Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1944 — Page 6

I'he Indianapolis PAGE 6 Saturday, July 15, 1944

MARK FERREE

ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE { Business Manager

President “Editor, (A SCRIPP§-HOWARD NEWSPAPER) Price In Marion Coun- | ty, 4 cents a copy; deliv ered by carrier, 18 cents a week. .

Owned. and published daily (except Sunday) by Indianapolis Times Pube lishing Co, 214 W. Mary.

land st. Postal Zone 8. Mall rates in Indl

ana, $5 a year; adjoining

Member of United Press, states, 75 cents a month;

Serippe Howard apna others, $1 monthly. per Allia » * ice, and Audit Bureau

of Circulations. Ae RILEY 5551 Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way

MONRONEY AND GORE THEY rolled out the barrel in the fifth district of Oklahoma—a barrel of money. The object being to beat Mike Monroney for congress. But the pressure didn’t press. Monroney won by over 3 to 1. Monroney, a businessman when he first ran for congress, apparently—until the votes were counted—had lost ‘a lot of his businessman support because he failed to come through for an oil price raise. Having been a member of the house banking and currency committee and having helped conduct long hearings on war inflation control, he had arrived at the conclusion that the greater good for the greater number called for preventing a crude-oil price increase. Such an increase would have meant 42 million dollars in income to Oklahomans and five millions to the state in taxes. : The_casy way would have been to rationalize and vote ves, justifying the action on the narrow construction that it was in the interest of his local constituency. so many wet-drinking, ‘dry-voting congressmen did in

senators do; it's why so many votes yield to C. I. O. political action and other labor lobbies, to the farm bloc and to the many other politically powerful organizations. Such a concept of representative government is one of the most dangerous phases of our national life. ried to its ultimate, votes would never be cast with a broad

consideration for the welfare of the country as a whole, but. |

only for the interests back home, regardless. That's not statesmanship—it's cheap and shortsighted messenger-boy politics. Unfortunately, however, it is all too common. Monroney after long study of price control had decided that if the oil price line were broken it would start an epidemic that would quickly sweep to other raw materials and end up in that high and fatal fever which is inflation, unrestrained. - ” . » n MONRONEY IS 44. There is another of his sort, who also went through the inflation control controversies. We mention him, because it is on this type of younger lawmakers that much of the future of our country will depend. He is Albert Gore. He is 36. He comes from Cordell Hull's district in Tennessce. He possesses the same kind of independence and the same kind of personal courage to back it up as does Monroney, His primary comes Aug. 3, and he * has a fight on. We hope and believe that the people of his district—ihe people who first sent Hull to Washington—will show the same appreciation for qualities that count that the people of Monroney's district showed.

“THE COUNTRY IS AILING” :

JT is not exactly news that millions of young Americans

| labor board, denied necessary priorities or renego-

Car- |

|

|

are under par physically or mentally. Certainly it isn't news to many older men who have had to be drafted because of the high proportion of rejections among their juniors. | Nevertheless, the testimony of officials this week before a | senate subcommittee on wartime health and education is | appalling. : “We can no longer regard ourselves as a sturdy, healthy nation; the country is ailing,” said Col. Leonard Rowntree, medical director of the selective service system. od “If we can't find a way to make our

healthy,” said Maj. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, head of selective |

We The People

service, “we shall see our mechanized society go into retro- |

‘By Ruth Millett

grade instead of advancing.” Four million young men found ineligible for military service because of physical or mental defects is a statistic that cries out for action, whether governniental or other-

wis, to make succeeding generations fitter—not for war, |

but for the pursuits of peace.

Who will quibble with Surgeon General Thomas Parran of

the public health service

when he says: “Public health is the paramount public

concern of our modern society"? The medical profession, with new burdens accumulating in the care of war casualties, will be hard put for the time and facilities to give increased attention to an underdoctored younger generation—even if the controversial problem of how to finance such treatment can be solved. And that difficulty is being compounded by the denial of | deferments to pre-medical students,

CAPITALISM TO THE RESCUE

DETRACTORS of capitalism might note that Soviet Russia is going to allow its citizens to establish small businesses for profit, as an aid to reconstruction, This happened once hefore in the early 1920's under Lenin's New | Economic Policy, when private business helped to stabilize | and increase industrial production after the chaos of revoution.

