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The Vancouver Sun from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada • 79

Publication:
The Vancouver Suni
Location:
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
79
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The VANCOUVER SUN: April 1, 19727Q Inn ousts Socreds 1. 1 A BARRIE, Ont. (CP) The manager of the Continental Inn threw out all delegates to a one-day meeting of the Ontario Social Credit party today for rowdy behavior. The order to leave came shortly after the first session began when regular party members and members of the Edmund Burke Society, renamed the Western Guard, hegan shouting over meeting procedures. Dr.

James McGillivray of CoUingwood, president of the Ontario party, told the 70 delegates that only those with proper membership cards would be allowed to remain for closed meetings. Any member of the Western Guard, or anyone who had his membership card signed by a Western Guard official, would not be allowed to attend, he said. Then the shouting match began. About half of the delegates were members of the Western Guard. At this point Dr.

McGillivray was informed by Edward O'Reilly, manager of the inn, that all delegates would have to leave. The delegates demanded to see O'Reilly, who personally told them to leave or he would ask police to 89 I ii i I I II I III LEGALS Blast kills 15 TEHRAN (AP) Fifteen persons were reported killed and 150 injured today when a bathhouse boiler exploded in Shahpour in northwest Iran. THK BOARD OF SCHOOL TBI STKES OF SCHOOL DISTRICT JiO. I VANCOUVER) SOUTHEAST SECTOR 1XEMENTARV SCHOOL Blake Street and Frontenac Street Vancouver 16. B.C.

The Vancouver Board of School Trustees will receive tendera (or 1 "Firm Bid" all trades, general contract, lor construction of the above achool consisting the following accommodation: The equivalent of 12 classrooms In open teaching areas, library resource centre, music room, kindergarten, administration activity room and lunchroom with dressing rooms and covered play area, and including communi LEGALS VVITATIOX TO TENDER THE CORPORATION OF THE DISTRICT OF PITT MEADOWS. B.C. SANITARY SEWERS, HIGHLAND AREA K1AI.E 1 ty facilities comprising multi-purpose room, kitchen and office, etc. Total floor area is 33.000 sq. ft.

Plans, specifications, tender, bond ana Sealed tenders marked "Tender for The Corporation of the District of Pitt Meadows, B.C., Sanitary Sewers. High agreement forms are avauaoie iui KnAntinn At the Amalgamated Construe- tion Association of B.C., 2675 Oak land Area Stage 1 will oe received at the office of the Municipal Clerk-Treasurer up to 3:00 p.m. local time, Tuesday, April 25. 1972. The work involves the supply and in Street, the Provincial Government Plan Viewing Room, Room 108, 501 West lJlh Aupnn Snuthnm Ruildine Rerjorts.

2000 stallation of approximately 5500 linear for.) nf snnilnrv Ipwpr. mostly 12-inch West 12th Avenue, and at Industrial diameter, 2 sewage pump stations, 3300 linear feet of 16-Inch diameter force Construction Centre 2430 willing-don, Bumaby, B.C Copies of same may be obtained by bona fide general contractors intending to submit bids on and after 12 noon. Wednesday. April 5, 1972, main, 1800 linear feet of 8-mch diameter force main and appurtenances. Tender documents may be examined at the offices of the Architects, Erick- at the office of Associated Engineering Services Ltd.

on or after Monday, April 3. 1972 and will be available to bona fide jr-i onMassey, 2412 Laurel street, Vancouver 9, B.C. A cheque for $50.00 for each set of plant and specifications covering the above school, made payable to the tenderers upon deposit of $25. Tender documents will also be view at the Amalgamated Construction Architects will be required as a deposit on the plans. This sum will be released on return of the plans complete and in Ralph Bower Photo satisfactory order.

Deducations irom this deposit will be made for missing nlans and specifications. today. Firemen were called to 4606 West Eighth about 9 p.m. Friday after explosion and fire were reported there. "MYSTERY HOUSE" where young man and woman were slain, has broken windows and heap of charred furnishings in yard Depository bids are required by the trades as set forth in the General Conditions of the specification and shall be deposited at the Vancouver and Jwer Mainland Bid Depository, 2675 Oak Association of B.C.

for interested contractors. Tenders must be accompanied by the specified Bid Bond payable to The Corporation of the District of Pitt Meadows. The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. J. J.

