Reports of town officers of the town of Attleborough 1942, Part 4

Author: Attleboro (Mass.)
Publication date: 1942
Publisher: The City
Number of Pages: 256


USA > Massachusetts > Bristol County > Attleboro > Reports of town officers of the town of Attleborough 1942 > Part 4


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1


2


2


1


5


6


4


July .


21


11


10


1


2


2


5


7


3


4


August


25


6


16


1


12


13


3


1


3


1


3


6


7


1


September


29


10


19


1


1


2


00


2


3


9


5


3


October .


19


5


14


1


1


6


8


~


4


December .


31


15


16


3


Totals


307 124 183


18


1


1 1


1


7 18


00 14


42 68 81


49


ANNUAL REPORT


11 6


21


N


14


2


2


1


June


3


6


4


6


November


25


49


50


CASES OF CONTAGIOUS DISEASES DEATHS FROM CONTAGIOUS DISEASES


Meningitis


Streptococcus


Chicken Pox


German Measles


Mumps


Scarlet Fever


Other Forms


Tuberculosis


Cough


Whooping


Dog Bite


Measles


Pneumonia


Lobar


Tuberculosis


Pulmonary


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths.


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


Deaths


Cases


January


1


1


7


6


34


1


4


7


February


1


1


1


5


9


3


88


3


3


March .


1


2


1


6


1


111


1


1


2


8


April.


1


5


2


1


2


=


50


May .


2


7


10


14


29


1


3


2


4


June.


2


1


10


1


13


10


1


2


4


July .


1


3


1


3


3


3


1


August.


1


16


1


9


September


1


9


5


2


3


October. .


4


14


9


2


1


4


November


=


19


0


1


1


December


00


1


12


10


10


1


2


1


1


Totals.


1


25


17


57


00


1


2


76


88


327


4 1


11 22


46


. .


1


3


ANNUAL REPORT


2


51


ANNUAL REPORT


REPORT OF THE INSPECTOR OF ANIMALS


December 31, 1942


Ralph P. Kent, M. D., Health Office, Attleboro, Mass.


Dear Doctor:


My report as Inspector of Animals and Inspector of Slaughter:


The duties of these two offices have progressed as usual, with this exception:


On account of present day conditions my yearly inspection of animals has been postponed and in its stead, special effort has been made to be constantly on the alert for any unusual outbreak of contagious disease. These are instructions from the Division of Livestock Disease Control.


Also, there have been many calls to check on animals because of Interstate shipments, especially in the South Attleboro section of the city.


Very truly yours, Frederick L. Briggs, D. V. M.


REPORT OF THE INSPECTOR OF PLUMBING


Dr. Ralph P. Kent, Health Officer,


January 8, 1943


City of Attleboro, Massachusetts.


Dear Sir:


The following is a report of work performed by the Inspector of Plumbing, during the year 1942:


There were 240 permits issued:


Number of toilets installed 160


Number of tubs installed 63


Number of lavoratories installed 115


Number of sinks installed . 100


Number of showers installed . 2


Number of wash trays installed 17


Number of sewer connections


5


Number of urinals installed. 17


Number of drinking fountains installed . .


1


Number of new buildings 9


Number of consultations with owners. 36


Respectfully submitted, John W. Bullock, Inspector of Plumbing


52


ANNUAL REPORT


Report of the Board of Fire Engineers


MAYOR John W. McIntyre


COMMITTEE OF THE CITY COUNCIL ON FIRE DEPARTMENT


Bertrand O. Lambert, Chairman John W. Wolfenden Arthur B. Cummings


BOARD OF FIRE ENGINEERS


Hayward H. Sweet, Chairman William E. Sweeney


Alfred J. Laliberte, Clerk Fred A. Clark, Chief


PERMANENT MEN


MEMBERS OF THE ARMED FORCES OF THE UNITED STATES


Gilbert F. Caswell Clifford E. Fielding James W. Hatfield


Merton E. Churchill Peter Godfrey Herbert E. Peets


William A. Wheaton


Chief, Fred A. Clark


Assistant Chief Joseph O. Mowry


CAPTAINS


Hiram R. Packard


Roy M. Churchill


Herbert E. Brown


LIEUTENANTS


Albert N. Knight William F. Ahern


Herbert E. Knight Clifford E. Dieterle


Edward M. Paton


Frank E. Barney Chester H Blanchard Henry E. Charon Manuel Duigmedgian Herman F. Gorman Joseph W. Hearn Wilfred M. Jacques Nelson B. Lees Alton V. Marland Frederick W. S. Moore Herbert C. Parker Harold T. Powers Joseph A. Smith Herman M. Thurber Newell C. Walton


