#stanton-walsh rule
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M. Emmet Walsh, a paunchy and prolific character actor who was called “the poet of sleaze” by the critic Roger Ebert for his naturalistic portrayals of repellent lowlifes and miscreants, died on Tuesday in St. Albans, a small city in northern Vermont. He was 88. The most enduring praise Mr. Walsh received also came from Mr. Ebert: He coined the Stanton-Walsh Rule, which asserted that “no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad.”
M. Emmet Walsh, ‘Blade Runner’ and ‘Knives Out’ Actor, Dies at 88 - The New York Times
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"... M. Emmet Walsh never married. As he put it in a 2015 interview, 'If you marry another actor, there's always competition. And if you marry a 'civilian,' they don't understand what you're doing and why you have to travel to, say, Nova Scotia for several months. Besides, I never met a woman stupid enough to think I was a great catch!'"
– The Hollywood Reporter
"Film critic Roger Ebert created the 'Stanton-Walsh Rule,' which held that no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad ..."
– Variety
#m emmet walsh#thr#the hollywood reporter#variety#roger ebert#stanton-walsh rule#harry dean stanton#films#movies#relationships#marrying an actor#marriage#character actors
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(via M. Emmet Walsh, Character Actor Who Always Stood Out, Dies at 88 - The New York Times)
A performance by Mr. Walsh in “Straight Time” led to a role in “Blood Simple” (1984), the first feature film by Joel and Ethan Coen.
...The most enduring praise Mr. Walsh received also came from Mr. Ebert: He coined the Stanton-Walsh Rule, which asserted that “no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad.”
In “Straight Time,” a 1978 film featuring both Mr. Stanton and Mr. Walsh, Mr. Walsh played a patronizing parole officer to Dustin Hoffman’s teetering ex-con. Mr. Walsh’s performance caught the eye of two brothers who aspired to be auteurs and were writing their first feature-film script.
The unknown Joel and Ethan Coen wrote the pivotal character of a detective in “Blood Simple” for Mr. Walsh. To their surprise, and despite offering little more in compensation than a per diem stipend, he accepted the role.
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The man has any number of classic films and performances, but in the spirit of Ebert’s M. Emmet Walsh / Harry Dean Stanton rule, Missing in Action is not a great movie, but is taken up a notch by Walsh wearing Hawaiian shirts, firing automatic weapons, and bringing some much needed charisma to the proceedings. R.I.P. to one of the great character actors.
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Roger Ebert had the “Harry Dean Stanton/M. Emmett Walsh” rule that any film that had at least one scene with one of those actors was not all bad, because they at least would be good.
I think SLJ can be added to that list.
There should be an Oscar category called the Samuel L. Jackson Award for Acting in a Terrible Movie.
I thought about it during Secret Invasion about how he elevates material (other good actors in that show did too, like Olivia Coleman). But his monologue in Deep Blue Sea is so randomly great, and the movie is so dumb. I think it must be harder to be good in a bad thing than be good in a good thing. So he's actually better than a lot of people who have won Oscars in competition. (Still randomly mad his lifetime Oscar wasn't presented on TV.)
Imagine someone else saying the line "Hold onto your butts" in Jurassic Park.
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Just based on their skills as an actor, who would bee your top 3? Here's mine, 1. James Gandolfini (Sopranos alone you can see his skills. But then he shows incredible depth on some movies he is in). 2. Brendan Gleeson (severely underappreciatted, everything he is in is a delight. From dark comedy films, light hearted films, to his series Mr. Mercedes, the man just pulls you in). 3. Ed oneill ( though didnt win much awards, being in 2 successful sitcoms says enough)
Charles Durning (He makes anything he's in better)
M. Emmet Walsh (Critic Roger Ebert so admired him that he created the "Stanton-Walsh Rule," which states that "no movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad)
Anthony Hopkins (I don't need to say anything here)
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Stanton-Walsh Rule
“No movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad. An exception was CHATTAHOOCHEE (1990), starring Walsh. Stanton's record is still intact.”
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For the week of 11 November 2019
Quick Bits:
Batman & The Outsiders #7 throws some further ramifications of Ra’s al Ghul and his minions meddling with Duke and Sofia. Some particularly disturbing transformations going on with Duke that should be interesting. The level of intrigue that Bryan Hill is keeping in the story is gripping.
| Published by DC Comics
The Batman’s Grave #2 is another excellent issue. A little more packed with action than the first one, allowing Bryan Hitch to cut loose with some of the sequences. Also, I’m loving the humour that Warren Ellis is giving us between Alfred and Bruce. That acerbic wit is something we’ve seen from Alfred a lot and Ellis just nails the voice.
| Published by DC Comics
Battlepug #3 is more fun from Mike Norton, Allen Passalaqua, and Crank! Some really nice stuff here as Bryony cuts loose on Nobody’s Ponies. I absolutely love the mix of traditional sword and sorcery storytelling with rather over-the-top humour that basically lampoons it at the same time.
| Published by Image
Black Cat Annual #1 is a fun tale of a heist on the Maggia by Black Cat and Spider-Man from Jed MacKay, Joey Vazquez, Natacha Bustos, Juan Gedeon, Brian Reber, and Ferran Delgado. It features the usual humour and action that we see in the series and I quite like how the artists are broken up each following one particular aspect of the story. Though it’s all one narrative, it gives a nice differing feel to each part.
| Published by Marvel
Black Hammer / Justice League: Hammer of Justice #5 concludes what has been an excellent series from Jeff Lemire, Michael Walsh, and Nate Piekos. Ultimately, this has reminded me of the old JLA/JSA crossovers of old, and just feels great as an overall story. Plus the possibility of seeing a sequel.
| Published by Dark Horse & DC Comics
Black Panther and the Agents of Wakanda #3 begins “God Loves, Moon Kills”, another two-parter for this series, from Jim Zub, Lan Medina, Craig Yeung, Marcio Menyz, Federico Blee, and Joe Sabino. I love this story format, giving us essentially quick-hit missions dealing with a problem and then moving on. It’s yielded some pretty tight storytelling and some fascinating situations.
