Evening Star Newspaper, February 5, 1942, Page 8

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A—6 % Big Banks Led Fight On Plan fo Sell U. S. Bonds, Eccles Chargps Opposed Direct Purchases By Federal Reserve Units, House Committee Told By the Associated Press. Marriner S. Eccles, Federal Re- serve Board chairman, ‘has charged that “a few of the big banks” were the principal opponents of a pro- posal to sllow Federal Reserve Banks to purchase Government obligations direct from the Treasury. This accusation, along with a statement by Attorney General Bid- dle that violations of priorities and allocations orders were “widespread and serious” was disclosed today ip the printed record of House Judi- ciary Committee hearings on the Exefillte-upproved second war powers Few Banks Called Chief Foes. “The real opposition” to permit- ting the Reserve banks to buy bonds direct from the Treasury instead of on the open market came, Mr. Eccles said, from “a few of the big banks that are interested in the buying and selling and from dealers and from people in the money market.” Both Mr. Eccles and Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau requested that the power be granted. Mr. Biddle's accusation came dur- ing discussion of a section of the bill broadening existing property seizure powers. He said the new legislation was designed by War Production Chief Donald Nelson to ;wt some teeth into the priorities iy The bill confers 14 specific new powers on Gevernment agencies to speed up the war program. Group May Act Today: The House committee was re- ported to have written in a new clause, allowing the Census Bureau to make available to defense agen- cies heretofore confidential in- formation when it is necessary. By the Associated Press. lives.” Gil, 3598 tons, went down early yesterday after an enemy submarine pumped 2 torpedoes and about 11 shells inte her. Two of the crew, Beaumont Barbe, 26, of Belgium and Secondino Castro, 36, of Honduras, were killed when the first torpedo exploded in the boiler room, but 39 others and one passenger were picked up after seven hours adrift in lifeboats and landed here. Four of the crew received minor injuries. The Panama-registered ship was the 15th officially reported lost off the Atlantic Coast through enemy action within the past three weeks. Permitted to Launch Boats. “The commander and crew of the submarine permitted us to launch the lifeboats before they began to shell the ship,” the 44-year-old skipper recounted. “They could have sent us and our lifeboats to the bottom at any mo- ment they wished. We wouldn't have had a chance. But they al- lowed us to get clear of the boat and we were 50 feet away when the shelling began.” Eleven of 15 shots fired from & . THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, ’I;HURSDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1942. U-Boat Spares Survivors’ Lives After Sinking Off Maryland Shelling of United Fruit Freighter Delayed Till Boats Are Clear; Two Killed LEWES, Del,, Feb. 5—Capt, Walter W. Koch, whose ship was torpedoed without warning off the Maryland coast, felt grateful today for the actions of a submarine commander “in sparing our The United Pruit freighter San¢————— deck gun plunked into the ship, he said, and then the undersea craft submerged, maneuvered into posi- tion “end let the second torpedo 0. Vessel Broken in Half. “The San Gil jumped and blew up in midair. Her 100-foot mast just seemed to dissolve. She went down stern first and she must have been broken in half by the last explosion.” Capt. Koch praised the ingenuity of Radio Operator Robert L. Thorp, 41, of East Orange, N. J,, and Stuart Condon of Boston, a passenger, who hurriedly erected a makeshift an- tenna after the first torpedo ex- plosion blew away the ship’s mast and managed to get away four SO8 flashes. The Coast Guard used those brief messages in plotting & courge to the lifeboats. Use Imported Tobacco Although the cultivation of tobacco is forbidden in Egypt many fac- tories there are producing cigarettes from tobacco brought from foreign countries. Generally, committee members #aid, they have approved the bill in virtually the same form it passed the Senate. The Judiciary Committee was expected to act today on changes in the bill made yesterday by a sub- committee. The changes would al- low men in the armed services in this country and abroad to receive free postage. This provision was written into the bill by the Senate. Navy Launches Herndon, Built in Record Time By the Associated Press. PORTSMOUTH, Va., Feb. 5.