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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 2, 1960)
8 MEDFOHD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFOHD, ORE. TUESDAY, AUGUST 2. 1960 o 8 O o o Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food Blueberry Puddingt . , . Serve Warm With Cream , Blueberries, aristocrat of the huckleberry family, are a treat beyond comparison say blueberry enthusiasts. They don't compare with huckle berries say the huckleberry hounds. It has been said that no one can describe the taste of a blueberry (huckleberry) and we agree. We know only thati-iigs, they're a treat in any formpdns, Persian melons, plums r!iiii with GMDa. onH rirm in jam, stewcOor in a pie: in pudding, shortcake, tarts and Q breakfast muffins. They're good combined with other fruits and berries; won derful sauce over vanilla ice ., cream. Here we put them in a pudding. Six series. 2 cups blueberries 0 O O 23 cups sugar ',4 teaspoon salt O 13 cup flour W'-i euys milt 3 eggs, serrated O 1 teaspoon vanilla pi Put the blueberries in six( greased individual bakineT dishes and sprinkle with onO third cup of l? sugar. Mix the remyiiig one-third cup of sifjinr wtlh the salt and flour in double boiler and stirQin the milk gradually, Cook, stirring constantly un- til thickened. Beat the Q;g yolks until thick and stir the hot mixture In them gradually. Cool to lukewarm and add the vanilla. FoloP in stiffly beaten egg whites a' pour over berries. Play in a pan of hot water ana wuku in h nnyeiaiu uven, 325 degrees, for about 45 min utes. '.One warm wilh cream or soft ice cream. Berry Sauce O For a raspberry strawL'rry, Loganberry or any other type of berry sauce, simply crush fresh berries using a little Suwu" T , ",' ''Thiient of Henry J. Bechtold as the bennes too for a distinc-tlJ',. . , ,., , ,,,, j tive and sometimes colorful dessert sauce. Perhaps you'd like to paSo a bowl of dairy sour cream along with the berry sauce for topping pud ding, custard, ice cream. Anchovy Sauce for Fillets of Sole f") There is an abundance of sweet-tasting fillets of sole in nur markets. Pan-fry or broil them quickly, handling as lit tle as possible. Anchovy is a savory topping easily made like this: Cream one-quiiiior cup brft) icr unui son; ana iwoijea spoons minced parsley, . one- half teaspoon salt, dash of pepper, one teaspoon anchovy paste, one teasQon prepared mustard and 1 i tablespoons lemon juice. Beat until fluffy. Spread on fish fillets or sleaks just before serving. Quick Lamb OWill Broiled indoors in the oven or outdoors over charcoal, this quick lamb grill is a dandy. You need six skewers; long ones. Select a lamb steali from shoulder or leg, sliceiVabout one-half inch thick and weigh ing about Hi pounds. Cut into one-inch squares. Slice a cucumber or cucumbers one half inch thick. Alternate pieces of lamb nnd slices of cucumber Wi skesvers. Sprin kle with salt, spread fQlh prepared mustard aud roll in cruml Broil undcMnoderalc heat, turning frequently. Six servings. Flank Steak Frills Flank steak is an economi cal. Tjo bone meat buy; lean and lull ot f(a).'or. Have meat man score the steak. Try bast ing it in one of these tasty sauces; cover and coo 'over low heal until louder, or bake revered in theViven for two hours. .-eole Style. Use diluted tomato soup as cooking liquid; add sliced stuffed olives and chopped onion. Fruited. To cooking water. add d(T)d celery, grated lem on rind and chopped onion. Half hour before steak is done, add one-half cup stew ed apricots in thcijrown juice Hearty Steak, tfse canned consomme as the liquid ftd add grated carrots to it -iJr cook flank steak in iaVy :W.ir r cream, bul(cjinilk, orrfon soup or vinegar and water for good nnd unusual eating. Summer Plentifuls Include Ice Cream, Fryers, VegerfVes July bundancc (fc'uhr in from omry lands, Srfchards, O farrfs) truck gardens, vine- lands. Plentiful dairy prod ucts remind us to keep more Qiilk in the refrigerator for the making of nourishing milk drinks. Ice cream ;as nQ-r more plentiful noMivailaule in more fine flavors for serv Oing often, in cones, in a dish, in cantaloupe ("wives, over fresh peach, iWry. apricot Oh no oiucr iruu pies ann coo biers. Cottage-chee!) and dairy sour crcitff are flavor ful, nutritious additions to , . 