lunes, 14 de noviembre de 2011

NOVEMBER 14, ON THIS DAY IN ELVIS HISTORY

Elvis performed at the Forrest City High School Auditorium, Forrest City, Arkansas at 7.00 and 9.15 p.m.
November 14, 1960
Billboard magazine reported that "It's Now or Never" was the fastest selling single in U.K. history. The song sold 780,000 copies in one week
. ´
November 14, 1961
"Blue Hawaii" premiered.
Elvis was released by MGM because all the publicity stills for the picture were shot.
Elvis had a day off from filming and flew to Reno for the day.
Elvis performed at the Inglewood Forum, Los Angeles, California, at 3.00 and 8.30 p.m. The attendance for these 2 shows
 was record-breaking: 37,398 people. This was even more than the year before with the Rolling Stones.
The total profit was over $300,000. 
Between the 2 shows Elvis was presented some papers for the ongoing paternity suit. This was done by a so called "fan",
 who was in fact a process server. 
During the 2nd show Elvis reminded his audience that he had "outsold" the Beatles, the Stones and Tom Jones: "all of them together". 
This show Elvis worn the Fringe Suit.
Elvis performed at the University of Alabama Field House, Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
Elvis performed at the Arena, Long Beach, California.

 

Date:14 Nov 1970
Time:3.00pm
Venue:Los Angeles, CA.
Forum Inglewood
Tickets:18,700
Costume:White suit
Track list:
Also Sprach Zarathustra
That's All Right
I Got A Woman/Amen
That's All Right
You Don't Have To Say You Love Me
You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' 
Polk Salad Annie
[band introductions]
How Great Thou Art
The Wonder Of You
Heartbreak Hotel
Blue Suede Shoes
Hound Dog
Bridge Over Troubled Water
Suspicious Minds
Funny How Time Slips Away
Can't Help Falling In Love
Recordings:
Los Angeles
At The Forum In LA
Photos:
Comments:Elvis Introduces His Father during this show

CONCERT DETAILS:
Tour Ref: On Tour number 3 - November 10th - November 17th 1970
Date: November 14 1970
Venue: The Forum
Location: Los Angeles CA
Showtime: (8:30 pm)
Crowd: 18698
REVIEWS:
Article *:
VIDEO INFORMATION:
Release: Behind The Image Vol.1
Length: 3 mins 11 secs
Quality:
ELVIS ATTIRE:
Suit: Wing
Belt:
Cape:
GROUP ATTIRE:






Musicians: Black Suit
TICKET STUBS:
SONGS - TRACKLISTINGS:
Opening Theme
Thats All Right
I Got A Woman
- segued medley with -
Amen
Love Me Tender
You Dont Have To Say You Love Me
Youve Lost That Loving Feeling
Polk Salad Annie
Band Introductions
Johnny B Goode
( featuring James Burton )
How Great Thou Art
The Wonder Of You
Heartbreak Hotel
Blue Suede Shoes
One Night
Love Me
Tryin To Get To You
I Was The One
( above song is just an excerpt )
Hound Dog
Bridge Over Troubled Water
Suspicious Minds
Funny How Time Slips Away
Cant Help Falling In Love
Closing Vamp
Polk Salad Annie
( above song is just an excerpt )
Cant Help Falling In Love
( above song is just one verse )
Closing Vamp
CDS FROM CONCERT:

Import CD






CDRS FROM CONCERT:








PICTURES FROM CONCERT:

