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NC PEACE & JUSTICE UPDATE
April 1, 2005 in...@NCpeacejustice.org
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Print, forward, and spread the word!
Info online at http://www.NCpeacejustice.org
Dear friends and allies,
Starting today with a demonstration at the Raleigh Recruitment Center, a great week of peace & justice events awaits your participation. Spend a beautiful day before the big game in Carrboro at the Reall Really Free Market, and join Black Workers For Justice at the annual banquet in Raleigh.
We’re continually adding updates, photos, and news coverage from the March 19 demonstration in Fayetteville to our website, http://www.NCpeacejustice.org. Check it out, and send us your feedback, photos, or thoughts on next steps!
*********EVENTS IN BRIEF************
Apr1, Demonstration Against the Reinstatement of the Draft, 2:30, Raleigh
Apr 2, Annual Black Workers for Justice Banquet, Raleigh
Apr 2, Really Really Free Market, 1-5 pm, Carrboro Town Commons
Apr 4, Earth is getting warmer, 7 pm, Murphey , UNC-Chapel Hill
Apr 5, NC Council of Churches Legislative Seminar, 9:00 – 3:30, RaleighApr 5 and 13, NC WARN Global Warming Action Meetings, Durham and Chapel Hill
Apr 5, Open forum on minimum wage legislation w/ Rep Linda Coleman.7:30, KnightdaleApr 5, Colombian Crossroads, 7 pm, Murphey 116, UNC-Chapel Hill
Apr 5, Statewide: Equality NC Lobby Day, 9:00 am - 3:00 pm, Raleigh
Apr 6, Peace in the Promised Land, 7 pm, Carroll 111, UNC-CH
Apr 7, NC Peace Action's annual Peacemaker award dinner 6:00, 4200 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh
Apr 8 and 9, Young Democrats NC Spring Convention, Raleigh.
Apr 9, 11, 13, Project Solidarity Seeks Summer Volunteers, Asheville, Triangle, and Wilmington
Apr 12, Undercurrents: The Music Business Conference, 7:00 pm. Hayti Heritage Center, Durham.
Apr 13, Nationwide: National Day of Silence
Apr 15, The Road to Peace: Following the Nonviolent Jesus in a World of War, 7:00 pm, Charlotte
Apr 15-17, World Bank / IMF Protests, Washington DC, www.globalizethis.orgApr 16, Earth Day Celebration , 1:00 pm – 10:00 pm, Asheville
Apr 20, Michael Moore Documentary “This Divided State” UNC-Chapel Hill
Apr 21, Tom Tomorrow Visits UNC-CH, 7:00 pm, Chapel Hill
Apr 23, Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem, 8:00, BTI Performing Arts Center, Raleigh
Apr 24, Earth Action Fest, 2:00-6:00,Chapel Hill
Jun 6-12, Prayer for Peace Gathering, Washington, DC
*************** EVENTS ***************
DEMONSTRATION AGAINST REINSTRATEMENT OF DRAFTFriday, April 1, 2:30 pm, the Recruitment Center, 3136 Calvary Drive, Raleigh
On Friday, 1 April 2005 at 2:30pm come join youth and students as we demonstrate at the Recruitment Center in Raleigh at 3136 Calvary Drive against the reinstatement of the Draft and the continued occupation of Iraq. Several of us will physically blockade foot traffic from entering the recruitment center while others picket on the sidewalk. On this same day, the anti-war movement has called for nation-wide actions to fight the draft and military recruiting. Organizers all over the country are planning activities, including Charlotte, North Carolina, Nashville, Tennessee, Santa Rosa, California, Ames, Iowa, Kalamazoo, Michigan, Voorheesville, New York, New York City, New York, Western Massachusetts and elsewhere.
ANNUAL BLACK WORKERS FOR JUSTICE BANQUET
April 2, Raleigh NC
Sorry, couldn't find location information - please email us if you know where this is, or want directions!
REALLY REALLY FREE MARKET
Saturday, April 2, 1-5 pm, Carrboro Town Commons
Carrboro's Second "Really Really Free Market". Event to Highlight Alternative Economies through a Community Exchange of Goods and Services. The community is invited to this FREE EVENT at which all are encouraged to give, receive, and create on their own terms. This free and open market will be a celebration of the cooperation and gift-giving that make life possible beyond the constraints of traditional understandings of economics.