11 - many tresh fruits and vege tables. Fifsr-broilcrs, many etils of becrrmany cuts of lamb and of pork are being offer ed at special prices through out local markets. Frank furter.s jg-mhurgers, cold cuts and ctSncd meats enjoy tre mendous summer menu popu larily, are budget priced. Pork li unusually plentiful for this VINCENT Editor flmc of year; VQf. means more barbecued ribs, more ham in menus, in sandwiches. FrQii. Meloni, Berriei. July finds season peaks in apri cots, blueberries, huckleber ries, cararvloupes, sweet cher ries, horreyballs, lemons, limes, neQrines, peaches, raspberries, watermelons. In creasing in supply right rfVng are avocacicj; DiacKDenies, era pes, (honey dew mel and prunes. vJ (lights beets, celery corn, cucumbeCj) 1 eTt u Ve, parsley .peas, peppers, rad ishes. A&a 1 1 i o n s. summer .(Quash, Swiss chard, tomatoes. Asparagus nas gone in most marlpjs. Plenty of carrots, snap beaTS) eggplant, potatoes Fish and shellfish displays feature abundant fillets of sole, halibut, scallops, sea bass, rockfish fillets and shrimp. Eggs continue (p)be one of (JJ'Ur very best buys for better DreaKiasis, tpj) luncn and sup per omelets and cheese fon dues, for good old hard-cooked eggs in vegetable, fish and shellfish salads and for stuff- (Qg in vast variety of ways. vacaiioiiuis are icuiiituuu to have a good neighbor check refrigerator and home freezers every day or so; leave limc and phone numlB)' of icpclll lllctll 11JI cniii guutiun. As UPI lap .. .. D New Yorjt flf PI - Appoint- financial editor of United Press lnternatiomJ. rcolac- g Elmer C. Walzer, has been announced by UPI Presfrfenl Frank . H. Bartholomew. Walzer becomes a news dc- fnartmcnl consultant. He serv- us iiiirtiiimi iruiiwi ii jnio. Dorothea M. Brooks was appointed assistant financial editor, the post formerly held by Bechtold. She had been in the department since 1945, and for several years has served as copy editor of the financial service. Joined in 1945 Bechtold came lo UP (now UPI) (n-HHS. in law lie was appointed Walzer's assistant. He is governor of the New York Financial Writers' asso ciation. Educated in New York City's public schools and Columbia university, Bechtold majored in economics with a view lo becominga business and financial newsAvritirr) He writes UPI's daily stock mar ket review. Walzer began his news paper career at the Roehi-ster """r1""" Vr as cuiickc icijuriy, liii.wviiii editor, and nigln editor. He came to New York to leach history and English al Wag- nci college 111 diiimi y, 1 1 in.i.i r: . mitt, c .. : W r im tt nil uti v iv. O Under Walzer's management united rrcss uccanie uic iirsi wire service to tabulate stock (Exchange stocks lynd dissem inate incn 10 newspapers, me rSvio change transmission of financial news from Morse cir cuits to printer circuits, and the first to send market (u;io- tations over narrow tape tele types. The financiiil dcparl- ment now employs 35 statis ticians anQreporteis. q lr. IR8 Spcsstei Dr. Edwin R. Durno. Re- publhQ- candidate for Con gress from the Fourth district, called ((ogressni an Charles O. PoGlr a "self styled one man state department," in a talk Sunday at the Linn Coun ty Republican pifvic in Bro-0illQ Dr. Durno. who also report ed highlights of the Republi can Lunveniiuii 111 niciKup.t :(bi)! that "we must climinnu(X(' 110111 me ponticaisccne an In-cumber.