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Albany Democrat-Herald from Albany, Oregon • 6

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MTTEDAT, JTSt ti. tm New Frontier Vote of Arms by Charles hp Book Briefs and Best Sellers i s- An Independent Evening Newspaper We Can't Be Kind to Reds I i aV I -CUV a I of 'liny e7mAml Alexander Anne Lindbergh on Lnv Mpnm sw laMf Anne Morrow Lindbergh call her new book, Dearly Beloved, "reflections in a fictional frame" and the reflections will be recognized by women as familiar, as responses they have known to the greatest question, human love. The frame is the June wedding of' Sally, Deborah's and John's daughter, with Mark, "in the sight of God and the face of this company." In the country-house living room the guests fly back in memory, or poise for flight forward, according to their years: Christie, bridesmaid: Andre, best man, a friend from France: Deborah's sister, Henrietta, and Don, somewhat dissipated: old Mr. Gardiner, whose wife is dying at home: Harriet, 80. spinster; Pierre and Adele.

Pierre remembering their own wedding, thinking of Rilke's words. "Two solitudes, who protect and touch and greet each other." then rejecting them for Saint-Exupery's "Love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction;" and he thinks of communication, of the eyes meeting, of the hand's quick sure pressure on hand. And Deborah is thinking, in her "ragbag" of a mind, of how she had entered marriage in fear and trembling and here she was. trembling again, for Sally. "The innocent, the habyfaced they looked serene and wise, but what did they know? Sheltered and coddled they weren't ready to go out into the drudgery, the every dayness" of life.

Beatrice and her first husband. Tom: It wasn't his absence and his other women that destroyed the marriage; she could have forgiven Tom that maybe even understood. "I know I am but summer to your heart." she used to repeat to herself at night "and not the full four seasons of the year." She was "much too tame for Tom. A field of summer grass would never hold him." Who was it. Milton? who said adultery didn't destroy marriaae as much as "unmeetness." She and Tom couldn't meet in (he mutual web of marriage.

That was what had driven him adrift. Seeing to her guests at the wedding supper, Deborah's harried ragbag is thinking. "How long it takes lo know oneself." Men may read this hook to learn about women; women, to rediscover and come to terms with themselves. Mrs. Lindbergh, married in 1929.

at once entered the active world of her husband, learning In fly. navigate and operate radio. Her first hooks. North to the Orient, Listen! The Wind and The Steep Ascent came from her experiences in flying with her husband; then came Gift From the Sea. reflections on women's lives.

Her new book is a novel, its characters fictitious, but one thinks of them as familiars. DEARLY BELOVED By Anne Morrow Lindbergh 202 pp. New York: Harcourt. Brace World. Inc.

A Helen and Kurt Wolff Book. $3.95. of revolution infiltration, penetration, subversion, even war to accomplish its purpose. Red China is trying to move farther and faster than Soviet Russia; it is seeking to attain Communism without going through the intermediate step of Socialism. To the Russians this seems fantastically impossible because whereas Socialism in various forms, has been made to work more or less successfully and to a greater or less degree in some countries Communism, in its Marxist Leninist form, works nowhere.

The Chinese "leap forward" is tantamount to total slavery. Khrushchev is still under attack and his future is not certain. In the method developed by Stalin in the Soviet Universal State, the top man, whatever his title, maintains a balance of power among differing factions. Stalin was able to maintain it by killing off the deviation-ists until no one who failed to support his position could have a voice in policy. He killed off nearly all the old Bolsheviks, so that no one superior to him, or even an equal, remained alive.

Khrushchev has not been able to do this. His major difficulty is that Mae Tze-Tung holds a greater moral authority in the Soviet Universal State than does Khrushchev. Mao is a more educated man, a philosopher and a poet; Khrushchev is a practical man with a tendency to be capitalistic in his process. Mae is a strict theoretician, and orthodox Marxist-Leninist; Khrushchev tries to operate a practical economy, one that will provide ample military supplies to battle the United States or any country and at the same time yield ample consumer goods to keep his people happy. These conflicts between factions among the Communists have been going on since 1903, when the Rolsheviks and Mensheviks split.