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CONCERT DATE: November 14 1970 (8:30 pm). Los Angeles CA.
Elvis Presley in Concert at Forum on Nov. 14
Los Angeles Times
October 9, 1970
Elvis Presley will appear in concert Nov. 14 at the Inglewood Forum as part of a seven-city West Coast tour. It will be his first local appearance in 13 years.
Other stops on the tour will include Oakland, Nov 10; Portland, Nov. 11; Seattle, nov 12; San Francisco, Nov. 13; San Diego, Nov. 15 and Denver, Nov. 17.
The West Coast swing comes on the heels of a six-city tour that included Phoenix, St. Louis, Detroit, Miami Beach, Tampa and Mobile. His only other appearances in the past decade have been at the International Hotel in Las Vegas and at the Astrodome in Houston. Presley's last Los Angeles appearance was in 1957 at the Pan Pacific Auditorium.
Tickets for the 8:30 p.m. Forum concert will go on sale at 10 a.m. Monday at the Forum box office. Tickets will also go on sale Monday at Ticketron outlets. The Forum seats 18,699.
The tour was arranged by Col. Tom Parker, Presley's manager, in conjuction with Jerry Weintraub's Management III Ltd., a New york based concert promotion management firm. The Los Angeles concert will be presented by Management III in association with Concert Associates and Concert West.
Weintraub, who also handled the earlier Presley tour, said arrangements for this one were finalized Wednesday. While he will present plans for future tours to Parker for consideration, no future tours has been discussed.
However, Weintraub made it clear that he is pleased with the Presley-Parker association. "Presley's the greatest attraction in the world," he said. "I'll present him anywhere, any time."
Weintraub said the Forum appearance will be the largest arena of the two tours. Detroit's Kiel Auditorium, with 17,000 seats was the largest stop on the first tour. Presley's largest crowds were at the Astrodome where he drew more than 200,000 for six shows.
Courtesy of Francesc Lopez


CONCERT DATE: November 14 1970 (8:30 pm). Los Angeles CA.
Fans Jam The Forum for Elvis
By Robert Hilburn
Los Angeles Times
November 16, 1970
In his first local performances in 13 years, Elvis Presley's two Saturday concerts at the Forum in Inglewood shattered the one-day box office record at the arena and demonstrated once again the dynamic qualities that have made him the nation's top concert attraction.
The $313,000 gross from the concerts, sponsored by Management III in association with Concert Associates and Concerts West easily broke the previous single day record of $238,000 set last year by the Rolling Stones' two concerts.
Backed by the same supporting acts (the Imperials and the Sweet Inspirations vocal quartets plus comedian Sammy Shore) that have been with him in Las Vegas, Presley's Saturday concerts were similar in design but different in results.
Both his timing and showmanship seemed better in the afternoon. By the middle of the evening concert, he seemed tired. His movements - the widely imitated karate-like gestures, the sweeping turns, the occasional hip wiggles - were less pronounced in the evening show.
It was a widely divergent audience, a cross between what one would find at an adult, middle America, dominated Tom Jones concert and a younger typical rock concert. It was an audience of worshippers and curious long hair and short hair, old fans (now in the 25-35 age group) and new ones.
The first show started 15 minutes after the scheduled 3 p.m. time. After an hour of preliminaries and intermission, the audience anticipation was at peak. Nine uniformed security guards plus Col. Tom Parker, Presley's manager, and Jerry weintraub, who is promoting the eight city tour, sat on benches in front of the stage to guard against overzealous fans. But no incidents developed.
At 4:15, the lights dim. As guitarist James burton hits the opening licks of "That's All right (Mama)," Presley walks on stage. He's wearing a white Apache-style jumpsuit with a red rope / belt around his waist. Hundreds of flashbulbs illuminate the Forum. "I love you Elvis," a woman screams from the audience. Others screech or shout similar loyalties. The flashbulbs are so bright he has to blink repeatedly.
"Hello, I'm Johnny Cash," he tells the audience, engaging in the tongue-in-cheek actions that he enjoys on stage.
He alters one of the lines in "Love Me Tender" as a gag move right into "You Don't Have To Say You Love Me" and then "You've Lost That Loving Feeling" going through all sorts of turns and sweeps for dramatic effect. Flashbulbs pop again.
After a strenuous rendition of "Polk Salad Annie," he falls to the floor, stays there for several seconds in mock exhaustion, then gets up with a smile on his face. After Johnny B. Goode," he introduces guitarist Burton as Chuck Berry and pianist Glen D. Hardin as Jerry Lee Lewis.
Presley then went through some of his early recordings ("Heartbreak Hotel," "Blue Suede Shoes," "Hound Dog" and the gospel "How Great Thou Art") before moving into "Bridge Over troubled Water," "Suspicious Minds," Willie Nelson's "Funny How Times Slips Away" and finally, "Can't Help Falling In Love." As always he didn't do an encore. He was on stage for 50 minutes.
In the evening show, Presley changed to a jump suit with long fringes along the sleeves. His selections were the same, except that he added "One Night," "Love Me" and "Trying To Get To You."
Because the evening show concert was sold out in less than 10 hours, Presley felt a special closeness to the evening audience. Perhaps that is why he engaged in such uncharacteristic - for him - actions as taking time to deny certain (unspecified, but obvious to the audience) stories that had been printed recently about his private life and to remind, the audience (in a sense, I think, of thanking it for its loyalty) of how many records he has sold and to say that his new movie, an MGM documentary on his last Las Vegas engagement, is the best film he has made in 10 years.
Though the pacing and execution of his evening performance seemed less precise than the earlier concert, the audience responded with the same enthusiasm.
Presley had come back to Los Angeles after 13 years. He had added an orchestra and some new songs, but he still had the excellent country-blues voice, the enormous personal charisma and showmanship.
He showed that he is still way in front of everybody else.
Courtesy of Francesc Lopez

