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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1959)
MAIL TRIBUNE, Msdfertf, Or. Monday, Aaf 31, 195t "Everyone to Southern Oregon Read The Mail Tribune" Published Diil except Saturday by - iCDFOAD PRINTING CO 33 North fit St Ph SP 2-6141 ROBERT W RTJHL. Editor EZRB GRETV Advertising Manage GERALD LATHAM Business ttgt ERIC W ALLEN JR. Managing ftebtor EARL B ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHTPMAN Teleg Editor RICHARD JKWETT Sport Editor OLIVE ST ARCHER Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON Circulation Mr An Indeeendent Newspaper Entered second elasa matter at Medlar Oreron under Act of March 3 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Bv Mai k In Advance Coov 10e. Dail- and Sunday 1 year $15.00 Daily and Sunday mos. 8 00 Daily and Sunday 3 mos 4.25 Sunday Only One year M-ZO By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland Central Point. Eagle Point Jacksonville. Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove Rogue Riv er. Talent and on motor routes Dail7 and Sunday 1 year f 18 00 Daily and Sunday l mo iju Carrier and Dealers copy lOe All Terms Cast in Advance Official Paper of City f Msdfori Official Piper of Jackson County United Press International FuD Leased Wire MXMBEB OF AUDIT BUREAU' OF CIRCULATION Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO, INC. Of fices in New York. Chicago. De troit. San Francisco. Los Angeles. Seattle, Portland St. Louis. At lanta Vancouver B C. rT NEWSPAPIR k PUBLISHERS "ASSOCIATION NATION At E0ITOIIAI Flight 'o Time Medford and Jackson County History from the file of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30, 40 nd 50 years ago. 10 YEARS AGO Aug. 31. 1949 (Wednesday) Medford- Patrolman Warren Cole, chasing two racing au tos, wrecks his motorcycle and loses a shoe but hops aboard a Fluhrer's bakery truck and successfully catches his prey. Ten carloads of Bartlett pears, the first purchased by the federal government, are ready to roll. 20 YEARS AGO Aug. 31, 1939 (Thursday) The Medford school system lists its faculties for this year, and one new name is that of Leonard Mayfield as Medford High school principal. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Some of the 1940 auto will have fluid control,' after it is pour ed into the engine, instead of the driver. 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 31, 1929 (Saturday) A scarcity of rental housing in Medford is reported. Grants Pass sees a "politi cal plot" in building a new road to Diamond lake. 40 YEARS AGO Aug. 31, 1919 (Sunday) Jasper N. Miller, 79, is to teach at Spencer Creek school People are urged to eat rye bread to cut the high cost of living. 50 YEARS AGO Aua. 31. 1909 (Tuesday) A shipment of Rogue Bart- letts sells for $3.70 a box in Boston. The circuit court term opens Sept. 7, with the State vs. George Putnam, Tribune niihlisher. for criminal libel being a prominent docket item. What's Your I.Q.? Nina or ten correct k superior; seven or erjht is excellent; five ee is: is good. 1. According to the Bible, who was the father of Metnu selah? 2. What is the American slang equivalent of an English bobby? a Who were the druids? 4. What volatile, inflamma ble, liquid hydrocarbon mix ture is used as a fuel? s Tffhn are the Jaycees? - 6. Was the current small size U. S. currency first-plac ed in circulation in 1927, 19Z3, nr 1931? 7. Is Pablo Picasso famed as a poet, novelist, painter, or srulntor? 1 . 8. How much does it cost to send an Air Mail postal card? 9. In what state is the win ter resort of Sun Valley? 10. Who was President of the U: S. when Alaska was purchased from Russia in 1867? Answers: 1. Enoch. 2. Cop or copper. 3. Members of re ligious order in ancient Gaul, Britain and Ireland. 4. Gaso line. 5. U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce members. 6. 1929. 7. Painter and sculptor. 8. 5 cents, 9. Idaho. 10. An drew Johnson. AUTHORIZZE LOANS Lisbon - (EPD - The govern ment has authorized loans to talling more than $50 million for the modernization of Por tugal's merchant fleet and fishing industry, spokesmen for the National Development Plan said today. Of Timing and the River Recently, we read that "primaries" in a re mote province of Malaya require that candidates for public office swim a river teeming with croco diles. If they make it to the other side, their elec tion is all but assured. If they don't well, no one ever said politics was a gentleman's game. We mention this simply as an analogy to the present U.S. political scene, in which avowed, unavowed and disavowed candidates for presi dential nomination next year are in somewhat treacherous waters themselves. 