Foreign Correspondents' Club, Hong Kong
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'"Cot*;p ondent Our Cover
Arthur Hacker is one of those classic Brits, a genuinely loveable eccentric, and one would be hard-
President
Bert Okuley
pressed
to find a Member of
the
FCC who doesn't wish him great success in sales and distribution of Hacker's Hong Kong. W¡th deft curlicues the man with the muttonchops, nasal drawl, rich belly-laugh
Fitst Vice President Jack Worth Second Vice hesident Martin Bishop
and frequently outrageous sartorial
-- to say nothing of countless friends and admirers -has captured at least one man's
Treasurer Martin Bishop
splendor
Secretary
of Hong Kong. Up with Hacker! PHOTO BY VAN ES.
essence
Ken Kashiwahara
&.É"
Editor Don Ronk Photographer Hugh Van Es Advertising Nida C¡anbourne
LE@W
y't/rr,,,'r.' Sole Aænts: FRENCH FASHIONS LTD., Hong Kons.
Cables: CORCLUB HONG KONG. Address all correspondence to: Editor, Foreign Correspondents' Ciub õf
When Arthur Hacker decided three years ago to commit his impressions of Hong Kong to posterity,
his f irst editorial discussions
revolved around the usual coffee
table photo book. But there was one critical problem with photo-
graphs. "You can't achieve cariacature with them," he says.
"You can't just stick the Duke of Edinburgh into a sampan in front of the Connaught Center, for example, without having to go through an awful amount of red tape." And possibly an earful of the Duke's celebrated wit?
ñ DI¡EE
DIil ¡Ult
ufiIl
ilñeñEa by Derel tlaltload Besides, photography is just not
Arthur Hacker's cup of tea. This singularly flamboyant man, with his fiery mutton-chop whiskers, his
polished Oxford growl and a bellylaugh that has yet to be tested on wineglasses at 40 feet, actually comes from a long line of artists and writers. His great grandfather
was a distinguished lino-engraver; his great uncle was an artist of Royal Academy standing; his grandmother was a poet and novelist, his mother a well-known poet and his
sister, Carlotta, is a novelist currently residing in Canada. So it was inevitable that Hacker himself should begin drawing and painting at the age of four, graduate later to the graphic design school of London's Royal College of Art and, when the question of that book was finally resolved, adapt his
drawing skills
to a
cariacatures aimed
series of at what he sees
,6,
?
as the essence of life in Hong Kong -"A "pop" art city of signs and little dahlings ..."
in
There are plenty of l¡ttle dahlings
Hacker's Hong Kong, most of
them portraying what he
calls "young Chinese with teeny-bopPer masks
on."
But he draws the line, so to
speak, at accusing the Hong Kong
younger generation
Western fashions.
of
aPeing
"The incongruity of Hong Kong is that there are more tour¡sts wearing cheong-vms than there are
Chinese. And besides, I don't
regard Western fashion as Western fashion any more. There are too
many Eastern influences. l'd
saY
that we're currently living in the era
of the distinctive Hông Kong fashion - denim and ieans. A whole denim lifestyle has developed around an enormous PublicitY campaign and
the great bulk of
cheap, 'seconds'
on the market."
Just as Hacker's own fashion is - who else dared introduce the subtle collision of green and purple shirts, jeans, Norfolk
distinctive
leather jackets and blue-tinted hexagonal spectacles into the
greyish conf ines of Government and the FCC? - so too is his artwork. With soaring whorls and an intricate spiderwork of patterned lines, his sketches put a rather bewildered
ancient civilization alongside the
Ë
of the British Lion's roar and it all up in a disco dim sum. He admits the style is different to
{
anything he's done before.
echo
wrap )
{ .J
¡
"Hong Kong is enormously decorative, and l've tried to show the sweetside really," he says. "lt's the energy of the place that attracts me - something is happening all the time. I'm not interested in the ugly side of Hong Kong. I wouldn't
present a drawing of someone smoking an opium p¡pe, example. I don't particularly want
to shock anyone. I went through that stage as a student."
