Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1939 — Page 2
i
or Depar:
ent’s
New Branch Office Opens Here Monday
elman Emphasizes ‘Improved. Tenor’ of Relations Between Employers and Employees; Townsend Praises Conciliation Service.
‘Arrangements were being completed today for opening Monday of Labor Department’s new branch office of the U. S. Conciliation vice in Room 218 Federal Building. The branch will work closely with the Indiana Labor Department in s to settle and avoid labor disputes, Dr. John R. Steelman, dictor of the service, told 200 representatives of employers and labor
terday afternoon at City Hall. "Dr. Steelman came here to
he improved ténor of employermployee relations in the last year definite indication that we are joving toward industrial peace,” 8, told them.
‘Come to Us’
** Flanked by Mayor Sullivan and
homas Hutson, State Labor Com‘missioner, Dr. Steelman paid tribute ‘the City for having arranged a g “where I, as a conciliator, tell you all to come to us with labor-employer problems and
LS overnor ‘Townsend praised: the work of the service and said the te Labor Department would coate with the Federal agency. “SCommenting on Dr. Steelman’s the Conciliation had no- authority to compel ghice in of labor disputes, the overnor stated:
that our State Labor Department no authority to compel groups ) appear before it. And I would t with all my mind any move fo give it that authority.”
iployers and labor leaders that ¥he labor question' in the United ‘States today “is not whether we hall have collective bargaining but
‘Unions Support Democracy’
“Collective bargaining is already the law,” he said. “The next logical step is to perfect a technique of developing it to a point where the . controversy is centered and ends
_ around‘the conference table.
+ “As long as our conflicts are con-
: ~ fined to the conference table our
_ democracy is safe. But when the _ sontroversy moves out into the firpe line, it is too late."
~ 2-“We have observed what has | Bavpencc to former democratic na-|
where the dispute between r and capital could not be setamicably. --“I believe that free, self-governing r unions are a bulwark of democracy, that through no other can labor bargain collectively industry on any semblance of
lity. 39 . quality ; Prevent 339 Strikes
; + During the last fiscal year, he
said, the Conciliation Service prevented 339 strikes which resulted in the saving of more than 4,611,000 smean-days of work and an estimated
: Wage income of at least $12,000,000.
. #.More than 90 per cent of all cases indled-by the service were settled & manner acceptable to all par-
diss, he said. =) » “The local branch of the service,” | he said,
“will work with the State Babor Department. Although it is g: Federal agency, its work is by no
- » means confined to industries in ire
'# gerstate commerce. * loeal industrial disputes as well as . those involving organizations ex-
It can handle
tending into several states.”
| %.The local branch will be directed
by Robert C. Fox, Labor Department conciliator, assisted by Robert ~ Mythen.
: | wooLEGs Este
«= VALUED ED AT $154,000
An estate valued at $154,000 was left by Frank F. Woolling, Indiangpolis real estate man and Demo-
: gratic leader, according to a will on ~ file in Probate Court today.
Most of the estate was left to his wife,* Mrs. Bernice Woolling, who was named administratrix.
~ 0SThe will provided that- income - from a property at 30th and Me-
gidian Sts. be placed in trust for the benefit of a daughter and three sons Sitter the death of Mrs. Woolling.
ELLIOTT ROOSEVELT “PREDICTS ‘HARMONY’
side’ Information Offered 2" On Future Trends.
Mm Ea -i
= (National Affairs, Page Three)
ie 5 WORTH, Tex, Jan. 21 (U. PF. ~Elliott Roosevelt, back from a te House visit, said today that e had “inside” information of an ed dota: movement for busi-ess-government harmony. e expected, within two months, t the Government would seek understanding with utilities; t legislation “to revise the entire ght rate structure in the United tes” would be introduced in Coness, and that alterations in the gricultural Adjustment Act were most certain.” Additionally, he ‘foresaw one year in which the pegoleum industry had “to put its se in order.” Mr. Rpostyels said his informadid not necessarily reflect the ws of his father, the President. -came, he said, from heads of vernment departments. if Young Mr. Roosevelt spoké over Texas radio network. While he Was a White House guest last week, ‘Me broadcast, by means of a wax | gecording, an address in which he ®redicted that the time “would soon me” when a Texan would be canate for President.