1I7HILE the jaws of pundits, pollsters and members of the opposite party in our civil ized society are generally concerned with mouth ing "inside dope" and caustic commentary rather than with actual dismemberment of the candi dates, we wonder if Nixon, Rockefeller, Ken nedy, Humphrey, Stevenson and the others would not prefer less show of teeth at present. Of course, most have brought it on them selves one way or another by getting into the political swim, so far ahead of election time. We hope, for their sakes, that if they survive the current "ordeal of the? crocodiles" they can also avoid becoming waterlogged before the races begin in earnest next year. E.W. Easy Surrender A sign carried by a teenage girl in recent Little Rock school disturbances gives a clue to the distressing spread of communism. The sign said, "Integration is Communism." It isn't communism, of course. It is of mod erate importance that the teenage girl thinks it is communism. It is of major importance if the sign she carried convinces a person who likes integration that integration is communism. That person may reason, "If integration is communism, then communism is for me." "FHE danger goes even further. Reactionaries x and foot-draggers of all stripes have charged that public works are communism. Same for public housing. And public power. And public health programs. And the graduated income tax. And such attempts at world brotherhood as the United Nations. These people are, by default, defining com munism as the sum total of many good things that many people want and need. Because they de nounce good things as communism (which they likely are not), their voices artless authoritative when they mention bad things that communism espouses. IF COMMUNISTS someplace in the world are favoring integration or public health programs or world peace, it does not follow that the rest of us should abandon those projects. Rather, we should do a better job with them than the Com munists can do. At the same time we can keep high the standard of human dignity, which the Communists cannot possibly do. The cold war is tough enough, at best. Let's not give it away by labeling as communistic some ideals that should be essential in our fight against totalitarianism. Eugene Register-Guard. When Sirius Stalks the Sun When Sirius, the watchdog of the firmament, and the sun rise in conjunction, the earth simmers and men are seized by the ancients. Modems jLi. j. 7 i.; uiao me cuujuucuun comes at aiiierent times in different latitudes, yet they still speak of "the dog days," that ' almost unbearably hot spell which comes so often in late summer. Perhaps dogs are not especially prone to madness when the forecast day after day pro claims: Fair and Hot. But when the mercury re fuses to descend below 90, there is cause enough for madness even in these days of air-conditioning. After all, between the electrically cooled office and the electrically cooled home or tav ern a man must expose himself at least briefly to the asphalt skillet. Indeed, the contrast mav make him all the more conscious of the heat. MODERNS cannot help wondering how their ancestors survived "the dog days" with no more than a palm leaf fan or a cardboard one, courtesy of the coal dealer to stir the air a little. At least they were not driven to the verge of despair when a power failure such as New York's deprived them of their electrical cooling gadgets. They put the ice man's card in the window daily, instead of every other day, and boosted their order from 50 to 100 pounds. They took to hammocks under the trees or on a shady porch. The wet-cold lemonade pitchers were filled and filled again. The young, m the heat of the day, lived m the swimming hole or turned the garden kose on each other. Yet then as now there were complaints of hay fever hardly anybody had heard of aller gies and discussions as to whether the sea-shore or the mountains offered greater relief. (Actu ally, neither helps much.) Interest in lawns and gardens flagged. Tempers as now, the best antidote a tall drink. St. Louis HOLD MANEUVERS Stuttgart, West Germany- (UPJ-Troops and planes partici pated today in "West Ger many's biggest military ma neuvers of the year. "Opera tion Ulmer Spatz" got under way Sunday with a mock bat tle involving more than 18, 000 men. strange maladies. So held know better. They know i j . undisturbed by exercise grew short. And, then for a short temper was Post Dispatch. ACCUSES ISRAEL Moscow-(UPfl-Izvestia accus ed Israel's government Sun day of "dragging the country into a military conflagration." "By its irresponsible actions, Tel Aviv is making itself look more and more like Bonn," the Soviet government news paper said. Dennis the Menace I ' "TURN YOUR Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right tc edit all letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for publication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is often the cae. Fears "One-Worldism" To the Editor: Thank you for