PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY The Nature of Co-Existence: Appeasement or Common Sense? THE INTELLIGENT management of our foreign affairs is currently hampered by the existence of a number of stubborn, reiterated myths. The most pervasive of these is the strange notion that the goal of co-existence with the Soviet Un- ion is equivalent to appeasement or treason. Only occasionally is this myth specifically analyzed and attacked, sometimes by men like Churchill, Adlai Stevenson and Walter Lippmann. But it is difficult to imagine any other reason- able goal than that of co-existence. The alterna- tives to co-existence are such strategic monstrosi- ties as "liberation of Eastern Europe" (a Republi- can slogan of the 1952 election), "drive to the North" (the reiterated cry of Korean President Rhee), and "let Chiang loose" (a fantasy of cer- tain U.S. senators in which Formosa's 300,000 sol- diers successfully conquer the Chinese land-mass). All such proopsals, besides being militarily ab- surd, threaten to precipitate World War III. Re- publican orators, who are largely responsible for them, may privately be quite willing to take such risks. But to those who retain a sense of reality, it is apparent that war is no longer an extension of peace-time policy, no longer, a means whereby goals otherwise unattainable are attained. An American-Soviet war, fought with such weapons as were recently detonated in the Pacific, would mean the end of all goals. It would mean that, unable to solve our problems, we have decided to end the collective life of humanity. A policy of co-existence, therefore, is neither treason or appeasement. It is defined negatively by the rejection of World War III as a meaningful device of policy, and positively by the belief that it is possible for free societies to persist and de- velop despite the existence of a hostile Soviet power-bloc. A policy of co-existence assiduously seeks the means to prevent the expansion of Soviet influ- "What Makes You ThinklHe's Not Neutral?" _ Mc9 --- w \ THURSDAY, JULY 1,1954 . . &tteri to tile &or. . M1asculinists would be noble of you to accept age to find time, do so under the ence and to weaken Soviet control along1 phery of the Communist world, but it view the destruction of Soviet power by sensible course. Such a policy requirest cious use of all our resources--ideological nomic, as well as military-and above all, chill has recently reminded us, patience. It is easy for Americans to fall into the peri- does not war as a the judi- and eco- as Chur- the psy- chology of complete victory that has character- ized our military past. We are not used to pro- longed frustrations, nor to the impossibility of a decisive end to our difficulties. Having never experienced modern mass warfare on our own territory, many Americans can still contemplate the possibility of armed conflict with Russia without the shuddering recoil with which Europeans view such a war. For many Americans, the H-bomb is chiefly a spectacle for television screens and newsreels, or only a tribute to our skill and resources. Hence the fear of other nations that we are too susceptible to dramatic proposals involving military counterstrokes and offering the illusory hope of a satisfactory end to the Cold War. It is to be hoped that the United States will supplement its understandable yearning for a quick end to ambiguities and complexities with one of our traditional national traits-cool, Yan- kee shrewdness. -Allan Silver "' ""*m T . I: i I i 1 3 To the Editor: IN REPLY to Remington Russell: I read with no amazement "the letter to the editor of one Marjorie Crockett, complaining that the title of the special summer pro- gram "Woman in the World of Man" discriminates against women by implying that it is basically a1 man's world." In objecting to Miss Crockett's objections, Mr. Russell indicates that he obviously belongs to that tribe of eager masculinists who have always plagued the nation, disrupting the thoughtful indul- gences of harrassed human beings by bashing in cultural windows with thoughtless, steel-barbed at- tacks on one-half of humankind. It may be true that this is a man's world simply because men have control of the mass media. It may be true too, as Mr. Russell predicts, that it will always be a man's world. But Miss Crockett has every right to take up verbal arms and disagree. Now Mr. Russell don't you think we males should encourage Miss Crockett to let off steam under the safety valve theory of democracy? Surely Mr. Russell you can't be afraid of Miss Crockett's "screech- ing crew" of feminists. Come now, regardless of what she screeches it will always be, as you've intoned, "A Man's World" I think you should beseech her to screech to show your fearlessness. In fact, it I It's a good thing for the world that the "noble career" of father- hood didn't deter Michelangelo, Shakespeare, Freud, or Einstein from engaging in certain sideline activities. Incidentally, the beginning of wisdom is not adjustment. Rather, self-wisdom