| Published by Marvel
Black Stars Above #1 is another incredible debut for Vault, with Lonnie Nadler, Jenna Cha, Brad Simpson, and Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou delivering an incredibly deep and unique horror story. It centres around a young woman in a family of fur traders, as the trade itself begins to die in Canada, and it’s impressive as to how real the characters and their struggle feels. The artwork from Cha and Simpson is exquisite.
| Published by Vault
Buffy + Angel: Hellmouth #2 continues Buffy and Angel’s descent through hell. It’s much more cerebral than you’d expect, with the demons trying to get into Buffy and Angel’s respective heads in order to manipulate and destroy them. Plus, a rather interesting surprise. Jordie Bellaire, Jeremy Lambert, Eleonora Carlini, Cris Peter, and Ed Dukeshire are doing some great work with the core of this event.
| Published by BOOM! Studios
Collapser #5 somehow gets even stranger in this penultimate issue as Liam creates a “perfect” world to run away from the problems he’s having in the real world. The real world bleeding through and a revelation of his girlfriend’s true intentions just ratchet up the strangeness further. Mikey Way, Shaun Simon, Ilias Kyriazis, Cris Peter, and Simon Bowland are just doing amazing work here.
| Published by DC Comics / Young Animal
Detective Comics #1015 takes an interesting turn as Nora decides that she likes being a villain. Through this, Peter J. Tomasi is definitely showing an interesting side to Mr. Freeze, emphasizing again that he’s a rather conflicted villain, only doing the various heinous actions to save his wife. Who now doesn’t need him.
| Published by DC Comics
Doctor Mirage #4 features more incredibly beautiful, inventive artwork from Nick Robles and Jordie Bellaire. The visual storytelling as Shan faces the Embalmer is just incredible. Magdalene Visaggio, Robles, Bellaire, and Dave Sharpe continue to deliver magic with this penultimate issue.
| Published by Valiant
Edgar Allan Poe’s Snifter of Terror: Season Two #2 is another entertaining issue. The lead tale from Tom Peyer, Greg Scott, Lee Loughridge, and Rob Steen has traditional EC Comics horror vibes, as a scientist tries to communicate with our worm overlords. In one of the comics back-ups Mark Russell, Peter Snejbjerg, and Steen revisit the world of the breakfast cereal monsters. And there’s the usual prose pieces, poetry, and Hunt Emerson’s Black Cat.
| Published by Ahoy
Event Leviathan #6 concludes this series from Brian Michael Bendis, Alex Maleev, and Josh Reed. How much you enjoy it will hinge on how much you enjoy Maleev’s art and the realization that most of this tale is about moving one person off the board and the reveal of Leviathan to set up further stories. Also, Bendis paints a Batman who is ridiculously terrible at hiding his secret identity.
| Published by DC Comics
Fallen Angels #1 is the final new first issue of this first wave of “Dawn of X” titles and in many ways it’s more personal than the other X-titles, even Excalibur, delving into Psylocke (the former Kwannon, not Betsy Braddock) and her past. Bryan Hill, Szymon Kudranski, Frank D’Armata, and Joe Sabino deliver an interesting story with hooks on the darker side of the X-world, including some ominous bits from Magneto and Sinister, but I question the inclusion of X-23 and Cable. They don’t exactly seem to fit the roles they’ve been put into here.
| Published by Marvel
Family Tree #1 is a phenomenal debut from Jeff Lemire, Phil Hester, Eric Gapstur, Ryan Cody, and Steve Wands. This first issue perfectly captures that insidious nature of family drama mixed with creeping terror and body horror as a bizarre plague begins spreading across America.
| Published by Image
Far Sector #1 is one of the most impressive debuts I’ve read in a long time. NK Jemisin, Jamal Campbell, and Deron Bennett create a rich new world in the City Enduring and a compelling character in the new Green Lantern, Sojourner Mullein. The murder mystery that ties everything together is just the icing on the cake. Incredible world-building here and drop dead gorgeous artwork. Do not miss this.
| Published by DC Comics / Young Animal
The Flash #82 is part one of “Rogues’ Reign” from Joshua Williamson, Rafa Sandoval, Jordi Tarragona, Arif Prianto, and Steve Wands. It features a Central City taken over by the Rogues, transformed into their own personal playgrounds, as the Flash is nowhere to be found. It’s not bad, but the amount you’re going to like it may be relative to how much you’re also enjoying “City of Bane” and the recently concluded similar arc involving the Trickster.
| Published by DC Comics
Folklords #1 is off to a fantastic start from Matt Kindt, Matt Smith, Chris O’Halloran, and Jim Campbell. It starts off with a precocious kid in a fantasy world who’s been having visions of what essentially amounts to our world, whose quest sets out a rather draconian lockdown on their society when the Librarians rein in everyone from illicit action, like finding the Folklords. Highly recommended.
| Published by BOOM! Studios
Forgotten Home #2 reveals more about Jannada, its history and society, and how an unjust queen was brought to rule through racial warfare. Love the artwork from Marika Cresta and Matt Emmons.
| Published by Vices Press
Gideon Falls #18 unleashes the Laughing Man on reality in part two of “The Pentoculus”. Jeff Lemire, Andrea Sorrentino, Dave Stewart, and Steve Wands are beautifully unfolding this twisted and horrific flower of a story.
| Published by Image
Gotham City Monsters #3 adds another element of DC lore to the series as Melmoth claims a particular prize. I really quite like how Steve Orlando, Amancay Nahuelpan, Trish Mulvihill, and Tom Napolitano are pulling together disparate bits of Gotham and beyond to craft this story.
| Published by DC Comics
Guardians of the Galaxy #11 is the penultimate issue of this series from Donny Cate, Cory Smith, Victor Olazaba, David Curiel, and Cory Petit. It’s basically a big fight between the remaining Guardians and everyone else. It doesn’t go so well.
