Sunday, 30 December 2012

Big Education Ape: LISTEN TO DIANE RAVITCH ALL WEEK LONG ...

How a Cynical Narrative Can Advance Privatization

Dennis Sparks has written a powerful post about the narrative of failure and decline that is now being cynically employed to privatize public education. Many of those now telling this story stand to benefit by taking over schools, firing teachers, and replacing them with computers, or selling the computers and software that replace the teachers. [...]

A Message for Reformers

This is a message for corporate reformers from Katie Osgood. I hope it will be read carefully by the folks at Democrats for Education Reform, Stand for Children, ALEC, Teach for America, Education Reform Now, StudentsFirst, the Gates Foundation, the Walton Foundation, the Broad Foundation, the Dell Foundation, Bellweather Partners, the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, [...]

Newtown Changed Everything

David Kirp is one of our most perceptive thinkers and writers about education. You will enjoy his new book about a wonderful public school in New Jersey. It is called ?Improbable Scholars.? In this article, he says that the massacre of little children in Newtown represents a frightening turning point in our society. What happened [...]

Why the Double Standards?

Arthur Goldstein, who teaches ESL and English in a Queens, New York, high school, writes a consistently excellent blog (nyceducator.com). In this post, he raises an intriguing question: Why is that reformers can criticize teachers nonstop and say ridiculous things about them but get twisted into paroxysms of outrage if anyone dares to defend teachers [...]

Time to Crack Down on Cheating

Matthew Di Carlo at the Shanker Institute has a good post about the importance of test security in an era of high-stakes testing. As long as we have high-stakes testing?which I oppose?we need to guard against cheating. He points out that the scandal in Atlanta was thoroughly reviewed by independent and well-trained investigators. They got [...]

Inside Story on Louisiana Spin and Failures

If you are a fan of mystery writing and novels, this will interest you. If you love non-fiction, it will also interest you. This is a true-life drama from Baton Rouge about a school that was taken over by the state in 2008 and has seen no improvement. The story involves money, politics, power, hidden [...]

Value-Added Ratings for Our Secretaries of Education

A little known group called Educators for Shared Accountability designed a rubric for evaluating Secretaries of Education. It incorporates multiple measures. By its metric, Richard Riley was our best national leader. Check out Secretary Duncan?s value added rating.

Another Way to Crush Teacher Morale

The Louisiana Department of Education is bringing to fruition the acme of corporate reform salary schedules for teachers. It may have been jointly designed by ALEC and TFA. Neither experience nor degrees count. The only thing that matters is value-added test scores. The LDOE recommends big bonuses?merit pay?of $10,000 or more for the teachers whose [...]

I Need Your Help

I am in search of information and I can?t find it by googling. So I am turning to you to help me answer these questions. 1. In your state, are special education students required to take the same grade-level tests as regular students? Are there exceptions based on IEPs? 2. Are charters in your state [...]

The Ultimate Reform School!

Drop whatever you are doing, and read this. EduShyster serves up a delightful portrait of an award-winning school in Minneapolis that embodies every new reform strategy. And here is the best part: It hasn?t opened yet! It won?t open until next September and it is already a great success!

What Is the Point of Reading?

A post about the Common Core standards ?No One Opposes Reading Non-Fiction?) was followed by a lively discussion among readers. Among many excellent comments, this one stood out. Written by Robert D. Shepherd, it raises important issues about how publishers will interpret the standards. And even more important, why do we want to read? Back [...]

On the Transiency of Big Ideas in Education

Diana Senechal has written a thoughtful reflection on the tendency of policymakers to foist big ideas on education. Fads come and go. The ones we live with today, say I, seem especially pernicious because they are backed by the power of the state in alliance with the profit motive. Yet I remain confident that truly [...]

The Happiest Teachers in America?

A few weeks ago, I spoke at the annual conference of the New York State School Music Association in Rochester. As I was going through the lobby of the conference center, I saw many teenagers carrying their musical instruments, preparing to practice and play together. There was a spirit of happy anticipation in the air?at [...]

Chicago Teachers Union Sues District, Claims Racial Discrimination

This should be of interest to readers. The Chicago Teachers Union has filed a federal lawsuit against the Chicago Public Schools, claiming that African American teachers have been disproportionately harmed by school closings. Over the past decade, their numbers have dropped dramatically in the school system. Chicago Teachers File Federal Lawsuit Charging CPS with Racial [...]

Where Are the Closing Schools?

Jersey Jazzman connects the dots about school closings. Do they close in white neighborhoods? No. Do they close in affluent neighborhoods? No. Guess where they close? In high-poverty neighborhoods. My guess: the white and affluent neighborhoods are next.

An Armed Guard for Every School?

Eclectablog is one of my favorites. I don?t know the writer, but he or she is super smart and witty, which is a great combination. Here is a post explaining that an armed guard in every school (132,000 schools of all kinds) would cost something north of $10 billion. That?s lot of moola-boola on new [...]

No One Opposes Reading Non-Fiction

A reader posted a comment yesterday wondering why so many who read this blog are opposed to reading non-fiction, or in the jargon of the day, ?informational text.? This is a reference to the debate about the Common Core standards, which mandate a 50-50 split between literary/informational text in lower grades, and a 70-30 split [...]

Please Arm These Teachers!

This elementary school teacher wants to be armed with smaller classes. She also wants to be armed with after school clubs and resources for her special education students. Read more about how she wants to be armed. This education dean also wants to arm teachers. He wants to arm them with passion, purpose, knowledge, understanding, [...]

An Interview with Todd Farley

This was sent by a reader of the blog. Todd Farley wrote a terrific book about the testing industry called ?Making the Grades,? based on his many years on the inside of that industry. He knows the tricks of the trade. If you haven?t read his book, you should. Interview with Todd Farley by Rebecca [...]

Teacher: Common Core Harms My Title I Students

One of the unsettled questions about the Common Core standards is whether they will widen or narrow the achievement gaps between children of different races and different income levels. In their first trial in Kentucky, the gap grew larger, and scores fell across the board. Some see this effect as a temporary adjustment to higher [...]