printing the communica tion sent in by Earl W. Tem ple of Rogue River. I believe you are all wrong in your opinion of the American Mer cury. Your entire column in the Aug. 25th issue was de voted to slandering the char acter of the American Mer cury and by implication the men who edit it. I would wish to call your attention to just one sentence of your edi torial. "Aren't they (Ameri cans) able to distinguish be tween the naked threat of force or subversion, and the alternative of peaceful (or non hot war) competition." The peaceful or non hot war that you mention is the biggest hoax that is being palmed off on the American people to day. You cannot have peace with a rattlesnake. There can be no peaceful co-existence with the treacherous butchers of Budapest. " The Russian people stand for everything their leaders stand for. The ones who don't will never get to America. The ones who do get to Amer ica are no better than the leaders. Christian Americans have no mutual grounds on which they can meet the Rus sians. And by Russians, I mean the God hating, atheis tic, freedom destroying group of people who are running Russia today. The only "Americans?" who have mu tual grounds to meet the Rus sians are the ones who don't believe there is a God and who deny that the Bible is the Word of God. People who don't believe in God have a place of meeting. At least they can agree on one subject. No, Mr. AUen, I do not be lieve Americans are afraid of Russian guns or atoms or subs, but true Americans are afraid of "One Worldism" by brain washing from within. Carroll Powell Box 621, Central Point, Ore. Mr. Rovere's Past To the Editor: Re: your editorial, Aug. 25, 1959, "Mer cury and McCarthy" - "One recent book, 'Senator Joe Mc Carthy' by Richard Rovere, etc." - You go on to say "Readers of this review should know that Mr. Sprague is editor and publisher of the respect ed Oregon Statesman in Sa lem, is a Republican, and is a former governor of the state." You failed to advise your readers that the "enlightened" author Rovere was a past editor of the "People's World," listed by the U.S. attorney general's office as a voice of the Communist party! Oscar William Cleal Jr. 575 Olive st. . Menlo Park, Calif. Truckers Defended To the Editor: I have sent the following letter to Sen. Wayne L. Morse: In the Medford Mail Trib une I note that you propose a rule that trucks carrying explosives may not pass through a town or city. Now may I ask, what do you pro pose in the event there is no road around a "town, or as sometimes happens, there are restrictions on trucks using back roads which would be necessary in order to by-pass a town? Mr. Morse, have you ever driven a truck of any kind? I'll bet you've never even ridden in a truck larger than one commonly referred to as a "pickup," and then no far ther than is necessary. I find, according to Mr. Frank Jenk- ROaN; DAD! HmCOMlS BOWUN BALir ins, of the Klamath Falls (Oregon) Herald & News, that there was an Interstate Com merce Commission rule that two persons be with the truck, That would have been suf ficient, under the circum stances to have prevented the disaster. I'll bet the police of Roseburg did not know ex plosives was in the vicinity of the fire. One driver could have been sufficient had the police andor fire department known of the explosives laden truck. And where to find -the driver, so that the truck could have been moved. Another thing, Mr. Morse, that you lawyers never think about. What is the driver of the truck to do when, after driving for eight or ten hours, he'd like a bit of rest? Would you propose that he sleep in the cab of the truck? Mr. Morse! Have you ever slept in the cab of a truck? personally, think you are unqualified to , decide what remedies -and precautions would be necessary in cases of this sort. Please consider before you start proposing newer laws to hamper others what condi tions they are up against. Floyd R. McCabe Mt. Pitt Star route Butte Falls, Ore. Dams Needed To the Editor: Some time ago we purchased some prop erty on the Rogue river, hop ing this would be an ideal spot to live when we retired. Our income would be suffic ient to make it interesting for the local merchants. Now, discouraging reports continue to pour in advising us to look elsewhere for a location. River is low, no water for spawning grounds, floods in the winter, and nothing being done towards building a dam on the upper Rogue to hold back and to preserve this precious water that is lost during the winter. Would you suggest we se lect some other location to retire? Many of our friends are thinking of doing like wise. Your paper could help pre serve this great section of Oregon. Continue with your editorials to encourage dam building. David E. Hanson, 315 Larkspur, Corona Del Mar, Calif. Pasior Explains To the Editor: I hesitated to write a letter, but when