| Published by Marvel
Hawkman #18 takes a somewhat different approach to Hawkman’s infection than what we’ve seen of the others so far. Rather than being a dark reflection of Hawkman’s own desires, he’s taken over by an Earth-3 incarnation in Sky Tyrant. Robert Venditti, Pat Olliffe, Tom Palmer, Jeremiah Skipper, and Richard Starkings & Comicraft instead use that to play the spirit of our Hawkman against.
| Published by DC Comics
Hit-Girl: Season Two #10 is part two of “India”. The artwork from Alison Sampson and Tríona Farrell is impressive, given an amazing level of detail to bringing Mumbai to life. Brutal and rich in colour.
| Published by Image
House of Whispers #15 takes a new twist as the Corinthian finds the House of Watchers, takes over, and everything changes. Nalo Hopkinson, Dan Watters, Dominike “Dono” Stanton, Zac Atkinson, and AndWorld Design kick off some new terrors as even Erzulie’s status quo is upended, and we get another guest appearance of John Constantine’s homecoming.
| Published by DC Comics - Black Label / The Sandman Universe
Invaders #11 pushes deeper into Steve and Namor’s history and relationship, as Steve refuses to give up on his old friend. There’s some very heavy, very good character work here as we head into the final issue. Chip Zdarsky, Carlos Magno, Butch Guice, Alex Guimarães, and Travis Lanham continue to astonish at the incredibly high bar they’ve set for this story.
| Published by Marvel
Justice League Odyssey #15 is a fun tale from Dan Abnett, Will Conrad, Rain Beredo, Pete Pantazis, and AndWorld Design. Jessica Cruz leading a rag tag band of villains (and Orion) against Darkseid and the previous JLO turned evil is unfolding as a very entertaining story with some interesting twists. Also, Dex-Starr is awesome.
| Published by DC Comics
Morbius #1 isn’t a bad start from Vita Ayala, Marcelo Ferreira, Roberto Poggi, Dono Sánchez-Almara, and Clayton Cowles. This first issue is largely just action as Morbius sets out on his quest to cure himself, again, but it’s not bad. The art from Ferreira, Poggi, and Sánchez-Almara is very nice.
| Published by Marvel
Oblivion Song #21 continues the slowburn investigation and reconnaissance of the Faceless Men’s base, as Marco tries to map it out and discover where they’re holding all of the people who decided to stay in Oblivion. Gorgeous artwork from Lorenzo De Felici and Annalisa Leoni as we see more of the Faceless Men’s technology.
| Published by Image / Skybound
Psi-Lords #6 does a bit more world-building as we find out more about the Psi-Lords and the Starwatchers, even as the four Earthers are beset by the other Marked in a bizarre farce of a trial. Fred Van Lente, Renato Guedes, and Dave Sharpe are telling a pretty great sci-fi adventure tale here. It largely stands alone in the greater Valiant universe framework and deserves more attention than its getting.
| Published by Valiant
Punisher: Soviet #1 is another welcome return to the Punisher by Garth Ennis, stepping back into Frank’s adventures like he never left. Ennis, Jacen Burrows, Guillermo Ortego, Nolan Woodard, and Rob Steen deliver a brutal and bloody beginning as Frank chases down someone who everyone seems to think is him.
| Published by Marvel / MAX
Reaver #5 is a fairly impressive spotlight for Breaker as he does what he really didn’t want to do again in order to help his “friends”. Justin Jordan, Rebekah Isaacs, Alex Guimarães, and Clayton Cowles present a number of twists and surprises in one of the most brutal issues yet.
| Published by Image / Skybound
Ronin Island #8 sees the remaining islanders largely stand together as they try to both stand up to and flee from the Shogun’s soldiers and madness. With a terrible occurrence that looks like it’s going to cause even more problems for the survivors. Giannis Milonogiannis and Irma Kniivila’s art continues to be everything.
| Published by BOOM! Studios
Sea of Stars #5 very nicely puts the pieces together as a disconsolate Gil has been captured and basically given up thinking Kadyn dead is brought to the world where his son is about to be gutted. Jason Aaron, Dennis Hallum, Stephen Green, Rico Renzi, and Jared K. Fletcher are telling an incredible story here and this issue throws even more twists at the reader.
| Published by Image
Seven Days #2 unfolds some of the fallout of people learning that they only have seven days left, as the superhero community is enlisted to try to stop whatever the shiny harbinger things are. Gail Simone, José Luís, Jonas Trinidade, Michelle Madsen, and Saida Temofonte are continuing to build an intriguing story here as we get more and more of the breadth of the Catalyst Prime universe.
| Published by Lion Forge / Catalyst Prime
Superman #17 is kind of a housekeeping issue from Brian Michael Bendis, Kevin Maguire, Paul Mounts, and Dave Sharpe, acting as a prologue to “The Truth”. A bit of reflection on the Unity Saga, Event Leviathan, and Year of the Villain.
| Published by DC Comics
Tales from the Dark Multiverse: Blackest Night #1 might well be the best of these one-shots yet. Tim Seeley, Kyle Hotz, Dexter Vines, Walden Wong, Danny Miki, David Baron, Allen Passalaqua, and Tom Napolitano give us a bleak look at a world where Sinestro chose not to share the power of the White Lantern light and essentially everything fell to Nekron and the Black Lanterns. It’s a very unique take on the zombie apocalypse on its own, made more interesting as a fallen Sinestro, Lobo, and Dove try to save this universe. The art from Hotz, Vines, Wong, Miki, Baron, and Passalaqua is perfect.
| Published by DC Comics
Trees: Three Fates #3 continues to build up the weird atmosphere from last issue, then turns around and focuses on more of the gritty aspects of Oleg, Mik, and Nina. Gorgeous artwork all throughout from Jason Howard and Dee Cunniffe.