leads to self-adjust- ment. -Larry Hulack Culture, my dear Watson To the Editor: SINCE MR. RUSSELL has taken offense at Miss Crockett's "feminist screechings" allow me to add a few "humanist screechings" of my own to the din. I am happy to admit that this is a man's world; indeed, I am doub- ly happy that Mr. Russell admits it-that's half the battle won. Whether or not it should be a man's world is another question and I for one favor neither the way it is nor a complete reversal. What Mr. Russell fails to com- prehend is that the "noble biolo- gical function of woman"-(sigh!) -"Motherhood," has kept women so busy taking care of the homes and children of the Shakespeares and the Einsteins that they sim- ply do not have the time, and are not given much encouragement, for any further exploitation of their talents. Those who do man- Russell is the same type of person that would ask of the Negro- "Where are your Shakespeares and Einsteins, etc?", (and I am not forgetting that there have been many outstanding Negroes and women) without ever realiz- ing, or even trying to understand, that by mis-using biological dif- ferences such as "she bears the children" and "he has dark skin" in order to create such myths as "she should keep out of politics and stay in the home" and "he doesn't have the mentality to cope mwiththe problem," Negroes and women in this society have never been given the same chance as that of the white male. Indeed it is unfortunate that woman's biological function has placed her in such a position that she must give birth to such male supremacists as Mr. Russell spend half her lifetime keeping his bib clean, so that he in turn might lord man's accomplish- ments over hers. The important thing to remember is that this same biological function has been, in other societies, the reason for female supremacy, and this might lead.one to believe that aside from being a biological role, it is defin- itely a cultural one. It is encour- aging to note that more and more human beings are realizing this fact. -Evelyn Challis Graden the inevitability of her screeching. fantastic strain of a double bur- After all sir the beginning of wis- den. dom is tolerance.A erson of the r f M k -l t { i 1 P cq9 Th, °r- WAS -{niC.,C sP St u, ON THE WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-EOUND WITH DREW PEARSON Justice in the U.S. Jury System AMIDST THE widespread discussion and contro- versy over the school segregation cases re- cently decided by the Supreme Court another re- cen decision of that Court in the field of dis- crimination has scarcely had the attention it de- serves. We refer to Chief Justice Warren's opinion of May 3 reversing the judgment of a Texas court which had sustained the conviction of one Pete Hernandez for the murder of a cotton planter in 1951. The appeal was based on the fact that "for the past twenty-five years there is no record of any person with a Mexican or Latin American name having served on a jury commission, grand jury or petit jury in Jackson County." Hernandez asserted that there were many per- sons of Mexican ancestry in the country who were qualified for jury service, but that they had been "intentionally, arbitrarily and system- atically" excluded. This he claimed was a denial of the equal pro- tection of the laws guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals rejected this contention on the ground that "the equal pro- tection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment con- templated and recognized only two classes as com- ing within the guarantee, the white race compris- ing one class and the Negro race comprising the other." But Chief Justice Warren denied that the Four- teenth Amendment was based on a "two-class theory." "The exclusion of otherwise eligible per- sons from jury service solely because of their ancestry or national origin is discrimination pro- hibited by the Fourteenth Amendment," he declar- ed. "The Texan system of selecting grand and petit jurors by the use of jury commissions is fair on its face, and capable of being utilized without dis- crimination," the Chief Justice noted, but while the law itself does not discriminate "those administer- ing the law do." "Circumstances or chance may well dictate that no persons in a certain class will serve on a particular Jury during some particular period," he observed, "but it taxes our credulity that resulted in there being no members+ class among the over 6,000 jurors called past twenty-five years." to say of this in the Hernandez did not ask for proportional repre- sentation of Mexican-Americans on the jury, nor indeed to have any of them necessarily there at all. He only asked that his case be considered by a jury from which all members of his group had not been systematically excluded. "To this much," said Chief Justice Warren, "he is entitled by the Constitution." Some people have gone so far as to suggest that this decision makes it necessary for a judge to study the cases on his docket to determine what nationalities or other minority