I read the statements relative to help for the lady with six children in the paper, I felt constrained to clarify the situation. I have known the family personally for several months. I have delivered groceries and monies received for them from our church, people, and those received from various people. Some neighbors also have helped. As far as I know, the Red Cross was not contacted for help previous to the incident. However, they now have been contacted, or shall I say, ap proached, in the matter. Their answer is this, that since the welfare commission has offer ed to transport the family to Missouri, they wUl do ab solutely nothing unless the lady wUl sign an affidavit that she is entirely destitute of things appertaining to life. As the letter states only worthy needy are given help by the Red Cross. If this is not worthy, pray someone teU me who is worthy? " The statement that she had obtained a baby sitting job to pay her rent is unfounded and untrue. She has a baby sitting job of her own and one which, perchance, most baby sitters would deplore. As soon as word was received that she was a resident of Missouri, she was immediately cut off without only time being given for her to get ready for the journey. It was an ultimatum to starve her into submission. This lady is a legal resident of Oregon having resided here almost nine months, and over six months when she was cut off from assistance. The state of Missouri upholds residence up to an absence of twelve months. Oregon Law says you are a bonafide resident after six months for all general pur poses, to vote, fish, and hunt. Exception to this, divorce laws. The welfare administra tion adopts its own methods of procedure, hence, the con flict. The Salvation Army was approached for an order of groceries on July 16 by my wife. They contacted the wel fare, who informed them of the Missouri proposition. On the basis of this they refused help. The. welfare said it was our responsibility, that is, Philadelphia Church. The lady and husband made their own decision to stay for reasons I cannot state here. We en deavored to fill the spiritual and physical need. We wish to thank the Med ford Gospel Mission for then help from time to time, also others, and the many inquiries the past few days. It has wanned the hearts of the family and has given them a new lease on life. After all, this is the real American way of life, to help others. This is the Christian way. All I can say is God bless you. If anyone has any doubt as the authenticity of this letter, I shall be glad to an swer any questions to all con cerned. Phone UL 5-1071. There is still a need of a cook stove. Rev. Thomas White Route 1, Box 344 Central Point Pastor of Philadelphia Church 1851 Grandview ave. Medford Comments on Fair To the Editor: This was a doozy of a 4-H fair this year. This is a letter about the home economics department. Why doesn't the Jackson coun ty fair board hire home eco nomics judges from out of the county? There is a judge they have had for three years straight or more. Some of the girls she has judged know her like she was their own moth er. Nothing against her, she knows what she is doing, but she has judged too many years straight. This judge lives in Jackson county also. When you get a judge, get them from a different county. I don't mean Klamath and Jose phine counties. They are still too close. This year's style revue must of had something wrong with it. There were girls who de served much better ribbons then what they got. This year the girls were supposed to be judged on how the dress fit, how the girl modeled it, and how the construction was visible from the outside. The score card on the styling is: 1. The girl; posture, poise, grooming, and attitude, 25 per cent: II. The outfit on the girl, 50 per cent; III. Construc tion visible from the outside, 25 per cent. This totals 100 per cent. I sure wish the styl ing judges would follow this. Maybe they did but if they didn't there would of been some different placings. A lot of girls would have been much happier. As a closing note I would like to say to Miss Marilou Garner, she has been a very good agent and I hope she will have much luck in Cali fornia. I only hope the next agent is just as good. A Jackson County 4-H Member (Name on file) Eagle Point, Ore. We're Panting Today To the Editor: If you want action, just write a letter to the Tribune about monkeys. You get poetry, funny letters and articles from various newspapers throughout the nation about monkeys, then at the last you see it on tele vision, "Tell the Truth." I hope everyone saw it. I received another letter yesterday, it said: "I have read your letters in the Tri bune, but I don't know why. Are you leaving out a few pages between each letter or am I reading them back wards?" He guessed half of it, so I'll start from where I left off