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QUESTION BOX
More Social Justice?
LEGION OF DECENCY
BY MSGR. J. D. CONWAY
Q. It costs us to send a child to a Catholic
high school or university, or to be admitted to
a Catholic hospital; yet when we work for a
Catholic school or hospital as an employee we
are paid the lowest wages in town. The Catho
lic Church teaches me that the primary pur
pose of marriage is the procreation of chil
dren; yet when I applied for a job at a Catholic
hospital, I was told by the one
in charge that I should not take
the job, because I could not sup
port my family on the wages
they paid. The same low wages
are paid at the Catholic uni
versity arid the other Catholic
Schools. The same Catholic
Church asks us to tithe. How
is this possible when we cannot
support our family on the wages
I ask for your prayers that I
employment.
they pay us?
may find decent
A. We do much preaching about the duty of an
employer to pay a living wage, but very often
we do not practice what we preach. Possibly
it is because Sisters have a vow of poverty,
with no personal need for money, and priests
are paid extremely low salaries (though few of
them suffer want). We may fail to realize the
needs of families.
Another possible reason is that we are wrap
ped up in the works of charity, education and
religion which our institutions are performing;
we dedicate our lives to these purposes without
really expecting proper monetary compen
sation; and we tend to expect similar sacrific
es from others — for the good of the cause. We
fail to implement the truth we teach and believe;
that neither charity nor religion can be virtu
ously achieved at the cost of justice.
The only consolation I can give you is that the
situation is gradually improving. Probably the
majority of Catholic institutions are now paying
a just and living wage — and some others are
having trouble keeping their help. I realize
that this slow wave of improvement gives you
no help in supporting your family now.
Q. I am no saint. I am not even a pious Cath
olic. But I have always been a believing Catho
lic, and as such I have always been asked ques
tions about my faith by non-Catholie friends.
It is my responsibility .to answer these ques
tions, and I do so to the best of my ability.
I have been asked the usual questions; Why
do we use Latin instead of English in our ser
vices? Why are Catholics not allowed to attend
Protestant services? Why are Catholics not who is
in heaven and who is not; and why do we pray
to the Saints? Why must the non-Catholic
partner in mixed marrages promise to raise
their children in the Catholic Church? Why not
birth, control? I gave answers to these and similar
questions. Some answers were accepted; others
challenged.
And now those who challenged my answers
are saying to me; "See, I told you so," Sudd
enly, there is no Latin in the Mass. Suddenly
Catholics are actually encouraged to see and
hear Billy Graham, (Just a few weeks ago I
was told in a sermon at Sunday Mass that this
would be a mortal sin.) Suddenly there is no
Saint Christopher. (My mother would not let
me out of the house without my St. Christopher
medal.) So who have I been praying to all these
years? And whose relics are in the altar stone
at St. Christopher’s Catholic Church.
Now, I understand that the non-Catholic part
ner in a mixed marriage will no longer be re
quired to promise to raise their children in the
Catholic Church. How many marriages were call
ed off, and how many lives were destroyed
because of this rule? And how many souls are
suffering hell’s torments for disobeying this
rule, which may now be changed?
And what about birth control?
A. It is with regret that I omit great portions
of this interesting letter. The continuation of
that question about birth control is very chall
enging, but space requires that we save it
for another time.
This questioner has my sympathy. I have ans
wered these same questions and many others
repeatedly; and my answers are in print where
they stare back at me smirkingly. I refuse to
read some of my older columns.
However, I am very happy that I need no longer
answer many of them. Oh, the replies I gave
were very convincing; they even convinced
me, for a long time. But the oftener t repeated
them the less convincing they became. I sought
new ways of saying them; so I could accept
them myself.
There is still plenty of Latin in the Mass,
but now the explanation for its being there is eas
ier. The human reluctance to change life-long
habits is so evident it needs no explanation.
We know that more of the Latin will gradually
go; and in a few years there will be no need to
explain why we use our own native language
in our prayers, our Scripture readings, our songs,
and our Sacraments.