Forum Of Ingelwood


Recorded live in Los Angeles, CA
November 14, 1970 Evening Show

Tracklisting
Opening Vamp / That's All Right / I Got A Woman - Amen / Love Me Tender / You Don't Have To Say You Love Me / You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin' / Polk Salad Annie / Introductions / Johnny B. Goode / Introductions / How Great Thou Art / The Wonder Of You / Heartbreak Hotel / Blue Suede Shoes / One Night / Love Me / Trying To Get To You / Dialogue / Hound Dog / Dialogue / Bridge Over Troubled Water / Suspicious Minds / Elvis introduces his father / Funny How Time Slips Away / Dialogue / Can't Help Falling In Love (with reprise) / Closing Vamp
Recording: Audience

Label: Suzy Wong Ltd. (released 2003)

Covers: [front] [back]

Rockin In Los Angeles


Recorded live at The Forum
November 14, 1970 Evening Show. Los Angeles, CA.

Tracklisting
Recording: Audience

Notes: See "Forum Of Ingelwood" in our CD section.

Sound: Contents:

Covers: [front] [back]

Other Releases
Title: An Evening At The Forum Title: Live In LA
Covers: [front] [back] Covers: [front] [back]



CONCERT DETAILS:
Tour Ref: On Tour number 4 - November 5th - November 16th 1971
Date: November 14 1971
Venue: University of Alabama
Location: Tuscaloosa AL
Showtime: (2:30 pm)
Crowd: 12000
REVIEWS:
Article *:
ELVIS ATTIRE:
Suit: Black Pinwheel
Belt: Gold Attendance belt
Cape: Red cape
GROUP ATTIRE:



The Sweet Inspirations: Long White Dress


Musicians: White Suit
TICKET STUBS:


SONGS - TRACKLISTINGS:
2001 Theme
Thats All Right
I Got A Woman
- segued medley with -
Amen
Proud Mary
Love Me Tender
( above song includes 1 false start )
You Dont Have To Say You Love Me
Youve Lost That Loving Feeling
Polk Salad Annie
Love Me
Heartbreak Hotel
Blue Suede Shoes
One Night
Its Now Or Never
Are You Lonesome Tonight ?
( above song includes 1 false start )
Hound Dog
How Great Thou Art
Band Introductions
Lawdy Miss Clawdy
Bridge Over Troubled Water
( followed by a reprise of above song )
I Cant Stop Loving You
The Impossible Dream
Suspicious Minds
Funny How Time Slips Away
Mystery Train
- segued medley with -
Tiger Man
Jailhouse Rock
( followed by a reprise of above song )
Cant Help Falling In Love
Closing Vamp
CDRS FROM CONCERT:








PICTURES FROM CONCERT:

© George Hill

© George Hill

© George Hill






















CONCERT DATE: November 14, 1971 Tuscaloosa, AL.
Elvis Turns On In Tuscaloosa
by Scott Cain
The Atlanta Constitution
November 15, 1971

