army of
Alexander or Cyrus?
4. Docs salt lose its flavor if
stored for many years?
5. What and where is Pago
Pago?
6. A mandrill is a bird, a mach
ine tool, a baboon, a fish, or a
tree?
7. Name the Negro educator
who was elected to the Hall of
Fame.
8. Who composed the march,
"Pomp and Circumstance?"
9. Is "comely" pronounced as
the word come, with an "ly"
added?
10. "Ye ugly, creepin' blastit
wonner. Detested, shunn'd by
saunt and sinner." Burns: "To
a Louse." What is 'blastit won
ner?" Answers: 1. Pa. Titusville
(1859). 2. Yes. 3 Alexander. 4. No.
5. Capital of American Samoa.
6. Baboon. 7. Booker T Wash
ington. 8. Edgar William Elgar.
. Yes. 10. An accursed dweller.
MOTH WANTED
Chicago IP Frank Cisco, 62.
planted a yucca plant in his
backvard 15 years ago and now
would like it to produce some
little yuccas. His plant bloomed
Thursday for the first time. But
it takes a yucca moth to pollin
ate the seldom flowering plant
and those special transmitters
are 1,000 miles away in the
southwest. N
MAIL TRIBUNE
Editorial Correspondence . . .
New York, N.Y., June 26th: If Los Angeles thinks is has a
monopoly on smog it is crazy. A heavier, smellier and more
offensive smog than we ever encountered in L.A. is shrouding
Manhattan Island today. No doubt the Weather Bureau will ex
plain it. We don't know the cause but we do know the result
it is a sort of heavy black fog that doesn't cool the air but kills
it. The odor is distinctly reminiscent of the stockyard district of
South Chicago, of some 50 years ago.
Perhaps there is something to the ancient claim that every
thing comes to him who waits provided he waits LONG enough.
We have waited for over a month to see the "Damned Yankees"
really clobbered, outclassed and thrown out in the snow or if
realism is demanded, the smog.
That blissful massacre occurred last night when the Cleve
land Indians out-hit, out-ran, and outclassed the "greatest team
Casey Stengel ever produced" to the sweet, sweet tune of 11
to 2.
We will have to say this' for the Yankee fans, however.
They took the slaughter like good sports. In fact the big ovation
of the evening went to a Cleveland outfielder by the name of
Roger Maris, for the sensational one-handed catch he made of a
sizzler that seemed certain for 3 bases if not 4. He got it not
only after a 100-yard dash, but by a dive through the air, with
the greatest of ease, his glove hand outstretched to the limit.
That, in act. seemed to be the turning point of the game,
with Cleveland leading by only one run 3-2. After that even
Mickey Mantle couldn't hit his hat and struck out while Colavito,
the Indian rightfielder, hit a grand-slammer in the first of the
ninth.
By losing last night and the White Sox winning, the Yankees
had to yield first place. We hope they stay there. (But we would
not do anything as WICKED as BET on it!)
Speaking of baseball, our guess is something is cooking
as far as the "big shots" and big money makers In the big leagues
are concerned. What has happened to boxing in this state with
Norris demoted and what has happened in pro-football, may
not happen in baseball LEGALLY, but we predict the players
are going to have a lot more to say about their status, financially
and otherwise, than they have ever had before. We don't know
whether Bob Feller's remarks about the game before the House
anti-trust committee were reported in Medford or not, but we
would advise not only Ford Frick, the commissioner, but all
the owners, to carefully consider them. Treating the baseball
players as pawns in a get-rich-quick racket is on the skids, as
we see it, and while it may take some time, eventually we feel
sure that sort of thing will be out. And for the sake of the sport
as well as for the players, "out" is where it SHOULD be.
The other day an engine on the New York, New Haven and
Hartford (which runs chiefly between New York and Boston)
caught fire and regular service, both on that road and the N.Y.
Central, was stopped for nearly two hours at a very critical
time, (around 5 p.m.). According to the press over 20,000 com
muters were late for dinner as a result.
Fortunately New York has both a powerful and alert public
service commission. They wasted no time in launching an in
vestigation for this was only one of many equipment failures
recently on the N.Y., N.H. and H.
If evidence shows the railroad is not properly manned or
equipped to render its transportation service to the people, as
it should in the interest of the public welfare, the PUC has the
power to COMPEL it. We hope the PUC in Oregon has similar
powers a3 a result of Senator Lowry's efforts, if it has not, it
should have!
