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18 July 1944

18 July 1944

[Harold types]

Dear Folks:

Dick came down to see me today and I thought while we were laying around we just as well write you a letter – or try to.  Right after we had dinner we walked along the beach road from Charan Kanoa to the end of the island looking for an army cemetery but couldn’t find it.  While we were looking for the place, Dick showed me the places where his outfit landed and even where he dug his first foxhole.  And we found a lot of Jap caves that were well concealed and topped over with a lot of dirt and leaves.  They dig in like [illegible] caves are transforming the face of the [illegible] saw several thick walled concrete [illegible] from the point we had a good view of Tinian [illegible] over there must be thinking – if they can see what is going on [illegible] there is (a) sugar factory that stands out on the landscape.  It took quite a beating from navy shells and girders and machinery are flung everywhere.  From the factory runs a number of narrow gauge railroad lines.  The army captured a few locomotives and now you can hear their high pitched whistle as the guys chug along using the cars to haul supplies, etc.  The trains are small and look more like oversized toys. We haven’t had a look at Carapan yet and I have been itching to get up there and see what goes. The town is about ten thousand so there must be quite a lot to see.  I haven’t seen a newspaper or magazine since I left Oahu and today Dick walked in with a Time magazine.  I’m anxious to review it from cover to cover.  I was asking Dick what I should write about and he said to mention that we will be sending home some souvenirs soon when the situation permits.  I told you about the bayonet and the flag.  In addition to those Dick got a wallet with quite a sum of Jap money in it, and many pictures of the officer’s family and what must be his wife. Also he got his insignia of a 2nd lieutenant.  He’ll probably have some more before it is all over.  The weather here is about the same as on Oahu but right now is the season when the monsoons begin and the past few nights there have been heavy rainstorms.  They say hurricanes strike near the island about once every two years and I hope this isn’t one of them.  Today is pretty hot and sultry and the sand all around is hard on the eyes.

We were both wondering about Phil and whether he has come into the army yet.  Every once in a while you see a crude handwritten sign over a foxhole saying Frisco 7752 miles, Tokyo 1521, and then we realize just how far away we are.  Guam lies about 103 miles to the south and just to the north are the Bonims(?).  It’s going to be a long boat ride home someday but we’re ready to accept it any time.  And remind us never to take another ocean voyage when we get home. The food was pretty good on the boats but the chow lines are hard to buck, and the accommodations are hardly first class.  Well I’m going to turn this over to Dick and let him add a few lines.

[Dick handwrites]

Today being Sunday I went to communion and then to see Harold.  We’re taking it easy now after a little uneasiness.  I’ll write some time later.

Love,

Dick

17 July 1944

17 July 1944

Dear Folks:

I’m a long way from home but today seemed like old home week.  We were taking a few minutes off with a pinochle game when somebody came striding in and said ‘Is there anyone from Nebraska in here?’  I was about ready to say your damn right when I recognized Jack Conklin.  Ol’ big burly hairy-chested Jack stripped to the waist with a helmet and dark glasses on – I had to look close.  He has been looking practically all over the island for me and when he did it was time for him to leave.  We pumped each other’s arm for a minute then got the low down on each other.  He couldn’t stay very long but we’ll be seeing each other again before long.  Dick, myself, and Jack aren’t too far away from one another and probably in the next day or two we’ll celebrate by eating a can of Japanese crabmeat.  It certainly is a treat to see someone like that.  Jack looked good as hell and of course everyone over here is brown as a dirty penny.  He said he hadn’t sent the pictures – hadn’t been able to develop them yet.

Tonight is a special night as it goes over here – its movie night – an old picture that I have seen before but I can always sit through it again.  The mosquitoes will beat out those of Minatare any old day, but the GI lotion keeps them off pretty good.  But then I suppose it will rain.  Along with the nighttime pests is the land crab.  Some of them are 7 or 8 inches across and when they get on the tin that we line our foxholes with or around boxes they scratch like hell and sometimes scare the wits out of you.  They’re mean looking things.  Little red ants run around too that leave a nasty sting that doesn’t go away right away.  A few snipers are still afloat and only a night or two ago, a couple were killed around Charan Kanoa, and sometimes in the night you get to seeing things.