The problem of Catholics’ attending Protes
tant services—for good sound reason—causes
me less embarrassment. I have long been ac
cused of laxity in this matter. The law of our
present Code of Canon Law is strict and formi
dable, at first reading, but it leaves some con
venient loopholes for sensible* practical appli
cation. I have loved those loop-wholes; and -npw
the ecumenical spirit will surely widen them.
Of course it has never been true, that Catho
lics know who is in heaven and who is not—
except for properly canonized Saints. We do not
even know that Hitler is in hell—much less
Judas Iscariot.
Those mixed marriage promises have always
been a problem, both to explain and to put into
practice. Often they failed to achieve their pur
pose, and became a point for resentment. Note,'
however’, that no change has been made 1 in this
matter to date. Maybe none' wll 1,"but'>1'hope Sb.' 1
The proposfedchanges would ’ SimpS y' ‘pUf'a“douBle“'
burden of responsibility on the Catholic part
ner to see that the children are rightly rais
ed. And the non-Catholic partner might coo
perate more readily because he has not been
coerced.
About birth control—-patience please.
Oh, yes, about good old St. Christpher; he is
just as credible—or incredible—now as he has
ever been. The Church hasn’t changed his sta
tus of bit. I doubt that his name was-eyer ment
ioned in the Vatican Council; though probably
many of the Fathers carried his medal.
Phon* 522-6500
Noe 8
&
c<^
589 Fmnn do, N. E. • Atlanta 12, Ga.
Smoking Study
CAMDEN, N. J. (NC)—Cath
olic schools in the Camden
diocese are cooperating in a
study by the Atlantic County
Medical Society to determine
why youngsters start smoking
cigarettes. The study will fea
ture distribution of a ques
tionnaire * on attitudes toward
smoking to children in grades
5 through 12. A spokesman
said the study’s purpose is to
"come up with a preventative
type of approach to the prob
lem."
A-1 (Unobjectionable lor All)
Apache. Rifles
Boy 10-Feet Tall
Capture That
Capsule
Cavalry Command
Cheyenne Autumn
Circus World
Dimka
Dream Maker, The
Disorderly Orderly
Duke Wore Jeans
Earth Dies
Screaming
East of Sudan
Emil and Detectives
Fall of the Roman
Empire
Fate Is the Hunter
Father Goose
F.B.I. Code 98
Finest Hours
First Men on
the Moon
Flipper's New
Adventure
Four Days in
November
Gladiators Seven
Godzilla vs.
the Thing
Golden Arrow, The
Goliath and the Sins
Of Babylon
Guns of August
Hard Day's Night ”
Hey There# It's
• Yogi Bear
Incredible Journey
Invasion Quartet
Island of the Blue
Dolphins
It's a Mad, Mad, -
Mad, Mad World
Lassie's Great .
Adventure
Law of the Lawless
Lilies of the Field
Lively Set
McHale's Navy
Magic Fountain
Mary Poppins
Master Spy
Mediterranean
Holiday
MGM's Big Parade
of Comedy
Moon-Spinners# The
Murder Most Foul
Murder Ahoy
My Fair Lady
My Son, the Hero
Mysterious island
Never Put it in
Writing
One Man's Way
Only One N.Y.
Pied Piper of
Hamelin
Pirates of Tortuga
Purple Hills
Queen of the Pirates
Raiders, The
Ready for the People
Rhino
Ride the Wild Surf
Robinson Crusoe on
Mars
Samson and the
Slave Queen
Santa Claus
Conquers Martians
Secret of Magic
Island
Sergeant Was a Lady
Seven Faces of Dr.
Lao
Snake Woman
Son of Captain Blood
Swingin' Maiden#
The
Tattooed Police
Horse
Teenage Millionaire
Thief of Baghdad
Thomashta
Those Callaways
Tiger Walks
Unearthly Stranger
Valley of Dragons
Voyage to Bottom of
the Sea
Voyage to End
of Universe
When the Clock
Strikes
Who's Minding the
Store
Wild and the
Wonderful
World Without Sin
Yank in Viet Nam
You Have to Run
Fast
A-2 (Unobjectionable for Adults, Adolescents)
Aphrodite
Advance to the Rear
And Suddenly It's
Murder
Atlantis# the Lost
Continent
Bandits of Orgosolo
Behold a Pale Horse
Blood on Arrow
Bullet for a Badman
Captain Newman,
M.D.