The fact that communistic Russia twice reached for |

some of our comfortable parlor Communists over here that the American system has some merit. It might even con- | vince them that abuses under capitalism can be corrected | without destroying the systen. It might, but it probably won't, NO SOAP N the midst of war news, reports on price control, and | exhortations to do something about the fifth war loan, | there arrived at this desk the other day a circular from a | manufacturer of exclusive men’s toiletries. .. Among other items offered for sale was a sofid gold shaving bowl price, | - $1875 plus tax. We were sorely tempted for a moment by the bargain. | Then reason returned. Even with a gold shaving howl we should still dislike the task of shaving, we figured, and the | razor would still pull. Besides, on second look we discovered |

that the manufacturer didn't throw in any shaving soap. | -So'we decided that we'd bettor put the shaving mug into 100 $18.75 war bonds. ‘In 10 years they'd be worth

gold shaving bowl—even with soap included. '

a - HU

-

| youngsters more

1

|

{

| Who fool the educational bills. {only friend, while the politicians! sign Mrs. Benefiel should take the

I bicker, the 57 varieties of women!knock?

| pairs of moccasins and three or four eve

| parents, | along just dandy as they are.

: N . . . { through school and earning their own the lifebelt of profit-taking in an emergency might persuade | 1 and earning their o

| The college style to be developed fo, Stephens girls

to lose.—Nazji Propaganda Ministe r

{ Navy Secretary James Forrestal,

Fair Enoud! v By Westbrook Pegler

NEW YORK, July 15.—In another of her sidelong pleas for the Communists, Mrs. Roosevelt recently wrote “we live in a country in which our proud boast for many vears has been that we could speak our own minds on any subject and be protected in our right to hold to our beliefs or to express ourselves as we pleased.” : As against that, I should like to say that the groups for whom, . later in the essay, Mrs. Roosevelt bespoke this cherished American right, are ‘violent enemies of freedom of dissent and to cite again some pertinent testimony from the writings of the late Frank Knox. Mr. Knox wrote that the government, of which Mrs, Roosevelt, by personal pushfulness, soon made herself an active and influential part had established, at public expense, an enormous propaganda “that functions along lines quite similar to the organizations of Stalin, Hitler, and Mussolini,” to tell the American people that her husband was a great President and that the New Deal was a great, idealistic program, He wrote further that “in addition to being a propaganda organization, it is an espionage system in full bloom.” -

Element of Political Intimidation

AND, FOR reply, long in advance, to Mrs. Roosevelt’s current taunting reminder of the freedom which Americans enjoyed before her own accession to influence as the wife of one whom she has had the confident effrontery to call the “ruler” of the American people, Mr. Knox set forth the elements of political intimidation by which Mrs. Roosevelt's party -has,

our minds on any subject.” “Let a person of prominence speak up in criticism of the New Deal,” Mr. Knox wrote, “and one of three things, or all three. is likely to happen to him. In due

| tee in Washington. hat's what | T I will be put on the calling list of the internal revenue ) . | department.” prohibition days; what so many do-something-for-silver

time he will find himself before a legislative commitHe will be publicily castigated by an obedient officeholder in Washington and/or, he

I would say, further, that many substantial Americans of unquestionable loyalty nowadays are afraid to speak their minds on. ¢ontroversial subjects lest they be persecuted by the labor relations board, or the war

tiated or harassed bv internal revenue. .I would say further that Mrs. Roosevelt herself very well knows that members of labor unions, which her New Deal government compelled them to join, are afraid to criticize the goons, Communists, and common; underworld criminals in the union movement, lest they be fired and blacklisted or even beaten to dedth, all of which reprisals have frequently occurred.