—The destroyer Herndon, built in only five months and nine days, the shortest time on record for the Nor- folk Navy Yard, was launched here today. Miss Lucy Herndon Crockett of New York smashed the bottle of champagne against the slim, gray bow in traditional manner a second before the warship began its slide into the Southern branch of the Elizabeth River. Comdr. William Lewis Herndon, U. 8. N, for whom the destroyer was named, was a grand uncle of Miss Crockett, the sponsor. He went down with a steamer in a gale off Cape Hatteras in 1857. Hundreds of Navy Yard workers cheered as the Herndon slipped into the water at 11:28 am,, E. S. T. Representative Harris, Democrat, of Virginie speaking at the cere- monies asserted that “this sleek and graceful destroyer * * * is symbolic of offense * * * of pursuit and at- sack.” The time for talk about defense “ended with the coming of dawn at Pearl Harbor on Sunday Decem- ber 7” Mr. Harrls said. “Our thought now, and henceforth, must be of offense. Cifizens’ Head Named Aide fo Air-Raid Warden Appointment of Harry N. Stull, president of the Federation of Citi- zens’ Associations, as assistant to Chief Air-Raid Warden Clement Murphy was announced today by Col. Lemuel Bolles, civilian defense director for this area. Col. Bolles also announced the first of a series of regular monthly meetings of all chairmen of Civilian Defense Committees for February 28, to check progress of the civilian defense program. at 2 pm. in the boardroom of the District Building. Establishment of a civilian defense fregistration office at 1241 Kenyon street N.-W. under the supervision of Mrs. Willie A. Dodson, was an- nounced by the District O. C. D. It will be open every night between 7 and 8 o'clock. A call for volunteers from residents of the Lincoln civic defense area for stretcher-bearer corps and rescue squad workers was. issued today by the Rev. George A. Parker, chair- man of the Executive Committee for the area. He asked that volunteers write to him at 2441 M street N.W. or notify him by phone, Repub- lic 2136. P.-T. A. Plans Box Supper The Parent-Teacher Association of Dunn Loring (Va.) School will sponsor an old-fashioned box sup- per at the school at 6:45 p.m. to- morrow. Music and entertainment will be furnished by the Priendship Circle Orchestra. Delivery of Night Final Edition ‘The Night Final Edition of The Star, with two addi- tional pages of last-minute news, is delivered through- out Washington and nearby suburbs, together with The Sunday Star, at 85c per month. This edition gives the latest developments of the day in International, Na- tional and Lecal news, with complete Financial Reports. Special delivery is made It will be heldr ‘of which there are a great many on between 6 p.m. and 7:15 pm. daily. i Survivors of the San Gil waved their thanks before leaving for the immigration station at Gloucester, N. J. Two bers were killed. LEWES, DEL—SUB SANK THEIR SHIP—R. L. Thorp of East Orange, N. J., left, was praised for repairing his apparatus and sending distress signals yesterday after a submarine torpedoed the freighter 8an Gil, off the Maryland coast. At right is Stewart ‘Winslow Roslindale, Condon, Mass., the only passenger aboard. Tuscania Survivors ToMeet 24 Years After Torpedoing 200 Will Pay Homage To 269 Who Perished Off Irish Coast By the Assoclaled 5. WISCONSIN RAPIDS, Wis., Feb. 5.—Some 200 survivors of the sink- ing of the Tuscania, torpedoed while carrying American soldiers during the first World War, wiil meet here Saturday and Sunday to pay homage to their 269 buddies who perished. The 1942 meeting of this unusual organization—the National Tuscania Survivors’ Association—will be all the more significant because warriors of a new A. E. F. are on the seas facing not only U-boat attacks but the danger of aerial bombing. Under British Convoy. The Tuscania was smashed by & torpedo within sight of the Irish coast 24 years ago today—on Pebru- ary 5, 1918. A 14,000-ton British vessel under British convoy, she was the only transport lost in the move- ment of nearly 2,000,000 American troops to Europe. “It felt like running into a sand- bar, in addition to the roar of the explosion and the crash of steel and timbers,” Leo V. Zimmerman of Mil- crew mem- A. P. Wirephotos. Cripps (Continued From First Page.) (president of the All-Russian Cen- tral Executive Committee) he em- phasized this danger of overcon- fidence. It is, I think, important in arriving at any evaluation of recent Russian successes to bear the above observations in mind. The German Army is not yet s defeated army, nor has it yet been routed. It has, however, had to leave a great number of occupied points and towns that it would very much like to have held through the winter. In leaving those towns it certainly has not been the cold or Russian winter that has forced the evacuation. Driven Out by Russians. The effect of the cold is to make the Germans want to hold on to every house and building that they can, to get protection from the frost. They are leaving because they are being driven