When Dick and I were out yesterday we noticed a bunch of Jap workers and thought how far behind the times they were.  They don’t seem to have much labor-saving equipment and do about everything by hand.  We saw a dozen of them pulling a tree stump when four of them could have picked it up and carried it off in a few minutes.  On Maui the sugar cane production used a lot of cranes etc. but over here I guess it’s all by hand.  They say that most of the working class are Japanese of the lower classes brought in from Southern Japan.  Many of the Imperial Marines taken on the island were said to be pretty good sized but all I’ve seen are little short runts, bow-legged, and squint eyed.  Several loads of Jap civilians go by every morning where they are put to work handling supplies or just cleaning up.

You should have a pretty good idea of the place from all I have written you – it has all been interesting and new to me and I thought perhaps you would be as interested as I was.  I guess I better line up for chow – suppers are usually pretty good, but my appetite still could stand improvement.  It is easy to get diarrhea or dysentery here and with so many flies you must be pretty careful.  Well I’ll wind up for this time and hope I get some mail from you tomorrow.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
15 July 1944

15 July 1944

Dear folks:

I should have much to write about this time for the censorship regulations have [been] cut down and now I can tell you some of the many things I have wanted to.  As you guessed I am in Saipan on the Mariane Islands, about 3200 miles from Hawaii and I don’t know how far from the house.  [illegible] which is the capitol and most heavily populated of the Mariane group.  Looks much like the islands of the Hawaiian group.  The island is about fifteen miles long with a mountain of 1500 feet in the center, and which was the most fought for point in the battle.  Three miles to the south is Tinian which is still swarming with Japs [the rest of this sentence was blacked out by the censor].  The boat ride from Oahu was a long one and a hot one.  Each day as we progressed nearer the objective the Chaplain gave a short talk about the islands, the makeup of the naval forces, the enemy strength, the battle plan and so forth.  We didn’t know where we were going on leaving Oahu and when we were told it was Saipan I think we were all pretty surprised.  I was myself for I thought we wouldn’t take such a big hop quite yet.  On our boat were mostly Marines [the rest of this sentence was blacked out by the censor].  Aside from a few submarine alerts and unidentified aircraft warnings the voyage was quite routine.  I remember the night before D-Day when we first caught a look at the island.  It was about three o’clock in the morning and we could stand on deck and see the battleships, cruisers and destroyers bombarding the island with their big shells.  About a half hour later we had breakfast and it was a big one.  Ration and a half for each man including steak, potatoes and the rest of it—more like a Sunday dinner.  About this time H Hour was coming around and although the artillery doesn’t go in as assault troops, I really said a prayer for the Marines who hit the beach first.  The Chaplain also had the boat quiet for a minute and said a few words.  From our position on the boat we could watch the battle although we were quite a ways out and could only guess as to how we were making out.  A few hours later rumors began to fly—we were going right along, then we were taking a beating and all versions were having their round.  Almost every evening on the boat the Japs would send over a few planes and that began my first war experience I guess you’d call it.  On the boat you go below and sit in the hot holds listening to the announcer give the location and speed of the enemy planes over the loud speaker and hope to hell they will miss you.  One night I remember I was sweating more than usual, our own pom-poms and anti-aircraft started a barrage and I thought if they ever hit us we would go straight to the bottom.  The first day after D-Day some of troops were ashore. I wasn’t among them and secretly I wasn’t disappointed.  The scenes of battle were everywhere, the effect of the naval shells, the Japs own mortar fire on our troops and many bodies lying around, in all positions and all stages of decomposition.  Sights that you hope you will never see again.  Along the beach, in and out of the water, were wrecked tanks, alligator debris and a thousand things necessary to the campaign.  The smell was terrible and the dust from tanks and vehicles was so thick you could hardly breathe.  Well the first thing for the night was dig a foxhole and that first one I built was a stinker.  I thought it was all right but when our artillery began to fire the thing almost caved in and the sand was all over me.  I couldn’t hardly get out of the thing for fear of being shot and I wasn’t feeling too brave anyway.  About the second day after I landed Dick came into camp looking dirty and disheveled.  I knew he must be having it pretty tough in his outfit and I was pretty worried, but he had a big grin and I felt better.  He had a lot to tell me, he gets up close to them and sees the Japs firsthand.  He said he killed two Japs the day before and he had a nice flag taken from one of them.  