Something new across the street. Our favorite fruit store
of course has pears from Argentina and has for two months, but
it also has Delicious apples from the same source. If the apples
are no better than the pears we have tried hard coarse grained
and blah we fail to see how Argentine can compete with grow
ers in Medford or the northwest. Probably they CAN'T except in
timing. R.W.R.
Moon Rocket
Would you, gentle reader, spend two bucks to
send a rocket to the moon?
That is the estimated cost per year for five years
per U.S. taxpayer to get a moon rocket launched.
The project hasn't been approved, but Navy Com
mander Robert C. Truax, a leading rocket expert,
says it could be done.
""THERE'S all sort of talk about moon rocket these
days.
One scientist claims that a beer can could be at
tached to the top of a three-stage rocket and sent to
the moon. (He doesn't say why he thinks a beer can
would be fitting to be the first earth artifact to land
on the moon.) He declares the cost would be nomi
nal, compared to the more elaborate plans for more
highly-developed, man-carrying rockets.
Another scientist, with tongue perhaps less firmly
in cheek than the beer can advocate, believes that
the first moon flight should be an unmanned vehicle,
fired to circle the moon, snapping pictures as it goes,
then returning to earth's atmosphere.
He thinks the problem of trajectory would be the
principal problem here, for not only would the force
of earth's gravitation have to be allowed for, but so
would that of the sun, the moon itself, and of the
bigger nearby planets.
AS a result, the course of this unmanned vehicle
would resemble a complex of curlicues, rather
than a simple elipse. One must remember that the
earth is circling the sun at a great rate, and that the
moon is circling the earth and that all three would
have strong and interlocking gravitational pulls on
each other. It wouldn't be like tossing a baseball
over a tall fence. It would be a little more like throw
ing a boomerang into the air on a windy day, with
sudden gusts coming from all directions.
"Working out the mathematics of this trajectory
would be a fabulously difficult job, but our scientist
friend thinks it could be done with present tech
niques. We commented here about five years ago that it
would not surprise us too much if a rocket landed on
the moon within our lifetime. At the rate things have
gone since, it wouldn't be surprising to see this hap
pen within the next decade. E.A.
Boy Killed in Fall
From Father's Truck
La Grande HP) Randy Ken
nenberger, 8, La Grande, ' was
kiled Thursday afternoon when
he fell from his father's truck,
struck a bank and apparently
rolled under the wheels of the
truck.
State police said the boy ap
parently leaned against the door
of the truck as it went arounr!
a curve and it opened, causing
the tragedy.
Friday. June 28. 1957
Meat Inspection Plans
To Be Told at Meetings
Salem W State Agriculture
Director Robert Steward said
today that proposed regulations
on compulsory meat inspection
would be outlined in public
hearings in six cities starting
next week.
Hearings are scheduled for
Salem July 1. Portland on July
2, Eugene July 8, Grants Pas
July 9, Redmond July 10 and
Baker July 11.
'Jlf
'THAT5 A HORNETS NEST, SON. JUST LEAVE IT ALONE
I AND THEY'LL LEAVE US ALONE.
Today and
By Walter
Back Towards The Constitution
In the Watkins Case, the' Su
preme Court, with Chief Justice
Warren delivering the opinion of
the majority,
has tried to set
down certain
limits on the
rights and pow
ers of Congres
sional i nvesti
gating commit
tees. We must,
I think, des
cribe the opin-
uaiter i.ippmann ion in mis ten
tative way. For the limitations
are stated in general terms, and
no one can know how they will
in the future apply specifically
in concrete cases. In practice, the
application will depend on how
much each particular committee
is willing to accept, how much it
is determined to stretch, the lim
itations, and whether the court
will be disposed to construe the
limitations strictly or loosely.
However, we have in the Wat
kins decision a powerful asser
tion of a principle which will in
fluence the conduct of commit
tees, the attitude of witnesses,
the actions of the court, and the
general posture of public opin
ion. The principle is that a wit
ness, who believes that his Con
stitutional rights are being abus
ed, may appeal to the courts for
protection. The question now be
fore the country is whether this
principle is constitutional and is
in the public interest.
Those who are opposed to the
decision must say that they do
not think that a witness should
be able to appeal from a Con
gressional committee to the
courts. This is, in substance,
what Mr. Justice Clark, the long
dissenter, seems to think that
for the courts to intervene is a
usurpation of power, and that,
as a matter of fact, it is not in
public interest that the judiciary
should "supervise" Congression
al investigations.
