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50th Anniversary Pictures
August 6, 2010 Harbour View Turns 50 - Residents Say It Is A Model Community Published: Saturday | August 7, 2010 - Jamaica Gleaner
Awardees pose after receiving their awards. Back row from left are Irving Montague, Ken Jones, Rev Leslie Hoo Sang, (front row) Alma Mock Yen, Marcella Vassell and Lloyd Sam Richards at the Harbour View Citizens' Association Independence flag-raising and awards ceremony to mark the 50th anniversary of the community at the Harbour View Primary School yesterday. - Rudolph Brown/Photographer
THE
CONVENOR of Jamaica's newest political party has urged communities across the island to
copy Harbour View.
Not about
self-pride Blaine told Harbour View residents that they should always remember that their role is "not about self-pride, it is about setting examples". Established two years before Jamaica's Independence in 1962, Harbour View's citizens say that they have positioned themselves as a model community. The community has a vibrant citizens' association, an enviable low crime rate, and youth and football associations. The community was the first in Jamaica to have a community paper. Its residents also claim that the community was the first to host street dances. The Harbour View Citizens' Association used yesterday's holiday to honour outstanding community members and former residents. Those honoured were Lloyd Richards, Marcella Vassell, the Reverend Leslie Hoo Sang, Ken Jones, Alma Mock Yen and Irving Montague. Bio-Data Honorees
Veteran teacher, Mercella Vassell, is one of the early residents of
Harbour View, having settled in this community with her young family in 1960.
She joined the staff of the Harbour View Primary School in 1970, and over the
next decade, she was instrumental in laying a sound educational foundation for
the many young children who came under her charge. Fondly called Miss
Sweetness by her colleagues, Mrs. Vassell rose to the rank of Acting
Principal. Today, we proudly recognize your tireless efforts, Mrs. Vassell, and we thank you for your role in nurturing the children of our community.
Mr. Ken Jones: Ken Jones was one of the many young, vibrant professionals among the residents of the newly-established community of Harbour View in the early 1960’s. He became the first President of the Citizens Association and, through his visionary and dynamic leadership, Harbour View set the pace for new communities and became a model for development and citizen involvement. Under Mr. Jones’ tenure, we organized such activities as a Miss Harbour View Beauty Contest, an Independence Parade and Street Dance which attracted citizens from all over the Corporate Area. The Harbour View Primary School which is hosting this 50th Anniversary function, and which, over the years, has accommodated several community events, was also built under his stewardship. Today, it stands as a monument to the work of Ken Jones and his team. Mr. Jones no longer lives in the Community, but his name is a household one for foundation residents. Ken Jones the citizens of Harbour View salute you for your pioneering work in our Community.
Mrs. Alma MockYen: Alma MockYen has made an outstanding contribution to the Performing Arts Movement in Jamaica, and, in particular, the Dance for which she has a deep passion. It was not surprising, therefore, when she established the Harbour View Dance Centre at her home in 1962 to teach children Classical, Modern and Caribbean techniques. During the Centre’s 10 years of existence, it won some 17 trophies and certificates in the annual Jamaica Festival Competition. Internationally-recognized dancers, Jackie Guy, now based in the United Kingdom, and L’Antoinette Stines, Artistic Director of L’Acadco, were among the students at the Dance Centre. Mrs. MockYen was later elected as a Councillor in the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation with responsibility for the Harbour View Division. She brought to this position her aesthetic values, which are reflected in the many community beautification projects which she initiated. “Look Out Park,” the remnants of which can still be seen at the South West entrance to Harbour Drive, is one of her creations. Alma MockYen still lives in Harbour View. As we celebrate this milestone anniversary, we recognize your contribution, Mrs. MockYen, in uplifting our community and its people.
Mr. Irvin Montague: Irvin Montague is one of the persons who were instrumental in the re-organization of the defunct Citizens Association. He it was who examined the existing Constitution and recommended necessary amendments. One could always rely on him to keep meetings on course, as he is a keen believer in protocol. He is a member of the Executive who represents the Association at meetings with Government officials and other stakeholders and he is very articulate in defending the interests of our Community. His 40th Anniversary Vision Statement for Harbour View as part of an integrated plan, which incorporates environmental development and preservation of the cultural heritage, is still very relevant today, and is well known at the highest Government level. The Association’s Annual Awards Function also owes much to him as he served as Co-ordinator for the event from as far back as 2002. Irvin Montague, we salute your continued contribution as an active member of the Executive of the Harbour View Citizens Association.