The Belly of the Beast

This article, published in The Times Educational Supplement (London), is an in-depth explanation of how the Global Educational Reform Movement (GERM) took shape and became powerful. Here you will meet Sir Michael Barber, who coined the idea of ?deliverology,? and learn about his rapid ascent from trade union activist to Tony Blair advisor to McKinsey [...]

Teacher: How Toxic Testing Drove Me Out of the Classroom

Carole Marshall, a former journalist, published the following in the Providence (R.I.) Journal on December 14, 2012: TESTING MANIA LEAVES URBAN STUDENTS BEHIND As a person who left a teaching position at Hope High School, in Providence, last June after almost two decades, I?d like to add my perspective to the discussion of high-stakes testing. [...]

A Literacy Expert Opposes the Common Core Standards

Stephen Krashen is a professor emeritus at the University of Southern California, where he taught linguistics. He comments here in response to an earlier post about the Common Core standards: What this excessive detail also does is (1) dictate the order of presentation of aspects of literacy (2) encourage a direct teaching, skill-building approach to [...]

How Standardized Testing Reinforces Inequity

Paul Thomas of Furman University in South Carolina says it is time for Southerners to recognize that testing is a way of reinforcing inequity. Tests reflect socioeconomic conditions. The haves dominate the top half of the bell curve, the have-nots dominate the bottom half. And the tests legitimate their status. Tests measure inequality of opportunity. [...]

Teacher: I Support the Common Core Standards

A teacher wrote this comment in response to the ongoing debate about the value of the Common Core standards: ?I was one of those who was very leary of the push for non-fiction in high school, but through nearly three years of working with the Common Core in St. Paul, Minnesota, I have come to [...]

Why Does TFA Need Nearly $1 Billion?

To be exact, why does TFA need $907 million? That is the amount that TFA raised from 2006-2010. EduShyster has done the numbers and explains it all here. During that time, TFA groomed some 28,000 teachers. But more important, it groomed leaders like Kevin Huffman, state commissioner of education in Tennessee, now planning for vouchers; [...]

TFA and Other People?s Children

Mark Naison, professor of African-American Studies at Fordham University, asks whether Teach for America leaders are the Robert McNamaras of this generation?

Parents: How to Support Your Public Schools

The best group now organizing and mobilizing to strengthen public education is Parents Across America. You don?t have to be a public school parent to join. PAA welcomes educators and everyone who supports public schools. If you care about improving your public schools and fighting off corporate control and privatization, join Parents Across America. PAA [...]

Reform Churn Hurts Students Most

In response to an earlier post about the escalating cost of teacher evaluation programs, a reader submitted this comment. I wish that our elected officials in Washington and in the state legislatures and departments of education would read it. This voyage is beginning in Connecticut. Every hour that teachers and administrators focus on the new [...]

Good News from North Carolina!

Wonderful news from Charlotte-Mecklenbug, North Carolina! The superintendent of schools has spoken out forcefully against the flood of testing. Because of this great news, I happily add Heath Morrison to the honor roll as a champion of American public education. Morrison is superintendent of schools in Charlotte-Mecklenburg, North Carolina. He is also highly respected among [...]

Greetings to the ?Beloved Community? of Education Activists

Mark Naison, professor of African-American Studies at Fordham University, sends holiday greetings to education activists across the nation. Activism today on behalf of public education, he finds, is akin to the activism for civil rights in the 1960s. It requires courage and dedication. You do it because you have to or you won?t be able [...]

A Teacher?s Christmas Story

When I visited Los Angeles in 2010, a group of young teachers surrounded me at UCLA and implored me to intervene with the schools? chancellor and get him to reverse his decision about the closing of Fremont High School. I tried but I was not successful. The teachers scattered, some stayed in teaching, some did [...]

Reading a Christmas Carol for Our Own Times

Ken Previti has written a meditation on Dickens? Christmas Carol and how it was bowdlerized to remove its true meaning. It is time to reclaim the true meaning of Dickens for our own time.

?Twas the Night Before Testing

Fred Smith worked for many years for the New York City Board of Education as a testing expert. Now he is a watchdog to guard against the misuse of tests. He writes opinion pieces and advises parent groups about the excesses of the testing industry. For non-New York City folk, Tisch is Merryl Tisch, the [...]

The True Goals of Education?

A reader suggests that we change our views of the proper goals of education: ?As important as core curriculum standards are they should not be the primary mission of public education. We would do well to adopt the four ancient civic virtues of Wisdom, Courage, Justice and Temperance as guidelines for student learning, K-12. Elegant [...]

A Gift for You: Why Education Matters

This article is a Christmas gift from me to you. Leon Wieseltier of The New Republic has written one of the most eloquent explanations of why we need teachers, schools, and universities. At a time when we hear hosannas to online learning, home-schooling, inexperienced teachers, the business model of schooling, for-profit schools, and the commodification [...]

Merry Christmas from EduShyster

This is a wonderful gift catalogue that will give you laughs and solace on this special day. EduShyster has created some priceless selections for the discerning shopper of edu-shlock.

My Holiday Wishes for You

Dear Readers, I can?t bring myself to say ?Merry Christmas,? because this Christmas season has been blighted by the tragedy in Newtown. We are still in mourning for the twenty babies who were lost there, the precious children who were so cruelly taken from their families. We are still in mourning for our brave colleagues, [...]

This Is What Courage Means

Earlier today I posted about four teachers in Louisiana who started a recall campaign against Governor Bobby Jindal and the Speaker of the Louisiana House. The odds against them were overwhelming. They had no organization, no money, and no political experience. They didn?t collect enough signatures to get on the ballot. They confronted a powerful [...]

Kudos for Superintendent Joshua Starr

Joshua Starr is superintendent of the Montgomery County public schools. He has stepped forward as an outspoken critic of standardized testing. He is emerging as a national voice against the national obsession with testing, ranking and rating students, teachers and schools. He has a different agenda: education. He recently was criticized for failing to follow [...]

Andere: Who Wins Nobel Prizes?

