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         Jamaica Culture:     more books (76)
  1. Jamaica (Fiesta) by Tim Cooke, 2001-01
  2. Cultural action and social change: The case of Jamaica ; an essay in Caribbean cultural identity by Rex M Nettleford, 1979
  3. Three planters and their slaves: Perspectives on slavery in Virginia, South Carolina and Jamaica, 1750-1790 (Institute of Early American History and Culture colloquia) by Philip D Morgan, 1986
  4. Jamaican Warriors : Reggae, Roots & Culture by Stephen Foehr, 2001-01-15
  5. Rock It Come over: The Folk Music of Jamaica by Olive Lewin, 2000
  6. Jamaican Food: History, Biology, Culture by B. W. Higman, 2008-02-28
  7. Rastafari: From Outcasts to Culture Bearers by Ennis Barrington Edmonds, 2002-12-26
  8. Sister Jamaica by A. Lynn Bolles, 1996-03-19
  9. Verbal Riddim: The Politics and Aesthetics of African-Caribbean Dub Poetry (Cross/Cultures) by Christian Habekost, 1993-01
  10. One Blood: The Jamaican Body (Suny Series, the Body in Culture, History, and Religion) by Elisa Janine Sobo, 1993-07
  11. Dub: Soundscapes and Shattered Songs in Jamaican Reggae (Music Culture) by Michael Veal, 2007-04-30
  12. Jamaican Folk Music: A Synthesis of Many Cultures (Studies in the History and Interpretation of Music) by Marilyn A. Rouse, 2000-11
  13. Jamaican Culture and International Folklore, Superstitions, Beliefs, Dreams, Proverbs and Remedies by Claudette Copney, 1999-02-01
  14. Roots of Jamaican Culture by Mervyn C. Alleyne, 1990-02

61. NetSEARCH Jamaica Society And Culture
afro WEB Website for the black community. Festival 2000 - The jamaica CulturalDevelopment Commission (JCDC) has been responsible for unearthing the talent of
http://www.netsearchjamaica.com/search/Society_and_Culture/

62. Islands.com | Jamaica
www.iriepeople.com Geared more to true fans of Jamaican culture than casual visitors,this friendly production includes reviews of books, concerts, and new CDs
http://www.islands.com/jamaica/
Receive Travel Specials from Jamaica and other islands
Jamaica
Field Notes

What to do on Jamaica
ISLANDS Web Picks

The best of Jamaica on the Web.
Maps

Jamaica at a glance.
Archives

Stories from ISLANDS magazine.
Jamaica Where to Stay US Airways Vacations Hilton Caribbean SuperClubs All Inclusive Breezes Resort Half Moon ... Other Caribbean destinations Jamaica is greater than the sum of its parts. But for many visitors, the only part they see is one of four major resort areas. There's always-lively Montego Bay, with its beaches, golf, shopping, and nightlife and Ocho Rios, known for its beaches and upscale resorts, while Negril, aka Beach Party Central, pulls in the younger set, and Port Antonio is a lush, quiet getaway. Visitors who explore find a beautiful island, a vibrant culture that goes far beyond reggae, and endless opportunities to play under the sun. You can golf, horseback ride, or dive (on wrecks and among the ruins of a city that fell into the sea in an earthquake in 1692). You can take day hikes or trek through the Rio Grande Valley, then celebrate with a cup of Blue Mountain coffee. In Kingston, the island's cultural heritage is on display at the National Gallery of Art, and you can learn about the most famous Jamaican of all at the Bob Marley Museum. Field Notes BEACHES GOLF Carved from the rolling hills near Mandeville more than a century ago, the Manchester Country Club is Jamaica's oldest golf course. It's a classic, but for the most challenging round of your stay, haul your putter to The Tryall Club. Built on the site of a 19th-century sugar plantation near Montego Bay, it's a stunning championship course with sea views at every hole.