| Published by Image
Triage #3 shifts to Commander Marco’s reality as the group flee from the Hunter. I really like what Phillip Sevy and Frank Cvetkovic have been doing with this story. Great high concept, but the interpersonal relationships are where it’s really at.
| Published by Dark Horse
Usagi Yojimbo #6 is a beautiful updating and embellishment of the very first story of Usagi from Albedo by Stan Sakai and Tom Luth. This single issue story really captures the spirit and magic of all of Sakai’s stories, wonderfully portraying his mix of action and folklore.
| Published by IDW
Vampirella/Red Sonja #3 explores more of what the Russians were doing in regards to Drakulon and more. More very nice humour from Jordie Bellaire in the interactions between Vampirella and Sonja.
| Published by Dynamite
Wonder Woman #82 begins “The Wild Hunt” from the new creative team of Steve Orlando, Kieran McKeown, Scott Hanna, Romulo Fajardo Jr., and Pat Brosseau. It very much continues on from the plot threads and elements of the previous run, continuing to build on the current conflict between Wonder Woman and Cheetah.
| Published by DC Comics
X-Men #2 is pretty damn great, going back to the big and wild ideas bringing new elements into the X-universe, all while Cyclops gives some of the strangest parenting. Jonathan Hickman, Leinil Francis Yu, Garry Alanguilan, Sunny Gho, and Clayton Cowles give us a new mystery with the arrival of Arakko and the first of -|A|-’s missing original horsemen.
| Published by Marvel
Other Highlights: Age of Conan: Valeria #4, Agents of Atlas #4, Catwoman #17, Doctor Who: The Thirteenth Doctor Holiday Special #1, The Dollhouse Family #1, Elvira: Mistress of the Dark #10, Firefly: The Sting, Future Foundation #4, Ghosted in LA #5, GI Joe: A Real American Hero #268, Girl on Film, Go Go Power Rangers #25, Harley Quinn & Poison Ivy #3, History of the Marvel Universe #5, Marvel Action: Spider-Man #11, Midnight Vista #3, Moonshine #13, Runaways #27, RWBY (print) #2, RWBY (digital) #6, Savage Sword of Conan #11, Star Wars #74, Star Wars: Jedi - Fallen Order: Dark Temple #4, Star Wars: Target Vader #5, The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl #50
Recommended Collections: Babyteeth - Volume 3, Dark Red - Volume 1, Fallen World, GLOW - Volume 1: Versus the Star Primas, Justice League - Volume 4: The Sixth Dimension, Savage Avengers - Volume 1: City of Sickles, Star Wars: Age of Resistance - Heroes, Star Wars Adventures - Volume 7: Pomp and Circumstance, Wonder Twins - Volume 1: Activate
d. emerson eddy can hear the scratching at the walls of reality.
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How a assembly in Dorchester in 1971 performed a role in a judge's busing ruling
On June 21, 1974, Federal Choose W. Arthur Garrity issued his acquiring that Boston’s faculties were segregated by the actions of the Boston School Committee. He ordered busing as a treatment commencing that September.
There was fierce opposition to the ruling amid several whites in Boston when Black people and youngsters acted with bravery that tumble when rocks pelted their buses on arrival at their new colleges.
The heritage of so-named “busing era” in the middle of the 1970s is a tale of some of the most significant events in Boston in the next 50 percent of the final century.
The suit that began it all – Morgan v. Hennigan – was filed on March 14, 1972. The named plaintiff, Tallulah Morgan, was just one of 15 Black parents with 43 children driving the suit the named defendant was James Hennigan, the chairman of the Boston University Committee.
A major influence on Decide Garrity’s decision happened at a September 20,1971 assembly at the Patrick O’Hearn College (now named the William Henderson Inclusion Faculty) on Dorchester Avenue around St. Mark’s Church and Fields Corner. Some 400 moms and dads, most of them white, crammed the school auditorium though various hundred additional listened exterior.
The impetus for the collecting was a vote taken by the College Committee that yr to overturn a vote it experienced taken in the late 1960s involving the construction of a new school on Talbot Avenue named immediately after a longtime faculty committee member, Joseph Lee.
The faculty experienced obtained distinctive state funding on the issue that it be opened as an built-in faculty, and the University Committee experienced agreed to this at a time when the neighborhoods around the Lee School were being general relatively built-in.
The nearby Franklin Subject and Franklin Hill developments housed mostly Black families and the neighborhood streets close by around Woodrow Avenue and off Norfolk Street had been primarily populated by white citizens.
But by 1971, those demographics had modified noticeably. In 1968, most of this area was designated by the Boston Banks Urban Renewal Group (BBURG) to permit African Americans to buy residences there, a stunning go on its deal with due to the fact Black households in the city had long been discriminated from when it arrived to home getting.
Considering that the BBURG system restricted the place its plan could be utilised typically to this place, real estate firms quickly established up offices there and utilized vicious blockbusting tactics to get whites to promote and shift out of the community. The real estate firms’ conspiracy concerned a marketing campaign of doorway-to-door canvassing, mailings, and phone calls to urge white people to promote, stating explicitly that because Blacks have been going in, they wouldn’t get a good rate if they did not provide ideal away.
In just couple decades, the proof of how this malevolent hard work experienced succeeded was stark: Hundreds of whites, a large amount of them Jews from the streets off Blue Hill Avenue, were being absent from the BBURG neighborhoods, leaving the spot predominantly Black and the Lee College no extended a prospect for significantly built-in standing.
In an endeavor to continue to keep the determination to open up the university as built-in, the School Committee arrived up with a program for some white learners from the neighborhoods about the O’Hearn in the St. Mark’s/Fields Corner region and the Emily Fifield University in Codman Sq. to be assigned to the Lee Faculty and some African-American students to be assigned to courses at the O’Hearn and Fifield campuses. The University Committee voted, 3-2, to approve the prepare, which was not probably to be well known with white parents.
Some Black mother and father had been not delighted with their young children staying assigned to a college located as considerably a mile absent from wherever they lived, specifically because the nearby Lee Faculty was manufacturer new, with a particular auditorium for the arts, a massive gymnasium, and other particular options.