Antalek. Clerk-Treasurer, The Corporation of the District of Pitt Meadows, 12007 Harris Road, PITT MEADOWS, B.C. Associated Engineering Services 1661 West 8th Avenue, VANCOUVER 9, B.C. April 1, 1972 Street, by 4:00 p.m., Monday, May 1, 1972. Each tender must be accompanied by a security deposit in the form of a certified cheque on a chartered bank in Canada, made payable to the Board, and in Top wartime Soviet spy held prisoner in Warsaw an amount not less than 5 of the total Mariner 9 "enters twilight' PASADENA, Calif.

(AP) Mariner 9 enters the twilight of its life at 7:06 p.m. (Vancouver time) Sunday, begin-, ning a twice-daily waltz with death that could silence it ever. But the U.S. space robot cling Mars is leaving behind a priceless legacy of photo-, graphs and data that strips' the red planet of some of its mystery and may indelibly" alter some of man's concepts of the solar system. "In 100 years, they'll look: back on Mariner 9 and say what a fabulously successful, experiment this has Dr.

Robert Sharp of the. California Institute of Technology. 1 "Mariner 9 has told us; we're going to find bodies in -the solar system much more; individualized and different' than we thought them to be," -Sharp said in an interview. "This mission has opened up our thinking about the other planets enormously," 'said Harold Masursky of the U.S. Geological Survey's as- trogeology branch.

Since rocketing into orbit last November, Mariner 9 has taken more than 7,000 photo-graphs and made hundreds of thousands of measurements of Martian temperatures and radiation. The data has revealed Mars as a dynamic planet wracked" by countless fiery volcanoes and scarred with mountain ranges and canyons grander' than any on earth. Some unknown force perhaps a flowing liquid like water has eroded the Mar-: tian surface in some areas to look like great river basins" on earth. The planet is bitterly cold and ceaselessly swept by-winds that lift choking storms of dust skyward. Clouds of carbon dioxide cover the Martian polar caps; during their respective winters, but otherwise there is lit-, tie sign of atmospheric clouds.

The largely carbon dioxide atmosphere is only one-hundredth as thick as that of earth. But in a few places it is-heavy enough for water to exist as a liquid, although no -evidence of pools of water has been found. Since dropping into Martian I orbit, Mariner 9 has circled the planet twice daily, constantly in view of the sun and drawing its electricity from solar panels. But the geometry of the! spacecraft, Mars and the sun has been slowly changing and at 7:06 p.m. Sunday, Mariner 9 will pass behind Mars and out of the sun's view for sev-" eral minutes.

It will have to switch to storage batteries and continue doing so each orbit until June, frequently enduring up to 90 minutes in Mars' shadow. It is a critical period engi- neers have dubbed the "sur-; vival mode." All cameras and instruments will be turned off and electrical consumption held to an absolute minimum. A single malfunction at the -wrong time could silence 9 forever. 1 Engineers are confident it will survive and resume sending a few pictures and data once a week until next fall. Then a gas used in control jets is expected to be exhausted, eventually silencing-the spacecraft.

Tourism to drop DUBLIN (Reuter) Tourist income in the Irish Republic is expected to drop by -about 20 per cent this year be- cause of violence in neighboring Northern Ireland, a tourist board spokesman says. amount of the tender; or by a bid bond Issued by a bonding company acceptable to the Board, In accordance with the terms of the specification and in the amount of 50 of the tender price. Such Security deposit or any monies due under the terms of the bid bond, shall DISTRICT OF SQl'AMINH CALL FOR TENDERS SANITARY SEWER INSTALLATION IN TWO SEPARATE CONTRACTS 1. Mamquam System Recall. 2.

Central Section Phase Two. SEALED TENDERS submitted on tha be forfeited the tenderer declines to forms provided and sealed in an enve sign a contract withm six days after being so notified by the Head of Business Administration of the Board. On signing the contract, successful tenderer shall substitute for the security deposit or the bid bond a contract per- lope marneo render win oe received by the undersigned until 8 p.m., April 18, 19T2 at his office in the Municipal Hall. The submissions will theareafter be opened and read publicly. The work includes installation of sewer mains, force mains and service lines together with ancillary works.