Nevertheless if we expect to profit by these disagreements we're in for disappointment. The ultimate goal of the Kremlin and Peking is the sameto establish a universal Communist state which will be coordinated into one social and economic system for the whole of mankind. There will always be an insistent Marxist orthodoxy and a rightist-leftist deviation, but all will be united against the United States. Our only hope of defeating this ambition is to become so united ourselves that we leave no opportunity for a breakthrough. We can't build thus by being polite to the Communists wee.

If NikiU Khrushchev wasn't kidding when he said the other day that the red flag would be raised over the United States by Americans he surely didn't mean he expects to see that day. In only two ways that we can think of can Khrushchev's prophecy be fulfilled. One would be through conversion of a sizeable proportion of the American publica majority or large minority to the ideology of Communism. The other would be through infiltration of the American government and seizure by coup, as was done in Czecho-Slovakia, where Democracy was a little overdone after World War II. Either process is probably going to take more time than Mr.

has allotted to him, unless we keep on welcoming Gus Halls to our rostrums. Khrushchev believes that it is possible for Soviet Russia and its European satellites to prevail in a world of peaceful co-existence among Capitalistic and Communistic countries. This has been his thesis since the 20th Congress of the Communist party, when he downgraded Josef Stalin, his predecessor. In effect, this is anti-Marxist, in the sense that it denies that Soviet Russia cannot succeed in Communism without the entire world becoming Communist. It is Stalinist in the sense that it tries Socialism (Communism) in one country.

It is original in that Khrushchev would attempt to do it by peaceful means, by beating the Capitalist countries in production, while trading with them, utilizing Capitalist methods of business, holding violence in reserve until it might be necessary to use it. Rhrushchev's ideas are not altogether welcomed in Soviet Russia. There are still Stalinists there. It is not welcomed at all in Red China. The remaining Stalinists are violently opposed to Khrushchev's concepts because, if carried to their logical conclusion, would put an end to the revolution and would reduce the conspiratorial activities of the communist movement.

It would have all relations between Soviet Russia and the rest of the world on a diplomatic and commercial basis and would dilute the revolution by, a free intercourse among all nations. It presumes Russia will prevail through economic superiority rather than through techniques of revolution. To Red China in particular this could be disastrous. It is in the first stage of revolution and requires all the apparatus GOP Goals Announced Tax Cuts Mark 'Positive' Forever Secure in Their Citadel: Old Family, New South One of the significant ligns of a new South in the making is the number and quality of its new writers. As is natural, they bring a strong glats to bear on the South'! hundred-year sleep, on its emergence today as part of a whole and not as a separate entity.

This is found again in a novel by Ellen Douglas, pen-name of a most promising new author, whose A Family'! Affairs sounds not like a first novel, but more suggests the accomplished work of one aware of her skill, of her scene, of its implications. A Family's Affairs climaxes with Kate Anderson's funeral in the Presbyterian church in Ho-mochitto, the town where the Anderson and McGovern fam ilies long have set the standards behavior. Eighty-five years had passed since Kate had been held up squalling to the font beside the pulpit and received her name Kate McCory Dupre bearing witness to the mixture of bloods, Creole and Scottish, "that she and her children had all perforce to accommodate." A hundred and fifty years had passed since the brick had been built in a raw land by settlers "long rooted in an austere faith" and in the broadsword virtues. Already this land 'Louisiana-Mississippi i and "the symbols so lovingly and solidly, constructed were old. an anachronism in a bewildering world, clung to tenaciously by the sojourners there who could find nothing else so solid in the whirlwind of their lives." This long, brimming novel plowing deeply in a century's loam, opens with the wedding of Charlotte Anderson and Ralph McGovern.

Kate's other child-; ren. Sarah Sis and Will, all are present as they are to be, after the turmoil and passions, I al Kate's funeral. Seen largely through the eyes of granddaughter Anna, the story tells how Charlotte has waited until she is 25 for the one man. a man she may respect and share with and found him in Ralph, an upright man in word and deed who is yet kindly and gifted with understanding. And now these children nf widowed Kate, who has lussed eternallv over them in her old house where gloomy or gay ancestors look from the walls on the sturdy old furniture they, too, had known make their unions, some for ill.

some for good; and their children in their time return tn be fussed over, and to make their good or ill decisions. On great occasions they come together in the house, now hemmed with ugly modern excrescences. If one of them falls, the family tightens together, hiding and helping him this latter being done usually by Ralph the steadfast. As the reader follows the drama of the tragic, private fam- ilv truths he comes upon the meaning, a meaning largely lost in today's rising generatinn: the shifting patterns of fate never can shake the homogenous whole of the. family of Kate McGovern.

