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  #9001  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 7:54 PM
chicagopcclcar1 chicagopcclcar1 is offline
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Originally Posted by Mr Downtown View Post
^But what's the point of a transit line that runs where nobody lives or works:



2010 census block groups, each dot represents 100 inhabitants
Where can I view a map like this of the entire city of Chicago? Thanks.

David Harrison
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  #9002  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 8:30 PM
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I've put a quick-and-dirty map of the whole city here.
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  #9003  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 9:37 PM
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That only counts where people live, not where they work. The loop is incredibly sparse. Would blue-collar workers who work in the industrial corridor take the ferries?
I doubt it. Those blue-collar workers don't live downtown... they live in places like Little Village and Austin (if they live in the city at all) and taking a slow bus downtown and then a slow boat upriver is a far worse commute than either driving or taking two buses that don't pass through downtown.

Besides, the river corridor on the North Branch is slowly de-industrializing. A better plan is to complete the riverwalk to allow for pedestrians and bikes to flow along the river corridor, and re-establish Clybourn and Elston bus lines. A few decades from now, if dense development takes hold along the river, it may become feasible to run waterbuses beyond the limits of downtown.

I suppose it's possible to run the existing water taxis up to North/Clybourn. It's a big shopping/entertainment district and a potential lure for tourists. Everything north of there is industrial or institutional.
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  #9004  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 11:04 PM
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I've put a quick-and-dirty map of the whole city here.
Mr Downtown, I am heartened to see the up-and-coming neighborhood of Jardine Filtration Plant has exceeded 1000 residents by now.
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  #9005  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 11:07 PM
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LOL..

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  #9006  
Old Posted Apr 20, 2012, 11:29 PM
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I am heartened to see the up-and-coming neighborhood of Jardine Filtration Plant has exceeded 1000 residents by now.
Yeah, as other GIS users will attest, one of the problems with Chicago census tract/block group shapefiles is that the boundaries extend far into the lake, so if you have the software do random distribution of the dots for that area, you end up with some in the park, in the lake, or in other places where they don't belong. Solving that problem takes more time than I wanted to devote this afternoon. So the number of dots right along the lakefront will be off, but the block groups are small enough (generally 6-10 blocks) that it shouldn't change the citywide picture.
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  #9007  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 5:36 PM
chicagopcclcar1 chicagopcclcar1 is offline
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Originally Posted by Mr Downtown View Post
Yeah, as other GIS users will attest, one of the problems with Chicago census tract/block group shapefiles is that the boundaries extend far into the lake, so if you have the software do random distribution of the dots for that area, you end up with some in the park, in the lake, or in other places where they don't belong. Solving that problem takes more time than I wanted to devote this afternoon. So the number of dots right along the lakefront will be off, but the block groups are small enough (generally 6-10 blocks) that it shouldn't change the citywide picture.
Thank you Mr Downtown for the city-wide map and thanks for the explanation about the misplaced dots. I did wonder about a few of them, LOL.

David Harrison
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  #9008  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 5:51 PM
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My Snowflake Notes: Why and Where of the Chicago "L"

I have put together a short essay from my notes that I compiled for my narration on the IRM Snowflake "L" Charter and I am sharing them in hopes that you find them interesting and educational.


Snowflake Notes...The Why and Where For Chicago's Elevateds

If you've ever flown into O'Hare or Midway at night, you've marveled at the grid patterns of light, the illuminated squares, the end result of a land use policy that divided our area into square miles called sections of land. The first surveying was done in conjunction with two Indian Boundary Lines, that marked a twenty mile corridor for a planned canal in the early 1800s The north line is clearly marked by streets and crossed by the Blue line after the Jefferson Park station, but the most familiar crossing is by the Red/Purple lines just south of Howard St. Within the city limits, the south line is almost invisible, marked by a few stretches of chain link fencing and an obscure street near 127th St. If extended, it will be crossed by the Red line extension.

The sections inside the Canal lands and the sections outside on both sides of the Boundary lines were sold and then subdivided into half sections and quarter sections, even down to quarter-quarter sections...the proverbial forty acres. All the subdivisions had to be further divided into blocks, eight of 'em to a mile is the accepted standard. But if both your streets and avenues are divided like that you end up with square blocks with a big unused space in the middle. So you have to run half block streets in one direction with paralleling alleys and then there is no unused space and you have rectangular 1/2 blocks. Because streets along the section and half section lines are generally heavily trafficked arterials and more valuable, "T" alleys are formed behind them so that the lots face those valuable streets, even along diagonal alignments.