Eduardo Andere is one of Mexico?s leading education researchers. Here, he comments on a post by Stephen Krashen about the PISA results. Well, maybe Mr. Krashen is right! The analysis below may help to buttress many people?s view why American education isn?t so bad after all: The education of Nobel Prize winners By Eduardo Andere [...]

Lessons from Finland

If you want to know why Finnish schools are so admired, consider the following: Finnish schools do not have standardized testing until college entry. Admission to teacher education is highly selective. Teaching is a prestigious career. Child poverty is very low. Finnish schools emphasize the arts, physical activity, and a broad curriculum. If you can?t [...]

Four Courageous Teachers in Louisiana

Last spring, four teachers in Calcasieu Parish in Louisiana decided ?enough is enough? when Governor Bobby Jindal rushed through his legislation targeting teachers and attacking public education. They decided they would launch a campaign to recall Jindal and House Speaker Chuck Kleckley. None had ever been politically active before. You have to understand that Bobby [...]

How Test Errors Prevented Students from Graduating

A post on the NYC Parents Blog tells the sad story of a middle-school student who was not allowed to graduate with her class because she had supposedly failed the ELA exam. She was an honor student, and it made no sense, but the NYC Department of Education was adamant. The tests don?t lie, do [...]

In Defense of Tracking

When Marc Epstein, who was a history teacher at Jamaica High School in New York City (now closed to make way for small schools), read Carol Burris?s post opposing differentiated diplomas and tracking, he wrote to express his disagreement. I invited him to write a post, and he said he had already written it. It [...]

The Mayan Calendar and You

A reader who is a veteran teacher suggests incorporating the Mayan calendar into VAM evaluations. It could be one of the multiple measures that everyone talks about and would very likely improve the overall accuracy of the VAM ratings.

Ms. Katie Has the Last Word on the Meaning of the Twitter Kerfuffle

Katie Osgood teaches children in a psychiatric hospital in Chicago. She is one of our most eloquent bloggers, whose understanding of the damage done to children in today?s society is unparalleled. This post of hers sums up the meaning of what I called the Twitter kerfuffle. Last week, I wrote a post about ?The Hero [...]

Edweek Questions Finnish Success

Education Week reports that there was no significant difference between the performance of eighth grade students in Finland and the US in mathematics on the TIMSS. Four American states had higher scores in eighth grade mathematics on TIMSS than Finland: Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Indiana. This is not what you hear in the media, [...]

A Substitute Teacher Dies as a Hero

A teacher sent me this link and urged me to post it. This is a story about Lauren Rousseau, a substitute teacher who lost her life during the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School on one of the days that she was hired to teach. Teaching was what she most wanted to do, but Newtown [...]

Burris: NY Regents Plan Promotes Tracking

Carol Burris is the principal of an outstanding high school on Long Island in New York. She is a leader of the principals? group opposing the new state evaluation system. This post includes her recent letter to the Regents in opposition to a new diploma program that she fears will encourage tracking. Her own high [...]

Do Conservatives Care about the Constitution?

A stunning editorial in the Statesman, a Louisiana publication, raises an important question about Governor Jindal?s voucher program: Why do conservatives remind everyone about the importance of adhering faithfully to the literal meaning of the state constitution except when they choose not to? The Jindal voucher plan is funded by the Minimum Foundation Funding dedicated [...]

Is This the NRA Plan for School Security?

A reader comments on the National Rifle Association?s ideas for school security: ?Let?s pretend. 100,000 schools would need 100,000 guards, preferably active police officers, who would by a conservative estimate cost at least $100,000 per year apiece in salary and benefits. That?s $10,000,000,000 to start, plus who knows how much more for the added costs [...]

The Language of ?Reform?

Ron Isaac is a retired teacher of English in New York City. He writes: What a shame that language is such a pliable substance! It?s putty in the hands of folks who control public policy debates, especially about education. And it can be deadly to progress when it?s off the tongues of people who exercise authority unjustly, either [...]

Uses and Abuses of Online Learning

The school district in Manchester, New Hampshire, is considering online classes?not blended learning?as Acosta-saving device. The idea is to put kids online and lay off teachers. Anyone who deals with children and adolescents knows that face-to-face contact, human-to-human relationships are very important. Something?s, like reading a book our practicing an instrument, may best be done [...]

Why Armed Guards Change Nothing

A reader explains why armed guards will not end the violence: As my own experience with troubled children, and as pointed out in the PBS ?After Newtown? program of 12/21/2012 pointed out: (1) the shooters tend to be young males who largely fantasize about the shooting long before they act, (2) they strongly tend to [...]

Outrageous Treatment of Children with Special Needs

In Louisiana, this mother reports, her 17-year-old autistic son will be required to take the ACT and EOC (end-of-course exams). As she writes, ?These children are also being forced to take the EOC. or ?end of course? tests for high school courses that they have never taken. Allow me to reiterate. They are forced to [...]

On TIMSS: Black Students in Mass. Do as Well as Finland!

The Daily Howler is all over the media for its sour reporting about the latest international test (TIMSS). He finds that they reverted to their ?doom and gloom? scenario without bothering to dig into the data. He dug into the data and found lots to cheer about. In this post, Bob Somerby parses the data [...]

No Guns in Schools!

The National Rifle Association wants an armed guard at every one of the nation?s 100,000 schools. Some legislators want teachers and principals to carry weapons. Why should policy be reactive? Better to limit all weaponry to officers of the law, except for single-shot rifles for hunters. Guns should be available only to those authorized to [...]

Privatization or Public Education?

Helen Ladd and her husband Edward Fiske are distinguished observers of American Education. Ladd is a Professor of Economics at Duke University. Fiske was education editor of the anew York Times. Together they describe a fork in the road for our nation?s public school system. Will we continue towards free-market privatization or will we revitalize [...]

What the Media Didn?t Tell You About Latest International Tests

Bob Somerby, taught for many years in the Baltimore public schools. His blog The Daily Howler offers a fearless critique of media coverage of critical events. His post on the latest international assessments (TIMSS) and the media?s decision tiresome putdown of American students is a classic. He points out that on the math portions of [...]