Chalk Garden
Children of the
Damned
Chushingura
Convicts 4
Dark Purpose
Devil Ship Pirates#
The
Distant Trumpet
Dr. Blood's Coffin .
Escape by N»ght
Ensign Pulver
Evil Eye
Evil of Frankenstein
Fail Safe
Family Diary
Fiances, The
Frantic
Gold for the Caesars
Goliath and the
Island of Vampires
Gone Are the Days
Good Neighbor Sam
Guns of Darkness
Hide and Seek
Horror of It All, The
Householder, The
I'd Rather Be Rich
Kings of the Sun
Ladies Who Do
Ladybug, Ladybug
Last Man on Earth
Lawrence of Arabia
Man From
Galveston-, The
Moro Witch Doctor
Muscle Beach Party
Night Walker
Night Train to Paris
Nightmare
No My Darling
Daughter
One Potato# Two
Potato
Pit and the
Pendulum
Point of Order
Quick Gun
Ring of Treason
Robin and the Seven
Hoods
Roustabout
Sardonicus
Satan Bug
Seance on Wet
Afternoon
Scream of Fear
Secret Door, The
Secret Invasion
Secret of Deep
Harbor
Send Me No Flowers
Seven Days in May
Shock Treatment
Sing and Swing
533 Squadron
Sound of Trumpets
Suitor# The
Stagecoach to
Thunder Rock
Stop Train 349 From
Berlin
Swingin' Affair
Taggart
That Man From Rio
Thunder Island
Trunk# The
Twenty Plus Two
Unsinkable Molly
Brown
Voice of the
Hurricane
Walk A Tight Rope
Walk Into Hell
Walls of Hell
War Is Hell
Weekend With Lulu
Witchcraft
World of Henry
Orient, The
Young Doctors
Your Cheatin' Heart
A-2 (Unobjectionable for Adults)
America, America
Andy
Ape Woman
Armored Command
Bebo's Girl
Becket
Bedtime Story
Bikini Beach
Billy Liar
Blind Corner
Buddha
Bus Riley's Back
In Town
Cardinal, The
Cartouche
Ceremony, The
Code 7, Victim 5
. Commando
Couch, The
Crooked Road
Dead Ringer
Don't. Tempt the
Oevil.
Eyes of Annie Jones,
The
Face in the Rain
Fargo
Flight From Ashi
For Those Who
Think Young
Global Affair
Goldfinger
Goodbye Charlie
Great War, The •
Guest, The
Guns at Batasl
Hellfire Club
Horror Castle
Invitation to a
Gunfighter
Killers. The
Kisses For My
President .
Love With the
Proper Stranger
Los Tarantos
Luck of Ginger
Coffey
Mafioso
Mail-Order Bride
Man Who Couldn't
Walk
Mon's Favorite ;
Sport
iya Marnie
Money, Money,
Money
Move Over Darling
Muriel
Naked Kiss
Nightmare -in the
Sun
One Plus One
Out-of-Towners
Outrage, The
Panic Button
Panic in the Year
Zero
Paris When It
Sizzles
Pink Panther
Prize, The
Rio Conchos
Rocco and His
Brothers
Rounders
Season of Passion
Seduced and
Abandoned
Soft Skin
Strait-Jacket
Strange Bedfellows
Take Her# She's
Mine
Tamahine
Thin Red Line
Third Secret# The
Threepenny Opera
Three On a Spree
Thunder of Drums
Torpedo Bay
To Bed or Not
Bed
Topkapl
Twilight of Honor
Two Women
Victors. The
West Side Story
Where Love Has
Gone
Woman of Straw
Woman Who
Wouldn't Die, The
Youngblood Hawke
Young Lovers# The
Zulu
to
Adam and Eve -
Best Man, The
Black Like Me
Case of Dr. Laurent
Cleo from 5 to 7
Cool World, The
Devil's Wamon
Divorce# Italian
i . Style.
Dr. Strangeloye
Easy Life, The
Eclipse .
