Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1939 — Page 8
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A
ore Hoosiers Ready o Join Vacationists Enjoying Sunny South
. and Mrs. Lucius French Leave Jan. 20 for Miami Beach; Mrs. Fotheringham Calls Children’s Theater Meeting.
By VIRGINIA MOORHEAD MANNON
. Hoosiers are heading South to relax on palmdowed terraces or in search of a healthy glow on suncked sands. ; ~ “Mr. and Mre. Lucius French will leave Jan. 20 to pend a month with Mrs. French’s mother, Mrs. J. H. Trimble, at her winter home at Miami Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Zink leave the same day for a two-month motor trip through Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. Mr. and Mrs. William Ray Adams are to leave the last of
this month for Naples, Fla. Dr. and Mrs. William Niles Wishard and Miss Genevieve Sco= ville are at St. Petersburg for several weeks. Mr, and Mrs. M. Zi. A. MacManus will leave Saturday to spend six weeks at Sanibel I:iand on the Florida west coast. Mrs. John R. Barrett and her two children are in Florida for two months. Mrs. Thomas Ruckelshaus is at Palm Beach for two veceks ~ visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hall, at their winter ~ home. Mrs. Thomas Madden and her daughters, Martha Taylor and Ethel Failey, are spending the winter at Naples. Mrs. George Philip Meier is expected home the last of the week from Augusta, ~ Ga. Mr. and Mrs. William P. McGuire have motored to Tennc=ssee
for two weeks.
ny Mrs. William Havemeyer has returned to Chicago after several weeks’ visit. with her sister, Mrs. Henry I. Raymond, and Mr. Raymond. Mr. snd Mrs. Lawrence J. Shappert are home from a 1C-day visit in Champaign and Belvedere, Ill.
- Civic Group to Meet
Mrs. George Fotheringham, newly appointed Children’s Civic Theater chairman has called a meeting for 10:30 a. m.-Mondzy at
| the home of Mrs. Kurt F. Pantzer for all workers interested ir the
Junior Program Production for this year. “Haensel and Gretel’ to . be presented by New York artists at 3 p. m. Feb. 11 -at Caleb Mills Hall, will be the thir¢ annual Junior Program Production sponsored by the Children’s Theater. Mrs. Fotheringham succeeds Mrs. John
: Gordon Kinghan. : :
8 & » ” o
* Miss Blanche Stilison’s midwinter series of seven illustrated ectures on “Art in America’i-on Tuesday mornings at 11 in the FPortfolio Room of the Propylaesum will begin next week with a discussion of “1876: The Philadelphia Centennial.” The Jan. 31, §eb. 1 and Feb. 28 meetings of the class will be devoted to “Sculpture and Architecture.” Other dates and subjects are Jan 24, “1893: The World’s Columbian Exhibition. Painting”; Feb. 7, “1914: The World . War. Painting,” and Feb. 21, “1933: A Century of Progress. Painting.”
Paul Sachs Lectures at Herron
: Precision, grace, delicacy and elegance have ever been the distinguishing characteristics of the French school, Paul J. Sachs told Indianapolis Art Association members in a discussion. of “Drawings of the 18tii Century” last night at the John Herron Art Museum. © Mr. Sachs, associate director of Harvard University’s Fogg Art Museum and professor of art history at Harvard, has been viewing the private collections of Dr. G. H. A. Clowes, William H. Thonipson and Booth Tarkington during his stay here. “Watteau, unrivaled creator of the most exquisite 18th Century art, was unsurpassed in sheer power of pencil,” Prof. Sachs declared. “He marked the beginning of the rococo period in France while Fragonard, with his poetic vision and sensibility, embodied
; the end.
“Although the 18th is a French Century, the Italians helped mold French art,” he said, citing as ranking Italian draftspien Tiepelo, “last of the old painters and first of the moderns”; C:ie=
* letto, Piranesi and Guardi.
