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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 2

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Orlando, Florida
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Saturday, April 16, 1966 3y nil Antipoverty Problem Said Explosive ten by BILLY GRAHAM flCEcf ui (r 1 vv Crusade Group Says Goal Still To Assist Poor 5 Channel 9 Applicants Join In Permit Bid SSs Im PL. Vlsm LI Li Oi Li Liu 'V xr'T I -j -Vf iiiiiw ARE THE TEN Commandments obsolete? R. L. K. ONE MIGHT AS well ask: Is the alphabet obsolete? Is the multiplication table obsolete? Is the calendar obsolete? There are some things that never change.

True, when they Interfere with our pleasure, we try to change them, but by so doing, only we will be changed! The Ten Commandments are not only as valid as they were when they were written, but they are more so. Jesus, our Lord, expanded them. The commandments say: Thou shalt not commit immorality. Jesus said, "When you look on a person of the opposite sex lustfully, you commit adultery." THE COMMANDMENTS say: Thou shalt not kill. Jesus said: "If you hate your brother, you have committed murder in your heart." The law says, "Love your neighbor and hate your enemy." Jesus expanded the law by saying, "Love your enemy." He made them tougher than they were to begin with.

BUT, IN A way He made them easier to observe, for He gives us the capacity to obey them. He puts a new law within our hearts when He transforms us by His grace, and we find that when the Lawgiver dwells within us, the laws He gives are easily observed. Tc the non-Christian the commandments are a hard duty. To the Christian, they are a high privilege. VIET NAM POLICY OPPONENT BURNS $300 CHECK And then his troubles really started Tax Protest provcs Cslly MADISON, Wis.

ItV-A 25-year-old Madison man burned his $500 chec and tore up an income tax form in front of the Internal Revenue Service office Friday. He said he was demonstrating his opposition to military spending and the war in Viet Nam. But the demonstration quickly backfired against Kenneth Knudson. THE SHREDDED tax form had scarcely touched the sidewalk when a police officer ordered Knudson to pick it up under threat of a $25 fine for littering. Knudson complied but his troubles weren't over yet.

Another officer served him with a warrant for failing to pay overtime parking tickets amounting to $15. Knudson borrowed the money from several other demonstrators marching with signs that read "No Money for Murder." Knudson said the $500 check represented the amount he owes in federal income taxes. TAX COLLECTOR Sheldon S. Cohen commented: "The government has never lost a case in which a taxpayer refused to pay on the grounds he disapproved of how the money is spent." mmmHkmi UPI Telepholo to The Sentinel tost night I'llllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII'l Radioactivity ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. IT) Two research scientists said Friday they are working on a sort of vaccine which might immunize entire populations against the lethal radioactivity of a nuclear war.

Dr. Wiilard J. Visek and Dr. Hung Chen Dang of the Now York State College of Agriculture said the substance was obtained from a weedlike Oriental plant known as the jackbean. IN EXPERIMENTS with mice extending over several years, they reported, only 30 per cent of immunized animals failed to survive a normally fatal dose of radioactivity.

Meanwhile about 80 per cent of a control group of untreated mice were killed by the radiation. In their report of the 50th convention of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology, the scientists said "the possibilities In both times of war and peace are tremendous." The immunizing substance derived from the jackbean is an enzyme called urease, which is produced naturally in men and animals by bacteria. Natural urease interacts with urea in the intestinal tract to produce ammonia. chemical changes in explosives. To make it more realistic, they rigged the display so that miniature explosions could be touched off.

After pinning on the blue ribbon, one of the judges triggered a tiny blast that ignited the entire display, shattering glass containers and blasting a hole in the table. lia1': 1 "1 1 0 Lony And Short Oscar, giraffe at Philadelphia Zoological Garden, puts on long stretch, and Catherine Hass, 5, of Deptford, N. does big reach to share bag of popcorn. (AP Wirepho-to to The Sentinel last night) Rioters Sack Red Embassy JAKARTA, Indonesia (Reuters) About 2,000 screaming Indonesian Chinese sacked the Communist Chinese embassy here Friday smashing doors and windows and burning piles of documents in the latest outburst of anti-Peking feelings. They smashed three cars, ripped the Chinese crest off the chancery, and tore down the Chinese flag and replaced it with the Indonesian flag.