Everyone is invited to arrive between 1:00 and 5:00 pm with goods, services, performances, stories, crafts, food, games, music, clothing, furniture, and resources to give and share(fully free of charge!) with others in the community. There is no buying, selling or exchanging involved-in this market, everything is strictly free. Better than a yard sale, the Really Really Free Market welcomes all items for giving and receiving, and has no price tags!
This event is approved by the Town of Carrboro and is organized by a small coalition of community members. This is a "self-organizing" event, in that it is not corporately sponsored or institutionally organized. The Carrboro Really Really Free Market is organized in the spirit of other free markets cropping up around the South, the U.S. and the world as ways for communities to come together, give, share and receive. FOR MORE INFORMATION: The Coalition for a Really Really Free Market, Email: vd...@email.unc.edu or depo...@email.unc.edu
EARTH IS GETTING WARMER
Monday, April 4, 2005, 7 pm, Murphey , UNC-Chapel HillAccording to the BBC, "the greenhouse effect could wreck attempts to lift the world's poorest people out of poverty and reverse human progress." Come hear Dr. Don Goldberg, senior attorney and founder of the Center for International Environmental Law, talk on poverty and cultural destruction resulting from climate change. He has also worked with the United Nations and the Kyoto Protocol. More Information
OPEN FORUM ON MINIMUM WAGE LEGISLATION
Tuesday, April 5, 7:30-8:30pm. East Wake Library, Steeple Chase Cir, Knightdale
East Wake Democrats will hold an open forum to discuss the pending minimum wage legislation with Rep Linda Coleman. Contact Shannon Hardy, csbh...@bellsouth.net
EQUALITY NC LOBBY DAY
Tuesday April 5. 9:00 am - 3:00pm.
North Carolina General Assembly, 16 West Jones Street, Raleigh
http://www.equalitync.org/lobbyday/index.shtml
**Oppose Discrimination in our Constitution.
**Support Inclusive Hate Crime Legislation
**Support Employment Non-Discrimination Legislation,
LEGISLATIVE SEMINAR: FAITH ACTIVE IN PUBLIC LIFE
NC Council of Churches
Tuesday, April 5, 9:00 – 3:30
Western Boulevard Presbyterian Church, 4900 Kaplan Road, Raleigh
The 2005 Faith Active in Public Life Award will be given jointly to Reps. Martha Alexander and Verla Insko. Martha is a member of Christ Church (Episcopal) in Charlotte, and Verla is a member of Binkley Memorial Baptist Church in Chapel Hill. Awards will be presented during the luncheon of the 2005 Legislative Seminar, and both recipients will be present to receive their award and speak briefly (legislative calendars permitting). If you haven't yet registered for the Seminar, please do so now. Complete information and registration form are below.
Workshops and Leaders
Citizen Action. Being an effective grass-roots lobbyist. The importance of visits with legislators. Led by Lynice Williams, Executive Director, North Carolina Fair Share.
Death Penalty Moratorium. Will this be the year? Led by Steve Dear, Executive Director, People of Faith Against the Death Penalty.
Domestic Violence. A new issue on the Council’s legislative agenda. Led by Marie Brodie, North Carolina Coalition Against Domestic Violence, and Will Polk, Office of the Attorney General.
Issues Affecting Gay and Lesbian People. The Marriage Amendment, employment non-discrimination, hate crimes laws, and more. Led by Stan Kimer, Council Third Vice-President and Former GLBT Diversity Program Manager at IBM, and Ed Farthing, Executive Director/Development, Equality North Carolina.
Health Care. Medicaid spending, Health Choice, and a constitutional amendment. Led by Adam Searing, NC Health Access Coalition.
Inadequate Housing. Funding for the Housing Trust Fund, mortgage foreclosures, and other issues. Led by Bill Rowe, General Counsel, NC Justice Center.
Latino Issues. Drivers licenses, education, workers comp for farmworkers, and more. Led by Dr. Nolo Martinez, Center for New North Carolinians, UNC-Greensboro, and former Director of Latino Affairs for Govs. Hunt and Easley.