groups are involved and make arrangements with the jury commission to make certain that members of those groups are represented on the grand jury and trial jury pan- els. This is ridiculous. Texas has sixteen counties without a single Latin-American resident, and for- ty-four with fewer than fifty of them. Such an interpretation of the decision would make it impossible or nearly so to try a Latin- American in those counties. And what of the Catholics, Jews, Poles, Puerto Ricans and oth- ers who live happily throughout our land, some- times as a minority and sometimes as a ma- jority? They are all capable of being fair to themselves and to each other if given the chance. All that is needed to give them that chance and to comply with the Supreme Court decision is a policy estab- lished by the trial court at the time the jury com- mission is empaneled that no person is to be ecluded from jury service because of membership in any national, racial or religious group. Soviet propagandists have made much of such examples of racial tension as could be found in this country. We challenge them to acknowledge the assurance of justice for members of minority groups which this decision gives, and to make sim- ilar provision for the millions of such people under their rule. -The Journal of the American Judicature Society li-t KANSAS CITY - It was Harry Truman's determination never to let down a friend, even a contro- versial friend, that contributed in part to his illness. His doctors didn't advertise it, but for some time the ex-president has been somewhat under the weather. To them his sudden seiz- ure in the wings of the "Call Me Madam" came unexpectedly and as entirely a surprise. They had tried to get him to curtail his activities, and strongly advised that he can- cel a date he had made with his old friend, James Petrillo, head of the Musicians Union, to attend the musicians' annual convention in Milwaukee. Months ago Petrillo had invited Truman to be the union's guest of honor and to play a little piano- trumpet duet together. It was an event calculated to make musical headlines, and both Truman and the head of the Musicians Union were looking forward to it. However, when Truman's doc- tors told him he would have to curtail his activities until. cooler weather, he reluctantly sent Pe- trillo his regrets. The show, he said, was off. But a few days later, Truman overruled his doctors and sent a telegram to Petrillo that he would be on deck. Th show, he said, "must go on." Asked for explanation, Harry Truman had a simple answer: "As long as I live I will never forget what Jimmy Petrillo and his men did for me in the 1948 election. He was one of those who did not let me down. And I can't let a good friend like him down now." K.C.'s Most-Loved Man Sentiment has changed a lot around Kansas City regarding Har- ry Truman. There was a time, about two years ago, when the little K.C. haberbasher who be- came president of the United States was criticized and scoffed at up and down the streets of the city that sent him to Washington. . But not today. Today, he is the most-loved man in Kansas City... never settl down in the ol' home town after the glamor of Washing- ton, after a private yacht on the Potomac, a retinue of servants and bodyguards. But he has settled down as comfortably as in an old shoe. . .Some of Truman's friends raised a little money to hire a bodyguard for his days as ex-pres- ident, but Harry hasn't needed him, doesn't want him. . .And if anyone around Kansas City ever thought of touching a hair of Har- ry Truman's head, no police could ever protect him. ..HST once con- fided to Garrett Smalley of the Kansas City News Press the rea- son why he didn't have air cooling in the White House. "I don't mind air cooling," he said, "but if I had it in here people would stay too long.". to interfere with my work. You have your friends too, some of whom I may not approve of, but I'm not going to ask you to give up your friends." Truman's loyalty to friends of course was what caused him more trouble than anything else in the White House. Clayton got the job. Notable Memory Last January, about three years later, I was in Harry Truman's office in Kansas City. It is lined withebooks,chiefly history books. He had been reading the works of previous presidents, even as he did while in the White House, and was dictating his own memoirs. Every day, he said, he dictated a chap- ter or so of his book, then had a staff of research men, who had been looking over his records, pull it to pieces, check it backward and forward, to make sure every detail jibed. The ex-president seemed relaxed, happy, very much at home. He didn't seem to miss the glamor, the excitement of Washington at all -which is rare for a man who has spent arthird of a century in politics. Neither Mr. Truman nor I men- tioned any of the unpleasantness that had sometimes marked our lives in Washington. But after the TV interview was over, he made a remark which indicates how long his memory is and also indicates some contrasts