Well a little after dinner he had to leave, and that was about ten days before the battle was over and I felt anxious again, and kept hoping the thing would be over in a few days.  Can you imagine Dick doing what he is doing?  Every evening without fail the Japs would send over a plane to drop flares and keep a line on the situation, and who came to be known as “Bedcheck Charlie”.  Later two began to appear and he was called “Bedpan Charlie”.  One night they were circling over and dropped a few bombs, and I was laying in the foxhole hoping he wouldn’t get any closer when we opened up with our anti-aircraft and in a few minutes he was hit squarely and caught fire immediately.  He dove to the ground and set off a mighty explosion.  When he was hit you could hear the dogfaces for a mile or two around.  All gave a big cheer.  The guys that knocked him down were big favorites after that.  About an hour later they bagged another Jap plane and he made a big flame too.  Our jeeps have a radio that can get Frisco and at six o’clock we would listen to the news especially anxious to hear what they had to say about Saipan and hoping you were listening too.  But when it came time for the GI programs, an air raid would sound and we would hit for the foxhole.  Radio Tokyo is easy to get also and of course we always heard their version too.  The reports would be exactly opposite and their reports of casualties about four times what we thought they should be.  Tokyo also has a night program called the Zero Hour and dedicated to the American soldiers in the south Pacific.  The nerve of the guys.  Tokyo Rose speaks perfect English and tries your patience by recalling for you how nice it would be to be home and that sort of stuff.  But the music is pretty fair and we don’t mind listening.  Well the battle went on and I hadn’t seen Dick for about eight or nine days and I was hoping he would show up. He was in the front lines about five or six miles from our positions and it wasn’t too easy for us to get together, but he showed up with a lot of souvenirs and more dope. Said he killed two more one of them a Jap officer, and from him he got his bayonet, a pretty good one.  About this time we were pushing the Japs back over the mountain and getting them cornered in the northern point, and Dick thought it would be over in a day or two so I thought easier about him.  In our battery we have a shower and that felt damn good to Dick who hadn’t cleaned up for sometime.  Our rations were mostly K-rations, single boxes one for each meal and pretty good.  We had plenty of them and nobody lacked enough to eat.  Cigarettes and toilet supplies are also issued gratis.  On the fourth we celebrated by eating a first meal from the kitchen.  By this time Aslito airfield was well in our hands and many of our Thunderbolts were already based there, and they looked mighty good.  During the night the Japs from Tinian would send over a little artillery fire but it did not damage [anything] and I believe we knocked them out in short order.  The report of the Jap navy being around didn’t make me feel better although I was sure we could stop them.  Jap opposition from the boats in the sea was practically nothing as far as Saipan itself is concerned. The Jap soldiers were interned in stockades or wire enclosed areas and separated.  I wanted to see them so one day we took a walk down and had a look.  There are about forty thousand civilians on the island I believe and there were plenty of them crowded in the wire.  The women had nothing on above the waist and they had no modesty at all.  They were dirty, thin, bewildered and there was more small children than I ever saw.  The Koreans were separated from the Japs.  Later we saw the two Jap prisoner soldiers.  I get a hell of a hatred when I see them, and I wish they were all dead.  About 85 percent of the population is Jap with the balance, Koreans and Chamorros, who are a half Filipino and [half] Spanish.  Later things began to quiet down and the battle was coming to an end.  At this time the Japs got saked up and made their last ditch stand and were successful for a while.  Dick was in on that and told me that he was caught on the beach by the Japs and had to be taken off on an alligator.  He has had some close shaves and told me of times he thought sure they would get him, but he just laughs about it.  He killed a Jap officer with a grenade and then shot the hell out of him to be sure.  He looks very good, and now that the campaign is over we’ll have it easy at least for a little while.  He was down yesterday and the day before and it’s mighty swell to have him around.

Well the campaign for Saipan is over and now the island is humming with repair work and defensive installations, but each night we can see flares on the mountain where the Marines are rounding up small pockets of snipers or civilians.  Many Jap trucks have been put to use and one of them is a water wagon and that has helped to hold the dust down.  One Jap truck was caught in our area, a repair truck and pretty well equipped.  Some of the dark boys fixed it up and used the motor for a pump.  The Japs had plenty of bikes and you can see them everywhere, many wrecked ones but many in use.  Most of the civilian cars are Fords and in Headquarters the boys got a 1940 model in good shape.  They have it running in good order now.