out after hard fighting by the Russians and they are leaving behind them a mass of material that they would dearly like to get away if they could stop long enough to take it with them. It is an orderly retreat just as was the Russiam retreat over the same ground at an earlier date, but it is a forced retreat and at any moment it might turn into some- thing much worse for the Germans, The whole question now is one of morale. If the morale of the Ger- mans was to break the retreat would become a rout. At present that morale stands, although there are signs it is not as firm as it once was; it is not yet broken and it may well be that the difficulties of winter which affect the Russians as well as the Ger- mans will prevent the retreat from turning into a rout. Although the Russians have shown that an offensive can be carried out in winter conditions, it is obvious that the speed of any advance must be slowed down by cold and deep SNOwW. Prophecy Is Dangerous. ‘When we come to the considera- tion of what spring will bring forth, then we embark on prophecy which is even more dangerous in this war than generally. Spring in Central Russia as a rule begins between the middle and end of March. If there are very heavy snows, as there have already been this year, then the thaw will last perhaps two months before the land gets dry and hard once again. This period of thaw is the most difficult time of all for military op- erations or any movements of trans- port. Rivers are full of blocks of ice racing down with destructive force, and low-lying ground and marshes, the western borders of Russia, be- come impassable. So the time for renewed activities under normal conditions will not come before the beginning of May and perhaps not before the end of that month. ‘The Russians will be as much held up as the Germans and, therefore, the position of the rival forces at the end of March will decide the direc- tion of the summer campaign. « They will both have some six weeks to two' months in which to make pre tions after acute fight- ing has hgen stopped by the thaw. No doubt the Germans will try to gather forces for a fresh push, per- haps in the south against the Cau- casus. But by that time the Rus- sians will have still more fresh ar- mies, and all factories they have moved to the east should by then be again in operation. They have not as great manufac- turing resources as the Germans with all the occupied regions of Eu- rope to assist them, but neverthe- less, Russian production will have gone up very considerably by spring. But it is just here that America and Great Britain come right into the picture. We have between us huge manufacturing capacity and must give to the Russians enough armaments to make certain that when the new clash comes in the spring they are not at a disadvan- tage. It is up to us to see that the Germans are stopped by efficlent machines rather than by inade- quately equipped human bodies. I don't think the ordinary Ameri- can or Englishman has the slight- est idea of the extent te which Russian industry has .been turned over to war production. It would not be much of an exaggeration to say the turnover was 100 per cent. Domestic Goods Lacking. ‘The Russian people are just put- ting up with it because they know that nothing else stands between them and the overrunning of their country by the brutal hordes of Nazis. ¥ You can buy nothing of ordinary domestic character in Russia today, and people go without cheerfully be- cause they are realists and know that total war demands for total victory a total deprivation of all ordinary comforts, let alone all Iux- uries. ‘We in Britain and America, slowly and very painfully, are learning the same lesson, but we still have a great distance to travel before we reach the Russian standard. It is not fair for us to enjoy com- forts and luxuries and at the same time expect the Russians to fight what is indubitably our battle as well as their own, without those sup- plies which they could have if we were prepared to give up everything in the way of comforts and luxuries to save Russian lives and bring them speedy success. It is not a question of depriving ourselves of what we need for our own defense, but of so increasing our production by going without manu- factured comforts and luxuries as to get extra production with which to assist Russia. If by our efforts we can make the spring offensive in Europe a decisive success for the Russians, we shall not only save hundreds of thousands of Russian lives, but British and American lives as well. Russians Are Grateful. The Soviet Government, I know, is most grateful for what our two countries have done following the Moscow conference in carrying out the promises of Lord Beaverbrook and Mr, Harriman. But can you blame them if they want as much as ever we