THE TWO-HOUR demonstration followed a rally at which the Chinese pledged loyalty to Indonesia, charged Peking with Interfering in Indonesian affairs, and called for a break in diplomatic relations. An army officer said embassy staff members fired on the demonstrators with machine guns, wounding three. Two others were hurt by tiles flung from roofs. Army troops fired shots to halt the Chinese after they arrived at the embassy but were unsuccessful. THE DEMONSTRATORS, Chinese and Indonesians who arrived to support them, finally left with a truckload of confiscated food which they said they would ship to victims of recent floods in Java.

When the smoke cleared, the Chinese diplomats rehoisted their flag, surveyed the damage and watched workmen repair the chancery gates. Uqeili Talked As Il'aCJ Head rtn ark Star Dispatch To Tht Smtintl BEIRUT, Lebanon Maj. Gen. Abdel Aziz Uqeili, defense minister, is being mentioned in Baghdad as the successor of President Abdel Salam Arif, who was killed in a helicopter crash Wednesday night near Basra. Arif's brother, Maj.

Gen. Abdel Rahman Arif, the acting chief of staff, who has also been named as a possible successor, returned from Moscow Friday night aboard a special Soviet plane that brought a Soviet delegation to attend the president's state funeral Saturday. General Arif went to Moscow last Monday at the head of a military delegation for talks on the further supply of Soviet Arms to Iraq. Doctors' Aid Sought In Controling Drugs New York Times News Servlct NEW YORK The new head of the United States Food and Drug Administration Friday urged the nation's physicians to rally behind his agency in its Herculean task of screening 4,000 drugs now in general use. Dr.

James L. Goddard, in another of his "we mean business" speeches, asked help in eliminating various abuses in the testing of drugs on human beings. Goldman Ends Vigil SURFSIDE (UPI) Aaron Goldman gave up a fruitless vigil by the telephone Friday to go to his office for the first time since his 18-year-old son was kidnaped March 28. I Vy "A ftv xC I Cfjiujo Tribune DUpatch to Tin Srntmel WASHINGTON Officials of the Citizens' Crusade Against Poverty, still shaken over Thursday's demonstration against antipoverty war director Sargent Shriver, said Friday their goals remain the same to help the poo help themselves. Richard W.

Boone, executive director of the private group that was formed with a $1 million grant from the AFL-CIO United Auto Workers Union, said he regretted the discourtesy shown Shriver, but added, "it did underline the explosiveness and the seriousness of the problem." "WE ARE MORE convinced than ever that there has to be a vigorous citizens' program implemented to help fight the war on poverty," Boone said. Shriver was booed and hooted when he addressed the second annual meeting of the crusade. A group of self-proclaimed spokesmen for the poor charged the stage at one time during this speech, but stopped short of the podium. When Shriver left he was surrounded by angry demonstrators demanding to know why more money from the poverty program was not reaching poor families. BOONE REJECTED Shrivers theory that "professional demonstrators" could be blamed for the outbreak, which caused the two-day conference to be ended about two hours ahead of schedule.

"It was much more than a professional demonstration," Boone said. "It was too big and too spontaneous for that. It was just generally an outpouring of frustration felt by the poor about the slowness of Implementing poverty programs." A top Shriver aide said there was "no question" in his mind but that a "small hard core of demonstrators planned the demonstration In advance." He added: "THE PROTEST was as much against the crusade as against Shriver and the war on poverty," he said. "They just used Shriver as an excuse to demonstrate. "If these extremists ever gained control of the poverty program, they would substitute rioting and demonstrations for responsible leadership." He said there was no doubt that Chester Robinson and Sioux Vargas, two Chicagoans who spoke to the group Thursday, had helped inflame the crowd.