New members of the Art Association’s board of directors elected at the annual meeting last night preceding Prof. Sach’s lecture were Mrs. Noble Dean and Mr. Thompson. Re-elected to the board were Mrs. Albert. M. Cole, Mrs. James W.- Fesler, Mrs. Che les Latham, Hilton U. Brown and Herbert Foltz. : . Things have been stirring in and about the museum in the past year, as revealed in the report of Wilbur D. Peat, director, to the hoard of directors. A tabulation of the year's visitors aciied up to 36264 who reasonably may have been attracted by the 97 recent acquisitions (78 gifts and 19 purchases). Ten painting: of 16th to 19th Century European artists were gifts of Mrs. Alber J. Beveridge and 11 American artists’ painting were presented by lirs.
: ~ Harry Payne Whitney.
John N. Carey.
Dean of Vanderbilts, 80, Reul Answer to Advertisers’ Dream
" Ev SALLY MacDOUGALL
Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Jan. 11 —Of all New Year’s wealthy women Mrs Hamilton Mc£. Twombly is ihe one who seems to live up to the advertisers’
dream that 80 to 90 per cent of the
country’s buying is done by ‘women.
The dean of all the Vanderbilts has three garages filled with 15 cxpensive cars, spends constantly on equipment for three fine homes, wears
lovely gowns and furs, zives grand priced chef in the countiy. Even the railroads make a lot of money on her, for on long trips she uses her own private railway car. She is‘ ‘the only dowager we know whose enormous holdings make it necessary for her to have an office in Wall Street, with a siaff to look after her finances. Looking at this trini, elegant, petite, gentle woman, you'd never
imagine that she had turned 80, but
it would be possible to guess her age after knowing that she is the aunt of Gen. Cornelius Vanderbilt, William K. Vanderbilt and Mrs. The late Reginald Vanderbilt wzs another nephew, so she is great-aunt to * young Gloria Vanderbilt. *
Groceries an Item
Some financial experts say that Mrs. Twombly is worth $50,000,000, some say $20,000,000. Eer father, William H. Vanderbilt, vas said to have had $200,000,000. Ee was the only son of Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, the far-seeirig pioneer who knew so well how to plan the future that his descendants never would need to worry about rent and groceries. : Groceries are an itera in Mrs. Twombly’s expenditures. To be inincluded as one of her dinner guests is a ticket to Gotham’s most exclusive society, besides making sure of a good dinner, for sie is distinguished for the excellence of her table. Responsible for that is her chef, Joseph Donon. Sone say the chef gets $25,000 a yesr. Donon is a personage. He won't tell. -He wears the Croix de Guerre with palms and the ribon of the Legion of Honor. He i: a former president of the Fedcration of French Veterans of the (Great War, a director of the French Hospital, a . former president of the Chefs de Cuisine Association of Ainerica and is active in a new mcvement to _ establish a French Lyceum in New ~ York. His cooking education was finished off by the grea: Escoffier ~ when they were both at the Carlton in London, before: the war. We set down these details abcut the im- ~ posing Donon because they are a “key to the high excelience with which Mrs. Twombly surrounds her ~ life. : ~ Take her fine fleet of ai:tomobiles, all enameled in her special shade of maroon. -the door enibossed in dull gold with her lion's 1ead crest ] . IT. (Flor‘ence Adele Vanderbilt Twombly), Jer three garages—161 E. 69th St.
©
home—are
parties and employs the highest
latial 70-room white mansion on Fifth Ave., which opens at 1 =, Tlst St, also wear maroon, - Dressmakers who fashion these uniforms and the painters who finish off a car with fine enamel all profit from Mrs. Twombly’s exacting taste, Homes on Fifth Ave.