Mr. Lloyd Sam Richards: Widely known as “Uncle Sam,” Lloyd Sam Richards is a man for all seasons, a community activist who prefers to work behind the scenes, but who is most articulate when the occasion arises. He is remembered, among other things, for the role he played in galvanizing an action committee when residents of Harbour View were faced with ethanol pollution in our water system. His strong and consistent advocacy gained immediate attention and positive action from the relevant authorities. More recently, when the residents of Caribbean Terrace were devastated by the onslaught of Hurricane Ivan, Sam Richard’s voice was most strident in drawing attention to their plight. He is the longest serving Chairman of the Donald Quarrie High School and, over the years, teachers as well as Principals, have welcomed his wise counsel and expertise in this role.
Mr. Richards is a caring, individual and a
father figure in our community. A friend of the youths and a confidant to many
other persons. To him there is always some good in the worst of us; and he is
prepared to make the effort to build on even the slightest good, however
difficult this task may be. Rev. Leslie Hoo Sang: The Rev. Leslie Hoo Sang has been Rector of the St. Boniface Anglican Church for over 30 Years, but his impact on the community stretches far beyond the walls of the Church. He is a committed parish Priest who identifies with any one in need, and who has a deep and real concern for the welfare of others, especially the youth. His caring and practical support in times of illness or death is incomparable. Father Hoo Sang ministers to persons in Harbour View, Caribbean Terrace, Bayshore Park, Melbrook Farm, Port Royal, Bull Bay and other parts of the city, regardless of their religious beliefs. Members of our community will always remember how he led the recovery programme following the destruction resulting from Hurricane Gilbert in 1988. The passion for community and human development which motivate his efforts in building God’s Kingdom in this part of the vineyard has also inspired his leadership of the Ministers’ Fraternal, which includes the heads of churches in Harbour View, Port Royal and Bull Bay. A stickler for details and correctness, Father Hoo Sang is sometimes feared because of his outspoken manner, but he is widely respected and his opinion is always valued. Rev. Leslie Hoo Sang the community of Harbour View salutes you for your tireless work and witness among us.
GUEST SPEAKER HARBOUR VIEW CITIZENS ASSOCIATION 50TH ANNIVERSARY AWARDS CEREMONY HARBOUR VIEW PRIMARY SCHOOL
FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 2010
Good morning. It is my special pleasure and duty to introduce our Guest Speaker for this 50th Anniversary Awards Ceremony, Mrs. Betty Ann Blaine, who I proudly claim as one of our own. You see, Mrs. Blaine lived in Harbour View for a while, during her teens… and it is significant that she has come back to her roots, as we celebrate our special milestone. Over the past 30 years, Mrs. Blaine has emerged as a leading spokesperson and activist for the welfare of Jamaican children and youth, as well as their families. She is, perhaps, best known for her work as Co-Founder and Executive Director of Hear the Children Cry – a national organization that is dedicated to leading and developing policies and programmes for this target group. One of the initiatives currently being spearheaded by this organization is the Prevent-A-Drop-Out Programme. Recognizing the link between education and social mobility, this programme seeks to provide a supportive environment for children who are most at-risk for dropping out of school. It is designed specifically for 14-15 year-old students attending inner-city schools, and it provides remedial education, mentoring, counseling, career guidance and life skills training. Another brainchild of Mrs. Blaine is Youth Opportunities Unlimited or Y.O.U., which she established in 1991 as the first fully-structured Mentoring Programme in Jamaica. Catering especially for inner-city children, Y.O.U. presently serves more than 1,000 mentor/mentee pairs matched. Thousands of other adolescents benefit from a network of related support programmes managed by the organization, which has gained the support of several major international donor agencies. In 2006, this tireless campaigner for marginalized youth also managed a special one-year education project for young men between the ages of 15 and 25 in the volatile Grant’s Pen community in St. Andrew. This experience led her to publish a handbook for Policy makers and project workers, entitled “How to Work with Unattached Males in Volatile Inner-City Communities.” Mrs. Blaine is a member of several national organizations including the National Council on Education, the Council of Voluntary Social Services, (CVSS), the Coalition on the Rights of the Child, the National Task Force on Child Safety and People’s Action for Community Transformation (PACT). More recently, she has given expression to a wide range of community/national concerns as host of the morning talk show “On The Agenda” broadcast on Nationwide News Network and through her weekly “Heart to Heart” column in the Jamaica Observer newspaper. Earlier this week, Mrs. Blaine took another step into the public domain when she launched Jamaica’s third political party, The New Nation Coalition, for which she is the Convenor. Betty Ann Blaine, who holds a Master of Arts Degree from Columbia University in New York, is also a graduate of Hunter College, Medgar Evers College and New York University. A member of Swallowfield Chapel, in Kingston, she is a much sought-after motivational speaker. As the Harbour View community looks back on its 50 years of existence and charts its future course, I am certain that our Guest Speaker will have much to tell us. I, therefore, ask you to join me in welcoming Mrs. Betty Ann Blaine to the podium.