GRAND JURY REPORT SLATED NEXT WEEK
early’ 50 witnesses have aped before the new 1939 Grand ry, which began deliberations ; Wednesday after an interuption when one of the jurors re-
he first report of indictments is ted to be made some time next All indictments will be limited of persons already held
ex-| ain the functions of the new
‘office.
rer
‘DUSTED MARTIN SEIZES OFFICES
Displaces Rebellious Board Members in U. A. W. Control Fight.
DETROIT, )Jan. 21 Homer Martin led his loyalist faction of the United Automobile Workers back into the union's headquarters today despite his “impeachment” a group of 17 executive board members whom he previously had suspended. Surrounded by police and a strong bodyguard, the U. A. W. president returned to the union offices and summoned into session the four executive board members remaining loyal to him. His opponents had controlled the offices for two weeks, but in a swift movement yesterday Mr. Martin suspended 15 board members and seized control of the Today he completed occupation of the embattled union's headquarters. The oppositionist group, which last night “impeached” President Martin and ordered him to stand trial, was not in session today. Al-
pended by Mr. Martin, two other board members joined the oppositionist faction and automatically placed themselves on the suspension list. With the two rival factions fighting desperately for support in the rank and file and for control of local unions, reports were developing that the Congress of Industrial Organizations may hold much of the balance of power. Heretofore the C. I. O. has insistently demanded harmony in the U. A. W,, its third largest member. Mr. Martin, however, has repeatedly demanded restoration of U. A. W. autonomy. Leaders of both factions anxiously awaited an indication of whether the C. I. O. would pursue its harmony [policy or come out openly for either of the two factions. President Martin said he would address a mass meeting of Flint locals this afternoon on the state of the union and another meeting at Jackson, Mich., tonight. He said he had not been advised of any preparations by the C. I. O. to intervene, explaining that “there is no issue with the C. I. 0, it is an issue clearly within the union.”
FOUR YOUTHS FLEE US. REFORMATORY
Believed Unarmed, Sought
In Southern Ohio.
CHILLICOTHE, O., Jan. 21 (U. P.)—State. and Federal officers searched throughout southern Ohic for} four youths who escaped from the| United States Reformatory here early today. gitives were Haskell Cordle, 20, Hitchins, Ky.; Tommy Henry Hunter, 20, Petros, Tenn.; Wilfred Rufus Mehaffy, 21, Knoxville, Tenn., and Horace Yonker, 17, Raleigh N. Cc. Cordle, Mehaffey and Yonker “vere committed to the institution on charges of violating the National Motor Vehicle Theft Act: Hunter was committed on a charge involving an interstate shipment. They were believed unarmed and wearing the regulation khaki prison uniforms. It was learned that the quartet escaped from a dormitory without being noticed and fled through the rear entrance to the reformatory. Their escape was discovered when the hourly check of the dormitory was made.
GOVERNMENT READY ~ TO TRY AUTO FIRMS
FT. WAYNE, Jan. 21 (U. P.).— The Government’s case charging General Motors Corp with violation of anti-trust laws is ready for trial, U, S. District Attorney James R. Fleming indicated today. Mr. Fleming returned yesterday from |" Washington where he conferred with heads of the Department of Justice antitrust division. In indictments returned last May, General Motors, Ford and Chrysler corporations, together with executive officers of the companies, were accused of “coercing” dealers to finance the sale of automobiles through financing companies controlled by the manufacturer. Ford and Chrysler entered into consent decrees with the antitrust division, agreeing to discontinue practices the division charged were illegal.
CHICAGO RADIO UNION UNIT VOTES TO STRIKE
CHICAGO, Jan. 21 (U. P.).—The ‘Chicago local of the American Federation of Radio Artists gave its unanimous support today to a pro‘posed national strike which would silence scores of popular network programs. The local, which includes '750 artists, announcers and studio attendants, voted the strike by resolution. The 1200 members of the New York local voted unanimously in favor of the strike Thursday night. A vote will be taken by the Los Angeles local tonight and by the San Francisco local Sunday.
NEW YORK, Jan. 21 (U. P).— Designated by Secretary of ‘Labor Perkins, Charles J. Post prepared
today to confer with union leaders and heads of advertising agencies ed in radio production.
(U. P)—|
though only 15 originally were sus-
Shortridge band’s new platform.