Three of the four elevated railroads chartered and constructed in Chicago; The South Side, The Metropolitan West Side, and The Northwestern were required by their franchise ordinances to only build "through the blocks." They could buy, lease, rent, a private right of way, but they could not build over streets or alleys. They could cross them, of course. If the half block streets and their accompanying alleys parallel the route, the cheapest way to go was to usually buy the back 25 ft of backyards next to the alley. If the alleys were perpendicular to the elevated, a more expensive purchase of entire lots was needed and the lots had to all be in a row. Usually the "L" selected lots at the quarter points so that if the next subdivision was oriented at right angles, the "L" easily slid across the boundary already positioned next to the alley.

The first "L", the South Side broke ground next to the alley at 25th St., just east of State St. The right of way for the most part was strung out on the west side of the alley, except in between 14th and 12th Sts. where the line crossed to the east side of the alley. The South Side was stymied trying to purchase needed land north of 12th St. The property owners did however agree to sign consents for the "L" to build over Victoria, an alleyway with a name, known today as Holden Ct., so the city agreed to modify the charter.

Although the franchise stipulated that 39th St. was the end terminal, before the tracks reached that point the Jackson Park Worlds Fair site was selected as the new end point. 39th St. was the city limits when the original charter was granted, but the new city limits had leaped to 138th St. in one fell swoop. The South Side chose the alley east of Prairie Ave. probably because the alley east of State was built up almost all the way to 63rd whereas the Prairie alley was mostly vacant . Plus to go behind State St. would encounter two large cable car buildings.

The "L" crosses from the west side to the east side of the alley in the 4800 south block. My thinking is they did that to avoid jogs to match up with shifts in the alley locations south from that point. Between 51st St. and 56th St., there is no alley. The east orientation also made the 61st St. yard a simple fit. Only one jog was needed to match a shift in the alley....at 57th and 58th Sts. A half block center track just north of the only island platform was put in at 58th St. Approved branches south to 71st and west into Englewood would have to wait, the first goal was getting the line to Jackson Park and the charter specified building through the blocks anywhere between 60th St. and 67th St. The South Side discovered building over 63rd St. to be a bargain....there was little development west of Woodlawn Ave. except for the thoroughbred race track. Property owners easily gave their consent, and the city agreed allowing the "L" to build a three track structure that included the spidery steel work over the raised embankment of the Illinois Central railroad. The entire extension from 40th St. to Jackson Park was built in under ten months. The east-west alignment alongside the Chicago Junction railroad would easily connect with two future extensions: to Kenwood and to the Stockyards.

The exception to the "build through the blocks" was the politically connected Lake Street Elevated. The charter specified "build along and upon" and the elevated was constructed using the street as a right of way and no signatures were ever solicited. But neither the city nor the railroad was bold enough to build east of Market St. so proper signatures were gathered and the over the street elevated won a charter east as far as Wabash Ave. Along most of Lake St., the cross beams were wide enough to allow an express third track to be added. When the street is your right of way, there is not much that can intervene in planning your route. Had the Lake Street built any of its chartered branches, they would have been built on private land conforming to a "build through the blocks" clause.

The third company on the scene put together the largest operation to date, a main line and three branches and all of it was built on private land. The Metropolitan West Side even brought their four track mainline to the edge of the Loop. The Met's four track main was constrained by Jackson and Congress east of Halsted; Van Buren and Harrison from Halsted to Sacramento Blvd.; and Adams and Polk from the boulevard west to the city limits.

Because of the extra number of blocks in the sections of land between Madison and 12th Sts. going west of State to the city limits, the blocks were more square than the typical rectangular city blocks with some lots having depths so deep that the "L" modified the customary "back of the lot right of way" and went through backyards with the garages on one side and the houses on the other. I would love to see photographs of those "L" structures. The Congress Superhighway obliterated all traces. The extra wide blocks gave the Met room enough to put their shop building and powerhouse in between the two pairs of the four track main.