with the methods of the McCarthy Committee. "You don't remember it," he said, "but a long time ago you wrote a story about me. You said a new committee had been formed to investigate military prepared- ness and efficiency. You said that a new chairman named Truman was in charge of that committee and that he made it a point to check on. the war effort without upsetting the government, that he took things up with the executive branch of the government to see if things couldn't be straightened out privately before he resorted to publicity. "That was what I was trying to do," continued Truman. I used to go down to see Roosevelt and tell him about a situation, and he would take out a pencil and make a note of it. And a week or so later he would report that the situ- ation was straightened out or sometimes he'd say 'we haven't been able to straighten it out, go ahead and investigate.' "Well you were the first to write about our committee," said Tru- man. "I haven't -forgotten it, and that's why you're here today." I couldn't help but think that the man who inherited the chairman- ship of the old Truman Committee, one Joseph R. McCarthy, had cer- tainly changed its methods today. O ANY observant man who has 'The Beginning Of The End? By J. M. ROBERTS JR. Associated Press News Analyst American observers in Indochina have been quick to interpret with- drawal of the French forces' from a large area of Tonkin as the be- ginning of the end of France in Indochina. Taken against the background of French plans as explained to me a few days ago, however, the development is neither surprising nor quite so final as it might seem. The French realized, after the fall of Dien Bien Phu, two things: 1. They could not take another defeat of that type. 2. It was very doubtful that they could hold the entire Red River Delta without outside help, mean- ing from the United States. They wanted to hold it all. But they were unwilling to try, by sending heavy reinforcements from. France, on the mere hope that an all-out effort would attract Allied aid should the going be too rough. They wanted action, not promises, and they weren't even getting the latter. The new French government has demonstrated,ehowevermthathit' does not intend to be left com- pletely helpless in truce negotia- tions by yielding the Delta entirely. It is ordering up new draftees in France so that regular army units can be sent to reinforce Hanoi. This is not a preparation for a runout. / It is, rather, an expression of determination to hold such a perim- eter as may reasonably be expect ed to prove defendable with the forces available. For three weeks it has been un- derstood that this perimeter will not extend far into the interior be- yond Hanoi. The fighting that has been going on recently has been largely a delaying action while this shortened perimeter, or en- clave, could be prepared for an all-out defense. Holding on is extremely impor- tant, and not merely a heroic ges- ture. The enclave might be pushed back very near the coast. But if the French can stay in the Delta for two more weeks, the monsoons will make it likely they can stay for two more months, during which all sorts of things can happen in negotiations. Sixty-Fourth Year Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial. Staff Dianne Au'Werter ...Co-Managing Editor Alice B. Silver.... .Co-Managing Editor DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -'" . . _ 31j The Daily official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the University. Notices should besent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3510 Administration Building before 3 p.m. the day preceding publication. THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1954 VOL. LXIV, No. 78 Notices University Holiday. The University will be closed Monday, July 5, in observance 3f Independence Day. Applications for Fulbright Awards for graduate study or research abroad dur- ing the 1955-56 academic year are now available. Countries in which study grants are offered are Australia, Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg, Burma, Cey- Ion, Denmark, Finland, France, Ger- many, Greece, India, Italy, Japan, Neth- erlands, New Zealand, Norway, Pakis- tani, Philippines Sweden. Union of South Africa, United Kingdom. The grants are made for one academic year and include round-trip transportation, tuition, a living allowance and a small stipend for books and equipment. All grants are made in foreign currencies. Interested students who hold an A.B. degree or who will receive such a degree by June 1955, and who are presently en- rolled in the University of Michigan, should request application forms for a Fulbright award at the office of the Graduate School. The closing date for receipt of applications is November 1st. Persons not enrolled in a college or university in the springuor fall of 1954 should direct Inquiries and re- quests for applications to the Institute of International Education, U.S. Stu- dent Program, 1 East 67th Street, New York 21, New York. The