Francis J. Barrett Harold Cassidy Joseph I. Claflin Charles I. Gay Leo A. Greve


Ralph L. Hopkinson Thomas R. Leedham William J. Lees Paul E. Monnier Harry E. Morris Adrian J. Pelletier William E. Riley James H. Sullivan


Walter R. Uhlig Harold F. Wellman


53


ANNUAL REPORT


To His Honor the Mayor and Municipal Council :-


We have the Honor of submitting the Annual Report of the Fire Department for the year ending December 20, 1942, together with such recommendations as we think necessary for increasing the efficiency of the Department.


ORGANIZATION


The Department consists of :-


4 Engineers 45 Officers and men


FIRE STATIONS AND APPARATUS


Station No. 1. Headquarters Station, South Main Street.


1 Ahrens-Fox 750 gallon triple combination


1 Ahrens·Fox 500 gallon triple combination


1 Ahrens-Fox City Service ladder truck


1 Chief's car


1 Assistant Chief's car


1 Supply Car


Station No. 2 Union Street 1 Ahrens-Fox 750 gallon triple combination


1 Seagrave, tractor drawn 75 foot aerial ladder truck


Station No. 4 South Attleboro 1 Ahrens-Fox 750 gallon triple combination


1 Seagrave City Service ladder truck


Station No. 5 Twin Village, South Main Street at Thurber Avenue 1 Ahrems Fox 500 galion triple combination


EMERGENCY APPARATUS


1 Trailer with portable lighting, foam generator and smoke mask


1 Trailer with boat, grappling irons, inhalator and resuscitator


APPARATUS


5 Triple combinations


1 Chief's Car


1 Supply truck


3 Ladder trucks


1 Assistant Chief's Car


2 Trailers


The Department, including all companies, has laid 7,050 feet of 1 1-2 inch hose, 30,850 feet of 2 1-2 inch hose, raised 2,711 feet of ladders, used 43 gallons of che- micals, 530 water cans, 15 pyrenes, 5 foam, 7 oxygen tanks, and used booster 182 times.


The Department has responded to the following alarms :- Alarms from boxes . 71


Assembly 3 Still alarms 403 Total 477


54


ANNUAL REPORT


CLASSIFICATION


Acid. 1


Automobile


20


Automatic sprinkler


7


Awning


1


Brush


214


Building


69


Chimney


16


Dump and fire menace


24


Electrical appliance.


8


False


4


Fence


1


First Aid


1


Flushing Street


1


Gain entrance


26


Gasoline


1


Inhalator


6


Motor


3


No fire. 28


Oil burner, range and furnace


20


One pipe heater


5


Rescue Animal


6


Rescue Person


1


Rope in pole .


7


Syphon


3


Railroad car


1


Tree


1


Taking picture .


1


Defense demonstration 1 Total 477


We have been out of the city, North Attleboro 2, Seekonk 1.


FIRE LOSS


Value of Buildings at risk


$ 832,285.00 1,645,250.00


$2,477,535.00


Insurance on Buildings


859, 375.00


Insurance on Contents


1, 632, 600.00


$2,491,975.00


Loss on Buildings


$ 16,709.28


Loss on Contents .


36,881.37


$ 53,590.65


Insurance paid on Buildings


$ 15, 549.36


Insurance paid on Contents.


36, 231.87


$ 51,781.23


Loss not covered by insurance . $ 1,809.42


LEARN THE LOCATION OF YOUR NEAREST FIRE ALARM BOX


We have been successful in keeping our fire loss at a low figure.


Value of contents at risk


55


ANNUAL REPORT


IMPROVEMENTS


The "Twin Village Fire Station" located on South Main Street at the junction of Thurber Avenue was completed this year and is ready to be occupied as soon as men are available. The station is an impressive addition to the neighborhood and will give improved fire protection as planned by the Board.