(3- ho i .Vjneddlins in internatioual(a)fairs. a world traveler without portfolio." The Rcput(fl?)in candidate eliarge. that Toi ler lias at temptod10 conciliate the Siv Ocl Unionpjvithout 'kJ rrnmi' itrtpu Eiir-tinn f.lln nowledce or sanction, called Fidi(QC"astii a "kindly man. who was doing Cuba great service," and advocates the initiation ot- trade between the Tiyiited QiAitcs and Red ChirW. "At home." Dr. Durno con tinued, "Porter is a prolific spender without regard to our taxes. He would buy your votes wittvpromises and your tax dollaVi. Locally through lack of interest or v.ffcctive- I ness. he has promised much land accomplished lc," V PLANE CRASH RECALLEDFifteen years fog Qd smoke obscure upper stories or the ago last week a two-engine Army bomber building after plane smacked into it. At crashed into the 79th floor of the Empire right, firemen -cick their ()iy over still State Building in New York City, killing 14 smoking, char.(ejt bits of wreckageat the nersons and injuring many others. At left, scene of the crash. (UPI Telephoto) B q mbiM taf N)ep Y Kditor'i Note: fifteen veatsjaco .brrOAhi'd 'niWrl of tlip Kmpire Sla. hiiMliiR lit New Yorklly, Kiyijri; l-liersons and ikliirlhij many uthers. United lresV.vlntcrtfatlfiiial has searrlieil out sume of the survivors of that crash, including four women who were trapped lor one Hour, ex pectlne. tolie, in an ofllce of Catholic Hkr) Keller services. Here Is their rcTTillectlon or that d and what it has done to their liv By ARRAJRA uSo'StQu NevLVork - IUPII - "It was no hazier than It is today, said Catherine R. O'Connor al the window of her 65 1 h floor off ii(e) in the Empire Stale building. "We could semuown 10 me street. . ... ... At Bedford, Mass., the wife of its pilot hugged her infant son and tried to shake away "a preiinoliition of disaster." At 9:W a.m., on Saturday, July 28, 1945, the twnengine B-25 Mitchell bomber crashed o the buil(flvig. I stiff)have a vivid mcfrV ory of the actual experience Miss O'Connor said. The of fices of Catholic Relief serv ices, then Catholic War Relief services, are today 14 floors bclovvjbut in exactly the same part of the building as they were onthal day. Miss O'Con nor, llnQ a secretary, is now the organization's office man ager. "It exploded within the building," she said. "There were live or six seconds - 1 was loitering on my feet try- mg w keep my balance -and three-quarters of Ihe office was instanleously consumed in (IJis sheet of flame, "One man was standing In side the (lame. 1 could see .tim It was Joe Fountain. His whole body was on fire. I kept call fin; to him, 'Come on joe; come on joer ne waiKeo oul of it." That was the scene thai re curred in Ihe nig&lnarcs Mks O'Connor suffered - as riul most of the women liap- ld wilh her in the of fie for months. "1 don'l think anything will ever bother me again -lo look al," she saidQ'cflcc tively. On 34th si., 17 - veur - old nald Molony was sighlftjlike." seeing on a 4H-nour pass H orn Vtie U.S. Coast Guard medical Iraining station. "BoiuTjwery young and in experienced," he recalls, now, in Los Angeles, "I heatkd)for the li oul There was a drug store (T) I he grouncOtloor of Ihe bui1d(nk. Some how 1 talked llicm Into giving me song) morphine, syringes andCpwas holding onto it and sa other first aid supplies. O 'w'cint Ihe red cross on my unifiWn, one of the fire- Uiicn grabbed me by the a(Qii, Qnd we headed (or the base menl.' l'hej firsl Od to Mrs. Belly LQ$ cif. vuliiii: iiuii)iiv i:iti'i Oliver, 20, an elevator ope ator whose car had fallen when its cables were snapped by the hurtling airplane en gines. Then he headed up stairs with the firemen. Blown Into Corridor On the 80lh floor, elevator operator Mary ScafrfiQ a cheerful and. it was to devel op, a courageous l virtual ly hdvstniclible voung wom an lrin Ireland, was blown against (he sidO'f her car and then out into tfT flaming corridor, hnc stumiiled to a nea.tbjj t(tf y-e whose occupant, witli a small hammer, (tfyike through a wr(tT).p'n)ey could escape. O One of hf bomber's engines smashed throng"' the far wall of the b u I I d 1 n (T)and (ell hfoi hgh a sky-light into a loiif iltl'nuiie across Wo street "A brick (ell IJitough thVfand carried me." skvlicht in mv Ititrhcn and knocked the cup uj of my hand," recalled Mrs. Oswald C. llering, who