last date on which applications will be issued by the Institute is October 15th. Applications for Buenos Aires Con- vention Awards for graduate study or research in Latin America during the 1955-56 academic year are now available. Countries in which study grants are offered are Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Co- lumbia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guatemala. Haiti, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Venezuela. Grantees are chos- en by the hbst government of each country from a panel presented by the United States Government. The United States Government pays travel costs and host governments pay maintenance al- lowances and tuition fees. Grants gen- erally are for one academic year, but some may extend for twelve months. Interested students who hold an A.B. degree or who will receive such a de- gree by June, 1955, and who are pre- sently enrolled in the University of Mi- chigan, should request application forms for a Buenos Aires Convention award at the office of the Graduate School. The closing date for receipt of applications is November 1st. Persons not enrolled in a college or university in the spring or fall of 1954 should direct inquiries and requests for applications to the Institute of Interna- tioal Education, U.S. Student Program, 1 East 67th Street, New York 21pNew York, The last date on which appli- cations will be issued by the Institute is October 15th. Student Organizations planning to be active during the Summer Session are reminded to register before July 3. Forms for registration are available In 1020 Administration Building. Use of the Daily Official Bulletin, and use of University meeting rooms will be re- stricted to officially recognized and reg- istered student organizations. The Art Print Loan Collection office in Room 510 Admin. Bldg. will be open Monday through Friday from 8-12 for the duration of the Summer Session. Diving Class-Women Students. A diving class for women students has been scheduled for Tuesday and Thurs- day at 4:30 p.m. It is open to any wo- man student who is interested. Sign up now in Office 15, Barbour Gymnasium. Rap-atna Rimmne r-W- on Thursday, July 1, in Auditorium C, Angell Hal, for all seniors and graduate students who are interested in register- ing with the Bureau of Appointments now for employment either after grad- uation, after military service, or 10Z future promotions in any of the follow- ing fields: education, business, Industry, technical, and government, Registra- tion material will be given out at the meeting. Those students who have previously registered with the Bureau of Appoint- ments for employment and who are stil on campus are requested to contact the Bureau as soon as possible at 3528 Ad- ministration Building in order to bring their records up to date. We must have your present address and .telephone number as well as your current courses. This information is necessary for effeo- tive service. PERSONNEL REQUEST Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, Indian&, has positions available for physical, or- ganic, or pharmaceutical chmeists, en- gineers, and an industry analst. Cambridge-Panelyte Molded Plastics Co., Cambridge, Ohio, has an opening for a Mechanical Engineer to do dsign work and some process engineering. Re- cent or August men graduates are eli- gible to apply. The U.S. Civil Service Commission has announced an examination for City Planner, GS-7 to GS-15. Basic require- ments include a bachelor's degree with major study in city or regional plan- ning, architecture, landscape architec- ture, or civil engineering. From 1 to 4 years professional experience In city or regional planning is also required; gra- duate study may be substituted for ex- perience. The U.S. Civil Service Commission is offeringean examination for Foreign Language Information Specialist, 07 to GS-12, for duty with the United States Information Agencysin Washing- ton, D.C. Applicants must have had professional foreign language experi- ence in writing, editing, or radio pro- duction. For additional information concern- ing these and other employment oppor- tunities, contact the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 3528 Administration Bldg., Ext. 371. Lectures Linguistic Institute Lecture. "Seman- tic Analysis of a Laxical Paradigm. Floyd Lounsbury, Professor of Linguis- tics, Yale University. 7:30 p.m., Rack- ham Amphitheater. Academic Notices Seminar in Applied Mathematics will meet Thursday, July 1, at 4:00 InRim. 