Minuteman Launched VANDENBERG AFB, Calif. (UPI) A Minuteman 1 intercontinental ballistic missile was launched from this base Friday on an apparently successful flight 5,000 miles across the Pacific Ocean. State Visitors Increase TALLAHASSEE (UPI) Florida parks recorded a 17 per cent increase in visitors during the past nine months, director Bill Miller reported Friday. TIDES MHti Lew tm. p.m.

la, DAYTON tEACH Saturder a 51 i il )0 SI Sunday 5 3 3 5 57 11:34 Monday 4 IS 4 3 iiwsday 4 5' 7. IS 34 MEW SMYRNA IIACH ai-ib-s COOL 11:14 11 58 13: 10 1344 SIT0 Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 4 54 77 11-03 5 38 4 02 11:3 4 20 4:44 12:03 7:02 7:20 12 3 PORT CANAVERAL 4:37 3 01 10 It 5 37 5:55 4 31 4.55 12:25 COCOA BEACH 5:11 5 42 11:11 5 53 4:17 11:54 12 IS 12 51 11 07 11 4 1207 12 37 11:3 17:30 1.04 4 35 it 12 :11 7 .17 7 35 1 2.54 MELBOURNE BEACH Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 447 sil use 7 5 47 11.4) 4:05 4:2 4:41 7.05 13 SEBASTIAN INLET 5:16 5:47 112J 5 54 4 22 4 40 7:04 12:23 7 7 40 12:5 VEKO SEACN 5 14 S38 11:21 5 54 414 4 32 4:5 12 7 7 7 32 12 51 11:17 11.5 12:17 12.47 11:41 12 35 1:11 11:48 12 04 12:40 1:10 11:30 12 39 I 00 5:3 4H 4 51 7.21 Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday I PORT PIERCI INLET Saturday 5 04 5:28 5 44 4 04 11:11 11 $4 12:12 12:44 15 4 01 4 27 4 57 Sunday Monday Tuesday Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 4:21 44 4 58 7 77 BAYMRT 11:37 11 55 12 01 12:13 12 37 12:31 near 10. to 15 o.n. HOMOSASSA RIVER MOUTH Airport) Trace I Ii 1 65 15 20 .1 Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 11- 33 12 tj 12:27 12 45 5 40 4 76 4 52 2.22 4 04 4 44 7:14 7:44 11:15 12.41 YANKEETOWI4 Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday 11:48 12 34 12 30 12:42 106 1:00 CEDAR KEY 11:44 12 20 12 12:38 4 20 7 04 7 32 8.02 4 44 7 24 7:54 8 24 1st. 4 44 6 31 10.54 4.18 858 11.41 14 57 15.1 15 7 1547 145! 4 3 Yr 48 '66 '60 '58 5 '47 'Ml i3 '45 '45 60 '63 Saturday Sunday Monday 5:27 4 13 4 3 5 51 31 7 03 7 3i I uesoav 102 12.

S6 7 0 (All tides subiecf mini conditions) Readina at 5 m. yesterday: Barometer 24,98 Ins. I Humidity 44 pet. I Vrind 17 mji.h.; Precipitation Tract. By ROULHAC HAMILTON Sentinel Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Five competi-tors for permanent authority to telecast on Orlando's Channel 9 have joined forces to ask Federal Communications Commission permission for interim authority to operate on the channel until FCC awards it on a permanent basis.

While three of the eight applicants for permanent authority to use Channel 9 were not included in the list of stockholders of Consolidated Nine, that group left the door open to any or all of them to acquire stock in the new corporation. The five applicants for the permanent FCC franchise for the long-litigated channel which joined to form Consolidated Nine were Central Nine Florida Heartland Television, Orange Nine, Television 9, and Howard A. Weiss, an individual. EACH OF the five holds 20 per cent of the Consolidated Nine stock presently outstanding. Not among the stockholders, but eligible to acquire an interest in Consolidated Nine under its by-laws, are Comint Florida 9 Broadcasting Co.

and Mid-Florida Television Corp. The latter has been operating on Channel 9 under temporary authority for more than a decade during litigation over the channel. Consolidated Nine's application to build a new station to telecast over the channel during what is expected to be another protracted fight to win it permanently was tendered to FCC Friday for filing. FCC will accept it for filing next week if, after reviewing the document, it determines that it complies with the commission's technical and legal requirements for applications. THE APPLICATION lists J.