It looks like the Japs kept the other nationalities in pretty much servitude from the stories they tell and the looks of their homes.  All of the houses I have seen are grass and tree limbs but everyone has a reinforced concrete cellar and stocked with Jap array supplies.  In Chalan Kanoa the buildings are thick concrete.  Apparently the Japs were making every house a strong point.

Well the biggest part is over now, and twice in the last week have seen a movie—old ones but they looked good.  And we even have a little time for a bridge game.  Doesn’t seem to add up does it?  We are pretty close to the Jap homeland and are set for big things now—from now on it will be the clue chips.

I have written quite a bit (probably the censor is using every profane word in his vocabulary on me) but I know you will be interested and perhaps there are many other things you wonder about.  Dick and I are fine and not the least bit worried.  The main topic is when will we get home.  The rumor is that President Roosevelt made a statement that a surprise was in store for the Saipan soldiers.  Have you heard it?

The mail has been coming in good but we haven’t received any papers or packages since leaving Oahu but I can understand that.  I am anxious to take those dozen back Free Presses and get together with Dick about that.  I think I had best stop now—this has been quite a job.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
10 July 1944

10 July 1944

Dear Folks:

Oddly enough right now I’m sunning my feet after a refreshing shower.  Sounds like I’m relaxing at a winter resort or something doesn’t it, but that is far from the case – you should see the place. Feel better today knowing Dick is alright and will have it easy for awhile – but I guess I told you about that yesterday. Had a letter from you today and you asked about my books.  I stored them on Oahu believing I wouldn’t be gone too long and will use them upon my return.  They are in a safe place.  The watch or the seeds have not come yet but I’m sure they will come no matter where I go.

There are many things to say but no way of saying them.  We get the latest news and GI press from ‘Frisco and always listen especially to the news as reported about our own area.  And then I hear the enemy version also.  Very interesting and often amusing.  Well so much for this time.  Mention the letters you receive so I’ll know you are getting them all.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
6 July 1944

6 July 1944

Dear Folks:

A few minutes before dark and time to answer several of your recent letters.  Received one from Nancy and yesterday one from you about the watch.  This letter is little more than to tell you I am alright – quite safe and things are getting better all the time.  Since my first visit with Dick haven’t seen him since but am expecting to have my visit with him soon.  He’s quite a guy – I think more of him every day.  Wish I could tell you about his experiences as he told them to me.  Our mail is arriving in good order, better than back on the islands, and is the most sought after commodity.  It means a great deal.

Follow the news closely and I’ll write as often as possible and hope I’ll soon tell you all that is going on.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
29 June 1944

29 June 1944

Dear Folks:

The sun is casting long shadows and I will have to work fast to get this completed but a little communiqué each day may make you feel better.  I’m writing for Dick and myself in a way because I don’t imagine he finds much time to write.  Received Dad’s and Nancy’s letters today—the most recent one to date.  You are correct Dad—about Phil [illegible].

I haven’t seen Dick for a couple of days and look forward so much to seeing him.  I’m sure he is okeh.  This is about the end of my text tonight.  Will write as often as possible although what I can write about is quite limited.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
27 June 1944

27 June 1944

Dear Folks:

This letter is in answer to several of yours that I received today and which were the most welcome sight I ever saw.  In my last letter to you I said I was at sea going into combat and that Dick was also at sea.  Well time has gone by and here I am.  The details I can give you are necessarily very limited but I know you must feel anxious and perhaps some word will make you feel better – I think it will make you feel much better as you read what happened to me today.  Under the circumstances you can well imagine how much your letters meant.  I knew you must know something was up when you never heard from me, and that I wasn’t writing for no reason at all.  I wish I could tell you all what you would like to know, but perhaps soon that will be possible.  Wandering around the area today somebody grabbed me and said my brother was here. I ran over and there he was, grinning broadly and looking good.  He had a little time off from ten thirty until twelve thirty when he had to meet the truck.  He took a bath and cleaned up and had a good dinner then we sat around for a lengthy bull session.  When we went to meet his truck he didn’t have to go back until two-fifteen so we came back and chewed the fat some more.  In the meantime a slug of mail came in and I had several so we both read them.  We made a lot of comments on them.  Among them was a letter from Betty Sue Myers, still the same cagey Betty, undecided but engaged.  I wrote her at the suggestion of Jack C when we were visiting on Oahu.  When we were young and wholesome our old gang made a resolution to have a reunion at the Brown Palace (which I had forgotten) and she was anxious that we all remembered it.  I think she (and Jack too) will still someday slip the noose on each other.  I’ve read your letters about sixteen times already and will probably read them as many more times before tonight.  I hope you can find a suitable watch – I didn’t ask for my own as it isn’t waterproof and it would take a bad time where I go.  I would like you also to take my funds and buy one for Dick.  As for myself I’m fine, getting good rations, and tolerating a few personal inconveniences.  Also had a letter from Gramp today – Dick got a kick out of it.  I thought the Chaplain’s idea for Mother’s Day was a pretty good one too.  On the furlough plan.  In the Central Pacific area the period is two years and the percentage allowed is very small, so small that it looks like a long time for one to come around.  Probably the accident that Ike was in, he was drunk and horsing around.  By the way I had an invitation from St. Andrews to a dance and house party.  Also had a notice from Reader’s Digest today something about a half price subscription after the war – guess I better mail it in.  I look forward to them.

By the way better quit a few of your letters V-mail for awhile – I think they will get here faster and surer.  Well I think this is all I have this time.  I will write you.  Don’t worry if you can help it and I’m sure everything will be alright.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
23 May 1944

23 May 1944

Dear Folks:

This should be a long letter full of quite a bit of news for the past few days have been pretty memorable.  A few days ago I received a letter from Jack Conklin and noticing his APO number found he was only a few miles from my station so I immediately tried to get hold of him.  I was lucky enough to reach him on the phone and that night saw him for the first time in three years.  And for the past three nights we have visited and rehashed all those never to be forgotten things that we did when we were young and foolish.  It was as good as a week’s furlough.  Jack looks pretty good and acts about the same as ever.  He has traveled around quite a bit since he left the states and has a huge stack of pictures that he had to show me.  He seems to have a nice job and one that is very interesting and not quite so GI as many of them.  He was anxious to see me and neither of us could hardly realize that we were actually talking to each other.  I couldn’t get a hold of Dick so that he could see Jack, but perhaps we can arrange that later.  I haven’t seen Dick myself for over a week now and don’t expect to see him for a while.  Yesterday afternoon (Sunday) got a pass, and just before I left got a letter from you and Dad and so had to tell Jack all the gossip in it.  It was (a) good letter to get because there was quite a little in it about the Conklins.  Well finally I had to say goodbye and probably our next visit will be many moons from now.  You don’t know how good it was to see him and find someone that could talk to you about things in common.  After he told me all his travels and we went through his pictures.  We talked about the aftermath and what we expected to do.  Jack does seem more serious about life and realizes his life was put to him on a gold platter.  What did I think I was going to do?  Well I said I was going to go home for a while then go overseas again and start myself something abroad.  I wish I could realistically relate to you our conversation but I’m not good enough for that.  You will have to imagine the rest.  Now to get around to your letters and see what I can comment about.  I’m so glad you liked what we sent and perhaps again soon I can send you some oddities.  I wish I could have sat in with you on the Ouija Board session and added some firsthand comments.  One of the big things Jack and I remarked about was the love life of the younger set at home – I mean all the marriages and babies.  And now little Jimmie Colson (is) engaged.  Jack couldn’t imagine Kate with a baby.  And of course Krumenacher, Fry, Carroll, and some others all came into our frying pan of gossip.  We feel that we are being left behind and that our future mates will be hard to find (ha).  And talking about the late songs – it is the custom in our tent to schedule a bridge game during the ‘Hit Parade’ so we don’t miss any of them.  No we don’t hear Tokyo Rose in the Islands, although those who have good radios can tune in Tokyo and hear them pretty good.  I heard some about a battle in the South Pacific and compared it with our news broadcast and somebody is lying like hell, and I hope it was the Japs.  I would like to meet R. Pitsch but it is increasingly difficult to get off and when I can get off a day I hardly like to spend ¾ of it looking for someone although perhaps I will happen to be out there someday and can locate him.  All the busses and taxicabs are crowded to overflowing and the highways are an endless ribbon of traffic and a dogface doesn’t find it too easy to get around.  And now around to Dad’s inimitable manuscript.  Your business must be very good and I was certainly surprised to hear the amount of money that you grossed last year.  It makes me feel very good.  Why don’t you take a picture of the place with the new signs and send me one?  By the way Jack and I took pictures and he will forward a set to you.