A-4 (Unobjectionable for Adults, With
Reservations* )
Long Day's Journey Strangers in the City
Into Night This Sporting Life
Tom Jones
Never Take Candy To ° Y oun * to Lov «
From a Stranger Under the Yum Yum
Night of the Iguana Tree
Nothing But the Best victim
“—*— Visit, The
Walk On the Wild
Servant, The slde
Sky Above and the Young and the
Mud Below, The Willing, The
8Vr ’
F^eud
Girl of the Night Martin Luther
Girt with the Green ^ 0n ^ 0 5 a . ne
Eyes
Important Man
intruder
King of Kings Organizer, The
ij„ Pressure Point
L-Shaped, Room, The p umpkin 6ater
La Dolce Vita
Lilith
Lolita
8 (Objectionable in Part for
v Americanization of
)j J tfd
Black Sabbath
Carpetbaggers, The •
Cleopatra
Corhedy of Terrors ’
Coniugal Bed, The
Crazy Desire
Cry of Battle *
Curse of the Living
Corpse
Dementia 13
Devil -and ,Tcn
Commandments
diary of Bachelor
Pour F or Texas «
From Russia With
• l ove
Get Yourself a
College Girl
Affair of the Skin,
An
And God Created
Woman
Baby Doll
Balcony, The
Bed of Grass
Bell'Anfonio
Boccaccio 70
Bonne Soupe, La
Breathless
Christine Keeler
Affair, The
Cold Wind in August
Come Dance With
Me
Contempt
Doll, The
During One 'Night
Empty Canvas
Expresso Bongo
Five Day Lover
Girl With the Golden
Eyes
Green Carnation
(was: Trials of
Oscar Wilde)
Green Mare
Gun Hawk, The
He : ’Rides 1 Tllf n
Honeymoon Hotel-H
Horror of Party ,
Beach
House Is Not A
, Home, A
Irma-La .Dduce-
John ' Goldfarb,'-'
Please Come
Home
Joy House v -
Kissin' CouS«ns
Kitten with A Whip
llady in a Cacje
Long Ships, The
Looking For Love
Love on the Riviera
Love# Italian Way
Man in the Middle
Masque of the Red
Death
New, Interns, The
Night Must Fall
No,Greater Sin
(was: 18 and
Anx'jous)
Nutty, Naughty,
Chateau
Of Human Bondage
Pajama Party
Palm- Springs
Weekend
Psyche 59
Racing Fever
Seventh Dawn
Sex And The Single
Girl
C (Condemned)
Heroes and Sinners
I Am a Camera
I Love, You Love
Image of Love
Joan of the Angels?
Jules and Jim
Kiss Me Stupid
Knife in the Water
L'Avventura
La Notte (Night)
Lady Chatterley's
Lover
Law, The
Les Liaisons
Dangereuses
Let's Talk About
Women
Liane, Jungle
Goddess
Love Game
Love Is My
Profession
Love on a Pillow
■Lovers, The
Mademoiselle
Striptease
Magdalena
Maid in Paris
Mating Urge
Miller's Beautiful
Wife
Mistress for the
Summer# A
Mitsou
Molesters, The
Mom and Dad
(Slderoad)
Moon Is Blue, The
My Life to Live
Never on Sunday
Nude Odyssey, The
Odd Obsession
Of Wayward Love
Oscar Wilde
Passionate Summer
Phaedra
Playgirl After Dark
Please, Not Now!
Port of Desire
Pof Bouille (Lovers
of Paris)
Prime Time
Private Property
All)
Shot in the Dark, A
Small World of,.
Sammy Lee# The
Soldier in the Rain
Station Six Sahara
Strangler, The
Sunday In New York
Three Fables of Love
Time Travelers
Tiara Tahiti
Under Age
Vice And Virtue
Viva Las Vegas
What A Way to Go
Who's Been Sleeping
in My Bed
Yesterday, Today
and Tomorrow
Question of Adultery
Saturday Night and
Sunday Morning
Savage Eye
Seven Capital Sins
Silence, the
Sins of Mona Kent
Slave Trade In
World Today
Smiles of a Summer
Night
Tales of Paris
Temptation
Third Sex
Too Young, Too
immoral
Trials of Oscar Wilde
Truth, The (La
Verlte)
Viridiana
War of the Buttons
Wasted Lives and
The Birth of Twins
Weekend
Woman in Dunes
Women of the
World
* An A-4 classification is given to certain films, which while hot morally of*
tensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis and explanation as I
protection lo the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclu
sions.