247 West Engineering. Speaker: Profes- sor G. E. Hay. Topic: Some problems in dynamics. Seminar in Mathematical Statistics wil !meet Fridays at 2 p.m. In Room 3201 AH. On July 2, Professor C. C. Craig will speak on Scheffe's solution of the Behrens-Fisher problem. Seminar in Lie Algebras: Will meet every Wednesday and Friday afternoon at 3 p.m. in Room 3001 Angell Hall. Make-up Examination in History will be given Saturday, July 10, 9:00 to 12:00 a.m., 429 Mason Hall. See your instruc- tor for permission arid then sign list in History Office. M.A. Language Examination in His- tory. Thursday, July 15, 4:15-5:15 p.m., 429 Mason Hall. Can bring a dictionary. Concerts Carillon Recital. The summer series of Carillon Recitals will be continued on Thursday, July 1, at 7:15, when Pro- fessor Price will perform bell music by G. F. Handel, compositions for a musi- cal clock, and three other arrangements of Handel's works. Recital for Viola and Piano by Lydia and Robert Courte, 8:30 Thursday eve- ning, July 1, in Auditorium A. Angell Hall. Mr. Courte is Associate Professor of Viola and Chamber Music and Violist of the Stanley Quartet, and for this nrogram has chosen Bach's Partita in A 4 Y 4 CJLt)tI UENT M P/1 _. A t the Michigan... GUN FURY with Rock Hudson and other scenic outcroppings. AM TWENTY TWO years old. I have been at- tending movies regularly since I was about five. I have seen movies in all kinds of theatres. I have seen movies in theatres with plush carpets and double balconies. Once I was in a neighborhood theater so sleazy the rats crawled onto my lap and stole my popcorn. But never, in all those years, have I heen a movie quite so unabashedly tedious as "Gun Fury." I am a reasonable man. I ask very little of a movie. But there are certain rules that even the makers of bad movies must follow. For instance, when the action calls for a chase across the state of Arizona, the movie makers simply must not use the same scenery through- out. To see a bad guy hiding behind a rock in- distinguishable from the one he used about half a state back that-a-way is just too much for this willing suspender of disbelief. The makers of this movie managed to eke an in- credible amount of mileage out of one little bitty picturesque hill. Again. If the scene we are watching is supposed to be taking place at night, I find it annoying to be shown green trees, red rocks, blue water, etc. Even the brightest moonlight is so comparatively weak that all colors fade to shades of gray. I challenge the producers of this atrocity to step outside on a moonlit night and identify the vibrant fought on the wrong side in the Civil War and has been a crazy little mixed up kid ever since, It just isn't funny any more. Acting: We connoisseurs of bad movies aren't fussy. But as a rule, if an actor isn't capable of real expression, he shouldn't try. He should just say the lines any old way and get on with the shoot- ing. Someone obviously forgot to tell Rock Hudson about this. Dialogue: There is a lot to be said for the old, terse, They-went-that-a-way school of dialogue writers. Those men recognized their limitations and were willing to abide by them. But the current crop has taken to inserting sly little witticisms that would look more at home in the gossip column of some high school newspaper. The most stimulating line of the whole evening came, not from the screen, but from a fellow suf- ferer seated in front of me. He leaned over, nudged his companion, and whispered hoarsely, "Hey Rog, you awake?" It brought down the house. Rog, by the way, was asleep. The cartoon accompanying the feature, a treacly item involving Raggedy-Ann and a little blind girl, also deserves a word of mention. Execrable. -Don Malcolm T HE ATTEMPTED revolution in Guatemala, of which we find it very hard to get news, was obviously designed to remove Communist influ- ence. There are other and less violent ways of promoting the same object. .One of them is the maintenance by other American republics of firm position against foreign intrusion into Amer- f Loyalty Caused Troubles recenty crossed the country it When I was in Kansas City last must be apparent that there January interviewing the former dence hysteria and more confi- president for television he told me abl t an migh seem conf- something that illustrates his ideas headlines and editorials reveal about gratitude and friends. Per- that international conferences fail haps also it shows some compari- to reach any solution to a divid- sons with the McCarthy Commit- ed world frantically engaged in tee. It's not exactly a secret that for buration itsfor armaments inworldepwar a long time President Truman had There are many reasons for this no great regard for me, but, it was atisfactory taterofsnd and not known how far he sometimes most of them aeofs of the carried that "lack of affection." soundness of thare proos o te Once, however, he almost turned ple at this particular time The thumbs down on Clayton Fritchey country is obviously prosperous; fr apositio n rtheWhite House its cities and their suburban staff because Fritchey knew me.itton arexndg;ewf- I had known Fritchey first when towns are expanding; new fac- he was on the Cleveland Press, tories, new discoveries and inven- S Prlfn,-of th e Nm Orpm tions, new highways, new shop- Becky Conrad.............Night Rona Friedman............Night Wally Eberhard............Night Sue Garfield...........Women's Hanley Gurwin........Sports Jack Horwitz.......Assoc. Sports E. J. Smith....... Assoc. 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