I REMEMBER WHEN....; GROWING UP IN HARBOUR VIEW IN THE 60s AND 70s HARBOUR VIEW 50th ANNIVERSARY SERVICE ST. BENEDICT ON THE MOOR CATHOLIC CHURCH February 7th, 2010 by: Professor Maureen Samms-Vaughan Monsignor Richards; Other Ministers of Religion serving the Harbour View Community; Member of Parliament, Mr. Joseph Hibbert; Councillor Oliver Clue, Mrs. Beryl Urquhart, Chair of the Harbour View Citizens Association; other distinguished guests in the congregation, past and present residents of Harbour View, well-wishers and children, I first wish to thank the organisers for the opportunity to celebrate with you by participating in this 50th Anniversary Service. My childhood and early adult years spent in Harbour View were years filled with many happy memories. Too few children have the experience today of growing up in a real community. I did!! A community is typically defined as a group of people forming a smaller social unit within a larger one, who share common interests, such as work, identity and location. Harbour View was this and more. I propose to share with those of you today who are recent residents of Harbour View what it was like growing up here in the 60's and 70's and jog the memories of those seated amongst us with whom I grew up. I moved with my family to Harbour View in 1961, when I was just a few years old, and I don't propose to give you any more information on my age. Our family, typical of many Harbour View families, included my parents and my siblings, my three older brothers and my older sister. We moved to Lot 981 on Windy Way; there were no street numbers yet. For us as children, moving into a new home was exciting, but for our parents this move meant much more. Like most adults moving into this new community, our parents were first time home owners, many of whom were mid-level civil servants or at similar occupational levels, persons who had toiled hard to make a living. They spoke of the pride of having taken the big step to own their own home. This big step, however, had many smaller preceding steps. Our parents would have heard about this new housing scheme being developed by West Indies Home Contractors in 1959, looked at the floor plans published in the Gleaner, viewed the model house established on Mars Drive in 1960 and found it to their liking, reviewed their finances and ensured they could make the down-payment and visited the office with the map of lots on Harbour Street from where they would have chosen their lot from the over 1,834 2 and 3 bedroom houses built. The older children, like my sister would have had some participation in this process too. In particular, they would have looked over the shoulders of their parents as they perused the floor plan in the Gleaner, secretly and sometimes loudly identifying their rooms. At Harbour Street our parents were advised that the construction of Harbour View was unique in many ways. It was the first time that a project of this magnitude was being undertaken by West Indies Home Contractors. Mona Heights, the largest previous project had only 720 houses built. The method of construction, with pre-cast concrete walls and pre-fabricated walls, roofs and partitions was another first in Jamaica. This meant that houses could be constructed at an amazing rate of 6 homes a day. So important was this development that it was featured in the Miami News newspaper of July 17, 1960. The price of the houses was quoted in this article as US $6,000.00. How many of you would wish you could purchase a house for that amount now!! When the first settlers moved in, there were roads, but no fences or trees. There were open lots also, but little else. Through the eyes of children, we watched and participated in the developments of the different aspects of the community, with little knowledge of the long term impact of these early days. With little knowledge that today we would be here celebrating the 50th anniversary of a community with awesome achievements. We watched the churches, the schools, the post office, the shopping and business centres and sporting and leisure hubs develop. With each new development the excitement of the children grew and the pride of the homeowners, our parents swelled. They had made the right choice for their investment. But there was an even bigger picture than the excitement of the children and the pride of the parents. Together we were establishing a new community!! How did we as children spend those early days? The School Week Like most other children, school dominated most of our week. The Harbour View Primary School and St. Benedicts Primary School were the main primary schools attended by children. The Harbour View Primary School also served as the community centre, as this was where most community meetings were held. A few children ventured out of the community but mainly to nearby primary or preparatory schools, including St George's Girl School, Holy Rosary and Vaz Preparatory schools. There was no secondary school in this early community. We all travelled out for high school, mainly to nearby schools: Excelsior, Camperdown, Kingston College, St. George' s College, Alpha Girls