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NEW YEAR’S MESSAGE
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VATICAN CITY (RNS)—New
Year’s Day saw Pope Paul VI
blend good wishes to all man
kind with a prayer that 1965
would see the world enjoy
peace, "the peace that is so
fragile and continuously threa
tened and offended, yet is ever
more nec ssary and yearned
for."
Appearing at the window of
his private study, the pontiff
spoke briefly before leading
the crowd gathered in St. Pet
er's Square in the noonday An-
gelus.
"WE are pleased," he said,
"to express our good wishes
to you and to all your dear
ones, to all mankind near and
far, to all the faithful in the
Church, to all Christian breth
ren still separated from us,
because our duty is to all and
our Christian love must be
spent for all...
"May the world enjoy thd pro
sperity it needs this coming
year. This is our wish and our
hope. May the world think and
plan along good lines, in jus
tice and honesty, freedom and
concord, to make it a better
and a happier place."
Going on to express his de
sire for peace, the Pope said
he had in mind especially "those
places where brother fights
brother, where human blood is
spilled, where there are plans
for domination and feelings of
revenge."
,vj "let our prayer," he said,
reach those places where the
councils of men decide the fate
of nations and the places
ANSWER TO
LAST WEEK'S PUZZLE
of nations and the leaders of
thought and ideas shape the
souls of peoples.
"We dare to address our
selves to the supreme hope of
the world, to Christ Our Lord,
the Saviour of mankind, Mas
ter of Peace and Redemption,
the Brother and Friend of all
men.
"We beg Him the Hope of the
World, to grant us peace in the
year ahead. And we pray for
this through the most powerful'
intermediary mostd-ar to Him,
His and our Mother, Our Lady,
the Blessed Virgin Mary.”
Cite Volunteers
CHICAGO (NC)~ The Papal
Volunteers for Latin America'
movement, which has national
headquarters here, will receive
an award for "leadership in
humanitarian endeavor” at the
Festival of Leadership dinner
sponsored in the Palmer House
Jan. 28 by the Little Flower
Society to help finance the edu
cation of 400 Carmelite sem
inarians.
THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1965 GEORGIA BULLETIN PAGE 7
BLAMES PRIESTS. BISHOPS
Historian Hits Clerical
Silence On McCarthyism
WASHINGTON, D. C. (RNS)
— More than a decade after
the McCarthy hearings
and "McCarthyism” was ad
ded to the vocabulary of Amer
icans, the priests and bishops
of the Roman Catholic Church in
the U, S. have come under
fire for not taking a clear-cut
stand on the Wisconsin sena
tor and his controversial inves
tigative tactics.
But rising to the defense of the
bishops, was the Most Rev.
Philip M. Hannan, Auxiliary
Bishop of Washington, who said
he believes the Catholic laity
has enough “maturity in the
faith” and competence in de
ciding for itself what it be
lieves on national politics not
to make it necessary to appeal
the bishops for an "official”
position.
THE charge that priests and
bishops were weak when the
Senate hearings were being held
by Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R.
-Wis.) between 1950 and 1954
was made by Dr. Vincent P»
De Santis, head of the Modern
American History Depart
ment at the University of No
tre Dame.
He read his paper before ne
arly 300 members of the Ame
rican Catholic Historical Asso
ciation, one of 28 history so
cieties chartered under the
American Historical Asso
ciation in 1884 by Congress.
Some 5,000 of its combined
membership of 12,000 convened
in Washington for the 79th
annual convention.
Bishop Hannan said, in a
critical analysis of the pap
er, that in Washington and in
other archdioceses *‘we are
under strong pressure from
many fronts to speak out on
this or that political issue.
Frankly, I do not think the com
monweal is particularly endow
ed with infallibility.”