One particular sketch in Hacker's Hong Kong - the kids flying kites sums up, I think. the tender pro-
fessionalism
and accuracy
major takeoff
"though what we'll
I don't -know: The mind boggles" - and it's going to take a boom like to break the hide-
see
that bound traditions and general lack of originality in Chinese art.
OFFICE DESIGN
to meet yout budget
with
which he approached his work.
"l sketched and re-sketched that piece about four or five times and still wasn't happy with it," he says. "The children just weren't right.
If you're moving your office, or refurnishing, call Avant Garde. If your office is a new one, we1l discuss your needs, and layout and plan the design, carpeting, furnishing, lighting, airconditioning and everything else. . . bette¡ than
They were slim and gangly and their positions just didn't fit into the sort of composition that I was trying to get. Finally, I had to ask myself what the traditional image of a Chinese child really is. And then lhad it - little roly-poly people bundled up in the chill winds. And I think the final
anyone else in town.
If you're refurnishing, our trained designers will gíve you on-the-spot suggestions on colours, wall-papering and furnishing. And we'll do our utmost to meet your budget. Call or write for more information.
impression works."
Hacker is now waiting for that impression
to go through the
in-
evitable copying machine of Hong Kong's art-media world. He says the visual arts in Hong Kong are currently on the threshhold of a
llleny
Fa¡ East Exchange Bldg, Cenfral.
5-260tM-7
Repulse Bay
I mas
old favorite. Then there's my own particular case: I remember setting Francis Yíp on a rock on the Peak for a series of pictures for the Hong Kong Yearbook. The next year she came back and had all her publicity photos taken in exactly the same position on the same rock."
ê llappy [kw lea¡ to thc F,C,C.
Rta0¿ê7r0
Arthur Hacker has a couple more book projects in hand - at least one of them in a similar style to Hacker's Hong Kong. His dalliance with private creative work has come at the best possible time - apart from Government lnformation work, he'd done no drawing or painting "or anything really" in the five years, five days, one breakfast and the luncheon of onion soup
Ristorante ltaliano 1+16 Fenwick St. Hong Kong
"lt's not just the
Chinese artists,"
he says, "Years ago,
Frank Fischbeck took the famous picture of the cricketers playing against the
this coupon for one free drink at the RIGOLETTO valid until 3111177 Save
Hotel, 5-923114
backdrop of the Bank of China. Since then, literally everyone has taken the same picture, We've even been forced to move the Cricket Club.
"The junk or sampan in front of
the Connaught Center is another
and deep-fried scallops that marked a belated anniversary of sorts when this interview took place. Hacker enthusiasts can now rest assured that just as he captured the
of Hong Kong in his first book, so Hong Kong has ensnared
essence
him. "l
can't think of anywhere
else to go," he says. "l work in a specialist field that can only, be
found in big cities. And as a city, Hong Kong takes a lot of beating."
5
fir061ilØAîI The FCC swings into action for the festive season with special year-
end menus featuring all the with baked ham, roast goose,
traditional goodies ... roast turkey Christmas pudding, etc., at the low,
olV0oIoEü
dogs, sweets and jellies. A special vote of thanks to all of "Santa's Helpers" the mothers and fathers who stayed at the party . . . . . or at least ventured upstairs from the l4th
lf you haven't booked for this year's FCC's famous New Year's Eve thrash, you had better hop to
and Carol Sínger Kenelm
open all
low FCC prices, and special prices floor bar occasionally . . . . . to for children. (Could anyone beat lend a hand; and MC Barry Kalb our Thanksgiving special for guality,
quantity and price? No wayl)
On New Year's Eve all
will be further reduced to cost price. lf you don't believe
us, come and compare our special
The 4-course dinner
with
HK$20. lf for
some
additional
with the published ones on the wine list, or go to your local prices
strange reason you've made plans
that do not include the FCC, stop in on the way home. The FCC will,
grog shop and price some champers.
of course, be jumping.