Since she moved over to Manhattan as a child from the Vanderbilt farmhouse at New Doorp, Staten Island, Mrs. Twombly’s- homes all have been on 5th Ave. Many 3 livelihood has been made from keeping them running in the apple pie order she requires. In 1863 her father settled them in a new house at 38th St. and the Avenue, where there were adjacent stables for the spanking teams, buggies and riding horses. She was married from there in 1887 to Hamilton McKowan '['wombly, a handsome Bostonian, dastined to become quite a figure in Wall Street. Their old photographs—she in scatins and hoopskirts, he with side whiskers and a mustache—fill quaint albums. For all that apd regardless of the tragic sorrows an abundant joys she has been through, Mrs. Twombly is distinctly a modern New Yorker. Her Favorite Home The orchids she grows at Florham are so fine that florists have wanted her to go into business and sell them. She uses them lavishly for party decorations, sends them to friends and does the same with vegetables ahd fruits that grow there. Strawberries, for example, grow all the year ’round. , That model 800-acre farm, with its 150 acres of park, is her favorite home. It takes quite a payroll for the gardeners and greenhouse men, the farmers who till the land, those who look after her stock, the dairy workers and the staff of household servants. : : Guests invited to a party at Florham needn’t worry about which roads to take Mrs. Twombly sends them tickets for a private train: that stops on the estate. When she goes there she motors, for motoring is her favorite recreation, and always there are two extra men in maroon besides the chauffeurs. -She owned one of the first automobiles in New York and every year since then has been buying new ones. Another of her expenditures is the personal physician who, with his wife, travels whenever Mrs. Twombly does. He lives a few doors from her 5th Ave. home. i It’s a bit of a shock to realize that modern, vivacious, fastidious,
speed-loving woman is past 80, that|
she remembers the Civil W.
Plan
Woinen Voters Make Study of Foreign Policy
Talks by three members of the League of Women Voters were featured this morning at the organization’s program on foreign policy at the American United Life Building. Legislation expected to come before the Congress and the State Legislature was discussed. Mrs. Walter O. Lewis talked on, “Neutrality Revision”; Mrs. Donald Gerking offered a summary of action: and implications of the Lima conference, and Mrs.
organization’s new foreign policy quiz. The quiz was written by Mrs. Quincy Wright, chairman of the Department of Government and Foreign Policy of the National League. Mrs. Wright attended the Lima Conference as an adviser to the United States delegation. The method used by committee members working in the Legislature for bills studied angl supported by the organization was described by Mrs. Alfred W. Noling, vice chairman of the Indiana League legZislative steering committee. Mrs. S. N. Cainpbell discussed the national program, including the action and the importance of letters to Washington. ov In addition to seeking a revision of the Neutrality Act and continuance of the reciprocal trade program, the National League program for 1939 opposes the so-called equal rights amendment, favors extension of the merit system, opposes further entrenchments of the patronage system in law and favors certain amendments to the Social Security Act, as.awell as adequate apprepria-
. | tions for the Civil Service Commis-
sion and the Food and Drug Administration. : “Different Forms of City Management” will be discussed this afternoon at the meeting of the Department of Government at the home of Mrs. Ernest Rupel,” 5716 N. Pennsylvania St. Six different forms of city management will be discussed. ‘
Club’s Founder . To Be Honored
Mrs. John Downing Johnson, founder of the Indianapolis Parliamentary Law Club, will be honored at a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Monday at the Colonial Tearoom. Mrs. C. W. Sett is arrangements chairman, assisted by the charter members, Mesdames J. Norman Bailey, C. W. Breunger, Frank Kern, Eugene E. Stacy, Gustavus B. Taylor, William S. Tomlin, Charles F. Voyles and Miss Maude M. Russell. The club was founded Jan. 20, 1933. Mrs. Johnson also is honorary president and study director. The lesson at the anniversary meeting will be on “Amendments.”
This trio of members of Alpha Omicron Alpha philanthropic sorority are planning a musical program to be presented Jan. 31 at a joint luncheon meeting of 15 Indianapolis chapters at the Hotel
4)
Wood L. Wilson presented the;
league's’
Alpha Omicron Alpha Pro
chairman, is
L. Faber.
Lincoln. Mrs. Carroll Long (left), nat
Times Photo. ional music
shown discussing arrangements
with Mrs. Russell Bleeke (center) and Mrs. M.
hostess.
“
Sophisticates. 7:30 p. m.‘ today. Ridge Road, hostess.
zell, 4025 S. State, hostess. Mrs.
Union.
EVENTS.
