WOW! I can't believe that there are less than two weeks left here, especially because I have not been as good as I could be about keeping this blog updated.
Spring has finally sprung in Copenhagen, though the weather is nowhere near as warm as it is in Gettysburg/at home. The leaves are finally beginning to come out, and each day they seem a little fuller. I am so glad that I get to see CPH when the trees and plants are actually green and the weather is fair. I was starting to think that it never got nice here and that rumors of the supposedly beautiful Danish summer were a myth. I'm going to try to focus on the key important days since my last post.
Nordic Mythology Field Studies: I mentioned in my last post that I had a really great field trip on a Saturday with my Nordic Mythology class. Despite a rough start (by some error a bus had not been booked, so we had to wait about an hour and a half for one to come), it turned out to be a rewarding day. We started off at the Ribe Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde, which holds the remains of 5 Viking ships. They were intentionally sunk in Roskilde Fjord in order to block off the easiest sailing routes so that you had to really know the waters to make it through without sinking. It was a pretty good defense mechanism, I think. The ships were excavated in the 50s or 60s I believe, and preserved by a slow process replacing the water in the wood with wax so it is permanently protected from decay.
One of the ships, in full view of the fjord in which it was found
We were perhaps a little rushed at the museum, but we were able to learn a little about the purpose of each of the ships, watch a very informative film about their finding, etc. AND I was able to buy a set of six mini posters with beautiful photographs of a full scale model of the warship in full sail outside of Scotland, of all places...for only 25 KRONER!!! I am pretty excited about it, because the pictures are really amazing, and it encompasses two elements of my abroad experience in one (Vikings and Scotland). Hurra!
After the Viking Ship Museum we were able to go to Lejre, which is the town right next door to Roskilde. There there are stones in the shape of Viking ships...these are burial mounds. Lejre was once a very sacred place and was used in a very intense ritual sacrifice. Once every 9 years 9 men (as well as many hounds, horses, hawks, etc) were killed each day for 8 or 9 days (different accounts give different numbers) by the Odinic death (hanging and stabbing). It was pretty neat to see where some of the stuff was that we have been discussing for the whole semester. It is difficult that this now peaceful, beautiful open field in the Danish countryside was once the place of such bloody events.
Some of the stones...many of the ones here were removed before they could preserve the area.
Right near the burial mounds lies the place where historians are quite sure that Herot stood. Yup...the same Herot told of in Beowulf. It was actually a real place, which I am not sure I really realized before. I, of course, was thrilled to learn this because I am a HUGE Beowulf fan. Now there is just a mound that they have erected to show where they believe it stood, but that was good enough for me!
After Lejre we drove clear across Zealand to see our last stop...Trelleborg, the ancient fortress of Harald Bluetooth I, the first king of Denmark and the man largely responsible for its Christianization. Trelleborg was his stronghold in Zealand and was essentially the reason he was able to accomplish what he did. They have a reconstruction of a mead hall there, which was pretty cool, especially since our professors secretly bought mead and had us try it while we were in the mead hall. Though I must say I only took one sip before I gave it away to Pat (mead is basically alcohol and honey...does that sound appetizing to you? BLECH), I still think it was a really cool experience. How often do you get to drink mead in a mead hall in Denmark? I was happy for the surprise, even if mead is not my cup of tea.
Bettina and Morten serving up mead in the mead hall
Me in front of the mead hall
Though of course I have pictures of the real Trelleborg, they don't really give a feel of what the whole thing looked like, so I will just post a picture of the model. See the real deal on Facebook!
Anyway, I think it was a pretty great day, despite the wind, slight chilliness, and delayed bus.
