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Fourteen New Members Join UM Fac •r turn The Mia urricane 41st Yeak, No. 33 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, August 19, 1966 MO 1-2511, Ext. 2942 EXAM SCHEDULE P»iti 9j UvhwstM Miscklty, RAM There is one rrudal week of school left before summer session is over and final examinations begin. If you have been keeping up with your studies, up to this point, then this week is no time to let down. If you have not been keeping up, now is the time to start working. For many students these final grades will make the difference between a degree or Viet Nam. Other students may be trying to add or make up credits for their degree. So keep your goals in mind this week as you prepare for your finals. Your future hangs in the balance. For your convenience, the exam schedule is printed below: Evening Classes II tM Cliu Emsi will be Mlttl it: Sins: 1st period in eve., 4 30-6:20, Mon. Aug 29 2nd period in eve., 7:00-1:50 Tues. Aug 30 3rd period in eve., 7:00-0:50 Mon. Aug. 29 Day Classes If tie Class Meets it: Eia* will te Sives: 8 00 or 8:30 e.m. 0:00- 9:50, Mon. Aug 29 9 30 or 10:00 a m. 12:30- 2:20, Mon. Aug. 29 11:00 or 11:30 e.m. 4 30- 6:20, Mon. Aug. 29 12:30 or 1:00 p.m. 10:00-11:50. Mon. Aug. 29 2 00 or 2 30 p.m. 2:30- 4:20, Mon. Aug 29 Lefever Resigns MRHA Highlights Gary Lefever, the newly elected Vice-President of the Men’s Resident Halls Ass4>ciation, resigned his post and withdrew from UM Iasi week. Harry Babcock was appointed by Mr. Skip Webb as acting Vice-President until elections can be held in September. The Orientation Banquet Committee has announced that it has rewived over seven hundred reservations, thus far, for the Parent-Student Banquet. The committee expects to have a capacity ! crowd of one thousand attending the dinner which will be held in the Student Union Ibis Cafeteria on September 10, at 6:00 P.M. Among the administrators present at the Banquet will be Dr. Henry King Stanford, President of the University of Miami; Dr. (William R. Butler, Vice-President for Student Affairs; and Mr. Ro-. bert H. Hynes, Dean of Men. The MJtJI-A. office has been moved from the old location at apartment 37K, to apartment 37Z In the housing area. The new office will make available better facilities and equipment. The Men’s Residence Halls’ officers have produced two manuals this summer relating to the living environment in the housing area. These contain such items as campus telephone numbers, suggested eating places, cultural and recreational programs in the area, and the philosophy and purpose of the Men's Residence Halls Association. The spear-head for the M.R.-H.A. 1966-67 program will be the Orientation Dance on the Student Union Patio, September 13, at 7:30 P.M. The M RH A. will also participate in campus-wide activities such as Spirit Week, Homecoming, and Cami Gras Representatives will be sent to the Florida convention of S.U.S.G.A. A special event, being planned by President Skip Webb, is a lecture by the Junior Senator from New York, Robert F. Kennedy, which is still tentative. Veterans Enroll The University of Miami is expecting several hundred veterans, discharged since January 31, 1955, to snap up Uncle Sam's offer of a college education he gave their buddies of World War II and the Korean conflict. “Based on pending applications,” said Miss Lucile Faul, assistant to the bursar and manager of veteran’s affairs at UM, “we will probably have between 500 and 1.000 veterans registering foT the fall semester." The new GI Bill of Rights, which went into effect June 1, offers $100 a month to a single veteran attending fulltime with 14 credits. A veteran with one dependent gets $125 a month and a veteran with two or more dependents gets $150 a month. The veteran will pay his own tuition. UM Desegregation Workshops Held Ten workshops covering school desegregation problems will be conducted in Florida this month by staff members of the South Florida School Desegregation Consulting Center of the University of Miami’s School of Education and nationally-known educators. Dr. Michael J. Stolee, director, said, “Our center is designed to be of assistance to schools as they meet problems occasioned by desegregation. We are not an enforcement agency — our commitment is to assist school systems in South Florida in providing the best possible education for all children.” On Aug. 15, Dr. Marie Fielder, professor of education at the University of California at Berkeley, will discuss inter-raci4d relationships in a workshop at the new Miami Killian High School. Mrs. Charlotte