"Let's Not Go Into Details’

PEOPLE NOWADAYS commonly say “let's not go into details on the phone” because that espionage system of which Mr. Knox wrote has put them in fear of punishment by her political associates in the New Deal government or by her followers in the subgovernment of the unions. i ‘ “A few people in Washington,” Mrs. Roosevelt wrote, further, “who hold minor positions, have been troubled by investigation into their private lives or into their political views and activities.” I suppose Mrs. R. here refers to the Dies committee's recent disclasure that she, among others, in the White House, and many individuals in the departments of justice and agriculture and regional directors of the farm security administration had received telephone calls from the New York office of the political action committee which has been denounced as a Communist organization. Even President Roosevelt ana Attorney General Biddle have said that communism is subversive and the Dies committee was organized to expose subversive activities,

"Trying to Deceive the People’ PURSUANT TO this mandate the committee in-

to a great degree suppressed our old right to “speak |:

ewoRD NE CALLOWER JERE

h}

MAYBE YOU SHOULD 0 JUST STUCK “TO EATIN? F RUGS, ADOLEY

T

1 wholly

The Hoosier Forum

‘disagree wi

th what you say, but will - defend to the death your right to say it.—Voltaire.

“WHY BLAME MRS. BENEFIEL?” By Free For All, Indianapolis

something worthwhile in the Forum.

fairs and still give no time to her own community affairs, such as juvenile delinquency. The papers nave been full for weeks about the bad condition of the juvenile home. Everyone who studies civic affairs knows that they have also been terribly short of help. -It is no one's fault especially, only that people are working in defense plants and won't work for a small salary for their work, Well, Mrs. Benefiel did. I have known her for years, and no one in her own community would believe a word that’s been published about her abusing the children at the detention home, but folks that don't know her will wonder about it. Well, making a long story short, I've been thinking tonight how nice

vestigated the P. A. C. and it just happened that Mrs. Roosevelt and the rest were identified in the long |

| distance telephone records as recipients of calls from 3 tenti I d nd the New York headquarters at a time when the New | detention home's needs and maybe ) q | some of the 57 varieties of women | forget the detention home until ‘who splutter around and want all the after this awful war has ended.|

Deal was trying to deceive the people by pretending that the P. A. C. was just an independent group of

| progressive Americans entirely ‘unconnected with the i Roosevelt party.

But, if minor persons in Washington were “troubled” as she says for their association with groups to which she herself has been partia} the fact remains that Mrs. R. never said a word in rebuke of the spies and terrorists of her own party and government: who hounded and persecuted and went after other Americans according to the method that Frank Knox described. ' |

i MRS. JONES-with two daughters in college and two more to go | —sighted as she read that Steph- | ens College had hired a top-flight | designer to create a new college |

style, which the designer hoped

would soon be accepted unit ersal- | ly by college students. vo The baggy sweaters, skirts. moecasins and socks which have been ! practically. a uniform on college! campuses for the past few vears|

might offend the senses nf fashion | designers, but they have been a god-send to parents

It is probably safe to say that many a girl now

goes to college who couldn't have aftorded it in the | old days, when complete and somewhat elaborate | wardrobes were a necessity, They Look All Right, Too NOW A FEW sweaters, skirts and socks a few

ng dresses will take a girl through college—rot looking like a poor relation, but like every girl on the campus. And they look all right, too. The natural good looks of girls their age give style and zest to their sloppy get-ups . As far as Mrs. Jones, and probablv a Int of other are concerned, their daughters are getting And they don't need made clothes-conscious until after they are salaries, Of course, there's a little hope for Mrs.

to be

Jones.

may not catch on at other schools. And also, the designer may hit on something just as casual as the sweater and skirt. But as Mrs. Jones points out have their sweaters and skirts. why try to switch them to some pecially at this time?

the girls already ' love 'em—and thin gz different—es=

So They Say—

THE GERMAN people have demonstrated they are |”

ready for anything. A nation hecomes most danger= ous when it has burnt its boats and has nothing more r Goebbels.

WHAT 1S happening now that, logistically speaking, we are getting close to the place where we can force the enemy in the Pacific to stand up and fight. - But I hage no illusions but that the fighting which the enemy will do will be bitter and costly.—

. - .