11 JR. JUSTICE CLARK, who re-L'-'-gards
the decisions as "mis
chievous," comes very near to
saying that Congressional com
mittees are a law unto themselv
es, and that there should be no
appeal from them to the courts
for the protection of the Consti
tutional rights of the individual
witnesses. "Perhaps," has says,
"the rules of conduct placed up
on the committees by the House
admit of individual abuse and un
fairness. But that is none of our
(i.e. the court's) affair. So long
as the object of the legislative
inquiry is legitimate (!) and the
question proposed are pertinent
(!) thereto, it is not for the court
to interfere with the committee's
system of inquiry."
This is a masterpiece of con
fusion. For it begs the question
before the court. In the Watkins
case was there individual abuse
and unfairness because a particu
lar phase of the inquiry was not
legitimate or because the ques
tions put to Watkins were not
pertinent? It is not entirely clear
what Justice Clark really thinks.
But apparently, it is that the
court must assume that what a
committee does is legitimate and
that the questions it puts are
pertinent, and that if they pro
duce "individual abuse and un
fairness," it is none of the court s
affair.
On the broad Constitutional is
sue, Justice Clark holds that it
is a "trespass upon the funda
mental American principle of
separation of powers" for the
courts to concern themselves
with individual abuse and un
fairness. But is it truly an Amer
ican principle that the seperation
of powers is absolute, so absolute
that a Committee 01 congress
cannot be called to account for
the lawfulness of what it does.'
Surely, the American principle
is that Congress is not a sover
eign body, accountable only to
itself, but that it is under tne
law of the Constitution of the
Constitution as interpreted' by
the courts and as it may be
amended by the people.
THE ULTIMATE ISSUE raised
by the Watkins case is not
llfij
Tomorrow
Lippmann
Constitutional. It is, if we are
quite candid, whether in order
to combat the Communist move
ment, which would if it could
destroy the American govern
ment and the American social
order, it is necessary to encour
age or to permit Congressional
committees to proceed outside
the Constitution. Can the Con
stitution be defended only by
extra-Constitutional means, or
can it be defended within its own
terms? It has been on the grounds
that there was. a desperate emer
gency that many sober and con
servative men have supported or
connived at McCarthyism.
The Watkins decision is ad
dressed to this particular kind of
extra - Constitutional investiga
tion, of which the object is to
outlaw by exposure and pitiless
publicity all behavior which
might assist, might favor, might
tolerate the spread of Communist
propaganda. These investigations
are not addressed primarily to
illegal acts, to espionage and
subversion. They are addressed
to activities which are not, strict
ly speaking, against the law and
could not be prosecuted in a
forming Congress how to make
new laws. Quite the contrary. It
is evident that laws prohibiting
these activities would be in open
conflict with the Constitution.
There being no legal way to
suppress such activities as prop
aganda, infiltration, and fellow
travelling. Congress with the sup
port of public opinion, has cre
ated committees which are de
signed, among other things, to
suppress by intimidation what
cannot be suppressed by due pro
cess of law.
THE SUPREME COURT has
waited a long time some ten
years before it has intervened
in what is unconstitutional pro
cess, resorted to on the grounds
that fire must be fought with fire;
that the end, which is to stop the
spread of Communism, justifies
any means.
I do not think the long patience
of the court shows that the Ei
senhower court is more liberal
than the Roosevelt-Tru.nan court,
but rather that the times have
changed. The emergency if
there was one which could not be
met by lawful means is over,
and the presumption is now that
investigating committees must
work within the limits of the
Constitution.
(c) 1957, New York Herald
Tribune Inc.
116 Oregon State
Prison Inmates To
Be Freed Monday
Salem (IP) A mass "evacua
tion" of 116 prisoners at the Ore
gon state penitentiary will start
early Monday and extend
through the rest of the day.
The men are being released
for good behavior as a result
of a law passed by the last Legis
lature. The law will go into ef
fect July 1. It gives convicts one
third of their sentences as "good
time" instead of one-fourth.
Return to Old System
Originally prisoners had been
given one-third time off for
good behavior. In 1952 prison
officials decided the statute had
been wrongly interpreted and ;
prisoners were only given 10
days off for every 40 served
instead of 10 for every 30
House bill 356 passed by thej
Legislature in the last session
spelled out a return to the old
system. j
The mass release will begin
at 4 a.m. Monday and 12 hours j
later at 4 p.m. Warden C. T. j
Gladden expects to have all HSj
prisoners processed through the
gates.
They will leave in groups of !
10 and one group will leave
approximately every hour.