Brooks. Director of English education for the Washington, D.C., schools, will conduct a workshop Aug. 15-17, in St. Petersburg for the faculty of the new Lakewood Senior High School and Southside Junior High School. She will discuss the relationships between teachers and pupils in a desegregated situation. Designed for faculty members, the workshop also will cover relationships between teacher and teacher and pupil and pupil. Dr. Sidney L. Besvinick, professor of education at the University of Miami, and Dr. Theona V. McQueen, assistant professor of elementary education at the University, will conduct a workshop at Harlem Academy, Clewiston, Aug. 17 and 18. Their topics will be “Problems of improving reading and test construction.” On Aug. 18, Judson Nichols, Director of Transportation for Dade County, will hold a workshop for bus drivers in Bradenton in Manatee County where school bus routes were recently desegregated. Mrs. Ida Ratcliffe, Director of Secondary Education, north central district of Dade County, will discuss “Staff Desegregation” before Broward County school staffs in Fort Lauderdale, Aug. 19. A team of outside consultants and staff members of the Center will visit approximately 30 schools in Palm Beach County Aug. 22 and 23 to discuss problems that may be encountered when the fall semester begins. On Aug. 24, Dr. Gertrude Noar, Director of Education, Anti-Defamation League, and B’nai B’rith, will conduct the workshop in Fort Lauderdale on working with pupils in desegregation situations. Some 225 teachers, principals, counselors and curriculum directors will attend the Broward meetings. Dr. Arnold B. Cheyney (cq), Assistant Professor of education, University of Miami, will speak on “Problems of Reading” at a workshop Aug. 26-27 in Moore Haven in Glades County. Dr. Flossie Marian Byrd, Dean of the School of Home Economics, Prairie View (Texas) Agricultural and Mechanical College, will hold a workshop for home economics teachers in Pinellas county Aug. 26. Big Band In Union UM will have a “magic carpet1 tour back into the golden era of music, Friday, August 26, 8:30-11:30, when the Student Union presents Fred Shannon Smith and the Clubmen “Golden Era to Present Day” concert. The patio of the Student Union will be the scene of a forty-five» minute concert of the best of the “big band” sounds, followed by dancing to today’s melodies played in the golden era style. “This is a first of programs of this nature, to appeal to everyone," stated Mr. Jack Maurer, Assistant Director of the Student Union. . AUG-19 1968 The UM is enlarging and strengthening its faculty in preparation for the coining Fall semsettr. Last WttARf1 was announced that 14 new staff memhlrc ¡»»tded to the school of education. During the past week, a cumulative total of 14 more faculty members were generally added to the faculty register. ♦ Appointment Of Dr. Richard! the University of Miami faculty _ If . . , , as assistant professor of soctol- D. Abraham to the faculty of the University of Miami department of foreign languages has been announced by Dr. Robert Kirsner, chairman of that department. Dr. Abraham, who came to UM from Illinois State University, recently was named chairman of the elementary teaching section of the Association of American Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese for that group's meeting in New York next December. Other appointments announced by Dr. Kirsner were: Dr. Juan R. Castellano, a former president of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese, as visiting professor. A native of Spain, Dr. Castellano holds a doctorate from the University of Madrid, and has taught at Middlebury College, Vanderbilt University and Duke University, from where he will come to UM. —Dr. Moss Roberts, assistant professor. Dr. Roberts, whose appointment was announced earlier in conjunction with the announcement that Chinese would be added to the UM curriculum this fall, holds a doctorate from Columbia University. He will teach the Chinese courses, which will be offered for the first time by a Florida university, —Dr. Nicholas Poppe, Jr., assistant professor. Bom in Leningrad, USSR, Dr. Poppe moved to West Germany with his parents as refugees in 1943. He holds the BA. Honors degree from the University of London, and a doc torate in Slavic languages and literature from Indiana University. Dr. Poppe was for five years an instructor in Russian for the U.S. Department of Defense in Washington. —Dr. Horst Isak, visiting assistant professor. A native of Aus. tria, Dr. Isak holds a doctorate from the University of Vienna He taught in Sweden