School, Wolmer's Girls and Boys, St. Hugh's High School. Unlike many children who get picked up from school by their parents these days, we took the bus home. Regardless of the High Schools we went to, we all ended up on the buses to Harbour View in the evenings: the 2A which stopped on one side of Harbour View, the 2 which went "over the river" and the 24 which went to the airport through Harbour View. The X21 to Bull Bay was also an option for us sometimes, but it really wasn't our bus like the others, it had other people on it!!!. We gathered at various points to get on these buses, downtown Kingston, the intersection of South Camp Road and East Queen Street or the beginning of Mountain View Avenue. It didn't matter where we got on, once these buses passed Rockfort, everyone on the bus was Harbour-View bound. We felt we owned these buses and the bus drivers humored us. They looked out for us, waited for us at bus stops to make sure we weren't late for school or late getting home. They scolded us if we misbehaved on the buses. They were like our parents, except a little more lenient and we loved and respected them. We sometimes walked to the Rockfort bus-stop, sometimes because we had unwisely spent our base-fare, or because we knew we could save the three pence for the 2 fare stage from Rockfort to Harbour View. There, we simply waited on the first car we knew was Harbour View bound. Residents who owned cars would slow down as they passed the Rockfort bus stop to look out for children from Harbour View. When they stopped we piled into the cars and were safely taken to our community. One of the few activities we were allowed during the week was to visit the Jamaica Library Service Bus, which parked on the open lot by Aqua Avenue. We took our books and exchanged them, each week getting new ones, until the Library Service opened a branch in the Shopping Centre some years later. Entertainment After the school week, our weekends were meant for fun and play and going to church. We had simple pleasures then. There was no designated play area within the community and in the early days there was no television!!!. No computer games or video games indoors for us. Going for walks in the community particularly on Sunday afternoons was commonplace. But for these walks on Sunday you had to be properly dressed or "tidied". On some days we walked to the Martello Tower. We etched our names on the walls and climbed up the dark, scary, winding stairs till we got to the top where we had a commanding view of our community and the sea. We played mainly on the street; Cricket and football were set up on almost every street with three stones or a garbage can cover marking the wicket and two stones outlining the goal posts for football. Basketball was not common then, so there were no hoops. Baseball was also played with two bases on one side of the road and two on the other. Drivers would slow down and wait as we removed the wickets and as we moved out of the road for each approaching car and would manoeuvre their wheels between the stones. I must remind you that there were fewer cars then and they didn't drive as fast as the cars of today. We also played in homes; and I mean everybody's homes. We played in one home till we were tired of that one, then we all moved to another. The children of each street belonged to everyone; the community really cared for its children. Some of this care was not welcomed by us all the time. For example, if I got off the bus at Neptune Avenue instead of my usual stop at the Shopping Centre, by the time I got home, my mother would know of this and enquire where I had been for the last hour. In the evenings, we played games on the newly built carports, which were not part of the original homes, and did our homework on weekdays. When television arrived in the mid 1960s, the first homes on each street that had television became mini movie theatres. Children and adults crowded into tiny living rooms watching everything that was shown on the single television station, whether it truly interested them or not. We knew the sign on and sign off signals, indicating when the JBC began and ceased its broadcasts for the day. On school holidays, we looked forward to the Community Fair, held at the Harbour View Primary School. There was always the merry-go-round, the ferris wheel, donkey rides and stalls for games and buying goodies. No child missed the fair, where Miss Harbour View was sometimes chosen. Then there were the street dances, usually held at the shopping centre at the time of the Independence Celebrations and at Christmas. The shopping centre also provided another form of entertainment for children, but was more important for our parents. This was where political rallies were held. Everyone went to the rallies of both political parties. It must have been difficult to determine then what the outcome of any vote would have been. In those early days, for entertainment some enterprising residents held film shows on their carports. Many a Western was watched on Dorado Drive on Friday nights, on a screen that was initially just a white sheet. Then in about 1963, the Harbour View Drive