The release will leave the
prison with 1394 inmates, the
smallest number since 1950. The
present population of the prison
is 1510.
Ike Passes
Supreme Court1 in Controversy
By LYLE C. WILSON
United Press Correspondent
Washington 'W President
Eisenhower has given his team
the signal on the angry contro
versy now rising around the
Supreme Court. If the President
has called a
timid play,
there is ample
reason for that.
Four of the
justices are his
men.
The word
from the White
House is this:
Lay off the
court. The
I. vie C Wilsnn
word came at this week's news
conference when Eisenhower
asked for respect for the court's
rulings even those which were
difficult to understand.
Attorney General Herbert
Brownell Jr. has moved quietly
and cautiously to remedy the
damage government prosecutors
believe the court has inflicted
on the processes of criminal jus
tice in federal courts.
Protection Bills Offered
Bills have been offered in
Comrnunicsiions
Letters to the Editor must bear
the name and address ot the writer
although under certain circum
stances the use ot a pen name or
initial lor publication is permis
sible The Mail Tribune reserves
the right to edit all letters witb
an eye to clarification and conden
sation Letters submitted for pub
lication must not exceed 400 words
Postal Pay
To the Editor: Now, according
to Assistant Budget Director
Robert Merriam, "an increase in
the postal pay roll would be in
flationary and would probably
lead to other government pay
raises costing billions of dol
lars." Only two or three months ago
this same- administration said
that postal pay raises would be
inflationary and "trigger de
mands for pay increases in every
industry."
Well, well So now that in
dustry has already received its
yearly raises it s the other gov
ernment workers" who would
have to be given raises also!
I had been wondering just
what was coming up next since
industry quite unobligingly re
fused to wait till we got our
postal pay increase before
getting theirs. It would consti
tute a major catastrophe were
we to be given an adequate raise
by our government. This situa
tion would be rather amusing
were it not of such great im
portance to us. However it is
very discouraging to say the
least, to know how little our em
ployers think of us. That we
should be expected to live - in
definitely on inadequate pay
because we are postal employees,
and there are those who do not
wish to raise postage rates in
order that we may give better
service in return for an adequate
living wage.
Since the Federal government
cannot or will not control prices
and other wages it has no right
to deny us an adequate living
wage.
S. J. Dodge
504 Austin
Medford, Ore.
Farm Vacation?
To the Editor: My husband and
I and our two children would
like to vacation on a farm this
summer. We also would like to
see Oregon, as we have heard
it is so beautiful so, we hoped
we could find a farm in Oregon
that would take paying guests
for a week.
We wouldn't expect to be
entertained, and the farm work
could go on as usual. We would
just like to get the children out
in the open, and as we are born-and-raised-in-the-city
people, we
too would just like to get out
where we can walk in the coun
try and have home-cooked meals.
If there is anyone who would
like to have guests for a week
some time in August, we would
like to hear from them. We
understand the average fee
should be about $100 for our
size of family.
Mrs. Lillian Broadbent
6808 El Carmen
Long Beach 15, Calif.
(Editor's note: The Jackson
County Chamber of Commerce
is interested in compiling a list
of farms in this area where pay
ing guests would be welcome
during summer vacations. Any
farmer who contemplates such
a plan is invited to list his farm
with the chamber.)
North Hiway 99 Half Way Beetween Medford and Centra! Point
OPEN UNTIL 10 P.M. INCLUDING SUNDAYS
: WEEK END SPECIALS
Ice Cold
Watermelons
the Word:
both houses of Congress to pro
tect FBI files against the court s
order which would permit crim
inal elements of the United
States to rummage through them.
Brownell went to Capitol Hill
today to testify before the Sen
ate Judiciary Committee on such
proposed legislation. If he told
the committee what federal pros
ecutors generally think of the
court s ruling in the Jencks case,
the legislators would get an ear
full. Clinton E. Jencks was tried
and convicted in a charge of fals
ifying an affidavit in which he
swore he was not a Communist.
Jencks, a labor union leader,
signed the affidavit under terms
of the Taft-Hartley Act. The trial
judge refused to permit Jencks'
counsel to examine the FBI files
on which the charge of Com
Increases in Crops
Discussed by Babson
By ROGER W. BABSON
New Boston, N. H. For sev
eral years a member of my or
ganization has been attending
the annual
C h e m u r gic
Conference in
the Central
West. These
meetings are
to help farm
ers market
their crops for
industrial pur
poses and not
merely for
food. People will always be able
to spend money on food, shelter,
and luxuries, but a rich person
can eat no more than a poor per
son and probably not as much.