Elvis tore 'em up in Tuscaloosa.
The Pelvis had only to shake a hand or a foot to set off a chorus of squeals and a blinding volley of flashbulbs.
When the spirit was really moving him and he shook a whole leg, or his behind, or his impressively black mane, the audience went wild, with shouts of ecstatic adulation from his female fans and enough light from clicking cameras to turn the darkened auditorium into day
Elvis in person is more acrobat and dancer than singer. Indeed, many of the words of his songs are hopelessly lost in the cacophony rising from the adoring multitude.
The ferocity of his fans is plainly embarrassing to the star, although he good-naturedly contrives to accept this vociferous homage as his due.
And he works hard. He comes on at full steam, sings innumerable songs, all the while lunging here and there in an exotic semi-dance that only he could carry-off, and finally leaves his fans both satisfied and craving more.
PRESLEY'S entrance is staged with almost Hitlerian precision. The orchestra plays the so-called "2001" theme, which lasts just long enough for everybody to wonder where their hero will emerge.
One hysterical youth next to me, dressing in bright blue boots and matching outfit, suddenly shrieked, "There he is!" and pointed toward a door where not one soul was visible.
Would Elvis come in from the back? Could he possibly get in from the rear even if he wanted?
The music drones on while everybody ponders such puzzles.
Then, he comes charging in, protected until he reaches the stage by half a dozen hangers-on. The audience is beside itself with excitement.
Elvis is dressed in one of those hillbilly horrors, all black with gold-colored spangles glistening from all sides. He has a cape that Count Dracula wouldn't have been caught dead in, and spattered with sequins laid out as if following the holes of a fusillade from a machine-gun. In other words, his costume is a smashing success.
For sore time, Elvis just stands there, hands on hip, drinking in the applause and letting everybody admire him. I am struck by the impression that his neck is slightly thicker but he is otherwise the Elvis of olden days, idol of 10 million girls and ultimate symbol of success for 10 million teen-age boys.
All the old songs are there, to everyone's satisfaction - "Love Me Tender," "Hound Dog," "Heartbreak Hotel," "Blue Suede Shoes." He sings, he wals, he jerks, he struts he practices, all with maximum energy expenditure.
He has only to head toward any age of the stage to elicit an uproar from the people in that section of the auditorium, always accompanied by blinding number of flashbulb eruptions.
HE IS A master in the use of the hand microphone, one of the few performers to whom the mike has not become a crutch. He has this bit of stage business about scarves. He wears a bright red one around his neck, occasionally using it to wipe off his sweat. In a few minutes, he tosses the tiny garment to a woman in the audience who nearly dies of excitement. At one point, he let several girls near the stage wipe is forehead and one was so stricken she was unable to move away unaided.
Elvis runs through a huge repertoire, almost entirely consisting of songs he has made famous, although "Bridge Over Troubled Water" and "Dream The Impossible Dream" and "How Great Thou Art" are included. Finally, he makes a comment about knowing 400 songs and intending to sing 320 of them at this one performance, but he is actually near the end of the show and only does one more number, then makes a dash from the auditorium while security personnel hold back the mob.
The show is over and most people start streaming out. In a few minutes, an announcement is made that Elvis has left the building and there's no need for anyone to hang around waiting for another glimpse of him.
What a show.
Some other impressions:
The most beautiful girl I saw there - aristocratic features and elegant Empire hairdo, wearing plu-colored pants suit - was a shameless idolater. She let out fierce wolf whistles every few seconds, to the considerable, embarrassment of her more sedate companions.
AT LEAST 2,000 people are known to have gone to the show from Atlanta. Other large blocks were sold in Birmingham, Montgomery, Meridian and other cities. The Coliseum at the University of Alabama reportedly holds 16,000 and was packed.
Fully two thirds of the audience was seated an hour before the show started , and almost everybody else was already on the auditorium grounds or in the immediate neighborhood.
A steak house across the street from the coliseum ran out of food more than an hour before the show started.
Traffic was bad enough going in, but coming out was a nightmare. The interstate was jammed all the way back to Birmingham
Conversation overheard at the Coliseum went roughly like this:
"JOE, HOW much do you think Elvis is getting for this show? A 90-10 (percentage) split?
"Naw. I'd say just as a rough guess he's getting 100 (thousand dollars). It's probably just a flat guarantee."
Courtesy of Linda Helms
CONCERT DATE: November 14 1971 (2:30 pm). Tuscaloosa AL.
Elvis: "He Was Beautiful"
by Paul Davis
Tuscaloosa News
November 17, 1971

