The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, June 14, 1948, Image 2

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    Reporter Expo
Used tot Produ
By CHUCK MAISEL
The Average Aggie picking up
h)8 evening copy of the Butt inis
one of two reactions—1) he curses,
or 2) he yawns. But, is this merely
• fa inst
reporters ireill
sophisticated veneer to cover up
his deep appreciation of the blood,
sweat, and Coca-Cola that has gone
I '
|
'Fevp things
turmoa ih Con
action in lutting*
European Recov
one bijliop .dollari
ihg his head
the reporter
about to get ajn ktfn, Thjij
him with theiryeyee Af
lucky enough bar be near
ors start industriously cli(
“Now is the time, etc,” . .
He KAars abdut the rooi jj.
Jlhot eyirs finall|y coming t >iji|esti
the njdst comfortable liookfnjj
in the office. The
: ter licks the blood
ajid
villi
MTh
under
house, a.
the leade
jroprihtidns committee,
„ ,-^hip )f Representative
John Tabjer, a N<w Yc/k tepubli<S;an, Re
versed-: it^ formed appi^l a $5,30
:00d,000 aiuthorizajtion flor fclRP and r
Ominenc
ended a cut
The Houqe of Represerj
prdvioijisl: t gone dong
action pf
figure,: . t^k Tab ir’s M'ord-
j. .
c le
mnjiitt
accept/ h)i s co
for th|! cut.
Republican leaders,
ly repudiated the jstand
mitteeiland the Hduse. Such men as
f
Stasseh, (Thomas ]E. D| we 7, Arthir Y^n-
-denberg, and Pmil Hofffmln, all Repuhli-
cans, immediately deni
action arfl clamored f
the original -figure. 4
Nor 'vere Re mblicihnsj alone nl
comleEnmlition of the. HI oust action.
11 .
prominent Democrats las tom Cotmally, ll'they will reverse their stand and agree
Sam j|la:'burn, J. Ho\yar4 McGrath, Jo- J ■’ -
seph C. (O’Mahoiiey, ainddAlbCn Bark ey
were jus I as vio ent iir tl eir disapiproval
of the house acton
However, the
1'
||
1
I,
billion dollars,
atik^es, which had
wim the original
their Hopse membsrs, imrrtedia
and voted
Bcommehdation
ast bunded at
of Taber, his co
the
e-
m-,
),untgd the
t, 11 restitu
Harold
hoi se
ion of
thbir
Sdch
greiiteB
s who control the
among t ie Repi blicar 1
House. Perhaps the
popular tiOP opinion of thd House ict
was a front page ‘ditorfial iji the NeW Y( rk
tereby threatened! the safety of the
Ujnited States in the years that lie ahead.’
The sentiment expressed in the Trib
ute puts into words the thoughts of the
large majority of (thinking people.
The bill for authorization of ERP funds
mOw goes to the Senate Appropriations
Cpmmittee. It will be in its power
ana in the ptoweR of the Senate which
must' approve the‘committee’s recommen
dation, to authorize the full amount of the
original appropriation. From the testimony
of many Senators we are confident that
the Senate will do this,
j When the Senate has completed its
aithomation it will then be necessary
for the two houses to compromise on the
f nal authorization. The House of Repre
sentatives will then have an opportunity
to undo the damag'e which it has wrought.
into the journal’s making? It is
t! It means 1) they’ve misspell-
his name, or 2) his name isn’t
ittjt j ;| j 1 . Jkll ,
Realizing that only a strange V&sh wounds and goes ortj »n
nus of the Aggie phlyum, th/:. assignment—in, this case Vfr at «re
eaverus Eageri, attends stimrotex f Story on the ijew outho
Imol, and knowing curipsk/ to 1 buUt by Mr. SiRrub of the
j this group’s'chief trait, tEPpow- j Rhology department
era that be at the BattaJjwUhave | OUR HERO
decided to let out the/!ecr&* of f ^ , /i ,;
just what does go 05/behirid the 1 O ur hero (thje reader
, nr beangj
Banks and McOure Will Study
European Schools This Summei
MANAGING/EDITORS
Under the gi^at white fathers—
the co-editor^—comes the man un
der the gun for each issue, the
managingreditor of the day. It is
this yopg journalist’s task to give
birth/fo all ideas, assign reporters
tb follow them through, check the
jiy, and make up the paper, flow-
/6ver, his most important duty is
sitting behind a desk at the door j
looking like a mogul. A large sign i
| ize mat all reporters an
approaches Mr, Sirrub
tions him on tjhc dimens
ficulties encouptered in
and other outhouse facts
“Why are (you buildi
structure, Mr. Sirrub?’