before coming to this country where he has been visiting professor in the department of Germanic languages and literature at the University of Pittsburgh. ogy. Dr. Marlene Stef an ow of the University of Saskatchewan, in Canada, will also join this department as instructor on a half-time Dr. Cartano will come from Ohio State University where he has been teaching for the past two years. Prior to that time he taught at National University in Bogota, Colombia, and did research in that conn-try as well as in the states of Ohio and Iowa. He holds a bachelor's degree from Iowa State University and the Master’s and a doctorate from Ohio State. Dr. Stefanow earned bachelor's degrees in English literature and sociology and the Master’s in sociology from the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. She holds a doctorate from Louisiana State University, where she also taught before returning to Saskatchewan as an instructor in the department of sociology there. Miss Joan Marie Sayre of Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, will join the University of Miami staff this fall as assistant professor of specjch. Miss Sayre, who has been a member of the Miami University faculty for six years, holds an A.B. degree from Bowling Green State University and a Master’s from Kent State University. She has done advanced graduate work at both the University of Cincinnati and at Miami U. Jonathan Fletcher Scott will join the University of Miami in September as assistant professor of art history. Scott holds the B.A. degree from Amherst College and his Master's in art history from the University of Kansas. He also studied at the Boston Museum School. This September, the University will initiate graduate programs in art and art history, which may lead to the degree of Master of Arts in Art or Master of Fine Arts. The Bachelor of Arts degree is offered with a chioce of seven areas of art specialization. Dr. Robert Charles Mings of _ . _ . , , Ohio State University has been -Pointed assistant professor of Dr. Castel holds a bachelor’s degree from Syracuse University, the Master of Arts from the Sor-Bonne in Paris, and a doctorate in Romance languages from New York University. Addition of the Chinese curriculum will bring to 10 the number of foreign languages offered by the University of Miami. Others are Spanish, French, Italian, German, Hebrew, Latin, Greek, Portuguese and Russian. geography at the University of Miami. Dr. Mings holds bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Indiana University and the doctorate from Ohio State. His field of major interest is the Latin America region and his dissertation dealt with the role of the Commonwealth Government in the de-tourist industry. This project included nine months research in Puerto Rico, supported by the Dr. David G. Cartano will join : Commonwealth Government. Psychology Dept To Get Three New Members net ty mkniii wnt. ram The arrival of diplomas and the departure of the few lucky students who have been working diligently for their degrees, is here. Graduation day is a day of reward for a job well done and a day of incentive for the many jobs there will be to do. To the graduating seniors who will be leaving us for their careers or to those who will be working for further degrees— good luck and Dr. Edward J. Murray, of Syracuse University, has been appointed professor of psychology and director of clinical training. Other appointees are Dr. Richard N. Carrera as associate professor and Dr. Leonard I. Jacobson as assistant professor. Dr. Murray, has been a member of the Syracuse faculty since 1958 and has served as director of that University’s clinical psychology training program. He also is chairman of field assessment of the East Africa Peace Corps Training Unit. Prior to joining the Syracuse faculty, Dr. Murray served at Walter Reed and Fort Belvoir Hospitals, and was a member of the staff of George Washington University. He earned his A.B. degree from Columbia, a Master’s from Duke University and a doctorate from Yale University. Dr. Carrei«, will come to UM from Emory University in Atlanta where he has been a member of the faculty of the department of psychology. He holds A.B., MA. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of North Carolina, and served at hospitals in Virginia and North Carolina before joining the Emory staff. Dr. Jacobson will join UM from Children's Hospital in Buffalo where he was a research psy-| chologist. He holds the B.A. degree from City University of New York, Brooklyn College, and the Ph.D. from State University ' of New York at Buffalo.