Legislative Process. How to focus your lobbying efforts at the right place and the right time. Includes points they never taught you in civics class. Led by George Reed, North Carolina Council of Churches.
Mental Health. Including mental health parity, adequate funding, and reform of the MH/DD/SAS system. Led by Robin Huffman, Executive Director, NC Psychiatric Association.
Moral Values: Rethinking, Reframing, Reclaiming. How progressive people of faith make clear that our work for justice, compassion, and peace is firmly rooted in the Bible and “moral values.” Led by the Rev. Cathy Tamsberg, Minister of Outreach and Adult Education, Pullen Memorial Baptist Church, and former Legal Services attorney.
The Lost Generation: African American Men in Prison. Why the disproportionate numbers? What can be done? An exploratory conversation about a new response to this critical issue. Led by the Rev. David Forbes, pastor, Christian Faith Baptist Church, Raleigh.
The State Budget – Spending. As the state faces another budget shortfall, what are the consequences of reduced spending by the state? How can we reframe the issue as one of investing in the future? Led by Chris Fitzsimon, NC Policy Watch, formerly Executive Director of the Common Sense Foundation, Communications Director for the Speaker of the House, and WRAL-TV political reporter.
The State Budget – Taxes and Lottery. The other side of the state budget is income. What taxes should be continued or extended? Why is the lottery a bad source of income for the state? What about lowering the corporate income tax? Also led by Chris Fitzsimon.
Wages. Minimum wage, living wage, wage parity. Why working hard is not enough. Led by Ajamu Dillahunt, Outreach Coordinator, NC Justice Center, and Sorien Schmidt, Legislative Director, NC Justice Center.
COLOMBIAN CROSSROADS
Tuesday, April 5, 2005, 7 pm, Murphey 116, UNC-Chapel HillOne of the nation's premier human rights advocates, Gail Phares will speak on what she has personally witnessed in the current drug war in Colombia, as well as previously in Nicaragua, Guatemala, and El Salvador. She does this as part of Witness for Peace, an organization she founded over 20 years ago. Delegations have been observing military and economic injustices in Latin American countries for more than 2 decades, then come back to the US to report on what they saw and advocate for policy changes. More Information
PEACE IN THE PROMISED LAND
Wednesday, April 6 2005, 7 pm, Carroll 111
Mary Lou Smith, winner of the 2002 Int'l Human Rights Award (given by the Human Rights Coalition of North Carolina) and Dr. Stephen Zunes, professor of Peace and Justice Studies at the University of San Francisco, will address one of the leading issues in international human rights today, the Palestinian/Israeli conflict. This talk will address misconceptions and focus on int'l law and human rights. More Information
NC WARN ACTION MEETINGS
Tuesday April 5 and 13, Durham and Chapel Hill
Durham: Tuesday, April 5th, 7pm to 8:30pm, Shannon Road Public Library
Chapel Hill: Wednesday, April 13th, 7pm to 8:30pm, Chapel Hill Public Library, 100 Library Drive (off Estes Drive).
Wake & Chatham: To be announced
The importance of global climate change and escalating risks at nuclear plants cannot be overstated.
With a series of State and federal events coming in late April and May, we need to fully engage our members and bring in new people in order to keep strengthening our public voice. Please mark your calendars and plan to attend one of these Action Meetings (and bring a guest). Environmental engineer Matt Huxley will help explain Climate Change, emerging nuclear issues and how NC WARN is takling these problems right now. www.ncwarn.org
NC PEACE ACTION ANNUAL PEACEMAKER AWARD DINNER
Thursday April 7, 6:00 pm
N.C. State University Club, 4200 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh
Honoring the long-term commitment of Gail Phares & Bridgette Burge to the cause of peace & justice. Social hour: 6PM; dinner: 7PM Deadline to register: March 30 Cost: Students: $20; general public: $35; Name in program plus two dinner tickets: $100 [specify vegetarian or non-vegetarian dinner]. Checks made to: NC Peace Action Mail to NC Peace Action, PO Box 10384, Raleigh NC 27605 Contact info: Bill Towe, 919-469-0831. Please make your reservations NOW as space is limited. For more information on Peacemaker Dinner see NCPA's March newsletter on www.ncpeaceaction.org.