“Oh, I’ve always wan
he confides.
“Is there anything unus
this outhouse
about?”
Why yes,
this
nd|er
turmoil w
bes t indication
All In Favo
1 Are yjou ati o ficGr! in four home town
club?. Dd you^bdong}to hny campus or
ganizatioi which fun4ionfe,'more or lejss,
in a parliamentary m:p^|!l?f If you ape,
then you will pro 'it to
fire rules listed- n Uvt
Panhandler Publ sher 1
kill your Drganizsdioii.
D'm'ted to anv bijd
the] following criteria
give you Pause t<»think, r
• Seldom, if ever jko bja meeting.
. If you do ettendj pii d fault with tfie
work .of the officers.
3.' Never acc( pt a
to Qnlicize than .0 do
4., If ajsked by a ch
duly a list Of sufe-
April issue of The
as
full authorization of the original ap-
jropriaton they will regain a portion of
le respect which they previously enjoyed.
| However, the action of the House can
■ever be disregarded, no matter What
they may do in the future, The short
sighted action in cutting the ERP appro-
j)riation may well be reflected when the
iation goes to the polls in November.
1 ..■■ • 1 ' ...
I 1
ijon’t give it anything but H - -
20: Kick) about tne cost of member
ship, even though you spend as m,Uch as
an entire year's dues on the World Series
br a “little party.”
!• Nomifiations are now. open for the pres
idency. j ■
j.
if heeded, «|m A Tboujilitl^s Act
g elub officer,
foff confusion will
]"
opinion regarding soriiq natter, tell’hi
you! hjaye I nothing to s
after the meetin,
5. Do nothing mor
necessary; but when
up their’sleeves and uillilgly and Unself- field that does not witness dozens of
-r
ishlv use tjieir ajb'lity
long.. howl that the
cliques.
6. Hold back (your
Bible, pr don’t pay them at all
|r.j!Whon albanqup ’
body (money ia being
whjcll- make a Ifig n):
nothing.
8. Whbn no bannhe
the (club) 1 is dea)d and
it.
9.! Don't ^ ^ 1e ^ ’IbVhow it can he p
you; but ift it doJsn’t lifelpte,‘resign
101. If you receive
i. *
1*3 j
r j off ce. It is ensile
th’t gs.
irr ian to givie your
BUt say plen
jis absolutely
iembers rail
to help matters a-
clup) is run by a
duei; as long ais pos
it isn’t a pleasant thing—injuring or
killing someone—but it could
(happened Friday night when th6 Gaines
ville Community Circus was presented on
Kyle Field, Anyone who/attended the
performance) could have been injured or
billed by being hit withyone of the many
pop bottles that wuS thrown from the
rim of the bleachers]
Why people foolishly endanger the life
jf any person by tossing objects over the
ikJe of the stadium is a puzzling problem,
but there is never an event held on Kyle
By OTTO KUNZE
Two Aggies, Donald P. Hanks
and Donald P. McClure, are goijig
on a ! European study tour
summer. The trip will be und
the auspices of the World Student
Service Fund, an organisation 'of
students and faculty of American
colleges and universities;
The tour was organizer! to ire*
quaint student leaders with condi
tions of student life abroad. It
Will provide an opportunity for* a
broader understanding of phases
of European life through travel,
ing and meeting the students ubjl
professors of other countrk
Out of 40 students goinj
America. A&M will have
representative*. Hanks, who wAn
last year’s president oy the Yltf-
CA Cabinet, gnuluaml in .Jai|-
uary and is now aw instructor i|n
''chemistry at iWAnnex. j
After returning in September,
he will workxmb year as the fi^ld
secretary organizing drives and
conducting campaigns for foreign
student/] Hanks attended high
schoor i|i Wichita Falls but grtld-
uafdfl fkoni Abilene. He ehtejjed
:M in 15)42. During the , war (be.