The following Wednesday (the 21st) we had a second field study, in which we visited the Arnamagnæan Institute, which houses many, many old manuscripts from Iceland, Norway, Denmark, etc. I was completely blown away by our talk there. Now, if you know anything about the Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights and Constitution, you know they are kept at the National Archives in DC under heat proof, bullet proof, 100% light reflective glass, and that they can descend into bombproof chambers. As special as these documents are, they are only 230-ish years old. I say ONLY because the Arnamagnæan Institute houses manuscripts that are from 1300. Maybe not so special, but the presenter handled them with his BARE HANDS. No protection from light. No cases. No gloves. Nothing. I was astounded. We voiced our amazement, and he stated that there are two schools of thought surrounding the preservation/treatment of old documents, which of course are exemplified by the two vastly different ways these documents are handled. It makes me wonder if perhaps the Declaration is getting far more pampered care than it actually needs.
Anyway, after my field study I trucked it back to DIS in the snow and falling volcanic ash(yeah...snow on April 21st, bleh). There I discovered that DIS had discount tickets to the ballet, and on a whim, I bought one of the last two. It turned out to be a great decision, even though I had to miss one of my Danish classmates presentations and Danish-style dinner with the class in order to get there on time. The ballet was "A Midsummer's Night Dream", which is a great Shakespearian play, in my opinion. First of all, the seats I got were amazing. They were worth $100, but I got them for $40. The theater was beautiful.
Even more exciting than all that, when I got there, I discovered that the Queen was coming! I got to sit so close to her! It was incredible.
Of course, the ballet was completely amazing and beautiful, though I must say the forest scenes could be very strange at times. The faeries were a very interesting interpretation. It was such a great experience, and I'm so glad I got to go. Horray for spontaneity!
Anyway, I had the best of intentions of getting caught up on recent events, but it is now rather late and I am struggling to keep my aching eyes open, so I will try to update again soon. Stay tuned to hear about my trip to Sweden as well as the activities of the Long Weekend. Eventually I'll have enough time to go back and talk about my long study tour (London) and long travel break (Czech Republic and Scotland). Hej hej for now!
Monday, May 3, 2010
Saturday, April 17, 2010
Tillykke med fødselsdag, Dronning Margrethe II of Danmark!
Yikes! It's been a long, long time since I updated, but SOOO much has been happening I just haven't had the time. Of course I have all of travel break to update about (and I'm pretty sure I never posted about the long study tour nearly two months ago), but I am going to start with just this week for now.
I can't even begin to tell you how difficult it was to go back to class on Monday after having exciting adventures in the Czech Republic and Scotland for two weeks, especially since I caught a cold (surprise, surprise) and felt crappy. However, I have had a lot of excitement this week to make up for the dullness of going back to class.
Friday was Queen Margrethe II of Denmark's 70th birthday, and so there were lots of people in town to celebrate; it was difficult finding a seat on the train in the morning, which is normally pretty empty at that time. I had Danish class in the morning, but we basically just quickly went over our homework and practiced a few phrases before Suzanne handed out paper Danish flags to everyone and we headed to Amalienborg Palace for the festivities. It took much longer than normal to get there due to the crazy crowds, and when we did we found one entrance blocked off. Suzanne was upset,thinking we were too late to get in, but we headed around to another entrance. It was right next to the building with the balcony where the Queen was due to come out and wave; we couldn't fight our way through the crowds to be able to even see the platform. Suzanne came up with a new game plan: she told us to go back out, go to the left, and run to the next entrance. Now, when you tell a group of American students to run when there is still an hour to go for an event, they usually think it means "walk quickly", but when we reached the street we turned around to see Suzanna sprinting down the street. And I do mean down the STREET. Taken aback, we started running after her, dodging cars and police motorcycles. At one point, Suzanna pointed out the license plate of a small black car I had barely dodged...a crown and a 2...and calmly stated that "That will be the Crown Prince's car." WHAT?! As if running down the middle of a street dodging moving vehicles wasn't adventurous enough, I nearly ran into the Crown Prince's car! We finally got the the next entrance and were able to get into the square with excellent views of the balcony. However, the crowd kept moving, especially when the band came in and marched around, so we ended up closer to the balcony than I thought possible. The excitement and frivolity in the square was infectious, and I couldn't believe that I was here in Copenhagen on such a momentous occasion.