School Closings Planned in Philadelphia

Privatization is in high gear in many cities?Chicago, DC, Memphis, Detroit, and elsewhere. The corporate reformers say they want to save money but the closings don?t save money. They say they want to improve education, but that hasn?t happened either. Here is Helen Gym?s account of the Philadelphia story.

A Terrific New Teacher Blogger

Here is someone you should follow. In a recent post, this teacher writes: In order to forestall state-takeover, our district is scrambling to find ways to make ?substantial improvement.? By improvement, of course we mean in our MCAS scores. One way we are responding is to get a private company called ?Achievement Net? or ?A-Net? [...]

Joshua Starr Belongs on Honor Roll: Proof

I previously named Joshua Starr, superintendent of Montgomery County public schools in Maryland, to the honor roll for his courage and wisdom. He rejected Race to the Top Funding because his schools have a nationally acclaimed peer review evaluation system. He called for a three-year moratorium on standardized testing. For daring to be different, he [...]

Secret Document Leaked: Chicago Plans to Close Nearly 100 Schools

The Chicago Tribune obtained a copy of a secret document describing the plan of Chicago Public Schools to close 95 schools, mostly in minority neighborhoods. The plan was dated September 10. This represents a dramatic elimination of public schools in Chicago. The city says it will slow down charter growth, at least this year, but [...]

The Baltimore Sun Joins the Honor Roll

So many news media have thoughtlessly or knowingly jumped on the bandwagon of corporate reform that it comes as a shock to encounter one saying simple truths. Te Baltimore Sun wrote, in response to the massacre of innocent children and educators in Newtown, that it?s time to stop the vilification of our nation?s teachers and [...]

Kaya Henderson Abandons 20 More Schools

Kaya Henderson, chancellor of the DC public schools, intends to close another 20 public schools. DC is now the second largest urban district with the greatest proportion of its students in privately managed charter, after New Orleans. Unlike New Orleans, DC did not suffer a natural disaster. Instead, its leaders don?t know how to improve [...]

Katie Osgood Defends Karen Lewis

Karen Lewis spoke up on my behalf when a TFA officer denounced my post ?The Hero Teachers of Newtown?) as ?reprehensible. Lewis then became the object of attacks from outraged bloggers and tweeters saying that she literally accused TFA of murder. Lewis said no such thing. This was a fine example of the dark art [...]

A Charter Teacher Explains What Happens with Longer School Day

Corporate-style reformers believe that children will learn more and get higher test scores if they spend hours more in school preparing for the tests. They probably think that retail clerks will sell more if they have a 9-hour shift. But a newcomer to EduShyster?s burgeoning staff explains what happens when the extra time is added. [...]

How State Aid Is Rigged Against the Poorest Districts

Bruce Baker has written an illuminating and disturbing post about how New York is underfunding its highest-need schools. Governor Cuomo likes to complain that the state spends far too much on education but sees little improvement. Baker demonstrates that the formula hurts the neediest students. The governor goes on to say that he will take [...]

Beware of Foundations Bearing ?Gifts?

Sarah Darer Littman has a good idea. She thinks that journalists in Connecticut should do investigative journalism and not just write what they find in the press release. Case in point: the recent gift of $5 million from the Gates foundation to Hartford schools. Littman calls the grant a Trojan horse because it commits the [...]

Source: http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2012/12/listen-to-diane-ravitch-all-week-long_29.html

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The Dem Love-Hate Relationship with Senator Lieberman ...

Connecticut?s Courant has this as part of a lengthy article regarding the retiring Jewish Senator Joe Lieberman: Lieberman?s evolution over the years brought him a series of new friends and supporters, including McCain, Bush, and Fox News commentator Sean Hannity. It also brought him a small army of political enemies who coalesced around a previously unknown anti-war candidate named Ned Lamont to defeat Lieberman in the 2006 U.S. Senate primary.

But Lieberman says he was vindicated with his greatest political victory in November 2006, made possible by a coalition largely made up of Republicans and independents. That proved to be his final campaign in a career that is now closing after 40 years in public service, including 24 years in the U.S. Senate.

In Connecticut, many liberal Democrats increasingly soured on Lieberman?s hawkish stances on defense and his support of Republican views. He was at his peak when he made history as the first Jewish American on a major party ticket, but his later views on the war in Iraq prompted many Democrats to deride him as a controversial and divisive figure.

Lieberman supporters believe that it was the Democratic Party ? more than Lieberman ? that changed through the years, as evidenced by the party?s blistering opposition to the Iraq war.

Lieberman himself attributed the change to ?a very unusual series of events in which I had different opportunities? involving ?different times and different people and different relationships that I had,? including his close friendship with McCain?

At the other end of the spectrum, hard-core liberals and some true-blue Democrats regret voting for Lieberman in his earlier days and say they would never do so again.

Consumer activist Ralph Nader says that Lieberman turned into ?a right-wing extremist on everything except the environment and gay rights? in the Senate.

?He started out as a promising environmentalist when he was a junior senator, and he turned into one of the leading warmongers for the American empire and an uncritical advocate for the military industrial complex that President Eisenhower warned us about,? Nader said in an interview. ?He never met a weapon system that he didn?t like. ? Look how Lieberman betrayed his own party. I?m not a fan of the Democratic Party. This is a guy who stood at the Republican National Convention, next to McCain. He supports the opponent. He describes Obama as immature, inexperienced. He comes back to the Senate, and they give him his chairmanship back!?

Despite the public clashes with friends, Lieberman has always rebounded. Even though Lieberman supported McCain over Obama in 2008, it was Obama who stepped in and said Lieberman should remain as the chairman of the Senate homeland security committee at a time when some Democrats were still angry. Although Lieberman was the first Senate Democrat to publicly scold then-President Bill Clinton in a memorable speech on the Senate floor during the Monica Lewinsky scandal in 1998, it was Clinton who traveled to Waterbury eight years later to rally support for Lieberman when he was on the ropes in the bitter primary. Clinton told the crowd that day that Lieberman was his longtime friend, and ?I love him.?