The four track main ended at Marshfield station, a half block west of Ashland AV and branches broke off in two directions: the Douglas Park directly south and the Logan Square directly north. The Garfield Park, now only a two track main continued straight to the west. But at Sacramento the two track main shifted its east-west alignment two blocks to the south for reasons I haven't found yet.

Both the Douglas Pk. and the Logan Square branches to the south and north were located in the typical back of the lot, along-side the alley, right of ways, along with 1/4 block land purchases when the alleys ran perpendicular. Several railroad crossings utilized masonry and concrete structures beneath the iron "L" structure and the branches crossed already raised steam railroad with majestic truss bridges. On the Douglas branch was an exception: where it went over the Burlington railroad on a tight acute angle crossing that simply used extra long reinforced bent beams in a design so strong it was left unchanged in the Douglas rehab a few years ago.

The north-south alignment of the Logan Square branch is almost all gone north of the overhead crossing of the Lake Street elevated near Paulina. I say almost because the 1894 era bridge that carried the "L" over the C&NW railroad tracks still stands today because the railroad has signals mounted on the structure. Not only is it the oldest surviving "L" truss bridge, it or the South Side Jackson Park east 63rd truss bridge was probably the longest ever built in the city. When the Logan Square reached the diagonal Milwaukee Ave., the "L" followed a course parallel to Milwaukee, alongside the alley, a routing distinguished by a speed reducing kink at North Ave. where the "L" adjusted to property lines. Just beyond this kink the now demolished Humbolt Park branch went west, again, alongside an alley but it never reached its franchised end point of the city limits.

The fourth company had the least restrictive charter. The Northwestern Elevated could start at Monroe, in between Wabash on the east and Market on the west and build north, cross or tunnel beneath the river and then build anywhere east of the North Branch of the River and west of Cass (Wabash Ave.); it could build and build, until they reached the city limits. Just do it all on private land. The Northwestern laid out a four track main line, featuring express and local tracks patterned after New York City. The entire structure used tower bents, which by 1900 had become the standard engineering style. But making room for the Northwestern's four track elevated at the rear of lots left little room for buildings on the remainder of the lot. From the end point at Wilson Ave. they paralleled the Milwaukee steam railroad south to Graceland (Irving Park). From Graceland to Willow, the structure basically follows the alley east of Sheffield. But the almost three mile stretch has more kinks, shifts, jogs, than anywhere else on the city's "L" especially north of Diversey because the tracks constantly adjust to the alley location, constantly adjust to varied property lines when the alleys are perpendicular, plus, throw in lot lines aligned to the diagonal Clark St. near Roscoe. And not to be overlooked, are other highlights like the curves near North Ave. and Halsted St., long rumored to be caused by property owners who demanded too much money and the "church curves" where the Northwestern swung its right of way around St. Joseph's Church, just south of Division. Uniquely, both of the east-west alignments corresponded to proposed branches never built, but the proposed branch leaving the main at Graceland finally appeared as the Ravenswood leaving the main at Roscoe. The east-west tracks south of North Ave. are mid-block to align with a short street.

But getting to the Loop over private property proved impossible and the Northwestern petitioned property owners for permission to use streets. With consents in hand, the elevated received new franchises allowing an "L" structure over N. Franklin and N. Wells continuing onto Fifth Ave. (Wells Ave.), but only allowing two tracks which would continue to be a bottleneck down through history.

The four sided Loop was completely constructed over streets, sometimes after bitter fights for consent from property owners. The last Van Buren side was built using a ruse of chartering a mile long elevated from Halsted east to Wabash, but only building between Market and Wabash. It was easier to get consent signatures from industrial frontage owners in the west half of the mile than from the residential, commercial and retail owners in the east half. A simple majority, 51 percent approval from all the property footage along the entire mile as a whole was all that was needed. Perhaps to validate this ruse, the downtown "L" was numbered using the "proposed" Van Buren elevated as the origin. When the numbering got to Lake & Wells, Tower 18 was named. The downtown elevateds used a lattice design for stringers to let in more light at street level while opponents with the strongest objections held out for curb line upright supports along Van Buren and along Franklin. When the Northwestern opened in 1900, this early stage of the Chicago "L" system still had much expansion ahead. (to be continued)