It is hard to beat the FCC at the year-end. Call Liz or Grace for
-
WINGS discotheque and all for the night will be at cost price -- that is even cheaper than the traditional year'
dancing till you drop is only $75 per head and if you're in shape for a champagne and steak breakfast during the wee hours, it is onlY an
champagne
reservations
by
end champagne specials.
from last year, don't you?l begin December 18 and last through
2.
As you'd expect, the Club ¡s night. Music is provided
champers on sale
The traditional champagne and champagne cockta¡l specials .(you do remember those black velvets January
We've only seating for 180 people for dinner and it is on a first come, first served basis.
it.
5-237734.
The organized chaos of the FCC's traditional C hÍldren's
Chrístmas Pafi swelled to a crescendo as Santa (played lovingly bV Jim Robínson) arrived vía the l Sth floor office. The kiddíes, all l2O of them .
Jim" to receíve theír surprise gifts -
. . . . . swarmed over "U ncle
pet turtles. A smashing success was the way one parcnt, ensconced at
the l4th floor bar of refuge, described the day, and his thoughts were echoed by squalls and screams for three
long hours.
Many thanks to N¡ki Ellis, (Chaírperson of the Kiddíes' Christmas Party)Penny Hayes & Katie Macdonald, who spent the better patt of two weeks planníng the party, buyíng the necessitíes and then decorating
Creíghton, both
of whom
have
been híred now by an inter-
national organization interested
ín stagíng Christmas parties . . . .
the Club. Gordon, Danny and the
. patterned after the FCC's own
somehow managed the
countries.
rest
of the stalwart waiters successes ..invarious
ímpossíble task of feeding a full house for a Saturday lunch and then re-doing the l4th floor to
accommodate two sittíngs of children, who successfully stuffed themselves wíth hot 6
The last round of applause should go to our own 'Auntíe Lí2," who managed to survive her îth Children's Party, wíth only slíght damage to body and reputation.
There was something about last year's Santa and all those glasses he had spread around in front of him in preparing for the onslaught. Yes,
it
was Derek the Zealand Kid.
The AÉ of Gommunication .Hong Kong has been in the communication bus¡ness for over a hundred years. The art òf precÍse communicarion is a Chinese traditlon that has rcsulted
in over 10.000 Chinese written chàracters. Today, che street sign is still a communicetions arr. Large metallic fìsh, over.sized fìre-cracke¡¡ and ancient symbols that echo the past, harmonise wlth a modern business communitl that communicates with the rest of the world through Cable ¡nd W¡reless.
Multi-natlonal companies use telephone, telegraph,
telex, leased circuits and television to keep ín concac! with the¡r internâr¡onal ofrìcesThe most distant ofice is now only a telephone number away. Efücient (ommunication has made Hong Kong one of the world's largest ôusiness centres and nucleus of the East. The Cable and Wireless Group of Companies know effrcient communics(ion means emcient business, that's what Cable and Wlreless is ¿ll abor¡t.
CABLE&
WIRELESS
Total Telecommun ication
ti"inglegerrds Meet the Europeans on their own ground. Visit their palaces. Watch their parades. Here is a splendour founded on a past. And there's no time like the present. To go there with Thai. Wing your way from Hong Kong to seven capital cities of Europe. Experience the smiling RoyalOrchid Service of Thai. The legendary way to fly.
BeautifulThai €r"m**..r,D 8-B De6 Væux Rosd, CentÌal, Hons Kons Tel: 5.242143, 5-257051 Pen¡nÊula Hobl East Arcade Tel:3€6?018
VietNam
Christmas
was a time
of quiet
by Paul Aogh
Paul Vogle was perhaps
the
American jou rnal ist longest resident in South Viet Nam, finally and
out with the change in governments. He is now reluctantly coming
based in Banglak and currently is acting Bureau Manager for UPI while Alan Dawson is on home leave. Paul shares with those of us who knew Saigon and Viet Nam's Christmas' what it was like on the evenings of December 24 and during December 25, any year during the 60s and early 70s.
The
Cathedral square
was
jammed, but somehow people were
to fall into the hole where someone had stolen the marker commemorating John F. careful not Kennedy.