Bill Dick should be a good man to work for you.  And with the landscaping and redecorating you are doing on the house, I can’t wait to see it and put out a tear or two just looking at home once again.  I know it will be something to see.  And I suppose that when the farm is fixed up that also will be quite a garden spot.  I hope all your hopes about the war is true and I sometimes think that this thing may crack sooner than we anticipate, but on the other hand think it will take quite a while.  I wish you and I could talk the whole thing over.  The new furlough plan seems to (be) taking effect for the boys in the Aleutians and I’ll bet they are having a good time, but don’t get too optimistic about my chances for I can’t see anything in sight for some months to come.  I had a very nice letter from Gram today and Dick and I both thought after we mailed the package that we didn’t send anything to Gram and Gramp and they probably felt a little put out but we will send them something and try to make up for it.  I surely miss her and think she is very sweet to write when I know it must not be too easy for her.  She is the most kindhearted and helping person, and I feel bad about not always treating her as I should have.  Well, here’s another request.  I want you to take some of my money and find me a good, waterproof, shockproof, and accurate wrist watch.  One that I can wear anywhere and that can take a stiff beating.  You will probably have to put out quite a little for one but I need one badly and I want one that I won’t have to worry about if I get it in water or in the mud or wherever else might happen.  Well I think this is about enough and I have a lot to do so I’ll cut off about here.  Seeing Jack and reminiscing brought both of (our) homes into clear focus, and we appreciate them much more than you think and know that never again will we hold some of the ideas we did when we were younger.  Well, so long for now.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
14 May 1944

14 May 1944

Dear Folks:

It has been sometime since I’ve heard from you.  Guess the mail has slowed up a little.  Hope you have received the box by now and liked what we put into it.

Well this was Sunday, Mother’s Day and suppose I should be able to write something very nice but there is so much that I remember about you and all you have done that I couldn’t start to express all I feel.  The church service this morning was in your commemoration and the Chaplain has something fixed up to send home, a little card with the program in it.  And speaking of church, the church sends me something now and then and I thought perhaps you would be interested in the enclosed program.  If you read them carefully, you can get an idea of the service and the size of it.  I wish I could attend every Sunday.

Dick dropped around this afternoon but there wasn’t a lot we could do so we just loafed around and chewed the fat and once again put Minatare through the mill.  He just bought a pair of glasses, dark tinted and he looks good in them.

The recent furlough plan has taken a little effect and two men from the battalion have left.  However don’t regard it as any indication that I will get one, for I haven’t two years service yet and then there are other circumstances as shipping, etc.  However I hope that in the next year an opportunity will present itself.

Well Mom and Dad, I can’t write much and I have a few things to do so I’ll put the breaks on about here. I wish I could have been with you on this Mother’s Day.  Every year that day means more and more to me.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
10 May 1944

10 May 1944

Dear Folks:

Guess I better be dropping you a line or I’ll be getting behind again.  Time moves along pretty fast.  Dick and I went to town last Sunday but the place was so crowded got pretty disgusted.  Spent the afternoon at Waikiki.  The traffic along the avenue was something terrible and it’s a job to even use the street.  Sunday before last Dick saw an all star baseball game and told me he saw Bob Harris.  Later he talked to him in the dressing room and guess they enjoyed quite a little bull session about Minatare.  Sorry I couldn’t see him.  Got the Free Press today and read about Parker’s trip to North Carolina.  How in the ___ can they do it?  A few days ago I sent my photo album home.  Didn’t want anything to happen to it so thought I better send it.

Well this isn’t hardly what you could call a letter but have to send something along.  Will write more tomorrow.  Going to visit Dick tomorrow too.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
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