Old jokes, quarrels, trials, mold these generations into one body, resting on the mysterious base of shared experience. No matter what tides rise around them, they are shored up against them, never in arrogance, but in love. This richly-figured tapestry, written in the deceptively simple style of line prose, can't be too highly recommended. A portion of it appeared in Esquire magazine for December. 1961 and it's winner of the Houghton Mifflin-Esquire Literary Fellow-ship award.

1961. A FAMILY'S AFFAIRS By Ellen Douglas. 442 pp. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. $5 95.

Talk About Writers In the May -August issue of Voices, one of the oldest '41 years i and most respected poetry publications, appears wnrk by these Oregonians: Howard McKinley Corning. Vi Gale. Verne Bright. Leah Sherman. Laurence Pratt.

It's guest-edited by Walter Evans 'Conrad Pendleton1 Kidd. Oregon-bred, now teaching at Nacogdoches, Te.x Stale. A few weeks ago Dr. Kidd's chapbook. Time Turns West i re-viewed here' was awarded the Southwest Institute of Letters pennant for 1961.

With due modesty he admits. "The loot came in handy He will visit Albany in August. 001' iUan IjWIM A Catholic Book Club selection. Immigrant Saint: The Life nf Mother Cabrinl by Pietrn Di lMiata. in a edition from Dell describes the lite of a brave woman who detied tilth in city tenements yellow 'ever in unclean hospitals, godless men in Colorado mines.

Mother Ca-brim was the first and only American nun elevated to sainthood, A Dell Laurel Renaissance, edited by Edward Weatherly Boccaccio. Rabelais. Erasmus. Cellini, Petrarch, five others. Sevenh-five rents 'A Strong-Minded Man in a Time of His Nation's Trial "Uniformed politicians" is Shi-geru Yoshida's term for the Army clique controlling Japan 1931-1945, the first year marked by the occupation of Manchuria, the second by the Allied occupation of Japan.

In his important new book. The Yoshida Memoir, he traces his diplomatic life from his removal as ambassador to Britain in 1939. through his 40 days in prison at the hands of the militarists, to his postwar service as foreign minister and five times premier. This ground has been covered often enough by historians and observers of the Western world, but not heretofore by a high Japanese figure in the events. Yoshida brings witness to the way by which a great and rising nation may he bent from the conservative middle ground of growth and security, driven to take the oft-fatal plunge into armed conquest.

Yoshida points tn the chicanery of cliques seeking absolute power: "This sort of anti-foreign policy has as its strengthening politically, within the country, of those who are its advocates. Which is precisely the line nf action, and the political strategy, adopted by Japan's Army extremists" in inflaming the people against the old U.S.Britain friendships and, that achieved, in joining the Axis and its war of conquest. When Gen. Hideki Tnjo became premier in 1941 and Shigenori Togo foreign minister. Yoshida withdrew from public life.

Recalled after the war, his was the task of putting the MacArthur directives into effect. He found MacArthur a man of quick decisions and action: often he appealed to him over the heads of the bureaucrats and usually won some softening of terms. The "purges" involved too many innocent officeholders, he believed, but adds. "We have to admit that they did exert a considerable influence in bringing about the democratization" of Japan and brought young, new men into key posts. A touch of the Chaplinesque appeared at Yoshida's investiture as foreign minister.

In haste, he had brought formal attire but not shoes. The only pair he could borrow at the last moment were too large, and he had "great difficulty in walking and preventing my footwear from emitting strange noises while in the presence of the Emperor." Had he cast a shoe, would history have been different? Y'oshida takes great comfort in the renewed friendship of the United States. Britain and Japan, seeing this as the course from which his country never should have deviated and which he fought helplessly lo preserve in the pre-war years. The arrhi. tect nf new Japan speaks as a sincere man.