''served 2 years in the arhiy ajnd
then returned to A&M. He engaged
in numerous extra curricula ac
tivities while he was a student;
Hanks attended the National
Student Conference at University
of Edittois in 194(5. He was co-chajir-
man of the YW r -YMCA foi/South
Texas and also a member of the
Regional Council of tjre two or
ganizations.
with old English" lettering saying 4 1?^ have Atr-conditi
' IT *
“Bleed Here” adorns the desk.
When the managing editor starts
blibbering at the mouth knd beat-
McGJure from
Coitus Christi. He attended high.
The other Agi
trim, is Donal
n T' ^
school at /Schreiner Institute at
KqtTville/and graduated in 194ti.
He entered A&M ip September of
the Sjame year to major in business.
m waa iilwo active In ex-
Ifii curricula actlvltlefl. He rop-
/ re«()nted the A&M YMCA at thq
Southwest Student Conference^ '
Camp Classen, Oklahoma, in 1947
and also attended the YMCA
Training Conference at Comfort,
Texas.
McClure and a student from
SMtl are the only tw« students
from the Southwest Area who
were selected for this trip. The
combined number from the Uni*
ted Stiles will be about 40. The
group will sail early in June and
will return about September 10.
The program in Europe will be
divided /into planned trips and
study /lours. The American stu.
dents will compose four different
groups who Iwill have an option on
StVCial tours.
At the end of August there will
heija reunion at Oombloux in the
French Alps where all the groups
will compare and evaluate their
experiences.
make this Slll'dlll 311(1 Gimlet
that T
replies
emotiai iji 1*
he C/UMih.g JW
Our reported blushinglkr
“thank you” aqd heads hif
Will It Never
Siding,
I
Gimlet Seeks A
Jlrrirb,
like
uty.
replies
to Jhc
here somowhdrcs.'
He fummed in his po
ethods
m duiioh of Goodwill Hall to write
story is to type the. woM “ThO
a id stairoi at It until ths reft of the
suntcqoe pops into his head. He
d »ds this and, after two' honrs of
• a nag, methodically types “heck'
vflth It” after the initial word.
He then tears the paper front
tpe mjachine, inserts a clean piece
and g ies to his thesaurus to find a
3lib.st lute for “the.”
I Tk
By Dr. ETAOIN 8HBDLU
Enrollment for the first term
of summer school was much lighter
than had been expected, and, as a
consequence, I found myself with- :
out a job and reduced to making
the rounds of the coin return slots
of pay telephones and coke ma
chines in order to supplement my
meager savings. I was just raking f oponer; one handy hottr
a slug from one of the telephones 0,10 l 1 * 4 *'* 1 °* RT*My
at the YMCA, before hurrying \-
over to the Inn ahead of Profes
sor Smorgasbord,, one of my col
leagues a so temporarily without
funds^, wh<n I was accosted by one
of m
^ ;t°y balloon. Gimlet
former students, a chap E' ve J*P ' n disgust wl
/!
'7%.,
>
'aWDCQ<3
WITH—"*~"-
If ield that does not witness dozens or / ] | I v
ii)o.p bottles falling into the crolwd of peo- /HorSebllFff
pie standing dut&ide the stadium. /
en? On Parade
whom \I chll “Gimlet” because he
botes me,
“Herr Doktor Perfe.sser Shrdlu”
he bellow^l. “I would a word with
you.”
I would have liked to ignore him,
butt Gimlet \s not the/type of per-
^oti one can, ignore. Besides, the
Sigjii of his empty sleeve, for
which I was ivsponfeible, made mo.
pause to brush him off lightly.
•Sorry, I can’t stop to talk to
ydu, Mr. Gimlet, but I’m in a
hurry. If you’ll bxcuse. . . ” '
“It ain’t no use, Perfesser; I
just come from the coke machine
at the Academic Building, and I
just seen Perfesser Bmorgasbored
coining from the Imi, Pickings is
purty Jeam today, ain’t they.”