Contract documents for each project may be obtained after Tuesday, April 4, 1972, from the Consulting Engineers, WEB Engineering 1011861 Welch Street, North Vancouver, B.C., lormance ana maintenance bona ior 50 of the tender and the balance of deposits will be returned. Tenders are to be for a lump sum, without escalator clauses and including all trades. The "Tender Form" as supplied must be filled in, sealed in the envelope provided, and be in the hands of the Head of Business Administration of the Vancouver Board of School Trustees. 1595 West 10th Avenue. Van.

EARTHQUAKE FINDER CLAIMED BY RUSSIANS MOSCOW (Reuter) Soviet scientists have moved nearer to solving the problem of forecasting earthquakes following the development of new detection equipment, Tass news agency reported today. The equipment registered changes in the conductivity of soil and rocks which occur when an earthquake is imminent, Tass said. Their resistance to electricity usually drops before a quake and returns to the previous level afterwards. Tass said the equipment is capable of detecting the change at a distance of up to nine miles from the epicentre. The report," which did not spell out how long before the earthquake this happened, said scientists had succeeded in predicting an earthquake in the Pamir Mountains, Soviet central Asia, of between force four and five on their 12-point scale.

Sadat still rattles sabre at Israel CAIRO (Reuter) President Anwar Sadat insists Egypt's decision to go to war with Israel has already been taken and all that now is left is for zero hour, or, couver 9, B.C.. by: 1957 he, his wife and sons were able to return to Poland. Trepper did not take advantage of the open door to Isreal offered then by the Poles because he is still a loyal Communist. He became chairman of the "Jewish Social and Cultural Society." "We are not enemies of Poland," he declared recently. "I consider the Gierek government a blessing for Poles.

I have never been a Zionist. But we are alone here now. Most of my relations were exterminated by the Nazis. The rest are in Israel or the West." Trepper's son Edgar undertook recently a hunger strike in Jerusalem to induce the Israelis to intervene for him. Edgar now plans to use the same methods in the United Nations.

Another son, Peter, lives in Canada, and his oldest son Michael is a teacher at Copenhagen University. Mrs. Trepper plans to fly to Copenhagen next week to meet the sons. "Red orchestra," the Soviet network in Germany, which Trepper headed after hostilities began. Glorification of this period is part of the resuscitation of Joseph Stalin as a hero.

But when Trepper sent word to Moscow that Adolf Hitler was preparing an attack in June, 1941, his report was scoffed at as unbelievable. In the Soviet history, all the top spies are pure Russians. Trepper operated for Moscow 18 months in Germany, but vwas arrested in November, 1942. The Germans claimed that he cost the lives of 200,000 German soldiers. In classic Russian fashion, the Soviets were able to spring Trepper from his German prison and bring him to.

Paris. He hid there till the Americans liberated the city. Then he was brought to Moscow on Stalin's personal plane, where he made theus-take of reproaching Stalin for not believing his warnings. He was put in the Lubjanka prison and kept there 10 years. In By GEORGE WELLER JERUSALEM The most famous living Soviet spy of the Second World War is being held a prisoner in a Warsaw flat, blocked from going to Israel by Soviet order.

He is Leopold Trepper, a 68-year-old sufferer from heart disease who wants to die in Israel, the land of his youth. Trepper helped found the Israeli Communist party as a young man, and then was recruited into Soviet intelligence in Paris in 1936. Within two years, his named changed to Gilbert Otto, he became chief of Soviet intelligence for all Europe. A British reporter, William Shawcross of the Sunday Times, found him bedridden in a Warsaw flat, still loyally Communist and non-Zionist, but eager to get away. The snag, appears to be that Trepper knows too much.

Russia is now preparing a history of Soviet intelligence triumphs, especially of the p.m., Wednesday, May 3, 1972. The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted. No tender which contains any qualifying clausa whatsoever will be considered. J. E.

Robertson Head of Business Administration Board of School Trustees of School District No. 39 The District of Squamlsh, Municipal Offices, Box 310, Squamish, B.C.. upon deposit of $25.00 for each set, refundable to those submitting bids when returned within 7 days of closing date. Tenders received after the stipulated time will be returned unopened. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.