Source: http://gestetnerupdates.com/2012/12/30/the-dem-love-hate-relationship-with-senator-lieberman/

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Texas rallies late to beat Oregon State in Alamo Bowl

SAN ANTONIO ? Texas offensive guard Mason Walters said he didn't see David Ash's momentum-turning escape and touchdown throw to Johnathan Gray ? "I had my hands full at the time trying to keep a couple more from getting after him" ? but that didn't stop him from sensing the play's impact.

"I did catch it on the Jumbotron afterwards," Walters said. "It was impressive and I don't know how he did it.

"It was huge. I've said it all year: college football is really just a game of momentum. And when you have it, you have it. When you don't, it's tough to get back."

That play, a 15-yard scoring pass with 8:18 left to go in the fourth quarter, cut the Oregon State lead to 27-24. But more importantly, it saturated the No. 23 Longhorns with enough momentum to close out a 31-27 Valero Alamo Bowl victory.

"We challenged all of our players to make sure that our seniors left happy and had a happy dressing room," Texas coach Mack Brown said. "And that's happening in there tonight."

Through three quarters, No. 13 Oregon State built a 27-17 lead by running the ball and keeping the Texas offense off balance. Texas entered the fourth quarter with 201 total yards, and Ash was just 12 of 22 for 95 yards with an interception. But in the final 15 minutes, Ash caught fire, completing 9-of-11 passes for 146 yards, and hitting on his last seven passes as Texas scored on its final two drives to pull out the comeback victory.

"You just kind of keep plugging away and you kind of wait for that play that sparks," Ash said. "This game, we started getting them, and we got the momentum back and we started playing well."

Texas's Major Applewhite faced a challenge in his first game as offensive coordinator and primary play-caller. First, he had just two weeks to game plan and make any necessary adjustments. Second, he faced a stingy Oregon State defense that excels at stuffing runs between the tackles ? exactly what Texas wanted to accomplish offensively. And third, Applewhite's backup quarterback, Case McCoy, was suspended for violation of team rules on Friday prior to the game.

"I'd like to forget that," Applewhite said of facing a difficult backup situation. "I spent about two hours with (true freshman) Jalen Overstreet in Conference Ballroom 15 trying to get ready for the game, and it was a little nerve-wracking."

Applewhite said that because of the quarterback situation, Texas was hesitant to run Ash too early and leave him susceptible to injury. But in the third quarter, with Texas trailing 20-10, and with no running game to speak of, the Longhorns called two designed quarterback draws in three plays. The first, called on a third-and-4, picked up 5 yards and a first down. On the second, Ash rushed for an 11-yard touchdown, leaping over an Oregon State defender into the end zone and providing that first spark.

"David really gained a lot of confidence, especially on the one where he ran it in and jumped over a guy in the end zone," said Texas wide receiver Jaxon Shipley. "You could see it. You could feel it. Everybody was fired up, especially him. From that point on, I felt like he definitely had a feeling that we were going to win the game."

Applewhite was also helped by a monster game from Alamo Bowl Offensive MVP Marquise Goodwin. Early in the second quarter with the Longhorns stymied offensively, Goodwin took a reverse 64 yards for a touchdown. And the speedster who competed in this past summer's London Olympics as a long-jumper burst past his defender to haul in the game-winning, 36-yard touchdown pass with 2:24 left.

"When you get those guys that have exceptional speed, they can do things outside of the design of the play so you don't have to be perfect, there's a little bit more margin for error," Applewhite said.

But Goodwin's speed wasn't the only speed that had a major effect on the game. The Longhorn offense went up-tempo through the second half and wore down the Beavers late.

"We probably were on the field too much . . ." said Oregon State coach Mike Riley. "We didn't sustain enough, didn't get enough first downs to give our defense a chance."

That was the result of a freshly dialed-in Texas defense, which gave up 228 yards and 20 points in the first half. Beavers running back Storm Woods ? in a homecoming of sorts ? rushed for 98 yards on 15 carries and a touchdown. In all, the Pflugerville native combined with fellow running back Terron Ward and receivers Markus Wheaton and Brandin Cooks to gash the Longhorns for 151 yards in the first half.

"The first half, we felt like we played great sound football," Woods said. "And the second half felt like Texas just made some adjustments and they came out and they just?. . .?I guess they wanted it more or something."

Texas defensive coordinator Manny Diaz said afterward that the Texas defense had a decision to make at halftime.

"To me, it was whether they wanted to fight their way out of it or sort of accept their fate," Diaz said. "I'm so proud of the way that they fought, the way that they battled in the second half."

Buoyed by the tremendous pass rush from Defensive MVP Alex Okafor, Texas rattled junior Cody Vaz and shut down the running lanes that were so easily accessible in the first half. Vaz entered the game with an 11-to-1 touchdown-to-interception ratio, but he finished 15 of 28 for 194 yards and no touchdowns to two picks. More impressively, he was sacked 10 times, with Okafor's Alamo Bowl-record 4.5 sacks providing the primary damage. Woods ran six times for 20 yards in the second half, as the Beavers had just 69 total second-half yards.

And when it came down to the end, after the Longhorns took the lead, the defense closed things out. On third-and-8, Okafor made the last of his sacks in bullying his way to tackle Vaz. And on fourth-and-14, linebacker Kendall Thompson pulled Vaz to the turf to end any hope of a Beaver rally.

"It's always great to end the season on a good note," said Okafor, who ended his senior season with 12.5 sacks. "We're going to use this game as a stepping stone, and Coach Diaz just talked about that we have to demand more from ourselves. That was kind of the mindset going into this game, and that's what we did."

For the second consecutive year, Texas ended with a victory, and the Longhorns finished 9-4. Oregon State, which entered the postseason with a 9-3 mark, finished with an identical record.

Walters said that momentum gained from that play, and the ensuing win, could also be applied on a more macro scale. The Longhorns won at least 10 games per season in Brown's first 12 seasons, but have failed to hit that standard in the three seasons since. Now, Texas is looking to morph the season-ending victory into a strong offseason and, eventually, a comeback of another kind ? the restoration of the Texas program as a whole.