Beverly Deepe, then of the New York Hearald Tribune, remarked that superstitious people were concerned that the cross atop one of the Oueen of Peace Cathedral steeples had fallen down during
a
thunderstorn shortly after the removal of the Kennedy marker. And the clock in the ghastly yellow PTT building had stopped.
Yet, my girlfriend, a Buddhist, I take her to midnight
insisted mass.
The big problem of the night
was getting to and
from
the cathedral; it took time. Never in the history of Saigon were the
city's streets ever jammed as they were Christmas eve of 1965 and every year. True, most Vietnamese are (were?) Buddhists, but far be it from them to let a minor item like a different religion get in the
*.V . . . .afrd.
nowthe goodflØws:
-oJ
an excuse for a holiday.
The AP, UPI and Reuters offices
kept one lone man aboard, the theory being that a story that couldn't be covered by telephone simply couldn't be covered on Christmas eve.
It wasn't the American build-up that emphasízed Christmas, but a holdover trad¡tion from French colonial times which the succeeding Vietnamese regimes kept marking on official calendars as a national holiday. Since it was a holiday, the Vietnamese felt free to celebrate (l never heard of as many "Buche Noel" parties back in Detroit as I did in Saigon) yet had none of the
restraints imposed by fat, wh¡ch drained purses and, after firecrackers
TRIONÆPH[]Ð
were outlawed, bound people for three days to soul-restricting family rituals.
The rich had their Christmas the curious went to Catholic midnight mass. But everybody -- contractors for Americans, cyclo drivers and part¡es and
Red and white wine from Bordeaux that you'd expect to pay much more for. Available ñow, at
leading supermarkets and stores.
pickpockets
--
could enjoy getting
lost in the downtown crowds that surged like a cyclonic sea. They mostly ¡ust chattered and giggled at each other, looked at the window
displays
if they
could get
close
enough, and stopped somewhere for a bowl of soup, a xa si or a dish of ice cream. Bars stayed open
for Americans
and other foreigners, but the girls
who worked in them either
had
their boy friends buy them out for the evening to join the crowd, or sneaked out on the patently gossamer excuse of "family problems" a healthy two or three
hours before closing time. Then the mamasans sat around getting drunk with nostalgically inebriated customers,
That's all. Christmas,
and
particularly Christmas Eve, was the
most carefree holiday of the year
for the denizens of Saigon, brief though it was. Unencumbered by the restraints of family social calls, mandatory appearances at Government rallies or gift-swapping, the Saigonnaise were free to selfishly
H.RUTTONJEE & SON, LTD. The House of Fine Vintage Wines and Ouality Spirits
indulge themselves
at
Christmas
by doing whatever they damned well pleased.
Precious those days were in war now.
time. They're gone forever
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Melinda Blair
--
daughter of Board Member Jim
turned out one of the nicest gifts imaginable during her stay in Hong Kong earlier this year. Melinda is a professional artist in Florida and produced a magnificent art diary-calendar, available
Miller
--
in most better book stores.
HONG I(ONG 1E77 AYumGlr,øtdpiublc
You've been meeting with Yum for some time now in the pages of the Sunday Standard -
Char
now meet him through his
tr¡vo
latest contributions to the Colony's
literature, available
in
most book-
stores. Yum Char (alias Club Member Dean Barrett) brings a bit
of wit to
bear where
it
hopefully
will help most. His earlierJosást¡'bks effort was well received and Harry Rolnick says this one's even funnier. 11
fififi:r.:f:ll:ll:
1776
-
ErtBo-klee ouf-strips Anklebiter indeathbid
1976
Serving the Nation 200 Years!
for
THE FORTS OF PHILADELPHIA have
olaved
a
crucial role
in
the
politicat & economic develoPment of Ametica since the Declaration
of Independence.
And are still doing so, because SERVICE is still our sPecialitY! Ship through the Ports of
PHILADELPHIA CAMDEN WILMINGTON DELAWARE RIVER PORT
AUTHORITY
Hong Kong, Mon: FCCPresident
and partY strongman, Ert Bo-klee'
last night narrowly escaped death in
an
assassination attempt
bY
a
screaming, knife-wielding six-yearold infant fanatic. The shock attack occurred at the
of a gala evening in which PreiÂĄdent Ert donned a white beard and Santa Claus outfit to PlaY host at a mammoth children's Christmas
height
party in the towering Club Street
citadel.