still occupies the adJTkinins penthoMsc. ((flitr Wngs also broke tlrrtiugh thlass ceiling. One was a ringshe took later to the Empire Stale building morgue. "I thought the JPS were bombing us at last."xHe said. An uninjui3)but liysterical elevator operator Qjas run ning into Fifth Ave. at that moment screaming the same bomb warning. InQWashington. the U.S. Senate was meeting and that day ratified the charter of Ihe Unilcd Nations.. B-29 bombers roared over Japanese cities , with their neafly last loads of higlOexplosiW bombs; Hire shima VI I'ai to be Jiext week Joe r ounlaini-J.Wiss O Con- nor and onr-just tiye ethcr women - mWt of the others in Their 20s and 30s-fled lo Q executive office - "The only one that remained in tact." STSw 10 WofEVrs Die They had seen 10 fellow workers die in an instant wilh we three men aboard the bomber. For one hour, in blinding, choking smoke and hellish heat they prayed, and joked, and ihouent and waited to die. O Tyy hung out the windows for air, to be met by more sfke billowingQ r o m the floor below. Their IctS) were scorched through shoes, thpljr Aims and faces blistorpd by ...;tu mnir .7.;.i... LUIIIIILI Willi IIIU, WlllllUtV frames. "VV4? all share a common faith, and acceptance of the will of God is a big thing," recalled Therese Marie F'or licr.Oyoungcst of the group, now Mrs. George Willig. Fountain was 1 burned be yond medical help, but be was to live for 9G hours. Ihe wom en recall that he once asked quietly. "Would you try not lo touch me, please." "He was an amazing man, Miss O'Connor said. "He had a great effect on our morale. It was really edi fying. "When wi( ' got in the of fice, 1 remember Joe said: 'Well, this is Y'hal your par ents and your schools and your church have trained you for all of your lives. I stiggesl we say an act of contrition (the Roman Catholic prayer of confession). Rescue Thoughts Absent "Ijoing rescued didn't occur to me," Ellen Lowe remem bered. "But I didn't think how I would die. I just thought 'Tomorrow, I'll be dead.' I thought, 'I had sui.'h a nice date for Sunday, and now 1' be in pprgalory instead.' I luum'u ill uiuvpi mkii un un roof of Ciimbel's and hinder ed what purgatory would be 'Thank Tleavens for a sens of humor," Miss O'Connor said "Charlotte was siting! oul a iWlow, as if she were washing the outside, with her (eet off the floor-a 79th floor window! There was a liltlc half-inch (piilcnt leather bell on her cotton dress, 11111O I ing. 'Be careful, Charlotte "That wasQio silly, v(e) all got laughing." They were puzzIcUqIo see another (ire Qozing in I lie penthouse below. They did not know until ,'y were re leased, and could ask. wluil hi i;scd Ihe earthquake like jolt and explosion. Floors below they saw an other iipire State tenant, at his o((ice winci talking on the telephone. They couldn't make him look up. Finally they hcarffia sound of lifpyking glass. Across a jog ill the building, fl.' start led (ace of a plufldu'ranher recognizcdOorQhe first .e iiuii nine w t 1 1 living ic-i- sons in the holocaust. The (ire lii(u$enant who volunleer irJ lo try firi reach them "was Wocked tiV(ind people alive," Miss O'Cimnur said. Miss Lowe pul iiWner arms Iriccrl I, in-, Pic3P inArm o Molony, Mty Connoir members, came to help Vbt'r downstairs. fs "He was IhiOutesMhing. -sue picKed me up in nis arms Her brefnyr looked at the ( clock as ftr picked (iij) her! phone call; it was exactly 11 I a.m. Miss O'Connor, a tall. n. ! while haired woman nowQ Hearing 50, sits w itlQu) a j tremor in a window corre sponding to one shattered at impact byShe plane. it her health is permanently impair ed by the effects of severe smoke poisoning and shock. QNone of the women was unscathed. A I delayed shock re actions, some many months later, some disabling. "It took me years lo get used lo hearing planes." Mis. Willig said. Today she lives under the busy traffic raltcrn.1 fc imMtea I into Idlewild ariport andiosves taHuyg the children - four of her own, a foster child, and