Mavoureen Harshman, Alice Agopin and Charlotte Retmier, members of the Shortridge High School | stagecraft class, apply the final coat of paint to the
able, permitting The stand was | in use. .
built by the bandsmen in their spare time. It seats about 90. Built in sections, the tiers are port-
the stand to be stored when not
Times Special
German refugee.
POLL APPROVES F.D.R. AIR PLAN
All Age Groups, Young Men Particularly, Like Idea of Training Pilots.
By DR. GEORGE GALLUP American Institute of Public Opinion
NEW YORK, Jan. 20.—President Roosevelt's recently announced program for training 20,000 college students as civilian airplane pilots is overwhelmingly endorsed in principle by voters in a nation-wide survey by the American Institute of Public Opinion. The survey shows that the President’s plan, designed to build up a reserve corps of pilots as part of the national defense, is not only favored by all age groups, but that a large majority of young men say they would like to receive training as aviators—a clear indication of the popularity of the air corps among the youth of the nation. The survey, which covered a typical cross-section of voters of all ages throughout the country, asked two questions. The first read: “As pat of the national defense program the Government is planning to train young men in schools and colleges to fly airplanes. Do you favor this plan?” The total vote was:
Yes Gessvvesseceseseseacve BI No ee Ssvs tress rssnssiev-13 A majority of all age groups favored the plan, though support was somewhat larger among the younger
voters. Do Not
Favor
Favor . Plan Under 30 .......91% 9% 30 and over......85 15
A second question in the survey asked all men between the ages of 19 and 30: “Would you like to receive such training?” The vote was:
Would like to receive such training susnsesasssnevse 91% Would not .ceceoccoce0....26
In sampling public opinion on the first question—whether voters favor the idea of training young men to fly—all respondents were asked to give the reasons for their vote. The typical comments of those who voted in the affirmative indicated four chief reasons. The main reason was that training of young
defense and make the country better prepared for war. The second
‘Iwas that it is “good training for
everyone to know how to fly.” The third reason mentioned was that the United States should “keep in step” with other countries in developing an air force, and the fourth reason was that “we’ll need pilots for all’ those airplanes we plan to build.” Among the minority who oppose the plan to train young fliers the chief objections were that it would “make the country too war con scious” and that . "Dying is too dangerous.” . ;
SKIPS DISH-WASHING; HER BROTHER KILLED
CHICAGO, Jan. 21 (U., P.).—Carmella Traficanti, 19, didn’t want to wash the dishes last night after a family dinner party. She wanted to go out. But her father insisted.
brother, Paul, 23, and his wife to their own home. Her father sent her other brother, Michael, 24, after her. A bitter argument developed between Michael and Paul. Michael fell and struck his head and died a few minutes later.
INDIANAPOLIS THUG IS GIVEN 10-25 YEARS
TERRE HAUTE, Jan. 21 (U. P)). —Richard Crady, 26, Indianapolis, and Robert Casinetti, 28, Terre Haute, had received sentences today of 10 to 25 years in Indiana Reformatory for theft of a mace belonging to Jailer George Madigan whom they beat unconscious while breaking out of the jail here, Dec. 217. The two men slugged a taxi driver and stole his car, according to police. = Crady surrendered in In-
dianapolis Thursday, He denied he slugged the driver,
pilots would strengthen the nation’s|d8y
Instead she accompanied her
Peace-Loving Earlham College To Aid, Educate Reich h Refuges
RICHMOND, Jan. 21 —Earlham College, built on a foundation of Quaker liberalism and love for peace, today extended a helping hand to a
Out of their own pockets, students and faculty members are financing the freedom and schooling of a refugee yet to be selected, for the —® next semester.
Under the direction of Der Gesangverein, students’ German Club, $150 is to be raised on the campus for a refugee. Dr. William C. Dennis, Earlham president, already has announced that the Earlham Scholarship Committee will grant tuition and fees amounting to $115 for the sernester.
Refugee Not Chosen
David Hawk, a junior from Philadelphia, Pa., is to have charge of the drive. He is president of Der Gesangverein. The move on the part of Earlham students and faculty members is in co-operation’ with the Institute of International Education which aids German students continue education halted by flight from Germany. Prof, Arthur M. Charles, head of the modern language department, indicated that the prospective refu-gee-student has not yet been selected but that several persons are being considered. He and his wife directed a summer camp for German refugees, sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, last summer near New York City. :
“ TRAFFIC ACCIDENT SURVEY COMPLETED
Youth, 11, Hit-Run Victim; Four Others Hurt.