63. Jamaica Travel Guide @ TravelNotes.org
jamaican culture. Irie People Celebrating the Irie people of jamaica withtimely information on arts, culture, music and the foods of the island.
http://www.travelnotes.org/LatinAmerica/jamaica.htm
Travel Notes Caribbean Jamaica Travel Guide Booking Engine
Caribbean Cruises
Flag of Jamaica Jamaica lies south of Cuba and is the the third largest island in the Greater Antilles. Local Currency
Convert your currency into Jamaican dollars. National Anthem
of Jamaica. Food Travel Fiction Health Kids Bios Humor Mags Software Gifts Tech Business Other
News Headlines World News
Directory of newspapers and news sources from around the world. Birthplace of Reggae Jamaica was a dependency of Britain for more than 300 years, and everybody knows the island as the birthplace of reggae; thanks largely to the popularity of Bob Marley. Kingston The capital of Jamaica is not for everyone, and many tourists staying in Montego Bay or Negril never even get to see Kingston, or squeeze themselves into one of the cross-island minibuses. At the foot of the Blue Mountains, on the south-east coast of the Caribbean island, Kingston has a deep harbour protected to the south by the Palisadoes. Many Caribbean Cruises make this a port of call. At the entrance to the harbour are the partly submerged ruins of old Port Royal, which was destroyed by an earthquake in 1692.

64. Radio On Go - Jamaica Power 106 FM Laing And Company
Tony Laing has had extensive experience in the promotion of Jamaican culture,thus earning him the reputation of being a true cultural activist.
http://www.go-jamaica.com/power/pp-tonylaingandco.html

65. Caribbean Websites And Links Organised In An Easy To Use Directory
jamaica Society and culture. Home Page ThemeIndex jamaica jamaica - Societyand culture. Home Page ThemeIndex jamaica jamaica - Society and culture.
http://www.caribbeansitedirectory.com/links/jamaica-societyandculture.html
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Jamaica - Society and Culture
Home Page ThemeIndex Jamaica Jamaica - Society and Culture Please support our Link Partners by visiting them.
Jamaican Family Search genealogy research library...
Jamaican genealogy 17-20th century land owners, properties, slaves, business and individual directory, Anglican, Roman Catholic, Jewish records, tombstones, wills, Almanacs, newspapers, maps, ... http://jamaicanfamilysearch.com
Other important links.
Arthur Website...
Arthur Wint A Jamaican Hero A THUMBNAIL SKETCH Next ... http://www.wintworks.com

66. JAMAICA - A Premier Caribbean Travel Destination Featuring The Resort Areas Of M
JIS programmes and publications serve an archival function as they advance and recordJamaica s culture and communitybased activities. http//www.jis.gov.jm.
http://www.jamaicatravel.com/jlinks/jlinks.html
var js_root="/"; var js_locale="5177f5d1-1ccc-4d27-bbd4-998c0d6372ac"; var js_localeCode="eng-gb";
The Plantain Garden River in St Thomas is the only river in Jamaica that flows to the west.
Looking for more information about Jamaica? Check out our extensive directory of helpful online resources. Jamaica Cultural Development Commission
The Jamaica Cultural Development Commission's (JCDC) mandate is to develop and promote the creative talents and cultural expressions of the Jamaican people. Its function is also to ensure that the nation’s cultural heritage is preserved and sustained for the benefit of future generations. The JCDC is the principal organiser of the annual Independence celebrations and other events of national significance.
http://www.jcdc.org.jm
Whatsonjamaica.com
Check our website for the most comprehensive listings of Jamaican events in Jamaica, as well as information on goods and services. Also see our 7-Day Guide, published weekly, on Fridays, in the Jamaica Observer Newspaper and distributed free in hotels and other venues across Jamaica.
http://www.whatsonjamaica.com

67. 1Up Travel : Jamaica - History And Culture Of Jamaica.
jamaica History and culture. History Arawaks were the first inhabitantsof jamaica, which they called Xaymaca, meaning isle of springs
http://www.1uptravel.com/international/caribbean/jamaica/history-culture.html

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Jamaica History and Culture
History Arawaks were the first inhabitants of Jamaica, which they called Xaymaca, meaning "isle of springs." Columbus first glimpsed the north coast of the island in May 1494, landing in Montego Bay before he sailed back to Cuba. When he returned nine years later, stormy weather damaged two of his ships, and he was forced to anchor at St. Anne's Bay, where he and his men were marooned until the governor of Hispaniola retrieved them. In 1510 a permanent Spanish settlement was finally established under the orders of Don Diego, Columbus's son, who was then governor of the West Indies.