ano(ffef)bal(fy;o)i the AVay - to the airporlfjo see thjets. Theresa Ann SpypcfTji now Mrs. Rudolph Fjyerdino and the mother of tSpec, said it is only in the last two of three years that hermind has been able or willi. to recognize the sound of a plane-"I would always ask, 'Wl((a)'s that noise?' I didn't register." Charlotte Deegan. like Miss O'Connor, still worl(s)for trfi) rcnei agency, ivnss Lowe ion a few years a for another job, Anna M. Ueagan, oldest 0 O O O if HOW CARS DIFFER IN Cft!, , ' ? l ' PtSSi WVl h " - E' BA&C EXCELLENCE H" ' T fc . V V' ' -J- ' o OO o CO CJ On ffic left you sec an(ri)'ihappy victim of "stoop Qvcr st) lii." The low roof and narrow(fl)ior of this I960 cur make both entry and cx back buckling manc::i's. It's a typical fajl inQic new Compaq anil some big I' cars, too. Hut on the right, the same man alights with q comfort ilig'y because this is the I960 Rambler 6 the car that's compact in exterior q dimensions onlv. Rambler's high, wide docQ lied of eliminate grunting contortions. u cars . . O It's just one iiuli0ionol"thcwa;(niblcrsarc Mating designed to give the most usefulness 10 the iy-.Ohig, jn some other Samples Scats thai adjust to 5 different '.a.ing posi QD'iis. including Traxcl Beds . . . sectional sofa front scats' that glide bQ and forth individu ally . . . Ailijrtjiblc HcadrcstP' RALOggRSOST LOYAL oS&l Useful, practical features like those described 1 above, plus Rambler's o - p Rambler-THE new of the group, left very soon after the incident. Molony was deco.ed the city of New York and the Navy i&r his "young a in experienced" valor on that day. If)iroved his heroism again as a hospital corpsman with the First Marine division in Korea, wlvply; he was ser iously woundVa and eight times decorated. Formerly a resident of De troit, he has recently recover 3)frorn jrr illnessand, (S)ad 32, is lQl&Wfor in! Ai;les. Mrs Olivpr whn fpll with her elevator, spent :?eks in Bellevue h(5ii witiGff broken back and legs and Qher injuri She and her husband. fS) rvavy tor pedoman in 195 We now runniiiga grocery store with his paTe)its in Fort (Smith, Ark., have a 13-year-old daughter (a)id two sons, 12 and 7Minri(ap 'ifnltitltfalnrl?l fine." w 0"1 Miss Sa)nl was in an ox:fMn rem for (wet ks (aid was rgiven 1t(e)el(a)ice to sur- vive They said (31 never walk again; they said mey migni hartr, to ampufa)e my UightQtr)m the floW of tne Sacra- armT but I said, no, sne S U... T .i-a- Mn ' (aM recently. fir six years s! was in and out of hospitals f plas tic surgery, skin grafts, treat ment of smoke poi:(oting and its after effects. Ncaring 40 tiiy, her hab is still red, her brown eye still twinkle.nd she (5)(is easily. "They said it was my de (gvmination," she said. "You'd never know today that (ahy- Ihing wa wrong (hiY: It's the cogipad? car for people who are not) o For are Airliner Reclining , to Rambler ing no basic excellence, make insioe-out o Radar Helps Eire Fighters in Assault on Sacramento- lUPU -A heavy ilJd formation, packing hun(.ive study through the 1960 dreds of lii(ming bolts'ire season will enable the sneaks into the State and un-T Weather Bureau to obtain bridles its fury over the foil ests in the hours before dawWl At d a y 1 i g hl4 state fire fighters awaken to find then selves facing an outbreak 0 fires at is impossible to con trol&Md some of them bt fortri into fullfledgOUsas ters. "If we could 'Th'y see at night..they moan. iThen we woulriVt have-ieeivWirprised and mahe W cO,ujd have mastered r forces for Q dawn asasult and won the bat tle before) the enemy t (3) slra:gjenoia With the helD of il huie) ar installed by the U.S. WMher BurA at Sacra- memo, utv loresi fieiuisucr) now have their ey(e at ni)it -and already the results (aye b(nniifj, to show. u nThe racial-. ,j-isirTgM 00 feet mento Valley, can reach out with its invisible rays for a radius of 250 miles Ghd de tect thounderheads. Although it went into op eron only last February, the state Forestry Division is finding it an invaluable aid in studies of the buildup of lightning stormfin Northern California. A monthly report from the Fore.