When a man finally came out to open the doors, the cheers were deafening and the Royal Family emerged to a rather joyous crowd.
Left to right: HRH Crown Princess Mary with HRH Princess Isabella, HRH Crown Prince Frederik with HRH Prince Christian, Her Majesty The Queen Margrethe II, HRH Prince Consort Henrik, HRH Prince Joachim, HRH Princess Marie with HH Prince Henrik, HH Prince Felix and HH Prince Nikolai. EXCITING!!
After the Queen waved for a little while, the crowd started singing the Danish birthday song, but as I don't know it, I was content to wave my flag around and shout "Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" when prompted. After about five minutes, the family went back inside, and the crowd started singing some song of which I only understood the words "dronning" (queen) and "hjem" (home). Luckily, a very nice Danish man next to us asked us if we understood, then enthusiastically explained that they were singing that if the queen didn't come out again they wouldn't go home. I have a feeling this is some sort of tradition, but based on the two words I knew I couldn't find the song online. Anyway, the whole Royal Family came back out and waved some more. The crowd sang a birthday song reprise and waved around their flags some more. This might have lasted about ten minutes total, but it was completely amazing. I don't think I will ever forget it: the sound of hundreds of paper Danish flags cracking as they were waved in ardent pride, the happy atmosphere as thousands of Danes sang the birthday song in unison, Danes of all ages packed into the square and the joy of parents as they showed their children their Queen, the sea of red and white, the sun shining brilliantly, and the music of the band echoing around the palace walls. Truly amazing.
After the Queen went away for good, the crowd started moving. The three or four girls with me all looked at each other and asked "Where are we supposed to go?" Well, there didn't seem to be a general consensus, so I pointed toward an exit and said "That way!" It turned out to be the best decision we could have made. When we got near the exit, the mounted police came and started parting the crowd; we knew something was happening, so we stopped. We were right next to a Danish national TV cameraman and reporter! A carriage with horses went by into the palace, and dozens more horse guards came prancing into the square.
Danish mounted police....they were so nice!
Horse Guards
They parked themselves right in front of us
After a few minutes of patient waiting, having my toes stomped numerous times, and having an anxiety attack over my batteries dying ever two seconds, the queen finally emerged in the carriage! Now, apparently this whole birthday shebang was pretty unusual. The Queen normally only comes out and waves, and that is it. My Danish teacher said this is the first time she can remember her going out in the carriage. Now, are you ready folks? This is the most exciting picture of the whole semester!!!
Bummer that the Prince Consort stuck his arm in the Queen's face, but still! You can see that I was 10-20 feet away from the Queen! I know that most Danes will never get that close to the Queen in their lives, and it makes me feel incredible. I was on such a high after that incredible encounter that I had a really difficult time focusing in class when I got back to DIS. The weather was great and the day was too perfect to end there, so after class Katie and I went to La Glace, a famous cake bakery in town. It is so well known (and price-y) that it is actually listed on maps of Copenhagen. The piece of cake that I got cost a pretty penny (47 kroner, nearly $10), but it was well worth it.
my cake piece
La Glace was celebrating the Queen's birthday, too!
Eating that cake by the (now running) fountain with the special, festive "golden apples" was the perfect end to a perfect day!
Well, I have more to post about this week, particularly my Nordic Mythology class field trip today, but it will have to wait for later because I have already worked on this post for an hour! Enjoy and godt aften!
I can't even begin to tell you how difficult it was to go back to class on Monday after having exciting adventures in the Czech Republic and Scotland for two weeks, especially since I caught a cold (surprise, surprise) and felt crappy. However, I have had a lot of excitement this week to make up for the dullness of going back to class.