David Harrison
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  #9009  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 9:12 PM
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curb line upright supports
What is this? Is it like the former Bowery L in NY? Man, I wish they had done it this way.


source
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  #9010  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 10:03 PM
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What is this? Is it like the former Bowery L in NY? Man, I wish they had done it this way.


source
Yes, the New York El pictured does use "curb line supports" but the separated tracks were probably built to keep an open space above the streets. Structurally the design doesn't look like it would hold up very well to the modern-day stresses. On Chicago's "L", the "curb line supports" are the supporting columns under these elevateds: the 63rd St, Van Buren St., N. Franklin and the Lake St. between the S. Br. Chicago River and Rockwell St. The curb line structures cost more than structures that had the columns in the actual streets.

David Harrison
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  #9011  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 10:59 PM
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The stability of the structure would depend on the size of the underground footing. Miami's elevated has a similar design with separated tracks, although it's from the 80s and built in concrete.

Unfortunately the Van Buren property owners lost their battle... and for the last 100 years, Van Buren has been an unattractive sewer of a street (Wabash is much nicer).
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  #9012  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 11:20 PM
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Originally Posted by Mr Downtown View Post
Yeah, as other GIS users will attest, one of the problems with Chicago census tract/block group shapefiles is that the boundaries extend far into the lake, so if you have the software do random distribution of the dots for that area, you end up with some in the park, in the lake, or in other places where they don't belong. Solving that problem takes more time than I wanted to devote this afternoon. So the number of dots right along the lakefront will be off, but the block groups are small enough (generally 6-10 blocks) that it shouldn't change the citywide picture.
Heh heh, I understand.
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LOL..
Baffled by your photo, I went onto Google ... would a correct response to your post be "midjarfilpla"?
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  #9013  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 11:23 PM
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Unfortunately the Van Buren property owners lost their battle... and for the last 100 years, Van Buren has been an unattractive sewer of a street (Wabash is much nicer).
Wait, are you advocating for in-street columns (like Wabash) instead of those curb columns (like on VanBuren)? Those are a nutty traffic impediment and I was going to propose one day that Wabash be re-done to move them to the curb if feasible. Wouldn't the Van Buren "sewer" problem be more a result of the width of the street, the width of the sidewalks, and/or the width of the track structure overhead? Not to mention that buildings are typically oriented facing N-S streets, which favors Wabash, and all the love Van Buren gets is alley entrances/exits. Also, Wabash, being closer to Grant Park, gets the prime buildings while Van Buren, particularly in the forlorn SW loop, gets decaying 19th century saloons, etc.
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  #9014  
Old Posted Apr 21, 2012, 11:53 PM
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Baffled by your photo, I went onto Google ... would a correct response to your post be "midjarfilpla"?
Doesn't quite have the same ring to it... Although maybe you could pass it off as some ethnic neighborhood like Pilsen, Jackowo or La Villita.

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Wait, are you advocating for in-street columns (like Wabash) instead of those curb columns (like on VanBuren)? Those are a nutty traffic impediment and I was going to propose one day that Wabash be re-done to move them to the curb if feasible. Wouldn't the Van Buren "sewer" problem be more a result of the width of the street, the width of the sidewalks, and/or the width of the track structure overhead? Not to mention that buildings are typically oriented facing N-S streets, which favors Wabash, and all the love Van Buren gets is alley entrances/exits. Also, Wabash, being closer to Grant Park, gets the prime buildings while Van Buren, particularly in the forlorn SW loop, gets decaying 19th century saloons, etc.
Well, the street width is the biggest issue, but I have no idea what the businesses or buildings were like along Van Buren before the Union Loop was built. I can probably guess that there were saloons and such, based on the rough-and-tumble, vice/industrial nature of the South Loop, but the Monadnock Building was built there and it was a premier office property in 1900.

I'm pretty sure that Van Buren would be far better off today if it was identical to Wabash. Then again, Lake isn't much better, crowded with garage exits and ventilation grilles.
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  #9015  
Old Posted Apr 23, 2012, 6:55 PM
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I don't immediately find a contemporary source, but I've always read that the bents span from curb to curb on Van Buren because the businesses located there had the clout to force Yerkes to build it that way. The drawbacks of posts in the street—especially in the days of horse-drawn wagons—were already quite apparent on Lake Street. Buildings such as the Fisher, Old Colony, Katahdin (Monadnock), LaSalle Street Station, Rialto, and Van Buren Building testify that it was not always a street of flophouses and tax-payer blocks.