last week. The Army got me to Ft. Stevens v.ith two pair of pants. It's a good thing they did, for Uncle Sam didn't have any pants. The very tarn Editorial Comment On Visiting Red China Oregon's Rep. Charles O. Porter has a couple of strong points in his suit to force the Department of State to issue him a passport to visit Red China: (1) Executive in terference with a legislator; (2) discrimination against a congressman in that the State Department has granted per mission for 41 U. S. newspa permen to visit China. The first point would be valid if he can show that he wants to visit China on busi ness of the Congress, and that should not be difficult. The second bears on the right of press, public and government to find out what goes on-behind the bamboo curtain. But even if he wins his suit, Mr. Porter may not be ad mitted to China, unless ' the State Department grants the quid pro quo of admitting a Communist Chinese of equal government rank. That is what is preventing the news papermen from entering China. The Reds' want the United States to accept an equal number of Communist newspapermen, and State won't do it.-Oregonian, Portland. Passport Suit Welcomed Rep. Charles D. Porter, con gressman from Eugene, again has raised the right-to-travel issue by filing suit against the secretary of state because of the department's refusal to grant him a passport to travel to Red China. Though the issue has been raised before by newspapers and other information media which wished to send report ers to China and by private citizens who simply wanted to travel, Porter injects a new point by claiming that denial "is a violation of the separation of powers doctrine and impinges upon the plain tiff's constitutional rights as a member of congress." This issue probably will raise involved legal points but even without this con stitutional question, the fact remains that the state depart ment has never given a clear cut or convincing reason for its adamant stand on the pass port matter. The issue was first raised by various newspapers and after much hammering, the state department finally agreed that a certain number of newspapermen would be granted passports. Porter now asks, and quite logically, why, he a congress man, is denied a passport when travel rights have been granted to newsmen even if the number is limited. A little over a year ago, in connec tion with another passport case, the state department ap peared to have descended from its autocratic position by admitting that there is constitutional right to travel abroad. The department still contended it had a right to put what is called "reason able" restrictions on foreign travel and a spokesman for the department set out two general grounds on which the department contends pass ports may be denied: One, the spokesman said, was membership in the Corn- first thing one of my Cor porals lost his shirt and pants in a crap game. I gave him one of my pants, because Uncle Sam didn't have any pants. Someone stole my Ser geant's pants and he put me on guard duty, so the Ger mans wouldn't steal all our pants. We had one pair of pants for the four of us, My Corporal, My Sergeant, me and my Uncle Sam. When Uncle Sam got us some pants, we took off for France. On our way home after the war, we were put in the iso lation barracks at Camp Dix. We had cooties. The Army tried out one of their new gadgets on us, a kiln to roast cooties. We left our uniforms in this machine for two hours, then nobody had any pants. Size 34-32 pants were sanforized to 20-20. Uncle Sam went out and bought 1200 new pants and we left for Ft. Lewis. When I got out of the Army, Uncle Sam gave me his pants and $60. I bought a suit with two pairs of pants, came back to south ern Oregon with three pair of pants and $20. I started in business and by the time I was 29 years old I had my first million made. Then what happened? To be con tinued. Everett Acklin, Box 233 Ashland, Ore. ...WHEREVER GOOD FOOD IS SOLD ... nider9s Quality DAIRY FOODS Washington Report By WILLIAM ANDERSON'S POWER Washington Secretary of the Treasury Robert B. Anderx son has become top boss of the home front and in compar ably the most pow erful man in the Cabinet. Presi dent Eisen h ower's incr easing preoccup ation with "Nilrita William S. , . . white Khrush c h e v of the Soviet Union, has left Anderson in all but sole charge of the Administration's whole domestic tone. The Secretary's conserva tive fiscal views have long since wholly captured the President's mind. The Ander son budget-balancing philoso phy has dominated the Admin istration's relations with the Democratic Congress. And this Anderson philosophy is, in the end, perhaps more responsible than any other factor for the President's newly "tough" line with the Capitol - includ ing his vetoes of unwanted bills. This, however, for all his enormous force in