Thomas Gurney of Orlando as president of Consolidated Nine. These other officers also were listed: Benjamin A- Smathers of Maitland and John Robertson of Orlando, vice presidents; William O. Murrell Jr. of Orlando, secretary, and Julian K. Dominick of Orlando, treasurer.

Listed as directors were James Thomas Gurney Jr. of Winter Park, Benjamin F. Smathers of Maitland, Howard A. Weiss of Chicago and Daniel W. Hans, Frederic E.

Dorkin and John W. Gannon, all of Washington. THE CORPORATION said it plans to build a new station costing approximately $1.4 million. It estimated its first-year operating cost at $1.3 million and its first-year revenues at $1.5 million. It proposes to make its facilities available for purchase by the winner of permanent authority to use the channel, and thereafter to dissolve.

The application stated that present plans call for a station staff of 75 persons. None have been selected, but if Consolidated Nine should win interim operating authority on the channel, preference will be given in employment to "qualified persons" now on Mid-Florida's WFTV staff, the application stated. Russians Planning Largest Sky Giant LONDON The Soviet Union plans to build the world's largest sky giant, a double-decker civilian plane carrying 724 persons that dwarfs anything on U.S. drawing boards. This was reported Friday by the periodical Flying Review International, which said the plane will be built at Kiev from the designs of Oleg Antonov, the Soviet aircraft designer.

Georgia Quadruplets In Critical Condition ATLANTA, Ga. IT Quadruplets born to a 30-year-old mother of 10 other children were reported in critical condition af a hospital Friday. A physician said the mother, Christine Robbins, 30, had not seen a doctor during this pregnancy. Her other children range from 11 months to 13 years, and include a set of twins. Los Angeles Sizzles In99-I)egree Weather LOS ANGELES Whew! It hit 99 in downtown Los Angeles Friday, the hottest ever for income tax day.

Winds blowing hot off the desert almost broke the all-time April record. It was 100 degrees on April 23, 1910- liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiii Willi! i it 7 Cfieiiticnl Display Explodes At Science Fair Sny 10 Still Sendinr Dala MOSCOW (Reuters) Russia's or-biting moon satellite Luna 10 is still sending important scientific data, the Soviet news agency, Tass, reported Friday. Luna 10, which went into orbit 12 days ago, completed its 9fth spin round the earth's desolate neighbor Friduy night, Tass said. Scientists have had 53 communications sessions with the 540-pound satellite, during which they measure its trajectory and received data on near-lunar space. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii CALENDAR AND CONCERT All City Band Concert: Slert lunlor and senior Schw" Theater rfv.LsrVjo0;10 REVUI "Hloh Payer" winter par Memorial tosnltal Auxiliary, winter Park Hign School Audilorium, 14 p.m.

SPECIAL IVENTS Rnihni Plesta. Rollins College Campus, Winter Park. tm-S m. "Florid, Heritage" Flower Show, Maitland Garden CluO, Greater Maitland Civic Center, 38 p.m. CARDS Orlando Bridge Club, Sunshine Park, 1.30 p.m.

DANCES Orlo Vliti Fire House Squares, Orlo Vista Fire) Station, 111 p.m EXHIEITIONS loch Haven Art Center, James Anderion Cralti, 1004 t. Rollins, 2 5. Maitland Research Centers Arf and Cralti, Farkwood Avenue, 25. American Federal Sav A Rama Roomi Artisti league of Oi anwe County Spring Snow, 453 S. Orange Avenue, am.

0:30 m. Seal Maitbie ShfK Museum: "Sheila ot all Types," Rollins College Campus, 1-5. Albm Polasek Home 1 Gardens- Paintings and Sculpture, 444 Osceola Winter Park, 10-noon, 2-4 JO. Central Florida Museum Tick Island, 110 E. Rollins, 10 5.

Cemer Street Gallery: Martha Mood tapestries. Park Avenue, Winter Park, f-J Ganery Jupiter, sot Lake Howell Road, Winter Park, all day. Who Canary: works ot Doris Leeper, JO E. Canton Ave Winter Park. MEETINGS O'lando Poetry Society, Broadway Methodist Church, 2 m.