YOUNG DEMOCRATS NC SPRING CONVENTION
Friday-Saturday April 8, 9 Brownestone Hotel, 1707 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh.
Brownestone Hotel, 1707 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh. See www.wakeyd.org for updates.
**Fri 4/8: 7 to 8:30 pm YDNC Leadership Reception with Special Guest Raleigh Mayor Charles Meeker. Hosted by Wake County Young Democrats. Goodwin House, 220 Hillsborough St., Raleigh.
** Sat 4/9: Leadership Luncheon at 11:30 with Special Guest Speaker Congressman, James E. Clyburn, 6th District of South Carolina
PROJECT SOLIDARITY SEEKS SUMMER VOLUNTEERS
April 9, 11, 13, Asheville, Triangle, and Wilmington
Saturday, April 9, 5pm in Asheville. Location TBA (For details, call Coqui Matilla 828-254-550, co...@riseup.net
Raleigh, Durham and Triangle area: Monday, April 11, 7:00pm at the Eno River UU Fellowship in Durham, 4907 Garrett Rd, 27707
Wilmington area: Wednesday, April 13, 7:00pm at the UU Church of Wilmington, 4313 Lake Ave, 28403Looking for a summer volunteer opportunity? Here's one that is only once a month and can make all the difference in the struggle for farmworker empowerment. Project Solidarity 2005 will help farmworker leaders attend their monthy union meetings. Below is more information, but dates for informational meetings about the campaign have already been set in some areas, so mark your calendars:
UNDERCURRENTS: The Music Business – Recording
Tuesday, April 12, 7:00 pm. Hayti Heritage Center, 804 Old Fayetteville Street in Durham.
Contact: Kat Summers, Undercurrents Regional Director (919) 491-3722
Undercurrents, the Cleveland based music conference and showcase company, will present the fifth in a series of free music business networking parties / education forums on The forum is titled “Demo Recording” and will be presented by Kat Summers, the Raleigh / Durham / Chapel Hill Regional Director for Undercurrents. The panelists include 9th Wonder, Ian Schrier of Osceola Studios and Iced Records Recording artist / rapper / producer; Twip.
The forum will provide musicians and music industry professionals with traditional as well as new ideas for music recording. The discussion will include information about pre-recording, sound techniques, mixing and mastering. As with all Undercurrents seminars, their will be networking opportunities, the renowned music demo listening, and information about future educational forums planned for the Triangle region.
Musicians are encouraged to bring their latest demo CD, current contact info, and an attitude to learn about succeeding in the music industry. Musicians attending will be the first to know about our upcoming regional and national showcase details, gig swaps, as well as the additional services available through Undercurrents. Forum attendance can be applied as college credit to those who qualify.
Future monthly forums will include panelists with expertise in topics such as: how to get a record deal, management, music marketing, radio airplay, contracts, publishing, merchandising and more. Each gathering is scheduled on the second Tuesday of the month. Presentation locations may vary. Undercurrents has been connecting bands with fans since 1989 with music showcases, music seminars, and music industry trade shows. For more information, please visit the Undercurrents web site at www.undercurrents.com.
NATIONWIDE: NATIONAL DAY OF SILENCE
Wednesday, April 13
A student-led day of action where those who support making anti-LGBT bias unacceptable in schools take a day-long vow of silence to recognize and protest the discrimination and harassment -- in effect, the silencing -- experienced by LGBT students and their allies. For details, please visit http://dayofsilence.org.
THE ROAD TO PEACE: FOLLOWING THE NONVIOLENT JESUS IN A WORLD OF WAR
Friday, April 15, Charlotte, 7:00 pm
Wedgewood Baptist Church, 4800 Wedgewood Drive, Charlotte
Come hear and speak with an internationally known advocate for peace and nonviolence in our world today. Father John Dear S.J., from Elizabeth City, NC, is a Jesuit priest, peace activist, organizer, lecturer, retreat leader, and author/editor of 20 books on peace and nonviolence. http://www.wedgewoodbaptist.com For additional information please contact Dennis TeallFleming at 704-868-9392 or teallf...@yahoo.com or go to www.fatherjohndear.org
World BANK/IMF MOBILIZATION UPDATE!!!