The preliminary survey of Indianapolis traffic control and accident prevention facilities was completed today. | Sergt. Kenneth R. Dickinson, who was in charge, was to leave for his home in Evanston, Ill. There he will prepare the report to be submitted to Chief Morrissey and the Safety Board on Feb. 2. It will recommend more detailed studies in accident prevention cases. Sergt. Dickinson spent the week studying City accident statistics for the past 10 years and gathering data on police department equip-
‘ |ment, personnel and procedure in
accident prevention and traffic control. He held interviews with Chief Morrissey and the heads of the traffic, accident prevention and record departments. He also: interviewed detectives who handle stolen car cases. Boy Hit-Run Victim Meanwhile, an 11-year-old boy was. recovering from injuries received when he was struck by a hit-run driver, as four others were injured in traffic accidents yester-
Clarence Biddle, a pupil at School 9, was treated at City Hospital when he was struck at Alabama St. and Massachusetts Ave., police reported.. He was taken to his home, 307 N. New Jersey St. John Haley, 71, West Newton, was in City Hospital with a possible concussion of the brain. He was trying to pass truck driven by Owen Stewart, 37, R. R. 5, Box 404, on Indiang 67 near Maywood, when the wheels of his motorcycle struck the snow at the side of the road and upset the machine, deputies said. :
Hit-Run Victim Believed Identified
, PORTLAND, Jan. 21 (U. P).—Local officers believe the man struck by a hit-run driver east of here Thursday night was Robert Shaffer of Antwerp, O. The victim was badly mangled when knocked, 60 feet, by a car after having been killed by a preceding automobile.
JONES CHOIR TO GIVE WAR PLAZA RECITAL
Tosti’s “Goodby,” selections from Verdi and Handel, Negro spirituals and various other numbers including popular religious airs will be sung by Floyd Jones, Indianapolis Civic Choir and Floyd Jones Singers leader, at the Indiana War Memorial Auditorium tomorrow at 3 p. m, Mrs. Jones will give readings and chalk illustrations and Miss Alice Dashke will play Weber's “Rondo” and “Master the Tempest Is Raging” by Palmer.
STATIONERY SUPPL,
PLASTIC PLANES
ARE DESCRIBED
Congress Studies Synthetic Method to Speed Up Production.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21 (U.P) — Congressmen seeking to speed up production of airplanes for the new defense program, planned today to study a process by which fuselages and wings of a plane could be produced with plastic materials in two hours. The new production technique was described by George A. Baekland, vice president of the Bakelite Corp., New York, for the National Monopoly Investigating Committee. He said the process was far beyond the experimental stage. Senator Lundeen (F.-L. Minn), member of the Military Affairs Committee considering President Roosevelt’s request for an $552,000,000 emergency defense fund, expressed special interest in the process and its possibilities for mass production. He said that only through some such methods would the United States be able to compete with European rearmament programs.
Steps Up Production
“There is no question about it that certain European countries have evolved production systems which enable them to make more planes in a month than we can in a year,” he said. Mr. Baekland told the Monopoly Committee that by substituting plastic materials for metals in plane fuselages and wings, production could be increased “20 or 30 times.” The present methods of fuselage construetion involve much hand work—oplacing of structural metal pieces in place, welding and riveting. The plastic method, Mr. Baekland said, would make it possible to produce in one operation, by pouring the plastic into molds, the entire body of a plane—its wings and fuselage. The material used, “duramold,” is stronger and more durable than the aluminum and magnesium of which plane body parts are now made, he said. Gordon M. Kline, plastics expert of the U. S. Bureau of Standards, said both Germany and Great Britain have been experimenting with plastics “perhaps longer than we have.”