SORORITIES / Phi Tau Delta. Fri. eve. Miss Wilma Summers, hostess. Psi Chi Phi, Tonight. Hotel Washington. Miss Fern Downey,
CLUBS
Anglo-India Chapter, I. T, S. C. 1 p. m. Sat. Mrs. George A. Balt-
Auxiliary to the Paul Coble Post, American Legion. 12:30 p. m. Pri. Mrs. Kenneth L. Croft, hostess. Mesdames Harry Kerr and Bert Ellis, assistants. :
CARD PARTY Sacred Heart Social Club. 2 p. m. Thurs. St. Cecelia clubrooms, 1502
LODGE
Cumberland Chapter, O. E. S. Tonight. Cumberland Masonic Hall. Conferring of degrees. Mrs. Carrie Spilker man, worthy matron and patron.
Miss Phyllis Johnson, 517 Blue |
James Malin, assistant. Frank Gastineau,
and Christian Brink-
|Book Talks
{North Side Study Club at the home
Two Betrothals, Prenuptial
Parties and a
Wedding Are
Among Week's Announcements
Announcements of two engagements, a marriage and parties in honor of young women whose marriages will be this week-end are in-
cluded in the news of the day. Honoring - their sister, Miss Georgia Shingleton, who will be married Saturday to Irving Walker Knight, Misses Martha, Ruth and Faustina Shingleton will be hostesses at & miscellaneous shower tonight at their home, 639 N. Tacoma Ave. Guests will include Mesdames Michael Flaherty, William O’Brien, John Sehrt, George Strawn, Grace Knight, James E. Ryan, Robert Amos, Frances Lawhorn, J. R. Brock, Ina Forthoffer, Misses Leona Flaherty, Helen Bratton, Elva Johnson, Esther Royce, Martha Royce, Laura Royce, Peggy Poulton, Evalyn Clouse, Martha Mosier and the bride-to-be’s mother, Mrs. George O. Shingleton. ” 8 ” : Miss Lucille Craigle and Miss Betty Breech entertained last night at a linen shower at Miss Breech's home for Miss Peggy Kiefer whose marriage to Albert Storer Mendenhall will be Saturday. Decorations and appointments were carried out in’ candelabra and pink and white flowers, the bride-to-be’s chosen colors. Favors were tiny wedding bells in pink and white ‘Guests included the Misses Chloris Bell, Maryanna Butz, Roberta Conreaux, Marjorie Dalman, Martha Finney, Ruth Duckwall, Carol Langfitt, Fanchon Oaks son, Bonnie Beth Myers, Franc Patton, Mary Evelyn Daniel, Norma Rahe, Mildred Viewegh, Barbara Jean Sullivan and Helen Healy; Mesdames Ralph Davis, Alberta Dolzall and Charles Brown, Ft. Wayne. Miss Viewegh entertained at a
‘breakfast at the Canary Cottage
recently for Miss Kiefer, "8 » ‘Miss Marie Ernst, 4210 Graceland Avé, has announced the engage-
Kennedys Skate at St. Moritz
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ment of her niece, Miss Margaret Mae Ernst, to Robert William Angell, son of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Angell. The wedding date has not been set. ” ® ” Mrs. John Tritch has announced the marriage of her daughter, Fawntella Fisher, to Kenneth Koons, son of Mrs. Joseph Groth. The wedding was Dec. 31 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tritch. The couple is at home at 548 N. Pine St. # ” 2 27 Miss Alma Agnes Baugh and George E. Montgomery will be married at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the Coomb’s Bible College by the dean, Dr. E. M. Cobb. Miss Baugh is the daughter of Mrs. Rebecca Baugh, Unionville. Both the bride-to-be and Mr. Montgomery are students at the Bible School. Miss Pauline Baugh will be her sister’s attendant and Jean Lacy will be best man,
Mrs. W. H. Krieg Heads Aid Group
Mrs. William H. Krieg is the newly elected president of the Auxiliary to the Children’s Bureau of the Indianapolis Orphans’ Home. Other officers elected at the annual meeting recently at the Propylaeum were Mrs. Marlowe W. Manion, vice president; Mrs. William C. Bertermann, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Hobson Wilson, recording secretary, and Mrs. Alfred D. Hurst, treasurer. Other board members are Mrs. John W. Shirley, general chairman; Mrs. Walton M. Wheeler, assistant chairman; Miss Helen Coffey, publicity chairman; Mrs. Warren T. Ruddell, motor corps, and Mrs. Wilbur Carter, ways and means.