April 15-17, Washington DC
www.globalizethis.org Contact: m...@riseup.net
Caution a Better World is Under Construction! Protest the Spring Meetings of the World Bank and IMF
It’s true: Paul Wolfowitz, the mastermind of the Iraq war, is the new President of the World Bank! How much clearer can it be that the aggressive military policy of the Bush Administration is part of the same system as the economic policies of the World Bank and IMF? After bombing Iraq and occupying it with soldiers, Wolfowitz is now entrusted with the task of dropping economic bombs on the rest of the Global South, and occupying their governments with economic advisers.
If you’ve ever protested against the Administrations Iraq war policy, or the World Bank and IMF, you need to be in Washington in April. Show that we understand the next step in the process of brutalizing and dominating the Global South (and beyond). The World Bank and IMF?s economic policy is war
by different means!
Show that we demand, and are already building, a better world! The April 16, 2005 meetings of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank will represent the five year anniversary of the first major demonstrations against these institutions in the United States. Again we will gather in the streets of
D.C. on A16 to show that our resistance to these institutions and their greed only grows stronger. A16 will once more be the day we show that our dreams for a better world are not only possible, but under construction at this moment, in all corners of the globe- and the IMF and World Bank, with all their
efforts to demolish these dreams and actions, can never stop us.
EARTH DAY CELEBRATION
Saturday, April 16, 1:00 pm – 10:00 pm, City/County Plaza, Asheville, NC
We have been lucky over the past couple of years to have almost spotless weather and with your positive thoughts, I hope it will continue for this year's event. The first year we estimate that 2,500 people partook in the day's activities, while last year we put the number at 3,000. This year, we want to bump it up to 3,500.
Includes a environmental round-table discussion on Friday the 15th, co-sponsored by the Environmental Studies Dept. of UNC-A. There will be a panel of experts and business leaders, lead by a moderator, who will discuss and answer questions for the public.
Tickets prices will be determined by the headlining act but will be no more than $15 for Adults and $8 for Students. If we drop the rate it will be $5 for Students and $10 for Adults. www.ashevilleearthday.org
Michael Moore Documentary “This Divided State”
MICHAEL MOORE DOCUMENTARY “THIS DIVIDED STATE”
April 20, UNC-Chapel Hill
Orem, Utah___Minority Films and the Center for American Progress proudly announced this week the national college tour of the controversial new documentary film, This Divided State. Steven Greenstreet, director and producer of This Divided State, has been invited by the Center for American Progress and its sub-division Campus Progress to screen the film at 22 colleges around the nation including Harvard, Yale, NYU, and USC.
This Divided State follows the explosion of community protest surrounding Michael Moore's visit to Utah Valley State College (UVSC) in October 2004. Though UVSC is located in one of the strongest Republican strongholds in the United States, vehement opposition to liberal filmmaker Michael Moore's visit was much greater than anticipated. Death threats, hate mail, bribes, and lawsuits were all candidly captured on film. Equally surprising, however, was the overwhelming "uprising" of students in support of Michael Moore. Additionally, since the controversy took place in Utah, a heated religious debate broke out as to whether Mormons can profess to be liberal without betraying their religion.
The national tour will begin in Washington D.C. on March 23rd 2005 at the E Street Theater and then will move throughout the nation during the following 5 weeks. The screenings (except the D.C. premiere) all take place on college campuses and are free of charge.
For more info on This Divided State, the tour, or to RSVP for a screening visit: http://www.thisdividedstate.com or http://www.campusprogress.org
TOM TOMORROW VISITS UNC-CH
Thursday, April 21, 7:00 pm Hanes Arts Center, UNC Chapel Hill, NC
Comic strip artist, Tom Tomorrow of "This Modern World," is coming to UNC April 21 in Hanes Arts Center to speak about his role as a politically motivated artist and to share with us his perspective on the last election. He's featured weekly in the Independent and in publications across the country. You can see his work at http://www.thismodernworld.com/pages/cartoonarc.html. There will be a book signing with internationalist books afterward.
The event is being sponsored and paid for by the campus group the Campaign to End the Cycle of Violence (CECV) but we're hoping to get the event co-sponsored by relevant departments and campus-based organizations. If your organization would agree to be a co-sponsor, it would be recognized in all of the advertisements for the event. For more information, please email or call Chase at (919)260-1872.