Claims Mass Production Possible in One Week
CHICAGO, Jan. 21 (U.P)— George Meyercorde, Chicago manufacturer, revealed today details of a new “plastic” material which makes possible the speedy mass
production of streamlined airplanes. | He said the material, was devel-|
oped by his firm, the Haskelite Co.,
the Clark Aifcraft Co. Hagerstown,|
Md., and the Bakelite Corp., New York. He said a ship of the new material already had been built and had passed its tests. “The Clark Co.,” he said, “could go into mass production in a week. “We have signed an agreement with the Army and Navy pledging secrecy regarding a detailed description of the process through which the material was developed and the plane built, but its principle hinges on the use of dies in which one complete section of the fuselage or wing can be cast at once.” The material used, he said, consisted of many strips of wood of long grain impregnated with bakelite synthetics.
‘HORSE AND BUGGY’ DAZE BRINGS TERM
LANCASTER, Pa. Jan. 21 (U. P.).—Driving a horse and buggy while intoxicated brought John L. Davis, 25, of Gap, a six months’ jail sentence and a $200 fine today. Just prior to his arrest, Davis served three months in prison for driving an automobile while intoxicated. After his release, he resorted to the horse and buggy for transportation. State Motor Police said they found Davis intoxicated in the buggy and zigzagging across Lincoln Highway, tying up traffic. Davis had attended a sale at Vintage and was headed home.
FOR JEWELRY
MA:
MABE 3
a
FLOOD SURVEY T0 GET LAND
Fall Creek, White River Control Project.
City Engineer M. G. Johnson to-
{day began a survey to determine
how the City can acquire right-of-way for a $500,000 Fall Creek and White River Flood control project to be conducted here by the Army. The City, Mr. Johnson said, can acquire the land either through donation or by purchase. The latter method, he said, would require a
bond issue. The survey was started following a conference yesterday between Marion County Flood Prevention Board members and Lieut. Col. D.
‘A. Davison, U. 8. Army engineer
for Southern Indiana and Kentucky.
Under the terms by ‘which the
Army will construct levees on Fall Creek and on the East bank of White River, the City must furnish the right-of-way. The Army would pay the cost of both labor and materials, Lieut. Col. Davison said.. Donation Expected
He said that construction of the project would be started as soon as the City had obtained and
cleared the right-of-way. Mr. John-
son assigned his assistants to survey the land immediately. Mr. Johnson said the land not already owned by the City probably would be donated. The project is to include earth levees on both sides of Fall Creek from 16th St. bridge to White River: an earth levee on the east bank of White River from Michigan St. to New York St; reinforcement of embankment levees along East Drive from New York St. ta Owosso Ave., and a reinforced concrete seaway from that street to Washington Ave. The concrete wall will protect industrial property on the east bank, engineers said. It will be similar to a wall now protecting the west river bank.
YEAR'S FIRST COMET SEEN IN NORTHWEST
Object Can Be Spotted With Pair of Field Glasses.
By Science Service DELPHOS, O., Jan. 21—The year’s first comet, §0 bright it can be seen through opera or field glasses, has been discovered low in the northwestern sky by Leslie C. Peltier, noted amateur astronomer ere Mr. Peltier, designer of children’s toys by day and student of the
stars by night, reported ‘the ‘dis-
covery to Harvard Observatory which bulletined it in code to all
observatories.
In an interview with Science
Service the 39-year-old amateur
stargazer explained that the new comet is the seventh he has dis-
covered in 23 years of comet hunting. It is of the eighth magnitude of brightness, just too faint to be
seen with the naked eye, but is
easily visible in the six-inch refracting telescope of Princeton Uni-
versity which Mr. Peltier has been
using, on loan, for 15 years.
Whether the comet has a tail or is in rapid motion is yet undetermined, for unfavorable observing conditions permitted Mr. Peltier to see it for only 10 minutes.
On Tabby Is A Dog's Life
Times Special . DECATUR, Ill, Jan. 20.— he way Wabash Railroad officials here ‘ get it, Tabby, the Peru, Ind., hobo cat, must ih eaten a timetable. Several days ago Tabby bed on a Wabash freight train and shipped West, leaving 2-year-old Kay Karel tzger, her owner, tearful, railroad policeman took . Tabby off the train, reprimanded her, and put her in 8 pe shanty for safekeeping. Mr. and Mrs. John tzger read of Tabby's are rest and detention in Deca-
" tur, and asked Wabash offici Is to intercede. ey did, but when’ Pred Haney went to get Tabby and put her on an east-bound train for Peru, she was gone. Probably hopped another - freight, he said. The search is to be continued.