LET IT BE conceded at once that in an absolute

“ . - i hy % $2500. And that's more than we'd be able to get for our | SePse. freedom from want and especiilly from fear | © |is hardly more than millennial hope.—Dr. Everett

‘Case, president Colgate U, Fh

nia,

it would be if Mrs. Haggerty would write articles telling folks of the

little angel-face delinquent Kids

many hours a day to running the

be for humanity's sake. Mrs. Haggerty, all that excess flow of hot air.you like to put out would be fine for these youngsters who need entertainment, but do keep it in the form of Mother Hubbard rhymes or maybe some Scripture trom the Bible. Or, sing, brother, sing, that's another good way to use up your hot air, and believe me, these kids all love to sing, I've heard them. Have you, Mrs. Haggerty? Of course, that's a foolish question to ask. Of course, you have; I'm positive you are well versed in everything. I can tell by your writings. And now back to the 57 varieties of women who are so interested in doing something for these dear children. I say Mrs. Benefiel has given her all, with the popr facilities that the home has and every-! one knows they need a new home. | Why . blame Mrs, Benefiel, their]

splutter and Mrs. Haggerty gives | her tune to national affairs which!

Well, it was really a treat to read]

It's funny how Mrs. Haggerty can]: spend s0 much time on national afe|

{Times readers are invited to express their views in these columns, religious controversies excluded. Because of the volume received, letters should be limited to 250 words, Letters must be signed. Opinions set forth here are those of the writers, and publication in no way implies agreement with those opinions by The Times. * The Times assumes no responsi bility for the return of manuscripts and cannot enter correspondence regarding them.)

are way over her head? Well, to

a fine boy, and if each of the 57 varieties of women, Judge Rhoads and Mrs. Haggerty would each take a child and help them, we could

Mrs. Haggerty says her son is in

‘given the best (even better than|service and she has never enjoyed ino agective, they give their own children), may-| such prosperity. W (be she could urge them to give so gefty, my sons are in service; and,

Well, Mrs. Hag-

{at their expense, I can see no pros-

| the bad days; but then as now, I worked in my home community and gave where it was needed most, but never once did I see the starved folks that you talk about so much in my path. I admit I saw people who were poor and some had hard times, but we all helped each other. Our children picked green beans, tomatoes and berries for us to can and we had Tots of fun. Today our children are far away killing others so that Dad can have a fat pay check. Is that prosperity? Well, it is two fat pay checks, one for Ma and one for Pa, that are making our juvenile delinquency. What do you think, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt Haggerty? It certainly isn't Mrs. Beneflel's fault and just because Judge Rhoads and the 57 varieties of women like to go fishing and then ever so often jump, around and wave both arms and say “My, my, my!” is that any

well* I don't tink so. and gals, if you think Mrs. Hag-| gerty writes hot stuff, just wait un-

Side Glances—By G

albraith

"Don't tell aa oa home she even, hat

= 1 + p y Ci ten i +2

COPR. 1944 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. U.S. PAT. OFF N\ —_ A me thar SBely diving

“ russ’

[a1 of you, I have one of these | boys in my house and he is making well-meaning, being conservative;

| LaFollette,

til Mrs. Benefiel shows her fine records that she has securely kept until needed.

‘® » “OUR HINDSIGHT IS ALWAYS BETTER" By Observer, Indianapolis A few days ago you published a letter by Mrs. O. H., Bargersville,

Been Told,” and I would like to say that I, too, went through the Cleveland panic and it was pretty bad. I think I am safe in saying that both the Cleveland panic and the Hoover depression were in the same category and that both Cleveland and Hoqver, good, sound conservative men, fell heir to these conditions from previous administrations which happened to be Republican.

‘belonged to the old school and be{lieved that these conditions were {inevitable and would naturally run

| their course like the measles. Cleveland did nothing effective about it and Bryan took over the Democratic party and he, Cleveland, went into eclipse. Hoover, likewise; did nothand in 1932 had the {skids put under him and he also ywent into an eclipse. | PF. D. Roosevelt, a man of action,

He

{lots of mistakes, and who wouldn't? (He is only human like the rest of jus.

ter than our foresight and that naturally would be true of him.

| Let us measure that 800d which | right or. tries to make him pay initiation fees, he's against the bad and]

[strike a balance, and if this is done good |

he has done

| Without prejudice, I believe the | will show up the best. And to-any-{one with more or less prejudice against Roosevelt, I would say, “Give the devil his due.” 2 { “MAY HE LIVE FOREVER, TOO" i

= [J ’ i 1

| By Aloysius Fuzz, Indianapolis I do not agree with Mrs. Boots! {that The Times should stop print-| ing the letters of that grand and gracious lady, Mrs, Eleanor Hag-| gerty. After all, we are indebted to’ her for telling us about those two fine gentlemen from Indiana now in congress, Senators Ludlow and! I fee] the same way | about the letters you print from those dther two grand and gracious ladies, Mrs. Eleanor Shipp and Mrs. | Eleanor Eleanor. God bless all three of them, May they live fors ever. Comes now one Mr. Gas!