Benjamin Britten’s War Requiem
Saturday, April 23 at 8 PM
Meymandi Concert Hall, BTI Performing Arts Center, Raleigh
The 170-voice North Carolina Master Chorale performs Benjamin Britten’s eloquent masterpiece accompanied by a 75-piece orchestra. Commissioned for the consecration of Coventry Cathedral, the work provocatively juxtaposes the vivid poetry of World War I soldier Wilfred Owen with the Latin Requiem Mass. In addition to members of the North Carolina Symphony, the performance features Sue Lee, Soprano; Richard Clement, Tenor; Grant Youngblood, Baritone; and the Raleigh Boychoir. Reserved: $28; General Admission: $22 Regular; $20 Senior Citizens; $5 Students, Group rates available for groups of 8 or more. (919) 856-9700 NC Master Chorale Box Office; or online at: www.ncmasterchorale.org
EARTH ACTION FEST
Sunday April 24, 2:00-6:00,Chapel Hill
PRAYER FOR PEACE GATHERING
June 6 – 12, Washington, DC
This summer, from June 6th - 12th, citizens and people of faith from across the United States will gather in front of our nation's capitol in Washington DC for a week long intercessory prayer gathering for peace. We are mobilizing for this historic action with the knowledge that our collective prayer has the power to shift humanity toward peace and collectively raise the consciousness of all Americans.
For one week we will gather in DC, while Congress is in session, to ask God in prayer for the safe delivery of our service men and women back home to the United States, to pray for the safe keeping of those effected most by this unholy war in Iraq, and to pray for the transform of our own culture of violence to one of love and compassion for all people. Please join us in this courageous act of faith!
If you know anyone who you think would like to write on peace and justice issues through the lens of their own faith, or on what we have in common as an interfaith movement, please help us to get in touch with them. If you have a piece of writing you think would help bring our community together let us know. We're just getting our blog going and need your writing! We're also beginning to put together our events listings at Prayer for Peace, so if you have events you would like us to list, please send them to: eve...@prayerforpeace.org.
Also, if you have any feedback on our website, please let us know. We'd love to hear your suggestions, especially about ways we can support your organizing efforts. Please keep checking back for further updates: http://www.prayerforpeace.org/events_summer05.html Contact: David Murphy, National Coordinator of Prayer for Peace, da...@prayerforpeace.org
The Student Environmental Action Coalition Summer Activist Training Camp
SEAC SUMMER ACTIVIST TRAINING CAMP
July 5 - 11, Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana www.seac.org/atc
Come gain the skills, knowledge, and inspiration necessary to fight for the environment and social justice during this week of education, skills building, action, networking, and fun! Deadline for Application is May 30, 2005 www.seac.org/atc/register.shtml
BUILD OUR ORGANIZING SKILLS: Obtain the skills to running a kick-ass student and youth activist group that creates concrete, lasting change with skills trainings led by experienced trainers
STRENGTHEN THE MOVEMENT: Only by confronting the legacy of racism and other forms of oppression
and their manifestations within the environmental movement today, can we become truly effective agents for protecting the environment and creating lasting change. The process begins with a two day anti-racism training, continued with forums for discussing and planning anti-oppression work in our organizing.
BUILD OUR COLLECTIVE POWER: By networking with other progressive student groups and youth organizations from around the country sharing resources and coordinating events, actions, and campaigns together!
FOR MORE INFORMATION:a...@seac.org 215.222.4711 267.716.0505
ONGOING PEACE VIGILS
Durham: Saturdays, noon-1 p.m., Brightleaf Square, Bill Jeffries, 402-0424
Chapel Hill: Mondays, 5-6 p.m., Franklin Street P.O., and Fridays, 5-6 p.m., E. Franklin St. and Elliott Rd., 942-2535
Raleigh: First Wednesday of every month, noon-1 p.m. on Fayetteville Mall, 821-2014 (Slater Newman).
Asheville: Veterans for Peace vigil at the Vance monument from 5-6 every Tuesday, Women in Black vigil every Friday, 5-6.
Fayetteville: Wednesdays from 5 to 6 pm at the Market House in downtown Fayetteville on the three Wednesdays prior to the March 18-20 weekend. That's on March 2, 9, and 16.
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