74 SMALLPOX CASES IN CITY
Dr. Morgan Warns Those “Who Are Not Immune.
Seeing no immediate chance for abatement, Dr. Herman G. Morgan, City health director, reported today there were 74 smallpox cases in Indianapolis. “The trouble is,” Dr. Morgan said, “that everybody thinks he is immune, vaccinated or not. All persons who have come down with smallpox in the city in the last
recent vaccinations.” He reported he had been besieged with calls from persons wanting to know whether they are susceptible to the disease. ; “They tell me,” Dr. Morgan said, “something like this: ‘I feel fine, haven’t missed a day in 10 years, and was vaccinated 16 years ago. Do you think I ought to get vaccinated, doctor? I give ihem an emphatic ‘yes’.”
DRAWS SIX MONTHS ON BIGAMY CHARGE
William Kittrell, found guilty of remarrying without getting a divorce from his first wife, today started serving six months’ sentence at the State Farm on a bigamy charge. He was sentenced by Criminal Court Judge Dewey E. Myers yesterday after the first wife testified
from Kittrell. The case of George Beaver, also charged with bigamy, was continued until Monday after a preliminary hearing in Criminal Court yesterday. Beaver testified that when he married his second wife last Auguist, “I thought my first wife had been granted a divorce.”
BUSINESS EDUCATION
Strong _ Accounting. Bookkeeping, Stenographic and Secretarial courses. Day and Syening gessions. Lincoln 8337. Fred W. Case, Principal
Central Business Colleg e
Architects and Builders Bulan Pennsylvania & Vermont Sts., Indpls.
few months were not protected by].
she had never obtained a divorce|ll
"FROM 2 WOMEN
HOME IS LOOTED
Burglars Jimmy Window at College Ave. Home to . Steal Jewels.
Burglars invaded the College Ave. 40th St. district last night and rane sacked a home before being frighte ened away by two women, police reported today. : At 8:30 p. m, Mrs. Donald H. Smith and Miss Laura Teaney, who live at 4144 College Ave., heard the . crashing of window glass. They were alone. They turned on all the lights, but noticed nothing wrong. At 9:30 | p. m., their next door neighbor, Mrs. | Frederick B. Neff, of No, 4152, who | had just arrived home, came over and asked if they had seen anyone | entering the Neff residence. | Investigation revealed the Neff | residence had been ransacked and $50 | worth of jewelry stolen. The crash- | ing of a jimmied window while the | burglars were in the home was the | sound that had aroused ihe, neigh- | bors, police said. Meanwhile, the wave ot snatching continued last night. Mrs, | Blanche Tiger, of the Spink-Arms | Hotel, was walking past the Chama ber of Commerce Building at 320 N. Meridian St, when a man grabbed her pocketbook contain ing $2. Mrs. May Beck, of 518 N, Illinois St., was walking near her horhe when her purse, containing 1 $3, was grabbed by a thief. When Victor Zore opened up the . National Wholesale Grocery Co. store at 106 S. West St. today, he found the sky peeking through a four-foot square hole in the roof and 10 cases of assorted cigarets valued at $500 missing. Police said that burglars had spent the night leisurely cutting an entrance. Mr Zore reported that packing cases were piled neate ly under the hole in stepladder fashion so that the intruders apparently had little difficulty in carrying out the loot.
GOV. WINSHIP’S NIECE TO WED LIEUTENANT,
SAN JUAN, P. R., Jan. 21 (U. P.). Governor Blanton Winship today announced the engagement of his niece, Katherine Winship, to Lieut. Thomas H. Hayes of the 65th U. S. Infantry, stationed here.
ROBBERY SUSPECT HELD
MILWAUKEE, Jan. 21 (U. P.). Kenneth BE. McNeal, 25, was held here today under $10, 000 bond, charged with participation in the $11,000 armed robbery of the Stell ben County State Bank at Angola, Ind., Nov. 22, 1938. Extradition
S. Commissioner Floyd E. Jenkins. A .
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Recent Developments in Science, $3
Propaganda Analysis, $3 Homa Buying and Building, $3 3 Introduction to Music, $5 Primitive Man, $3 ‘Psychology of Human Behavior, $5 Interior Decoration, $3
125 Classes Begin Feb. 6
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