can spare? It is vital that we should keep S. R. needs our moral support and true friendship just as we need hers. I know there are difficulties and we shall not help by closing our eyes to those difficulties. History can- not be unwritten and the legacy of past relationships between three countries cannot be got rid of in a day. The Russians are the most real- istic people in the world. They do not close their eyes to the obvious facts of the past, nor can they at once get rid of suspicions which at one time had a sound foundation. ‘They want, as we want, to know where they stand. Are we tempo- rary friends as & matter of expe- diency or are we prepared to make an attempt to remold our relations with them on a firmer and better basis for the future? T will deal with this vitally impor- tant question in my tomorrow's article, Libya (Continued Prom Pirst Page.) terday. But eight R. A. F. planes were listed as missing. Advance East of Derna Continues, Italy Says (The following dispatch was sent rom an enemy country. whose motive n releasing news is likely 1o be propa- ganda. Axis claims should be credited when confirmed by American or Allied sources.) -ROME (From Italian Broadcasts), Feb. 5 (/).—The Italian high com- mand announced today Axis forces were continuing their eastward ad- vance after passing Derna, Libya, which is only 95 miles west of To- bruk. 'Thus the Italians and Germans had won their way back within striking distance of the Libyan stronghold where a British and Aus- tralian garrison heid out seven months against all Axis thrusts. Tobruk is 80 miles west of the Egyptian-Libyan border, putting the Axis columns within 175 miles of the frontier. Continuing the Axis drive to knock out or neutralize the British island base of Malta, the Italians said German and Italian planes suc- cessfully attacked air and naval bases and many objectives suffered direct hits. British bombers dropped high ex- plosive bombs near Palermo, hit- ting a train and killing four mem- :{; of the train’s staff, the report Six machines took part in the raid, Complete the Italians said. They added their defenses shot down one plane near Santa Flavia while another crashed to the ground in the Prezzi area. British Forces Dispersed West of Tobruk, Nazis Say BERLIN (From German Broad- casts), Feb. 5 (#).—With the Axis pursuit of the British continuing beyond Derna, Libya, German bombers dispersed British columns west of Tobruk and bombed the | enemy’s lines of retreat, the German high command said today. The Germans said reports thus far received told of 3500 British prisoners brought in during the fighting in Cirenaica in January. These reports also said 370 armored | cars and 192 guns were captured or destroyed. In operations off Salum, Egypt, German submarines attacked a Brit- ish convoy escorted by destroyers and scored torpedo hits on various units, it was claimed, and the sink- ing of a British destroyer was re- ported as probable. WOL Engineer Sent SOS From San Gil in 1923 Bob Dalton, transmitter at radio Station WOL, once sent out an SOS to bring aid to the San Gil, United Fruit freighter sunk off the Mary- land coast by an enemy submarine early yesterday. Mr.'Dalton, second wireless opera- tor on the ship, radioed for help when it went on a reef during a storm off Old Providence Island, in the Caribbean about 300 miles north of the Panama Canal, in May, 1923. A brother-in-law of Mr. Dalton, Jack McGarigle of Boston, was one of the survivors of the San Jose, United Fruit boat sunk in a colli- sion with a Grace Line ship off the east coast January 17. Mr. Dalton lives in Arlington, Va. The Rev. G. H. Crook Resigns POOLESVILLE, Md., Feb. 5 (Spe- cial). —The Rev. Guy H. Crook, for the last 12 years rector of St. Peter'’s Episcopal Church, Poolesville, and Christ Episcopal Church, Barnes- ville, has resigned both charges and has moved with his family to Ta- koma Park. His successor at the two churches has not been selected. Mr. Crook came to Montgomery County from Ravenswood, W. Va. GLASSES 10 Modern Stvles Lenses & Frames Any Strength UHL “&eorr 735 Thirteenth Strest NW. | waukee, association historian, de- scribed the Tuscania attack. “Hatchways were filled with sol- diers adjusting lifeboats . . . no panic was apparent . . . There in the dark we stood on the slanting deck, counting off as we awaited the launching of the lifeboats . . . Two hissing serpentine streaks of fire shot up—skyrockets, signals of distress . . . the stars blinked sadly and the lighthouse many miles away beckoned us on like a siren.” Sub Commander Was to Attend. ‘The tragedy was not without its oddities, however. Two men were shooting dice when their raft was found at daybreak. Another sur- vivor claimed the shock of the ex- plosion cured his pneumonia. A decade later, the survivors