American affairs, is one of the least known of all the Eisenhower Cabinet ministers. Who, real ly, is this man of such large! and little - appreciated power? HE IS, first of all, an ex Texas Eisenhower Demo crat" from 1952 who has gone the whole way in personal transformation. He has moved his official residence to Con necticut and is now a regis tered Republican. (Very few native Texans ever, in any circumstances, become offi cially ex-Texans.) He is tall, rangy, faintly stooped, quiet almost to the point of inaudi bility except when he wishes it otherwise. His thin, aca demic face reflects a studious and sensitive private nature. The ironical fact is that the most orthodox Republican munist party and the other is that the proposed travel "is inimical to United States foreign policy or detrimental to the orderly conduct of United States foreign rela tions." No one has accused Porter of being a Communist and the second ground is so general that it could encompass al most anything. Even if it were more specific, it still leaves unanswered the ques tion as to the right of the de partment to restrict travel as a part of foreign policy. Joseph N. Welch, lecturer on the Constitution and rep resentative of the U. S. army in the McCarthy hearings, said there is nothing about travel by an individual so significant, from the stand point of national safety, that the federal government should be allowed to control travel by passport device. A suit by Porter or anyone else which will bring these questions into the open and more clearly define the con stitutional rights of private 'citizens as well as congress men will be welcome.-Oregon Journal, Portland. AUTHOR DIES Briarcliff Manor, N. Y.-0IPD -John Corbin, 89, author and former editorial writer and drama critic for the New York Times, died Sunday. Corbin had written at least 12 books, including "Two Fron tiers cf Freedom," published in 1940. Reasonable Funerals (Priced for Everyone) iA 7 FRANK PERL FREE Parking Space Adjacent To Mortuary FRIENDLY. S. WHITE now in the Cabinet was born and brought up in a Southern Democratic state. Anderson's predecessor as Secretary of the Treasury, George M. Humphrey, is a member of that wing of the GOP which historically is the most teetotally old-fashioned Republican - the "Ohio Re publicans," as they have been called for two generations.. That Humphrey would to a large extent dominate the Cabinet was thus more or less inevitable from the day he entered it. For the Treasury post traditionally has lain close to the heart of nearly all GOP administrations, as the Secretaryship of State has done in nearly all Democratic a(3ministrations. rpHE fact that Anderson is -- likewise in a position of dominance is quite another thing. Indeed, it is an improb able thing, for he is of a differ ent breed altogether. He has not reached this point, accord ing to fellow Cabinet mem bers with whom this corres pondent has talked, simply as Humphrey's heir. He has come forward on his own peculiar steam. THo i - -i: i viuaiiiics, as ilia dumci colleagues see them, are two: a special dedication to his work, and an ability to throw off a calm but strong impres sion of extraordinary compe tence. His strictly personal, social relations with the Presi dent are not so close as were Humphrey's, perhaps because Anderson, at 49, is a genera tion younger than Mr. Eisen hower. But the ex-Texan ac tually takes a more decisive hand in all phases of the Ad ministration's work than even Humphrey ever did. Humphrey, as one Cabinet informant puts it, would speak forcefully in Cabinet on the general fiscal issues closely touching the Treasury, but usually left matters there. ANDERSON does not simply speak broadly for the Treasury. He also gets into the discussion sometimes with a veto of his own on every issue before the Cabinet that involves either major spend ing or major policy. This, of course, is another way of say ing that he interests himself in everything of any conse quence, no matter whose Cabi net department is especially involved. This normally would be a good way to lose friends fast. The fact that Anderson has instead the respect and affec tion of the entire Cabinet thus must say a good deal about the kind of man he is. So does the fact that he retains the re spect and friendship of the Democratic leaders of Con gress not excluding Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas, who ordinarily speaks in smoky language of Democratic party bolters. Then there is this final point. Asked, ''What does the President really think of Anderson?" another Cabinet officer told me: "Put it this way: if the President were a dictator, and wanted to act as one, he would surely make Anderson his successor as President." (Copyright, 1959, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) 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