J. R. Craven, A.C.I.S. NOTICE This Is your notice that the under-signed carrier has made application to Increase certain hourly and commodity tiOVHRNMENT OF THE PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA DEPARTMENT OF I-'ECREATION CONSERVATION NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS rates. Subject to consent of the Public utili ties Commission, the nrotMsed charsea A Standard Workshop Building in Mount will become effective May 1st, 1972.

Copies of the proposed charges may be examined at the offices of the under signed. vuuua riuvuiuiai rant wiu oe received by the Deputy Minister, Department of Recreation and Conservation, Parliament Buildings, Victoria, B.C. up to three p.m.. Thursday, the Twentieth Diy of April, 1972, and opened Ih public at that lime in the nonntv Any representation respecting proposed charges may be made to the Su. perintendent, 'Motor Carrier Branch.

Office. punnc utilities Commission, at Vancouver, up to April 16th, 1972. Pacific Tariff Service Ltd. Tariff Agent for: WALLACE TRANSFER LTD. Plans, Specifications and Conditions of Tender may be obtained from The Gov.

eminent Agent, 1600 3rd Avenue, Prince George, B.C.; The Government Agent, NO. 7 W. Sevmour Strpet. Knmlnnnt B.C.: or from the Provincial Parks Rrnnnk lOIQ in-. VT nuaii oueci, victuna, B.C.

on the deposit of J25.00 for each At uihinh -l NORTHERN EMPIRE MINES LIMITED (N.P.L.) (IN VOLUNTARY LIQUIDATION) NOTICE Is hereby given that, pursuant to Section 228 of the Companies Act, a meeting of the creditors of NORTHERN EMPIRE MINES LIMITED (N.P.L.) tin Voluntary Liquidation) will be held at the of'lces of Anrirews Swinton. 9th Floor, 900 West Hastlnea niu ur iciuilUCU upUll U16 I e- turn of the Plans within one month of the opening of Tenders. The deposit of Penalties urged for late flights ble. Each Tender must be accompanied by Street, Vancouver, British Columbis. -m Thursday, the 23rd day of March, 172, at the hour of rieven o'clock (11:00 Amount of Tender.

No Tender will be accepted or considered that contains an Escalator Clause or any other qualifying condition, and the lowest nr nnv Tnnrl.it. a.m.) in the forenoon. DATED at Vancouver. British Ov lumbla, this 21st day of March, 1972. nut be accepted.

GRAHAM A. CHAMBERS. LIQIJT. DATOR nans ana specifications will be on display with the Prince George Construction Association, 3851 18th Avenue. Prince George.

B.C. and inspection of tiie site may be arranged by contacting the Regional Supervisor, Mount Rohson Park. Reri p.Et oi NOTICE Under Mechanic's Lien Act Is to alt (former customers of flen. Skok, 5124 Victoria Van. 16, B.C.

Dayan shuns army return JERUSALEM (AP) Israeli Defence Minister Moshe Dayan insists the Jordanian army must not be allowed to return to West Jordan after peace is reached between Israel and the Arabs, and Jews must be permitted to settle along the Jordan River. "We must certainly be in a position where, if the need arises, we have complete control of the West bank. There can be no other army there," Dayan said in a state television interview Friday. A peace agreement with Jordan, Dayan said, "must be one that enables us to settle anywhere in that region." Jews must also be free to settle in the Arab Gaza Strip, he added. JaunelW.

Merchandise must be a med by tar holders before April 30. 1972. Plans and Specifications will also be displayed at Southern Interior Construction Ascrvintlnn nlrt i a-i MRS. VERONICA SKOK. Street, Kamloops, B.C.

Phone: 372-3364. DIUUK9, Acting Deputy Minister. Department nf Rnr0aiin, r- UDf ir. OkSS SIZES I 34-48 Parliament Buildings, tutu. IS, DEPARTMENT OF INDIAN AFFAIRS NORTHERN DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL HISTORIC PARKS BRANCH Contract No.