(tty Division to Gc$v Ed mund G. Brown has this to say: Rambler owners the most loyal car owners. This is proved by many surveys done by m;(zincs and otherQuch independent organizations. "fSt most recent survey, of owners of 6-cylindcr "low priced" and ccpact cars, shows again that niorc&aniblcr owners arbetlerlcased with their cars than ow ners of the other malQs. example, RamblcPowncrs are(6fcst all wilh the interior dimensions . rate their cars tops in healing and rcn- efficiency . . . in trouble-free opcratioQ . . performance and lops in over-all useJiS) the user. 'ire Ramb(er)ow iters c(fi best in value for the money. More Rambler Q-ersQ il they tvouhlbuv .e)same make again. RASLEOIDEASLEAO TfJE INDUSTRY One example is Sinalc-Unirj coostruction a iia. .J(nlhcr is .cp-DipT ruQuoo) O I Vincr d.S(yar Ql'ers this (Jyinpletc, protection against rust and corrosion o standard Lightnin , "liSii. hoped that a coopera- field information which will provide better indentification of the various stages of light ning storms which appear on tWir radar scope. Q "This ormatiorQ should provide all of the cooperating agencies witit, new informa tionJtnout tlVy lUiiracteristics of lightning storms, where thev breed, where they move to, and F'bly, when we carQ expect cioua-Lu-ijyjuir ub'h ning and in what districts." But the ray eyes of raig)' aren't the ottTV ones being used in the constant battle .1 ;inst i(a)ure's 'ages 1 lure. TKg) eyes of man are also beirfg) U1, joinuy wun imw , ,l1 i'j1-01 -1 . CjiTrnfyaS) U:(ed) Clinton Phils, fire con trol reseaxch coordinator for the Divisoli of Forestry, d his agtkncy was testing pet theories about thundgptorms by studying them. One theory, f instance, is that a large number of North ern California's storms are born in the Lake Tahoe area. Others come to life over the Nevada desert and still othcri breed in the Pacific Ocean. The division has set up three time-lapse cameras in the northern part of thQtate: al (i)abbe(t) Lookout in the Tahoe area, on, Mount In- i(als in Plurpas County and Rambler brought out the original cQmpact carin 1950. Although practically every canaker has come out with an imitation, Rambler sales have continued to soar up 22 over last year. vcryo knows that as volume goes up, sales costs come down. So, Rambler dealers can pas the savincs on to vou. Your sQr ,ir satis- Ou'OTld like to help you of their l-Httl Mail coupon for valuabVi0 28-page book coming compact and IoGriccd cars. O ttrri by American Motors rate their This Valuable 28-Page Sidy Can Save You Money r . . -v nil MIL. - MCOUPON 1 c I AMERICAN MOTORS I SALES CORPORATION o I Autrive Omsion I P.0, Detroit 32, Michlpii P'eue mtil liet booh to mt. j ClIY. STAtLffeL. of basic excellence at Fredori) Lookout in Las- sen Counl.)near tagle Lake. The men slatianed (S)lh these cameras are instructed to photogr any buildiioj clouds they see. Of coSe, (Cnvy can't ser'a). night and tnat's who radar is espe cially valuab Eventually, asa result of these observatioiW; it is hoped that firelighters will be warn, ed far cno(fffii in advanQ- to move in befolje the fircV start-and be in position to battle them qtckly when they do start. ii((a5)f5a) Phillips said the state, tern l(g)ari!y t least, had aban. doned pram in Lassen County in which scientists tried Q) control lightning storms by cloud seeding. "We (n)iven't proven any thing &t way or Uie !ot)ier," he said. "We-vere blamed wii they hadMio much rain and we were blamed when they djflyrt have enough." 03ut Phillips held out a hope that when time-lapse and radar studies of the storms advance far1r il may 09 possible lo return to storm control through cloud seeding and prevent large-scale lightning-caused fires like the so called "haystack" fire in Sis kiyou county which burned 65,000 acres in 1955.- ' o o o O save. See hinQodav. ' o O 'Ofifyal at extra col O IlllStl buying 1 com$t car o Q o