68. Jamaica Art Gallery
Online Gallery blends the Internet technologies with the time proven skills sculptorsand artists in bringing to you a taste Jamaican culture and giving you a
http://www.jamaicaonlinegallery.com/

Sculpture
Paintings
All Prices quoted in US$

Jamaica Online Gallery
Welcome to Jamaica Online Gallery where we promote and make available Jamaican art of the highest quality and best prices. Jamaica Online Gallery blends the Internet technologies with the time proven skills sculptors and artists in bringing to you a taste Jamaican culture and giving you a chance to own a your part of it. Featured Product
Details

Personalized Orders
Special orders (custom built items) or what ever you would like to be made from wood.
Special Orders

Repairs

If you buy any product from us and it breaks for what ever reason or needs cleaning we will do it FREE of charge. Repair Request * shipping and handling not included. Pleasure Was: US $895 Now: US $750 more details This free gift with the purchase of the item above!! Jamaican Art More Tell a Friend If want to tell some one about us simply...

69. West Coast Craving Jamaican Flavour - JAMAICAOBSERVER.COM
Tourist Board commercials are on television, but in a city where so many personshave so much disposable cash, and where jamaica is the hottest culture in town
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/lifestyle/html/20040429T230000-0500_59193_OBS_WES
Last updated: document.write('Wednesday, June 9, 2004, 12:17 AM EST');
West Coast craving Jamaican flavour
Jana Bent
Friday, April 30, 2004
Is it because we are so far away? Or is it that there are so few visible Jamaicans in California that the mystique surrounding us is that much more heightened? Maybe it's the success of our Reggae and dancehall ambassadors that has stimulated the West Coast appetite for things Jamaican. In my opinion, it's all of the above. In Los Angeles, particularly, it's an excellent opportunity for us to cash in on the current popularity of the Jamaican culture - our music, our cuisine, our dance forms, and films that explore our uniqueness and beauty. At the World Championships of the Performing Arts held in Hollywood last year, I spoke with the judges, who were all music, film and television executives working in the Hollywood entertainment industry. Every single one of them asked basically the same questions: how could they get more Jamaican content into their products? How could they find more Jamaican artistes, models, actors, dancers, bands and musicians? At an event where close to 600 persons from all over the world competed in speech, dance, drama and music, when the final 10 were announced, seven of them were Jamaicans. Weeks before the event, the organisers in LA were calling and sending me E-mail messages asking that I recruit more Jamaican performers, because they were getting urgent requests from the judges for Jamaican bands, singers, dancers and actors. Sadly, the costs of entering the event - accommodation and travel - far exceeded the financial capabilities of our performers.

70. IPS-L Programs - Jamaica
community. jamaica is connected by culture to Africa, by geographyto the Americas, and by history to the British Commonwealth.
http://www.ipsl.org/programs/jamaica.html
IPS-L Programs
  • Master's Degree
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  • Ecuador - Galapagos
  • Ecuador - Galapagos ...
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  • Scotland ... Programs > Jamaica Site Map
    The geography of Jamaica is as varied as its people and its rich historical and cultural background. In Jamaica, you will learn about the original Carib and Arawak Indian peoples, Spanish and British colonialism, the plantation period and economy, the achievement of independence in 1962, and Jamaica's efforts toward development in the contemporary world as the leader of the Caribbean community. Jamaica is connected by culture to Africa, by geography to the Americas, and by history to the British Commonwealth. From its British heritage, the national language is English (with a melodious lilt), but you will equally hear and learn the "second language," patois. You will enjoy reggae music and learn of Bob Marley's leadership in bringing peace between rival political parties and points of view. Through service-learning and your homestay, you will learn that this island nation is more than beaches and reggae (although both of these will certainly be part of your experience). You will directly encounter the social, cultural, economic, and political issues and concerns facing Jamaica and the Caribbean, and learn what it means for Jamaicans to live in the shadow of its giant neighbor to the north.