They say that Mr. Presley publicity man called our office to get copies of our review of Sunday's big show. That must have been embarrassing for the staffer who answered the phone because for some reason we didn't have a review of this cultural event.
I was not in the office Monday and when I picked up the paper Monday night, I, too, was surprised that we did not have a review.
Our own Dr. Fred Goosen has never let us down before, but for some reason he didn't supply copy for Monday's paper detailing for us laymen the fine musical points of the show.
So, untrained as I am, I will present for you my review of the starstudded show which brought out the largest crowd in the history of Memorial Coliseum.
Elvis was Elvis.
NOT BEING A MUSICIAN, I will not go into detail on the music, but will attempt to convey to the reader the real atmosphere in our city as the historic day unfolded.
The faithful waited for as long as four hours for Mr. Presley's plane to land. I went to church and missed the arrival, but my mother-in-law was there and here, in her own words, is what happened:
"He was beautiful. He had a ring on every finger. I touched him and his skin was as soft as a baby's. Here's the pen (a 19-cent Bic) he used to autograph his picture (I touched the pen and felt the power and beauty she must have felt.)
"Charlotte kissed him. (That's Mrs. Dan Patrick.) She went toward him and he said, "Lay it on me, baby," and she really did. She touched his hair - it's down to his shoulders - and it's all real and soft and like silk..." (It gets real mushy from that point on. Some of the comments might be misinterpreted.)
FORTY-FIVE MINUTES later: We are now in the Coliseum. It is dark. The only light spills over into the crowd from the orchestra. Finding row and seat numbers is almost impossible. Mother-in-law had purchased a dozen of those $10 tickets so when we got close they saw us and we were waved into place.
We listened to the airport scene again - "His face was as soft as a baby's you-know-what, etc.) The house lights would go up and down and the tension grew and the minutes slipped by.
Then it started, the drum beats and the blare of trumpets. They were working this crowd up good. The Sweet Inspirations bounced on stage, three girls in canary yellow hot pants. They did their thing real well, but this crowd was ready for Elvis and after a deafening 15 minutes, they said their goodbyes, bowed and left.
Now, we were ready for Elvis. But they gave us a tired comic from Canada. He was fatherly type in a knit outfit who told all the old jokes with the local names substituted. (The paper mill stinks, your city fathers and Mayor Hinton took us to lunch at the Dobbs House, I saw Johnny Musso walking on Lake Lurkeen...) He did his 15 minutes and left, too.
Now for Elvis.
BUT, NO, THE BARKER, I mean master of ceremonies, returned with his husky "we-have-25-more-lovely-girls-inside" voice and announced an intermission.
"It's popcorn and peanut time at the concession. The show will continue after this brief intermission. And we might tell you there is to be no smoking on the arena floor and our vendors will be in the audience selling the official Elvis souvenir program. They're only $2 and, honestly, folks, we have only a limited supply. Hold'em up high boys. There they are folks, the vendors coming down your aisle.
"While the supply lasts, now, we have only a limited supply. (There was a Hertz truck outside with less than 86,000 copies left. Also outside were the private vendors who had the " I Love Elvis" pennants, opera glasses, and glossy, autographed photographs suitable for framing.
For intermission, our row had potato chips and cokes - Bear Bryant brand - and our group squealed again when the lights went down.
THE DRUM ROLL started again. I thought at least two of our folks would faint. I can't remember the tune which started to build but it sounded like a cross between "Exodus" and "Aquarius".
It was black as night in the place. The music grew louder and louder. As the music reached an ear-splitting pitch coming from those dozens of speakers, the spotlight rose - some silver, some green, some gold.
Elvis surely was coming and after almost an hour of unbearable waiting, there he was, running toward the stage - looking every bit the better half of the Dynamic Duo - and the crowd went wild.
Although a product of the 1950's, this Presley hadn't really changed. He wore a black outfit, was almost topless and the black cape had gold sequins and a red lining. His shirt was open to the waist, but to keep his costume from being too shocking for the Tuscaloosa crowd, he wore an electric red scarf.
THIS WAS NO BOBBY sox crowd. He faced better than 12,000 women, most of them with a husband or boyfriend along to provide emergency care if they fainted. Instead of full skirts and white blouses, these females were decked out in those velvet-looking hot pants, low necklines and lots of makeup. They all dressed for Elvis. Dress shops surely sold more clothing for Elvis than they did for homecoming.
Elvis sang and shouted, dashed through "Hounddog," "Are You Lonesome Tonight," "Heartbreak Hotel," "How Great Thou Art" (After all it was Sunday), "Blue Suede Shoes," and 43 others as the crowd shrieked and screamed.
A million flashbulbs turned the darkened Coliseum into a light circus and at one point, the 38 year-old Presley had the house lights turned on so he could see those who loved him so much.
He made hearts flutter as he would move to the front row and exchange his red scarf for a perfumed handkerchief. He would mop his brow, wipe his armpits and pass the handkerchief back to a girl who would now love him forever.
IT WAS QUITE a show and on the corner of the stage backing up this All-American boy who came from the little Mississippi town and made it big were those same Sweet Inspirations, now wearing white instead of yellow, and - of all people - J.D. Sumner and the Stamps Baxter Gospel Quartet.
Elvis is a frustrated gospel singer who found the real money is in bumping and grinding, not the testimonial affairs.
Sumner, billed for a decade as the world's lowest bass singer when he was with the Blackwood Brothers, swallowed the microphone and covered for Presley when the notes dipped too low.
He's a bass fiddle and a tuba rolled into one. He was at home on the platform with Elvis, despite his gospel quartet background. It was Sumner and the Blackwoods who helped usher in what today is more of a gospel rock sound than the old-time religion songs from the paperback books.
And now, Elvis is gone, but the sweet memories will linger in the hearts of our ladies for a long, long time.
They'll remember the shakin' and the semi-splits, the sensuous knee slides, the diamond-studded belt, the soft, baby face and that left leg that never stopped rocking throughout the show.
And now, Fred Gooseen, wherever you are, for shame.
Courtesy Of Archie Bald