Inn Theatre opened, the first of its kind in Jamaica. We felt it belonged to us. Many boys watched the movies from the roofs of their homes or sitting on top of the walls of the Drive-Inn. How they heard what was said, we never understood. The seating gallery at the drive-inn was usually dominated by Harbour View young persons, as most other persons stayed in their cars. The Harbour Head Park, now just a shadow of its original beauty, was a popular site for spending Saturdays or public holidays with your parents when you were younger, or for walking to on Saturday or Sunday evenings with a group of friends when you were older. We swam in the crystal clear water, occasionally getting stung by jelly fish or getting sea egg spikes in our feet; we spread blankets in the grass and had picnic lunches or climbed poinciana trees. Sometimes, we ventured further out, driving with our parents when we were younger and walking on the Palisadoes Strip with our friends or taking the bus when we were older to Gunboat Beach, a popular and well maintained beach of the day. We sometimes drove or took the bus to the Rockfort Mineral Bath, especially on Saturdays. We would often see the prisoners working by the Mineral Bath. When we were older, the high point of the weekends was watching football matches at what we called "Compound" then, a dust bowl, now known to you as the Harbour View Football Stadium. As children, we had no idea that grass could ever grow there. As teenagers, there were always house parties held on the carport or in a living room cleared of furniture. Parties started earlier in those days and for some of us, by 10:30 or 11:00 p.m., the cars of parents who drove would line the streets, while teenagers inside anxiously looked at their watches. Those who had to leave early would have the sympathy of those who could stay until midnight or 1 a.m. Attending church was an important part of our lives. Few children were not affiliated with one of the churches serving the Harbour View community. Some churches, like the Harbour View Gospel Chapel, had its beginnings in the living room of one of the founding members. Other early churches included the Church of God, the SDA church, the Moravian Church, St. Marks Methodist and St. Benedicts Catholic Church. For the young men of Harbour View, who wished to visit young ladies outside of their community, transportation back home had to be organised or you had to stay overnight with a friend or relative outside of Harbour View. On the other hand, for those young men wishing to woo young ladies in Harbour View, this meant knowing the exact timetable of the Jolly Joseph bus, in particular, what was commonly known as the "last bus." Business Development: Businesses grew in homes. As children, we could take piano lessons at Mrs. Case, Mrs. Shaw and a host of others, violin lessons, dance lessons at Ms. Mock Yen and many others, without leaving Harbour View. We could have our hair done at Fay's Beauty Parlour. Most adolescent girls and adult females in Harbour View would have had their hair straightened at Mrs. Holder or at Fay’s, if not at their homes in the early days or “creamed” (relaxed) in later years. Our major grocery shopping was initially done in down town Kingston or at the small supermarket at Rockfort. But there was always an enterprising resident who kept a small shop at their home. Mr. Tai's shop was closest to where we lived. There was always a crowd at Mr. Tai's little grilled window through which he collected money and passed goods to customers, especially on a Saturday night. We had no idea when Mr. Tai or his family slept; any hour of day or night when we needed some item, we could knock at the closed shop window and receive service. Even when the Harbour View Shopping Centre opened its doors offering major competition, Mr. Tai's shop stayed open. They couldn't offer the type of customer service that he did!! But the Shopping Centre offered new experiences for children. There was Kent Pharmacy, where we viewed toys when we were younger and cosmetics when we were older. On Sundays, if we saved all week, we could buy a sundae or banana split and sit at the chairs and tables on the patio to the side. The bakery and pastry shop next door was visited more frequently as the sugar buns and pastries were more in keeping with what we could regularly afford. Alternatively, especially on a Friday or Saturday night, we bought fried chicken from Mr. T’s Wings and Things; we always secretly wondered and joked amongst ourselves as to what the “things” were. Then there was Times Store, with books and school supplies at the front, but toys at the back. There was always a dress shop as well; where we would window shop. At the start of every school term, the boys in the community had their regular trips to the Shopping Centre’s barber shop. Our parents were much more interested in the other facilities there: the meat shop, the bank and for the men, the bar. Joys and Sorrows: Over the years, we had many joys. Too numerous to mention individually, our joys will be highlighted here by two that resulted in international recognition. First, Donald Quarrie, one