71. Jamaica Negril Culture
Mar Romeo, Big Youth, Dennis Brown, Third World, and culture are a few musicians InJamaica today, new musicians popularize dance hall reggae and dub, the big
http://www.jamaicanegril.com/negril-our_culture.html
Our Culture Stay in a Villa . . . for LESS than a hotel!
  • JAMAICA, a nation in the West Indies, occupies the third largest island in the Caribbean Sea

KINGSTON is its capital
  • LOCATED south of Cuba and west of Hispaniola, Jamaica is slightly larger than the island of Hawaii. WORLD FAMOUS Negril Beach, A 7 mile Beach covered with snow white Jamaican sand.
Many Rasta words have become an accepted part of speech in Jamaica. Following are some of the more popular terms:
  • Babylon: the Establishment; America, Europe, any place that Rastas consider corrupt. Chalice: a smoking pipe, often used for ceremonial purposes Dreadlocks: locked hair that is neither combed nor cut. Dread: a Rastaman. I and I: "me and God"; meant to reveal a Rastaman's deep relationship with God.

72. Jamaica - LANIC
Cabinet Office; jamaica Defense Force; jamaica Information ServiceJIS; Ministry of Education, Youth, and culture; Ministry of Finance
http://lanic.utexas.edu/la/cb/jamaica/
Jamaica
Academic Research Resources
Economy

73. Culture & Travel | Jamaica Air
culture Travel. Air jamaica Reports Recovery from September 11 andBegins a Tobago and Guyana Campaign. In the wake of the terrible
http://www.jahworks.org/travel/air_jamaica.html
Air Jamaica Reports Recovery from September 11 and Begins a Tobago and Guyana Campaign
In the wake of the terrible attacks on America and the resulting fallout in world travel, a Caribbean airline says business has been better than originally anticipated. Air Jamaica marketing executive Allen Chastanet said he believes the carrier will exceed budget for both January and February this year, while advance bookings for March, April, May and June look extremely promising. "The critical question is when do we stop the level of discounting that we are having to do in order to resuscitate this business." Chairman of Air Jamaica, Dr. Gordon 'Butch' Stewart, speaking to travel agents and industry partners in New Jersey last week, said: "Mr. Bin Laden messed up Air Jamaica much less than most people were affected and we never did fall below a 50 percent load factor (after the terrorist attacks)." Chastanet, who is the airline’s senior vice president of marketing and sales, noted that several routes were recovering nicely due to a release of "pent up demand" and people were resuming their travel plans despite the recent warm weather in the United States. In particular, loads to the Dutch island of Curaçao from Montego Bay have been steady while business to Barbados is on the increase. Air Jamaica serves Barbados with non-stop flights from New York and via the Montego Bay hub in Jamaica.

74. BBC - BBC Four Documentaries - Jamaica 40
Quick Guide to Reggae Do you know your rocksteady from your ragga?jamaica Country Profile Overview of politics, media and culture.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/features/jamaica_40.shtml
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... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! JAMAICA 40 Sunday 4 August - Tuesday 6 August 2002 A series of documentaries, music and discussion to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Jamaican independence. Bob Marley at the Rainbow Sunday 4 August 9pm-10.10pm; rpt Monday 5 August 10.50-midnight Archive footage of Bob Marley and the Wailers' legendary concert at London's Rainbow Theatre. Life and Debt (in Jamaica) - Storyville Sunday 4 August 10.10pm-11.15pm; rpt Tuesday 6 August 10.30pm-11.35pm and 12.35am-1.40am How has global economics affected everyday life on the island? Find out more about the film and read an interview with its director. Jazz Jamaica Sunday 4 August 11.15pm-11.55pm A 20 strong ensemble brings together heroes of the UK jazz scene with legends of Jamaican music, including saxophonist Andy Sheppard, singer Juliet Roberts and trumpet legend Eddie Thornton. Watch a video stream of the concert.