THE YOSHIDA MEMOIRS By Shigeru Yoshida. Trans, by Kenichi Yoshida. .105 pp. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. $5.50.

netted by fishermen near East London. South Africa. And it was a woman who undid the longbeards. Miss M. Court enay -Latimer, curator of the small East London museum, rescued the shining blue stranger from a pile of trash fish, had it mounted and, noting its leg-like fins and protective scales, cautixisly informed a famed icthyologist friend.

They knew what they were getting into. As Helm teils it. to claim that a creature whose fossil remains proved it to have lived from years ago until 50,000.000 years ago. when it disappeared, was still fooling around the seas in its onginal form was "an excellent way to make scientific fools" ol themselves. Science had established "beyond the shadow of a doubt'' that the coelacanth vanished 50.noo.000 years ago and "was ready tn prove this should it ever he questioned." The coelacanth' was not a creature of the black depths, none of which wear or need protection while this fish had armor-plate scales; creatures of the inky depths are dark or black except for headlights and the coelacanth was sky-blue.

After a campaign among fishermen, not scientistsa second coelacanth was taken and preserved and since then, mimerotis others, all in the shallow waters off the east coast of Africa But it wa not restricted, either: in 1949 near Tampa Fla tresh remains were found for sale in a curio shop. Helm, author also trf Treasure Hunting Amund the World lives in Dunedin. with his wile; when nni working on his next brk he's like to be prowling on the bcinn. He has an homely style, like story -tellers around a roaring driftwood fire on the strand where the breakers roar, then murmur as they with-' draw again. MONSTERS OF THE DEEP Ry Thomas Helm 232 pp Photos, drawines bv Alexander Key.

New York. Dodd. Meaa Co. M. Yes, Santo Still Exists Gift Burdens Shared by How Now, Conser Monster? summaries of similar Democratic objectives: "A thorough overhaul of the tax system tn encourage production, build jobs and promote savings and investment is overdue 'President Kennedy made a similar statement In his press coiilerence on the day this came nut.

1 "Government should help develop skills that fit workers for new jobs in a swiftly changing economy." tA manpower retraining act has been passed and a similar adjustment program is part of the trade expansion bill." Want Home Rule "We advocate a shift in resources, encouraged by a massive voluntary long-term land retirement program. (This is part of the Kennedy-Freeman farm program and part of the Kennedy-Udall natural resources and recreation program 1 "Even American vouth should Queries, Replies How many mothers lived to see their sons become presidents of the United States? A Ten. hut six did not attend the inaugurations. Q-ls banana oil derived from bananas? A No. It is isoamyl acetate.

O-By what treaty in 843 A D. is France considered to have begun its history as a separate nation'' The Treaty Verdun. A Dutchman. Van dor Luhbe. was beheaded lor setting what famous fire? A-The Reichstag fire.

Feh. 2T. 19.1.1. Aniwir to Prarioui Puiil IAIBPI1 wi. 33 Manage 36 Turf 38 Miauaei 3 Attempteri 40Haurd 42 Church aeiti 44 Frolic 49 Persian tateway 30 Abstract being 32 Ribbed fabric 33 Yellow bugle plant Platform have the opportunity tn receive an education commensurate with his ability." 'Representative Laird himself says there are now 1 .17 or 38 aid-to-education bills be- lore Concrcss.

"Slalp and local Governments must deal with the urgent problems of urbanized areas, or run the risk of federal control." 'Democrats say local govern- i ments haven't dealt with the problems as they should and pro- i pose action now.) In four nf the major positive statements on Labor manage- ment and farm policy, foreign policy and aid. the Republican declaration stick tn what have been considered traditional con- servative policies: "Government should exercise impartiality and forbearance when the immediate economic interests nf management and la- i bur come into conflict. "The ever-increasing red-tape fences across the farms of this i land must be torn down "In foreign policy, the overwhelming national goal must be victory over Communism. "The American program of economic 'loreign' aid must he recast within sensible limits of priorities Sonotone has done it again with the the world's smallest hearing aid, worn entirely in the car. It's cordless hearing no cords down the neck, nothing behind the ear, nothing on the body.

The new Sonotone jjmuggles in the hollow of the car. It weighs only 1 5th of an ounce including tiny battery inside) and is so small it's hardlv noticeable. The "iUSr-EAR" can help 7 out of 10 persons with hearing losses. Slips in and out of your car so easilv As small as a dime, as light as a nickel. Here's better hear- ing from Sonotone in the remarkable modern vvny-the "H'SP-EAR" worn inside the car.