edge. Sez Mr. Gas Voda: In 1920, Mr. Roosevelt was made secretary of the navy, when most of us dumb clucks thought he was then running for the vice presidency. Sez Mr. Gas Voda. Five members of the Roosevelt family ‘have been secretary of the navy, the other four, presumably, being Pranklin Jr, Elliott, John and Jimmy, the big insurance and movie magnate. Sez Mr. Gas Voda: Under Mr. Roosevelt our national defense cannot be equalled or surpassed. As witness the fine shellacking our armed forces gave the Japs at Pearl Harbor. Sez Mr. Gas Voda: Everybody should know that the members of the supreme court are elected for life, when most of us dumb clucks thought these gentlemen were appointed bythe President, these appointments being confirmed by the senate. Sez Mr, Gas Voda: When the legislative and judicial branches of our government do not function according tq the will of the people, don’t, blame, the President. Blame the executive branch of the government. God bless-Mr. Gas Voda. May he live forever, too, ™ =

‘DAILY THOUGHTS : For it is easier, for a camel to go through a needle’s eye, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.—Luke 18:25.

COMMON sense among men -of

the tractor, Uncle Will! Why, to wash the dishes!"

Y CN

under the heading “The Half Hasn't!

Both men, though honest and

Our hindsight 1s always bet-

Voda, another fountain of knowl- |

By John W. Hillman

THERE ARE irresponsible ele« ments in every organization, and "it is to be hoped that the “spokes= “men for organized .labor” men= tioned by Fred W. Perkins in his Washington column Thursday be long to that classification.

spokesmen “are beginning to express doubts_as to the wisdom of congress in writing into the selective service law an iron-bound

men have the first they enlisted.” Such doubts will come as a surprise to the vast majority of American citizens, including the rank and file of labor organizations, most of whoni have sons or loved ones in the service. No principle is so widely accepted in this coumtry today as the one that decrees that the men who left their jobs to fight will have, ‘and should have, their jobs back when they return from the war,

right to the jobs they gave up when

"Priority Comes From a Solemn Promise’

PERKINS POINTS OUT that the national C. I. O. war relief committee, of which Irving Abramson is chairman, is attacking Col, Paul H. Griffith, chief of the veterans personnel division of the selective service system, for ruling that: “A returning veteran is entitled to reinstatement in his former position or one of like seniority, status and pay, even though such reinstatement necessitates the discharge of a non-veteran with greater seniority." In its publication, the, New Veterans, the C. I. Ou committee says: re , “Representatives of the C. I. O. have pointed out that this will mean the dismissal of world war I veterans and thousands of women workers who are in war jobs to support their children. All these people have accumulated union priority . . .” So what! The men serving overseas have accumulated prie ority. too; and-it is not union priority but the priority of national obligation, the seniority of sacrifice. Their priority comes from a solemn promise made by the nation, and from months of suffering and hardship in the steaming, mosquito-infested swamps of New Guinea, on the blazing deserts of ‘Africa; on desolate Attu and Kiska, in flak-battered. bombers and on freezing watches in the Arctic seas. If these men are | not entitled to their jobs, there is no honor left in | this nation. | We made them a promise, Is thisa promise to be | welshed upon as some petty, greedy individuals have | welshed upon the no-strike pledge? Is the national welfare, or union interest, to come first? We know the answer to that, and it is in the hearis of millions of Americans. We shall not betray the men who are fighting for us.