75. Jamaica: Queer In A Culture Of Violence
jamaica Queer in a culture of Violence. Cops are deadly, politicians corrupt,the people poor, but musicians sing, “Kill the fags, burn the sissies.”.
http://www.sodomylaws.org/world/jamaica/janews11.htm
Last editted: November 19, 2003

Jamaica: Queer in a Culture of Violence
Cops are deadly, politicians corrupt, the people poor, but musicians sing, “Kill the fags, burn the sissies.” The Gully , November 7, 2003
http://www.thegully.com/essays/gaymundo/031103_lesbian_gay_jamaica.html
By Kelly Cogswell Don’t let Bob Marley’s peace and love lyrics fool you. In Jamaica, violence is an endemic problem that erodes everyone’s basic civil liberties, and threatens gay lives. More than 740 murders have taken place so far this year on the Caribbean island, many of them due to reprisal killings, gang-related violence, and domestic incidents. In 2002, the police themselves were responsible for the deaths of at least 133 people, “many in disputed circumstances suggesting extrajudicial executions,” according to Amnesty International. The elections that year saw the deaths of at least 60 people in politically motivated violence. Lesbians, gay men, and transgendered people are on the front lines, targeted for repression and violence from the dancehalls to the pulpits, and police stations. Against God and Jamaica In the 1980’s, AIDS brought the issue of homosexuality out of the closet in Jamaica, but the violent backlash drove the small lesbian and gay community underground. Queer issues are once again in the hot seat, this time with the first confirmation of an openly gay priest as an Anglican bishop almost two thousand miles away.

76. World History Archives: The History Of Culture In Jamaica
The history of culture in jamaica. The history in general of jamaica. jamaicanculture in general. Redemption Song Robert Nesta Marley, 1980.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/43/index-hf.html
The history of culture in Jamaica
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives The history in general of Jamaica
Jamaican culture in general
Redemption Song
Robert Nesta Marley, 1980. Lyrics to a song on mental slavery by Bob Marley.
Island Debates National Hero Status for Reggae Superstar
By Howard Campbell, IPS, 18 April 2000. Around the world the dreadlocked image of reggae music popularised by Bob Marley is synonymous with Jamaica, the island where he was born 55 years ago. But for many Jamaicans, Marley's international acclaim does not mean that he is any kind of role model for the country.
Plan for nude nuptials upsets Jamaicans
The Straits Times, 3 February 2001. Hedonism III resort's plans for the 'world's largest nude wedding' has created a stir. During the past three decades, as tourism has boomed, Jamaicans have quietly endured visitors' stereotypes of their country as a place to frolic by the Caribbean Sea and leave 'civilisation' behind.
The history of religion in Jamaica
Away With Obeah Laws Say Rastafarians
By Sam Pragg, IPS, 20 January 1999. Members of the rastafarian community call laws against Obeah should be removed because it is a really a religion, not witchcraft.

77. Culture House For Jamaica
culture One of the best jamaican craft is jewelry made from local semiprecious stones.The people of jamaica have two favorite foods and they are bananas, and
http://www.learningspace.org/passport/nov/team1.html
Jaimaca Setting the Table Unique Food Unique Celebration ... About About Jamaica
The Arawak Indians, who were the first people to live in Jamaica, called it Xaymaca, which meant island of springs. Today, Jamaica's beautiful beaches, soaring mountains, and pleasant climate attract more than 700,000 tourists every year. Geography
The ocean next to Jamaica is the Atlantic ocean. The location of Jamaica is a good one because it is hot and sunny there, and it only snows some of the time, and because of the hot climate it is a very good place for tourists that come to Jamaica every year. Of Interest
The people of the Jamaica climb waterfalls it is a sport and unique to Jamaica. Red-Stained water caused by the mining of bauxite, mars the natural beauty of Jamaica. Landforms
Jamaica's many mountains include the Mocho Mountains, which rise in the center of the island, and the Blue Mountains, which rise in the east. Limestone formations are found in the northwest area known as Cockpit Country. Culture
One of the best Jamaican craft is jewelry made from local semiprecious stones. The people of Jamaica have two favorite foods and they are bananas, and mangos.