SONOTONE W. F. DODGE, Mmager 141 Liberty S.E.. Silem, Ore. Ph.

3n'3-94R5 Loral Representative FOLEY JEWELRY IIS W. 2nd fh. WA I-I4(it uA rHE I I 11? PETER EDSON Washington Columnist WASHINGTON i NEA Announced purpose of the latest "Declaration of Republican Principle and Policy" just released with former President Eisenhower's blessing was tn draw up a statement of "positive" goals. This was In overcome the idea that Republicans are too olten "negative." The 2.500-word document which finally came out differs with Democratic policy on 32 principal issues, according to Rep. Melvin R.

Laird nf Wisconsin. He is chairman nf the group nf six GOP senators and six representatives which has been drafting the statement in the last three months. But if you read it carefully you gel the feeling that on many points the policies of both parlies aren't too far apart. The new GOP statement declares: "Effective lax relief for medical and hospital insurance should he given to all." Declarations Quoted Laird explained this means full deductions or exemptions for all medical expenses, not just those in excess of 3 per cent of income, which is present law. Tax relief, of course has been a popular subject among Democrats recently.

Also the GOP statement advocates that: "Tax relief should be given tn those who hear the burden of financing education for themselves or others." Individual congressmen have proposed this, though neither the Eisenhower nor Kennedy administrations have (Jiioted below are positive GOr declarations pointed out to this reporter by the joint committee stall. Inllowed by parenthetical South Korea ACROSS Number 1 ii tha CiurHi MjMtil of City in Smith Korrt York UU The li one Everlntin of iu pnnoipal 'pou nvara 10 Rtrdi' home 1 1 Feminine nieknima 19 Nimti 14 Belgian tr. 15 AnoinU 1 Bind 17 Utile demon It Ttblt KTtp MSamhor lab 11 Omnul porgjr 13 Namai lab IS Dcacry Recipient 19 Tnmminn 31 run tut 32 Stray Family BMOitwr 34 Vibratat 37 Salamandar 40 Veubl 41 Apet 43 Art (Ulin) 45 Sra bird 40 City in tlva Nelharlandi 47 SliM tut 4S Blutb 31 Author 34 Interior 33 RigorotM 36 Milijn (lanea 37 Antiquated DOWN 1 Aperture 2 DveatuB 3 MuArtiiM mammal! 4 Shoehoneaa Indian 12 Redact 13 Weapon! IS Feast day icomb form) 24 Entreaty 23 Canadian county 27 Middar 28 Low land hat 3fl Feign 34 Unruffled I 2 3 II a ii a 3 p-jS 5) 3 a eTlo By morrie ryskind Times-Mirror Columnltt Dear Virginia: Your recent letter, addressed to The New York Sun. has been forwarded to me by the Dead Letter Office. You see.

Virginia. The Sun pased on some years ago. There have been other changes, too, and I ran understand your bewilderment. I'll try to explain things, but I must ask you- to brave, Virginia. Alter all.

it was back in 1IW7 when The Sun's editor reassured you about the existence of Santa Claus. and 1 think you have matured enough now to fare up to the truth Now don't jump to conclusions. Santa Claus still exists, as Mr. Church promised you he would for at least 10 times lo.ooo years. But of late, what with the population explosion and the need to woo the neutral nations, his job has become just too much for one man.

If you consider the number of homes he now has to and that he is still committed to make use of those reindeer who, like Santa himself, are no longer as spry as they used to be -you will realize the enormitv of the task. Mn. Claus fats Peeved Besides and this is a subject I wish I didn't have In discus with you he's been having Family Trouble, and there has even been talk of Mrs. Clans going to Reno for a divorce. The gossip hinted that she was to get Comet, Cupid.

Prancer and Dancer in the settlement, leaving Sanla only four of his famous stable. It wasn't Santa's fault, I needn't tell you, hut we must he lair and see Mrs. Clans' side For hundreds of years, Santa, no matter how burdened on Christmas Eve, always managed to get hack in time tor Christmas dinner. Then, suddenly, he began traggling home one day lale, then two or three. You know what that dose In a woman who's been cooking over a hot stove all day.