Object Description
Title | Miami Hurricane, August 19, 1966 |
Subject |
University of Miami -- Students -- Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals -- Florida |
Genre | Newspapers |
Publisher | University of Miami |
Date | 1966-08-19 |
Coverage Temporal | 1960-1969 |
Coverage Spatial | Coral Gables (Fla.) |
Physical Description | 1 volume (4 pages) |
Language | eng |
Repository | University of Miami. Library. University Archives |
Collection Title | The Miami Hurricane |
Collection No. | ASU0053 |
Rights | This material is protected by copyright. Copyright is held by the University of Miami. For additional information, please visit: http://merrick.library.miami.edu/digitalprojects/copyright.html |
Standardized Rights Statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Object ID | MHC_19660819 |
Type | Text |
Format | image/tiff |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Object ID | MHC_19660819 |
Digital ID | MHC_19660819_001 |
Full Text | Fourteen New Members Join UM Fac •r turn The Mia urricane 41st Yeak, No. 33 University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida, August 19, 1966 MO 1-2511, Ext. 2942 EXAM SCHEDULE P»iti 9j UvhwstM Miscklty, RAM There is one rrudal week of school left before summer session is over and final examinations begin. If you have been keeping up with your studies, up to this point, then this week is no time to let down. If you have not been keeping up, now is the time to start working. For many students these final grades will make the difference between a degree or Viet Nam. Other students may be trying to add or make up credits for their degree. So keep your goals in mind this week as you prepare for your finals. Your future hangs in the balance. For your convenience, the exam schedule is printed below: Evening Classes II tM Cliu Emsi will be Mlttl it: Sins: 1st period in eve., 4 30-6:20, Mon. Aug 29 2nd period in eve., 7:00-1:50 Tues. Aug 30 3rd period in eve., 7:00-0:50 Mon. Aug. 29 Day Classes If tie Class Meets it: Eia* will te Sives: 8 00 or 8:30 e.m. 0:00- 9:50, Mon. Aug 29 9 30 or 10:00 a m. 12:30- 2:20, Mon. Aug. 29 11:00 or 11:30 e.m. 4 30- 6:20, Mon. Aug. 29 12:30 or 1:00 p.m. 10:00-11:50. Mon. Aug. 29 2 00 or 2 30 p.m. 2:30- 4:20, Mon. Aug 29 Lefever Resigns MRHA Highlights Gary Lefever, the newly elected Vice-President of the Men’s Resident Halls Ass4>ciation, resigned his post and withdrew from UM Iasi week. Harry Babcock was appointed by Mr. Skip Webb as acting Vice-President until elections can be held in September. The Orientation Banquet Committee has announced that it has rewived over seven hundred reservations, thus far, for the Parent-Student Banquet. The committee expects to have a capacity ! crowd of one thousand attending the dinner which will be held in the Student Union Ibis Cafeteria on September 10, at 6:00 P.M. Among the administrators present at the Banquet will be Dr. Henry King Stanford, President of the University of Miami; Dr. (William R. Butler, Vice-President for Student Affairs; and Mr. Ro-. bert H. Hynes, Dean of Men. The MJtJI-A. office has been moved from the old location at apartment 37K, to apartment 37Z In the housing area. The new office will make available better facilities and equipment. The Men’s Residence Halls’ officers have produced two manuals this summer relating to the living environment in the housing area. These contain such items as campus telephone numbers, suggested eating places, cultural and recreational programs in the area, and the philosophy and purpose of the Men's Residence Halls Association. The spear-head for the M.R.-H.A. 1966-67 program will be the Orientation Dance on the Student Union Patio, September 13, at 7:30 P.M. The M RH A. will also participate in campus-wide activities such as Spirit Week, Homecoming, and Cami Gras Representatives will be sent to the Florida convention of S.U.S.G.A. A special event, being planned by President Skip Webb, is a lecture by the Junior Senator from New York, Robert F. Kennedy, which is still tentative. Veterans Enroll The University of Miami is expecting several hundred veterans, discharged since January 31, 1955, to snap up Uncle Sam's offer of a college education he gave their buddies of World War II and the Korean conflict. “Based on pending applications,” said Miss Lucile Faul, assistant to the bursar and manager of veteran’s affairs at UM, “we will probably have between 500 and 1.000 veterans registering foT the fall semester." The new GI Bill of Rights, which went into effect June 1, offers $100 a month to a single veteran attending fulltime with 14 credits. A veteran with one dependent gets $125 a month and a veteran with two or more dependents gets $150 a month. The veteran will pay his own tuition. UM Desegregation Workshops Held Ten workshops covering school desegregation problems will be conducted in Florida this month by staff members of the South Florida School Desegregation Consulting