78. A Routledge Publishing Title: Interventions - Special Issue
They each interrogate jamaican nationalisms and suggest ways in which contestationsover ownership of the brand, jamaica, generate culture clashes around
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/offer/riij_specialissue2.asp
Contact Us Members of the Group All Products Books Journal Article eBooks Alphabetical Listing Journals by Subject Advertising Customer Services ... eBooks Special Issue - Interventions: International Journal of Postcolonial Studies
Volume 6, Number 1, 2004 Jamaican Popular Culture
Edited by Carolyn Cooper and Alison Donnell
Special rate price US$26/£16
Please see order form for more details. It is now acknowledged that some of the most exciting scholarly work on Caribbean, and specifically Jamaican, culture is precisely that which attends to popular forms. These essays on Jamaican popular culture all address the problematic politics of identity in a 'postcolonial' state, from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Their interests span a century of Jamaica's cultural life, beginning with the early-twentieth-century pageants of the Garvey movement and ending with the twenty-first-century staging of masculinity and heterosexuality in the dancehall. They each interrogate Jamaican nationalisms and suggest ways in which contestations over ownership of the brand, Jamaica, generate culture clashes around representations of race, colour, class, gender and sexuality. Articles include:
  • Unruly virtues of the spectacular: Performing Engendered Nationalisms in the UNIA in Jamaica
    Honor Ford-Smith From Explanitations and Madnificent Irations to de Culcha Clash : Popular Theatre as Psychotherapy
    Frederick W. Hickling

79. The GULLY | Americas | Jamaica: Queer In A Culture Of Violence
jamaica Queer in a culture of Violence Cops are deadly, politicians corrupt, thepeople poor, but musicians sing, Kill the fags, burn the sissies. By Kelly
http://www.thegully.com/essays/gaymundo/031103_lesbian_gay_jamaica.html
Americas Jamaica: Queer in a Culture of Violence
Cops are deadly, politicians corrupt, the people poor, but musicians sing, "Kill the fags, burn the sissies."
By Kelly Cogswell
Weapon of choice in Jamaica. Complete Coverage Gay Mundo
Americas

Related Articles Jamaica: Accounts of Anti-gay Violence
Gay Rights Dawn in Ghana

Caribbean AIDS Outreach Hampered by Homophobia

Gay Bishop Roils Anglican Unity
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Long Road Home

NOVEMBER 7, 2003 . Don't let Bob Marley's peace and love lyrics fool you. In Jamaica, violence is an endemic problem that erodes everyone's basic civil liberties, and threatens gay lives. More than 740 murders have taken place so far this year on the Caribbean island, many of them due to reprisal killings, gang-related violence, and domestic incidents. In 2002, the police themselves were responsible for the deaths of at least 133 people, "many in disputed circumstances suggesting extrajudicial executions," according to Amnesty International. The elections that year saw the deaths of at least 60 people in politically motivated violence. Lesbians, gay men, and transgendered people are on the front lines, targeted for repression and violence from the dancehalls to the pulpits, and police stations.

80. IFACCA | International Federation Of Arts Councils And Cultural Agencies
NEW JERSEY HERITAGE COMMISSION RESEARCHES jamaicaN culture jamaica InformationService, Wednesday, May 19, 2004 (USA) The Middlesex County Cultural and
http://www.ifacca.org/ifacca2/en/new/page05_intnews.asp
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Ph: +61 2 9215 9018 Fx: +61 2 9215 9111 info@ifacca.org ABN 19 096 797 330 Home What's New International Arts News International Arts News Search ACORNS News Register for ACORNS Found 100 Items. This is Page 1 of 6 pages. You can move through the pages by clicking the page numbers at the bottom. PROPOSED MERGER MAKES SAN FRANCISCO ARTS ADVOCATES NERVOUS San Francisco Chronicle, Thursday, June 10, 2004 (USA) Faced with a proposed city and county of San Francisco budget for 2004-05 that merges Grants for the Arts with the San Francisco Arts Commission, streamlines both agencies, necessitates staff cuts and trims almost $1.5 million, arts administrators and advocates are apprehensive about an uncertain funding future. FILM INDUSTRY HEADED FOR ANOTHER CRISIS The Hindu Online, Tuesday, June 08, 2004 (India)

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