RECOMMENDATIONS


We recommend the following change be made in the Ordinance relating to Fire Department. Section One, paragraph three. The Chief of the Fire Depart- ment shall receive an annual compensation of Three thousand dollars ($3.000.00) and all other members of the Board of Engineers shall serve without compensation. Section One, added paragraph. The Chief of the Fire Department shall perform the duties of Building Inspector, upon appointment by the Mayor, without com- pensation.


We recommend that the salary of the Assistant Chief be restored to Twenty- four hundred dollars ($2400.00) .;


We recommend an increase in wages of Twenty per cent (20 %) for all mem- bers of the Department.


We recommend the purchase of One thousand feet of two and one half inch hose to replace that lost at the R. I. Cardboard fire.


We feel that to recommend a new heating plant for the Central Station and the replacement of old apparatus at this time would be a hindrance to War pro- duction and impossible to obtain.


APPRECIATION


We wish at this time to thank His Honor the Mayor and Municiapl Council, the Committee on Fire Department and the Police Department for their assis- tance. And the Officers and Men for the able manner in which they performed their duties.


We wish to thank Dr. Kent for his attendance and services rendered to our men injured at fires.


We wish to thank the special Fire Police of Box (9) Club for the efficient man- ner in which they handled traffic conditions at fires.


We thank the Auxiliary Firemen for their attendance at Fire Drills and their assistance at fires.


Respectfully submitted, Board of Fire Engineers


Hayward H. Sweet, Chairman Alfred J. Laliberte, Clerk William E. Sweeney Fred A. Clark, Chief of Department.


56


ANNUAL REPORT


Salary and Wages


Salary of the Chief.


(1)


2,500.00


$ 3,000.00


Salary of Assistant Chief.


(1)


2,250.00


2,400.00


Salary of (3) Captains.


(1)


6,022.50


6,022.50


Salary of (5) Lieutenants.


(1)


9,581.25


9,581.25


Salary of (35) Permanent men


(1)


57,259.79


63,855.50


$ 77,613.54


$ 84,859.25


Maintenance of Equipment


Autos.


(2)


1,600.00


2,500.00


Stations


(2)


3,000.00


3,000.00


Hose .


(2)


1,950.00


1,200.00


Apparel


(2)


950.00


100.00


Incidentals


(2)


60.00


60.00


7,560.00


6,860.00


Other Expenses


Light.


(3)


475.00


525.00


Phone


(3)


460.00


550.00


Water


(3)


145.00


165.00


Fuel.


(3)


2,650.00


2,700.00


Office .


(3)


50.00


50.00


Incidentals


(3)


30.00


30.00


$ 3,810.00


$ 4,020.00


Hydrants


(4)


$


20,880.00


New Equipment


Hose. ..


$ 1,200.00


Report of Superintendent of Fire Alarm


To the Board of Fire Engineers,


City of Attleboro, Mass.


Sirs:


I herewith submit the annual report of the Electrical Branch of the Attleboro Fire Department for the year ending December 31, 1942.


The activities of this department for the past year have mostly been taken up by repairs to the outside lines, maintenance of boxes and all other plant. Because of the very high priorities needed we were unable to purchase new fire alarm boxes and therefore no new street boxes have been installed in various factories working on war production.


Box No. 356 was installed at the American Metal Crafts Company on Water Street, Box No. 453 at the Robbins Company on School Street and Box No 454 at the Marathon Company on Brook Street. All of the boxes listed above are con- nected to the sprinkler systems in these plants. A fourth box is on order at the present time and when received will be installed at the Automatic Machine Pro- ducts Company located on Wall Street. This will be Box No. 411 complete with sprinkler connection, remote control stations and supervisory panel.


Expended 1942


Needed 1943


57


ANNUAL REPORT


During the past year construction was started on the new "Twin Village" Fire Station on South Main Street. This building has been wired and all elec- trical devices and equipment have been installed by the Assistant Electrician, Mr. Frank N. Hoyle and by so doing has saved the city considreable money.


Due to the Attleboro Steam and Electric Company and New England Tele- phone and Telegraph re-locating and setting new poles, much of our outside plant had to be moved or re-located along with the new locations of the poles. Boxes and their attachments had to be moved also. Boxes have been tested, oiled and painted. Recently a truck collided with the standard supporting the fire alarm box at North Main and Peck Streets, knocking it over and severely damaging the standard The insurance company covering this truck was contacted and they have agreed to make restitution.