WR limri Cmtklna to be decided. The Egyptian president's speech during a visit to an air base was backed up by the war minister, Gen. Mohamed Ahmed Sadek. Sadek told a group of new cadets graduating at Egypt's military academy that Egypt had no alternative but to launch a battle to recover the Arab lands occupied by Israel. The speeches followed warnings of the war danger by Israeli's chief of staff, Lt.

Gen. David Elazar, in an interview Wednesday with the Israeli newspaper i Aharonot. Sadat claimed the United States had escalated the situation by a decision to provide the Israeli navy with torpedo boats to guard the ports of Elath and Sharm el Sheikh. Although both Egypt and Is-. rael had warned of growing Middle East tension, each side now seems to be awaiting the outcome of President Richard Nixon's visit to Moscow in May.

Elazar said there would be a gigantic danger of a fresh clash if Nixon's Moscow visit did not contribute toward a -political solution. But in his speech, Sadat dismissed American proposals for "close proximity" talks to reach an agreement on reopening the Suez canal. "The decision to go to war is irrevocable," Sadat said. "I will set zero hour for the armed forces after preparation of the home front Is completed." Although the tenor of Sadat's criticism of the U.S. has been steadily growing in recent months, the influential newspaper Al Ahram reported Friday that official contacts have been continuing between the two countries.

ALASKA PORT Ship spills bunker oil KODIAK, Alaska (UPI) -Crews today were cleaning up a spill of heavy bunker oil from an ice-damaged ship Friday in Kodiak harbor. A U.S. Coast Guard spokesman said ice caused a 14-inch rupture in the hull of the sea-land motor vessel Summit allowing oil to pour into the harbor. The Coast Guard classified the incident as a "medium spill" which ranged from to 100,000 gallons. The damage was apparently caused while the ship was in Cook Inlet.

Crew members shifted fuel, water and cargo to bring the rupture above the water line, minimizing the spill. The spill was contained by a makeshift boom, fabricated by crew members from timbers and rope, Downdraft from the propeller of a coast guard helicopter was used to keep the oil behind the boom and straw was used to soak up the oil. The coast guard said no oil reached the shore. Victoria man arrested in U.S INDIO, Calif. (AP) Two men, including one from British Columbia, were charged with possession of drugs when 2,000 pills were found in their car following an accident Thursday night, police said.

Michael Gillis, 21, of Victoria, the driver, and William Moore, 23, of Anaheim, a passenger, were booked at the Riverside county jail. view of CAB regulations requiring that at least 75 per cent of an airline's flights operate on time defined as within 15 minutes of the schedule regulatory action is in order. The petition said the CAB has failed in its duty to regulate scheduling and called on the board to levy fines or cancel route permits. "As a result of this inexcusable regulatory lag, the scheduled air carriers of this country have long ceased to provide adequate, dependable and predictable air services as required," the petition said. The complaint named 11 trunk airlines.

"Among the various delinquents, Delta ranks first in violating the law with systematic persistence and perseverance," said the petition. It accused Delta of violating federal on time regulations in almost every three-month reporting period for the last three years and identified the most troublesome routes as Atlanta-Miami, Atlanta-New York, Dallas-Los Angleles, Miami-Detroit, New Orleans-New York, Chicago-Miami and Fort Lauderdale-Chicago. In Delta's most recent report, the airline's flights were late more often than they were on time on the Atlanta-New York run. The African grasshopper is four inches long and feeds on mice. WASHINGTON (AP) A consumer action group has accused the major U.S.

air carriers of failing to provide adequate on time service and urged the civil aeronautics board to require cash payments to passengers whose flights are delayed. The penalty payments, proposed in a petition by the aviation Consumer Action Project, would be equal to the ticket price for cancelled flights and $25 for every half hour flights are late taking off or landing. K. G. J.

Pillai, executive director of the Ralph Nader-sponsored group, said his review of airlines' on time filings with the CAB showed 26 per cent of the flights on the nation's 200 busiest routes were 15 minutes or more late in 1970. The airlines performed flights on those routes in 1970 and cancelled 280,056 of them, Pillai's petition said. He estimated 1.5 million to 2 million passengers were affected by the cancellations alone. The Air Transport Association, spokesman for the nation's airlines, had no immediate comment. "It's unreal.