Initiation Due for Las Amigas Group
Pledges of Las Amigas Club will be formally initiated Saturday night at a dinner at the Kopper Kettle, Merhbers will attend the Scottish Rite dance later in the evening. Pledges are the Misses Bernice Wires, Dorothy Johhson, Bernice Hendricks and Frances Robertson.
Variety to Spice
at the meeting this Sorority. : The theme of the meeting is “Nor-
£ way.” Mrs. Harry Foreman will en-
tertain the group at her home, 3835 Washington Blvd. A trio, including Mesdames Sidney Blair Harry, James! W. Costin and Volney E. Huff, will sing “Solvejg’s Song” and “Solvejg’s Cradle Song,” by Grieg. Mrs. Harriet Burtch will be accompanist.
Are Among Club Plans
Current Events Group Will Elect Officers Tomorrow.
Speakers, book reviews and dis-
row’s women’s clubs. One group will elect
luncheon. : Officers will be elected by the
with Mrs. W. H. Link and Mrs. C. M. McGrail as hostesses. Mrs. E. P. Messick will talk on “Conserva-. tion of Wild Life.” Responses to roll call will be “Current Events.” Music will be under direction of Mrs. L. L. Lackey and Mrs. M. E. Burkhart. | :
Two talks will be features of the Service-Study Club meeting tomorrow at the Indiana War Memorial. Mrs. Austin J. Kassler will talk on “Monuments” and Mrs. Carl Corwin’s subject will be “Parks.”
Miss Ruby Hardin will review “Hearken Unto the Voice” (Franz Werfel) at the meeting of - the of Mrs. J. Blaine Hoffman, 5240 Broadway.
Solon Vial will talk on “Probation in Municipal Court” at the meeting of the Irvington Service Circle, International Order of King’s Daughters and Sons, at the home of Mrs. E. A. Perkins, 5457 Julian Ave. Mrs. Caroline Hall will be chairman of hostesses, assisted by Mesdames C. R. Evans, R. E, Guthrie, C. J. Irby, J. K. Kingsbury, W. A. Kunkel, J. L. Neal, O..C. Neier, S. G. Pattison and G. W. Van Ausdall. Mrs. W. B. Ward will have charge of devotions and Mrs. Evans will present the “Silver Cross.”
cussions will be features of tomor-| ¢ meetings of Indianapolis
officers and another has planned a :
Indianapolis Current Events Club, ||
| Active in Organization Wo
Miss Louise Ryman (left) was managing editor of the annual all
coed edition of the Butler University Collegian which appeared on the Fairview campus this morning. Miss Ruth Oovllier (right) was editor.
Miss: Evelyn. Pitts (left) recently was installed as president of
Lambda Mu Chapter, Sigma Beta Sorority, at a Founder’s Day bane quet at the Hotel Antlers. :
‘Miss Irene Headley Armes, Boston, Mass. national field secretary
of the Business and Professional Women’s Clubs; will speak before the Indiana B. P. W. Council Sunday at the Severin Hotel. :
Mrs. Walter A, Bohme and Mrs. A. M. Alexander will have charge of a program on “Insure Domestic Tranquillity” at the meeting at 10 a. m. of the Beta Delphian Club at the directors’ room of the Indiana National Bank. :
Mrs. Kathryn Turney Garten will review “Savage Symphony” (Eva Lipps) at the meeting at 1:30 p. m. of the Book Review: Club at Ayres’ auditorium. =
“Outstanding Writers” will be discussed by Mrs. John W. Thornburgh at the meeting at 7:30 p. m. of the Flemish Flanders Chapter, International :Travel-Study Club at the home of Mrs. Ruth Quincy Yount, 931 N. Dequincy St. Miss Marie Wilson will aid the hostess.
Mrs. James V. Rawlings Jr. will entertain members of the Irvington D. A. R. with a 1 o'clock luncheon at her home, 5510 Lowell Ave. Miss Mary Hostetter will speak.