Several white moms and dads ended up opposed to obtaining their little ones go to a farther away university in a Black community so that it would open up integrated. Some of this response was driven by worry, some of it by resentment that their children would have to go away their neighborhood faculty, and some of it by racism.
Black mother and father in basic considered that built-in faculties had been their childrens’ only route to good instruction as overall the colleges in Black neighborhoods had fewer means, less expert academics, and desired a lot more repairs. But in this circumstance, some of these parents favored a close by new university to getting their children travel farther to integrate one more college.
White dad and mom from sections of Codman Square, the St. Mark’s spot, and Fields Corner quickly organized by themselves and established out to get the College Committee to reverse the final decision. The Sept. 21 mass meeting at the O’Hearn University was a forum for their enterprise.
All the area (all white) Dorchester politicians were there with the moms and dads….Condition Reps. Paul Murphy and Joseph Walsh, point out Sen. George Kenneally, and then-Congresswoman Louise Working day Hicks. Rev. Leonard Burke, the pastor at St. Matthew’s Church on Stanton Street down from Codman Sq., was a main chief of this energy.
The focus of the organizers was University Committee member James Craven, who was then operating for City Council. His prospects in that election faced excellent odds considering the fact that he experienced voted for this coverage that experienced white parents up in arms. Craven utilised the celebration to announce that he was changing his vote, a instant greeted by loud cheers since his reversal insured the repeal of the Lee Faculty strategy. Craven claimed he’d originally been supplied fake info on the specifics of the approach, declaring that his candidacy for Metropolis Council, which failed in the finish, had practically nothing to do with his improved vote.
State Education Commissioner Neil Sullivan said he was “completely amazed and considerably disappointed” by the vote to reverse the integration prepare. Congresswoman Day Hicks, the very long-time leader of opposition to college desegregation, said at the conference that she was “delighted to be in this article and choose portion in democracy in motion,” in accordance to a Boston Globe report.
Make sure you take what you may perhaps have experienced or go through about the attitudes and politics that prevailed in 1971 and place yourselves in the sneakers of the white and Black moms and dads (and college students) and think about what you could have carried out in that predicament.
I recall chatting to one particular white parent, Patricia “Pat” Jones, now deceased, who attended this meeting in opposition to the integration approach. A couple of years later on, she labored for the Citywide Education and learning Coalition that attempted to support make the courtroom-requested desegregation begun in 1974 accomplish its purpose. Not numerous white doing work-course individuals would have related themselves for a team like that in these times.
Black dad and mom submitted the Morgan v. Hennigan fit six months just after these occasions, on March 14, 1972, and the Boston NAACP and the Center for Regulation and Education and learning represented them.
James Hennigan often resented the court docket go well with owning his name on it irrespective of his obtaining voted in favor of the integration plan for the Lee Faculty. As advised in Jim Vrabel’s “A People’s Record of the New Boston,” Hennigan was lamenting: “People stated there was no leadership, but when we tried out to demonstrate management, the individuals did not want it.” Choose Garrity’s 1974 determination discovering segregation and purchasing busing was appreciably impacted by the University Committee’s reversal in this story of the Lee, O’Hearn, and Fifield schools.
The Boston faculties however assign learners primarily based on the legacy of that courtroom determination. Little ones do not probable go to their neighborhood college, but a single of lots of in a part of the metropolis that they utilize to. The ugly incidents of racism amidst the protests from busing stained Boston’s standing for many years into the present.
Mayor Kim Janey created a level to check out the Edwards School in Charlestown on her first working day in office environment. That was wherever she had been bused as a small woman and greeted with racial slurs and rocks as her bus arrived.
It has now been 50 decades because that Dorchester marketing campaign and meeting proved sizeable in the huge functions we variously connect with busing and desegregation.
Lew Finfer is a Dorchester resident and an organizer for Massachusetts Communities Action Community.
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PAIRINGS
Jack & Elizabeth
Leland & Rosemary Coulter
Jesse & Clara
Rev. Frank Hogan & Abigail Stanton
Leading Characters / Cast
Elizabeth Thatcher (Thornton) / Erika Krakow
Jack Thornton / Daniel Lissing
Abigail Stanton / Lori Loughlin
Rev. Frank Hogan / Mark Humphrey
Rosemary Coulter / Pascale Hutton
Leland Coulter / Kavan Smith
Henry Gowan / Martin Cummins
Bill Avery / Jack Wagner
Carson Shepherd / Paul Greene
Faith Carter / Andrea Brooks
SUPPORTING Characters / Cast (Past & Present)
Under Construction
Florence Blakely / Loretta Walsh
Dottie Ramsey/ Erica Carroll
Mollie Sullivan / Johannah Newmarch
Jesse Flynn / Aren Buchholz
Clara Stanton / Eva Bourne
Mike Hickam / Ben Rosenbaum
Ned Yost / Hrothgar Mathews
Katie Yost / Larissa Albuquerque
William Thatcher / Garwin Sanford
Julie Thatcher / Charlotte Hegele
Viola Thatcher / Devon Weigel
Tom Thornton / Max Lloyd-Jones
Cat Montgomery / Chela Horsdal
Charles Kensington / Marcus Rosner
Mr. Jenkins / Milo Shandel
CHILDREN:
There are a lot of children on this show. I think I covered most (if not all) of the main children cast, but if there is someone not listed and you think should be listed, please message me and let me know.