It's just dumb," said a spokesman for Northwest Airlines. "Would they have airlines fly through thunderstorms or other bad weather? "The ontime performance of airlines in the past year has improved in direct relationship to improvement in airport controller difficulties." The petition said that in Banff Jasper National Parks Alberta, and Yoho National Park-British Columbia The work consists of Crushing approximately 93,000 tons of gravel 33,000 tons Yoho National Park -tons Banff National Park 20,000 tons Jasper National Park TENDER Documents can be F7A1.NEDk, a Contracts Ad-Winislra or, National Historic Parks Branch 34 llth S.E., 131 Cus- a. Alberta. "i "icM lhe Superln-tendenls of Banff, Jasper 4 Yoho National Parks the Construction Asso- following cities-Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta; Kamloops and Vancouver, British Columbia. TENDERS to ihl," "i addressed i ADdmlnlstrator, National TnSl i Binnch, Department of Indian Affairs Northern Development, AVe" Customs Wl" be P.

MALIS. Regional Director KJv Regino 38 Winnipeg 38 Bobby Fischer gets chess match ultimatum Edmonton 1.1 xyXYVjwwy 9'n 0.8 '''''v, winnipo 1.2 To'on, 6 Precitaitioi OOVEHNME.NT OF THK aORTMWENT TERRITORIES DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS NOTICE OF TENDER FOR PREFAHRICATION AND DEI.IVEHV OF Jif l0W RENTAL HOUSES Scaled 1 enden Addressed To: Chief of Program and Administration, Nortnwe" eprtment of Public Works, P.O. Box YELLOWKNIKE. N.WT b5 waived until 3:00 p.m., WS Vj BT" 'u 19: Anders will opened 4:00 p.m., M.S.T., April 21, 197 Prefabrlcatton and Delivery of atMonlreal, Quebec and Hay River, may be obtained nS mf "Honed address by Contractors on deposll of Sioo.uo cash or certified cheque made payable to the of Uia Northwest Terrl- 'lender envelope shall be marked as to contenls, sender and address. To be considered aach tender must be submitted on the forms provided.

Lowest or any Tender not necessarily accepted. U. C. AUMOND Chief of Program Administration Department of Public Works Government nf the N.W.T. YELLOWKNU'E, N.W.T.

Complete outfit By ANNE ADAMS TRAVEL FIRST CLASS in this action inspired, S-part wardrobe. Includes coat and jacket with or without sleeves, overblouse, skirt, pants. Choose double-knits. Printed pattern 4521: NEW women's sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. To obtain this pattern send 70c to Anne Adams, Hox 6700, Vancouver B.C.

PRINT all In. formation pattern number, nlxe, name, address and telephone, number on (INK sheet nf piiiier, Allow thre weeka for delivery. Or add Ino (on eh put-tern) for first elan mull dellv. ery from Toronto. (Spring.

Summer Fashion Hook, SOi'l coupon for free pattern.) To end the financial bickering over the title match, FIDE decided the location at a meeting in Amsterdam March 20, It informed the organizers that first part of the 24-match series would be played in Belgrade June 22 through July 15, with the second part to be played in Reykjavik, Iceland. Fischer told the organizers their offers were too low and that he would not play Spas-sky under those conditions. played in Belgrade and Reykjavik this summer. The statement gave Fischer until Tuesday to guarantee his attendance or lose his chance at the title. "Lacking an answer by the deadline (FIDE president Max) Euwe will take it as a refusal from Fischer to play for the title," the statement said, The controversy flared after the Belgrade organizers told FIDE that "due to the uncer tainty still going on it is impossible to carry out all of the organizational preparations such a match would require." The Yugoslav Export and Credit Bank and a Belgrade chess magazine made the highest bid to stage the match $152,000 but Fischer turned the offer down, demanding that all profit made from the meet, after deduction of organizational costs, should be paid the players.

AMSTERDAM (UPI) The International Chess Federation (FIDE) offered U.S. grand master Bobby Fischer a final choice today either face world champion Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union under current financial conditions or be disqualified as a challenger. FIDE issued its ultimatum in a statement after Fischer rejected the payment arrangements agreed for the championship games to be CRUEL APBIl FOOL says April will bo cool. Unfortunately, U.S. Weather Bureau is serious in its prediction lor next 30 days..

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