Last edited by Mr Downtown; Apr 24, 2012 at 1:41 AM.
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  #9016  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2012, 5:21 AM
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^ I looked deeper into this and I want to update my position. Although Van Buren suffers from short blocks interrupted by alleys and intermediate streets, from the fortresslike trading buildings, from a lack of more upscale tenants that are found on Wabash, and from what I believe are narrower sidewalks, it seems clear that having the el supports at the curbs substantially amplifies the tunnel effect for pedestrians and drivers. Even with the track infrastructure being identical to Wabash (i.e. just 2 tracks above), those "bents" (if that's what the supports are called) have a huge imposing effect when they reach out as far as the curbs. Maybe the biggest problem is that the horizontal beams are very deep (by which I mean "tall", like easily 48 inches?), and because they are spaced frequently (like every 10 yards maybe?) they really obstruct views. Walking or driving down Van Buren, the field of view is completely eaten up by them, and of course they block sunlight illuminating the sidewalks and storefronts as well. In comparison, Wabash is really not bad at all -- it's almost a quaint balance between overhead el and sunlight and open sky.

I hope if there is ever any need to reconstruct the substructure of any of the 4 sides of the loop, extra money will be spent (because it's the historic loop and it's just a few blocks) to use steel spans of the maximum length and of the minimum thickness practicable. But barring that, as far as Wabash is concerned, I'd rather have it stay with columns in the streets than see it turn into a Van Buren. Apologies in advance to the auto collision insurance companies of the world.

(State-Lake and maybe a few other intersections are an exception -- columns in the middle of intersections are definitely not a good idea.)
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  #9017  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2012, 5:43 AM
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Well, the city could remedy things some with design guidelines. A sidewalk setback would do wonders, but the dark color of the buildings is also problematic, and so are the block-long blank walls.

The LaSalle/Van Buren station is also a big problem - its mezzanine and platforms block light for a 2-block stretch. It has the lowest ridership of any Loop station, and that ridership would be low even for a neighborhood station. I know CTA has some lofty plan for "2 stations on each leg of the Loop" but is this station still needed? Service to the area is already provided via the Blue Line, which serves both sides of Congress. The elevated station doesn't even provide any transfer opportunities that can't easily be accommodated elsewhere in the system.
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  #9018  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2012, 7:55 AM
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Have they considered another North-South Subway along the Dense Lakeshore drive corridor?
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  #9019  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2012, 2:32 PM
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^Often discussed by fanboys but no serious consideration since the early 80s.

The corridor is already well-served by an array of express buses that provide one-seat rides for many patrons. In addition, a line right along Lake Shore Drive would be a single-loaded corridor, with no ridership originating east of the line. That's why plans always talked about a line under Clark or Broadway rather than Marine/Lake Shore Drive.
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  #9020  
Old Posted Apr 24, 2012, 2:45 PM
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I don't immediately find a contemporary source, but I've always read that the bents span from curb to curb on Van Buren because the businesses located there had the clout to force Yerkes to build it that way. The drawbacks of posts in the street—especially in the days of horse-drawn wagons—were already quite apparent on Lake Street. Buildings such as the Fisher, Old Colony, Katahdin (Monadnock), LaSalle Street Station, Rialto, and Van Buren Building testify that it was not always a street of flophouses and tax-payer blocks.
On a second look, the urban legend theory that the curb line uprights for the "L" are the result of yielding to pressures is losing credibility and I am rethinking that position too....a simple fact might have been that Van Buren St. is too narrow to put the uprights in the street. The ordinance definitions for the supports usually talks about locating the supports under the outer stringers or locating the supports so many feet from the outside rail of streetcar tracks below.

Van Buren is only 66 ft, where as Fifth Ave. (Wells St.) and Lake St. are 80 ft wide. Wabash looks the best of all....Wabash is 100 ft wide too. N. Franklin is listed as 67 ft, but streets on either side are listed as 80 ft, so the sixty-seven might be an error. Some research is in order.

David Harrison
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