Center of the University of Miami’s School of Education and nationally-known educators. Dr. Michael J. Stolee, director, said, “Our center is designed to be of assistance to schools as they meet problems occasioned by desegregation. We are not an enforcement agency — our commitment is to assist school systems in South Florida in providing the best possible education for all children.” On Aug. 15, Dr. Marie Fielder, professor of education at the University of California at Berkeley, will discuss inter-raci4d relationships in a workshop at the new Miami Killian High School. Mrs. Charlotte Brooks. Director of English education for the Washington, D.C., schools, will conduct a workshop Aug. 15-17, in St. Petersburg for the faculty of the new Lakewood Senior High School and Southside Junior High School. She will discuss the relationships between teachers and pupils in a desegregated situation. Designed for faculty members, the workshop also will cover relationships between teacher and teacher and pupil and pupil. Dr. Sidney L. Besvinick, professor of education at the University of Miami, and Dr. Theona V. McQueen, assistant professor of elementary education at the University, will conduct a workshop at Harlem Academy, Clewiston, Aug. 17 and 18. Their topics will be “Problems of improving reading and test construction.” On Aug. 18, Judson Nichols, Director of Transportation for Dade County, will hold a workshop for bus drivers in Bradenton in Manatee County where school bus routes were recently desegregated. Mrs. Ida Ratcliffe, Director of Secondary Education, north central district of Dade County, will discuss “Staff Desegregation” before Broward County school staffs in Fort Lauderdale, Aug. 19. A team of outside consultants and staff members of the Center will visit approximately 30 schools in Palm Beach County Aug. 22 and 23 to discuss problems that may be encountered when the fall semester begins. On Aug. 24, Dr. Gertrude Noar, Director of Education, Anti-Defamation League, and B’nai B’rith, will conduct the workshop in Fort Lauderdale on working with pupils in desegregation situations. Some 225 teachers, principals, counselors and curriculum directors will attend the Broward meetings. Dr. Arnold B. Cheyney (cq), Assistant Professor of education, University of Miami, will speak on “Problems of Reading” at a workshop Aug. 26-27 in Moore Haven in Glades County. Dr. Flossie Marian Byrd, Dean of the School of Home Economics, Prairie View (Texas) Agricultural and Mechanical College, will hold a workshop for home economics teachers in Pinellas county Aug. 26. Big Band In Union UM will have a “magic carpet1 tour back into the golden era of music, Friday, August 26, 8:30-11:30, when the Student Union presents Fred Shannon Smith and the Clubmen “Golden Era to Present Day” concert. The patio of the Student Union will be the scene of a forty-five» minute concert of the best of the “big band” sounds, followed by dancing to today’s melodies played in the golden era style. “This is a first of programs of this nature, to appeal to everyone," stated Mr. Jack Maurer, Assistant Director of the Student Union. . AUG-19 1968 The UM is enlarging and strengthening its faculty in preparation for the coining Fall semsettr. Last WttARf1 was announced that 14 new staff memhlrc ¡»»tded to the school of education. During the past week, a cumulative total of 14 more faculty members were generally added to the faculty register. ♦ Appointment Of Dr. Richard! the University of Miami faculty _ If . . , , as assistant professor of soctol- D. Abraham to the faculty of the University of Miami department of foreign languages has been announced by Dr. Robert Kirsner, chairman of that department. Dr. Abraham, who came to UM from Illinois State University, recently was named chairman of the elementary teaching section of the Association of American Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese for that group's meeting in New York next December. Other appointments announced by Dr. Kirsner were: Dr. Juan R. Castellano, a former president of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese, as visiting professor. A native of Spain, Dr. Castellano holds a doctorate from the University of Madrid, and has taught at Middlebury College, Vanderbilt University and Duke University, from where he will come to UM. —Dr. Moss Roberts, assistant professor. Dr. Roberts, whose appointment was announced earlier in conjunction with the announcement that Chinese would be added to the UM curriculum this fall, holds a doctorate from Columbia University. He will teach the Chinese courses, which will be offered for the first time by a Florida university, —Dr. Nicholas Poppe, Jr., assistant professor. Bom in Leningrad, USSR, Dr. Poppe moved to West Germany with his parents as refugees in 1943. He holds the BA. Honors degree from the University of London, and a doc torate in Slavic languages and literature from Indiana