HE HELD that "nobody knows
completely the case for or
against McCarthy," and no one
ever will until all the documents
of Russia and other nations
are made known just how much
accuracy there was in the Sen
ator's probes and accusations.
The bishop said he believes
it premature to make full jud
gments on the issue. He added
that there was strong pressure
to take a definite stand purpo
rting that the late President
Diem of South Vietnam was
the main roadblock to fighting
the Communsts in that country.
But he said not enough time has
elapsed or enough evidence is
available to make such a pro
nouncement against Diem,
who was a Catholic.
"I believe the laity is compe
tent and that this can be handl
ed in the forum of the laity."
IN HIS paper, Dr. De Santis
related that the preponderance
of Catholic opinion at the time
of the hearings was in favor of
the Wisconsin legislator.
Fifty-eight per cent of Cat
holics polled, he said, favored
the Senator’s program and tac
tics in probes of' alleged Com
munists in the U. S, govern
ment, while only 23 per cent
of them disapproved and 19 per
cent expressed no opinion.
To his knowledge, he said,
only one priest publicly spoke
out against McCarthy, and only
Auxiliary Archbishop Bernard
J. Sheil of Chicago among
the bishops spoke out publicly
against him. "Many persons in
America got the mistaken hotion
that Catholicism and support
of McCarthy were inseparable.
The Senator was a Catholic.
HE blamed the Catholic press
for much of this, along with the
laity and the clergy in general..
Of 46 Catholic weekly news
papers analyzed, he said, af
ter Archbishop Sheil made a
public attack against McCarthy
and his tactics, 22 ignored
it altogether, while 24 ran
news stories and editorial com
ment on it. Only two used the
story on page one, although the
speech received headline trea
tment in many secular news
papers across thenation. Only
two used the entire text of the
critical speech; the Catholic
News Service had made it ava
ilable to all of them.
Dr. De Santis said that be
cause of this treatment and the
Silence of the clergy, there was
very strong danger of it becom
ing a Church issue between
Catholics and Protestants.
"Catholics were being made
guilty by association with the
Senator."
THE Notre Dame historian
hel d that there were three
principal reasons why the
Catholics expressed a strong
sentiment for the Senator, apart
from the fact he was a Catho
lic:
1. Reaction against a gene-
rally-held view that Protestants
believed Catholics were more
loyal to the Vatican than they
were to America. As a result,
anything that appeared to be
strongly American was war
mly praised by the Catholics.
To be against communism was,
therefore, the height of Ame
ricanism.
threat, and were "convinced
that you fight Communists in
the same way you fight rat
tlesnakes — without a rule
book" The menace, therefore,
justified the technique. Mc
Carthyism became to Catholics
a necessary nuisance."
3. McCarthy embodied the ide
als of the isolationist element
within the American Catholic
Church.
The historian was parti
cularly critical of Francis
Cardinal Spellman, Arch
bishop of New York, who, he
said, by his presence at a test
imonial dinner for the Senator
during the hearings, added sup
port to his practices.
Peace Medal For
Bishop Wright
2. That only Catholics "fully
understood" the Communist
Students Assist
EAST LANSING, Mich, (NC)
--Catholic students atMichigan
State University pledged
$145,792 in the first phase of
a $400,000 drive to expand the
facilities of St. John’s Stu
dent Parish which serves the
student body. Catholic students
at Michigan State now number
6,000 and are expected to toatal
9,000 by 1970.
PITTSBURGH (NC)—Bishop
John J. Wright of Pittsburgh
will receive the 1964 Peace
Medal of the Third Order of
St. Francis at a Jan. 16 lunch
eon in the Penn Sheraton Hotel
here.
Awarded annually for "truly
Christ-like efforts in behalf of
peace among all men," the
medal has gone in the past to
such men as Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles, FBI di
rector J. Edgar Hoover, and
Negro civil rights leader Dr.
Martin Luther King.
CLASSIFIEDS
INSURANCE I PERSONAL
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'Painting," papering,'' minor re-
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Painting- Interior-
Exterior
Thoroughly expo: ienced expert
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ABLE furniture, clothing, ap
pliances, books, etc., for the
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phoning: 688-6390
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ATLANTA 5, GEORGIA
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