learned that Capt. Wilhelm Meyer of Saarbrucken, commanded the submarine. He promised to attend the 1933 meeting. The German Embassy in Wash- ington later announced Capt. Meyer “had decided not to come” re- portedly because the Embassy had been offended at a radio dramatiza- tion of Capt. Meyer’s acceptance in which he was represented as ex- pressing sorrow over the drowning of the American soldiers. Cappe} Joi;Senators Seeking Annuify Repeal ‘The movement to repeal the pro- vision of the new civil service re- tirement law making members of Congress eligible for annuities gained momentum today when Sen- etor Capper, Republican, of Kansas, introduced another bill for that pur- pose. Senator Capper told his colleagues extension of the retirement system to elected officials was “a great mis- take.” He served notice that if it is not repealed he will not exercise the option of applying for a pension under {t. The new bill went to the Civil measure sponsored by Senators Byrd, Democrat, of Virginia; John- son, Democrat, of Colorado; Bailey, Democrat, of North Carolina, and Burton, Republican, of Ohio already awaits action. Senator Capper had placed in the Congressional Record a copy of a letter he sent to President Roosevelt immediately after passage of the bill, urging him to veto it. The | President, however, signed the bill. {Baby Broker Bill Passed | \By House Without Debate Without debate, the House today passed and sent to the Senate a bill | designed to regulate placement of children under 16 in foster homes in the District. The legislation was called up by Acting Chairman Schulte of the Dis- trict Committee, and approval fol- lowed a brief explanation of its pur- pose. By provisions of the bill child placement agencies would be licensed by the Commissioners and placed under the strict control of the Board of Public Welfare. The Commissigners are directed | to appoint a committee of eight to | formulate and adopt rules and regu- | lations, subject to the Commission- ers’ approval, providing standards | of placement, care and services to | be required of child placing agencies. The committee would be composed | of & membeg, of the Welfare Board | who would Serve as chairman, a | member of the staff of the District | Health Department, a member of the staff of the Welfare Board, and one representative from each of five charitable organizations “having an organized program for placing chil- dren in family homes.” Gen. Franco Reveals Debt To Italy Is $250,000,000 By the Associated Press. MADRID, Feb. 5—To “regularize” Spain’s debt to Italy for war mate- rial furnished during the civil war, Generalissimo Franco today ordered transferred to Rome 5,000,000,000 lire | (nominally about $250,000,000) in Spanish treasury bonds. | The order, which appeared in the | official bulletin this morning, was dated “Law of May 30, 1941,” and was based on an accord signed in Madrid May 8, 1940. ‘The only provisions of that accord which had been made public were those establishing trade quotas be- tween Italy and Spain. C i TRY THIS FORMULA Cascara Sagrada, Frangula, Sal Amarum, Anise, Caraway, Fen- nel, Ginger, Licorice, Methyl Salicylate, Carbonate of nesia, Oil of and as. 1t all ready for you under name of FADLERTIA "4 the i &5 § carminatives for relief :i:.und!h?,uuh .mfi*" ' | Service Committee, where a similar | 4 ',_,..) = gHIENGMAL | JAPANESE HELD ON EAST BANK OF SALWEEN—Withering fire from British artillery and Indian riflemen today held Japa- nese on the east bank of the Salween River, preventing their attempt to cut off the port of Martaban (1—broken arrow). The invaders advanced north along nese bombers hit at Rangoon Berlin radio said Bilugywun I fallen to the Japanese. the river toward Paan. Japa- and Pegu Airdrome (2). The sland, opposite Moulmein, had —A. P. Wirephoto. Burma and Indian garrison, but British headquarters said this effort had failed. Japanese skirmishers were re- poited strung out all along the Low- er Salween front, but there were indications they lacked strength, at least for the present, to handle a full-dress assault across the river. Their feeler attempts have been thrown back. Indians Engage Japs. Thousands of lithe, tell Indian rifiemen newly from their homeland are engaging the invaders along the line from Martaban to Paan. British and American volunteer group fiyers skimming the treetops in strafing and bombing raids, were declared unofficially to be prevent- ing the Japanese from maintaining toeholds on islands at the Salween mouth. ‘The Japanese air force meanwhile bombed Rangoon twice just before dawn today. Explosions were heard in the eastern and northern section of the city. (The Japanese claimed they smashed military establishments in Rangoon and destroyed facil- ities at the Pegu Airdrome, 50 miles northeast of Rangoon.) Jap