Emily Montgomery / Gracyn Shinyei
Miles Montgomery / Logan Williams
Gabe Montgomery / Mitchell Kummen
Cody Stanton / Carter Ryan Evancic
Becky Stanton / Ali Skovbye
Anna Hayford / Kandence Kendall Roach
Opal Weiss / Ava Grace Cooper
Robert Wolf / Jaiven Natt
Timmy Lawson / Christian Michael Cooper
Philip Cantrell / Liam Hughes
Laura Campbell / Genea Charpentier
Hattie Ferguson / Imogen Tear
Harper Tucker / Callum Seagram Airlie
Ruby Benson / Hannah Zirke
Albert Bickley / Sean Michael Kerr
Maggie Lawson / Amelie Eve
Rosaleen Sullivan / Mamie Laverock
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1x01 Lost & Found
1x02 Cease and Desist
1x03 A Telling Silence
1x04 Secrets & Lies
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1x08 Perils of the Soloist
1x09 Change of Heart
1x10 Love Comes First
1x11 Rules of Engagement
1x12 Prelude to a Kiss
Season 2
2x01 Trials of the Heart
2x02 Heart and Soul
2x03 Heart’s Desire
2x04 Awakenings & Revelations
2x05 Heart and Home
2x06 Coming Together, Coming Apart
2x07 With All My Heart
Season 3
3x01 New Year’s Wish
3x02 Troubled Hearts
3x03 A Time to Speak
3x04 Heart of a Hero
3x05 A Gentle Heart
3x06 Forever in My Heart
3x07 Heartbreak
3x08 Hearts in Question
3x09 Prayers from the Heart
Season 4
4x01 When Calls the Heart Christmas
4x02 Words from the Heart
4x03 Heart of Truth
4x04 The Heart of the Community
4x05 Change of Heart
4x06 Heart of a Teacher
4x07 My Heart Will Go On
4x08 Healing Heart
4x09 Courageous Heart
4x10 Heart of a Secret
4x11 Heart of a Fighter
Season 5 (current season)
5x00 The Christmas Wishing Tree
5x01 Believing
5x02 Hearts & Minds
5x03 Home is Where the Heart is
5x04 Open Hearts
5x05 My Heart is Yours
5x06 Love & Marriage
5x07 Heart of the Matter
5x08 Weather the Storm
5x09 In My Dreams
5x10 Close to My Heart
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2018-03-30 06 SPORTS now
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Harry Dean Stanton, cult American actor, dies aged 91
Harry Dean Stanton, cult American actor, dies aged 91
Prolific character actor, who appeared in scores of films including Paris, Texas, Alien, Repo Man and The Straight Story, died in an LA hospital on Friday
Harry Dean Stanton, the veteran American actor who ballasted generations of independent and cult films, has died aged 91. The subject of the late critic Roger Eberts Stanton Walsh Rule No movie featuring either Harry Dean Stantonor M Emmet…
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Latest from NFL: Pats and fog dominate Super Bowl rematch
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Latest from NFL: Pats and fog dominate Super Bowl rematch
The Latest from week 7 of the NFL regular season (all times Eastern):
11 p.m.
Do not adjust your TV sets.
New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, center, passes in the fog against the Atlanta Falcons during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Foxborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
A thick fog descended over Foxborough, Massachusetts, for the Super Bowl rematch between the New England Patriots and Atlanta Falcons. The fog dipped in and out during the first half but sat heavily on the field in the second, making it hard for fans to see action at the far end of the field.
The TV picture was also fuzzy for all but the closest close-ups, forcing NBC to rely more on the mobile skycam that is manipulated around the field by wires.
The Falcons played like they were in a fog, falling behind 23-0.
– Jimmy Golen reported from Foxborough, Massachusetts
___
7:30 p.m.
Chris Boswell did his best to match Kai Forbath’s day for the Minnesota Vikings only to come up just shy.
Boswell connected on all five of his field goal attempts scoring the last 15 points for Pittsburgh, and the Steelers finished off a 29-914 win over Cincinnati.
Forbath made all six of his field goals earlier Sunday in Minnesota’s win over Baltimore. Ryan Succop kicked four field goals in Tennessee’s 12-9 overtime win against winless Cleveland, including the game-winner.
The Dallas Cowboys lost kicker Dan Bailey to an injured groin, but not to worry. Safety Jeff Heath became the first non-kicker or punter in the NFL to connect on multiple extra points since 1980 as he made two of three attempts. Ted Thompson, now the Packers’ general manager, made all four of his extra points in 1980 as a Houston Oilers linebacker.
Not that the Cowboys had to sweat a field goal by Heath. They beat San Francisco 40-10.
The Chargers shut out Denver 21-0, and Seattle beat the Giants 24-7 in the other late games.
___
6:15 p.m.
Dallas kicker Dan Bailey will miss the rest of the game with a right groin injury.
Bailey got hurt in the first half against the San Francisco 49ers. With Bailey hurt, the Cowboys went for a 2-point conversion after their third touchdown of the half but failed to convert. Bailey had made the first two extra points and is perfect on 23 kicks this season.
Safety Jeff Heath kicked off following the touchdown and managed to reach the goal line with his kick. Heath made an extra point after Dallas scored on its opening possession of the third quarter, then he missed a second extra point.
– Josh Dubow from Santa Clara, California.
___
5:50 p.m.
Former San Francisco 49ers great Dwight Clark says he just wanted to see his teammates in an emotional halftime ceremony.
Clark announced earlier this year that he had been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, more commonly known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease.
The team brought in about 30 of Clark’s former teammates to honor him for his leaping grab in the back of the end zone for a yard TD in the final minute of a 28-27 win over Dallas in the NFC title game launched the 49ers dynasty.
The team played a video tribute narrated by Vin Scully and then Joe Montana introduced Clark, who spoke haltingly to the crowd while describing the one wish he had for this day.
“And the 49ers heard that and flew all these players in so I could see them one more time,” Clark said.
– Josh Dubow from Santa Clara, California
___
5:30 p.m.
Days after the NFL declined to change its rule on the national anthem, about two dozen players protested around the league.
Associated Press journalists counted 22 players protesting during the anthems in some way before day games. Some took a knee, others sat on the bench, stayed in the tunnel or raised a fist.
On Sept. 25, days after President Trump said players should be fired for protesting during the anthem, more than 200 players protested.
On Sunday, the Seahawks and 49ers had the most protesters. Seattle defensive end Michael Bennett and seven Seahawks teammates did not stand before their game with the New York Giants.