‘They've Seen Other Promises Broken'

MANY OF these men have had some experience with broken promises There is the outfit on the bate tle line, fighting under the most deplorable conditions imaginghle after long weary months away from home, They were exhausted, dispirited, near the breaking point in morale~—but on their assigned objective depended the whole success of a campaign. To these men came a spit-and-polish general, fresh from the rear. He made them a speech, and he told them he knew how tough it was, how tired they were, how many men were dragging -along with fever and

last forever, he said. Hang on and push ofi, he exe horted, and then he made this promise: “Your nexs pay will be in American money.” That meant only one thing—the magic word, “home,” and it did the trick. The tired division called up its last resources of strength, stormed the pills boxes, and captured the stronghold. And then it was sent, not back to America as promised, ‘but’ to Australia—and it hasn't come home vet. | The general knew, when he made the promise, that the division was not going home—and the men now know that he knew. “Battle psychology,” the general called it. The doughfoots had another name for it. What are these men going to think when they do come home if their country, and not just an ine | dividual officer, has deceived them with glittering, | false promises?

| Job Will Be Waiting for Joe

| FOR ITS own sake, the C. I O. and all labor { leadership should disavow the statements of thesa | “spokesmen,” or the nation will disavow the C. 1. O,

{ {

| mangle, washing clothes, mending perity. But during the depression took over and something was done If labor should press such views, it will be sowing clothes or even mopping. Just think | with them at every meal and well about it, as everybody knows. ; what a wonderful service this would and happy, we didn’t even notice done a lot of good and also made

| the wind and it will reap a whirlwind when the | veterans—who aren't too happy, anyway, over strikes {in war industries and other home front failings— | come home. This could easily wreck the labor movee ment in America.. : ! When G. 1. Joe comes home, his job will be waite | ing for him, and woe to the man who questions his

already paid his in blood and suffering and lost years, { G. I. Joe probably will join the union—unless its | leaders persist in such short-sighted policies as this

| one. But if he doesn't want to, that's his privilege,

He's earned it. ~Why should he have his job back? A G. I. Joe answered that in Normandy the othep dav when he came up to Ernie Pyle, and said: “Why don't you tell the folks back home what thig is like? All they hear about is victories and lots of

[ story stuff. ~They don't know that for every hundred

yards we advance somebody gets killed. you tell them how tough this life is?” Mr. Abramson can't dispute that with talk about “union priority.” If Joe wants his job back, he's going to get it. You can bank on that. and so can. Joa, Col. Griffith is right. There'll be no apple-selling for Joe this time,

Why dong

Bomber Defense By Maj. Al Williams

NEW YORK, July 15. — The next vital stage in the development of air-war weapons will be a weapon of defense against the orthodox bomber. The standard equipment was merely guns of ine creased range, with a lot of intri= cate sighting devices. But the best marksmanship was far short of the Y i necessary efficiency, despite ‘all the fe, propaganda about “shooting pMiles ou A out of the sky-like clay pigeons.” oo. ois Witness the apparently authentic’ reports about 20,000 Nazi AA guns mounted in the Rhineland alone, and still the mass bombardment goes on. Radar-directed anti-aircraft gunfire was an ime provement .over old methods, but it didn't stop the bomber. It appears that the most immediate defense which “Will stop the bomber will assume the form of an explosive charge (perhaps only a few pounds) carried on wings, driven by some version of the rocket prine ciple. This conception might be a miniature aircraft, in the nose of which would be mounted sound-detecte ing elements tuned to be guided by the sound propellers. ‘Thus these rocket planes could pursue and collide with enemy aircraft. The collision would, of course, detonate the explosive charge .an moli an 4 d demolish,

Principle Is Basically Wrong"

NOW’ LET'S look at the principle of AA fire. Basically it's wrong. We are still trying to shoot ducks with rifles. We speed up the firing, seeking by the establishment of grouped projectiles in the. sky to simulate the pattern formed by one shell of the ordinary shotgun‘ Thousands of AA shells are fired against every bombing formation, and only a few bombers shot down, I insist we are using an out-moded idea, inherited from

fortune Is rare~Juvenal, =

»

mi

.,

passed along by world war I.

For, according to Perkins, these *

provision. that returning service- .

malaria, how great the resistance was. But this can’ -

ground warfare and

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. IN NORMA! in our hands, block there ‘see be, because ac fighting is gust

of the other. men were in d¢ about 50 feet o millimeter gun narrow street. windows, smoke street was shak As the tank doorway, becau back. Inside tl level cellar, d wine . shop abc wire crates for There were lot

German S)

I WENT bs out at the tan denly a yellow and there was matically blink from where I enemy shell. A second sh the tank. The didn't catch fu ing out of the Grim as. jt ran toward us, lently. They going’ up and aces. They pit I spent the changed to ai

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