Methods Described. Japanese methods in the land thrust from Thailand into Southeast Burma were described at the front by a British-officer of the Burma Rifiles, who fought at Moulmein. Rubbing his unshaven chin and contemplating his blistered toes through his open sandals, he said: “We held the enemy attack for 36 hours. By day, groups of two and three Japanese tried to annoy us and draw our fire by shooting from treetops and setting off firecrackers at various points. “Their rifle marksmanship was bad, but their small, manhandled artillery was good. “They had captured some of our | Burmese lorry drivers and stripped them of uniforms. It is a fact that a number of Japanese wore British khaki when they attacked us Others, apparently Siamese, wore | white tunics and blue trousers. Forced to Reorganize. “After the drawn-out war of nerves, mass frontal assaults and dented one side of our line, which forced us to reorganize. “We inflicted heavy casualties, but ‘we needed reinforcements. We drave them back twice with bayonets. “We fought house to house in Moulmein. We burned our stores and set fire to jetties.” Some British and Indian troopers and officers who were left at Moul- mein at the time of withdrawal still are managing to cross the Salween and rejoin their units. Isle Opposite Moulmein Reported Taken by Japs (This_dispatch was sent from an enemy country, whose motive in re- Jeasing news is likely to be propaganda. Axis claims should be credited only when confirmed by American or Allied sources.) BERLIN (from German broad- casts), Feb. 5 (#).—The Berlin radio, quoting Japanese reports, said to- day the Japanese had occupied the Island of Bilugywun, opposite Moul- mein, Burma, thus menacing ship- ping along the Salween River and ships sailing toward Rangoon. Dispatches broadcast by the radio also said the railway north from Rangoon which feeds China’s vital Burma road had “been cut effec- tively” by a series of Japanese air raids yesterday. These attacks, it was asserted, de- stroyed the railway station at ‘Toungoo, 130 miles riorth of Rangoor:, and severed the railway south of Mandalay at several points. Five British planes were destroyed on the ground at Toungoo, where the British were caught by surprise, the broadcast said. It claimed the Jap- anese suffered no losses. The Ger- man radio also reported that the Rangoon radio had ceased trans- mission. It added that the latest Bangkok reports said the radio sta- tion was destroyed by a Japanese air raid last night. the enemy finally staged | P.-T. A. Hits Federal Use Of New Kramer School The Executive Committee of the District Congress of Parents and Teachers today is on record as de- ploring recently disclosed plans of the Federal Government to hasten completion of the Kramer Junior High School in Anacostia and use it for offices. In a unanimous resolution the committee denounces the proposal as “an unnecessary gesture” and “poor planning on the part of those responsible for the success of the defense effort.” Mrs. P. C. Ellett, president of the congress, pointed out that the school population in Anacostia has com- pletely outgrown the capacity of the Anacostia Junior - Senior High School, forcing the scheduling of classes in shifts. The P.-T. A. leaders feel that other accommodations could be found which would not deprive the area of the badly needed facilities. Point- ing out that the building of the Kramer School was the result of a long campaign by citizens' groups of the area, Mrs. Ellett declared: “The committee believes that some consideration should be given to the rights and feelings of these citizens,” |Editor, Capital Reporter |Join Censorship Office | By the Associated Press The Office of Censorship an- nounced today that William P. Steven, managing editor of the Tulsa | (Okla) Tribune, and William H. Mylander, Washington correspond- ent for the Toledo (Ohio) Blade and the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, had accepted invitations to join its press section. Mr. Steven will serve on the gen- eral staff and Mr. Mylander will be available especially to co-operate with Weshington correspondents and press associations. “Both will be- gin their duties soon. |0'Conor Abpoints 34 To Guard Arms Plant By the Associated Press. ANNAPOLIS, Md., Feb. 5—Thir- ty-four special policemen were ap=- pointed yesterday by Gov. O'Conar | to protect the Triumph Explosive Works at Elkton. The Governor also urged private concerns handling defense con- tracts to protect their plants against possible sabotage by asking him to commission their employes as spee cial policemen. ADVERTISEMENT. Men, Women! Old at 40, 50, 60! Get Pep 's Younger, Full of Vim usted, worn-out, ryn-down ferling A T3-year- ‘doctor writes: “1 ook it mysell. 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