Black Matador In Tuscaloosa


Recorded live at University of Alabama
November 14, 1971 Evening Show. Tuscaloosa, AL.

Tracklisting
Recording: Audience

Highlights: Proud Mary, Love Me, One Night, How Great Thou Art, The Impossible Dream & Jailhouse Rock(reprise).

Sound: Contents:

Covers: [front] [back]



Tour Ref: On Tour number 7 - November 8th - November 18th 1972
Date: November 14 1972
Venue: Long Beach Arena
Location: Long Beach CA
Showtime: (8:30 pm)
Crowd: 14000
REVIEWS:
Article *:
ELVIS ATTIRE:
Suit: Aztec Star
Belt: Gold Attendance belt
Cape: Silver cape
GROUP ATTIRE:


Kathy Westmoreland: White Suit
The Sweet Inspirations: White Suit

JD Sumner and The Stamps Quartet: White Suit
Musicians: Black Suit
TICKET STUBS:
SONGS - TRACKLISTINGS:
2001 Theme
C C Rider
I Got A Woman
- segued medley with -
Amen
Until Its Time For You To Go
You Dont Have To Say You Love Me
Polk Salad Annie
Love Me
All Shook Up
Heartbreak Hotel
Blue Suede Shoes
One Night
Teddy Bear
- segued medley with -
Dont Be Cruel
Hound Dog
Love Me Tender
Little Sister
- segued medley with -
Get Back
How Great Thou Art
Suspicious Minds
Band Introductions
Burning Love
Funny How Time Slips Away
You Gave Me A Mountain
Fever
A Big Hunk Of Love
Cant Help Falling In Love
Closing Vamp
CDS FROM CONCERT:

Import CD







PICTURES FROM CONCERT:


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Long Beach, California 1972


Recorded live at Long Beach Arena.
November 14, 1972. (8.30 pm) Long Beach, CA

Tracklisting
Also Sprach Zarathustra / See See Rider / I Got A Woman - Amen - I Got A Woman / Until It's Time For You To Go / You Don't Have To Say You Love Me / Polk Salad Annie / Love Me / All Shook Up / Heartbreak Hotel / Blue Suede Shoes / One Night / Teddy Bear - Don't Be Cruel / Hound Dog / Love Me Tender / Little Sister - Get Back / How Great Thou Art / Suspicious Minds / Band Introductions / Burning Love / Funny How Time Slips Away / You Gave Me A Mountain / Fever / A Big Hunk o' Love / Can't Help Falling In Love / Closing Vamp
Recording: Audience

Label: Tiger 2000 (Released 1991)



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