University. Dr. Poppe was for five years an instructor in Russian for the U.S. Department of Defense in Washington. —Dr. Horst Isak, visiting assistant professor. A native of Aus. tria, Dr. Isak holds a doctorate from the University of Vienna He taught in Sweden before coming to this country where he has been visiting professor in the department of Germanic languages and literature at the University of Pittsburgh. ogy. Dr. Marlene Stef an ow of the University of Saskatchewan, in Canada, will also join this department as instructor on a half-time Dr. Cartano will come from Ohio State University where he has been teaching for the past two years. Prior to that time he taught at National University in Bogota, Colombia, and did research in that conn-try as well as in the states of Ohio and Iowa. He holds a bachelor's degree from Iowa State University and the Master’s and a doctorate from Ohio State. Dr. Stefanow earned bachelor's degrees in English literature and sociology and the Master’s in sociology from the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon. She holds a doctorate from Louisiana State University, where she also taught before returning to Saskatchewan as an instructor in the department of sociology there. Miss Joan Marie Sayre of Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, will join the University of Miami staff this fall as assistant professor of specjch. Miss Sayre, who has been a member of the Miami University faculty for six years, holds an A.B. degree from Bowling Green State University and a Master’s from Kent State University. She has done advanced graduate work at both the University of Cincinnati and at Miami U. Jonathan Fletcher Scott will join the University of Miami in September as assistant professor of art history. Scott holds the B.A. degree from Amherst College and his Master's in art history from the University of Kansas. He also studied at the Boston Museum School. This September, the University will initiate graduate programs in art and art history, which may lead to the degree of Master of Arts in Art or Master of Fine Arts. The Bachelor of Arts degree is offered with a chioce of seven areas of art specialization. Dr. Robert Charles Mings of _ . _ . , , Ohio State University has been -Pointed assistant professor of Dr. Castel holds a bachelor’s degree from Syracuse University, the Master of Arts from the Sor-Bonne in Paris, and a doctorate in Romance languages from New York University. Addition of the Chinese curriculum will bring to 10 the number of foreign languages offered by the University of Miami. Others are Spanish, French, Italian, German, Hebrew, Latin, Greek, Portuguese and Russian. geography at the University of Miami. Dr. Mings holds bachelor’s and Master’s degrees from Indiana University and the doctorate from Ohio State. His field of major interest is the Latin America region and his dissertation dealt with the role of the Commonwealth Government in the de-tourist industry. This project included nine months research in Puerto Rico, supported by the Dr. David G. Cartano will join : Commonwealth Government. Psychology Dept To Get Three New Members net ty mkniii wnt. ram The arrival of diplomas and the departure of the few lucky students who have been working diligently for their degrees, is here. Graduation day is a day of reward for a job well done and a day of incentive for the many jobs there will be to do. To the graduating seniors who will be leaving us for their careers or to those who will be working for further degrees— good luck and Dr. Edward J. Murray, of Syracuse University, has been appointed professor of psychology and director of clinical training. Other appointees are Dr. Richard N. Carrera as associate professor and Dr. Leonard I. Jacobson as assistant professor. Dr. Murray, has been a member of the Syracuse faculty since 1958 and has served as director of that University’s clinical psychology training program. He also is chairman of field assessment of the East Africa Peace Corps Training Unit. Prior to joining the Syracuse faculty, Dr. Murray served at Walter Reed and Fort Belvoir Hospitals, and was a member of the staff of George Washington University. He earned his A.B. degree from Columbia, a Master’s from Duke University and a doctorate from Yale University. Dr. Carrei«, will come to UM from Emory University in Atlanta where he has been a member of the faculty of the department of psychology. He holds A.B., MA. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of North Carolina, and served at hospitals in Virginia and North Carolina before joining the Emory staff. Dr. Jacobson will join UM from Children's Hospital in Buffalo where he was a research psy-| chologist. He holds the B.A. degree from City University of New York, Brooklyn College, and the Ph.D. from State University ' of New York at Buffalo. |
Archive | MHC_19660819_001.tif |
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