RECOMMENDATIONS FOR 1943


Salary and Wages


$ 2,190.00


Salary of the Supt. Fire Alarm


Salary of the Asst. Electrician.


2,000.00


$ 4,190.00


Maintenance of Equipment


Maint. of Fire Alarm


2,860.00


Maint. of Motor Equipment.


400.00


New Fire Alarm Boxes


32500


$ 3,585.00


Other Expenses


221.00


Light and Power Phone


147.00


$ 368.00


Under the above headig of "Recommendations" I would suggest that refe- rence be given to the annual report of this department for the year ending Decem- ber 31, 1941. As of the requirements of the National Board of Fire Underwriters the Fire Alarm Office should be housed in a fire-proof structure away from all other buildings. The present office does not meet these requirements and a small fire starting in the open attic overhead would soon place the whole system out of commission. In previous years we have always requested that our cable facilities be increased. The lack of these cables, particularly the ones running to South Attleboro and Hebronville, loomed up during the past year when additional circuits were needed to operate Civilian Defense sirens and in making other means of communications possible in time of disaster. Cable cannot be purchased at this time but when it may be obtained, some serious thought should be given to overcome this weak spot in our system.


In conclusion, we wish to use this means to extend our thanks and apprecia- tion to the Board of Fire Engineers, the officers and men of the Fire and Police De. partments and all other Municipal Departments who have aided in the operation of this branch.


Respectfully submitted, William S. King Superintendent of Fire Alarm, Electrical Branch Fire Department, January 29, 1943.


58


ANNUAL REPORT


Report of the Wire Inspector


To His Honor, the Mayor and the Municipal Council of the City of Attleboro, Massachusetts.


Gentlemen:


I herewith submit my annual report of the activities of the Wire Inspection Department for the year ending December 31, 1942.


During the past year permits issued and numbers of inspections made are as follows:


Applications


Permits


Inspections


Reinsp. 78


Total


January


44


44


59


137


February


50


50


67


72


139


March.


47


47


63


98


161


April


45


45


60


99


159


May


24


24


32


92


124


June


11


11


15


108


123


July


15


15


20


127


147


August


25


25


33


132


165


September


47


47


63


120


183


October


50


50


67


134


201


November


4


4


6


130


136


December


10


10


13


88


101


372


372


498


1278


1776


By the above figures it will be noted that the number of permits issued to electricians has fallen off considerably. This is due to government restrictions liniting the purchase of electrical supplies for other than war production purposes.


Over one half of the local licensed electricians have left the city either to join the Armed Forces or to work in shipyards, Naval Stations and many other places contributing toward the War Effort. The remaining electricians are extremely busy keeping the local plants in running condition. In cases where one man is employed to take care of a local plant he is issued a yearly permit for upkeep of the premises where employed, this having a direct bearing on the number of permits issued. There is still the demand for the same amount of inspections to be made but they are almost entirely confined to factory construction or alterations. There has been very little work done during the past year on private dwellings.


RECOMMENDATIONS FOR 1943


EXPENSES


Maintenance.


(1)


$ 250.00 300.00


Maintenance of Auto.


(1)


$ 550.00


In conclusion, I wish to extend my sincere thanks and appreciation to His Honor, the Mayor, the Municipal Council, members of the Police and Fire De- partments and all who in any way contributed their assistance toward the opera- tion of this department for the year 1942.


Respectfully submitted,


William S. King Electrical Inspector, City of Attleboro, Massachusetts January 29th, 1943.


February 8, 1943


59


ANNUAL REPORT


Report of the Public Library


To the Mayor and Council of the City of Attleboro,


Gentlemen,


Enclosed is Librarian's report with detailed information relative to expenses and operation of the Library.


Your board has held its regular meetings, together with many un-scheduled meetings to cope with the varied and difficult problems which are constantly arising due to war conditions. The heating problem, due to insufficient fuel has forced us to curtail working hours at the library, but the staff has cooperated mag- nificently by doing the detail work at their homes, which has necessarily added a heavy burden on them.