Friday was Queen Margrethe II of Denmark's 70th birthday, and so there were lots of people in town to celebrate; it was difficult finding a seat on the train in the morning, which is normally pretty empty at that time. I had Danish class in the morning, but we basically just quickly went over our homework and practiced a few phrases before Suzanne handed out paper Danish flags to everyone and we headed to Amalienborg Palace for the festivities. It took much longer than normal to get there due to the crazy crowds, and when we did we found one entrance blocked off. Suzanne was upset,thinking we were too late to get in, but we headed around to another entrance. It was right next to the building with the balcony where the Queen was due to come out and wave; we couldn't fight our way through the crowds to be able to even see the platform. Suzanne came up with a new game plan: she told us to go back out, go to the left, and run to the next entrance. Now, when you tell a group of American students to run when there is still an hour to go for an event, they usually think it means "walk quickly", but when we reached the street we turned around to see Suzanna sprinting down the street. And I do mean down the STREET. Taken aback, we started running after her, dodging cars and police motorcycles. At one point, Suzanna pointed out the license plate of a small black car I had barely dodged...a crown and a 2...and calmly stated that "That will be the Crown Prince's car." WHAT?! As if running down the middle of a street dodging moving vehicles wasn't adventurous enough, I nearly ran into the Crown Prince's car! We finally got the the next entrance and were able to get into the square with excellent views of the balcony. However, the crowd kept moving, especially when the band came in and marched around, so we ended up closer to the balcony than I thought possible. The excitement and frivolity in the square was infectious, and I couldn't believe that I was here in Copenhagen on such a momentous occasion.
When a man finally came out to open the doors, the cheers were deafening and the Royal Family emerged to a rather joyous crowd.
Left to right: HRH Crown Princess Mary with HRH Princess Isabella, HRH Crown Prince Frederik with HRH Prince Christian, Her Majesty The Queen Margrethe II, HRH Prince Consort Henrik, HRH Prince Joachim, HRH Princess Marie with HH Prince Henrik, HH Prince Felix and HH Prince Nikolai. EXCITING!!
After the Queen waved for a little while, the crowd started singing the Danish birthday song, but as I don't know it, I was content to wave my flag around and shout "Hurrah! Hurrah! Hurrah!" when prompted. After about five minutes, the family went back inside, and the crowd started singing some song of which I only understood the words "dronning" (queen) and "hjem" (home). Luckily, a very nice Danish man next to us asked us if we understood, then enthusiastically explained that they were singing that if the queen didn't come out again they wouldn't go home. I have a feeling this is some sort of tradition, but based on the two words I knew I couldn't find the song online. Anyway, the whole Royal Family came back out and waved some more. The crowd sang a birthday song reprise and waved around their flags some more. This might have lasted about ten minutes total, but it was completely amazing. I don't think I will ever forget it: the sound of hundreds of paper Danish flags cracking as they were waved in ardent pride, the happy atmosphere as thousands of Danes sang the birthday song in unison, Danes of all ages packed into the square and the joy of parents as they showed their children their Queen, the sea of red and white, the sun shining brilliantly, and the music of the band echoing around the palace walls. Truly amazing.
After the Queen went away for good, the crowd started moving. The three or four girls with me all looked at each other and asked "Where are we supposed to go?" Well, there didn't seem to be a general consensus, so I pointed toward an exit and said "That way!" It turned out to be the best decision we could have made. When we got near the exit, the mounted police came and started parting the crowd; we knew something was happening, so we stopped. We were right next to a Danish national TV cameraman and reporter! A carriage with horses went by into the palace, and dozens more horse guards came prancing into the square.
Danish mounted police....they were so nice!
Horse Guards
They parked themselves right in front of us
After a few minutes of patient waiting, having my toes stomped numerous times, and having an anxiety attack over my batteries dying ever two seconds, the queen finally emerged in the carriage! Now, apparently this whole birthday shebang was pretty unusual. The Queen normally only comes out and waves, and that is it. My Danish teacher said this is the first time she can remember her going out in the carriage. Now, are you ready folks? This is the most exciting picture of the whole semester!!!