Fiorina Slate Association ot Lite Underwriters Langtord Hotel, tarn. Poiiins coiieur Fiesta Dance- lanoford, m. Orthopedic Seminar, Anopbiit Hotel, 3-10 m. vvariow Short Course, Anwebill, a.m :30 m. Salvation Army, Robert Mever Motor Inn, am.

Florida Laboratory Guild, Robert Mever, a m. Fkinda Automobiit Wholesalers Association. Robert Mever, noon. Fionaa Landscape Architects Meyer, all day. Fionda State xctsange Ctufts.

Robert Meyer, tarn. Florida Institute ot Launoerers and Dry Cleaners, Robert Mever, a.m. German Amerkan Society, Cherry Plan Hotel, I Florida Baptist Foundation Promotion Committee, Cherry Plara, II am. Florida Education Association, Cherry Plaza. 10 a m.

Kent Peal tstale School, Cherry Plaia, 1-10 m. Bert Roogers School ot Real Estate Law, Cherry Plaia, 9 30 p.m. Scott Kelly Committee, Cherry Piara, p.m. nal nth Man oi tne Year Banquet, Cherry Plata, 7 TONIGHT'S MOVIES BFACHAM The Sound of Music, I. I COLONY Nobody Waved Goodovt, 10.

SO, 7:40, 50 PARKWOOO CINEMA Harper, 1, 3. 10, IS. 7:35, SO PARK EAST Bambl, 11:10, 1 05, 3 05, 5. 7, Prowlers ot the tverglades, 12.20. 1.1, 1.15, 15, 15 PARK WEST Tlst Troublt With Angels, 1:15, 35, 5 5S, t.

10 PLAZA TrtATF-See Plara Theater Ad SEMINOLE CINEMA The Oscar, 2.30, 7:25, ao. DRIVE-IN THEATERS SOUTH TRAIL Ghtrfrah, tt Th'eo Headed Monster, 7:15. Di Monster Die, Planet ot tt-t Vamwres, 10.30. COLONIAL Judith, 7:15. twlrei Tlcklo Me.

IS. ORANGE AVE Billy the kid vs. Oracula, 7 15, 10 I Si Jess James Meets Frankenstein Daughter, I ao. ORLANDO Spv Wtio Came In From the Cold, 7:15. 11 I Si Seven Women, 40.

PINE 7 W. 1104! TicktO Me, 13. PRAIRIE LAKE The Spy Who Came in From th Cold, 7:15, 10:55: Seven Women, 10. Ri-MAR Ghiclrah, The Three Headed Monster, 7:15: Die Monster Die, tj Planet ot Vampires. 10: JO.

WINTER PARK Billy the kid vs. Oracuia, 7:15. 10 iO; Jesse James Meets Frankenstein Dauohter, 51. WINTFR GARDFN- STARLITE The Ugly Dachshund; Winme the Pooh; Ft. Courageous.

1966 APRIL 1965 Sun. Mon. Tue. Wed. Thuf.

Fri. Sal. 16 17 13 19 20 21 22 23 DAYUCHI 25 26 27 23 29 30 Fair Weather Expected i mthu luittn to VTP" MatMel) I I I ii ie I r. I Ht 2T0SOt nMitm 1-1 FAIR. I Vrt" VI -T 'mAC 1 1 1 etU! TM I La '-i T.Ms) I MfCT TtMPf MTVWJ VX-.

WAatM C10U0 F0HCHJ1 XV I VJ MARINETTE, Wis. No sooner had judges awarded first prize in the chemistry division at Marinette High School's science fair Thursday night than they had to take cover. The display blew up with a roar. Two sophomore students submitted the winning entry a device showing the molecular and Sun And Moon Sun will rise at i.5 am. and set at 1.32 p.m.

aalin LC 1 a ti i a m. 65 3 a m. 5 4 a n- 65 5 a m. ti 4 a m. 65 7 a 66 I a.m.