The book purchasing program has of course been greatly changed not only to encourage but also to meet the demand for a much greater desire for technical books, histories, geographies and reading relative to the trend of the war conditions. These books are of course much more expensive than the usual run of recreational reading and has strained the Book Budget to the extent that the volume of books purchased had to be adjusted to this condition.


If proof were necessary, perhaps there would have been no better way to have given it to us than the present crisis, in that the public showed signs of almost re- sentment when they became aware that the library hours had to be drastically curtailed, the bulk of the complaints being that reference books were necessary for their work.


Staff changes have been numerous and have added greatly to the burdens of a normally under staffed group. While some changes would no doubt had occurred from the lure of higher wages in industry, we feel sure that much of it could have been avoided had we been able to assure them of even comparable salaries of those in other city departments.


No report of the library work would be complete, without expressing publicly our deepest appreciation to the staff for their help and cooperation in meeting the almost unsurmountable difficulties with which we have had to cope.


To all the library friends who have made gifts to us in the past year we wish to say thank you, and assure them that their kindness is deeply appreciated. The response to the books for service men campaign was met with the usual Attleboro spirit of putting any appeal across 100 per cent.


Respectfully submitted. Trustees of the Attleboro Public Library


Joseph L. Sweet Memorial. Ethel H. Barden, Secretary


60


ANNUAL REPORT


To the Trustees of the Attleboro Public Library :


Our minds are the makers of the human world in which we live. Only free minds can make a free world. Henry Overstreet-Our Free Minds.


What place does the Public Library play in a world at war? Is it a frill or an integral factor in the democratic form of government?


If the providing of entertainment, spiritual refreshment and mental and emo- tional escape for war-torn nerves and work-weary bodies is a frill, then the Ameri- can Public Library must acknowledge guilt. But how about acknowledging, like- wise, responsibility for acting as a stabilizing force by providing those very things. intangible as they may seem?


Wars are not won simply by fighting against the enemy, but by fighting FOR the things of heart and mind and spirit by which men live.


And who is to determine what constitutes amusement or spiritual solace, or mental stimulation? Surely not members of the library staffs who see small boys completely absorbed in books on mathematics for the aviation trade and in highly technical periodicals dealing with electronics, frequency modulation, and the like; who help girls whom one would expect to find requesting Vogue and Mademoiselle, to get clear directions for the use of the slide rule in order to qualify for a new def- fense job.


And how about feeding the family with less sugar, without butter and with- out scores of the customary staple items formerly taken as a matter of course? What about the new textile materials? How will they wear? How care for them? Keep them clean?


Surely it is not a frill to provide information on such homely, but nevertheless, vital topics, in terms of domestic thrift and efficiency. Help in the care of chil- dren is as potentially important to national welfare as information on how to read blue prints, time study and cost control and the chemistry of synthetic resins.


During the past three years when longer working hours have meant fewer hours for reading and study, the library has circulated more than 16,612 volumes of adult trade and technical and how-to-do-books.


The answer to the oft-repeated "where are your best sellers?" is bluntly, "in circulation." And the best sellers are apt to be books on backgrounds of the war, the countries involved, personal narratives and commentaries of people whose job it is to keep other people informed.


Books, except as agencies for political and racial indoctrination, are hated and feared by totalitarian governments.


The libraries of the United States having too often struggled under the burden of having to do much with too little, have been amazed at the Nazi conception of the American Public Library as a political weapon. In the attempt to fill requests for books which interpret by story or factual presentation, ourselves and our neighbors, or help in understanding the social and economic upheavals of our own and other countries, libraries also have probably been a little blind to the leavening value which these books might have in providing the staff of life to American thought.


Such books as Overstreet,-OUR FREE MINDS, Kernan-DEFENSE WILL NOT WIN THE WAR, Miller-YOU CAN'T DO BUSINESS WITH HITLER, Adamic-ONE WAY PASSAGE, Hoover and Gibson-PROBLEMS OF A LASTING PEACE, have but one thing in common. They start a person thinking.


61


ANNUAL REPORT


It has been said that the highest function of a book is to wake up, not make up, a man's mind. The democratic form of government is based upon the duty as well as the right of the individual to do his own thinking.


The Office of War Information has repeatedly stated the value and necessity of the Public Library in providing material essential to the conduct and winning of the war.