However, the percentage of
fruits and green vegetables con
sumed increases considerably
more than ' the demand for
wheat, corn, potatoes, and other
staples. Progress along chemur-
gic lines will increase the value
of ,much farm property.
Atomic wonders may revolu
tionize farming.
The spraying of fruit and oth
er trees to kill- destructive- in
sects may be entirely changed.
Instead of being sprayed as at
present, they will be sprayed
with electrical rays. This will
enable the birds to come back
again. These birds will soon kill
off insects and enable the chem-
urgic cycle to progress as God
intended.
Some years ago the Japanese
noticed that plants which ad
joined a plant with a certain
fungus had a remarkable
growth. This was found amongst
the rice plants especially. Later
this fungus was reduced to an
acid and used in the ratio of 0.1
to 10 parts per million parts of
solution (usually potassium salts
and water). Exhibitions are re
ported" where you can almost see
the plant grow from hour to
hour. The sprays are fairly cheap
and although not yet passed by
the Food and Drug Administra
tion yet they may revolutionize
fertilizers. Instead of mixing
chemicals with the soil, the
seeds, sprouts, and leaves of the
plant are sprayed.
Experiments show that this
spraying results in taller forest
trees, better yields for pulpwood.
and improved fiber crops, such
as cotton. uibDereiuns aiso
lengthen the stems of flowers,
hasten development of trans
plants, and reduce the work of
farmers and gardeners.
Pasture Lands
Gibberellins make grass green
er in pastures. In Florida, where
ten acres are now needed to pas
ture cattle, only three acres may
Editorial
Comment
RATS AND RABBITS
A Ku Klux Klan official in
Florida describes his lodge well
when he orserves that Klan or
ganizations are multiplying "like
rats and rabbits."
Rats live in the alleys of civil
ization, infecting and poisoning
and despoiling all the things they
come in contact with.
Rabbits are timid souls who
feel like rabbits. Perhaps the
rabbits would be less timid if
they, too, could don white robes,
ride through the night, speak
with anonymous voices to crea
tures weaker than they are, and
then seek to avoid responsibility
for what they do. Eugene
Register-Guard.
Your Favorite
Ice Gold
Beverages
Kocer W Babson
'Lay Off
munist Party was based. The
Supreme Court reversed the con
viction, and Jencks is a free man.
Far Reaching Consequences
This was a so-called civil lib
erties case, and the court got a
lot of applause for defending an
individual's rights against public
prosecutors. The ruling will pre
vail, however, far beyond the
field of civil liberties. It will
govern in criminal actions in
federal courts relating, for ex
ample, to dope peddling, tax
skullduggery, anti-trust prosecu
tors and the like.
Some 30 such cases, under
trial when the Jencks decision
came, now are in a condition of
legal chaos. Federal judges do
not know how to interpret the
Supreme Court's new rule nor
do federal prosecutors know how
to proceed under it.
be needed with the use of Gib
berellins. Texas cattle may be
fattened in their native pastures
instead of being sent to Kansas ,
or other Central States for fat
tening. It is rumored that Gib
berellins may reduce the' price
of the best steaks to one half
their present price. In fact, the
entire price structure of cattle,
hogs, and other grass-fed animals
may be revolutionized.
But this is not all that the
Gibberellins can do. They may
make the raising of fruit, corn,
and other products which are
subject to frosts a safer business
by extending the growing sea
son. Although these developments
discussed above may hold down
the price of farm products, they I
could easily increase the priced"
of farm land. Don't be too quid'
to sell your farm land. This espe
cially applies to small farms nea
cities where the land could bt
divided up for residential prop
erties. Also, remember that the new
highway systems to be built by
the government may elongate
cities. That is, instead of a city
being five miles square as the
average city is today, it will he
one-half mile wide on each side
of the new highway and 10
miles long. This should greatly
improve the price of certain
present unprofitable farm land.
Besides, one of the new "rare
earth metals" may be found on
your farm, some of which are
Cerium, Dysprosium, Erbium,
Europium, Gadolinium, Holium,
Lanthanum, Lutetium, Niobium,
Praseodymium, Promethium, Sa
marium, Terbium, Thulium, and
Ytterbium.
i I i imi i ---- , i Tirfi't armrl
Keep Temper and
1L
Temperature
Undjf'Control
COOL FILTERED WASHED Alt
Cbolo ef 13 Mesfls
Trowbridge & Flynn
Electric Company
214 W. Main Ph. SP 3-6241
1
PieilG
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