The attemPted slaYing caught
most of the estimated 3,000 wildlY applauding parents and infant guests completelY bY surPrise. ManY of
them watched stunned
522,
to
helPlesslY, too
move, as the would-be
killer ripped
his festive Snoopy-the-
Red-Baron mask
the aging
off and leaPt
at
President screaming, "AnklebitĂŁrs of the World Unite!" His weapon, a deadlY six-inch plastic Boy Scout knife
74512 Aport HX
-
presented
to him onlY seconds earlier bY the iron-fisted El SuPremo - missed the president's throat bY inches'
Horrif
ied bodyguards, led
bY
Wing Commander Keet "Smiler" Jak-son, grabbed the boY and hauled him away before he could strike again. The violent murder bid shattered
what had been a gaY, emotion' charged celebration, at which the grizzled former peasant freedom fighter was making his first public appearance since ruthlessly crushing
dissident elements
in
last month's
bitter "Redneck" wallposter war' From the moment President Ert
stumbled heavily, with a "Ho goddam Ho Ho" out of the elevator - toting a huge sack of gifts and clutching his familiar phial
of amber-colored liver tonic - it was clear that he had come to the opulent 14th floor Great Banquet
Hall to indulge his favorite passion, looking after the kids.
"Your children are not Your children," he told the assembled masses, quoting from the works of the famous Lebanese Poet, Khalil
assassination and declared: "Behind
Gibran. "They are little humans. Some of them are a little less human than others, that's all. I was
It
was as the great ruler chatted and joked with his next guest, six-
year-old Anklebiter's Union Secretary and Political cadre, Dun-Can, Gil-Kee that the merry festival al most ended in tragedY. President Ert had just told the boy:
a child once. Ask Jack, he knows."
Amid a crescendo of cheers and infant screams, the great dictator performed the opening ceremony by pushing a button which blew out all the gaily colored bulbs on a 25-foot Christmas tree. As firemen fought the blaze the president chatted with the children and handed out gifts, helped by foreign affairs lieutenant, Nik "Blue-chips''
"No, I don't think
Santa Claus has any AK-47 assault carbines or three-point-f ive mil limeter anti-tank weapons in his bag ... But how about a nice Boy Scout knife ...?"
Oui-ng, who had just returned from a goodwill visit to the Phยกlippines.
biter's Union.
At the same time, the South
China Morning Post received
"Kids ... Ain't they cute?" the
an
anonymous telePhone call from the
President laughed hoarsely, gently smoothing down the giggling child's mini-skirt as he eased her from his
Anklebiter's Revolutionary Army in which the group claimed full responsibility for the attempted
lap.
freedom fighters will
the
emancipation
struggle
of all
for
adults within the FCC."
While FCC propogandists
Suite 823 Star House
Kowloon
have
clamped a top-security information blackout on the assassination bid and the Club Street manhunt,
_ HOME LEAVE _ HOLIDAY
the anklebiters have been under veiled threats
of
detention
and
deportation culminated two months ago in a Presidential Decree declaring a State of Emergency and an FCCwide seven o'clock curfew.
"President Ert has decided that
the anklebiters constยกtute a grave new threat to the internal peace and security of the FCC," one informed source commented. "But peace means nothing to these ki ... er, developing adults. The Great Helmsman could be facing a long hard winter of discontent."