By changes in purchasing plans, by revised organization of routine and pro- cedures and stimulation of the staff to greater and better directed effort, the Attle- boro Public Library has striven to serve the community. But salar y schedules below the minimum wage rate will not hold workers who have qualified both by formal training and experience for better positions in other libraries, or in the vari- ous fields in which there is a demand for persons who have the backgrounds and techniques of library workers.


It is essential, therefore, that immediate provision be made for graded increases in pay rates in consideration of duties and training and comparable to the salaries received by workers in other city departments. It is also essential that the Attle- boro Public Library continue to provide for business and industry the service which local taxes on business and industry, combined with loyal, intelligent, staff workers have made possible.


It is most earnestly requested, therefore, that a more just compensation for work be provided to prevent further personnel turnover, and subsequent impair- ment of library service to the City of Attleboro.


Respectfully submitted,


Lucile Palmer Cavender Librarian


THE LIBRARY SERVES THE CITY


1942


Service at


Books loaned


Adult


Children


Central Library


39, 080


15,610


Hebronville Community Cottage


2,466


4,233


South Attleboro Village


4,176


1,708


Tiffany School


1,664


5,966


Washington Street .


4,072


11,601


Sturdy Memorial Hospital .


3, 220


307


Deposits at Schools


2,225


494


56,903


39,919


Grand total


96, 822


The Collection Includes


53, 174 Volumes Subscription to 225 Magazines


Subscription to 10 Newspapers


Special collection of maps, pamphlets and pictures


Talking Book Machine


Collections of manuscripts, almanacs, Governor's proclamations, and family papers.


62


ANNUAL REPORT


Volumes Added 1942


Adult


Fiction


789


Non-fiction


1,340


Duplicates and Replacements .


631


Children's


Fiction


687


Non-fiction


413


Duplicates and Replacements


459


Total.


4,319


Gifts


470


Operating Expenses City of Attleboro Disbursements


Salaries


Library Staff


$12,475.00


Building Staff


1,565.00


Books and Bindery


4,135.58


Maintenance, including office supplies and equip.


3,077.24


Branchés


987.07


Total


$ 22,439.89


TRUST FUNDS Disbursements


Salaries


$ 389.72


Books and Bindery


1,245.85


Maintenance


1,451.59


Branches


129.09


Total


$ 3,216.25


BOARD OF TRUSTEES


Edwin F. Leach, President


Mrs. Winthrop Barden, Secretary


Raymond F. Horton, Treasurer Mrs. Lewis Chilson


*Miss Edith Claflin


Mrs. Arthur Conro Mrs. William Gregory Mrs. Charles Holden Dr. Frederick V. Murphy Hayward H. Sweet


63


ANNUAL REPORT


THE STAFF


Lucile Palmer Cavender, Librarian Dorothy I. Hannaford, Assistant Librarian *Kathleen S. MacKell, Children's Librarian Betty F. Yellin, Children's Librarian Grace C. Freese, Senior Assistant Angela B. Lewis, Senior Assistant Alice I. Kingman, Staff Secretary


*Ruth W. Gendron, Children's Assistant Virginia J. Cate, Junior Assistant Marion Moore, Junior Assistant Phyllis Edwards, Junior Assistant Bertha C. Bigney, Special Assistant


*Resigned


PART-TIME ASSISTANTS AND PAGES As of December 1942


Gene Bellerose Jane Coogan Alice Cooper Dorothy Moore


Alice Mustillo Jeannette Pieper Ralph Rogers Charles Stobbs


Russell Moore


Janitor William P. Barrett


64


ANNUAL REPORT


Report of Inspector of Buildings


To His Honor the Mayor and Municipal Council,


Gentlemen :-


Following is a report of the Inspector of Buildings for the year 1942. During the year 166 permits were issued a mounting to $116,719.00, divided as follows:


January


One Family Dwellings


( 4)


$ 14,000.00


Garages


( 2)


535.00


Alterations and Additions.


( 2)


2,050.00


Minor


( 3)


Raze


( 1)


February


Garage


( 1)


500.00


Alterations and Additions


.( 1)


75.00


Shingle


( 1)


100.00


Raze


( 1)


$


675.00


March


One Family Dwelling


.( 1)


4,000.00


Alterations and Add itions




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