"That's big. We experienced it last year and obviously?. . .?if you look at it at the end of the year, and we judge wins and losses, we've improved from where we were last year.

"However, this is not where we want to end up," Walters said. "This isn't going to be good enough. I wouldn't accept 9-4 next year. I wouldn't take that deal right now. We're just going to have to ride it. I know I've already talked to a lot of guys that are going to be on the team next year, we're excited to get back to work and get back together with everybody and get back on the grind."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Foxsports/rss/CFB/~3/AKKvN5cxAGQ/texas-longhorns-beat-oregon-state-beavers-alamo-bowl-122912

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Saturday, 29 December 2012

French panel overturns 75 percent tax on ultrarich

(AP) ? Embattled French President Francois Hollande suffered a fresh setback Saturday when France's highest court threw out a plan to tax the ultrawealthy at a 75 percent rate, saying it was unfair.

In a stinging rebuke to one of Socialist Hollande's flagship campaign promises, the constitutional council ruled Saturday that the way the highly contentious tax was designed was unconstitutional. It was intended to hit incomes over ?1 million ($1.32 million).

The largely symbolic measure would have only hit a tiny number of taxpayers and brought in an estimated ?100 million to ?300 million - an insignificant amount in the context of France's roughtly ?85 billion deficit.

Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault was quick to respond, saying in a statement following the decision the government would resubmit the measure to take the court's concerns into account. The court's ruling took issue not with the size of the tax, but with the way it discriminated between households depending on how incomes were distributed among its members. A household with two earners each making under ?1 million would be exempt from the tax, while one with one earner making ?1.2 million would have to pay.

The French government approved the tax in its most recent budget, amid criticism by some that it would do little to stem the country's mounting fiscal problems and would drive away the wealthiest citizens. Hollande's popularity, meanwhile, has been tanking as the country's unemployment continued its rise for the 19th straight month.

In recent weeks, Gerard Depardieu ? France's most famous actor ? announced his intention to turn in his French passport and move to a village in a tax-friendly Belgium.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2012-12-29-France-Taxing%20the%20Rich/id-d468b6e529bc4b9b864961ecc16f6f3a

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Washington Times | Liberals press own red lines in ?fiscal cliff? talks


Republicans said Wednesday that it?s now Democratic leaders? turn to feel the? heat of trying to work out a budget deal.

After House conservatives sank his plan last week, Speaker John? A. Boehner, Ohio Republican, and his top lieutenants said it?s now up to? President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, to take the next? step and try to write a deal that can get through the Senate.

But Mr. Obama and Mr. Reid are facing? increasing heat from their party?s left flank to make sure Social Security isn?t part of any agreement.

Some liberal leaders have drawn red lines, and one pressure group has vowed? to find primary opponents for any Democrat who votes for a deal that includes? reductions in projected Social? Security benefits.

?We will not be voting for any cuts to Medicare, Medicaid? and Social Security,? said Rep. Keith? Ellison, Minnesota Democrat and co-chairman of the Congressional Progressive? Caucus. ?They can go back and recalculate and come up with something else,? because we?re not going to solve these fiscal problems on the backs of the? seniors, of the disabled, of the survivors.?

More.

Source: http://conservatives4palin.com/2012/12/washington-times-liberals-press-own-red-lines-in-fiscal-cliff-talks.html

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Apple withdraws patent claim against Samsung's Galaxy S III mini

Apple's patent claim against Samsung's Galaxy S III mini is no more, with Cupertino citing the phone's lacking availability in the US for the amendment to its original November filing. In the ongoing litigation between the two electronics giants, Samsung argued that it's Galaxy S III mini didn't warrant inclusion in the latest volley of Samsung devices Apple wants added to its patent lawsuit; Apple apparently agreed, and is thusly withdrawing its claim against that particular device. The argument also highlights the sad news that the S III mini won't join Samsung's Galaxy lineup in the US.

An agreement filing spotted by Reuters from a San Jose, CA. US District Court revealed today's news, coming just days after Judge Lucy Koh dismissed a request to permanently ban sales on several Samsung devices. It's unclear if the other Samsung devices Apple asked to be added to the ongoing case are approved yet by the court, but we can certainly count the S III mini out for the time being.

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Comments

Source: Reuters

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/12/28/apple-samsung-siii-mini/

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Speaking at the Alameda Writer's Group January 5, 2013 ...

Speaking at the Alameda Writer?s Group January 5, 2013

I will be speaking at the Alameda Writers Group on January 5th at 10:00 on Know Your Writer?s Rights, a one hour presentation where I give screenwriters everything (well, almost everything) they need to know about the legal issues affecting writers. ?Will cover copyright infringement, registrations, options agreements, collaboration agreements, Libel & Slander, Titles, and a host of other topics. ?It?s free, so come on out and begin the year by learning something new.

For more information, visit?http://alamedawritersgroup.ning.com

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Source: http://zernerlaw.wordpress.com/2012/12/27/speaking-at-the-alameda-writers-group-january-5-2013/

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Friday, 28 December 2012

Hawaiian island is dissolving from within

Plan your island getaway now: In time, the mountainous tropical paradise of Oahu will erode, according to new research, with the biggest losses coming from within the island itself.

To be accurate, you do have some time to book that vacation before Hawaii's Oahu flattens from an island into a low-lying seamount. Researchers writing in the upcoming Feb. 15 issue of the journal Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta estimate that the volcanic island will continue to grow, thanks to plate tectonics, for another 75,000 to 1.75 million years. After that, however, the forces working to eat away at Oahu from the inside out will begin to triumph.

Researchers at Brigham Young University in Utah investigated the forces that add and subtract material from Oahu. The island offers an ideal place to conduct such a study, the researchers said, as it consists of one kind of rock that is exposed to very different levels of precipitation. Various regions in Oahu can record between 2 and 23 feet of precipitation a year, depending on the local climate. [ Gallery: One-of-a-Kind Places on Earth ]

  1. Science news from NBCNews.com

    1. The year's top ancient mysteries (and missteps)

      The past year saw plenty of controversy over ancient mysteries ? and we're not just talking about Maya prophecies. So what happened to "Franken-saurus," the Gospel of Jesus' Wife and the plan to clone a woolly mammoth?