In San Francisco, about a half-dozen 49ers kneeled led by Eric Reid, Marquise Goodwin, rookie linebacker Reuben Foster, Eli Harold, Adrian Colbert and K’waun Williams. All the Dallas Cowboys stood, but defensive tackle David Irving raised his fist after the anthem ended.
___
4:20 p.m.
The NFL’s kickers took center stage at a handful of the early games with none having a better day than Kai Forbath for the Minnesota Vikings, and three others came through when it mattered most.
Forbath kicked six field goals to lift the Vikings to a 24-16 victory over the Baltimore Ravens. He made kicks of 52, 51, 43, 43, 34 and 32 yards.
Ryan Succop kicked four field goals, and his 47-yarder with 1:55 left in overtime lifted the Tennessee Titans to an ugly 12-9 win over winless Cleveland. The kick also extended Succop’s NFL record for makes inside 50 yards to 55 straight.
Buffalo kicker Stephen Hauschka tied an NFL record for field goals 50 yards or longer with his 12th consecutive made kick. He had three field goals as the Bills beat Tampa Bay 30-27, his third a 30-yarder with 14 seconds left for the victory.
Cody Parkey kicked the only field goal between the New York Jets and Miami Dolphins, and his 39-yarder with 22 seconds left wound up the game-winner for the Dolphins in a 31-28 victory.
Even in the Los Angeles Rams’ 33-0 rout of Arizona, Greg Zuerelein pitched in four field goals for the win in London.
___
4:02 p.m.
Tennessee tight end Delanie Walker has been carted from the sideline to the locker room after hurting his right leg in a 12-9 overtime victory against the Cleveland Browns.
Walker, a two-time Pro Bowl tight end, hurt his lower leg after catching a 16-yard pass on the sideline. He was helped to the sideline and didn’t put any weight on his right leg.
He had a team-high seven catches for 63 yards when hurt.
___
3:29 p.m.
Buffalo Bills kicker Stephen Hauschka has tied an NFL record by making 12 consecutive field goals from 50 yards or longer.
Hauschka matched the mark set by four others with a 52-yarder to put Buffalo up 20-13 over the Tampa Bay Buccaneers with 13:31 left in the fourth quarter. The record is shared by Blair Walsh, Robbie Gould and Matt Prater.
The Bills signed Hauschka in free agency this offseason after spending the previous six seasons in Seattle. He’s now hit five straight attempts from 50 or more yards in Buffalo.
Hauschka’s streak dates to the start of the 2015 season with the Seahawks. He’s not missed an attempt from beyond 50 yards since missing a 50- and 52-yarder in a 35-6 win over Arizona on Dec. 21, 2014.
– John Wawrow reporting from Orchard Park, New York.
___
3:25 p.m.
The Baltimore Ravens and Minnesota Vikings have combined to tie an NFL record with nine field goals made in their game.
Kai Forbath is 6 for 6 for the Vikings, and Justin Tucker is 3 for 3 for the Ravens.
This is the fourth time that an NFL game has produced this many made 3-pointers. The most recent one was in 2007, between Miami and Houston.
– Dave Campbell reporting from Minneapolis
___
3:10 p.m.
Cardinals quarterback Carson Palmer will not return to the game against the Rams in London after injuring his left arm in the second quarter.
Palmer was hit by Rams linebacker Alec Ogletree with 5:48 remaining in the quarter on a play that resulted in an interception.
He was replaced by Drew Stanton, who led a 7-play, 17-yard drive on his first series before throwing an interception from his own 25-yard line with 41 seconds remaining in the first half.
Also, the Rams announced center John Sullivan has left the game with a knee injury and is questionable to return.
___
3 p.m.
Miami Dolphins quarterback Jay Cutler has left the field with a chest injury after being shaken up when hit by New York Jets linebacker Jordan Jenkins.
Cutler landed hard on his left shoulder as he threw a long incompletion and was slow to rise. He walked off the field, and was examined on the sideline before going to the locker room.
The Miami quarterback was replaced by Matt Moore with the Dolphins trailing 21-14. Cutler drew boos in his Dolphins home debut two weeks ago, and some Miami fans cheered when Moore entered the game.
– Steven Wine reporting from Miami Gardens, Florida.
___
2:45 p.m.
Browns rookie quarterback DeShone Kizer has been benched again after throwing interceptions on consecutive passes.
Kizer was picked off late in the first half and on Cleveland’s first possession of the third quarter – both picks by Titans safety Kevin Byard.
Browns coach Hue Jackson sat Kizer last week in Houston, hoping he would learn from the time on the sideline to learn. Kizer has thrown 11 interceptions, four inside the red zone. This time, Cody Kessler replaced Kizer and drove the winless Browns to a field goal that tied the score at 6 late in the third quarter.
– Tom Withers reporting from Cleveland
___
2:13 p.m.
The Indianapolis Colts have lost safety Malik Hooker, their first-round draft pick, late in the first half with what appears to be an injured right knee.
Hooker was injured on a 50-yard pass play from Blake Bortles to Allen Hurns – yet another tough moment in a rugged first half in which the Colts trailed Jacksonville 17-0. Hooker has been declared out for the rest of the game.
After a cart drove onto the field to take Hooker back to the locker room, the rookie got up and walked to the sideline under his own power.
Hooker has three interceptions this season and was tied for second in the league heading into Week 7.
– Michael Marot reporting from Indianapolis.
___
1:27 p.m.
The Baltimore Ravens are down to three healthy wide receivers, after losing Mike Wallace to the concussion protocol.
Wallace departed in the first quarter at Minnesota after a jarring hit from the shoulder of Vikings safety Andrew Sendejo that left him lying on his back for a few minutes before slowly leaving the field on his own power.
The Ravens announced Wallace’s return as questionable. The contact was hard enough to knock Wallace’s helmet off and draw an unnecessary roughness call on Sendejo.