-
PERSONAL FOR ALL YOUR TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS CONTACT
BUSINESS
full
developing
strong pressure from Ert Bo-klee's regime in recent months. Thinly
Division, a mercenary army formed
wide-eyed little mite tugged playfully at his beard and whispered in his ear.
continue
loved helmsman.
to protect the President, had sealed off the elevators to the FCC 14th and 1Sth floors and launched a massive hunt for leaders and sympathizers of the outlawed Ankle'
his knee. "Uh, Nik. You got a minute?" he ioked gruffly as the
stick. Our
seasoned FCC-watchers note that
troops
year-old, jiggling her paternally on
Bo-klee's fatherly smile there of a man who can't stand kids or puppies. He who hands out candies also carries a big
that the young fanatic tore off his party mask and lunged at the be'
Within an hour of the attack of the crack 301st Yantze
"And what would you like for little girl7" the genial party boss asked one blushing, squirming, blonde-curled lยกttle 18' Christmas,
Ert
lies the face
Tel: K-694108(4lines)
@re^tELovE OPEN WEEKDAYS AND SATURDAYS 9 A.M. TO 5.30 P.M.
Cables: TRALOVE Telex: &4994 LOVE HX
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The Science Museum of Minnesota has announced of Lee Dilworth Dibble as director of pu'Uii" relations. She replaces Joan Ke.lly, who left a new post in Washington, õ thräe weeks ago to assume D. C. ç A native New Yorker, Ms Dibble has taken up residence here after many years abroad, in Europe, Mexico and Asia' She was a journalist and publicist
,;
the appointment
;
ã 3 o
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thepeoplewhoïrinkit. There is a common oPinion that all oins are the same. lt may be true of some. But not of Gordons. For the way we use juniper, coriander and other botanical ingredients in ourdistilling recipe, makes subtle differences to the taste of our gin' The actual details are of course a secret. But the results are not. Gordon's is ttre best selling gin in the world. Need we saY more?
"
GORDOÌ.{3 The in drink for generations
@trlc'trIvttELl.
r CLATìIDGC
Erich
HCUS€
¡
Suppliers oJ' Funtishittgs
says...
for
The question You must ask vourself is: should I trust mY áyes to someone who is not Anyone in Hong Kong - regardless of training or qualificaiion - can open an oPtical business, conduct eYe examinations,
fit
Office Club
Qo¡donllo
contact lenses
Schools
and eyeglasses.
Erich Schwaabe of OPtica Ltd. is a fullY qualified Pro' fessional oPtometrist. He gra-
Restaurants
M9
duated from the College of OPtometry in West Berlin and has been in practice in Hong Kong
for three years. At OPtica You are assured that a professional - qualitied in all aspects of eYecare - is determining your eyesight require-
thc
Home
qualified?
prescribe and
LrD
Awalded to Mr Gordon Ho, FGG Manager for helP
in arresting an
ments.
Hotels t2C SINCERE INSURANCE BU¡LDtI{G. 4.6, HENNESSY ROAD. HONC KOI{G. TEL: 5-278121-¡l CABLE: CLARIDGE
alleged
Ch¡ ¡¡¡þe' r)f CotÌl ¡ììcrce Goocl C i ti zerr Aw't t'c||-u nd
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Noticed
oerms in
less
Your Éanana split? Our staff has, under
prodding
Ì* *t ,n
*E 0f ¡Tlfnftt
EnT¡flcllt
L'N@EI
from
your House Committee, taken Part in a healthY food
class to
frEllñffi
imPress
upon them the need for cleanli'
frÊ
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,!
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tÉifirt
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rilr'*i.1¡*.
-,.,,..,.,^.4'-'-tI
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fi
ness.
ll'ANTED Ì1IANTED $'A}TÎED Erich Schwaabe of OPtica Ltd. Wing Cheong House, lst floor I LiYuen Street West, Central
Tel:5-256937
..DOWN THE LANE
IN CENTRAL''
you did. Reservations gladly at the
office.
given
ls
FOR LUNCH MEET THE BUNCH FOR LUNCH
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THE TASTE OF AMERICA
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Special Dinner Offerto F.C.C.
zÐ
Members: FREE Bottle of wine
ú,
during the months of
with dinner. Offer
J
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available January &
Kowloon:
locations:
Oueen's Road & Wyndham Street King's Theatre Building, lst Floor,
5-222271 57 Peking Road Tsim Sha Tsui
3-671683
February,1977.
Reservations accepted
l)
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Kong:
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UOI t{f,Nn8 3HI I13t4ü Hf,Nn'l
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