    2. 2,750-year-old temple found near Jerusalem
    3. Weird Science 2012: Sex, drugs and doomsday
    4. Peru's mysterious Nazca Lines form a labyrinth

The researchers measured solids dissolved in both surface and groundwater from 45 streams and 30 springs and wells around the island, adding those new measurements to previously reported data, for a total of 170 water samples scattered across Oahu.

Using that data, scientists calculated the mass Oahu loses each year. Although one might expect rain to carry away most of the soil in such a wet climate, underground freshwater springs actually removed the bulk of the mineral material from Oahu, the researchers found.

"More material is dissolving from those islands than what is being carried off through erosion," study researcher Steve Nelson, a Brigham Young University geologist, said in a statement.

In fact, groundwater carried between three and 12 times as much dissolved solids compared to surface water, the researchers report.

Oahu is made up of the remnants of two collapsed shield volcanoes, the kind known for burping out thick, oozy lava that hardens into new land. One volcano, Waianae, was active from about 4 to 2.6 million years ago; the other, Koolau, developed later.

Today, Oahu grows not because of volcanism, but from geologic uplift. As the younger Hawaiian Islands push the Pacific tectonic plate downward, nearby Oahu "pops up," as if on a seesaw. That uplift pushes Oahu's landforms upward at a rate of 0.2 feet per thousand years, enough (for now) to compensate for the losses caused by groundwater carrying away the island's mass.

Researchers hope that the same methods they used on Oahu can help clarify how other tropical islands change in response to different climate conditions.

Follow Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas or LiveScience@livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

? 2012 LiveScience.com. All rights reserved.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/50307321/ns/technology_and_science-science/

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The Final Epilogue

The Final Epilogue

Many generations after Zael and his team had ended the war, the Island made from Fortress Island and Lazulis Island had prospered. However, there is always a threat to society, and it had shown its face generations after peace had settled in

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This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?The Final Epilogue?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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Forum for completely Out of Character (OOC) discussion, based around whatever is happening In Character (IC). Discuss plans, storylines, and events; Recruit for your roleplaying game, or find a GM for your playergroup.
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I have a thousand years of experience, went through a thousand years of battles, and have a thousand years of wisdom. What makes you think you'd out-smart me?

WHERE IS THE END OF THE WORLD NOW, HUH APOCOLYPSE THEORISTS?! Yeah, I said it. Hate me. I dare you! I DOUBLE DOG DARE YOU- -Sorry, but we are experiencing technical dificulties-
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The Pro-Gun Movement Is Too Often Anti-Liberty (Atlantic Politics Channel)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/273149964?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Thursday, 27 December 2012

Translation, Creativity and Creative Writing | Metaglossia: The ...

Vacancies in this network: Translators, Revisers, Editors, etc.

Posts about University of Alberta written by lsacelp

The Canadian Indigenous Languages and Literacy Development Institute (CILLDI)?at the University of Alberta invites you to our 14th Annual Summer School, July 8-26 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. ?This summer we are offering a total of 20 University-accredited courses in the areas of language documentation, education and revitalization. ?Credit is available at both the graduate and undergraduate level, and bursaries/scholarships are available?for both Canadian and International students.

For the first time this year, we are offering a full three weeks of intensive?Cree and Michif?language courses. ?In addition, we are proud to offer two brand new courses this summer:

LING 311 Online Tools for language Revitalization

This course provides an introduction to the use of new technologies to aid in language revitalization in both home communities and urban settings.? Topics will include computer-based learning tools, online language courses, and the innovative use of social media sites.? Students will examine how these new technologies are being used in indigenous language communities around the world, and will design a language technology plan appropriate for their own community.

ANTH 485?Landscape, Meaning and Culture: The Social Meaning of Place

This course explores how and why particular places are invested with social meaning by different cultural and linguistic groups.? Students will analyze place-naming practices in their own and other Indigenous languages, and examine the ways in which people talk about place in both? conversation and narrative.? Students will also investigate various perspectives on map-making, and the ways in which Indigenous cultural and worldview can be incorporated into community mapping projects.

The full listing of our Summer School courses is shown below. ?Courses marked (CLC) are part of our Provincially-recognized Community Linguist Certificate program, now in its seventh year.

Google Translate For Mobile - Blogs at KTAR.com
Guest post written by Ashley Harrison Ashley Harrison is CEO of the social news reader and publishing platform Taptu, a unit of Mediafed.

With the digital and mobile era clearly setting in across the global landscape, media is continuing to transform on a daily basis. As smartphones and tablets begin to overthrow PCs, advertisers and publishers alike are stuck in a search for a way to hit their target audience and still generate revenue. With new doors opening and others closing nearly everyday in the world of publishing, 2013 will be the year that mobile consumption finally raises the bar on both advertising and publishing in the digital age.

Flag of the EU All major political and economic organizations that bring together a group of nations for a common purpose always represent a great challenge
Tr?s belle initiative que celle du Journal du Net qui a r?cemment publi? le Dictionnaire politique d'Internet et du num?rique.

Tr?s belle initiative que celle du?Journal du Net?qui a r?cemment publi? le?Dictionnaire politique d'Internet et du num?rique.

Coordonn? par Christophe Stener, consultant en strat?gie d'entreprises, ce document s'est appuy? sur l'aide d'une centaine d'acteurs ?conomiques, politiques, universitaires et sociaux, tous charg?s de r?fl?chir aux enjeux d'Internet aujourd'hui.

Ce dictionnaire se donne pour objectif de rendre accessible au plus grand nombre les contours d?un ph?nom?ne structurant de notre soci?t?. Le lecteur pourra ainsi mieux appr?hender le sens de mots et de concepts qui sont rentr?s dans notre vocabulaire quotidien tels que : "blogosph?re", "cybers?curit?", "fracture num?rique", "Hadopi", "haut d?bit", "neutralit? d'Internet" ou bien encore "Acta".