“Oh well, what
for,
iiig out in the irocess thc)
items: one qteck-jaclf;
. 7 ,0
sizes; five sk(|leton keysL
types; three, packages 0
ettes, partiallj used; ohst>)
book mutches;'one handj
landy botte!
isy cards ,i:
one pair of dieje, loaded; nj
tale grey handkerchief, j
used; one Handy hip po<k|e
half full, alsojialf emptj;;und|oi
THE STORY
and
cks of cigarettw,
lister, he hands the
opus to the managin
editor, The latter gives the you
nluan a cigarette and buys him, a,
iZ
«|iUf
iys him, a,
h appreciation. The Managing
• then decides how the story
t and decides on the space and
s ze of type to be given to the
hjeadl ne. Much care us put into
tl»e writing of this headline as this
is prob “
Ir i 1
ijd headline written, the copy
bably the only part of the
fhiit will be reau.
sent into the dungeons of Good
in Where many strange and inter
esting things are about to happen
ti it. If the reader has followed
fius far, he is no doubt gripped
by curiosity as to what happens
f -om here on in, but even if he
iiin’t, he gets the thing free and
ilS going to be in the next issue,
s) he might as well find out.]
44
ii
something scribbled
(cuff.
“What's thal on your shiil c
I asked, “poop for an icfxar,.
girl’s number, j.«r the infci relation
‘Ofi, that’s light, tha ’!)
is 'jiven, tell everT
r ast set on btow-ou.s j
i^c land accomplis h
| ; f ' 1
are given, s^y
ninAjls. a can tied
:L;
d:
IV-
tl
Tie
City 5
J :• '
i
ttalion,
liege St ti
en T cc without joiji
iRg' V
eah t correct-Rbus^s
u«iie88, howl thit
illf' "
ttitntiin to abuees
(club), j ‘
for somfethi
Md it, yelp,
ttifity threaten to
lida to resign.: I
nd jja meeting, vo
enigo home and do
ingi don’t think >f joi
11. If the (cl ib) d
in yqur heighbpr’s
nothing is! clone, j
12. If fit calls a
your own, reaigr frorif thi
Koej) yotjr eyqjoj|i
wrong, anid, when y
ever}) opp
quit And get yoiiir f:
15(. When yoju at
to do something and
the opposite.
16. Agree tej everything said at
meeting and disagree jyitli it outside
ll When asked fir ittbrmation, don
give jt J 1 v JF , v j j- : 'I
1$. CUissthe (clut |) fotj incompletenejs
of its; inf01 m^tic p. 44- , - ,
10. Get all tjhe T<pDjf givtes you, bijt
O^ily a moment of thought is needed
|o foresee the potential danger of such
foolish act, Is it too much to ask these
^pple.who endanger the lives, of others
0 refrain from such a practice? We think
ot. if.] ■ ’//
. : I • i T I ■ .
'j--j, ! ; / . >
Under agreoment betwpnn the Air
Force and the Naval Air-Force on who
jhould bomb what, strategic bombing
(would be primarily the function of the
Air Force , but Navy fliers could engage
|i|n it if, during a campaign, the Navy
found that it had surplus-' planes. And
bur idea is 1 that when there was fighting
going pn the Navy would always be ready
to declare some planes surplus.
(Editor*’ Note: Mr. TexiXKham J, Billingsley of our foreign cor
respondent staff is on summer!leave in Houston where he is serving
in the vital capacity of deck hand on! a tug boat. Mr. Billingsley’s
columns will appear here wheh his working hours and the Houston
bar ht.urs do not coincide.) j ; | j ' ;
Houston, the city of mechanized progress, is having horse
trouble. And the difficulty s not coming from the horse’s us
ual role as a draft animal.! This time its a gastronic worry.
Houstonians fear they may have S
tycen unwittingly eating old Dob
bin for some time. ( J
It all began last week when tlhc
City Health Commis*ion uncover-
(act
!
|
A naition-ivide poll showed that a large
percentage of people have an exaggerated
idea of profits matje under, the American
economic' system. Many likewise have an
exaggerated idea of the profits they could
make. * . L
•u
hS
OOlb
e Associate Presja is ntitled exclusively
to t. or njst 6t$nv|e credited n the
hd B
and pin,.and two
■ihJ
di
Attired in earrings,
md: ‘
Dolph discussed her plans for attending a
a gold necklace
iamfttd rings, Miss
reunion at Bucknell University.—-A’or/olfc
(Vo.) Virginian-pilot.
nb vtpaper of the .
’exa .is published fi'
noon, iXcept [during bolidaysi and
ilished tri*w< jklyj Subscription ra'
1 my ie made byTelepl ode
adt may be placed by te
Goodftin [all.
of tei 1 ujlh ation of el]
ttalion
cd the fltartlihg fadt that hojnc
meat was bding served, in u d|is-
guised form, in one of the city’s
lower eating places
Subsequent investigation proved
that even though the Commission
went into the upper rent district,
the hill of fare was still the same
—rump roast of roan in disguipe.