Though Santa explained about the 'traffic jams and trying tn locate a village blacksmith to fix a shoe Blitzen had thrown. would have none of it and insisted he had been making the rounds with the boys instead of coming home at a decent time. But the big bust-tip came when he didn't come home until 2. That was the night she threw things at him and accused him of infidelity, naming several moue Uncle Sam stars lie had undeniably lavished expensive gifts nn. As he ducked the misv-iles.

Santa explained again. It seems the tan were now making pictures abroad and. instead of their presents in their Beierly Hills homes, he had been compelled strictly in the line nf duly tn make deliveries in England, I he Atrican jungle and It e. All she said was. "Hmmph! A likely story and called up her lawver.

Cnclr Sam to Rescue But mutual friends stepped in and a teutul reconciliation uas allecled. Mrs. Claus withdrew her wild charges and Santa agreed tn limit himell to North America which would got him home in time for Christmas rim-tier and turn foreign aid over to an assistant In spite ol charge ol nepotism, this important post went to a relative. Samuel Pal-rick Claus. uho had majored in the suhpct at Harvard and was known to foreigners as Uncle Sam or, mine famiharlv, I'ncle Patsy As is to he I when young hlotid comes into a firm, I'ncle Pat.y has made some revolutionary changes He gives tn the undeserving and the deserving alike, and he regards every day as Christmas Kve So.

if Nasser nrvtls a dam or Brazil a slum clearance. Poland some extra cash to 'finance a heavier military mitlav or Tito some expense mont-v tor a trip to Moscow, the good uncle is not churlish enough to demand that thev wait until Christmas Kve and he has had a chance to scan then report card and see it they've been good little hovs. Thev gM what they -want In jet plane There aie months in the year, and each one is ust as good as Iteioniber, says I'ncle Patsv, tot us to jive according to our ability and the rest the world to receive according to its need This i known as a lHnamic Foreign Policy. So don't worry your pielly little head. Virginia Your conserv.

ative little friends are wrong Sanla Claus is still on the job, doing it thanks to le ratsy better and bigger than ever, That jovial denizen of Conser Lake, an oversize pond a brisk walk north of Albany has not made his appearance in the headlines so lar this season, perhaps due to the cool weather. Some hold he has wafted his way to Seattle's fair, while others hint that as a result of splendid financial offers, he is now based at the bottom of Timber Linn Lake, ready to make his appearance at the height of the Timber Carnival. For our part, we suggest he has put monstering behind him, settled down and married and now lives respectably next door to the Joneses on some happy Mortgage Row. But the world need not suffer for any lack of monsters, as Thomas Helm makes clear in his new Monsters of the Deep. In this vastly entertaining and informative book sightings of sea monsters going back beyond the elder Pliny.

Aristotle are updated to the present, when reports still come in. And many-more monsters are sighted than reported. Helm believes, because responsible seafarers fear the tun and ridicule some scientists still heap on such reports. The Loch Ness fellow has ceased to be news, since thousands have spotted him: this hook carries a photo of the creature. Helm, a lifelong lover of the sea and all that, therein dwells, and tireless researcher among its mass of lore and legend, is serious about his subject, though never sensational or didactic.

He sees both side and agws many sightings are illusoj' mistaken He doe fhmk until the turn gf this-ewtun nt the least were moUy loo cocksure in their basty disposal nf teports trom reliable nen who had made the tea their tome fin-dec ades and knew it and its creatures He has one ins ant in our time, familiar to nwspaper readers since 193 This is the cane not rt a mon er but frfne-ioat fin-potmd fish, the Coelacanla THE DEMOCRAT-HERALD PUBLISHING CO. ELMO SMITH Publisher and General Manager RALPH LEE, Asst General Manager CUPTORD BRYAN Business Manager LAWRENCE YOUNG Managing Editor ITalLISMIO IN lltt. USUSMIB CONTINUOUSLY UNCI lit) Entered at Strand PL Mail Miliar al Ida Albany. Orr-ion, Pimi Office I 17 4 II 110 ri rr iT fWfl Ji iTpT-S 51 3 57 38 3 il i 3 JT a 5T iTJm 3 ILT I II ALWCE EAKIN Asst. to the Puncher RALPH CROMSE Consulting Editor Mrmbrr National Wntirtal Ann Pai-idr S.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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