of our residents, after many earlier achievements on the athletic track, won the 200m gold in the 1976 Olympics. We were exceptionally proud. Later, Dorado Drive was renamed Donald Quarrie Drive in his honour. Second, is the football powerhouse known as the Harbour View Football Team, which though almost always present in Harbour View in some form, was not officially established until 1974. We also had our sorrows; in our first few years, as a community, Harbour View residents experienced the deaths of a number of its children. On Harbour Drive, a young boy was killed from a falling rock, a little girl was murdered and three boys 16-17 years old, one of them my brother, died in March 1962 in the Hope River Bed, where they found an unexploded bomb. Soldiers had previously used the Harbour View site as a firing range. This made headlines in the papers and an investigation was done, but this concluded the boys' death as being by misadventure. In this community, we shared our joys and our grief together. The outpouring of support and sympathy to families who had lost loved ones by community members was immeasurable. Two other distressing early events for the Harbour View Community were heralded by heavy rains. In one event, homes on Riverside Drive were flooded as the heavy rains led to the overflow of the Hope River. Ropes were tied by residents to lead others from the water logged houses to safety. Everyone helped in the clean up effort. In the late 1960’s heavy rains caused a mud slide from the Jamaica Flour Mills property on to the road, completely blocking the only access to our homes. Scores of people got off buses and walked home together in the pouring rain. Residents on the side closest to Harbour View helped to transport walkers home. Many residents stayed with relatives that night, until the road was opened the subsequent day. This subsequently led to the terracing of the sloping land by the Jamaica Flour Mills. Harbour View, A Unique Community What made Harbour View the unique community it is today? How many communities can boast a web-site keeping residents from all over the world together. How many can boast annual reunions held in Florida? In looking back, Harbour View was physically isolated from other communities, bordered by the sea on one side and the hills, and separated from Kingston by a strip of road that had no other communities. But this alone could not have created the vibrant community of Harbour View. What really created the community that current residents enjoy was the spirit and will of the people, the first settlers. They were determined to create a community for their families and children that would see to their children's development and be a safe and secure place for their retirement. They had worked hard to achieve owning their home, but they also wanted a community, rather than 1800 individual homes. A thriving Citizens Association emerged and supported and strengthened the development of this new community. Much has changed in the world, in Jamaica and by extension in Harbour View, since the 1960s and 70s. But a community that wants the best for its citizens can never be stopped. I note the intention to pursue the implementation of the Action Plan for Harbour View. Fifty years ago, the first residents had a vision which they pursued. Harbour View citizens must continue to be visionaries. What is again unique bout Harbour View is that we don't have to look outside ourselves for examples as to how to achieve a vision. In this small community, a few young men kicking football in the evenings on a dust bowl has become a highly regarded professional football club, indeed the first football club in the country to be incorporated as a limited liability entity and the first to have its own world-class Stadium. Those young men had a vision and pursued it against all odds. It could not have been easy, but they succeeded. I started this presentation with one definition of community, but I end with one that better describes the community of Harbour View that I grew up in. This is an ecological definition, and describes a community as a group of interdependent organisms inhabiting the same region and interacting with each other to the benefit of all. This is the community that I grew up in!! May Harbour View continue to pursue this vision!!
With thanks to my mother, Lena Samms, arguably at almost 93 years, the oldest living original resident of Harbour View; my sister Dorrett and my bother Lascelle, who reviewed the written piece and my friends who spoke with me after the original delivery at the 50th Anniversary Service; all of whom reminded me of additional experiences, which I subsequently included.
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Jamaica Gleaner Articles about Harbour View 50 years, check it out. Page 2. <http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100418/news/news5.html>
Mini-Stadium: <http://jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100425/lead/lead7.html> Drive-In: <http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20100725/auto/auto2.html>
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