Trevor Baylis, who invented the wind-up radio, said children are losing creativity and practical skills because they spend too much time in front of screens.

'They are dependent on Google searches. A lot of kids will become fairly brain-dead if they become so dependent on the internet, because they will not be able to do things the old-fashioned way.'

Recalling how his career had its roots in the very different world in which he grew up, he said he was? about five or six years old when he began to invent devices. 'During the war, when I was not at school

Read more:?http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2253170/Inventor-warns-Google-generation-spend-life-screens-losing-creativity-skills.html#ixzz2GAO7nfS9?;
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No matter how many documents you write, how many years you spend practicing, improving your craft, you can always make yourself a better writer.

Remember binders full of women? How about redneckognize? Check out the new phrases, words and terms that became a part of our collective vocabulary in 2012.

Translation Contest to Honor Abraham Sutzkever

Summer Literary Seminars?has announced itsAbraham Sutzkever Translation Prize,?marking the centennial of the birth of one of the most acclaimed Yiddish poets of the 20th century.

?To me, he is the leading Yiddish poet, the epitome of Yiddish literature in the 20th century,? Mikhail Iossel said of Sutzkever. Iossel, a Soviet ?migr? and associate professor of English and Creative Writing at Concordia University in Montreal, is the founder and director of the literary, creative writing and historical workshops that have taken place in St. Petersburg, Montreal, Nairobi and Vilnius. The Sutzkever Prize is associated with the?SLS Lithuania?program for summer 2013.

The new prize is being added to a lineup of already existing ones that are given through theSLS Unified Literary Contest,?awarding winners with tuition, stipends and publication assurances. The winner of the Sutzkever Prize will receive tuition to SLS Lithuania plus $500 toward travel expenses. In addition, the winning entry will be translated into Lithuanian, and read at a celebration in Vilnius on the centennial, on July 15, 2013. The deadline for submissions is February 28, 2013.

1?Le matin.Ma m?re me disait souvent ? Il faut te lever t?t parce que le matin, l?intelligence nous fait cr?dit ?. Elle me...
Ask Scott Livingston to tell you about himself, and he will tell you about writing. That seems to be what he is about, and he's the new teacher of the writing class sponsored by the American Fork Arts Council.
wasafiri

A series of seminars organized by the OU?s Contemporary Cultures of Writing Research Group in collaboration with the Institute of English Studies, UL.

In the context of a Research Group (http://www.open.ac.uk/Arts/contemporary-cultures-of-writing/events.shtml) whose focus is on the cultures shaping contemporary modes of writing, this seminar series will look at the kinds of creativity involved in writing and translation with a view to highlighting the re-versioning and re-visioning at the heart of creative and literary endeavour. It will also seek to interrogate notions of translation both literal and metaphorical and to reflect on the challenges posed by multilingual writing and self-translation for both Creative Writing and Translation Studies.?
Google Apps was long seen as too lightweight to be a competitor to Microsoft Office.

For years,?Microsoft Office?was widely considered to be the way for businesses to get "serious" work done.?Google Apps, the cloud-based office suite, wasn't generally thought of as being stable or full-featured enough for company use. But as Google Apps has matured, more and more companies have noticed -- and in 2012?Microsoft?found its core business base eroding as offices jumped ship to?Google.

Google makes huge gains in smartphone market, but use of search-free apps spells bad news for firm
Top Google searches in 2012 reflected an eclectic year in politics as Americans turned to their keyboards to query the lighter side of the news, such as presidential candidates? gaffes, and the serious, including policy issues like SOPA.
Mackintosh?s musical lacks stylish cohesion in its big-screen translation.
2012 was a big year for enterprise software, as companies began to more readily adopt technology to more effectively communicate and?collaborate.

Star du PSG et du championnat de France, Zlatan Ibrahimovic a vu sa popularit? sortir de la stricte limite des terrains de foot pour entrer dans le langage courant. Le verbe ?zlataner? est de plus en plus utilis? pour signifier qu?on a battu quelqu?un ? plate couture, qu?on l?a ridiculis?. Le joueur se dit plut?t fier si un jour le mot venait ? rejoindre le dictionnaire.

??
Taipei, Dec. 26 (CNA) "Linsanity," a phenomenon describing Taiwanese-American NBA player Jeremy Lin's sudden rise to stardom, has been chosen in a recent poll as the English word of the year in Taiwan.

Eugenia Loffredo and Manuela Perteghella, who both have connections to the university where I work (the University of East Anglia), have started a new blog on translation.This is how they describe it:...

The digital technologies, virtual learning / instruction, as well as the change in translator work patterns had an impact on translator training at university level. The need to rethink the pedagogical approaches as well as the type ...

Full Title: Verbum?

Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Lexicography; Morphology; Psycholinguistics

Call Deadline: 30-Jan-2013?

Neoclassical Compounding

Special issue of the Verbum journal

Guest Editors: St?phanie Lignon and Fiammetta Namer

Among all the available morphological processes for lexical creation in languages, the neoclassical compounding involves specific models. Compounding is a constructional process during which at least two base lexemes are combined in order to construct a new lexeme (tea bag). Two types of compounding may be distinguished: standard compounding (also called popular) on the one hand which involves the modern vocabulary (porte-bagage), and neoclassical compounding on the other hand which involves lexemes borrowed from ancient languages, often Greek and Latin (anthropophage).

Raymond Li has?an article in the?South China Morning Post?(Friday, 21 December, 2012) in which he announces the results of a poll by the Education Ministry that has selected m?ng ? ("dream") as the character of the year, ostensibly because it represents the hopes and achievements of the nation.? But m?ng ? ("dream") is definitely a double-edged sword, and critics of the government put a totally different spin on the word.

I AM 84 years of age and I wish to say something which may or may not be of interest to the public and users of the English language worldwide.
The Translation and Interpreting Institute (TII) of Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU) and Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing ...

Source: http://www.scoop.it/t/translation-world/p/3854083885/translation-creativity-and-creative-writing

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