Joe Flacco and the Ravens are already playing without wide receivers Jeremy Maclin (shoulder), Breshad Perriman (concussion) and Chris Matthews (thigh). Wallace was also listed as questionable for the game because of a back injury.
Michael Campanaro, Chris Moore and Griff Whalen are the only healthy wide receivers remaining.
– Dave Campbell reporting from Minneapolis.
___
1:10 p.m.
Just one player appeared to protest visibly during the early NFL games Sunday, Rams linebacker Robert Quinn, who raised his fist during the U.S. anthem, then brought it down before “God Save The Queen.”
Most of the Indianapolis Colts locked arms before kickoff at home against the Jacksonville Jaguars. In Cleveland, Titans wide receiver Rishard Matthews stayed inside the tunnel during the national anthem . In Miami, Kenny Stills, Michael Thomas and Julius Thomas all stayed in the locker room during the anthem.
Reporters at the other early games did not notice any other obvious protests.
Both the San Francisco 49ers and Seattle Seahawks, who have had several players protesting every week, play later Sunday.
___
1:06 p.m.
The Green Bay Packers are off to a great start without their injured starting quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
Aaron Jones’ 46-yard touchdown run on the game’s opening drive gave Green Bay a 7-0 lead over the New Orleans Saints. Hundley is making his first NFL start, but the best play by far for the Packers has been a handoff to Jones, a rookie. He has 70 yards on four carries.
Jones started in place of Ty Montgomery, who is active. Montgomery started last week in his first game back from broken ribs.
– Genaro Armas reporting from Green Bay, Wisconsin.
___
The best game of Week 7 in the NFL will be under the lights when the Atlanta Falcons visit the champion New England Patriots in their Super Bowl rematch.
The Falcons have heard reminders for months about blowing their 28-3 lead as victims of the largest comeback in Super Bowl history.
The blown lead came on the NFL’s biggest stage, and even a win in the rematch won’t erase that.
The bulk of the schedule features eight games including another London game pitting the Los Angeles Rams and their NFC West rivals Arizona.
Rams running back Todd Gurley has made it very clear he doesn’t like being sent to England to play an opponent that is only a 45-minute flight away.
___
For more NFL coverage: http://www.pro32.ap.org and http://www.twitter.com/AP_NFL
Dallas Cowboys strong safety Jeff Heath, right, kicks a point after try from the hold of Chris Jones (6) during the second half of an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers in Santa Clara, Calif., Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin, center, talks with an official during the first half of an NFL football game against the Cincinnati Bengals in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)
Former wide receiver Dwight Clark, center, gives a kiss to former San Francisco 49ers owner Edward DeBartolo Jr. during halftime of an NFL football game between the 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys in Santa Clara, Calif., Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
San Francisco 49ers players kneel during the performance of the national anthem before an NFL football game between the 49ers and the Dallas Cowboys in Santa Clara, Calif., Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
Tennessee Titans kicker Ryan Succop (4) kicks a winning 47-yard field goal in overtime of an NFL football game against the Cleveland Browns, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Richard)
Cleveland Browns inside linebacker Christian Kirksey (58) defends against Tennessee Titans tight end Delanie Walker (82) in the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/David Richard)
Arizona Cardinals quarterback Carson Palmer (3) leaves the field injured during the first half of an NFL football game against Los Angeles Rams at Twickenham Stadium in London, Sunday Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
Miami Dolphins quarterback Jay Cutler (6) leaves the game, during the second half of an NFL football game against the New York Jets, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
Cleveland Browns quarterback DeShone Kizer passes against the Tennessee Titans in the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Ron Schwane)
Green Bay Packers quarterback Brett Hundley (7) celebrates his touchdown run during the first half of an NFL football game against the New Orleans Saints, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Green Bay, Wis. (AP Photo/Mike Roemer)
Los Angeles Rams outside linebacker Robert Quinn (94) raises his fist in the air during the playing of the U.S. national anthem before an NFL football game against Arizona Cardinals at Twickenham Stadium, in London, Sunday Oct. 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)
Miami Dolphins wide receiver Kenny Stills (10), free safety Michael Thomas (31) and Miami Dolphins tight end Julius Thomas (89), far right, enter the field after the National Anthem is played, during the first half of an NFL football game against the New York Jets, Sunday, Oct. 22, 2017, in Miami Gardens, Fla. (AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee)
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Prolific American Actor Harry Dean Stanton Has Passed Away at 91
Sad news to report about a very talented, beloved actor. Harry Dean Stanton has died at age 91 (report via The Guardian) at a hospital in Los Angeles. Stanton has a legendary, prolific actor who appeared in over 100 different roles throughout the years. Many may recognize him because he's probably been in something you've seen, or a movie you love, there's no question about it. Roger Ebert even created the "Stanton-Walsh Rule", saying: "No movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M. Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad." Stanton most recently appeared on the new "Twin Peaks" show, playing Carl Rodd, and has a film out this year (titled Lucky). He also dabbled in writing and music, but ended up sticking to acting. ›››
Continue reading Prolific American Actor Harry Dean Stanton Has Passed Away at 91
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Harry Dean Stanton, cult American actor, dies aged 91
RIP
Prolific character actor, who appeared in scores of films including Paris, Texas, Alien, Repo Man and The Straight Story, died in an LA hospital on Friday
Harry Dean Stanton, the veteran American actor who ballasted generations of independent and cult films, has died aged 91. The subject of the late critic Roger Ebert’s “Stanton Walsh Rule” – “No movie featuring either Harry Dean Stanton or M Emmet Walsh in a supporting role can be altogether bad” – Stanton was famed for his ability to project his hangdog, laconic charm into minor roles, which ensured he worked continuously for over six decades. Directors who cast him include David Lynch, Sam Peckinpah, Ridley Scott, Alex Cox and Wim Wenders, but he was never nominated for an Oscar or any of the other principal acting awards.
Related: Harry Dean Stanton: 'Life? It's one big phantasmagoria'
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