Only yesterday the probers
foitnd that more than half of the
city’s school children had bten
fed horse meat iu the school cafe
terias.
Alb this proved just a bit loo
much for the usually laconic Hous
ton natives. In public eating plates
you now see the natrons carefully
probing their veal cutlets for ajny
telbtale saddle marks, and one
confirmed family man left his h6me
in a huff because he-i claimed the
roast nis wife served' him Had
whinnyed at him when he picked
up a carving knife.
All the furor arose just as the
very horsy Pin Oak Stables, dne
of the city’s larger riding du)S,
Letters
can
not
this
stuffed all of
pockets again, and
lum lf!(r
ion hji
cuff: “StiMa
PJ
th
cxcluimct},
my ears,
me; you u|
jn, |he
it up
thujl,
4
CORRECTION
• •.
Editors, The Battalion:
I should like tb call your ajt.-
tctUion to an error in the article
in ia box on the first ..page of The
Battalion for June 9. The article
concerns the hours of the Library.
: The hours for the Cushing
Memorial Library arc $ a. m.
tp 5 p. m. Monday through Fri
day; Saturday 8 a. m. to 4 p. m.
and Sunday 6 to 10 p. m.
The hours for the Texas Engi
neers Library are from 8 a. m.
to 5 p. m. Monday through Fri
day, and 8 a. tn. until 12 noon on
Saturday.
It is important that this cor
rection be . made, otherwise many
pprsons will get thb idea that the
Library is not open during the
evertihgs.
ct&er
f MJWnM iM MeclKMMlUU »#: ■ *f l» . PPlit
Office «t, College Ststiou,. 11xu. render
a 4 the A4 of C ingress »f S, 1870.
J- - -4— ;
Ik
cultural and Mi
k lea U week s
.tjon peri
$4^0 per school
was preparing for its fourth i,n-
nual horse show. There have bqcn
mated whispers that it’* all a pub-
lieity: gag fob the show, but nc
diredtors deny it even thougl
I do
you?”
“ You’re
t e a e h i p ’
term?” ‘ A
“Ai^e you tell
ing me .or , ask- ?
ing me? No, I’m
not teaching this
teim.”
“You want to
make a little
money?"
“No, I want to
make a lot of
money, but I’ll
listen to your
proposition.’*
“Well, I’m tak-
in’ this English
801, Writin’ for
Pmessional Men, and . ”
“You’re taking 301! How did you
jtet in that course? The last I
hdard, you were taking 104 and
flimking that."
“Well, I flunked 104, but I’m
tired of flunkin’ the same .old
courses all the time, so when you
wasn’t at registration to stop me,
I! signed up for 210, Straight
Thinkin’ and Cussin’.”
“But I thought you kuid that
ybu were taking 301.”
"I’m gctti|n’ to that. I went to
ope meetin’ pf that there 210
dlass, and the first thing the per
fesser said was that we shouldn’t
be biassed and should keep our
minds open. That right there was
enough fer me, so 1 got up and
walked out. No perfesser is goin’
ter tell mb that I got ter be open
minded. Sp then I went in and got
mie changed over ter 301J”
“Amazing. I’m afraid that I un-
English
me f|roin his
Uipp jn .the .lejaching ,of
“What!” I '
able to believe
“You heard
‘Standardization
of English’.”
“Who thoug
for you?”
“One of the fellas in
The perfpsser Worked
title.” I .
“And just what do yn«
prove?”
“That you
not only don’t
you don’t grac
“Well, just
to prove it?”
“I got plenty proof. 11:
five times under five dif f«
fessers, an’, i — - ■
course under e
“We all flun
Doesh’t that spew som<
ization?"
“Yea, but not enoug u
pedal’ I got (.be goodpj
not only don’t give the
on the same j theme
perfesser* give but you
give the satee! grade oi
was a
ich one t
ed you,
i Writer
ime of the prof, the course and
ictlon numbers, end then when
fou get it back, you record th«
i t»» yeu got.”
"Wlhat's the purpose of all this
i formation?"