Assembly Club Gives Luncheon For State Guests
Members of the Indiana State Assembly Women’s Club and their guests were to have a luncheon today, at the, Cl ool Hotel Riley Room. The Indianapolis branch of the organization was to be. hostess. Mrs. Bjorn Winger was to talk on “Indiana Holds a Mirror.” Selections by Indiana composers will be played by a string trio, including Mrs. Leland K. Fishback, violinist; Mrs. Robert Reiner, cellist, and Mrs. Frank Edenharter, pianist. Mrs. James Hughes, state president, was to respond to a greeting from Mrs. Louis R. Markun, Indianapolis branch president. Mrs. Charles J. Buchanan will give the invocation. . Assisting Mrs. Clarence R. Martin, arrangements chairman, were Mesdames Clifford Townsend, Arch N. Bobbitt, William F. Dudine, Albert F. Walsman, Jacob Weiss, Thurman Gottschalk, Walter Behmer, S. K. Ruick, Dana Enlow Mendenhall, Robert L. Moorhead and Henry Schricker.
Sorority Installs ~ New Heads Tonight
Officers of Beta Chapter of Delta Phi Beta Sorority will be installed tonight at the home of Miss Donna
Jacobsen, 1305 W. 35th St. : Officers are Mrs. Thomas White president; Mrs. Illoph Scott, vice president; Miss Alice Smith, parliamentarian; Mrs. Herbert Martin, secretary; Mrs. Thelma Lambirth, treasurer; Mrs. Philip Saxe, chaplain, and Miss Helen Whitmore, ser-geant-at-arms.
Quartet Will Sing
will be included on the program Friday for the Ladies’ Bible Class of the Emerson Avenue Baptist Church. A business meeting at 1:30 will precede the program at the church. “Listen! The Wind!” (Anne Morrow Lindbergh) will be reviewed and a colored quartet will
sing. i
Programs
Of Sorority Groups Today
A musical program, “A Night at Monte Carlo” and a number of routine social and business meetings have been planned by social chairmen of Indianapolis sororities for today’s gatherings. : Mrs. Albert Hirschman will read a paper on “Grieg and His Music” morning of the Patroness Club of Mu Phi Epsilon
Poet Will Be Speaker at
Woman's Department Club
Louis K. Anspacher, poet, philosopher and dramatist, will speak on
“The Achievement of Happiness” at the general meeting of the Woman's Department Club at 2:30 p. m. today. The meeting will be Susan E. H. Perkins auditorium at the clubhouse.
held at the
Mr. Anspacher will be introduced
by Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, president of the organization. A business meeting will be held preceding the lecture. Ushers will be Mrs. Lewis G. Ferguson and Mrs. James P. Tretton. Tea will be served following the
son, vice chairman of the tea committee, in charge. Mrs. P. C. Reilly will head the decorations commit-
A book review and quartet singing f
Beta Chapters of Phi Delta Pi Sorority. : : Members of Alpha Chapter, Omega Chi Sorority, will make plans for their annual card party at a meeting tonight at the home of Mrs. Martin Oslos. Mrs. Bryan Hiner and Mrs. Oren Carter will entertain tonight at Mrs. Hiner’s hotfie, 320 N. Irvington Ave. for members of Sigma Phi Delta So-
* lc. Hilgenberger, Louis D. Belden,|o’
Glass.
Harry, S. E, Barr and F. F r | “A N at
Give Bunker Hill Party
A Hard Times Party will follow the regular meeting of the Bunker Hill Parent-Teacher Association Friday at 7 p. m. at the school. Mrs. Mary Wolcott is in charge. The refreshments committee is headed by Mrs. Charles Harris.
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In Ten Luscious Colors:
Saddle Brown Aqua White ‘Rose
Cherry Navy
a
meeting, with Mrs. Ralph I. Thomp-
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tee. Presiding at the tea table will be Mesdames Othniel Hitch, C. E, Wolcott, Hugh J. Baker and A. C, Rasmussen.
Women Will Tnstall Officers of Lodge
Officers of the Past Matrons and Past Patrons Association of Marion County, O. E. S., will be installed following a dinner at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow night at the Broad Ripple Masonic Temple. Mrs. F. O. Payton, retiring president, will be installing officer, assisted by Mrs. Nellie Leonard, installing marshal. Members of ths Broad Ripple and New . Augusta Chapters will be hostesses. .
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