67 FLORIDA TEMPERATURES Prec Aoa'coia 702 joMi'mlB paytpna 70 65 I'd le 15 ee Wy rs 4 63 GeinVt 66 60 Jaca'v 63 SI st i 70 Mi'mi 14 aS Oraia Pen'cn'a Saramta .91 St Pete Tal'h'se 64 61 t'moa 77 61 .1 P' I as TEMPERATURES ELSEWHERE Prac ss mrmr Albany Aipena Amar'lo A.hev'i at'anta All ic Balt'm'a Bwn'ck Boe Boston Buffalo Burt'ton Hat 63 J7 Ang'I'teS 60 53 72 Louisv a S7 34 76 37 Memp's 3 56 3J .15 Mend 'II 72 4 46 ,13 Mn'lte S3 30 W-SV ul 41 .07 41 33 WoOile 75 54 6 Monfry 55 .01 64 31 Mnntr'l S3 34 73 3 Nasnv'le 63 34 5S 3. Orl'ns 72 J' New 66 11 0 2' Norfolk ii 3f 5 5 un.a 40 Cnan'itn 64 47 10 2 65 .07 Pitt, 9n 56 32 .12 P'rli 51 37 Ctar-t 61 44 Cnat 9a 5 47 C'Caoo 44 40 Cm'nili 54 2 level 54 J7 fi'bus. Ose 3S Dallas 75 47 Denver 70 3 M'nes J6 3v Detroit 55 33 P'rfi 67 Richm 61 33 St 55 34 Ik. 72 35 An'n 76 53 Di 00 76 54 Pr'sco 5 58 San an S2 72 66 4 Seattle 5 Toronto 53 3o Washrii 62 34 7 04 Dulntn preino houstnn Ind polif KanCiy kmifi L. kxX 47 22 I 51 75 56 58 35 65 45 ti tvii n.

nc 62 4i 7S 41 April I April AnrllJ May 4 tt'C )Q New 1st Full LOCAL TEMPERATURES Mi.l, II L. a Prestation: Trie. a -el i -71 HIGMtJT I0a Ham 'J 7 pm. 47 te- S3 5 71 .33 Generally mvitw or HI Saturday Southern should Telephoto Wtsr COAST Sunday mitts s'e's Saturday 75 Saiuiday to 1AL' AMASSfE, EAST Saturday Cioudv Satjrddv Sunaav. ar irr iunjay.

winds MIDDLE Cloudy tnrouqn probability of Saturday 75 ornds to SOltTHWFST GLADES, cloudy per cent afternoon, Va-iir. winds KEYS Wt AT 1 1 FOTOCASt Q'sHowimpfTfl FUEumoumoitKUT Generally fair weather Is expected in nation with exception of some shower activity over Rockies. Sunny to partly cloudy skies be rule. Carolinas may note slight warming. (UPI Map to Sentinel Friday night) Sunday.

High Saturday Vanaoit winds Saturday RAINFALL I Observations at Herndeti 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Total this month to date Normal th monm to date Total since Jan. Normal since Jan. 1 ORLANDO-LAKELAND. UPPER Partly cioudy tnrouoh 20 per cent probability ot Saturday afternoon.

Hiqn to 10. VenaDi winds 15 en. GAINESVILLE. UP-PF COAST Mostly cloudy morning, becoming oa'tiy atternoon ttirouqh Saturday 70 to 76. a I'tt'e variable trosliy nortn-easieriy Saturday I to 15 m.p.n.

EAST COAST Partly Sunday itn 20 per cent showers Saturday. Hioh witn mostly noftneasteriy 15 man. COST, EVER LOWER EAST COAST -Partly through Sunday with 20 probability ot snowe? Saturday hitrn Saturday to IS. to 15 n. Saturday.

Partly cloudy throutn 1H4 4 45 4.3' i.57 14! Ay 1 .7 lot 3 67 January February Marctl Aorll Mav June Juiy August Seoiemoer Seotemoer October November Peceme4 302 41 .66 .52 736 42 157 6 130 115 5 4 44 it) 7 23 5 9 7 23 4 04 44 16 157 1.21 18 h..

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