‘‘That’s to save embarrassment
fuch 4 nine students handing the
i ante Itedk report into the shmu in-
i truqtilir In the snmc coutee like
rehitti; happened lust semester when
the slobs over in ‘A’ Gompiiny got
too luty to do it.!’
“Hnimm, and What about my
giving you an ‘F’ on an ‘A’ papt)r?|
“\Vhy, I copied this here ‘A'
in per that good old Charlie'Joseph
■ vrote back in 191|), and ypu gave
inolln Y on it.’’ .
“But I wasn’t hero in 1919. • ,
“Oh, Chick Swenson got an 1 A
(See GIMLET, Page 1) I
-44 - r—
L : ^
abject
t)l(e dlasi
tlh
3 at
he
ne rfeisci s
mt
: it:
teach alii &
e alike." ;
tiow do ipiten
j
ook 10'
ent pei|
t ifferem
f. dhem.”
n’t'we
tandafi
Yoii 4 1
Vo l
theme when itlj handcc
twice.”
“What do you maun
“JUs’ what
thomo on art;
yfi
le
breeding cattle
dent got an 'A
and you give
you not only
hut you also
said,
ickle in.-ji
that axo
off of
me a ‘
ain’t s
indiiscri
tween us stude Us,"
"If your spe ling on
was anything I ke your .
(ion, I can readily unde T
on the
rocognl :4
hlajfc ®thc
< n’t kxew
tpc
tol, yeh i
lopii
itatii
t mr
Tl?
iteardiiq
i ate
you got an ‘F’
why I didn’t
second time. By the wi
you know thal. had hm
before and had given it
. “It was bn tnc card,
“What caid?”
ibmittciiti-
t md
ii .per
.it tkb
bow d] i
lb pa^i i f;
card on
was tilt
' sh file
e (4-5444) or at the editorial
elCphone (4-5324) of |at the
rs deny it ev
haimtes J datiB, l and l $teak and
elates
class,
d op
A
,o the use for republication pf all nows dispatches
^ pub “‘
Office, Room 201, The one advantage of the hor ie*
Student ActiviUes meat scandal is that it give* wlit* _
INewman, Catholic
Mender of
The Associated Press
r
tUptoeaM lutMulb br KaUoaal A<1-
mtisiuj Service Ind, at New York Ony.
Chicago. Lou Angeles, and San Francisco.
Youth Qitba Meet
^ fogiler^ghf
iSTK&r 1 ^
Most of the city’s citizens re*
garded the entire affair as a jdke
until suddenly they found they, may
have| dined somewhere on horse*
burgfcr filkt-of-filly, and then i he
matjjer becomes a horee of another
^ One health authority reeeJuy
estiinated that iu the last^wq
montha, Houstonians have unknqw.
inglV consumed 76 horses. At lets
no one cau say this is a one-hOffti
towtfcf :;m .ii.
' !f L-
ter
write a technickle report in this
here 301 elaes, and since you ain’t
teaehin’, I figgerad maybe you’d
like ter piik up ffVe budts fer
writin’ oho Ter me.”
“ ,r *
a lot
have some principles . . . why, I
will never know.
“How dare you offer We five
dollars to write a techitietl report.
Have yon no decency?’’
“I guess that Isn’t very much,
red you sure look llkt you heed
“The
course.”
“And where
“In the Eng
old outfit, nai
“English fileJ I’m af^
understand.” ] A-
“You must H new
eer. Everybody -kupwg
l.h j.'
‘You must bfc i
. Everybody k
Hah fUee/’
ft
ink
sized filing ca
sal the
you, steal
the money,
bucks, and
IU maka it ten
that’s my top price. I fit cohttit
get a theme written in German -; themes,
“1
m
li
irfteskions.
to u
•....I
ithol:
ienU,
Ramsey said.
il:
that, and you wouldn’t have
gall to ask for more to write
aiiheme in my own language than
fer one in a furrin language.
I wasn’t really tempted, but I
Was chrioUte, so I decided to string
yon? teahrica! fepoft
topic?” • ,( I asked.
“Let’s see ... Tgot il writ down
s*..
4 ^r
*■41
on it, and
{he*?
Sid whi
QUEEN
i 1
_ OID
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it I mm nm
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AimtM
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Today thru Wed.
. >> {Lwiturea Begln--
ijHO . 3:10 - 410# • 0' 10 *
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10:15
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