Bummer that the Prince Consort stuck his arm in the Queen's face, but still! You can see that I was 10-20 feet away from the Queen! I know that most Danes will never get that close to the Queen in their lives, and it makes me feel incredible. I was on such a high after that incredible encounter that I had a really difficult time focusing in class when I got back to DIS. The weather was great and the day was too perfect to end there, so after class Katie and I went to La Glace, a famous cake bakery in town. It is so well known (and price-y) that it is actually listed on maps of Copenhagen. The piece of cake that I got cost a pretty penny (47 kroner, nearly $10), but it was well worth it.
my cake piece
La Glace was celebrating the Queen's birthday, too!
Eating that cake by the (now running) fountain with the special, festive "golden apples" was the perfect end to a perfect day!
Well, I have more to post about this week, particularly my Nordic Mythology class field trip today, but it will have to wait for later because I have already worked on this post for an hour! Enjoy and godt aften!
Monday, March 15, 2010
Academia and Christiania
Hello everyone! It's been a while, so I will probably have to break this post up into several. I've had a few requests to discuss academics in Denmark, so I will try to spotlight that a little now. My mom is constantly asking if I am actually doing any work here or if I am just on vacation, since I'm traveling a lot. The short answer is that I am learning a LOT, both inside and outside the classroom, and this definitely isn't a slacker semester. Just like at Gettysburg, if you miss a day of doing work, you might be seriously behind and it can be difficult to catch up. General background on DIS: when you come to DIS you pick a program, for which there may be one or more core courses depending on which program you chose. My program is Biotechnology and Biomedicine (BB for short), so my core course is Medical Biotechnology and Drug Development. DIS really stresses experiential learning, so for your core course you will go on a short study tour (3-4 days) to either sestern Denmark, sourthern Sweden, or northern Germany. I already blogged about that (we went to Aarhus and Odense), as it was three weeks into the semester. Later you go on a long study tour with your program (6-7 days). Other programs went places such as France, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Estonia, Lithuania, Scotland, Turkey...my program went to London, where we learned a lot of the business aspect of biotechnology. It is really a unique experience to learn about something in a classroom and then see it in real life, especially when you are able to see that what you are learning applies internationally. Field trips are not limited to the core courses, though. Every class has one day "field studies", which are essentially the study tours in miniature (a few hours or a day rather than a few days). I think that the experiential learning is what makes DIS unique, and it has helped my personal learning curve skyrocket. I've been able to read Hans Christian Andersen stories, hear about his life, then go and see where he was born. I've heard all about Christiania, a free-town in Denmark, but then I was able to examine it with a critical eye with my Danish class. I've actively engaged with the Danish culture by being a screaming F.C. København fan during a match with their big rivals Brøndby. I have learned about Viking history and Nordic mythology, then seen archeological relics from that era. I have learned about cancer and spent time in the pathology department at Rigshospitalet trying to diagnose diseases. It has just been an amazing experience, and I have learned so much. I really wish that American universities would use this style of teaching more, because I think it makes a huge difference. Hans Christian Andersen once said "At rejse er et leve" ("To travel is to live"). I would suggest that this should be modified to "At rejse er et lære" ("To travel is to learn").
I mentioned before my long tour that my Danish class visited Chrisitinia, which I now have time to fully discuss. Christiania was born in 1971 when some squatters moved into recently abandoned military barracks. Before long, it became a large settlement which the government couldn't get rid of. Any attempts by police to remove people led to rioting, so the Danish government decided to treat it as a social experiment and let it be. The community has had a lot of trouble with drugs in the past, so they made a law banning hard drugs. They put a lot of work into helping junkies get over their addiction by buying a farm in northern Denmark where they were able to get rehabilitation services. Other laws of Christiania forbid private cars, violence, weapons, bulletproof clothing, sale of stolen goods, fireworks, and motorcycle gangs/paraphanalia. Interestingly, Christiania is mostly men, and a lot of the residents are older--leftovers from the hippie generation. Christiania is actively trying to get the Danish government to legalize marijuana (or hash as they call it here), and they openly sell it on the aptly named Pusher Street. Since there was a police raid while I was there, there were no hash sales going on, and everyone was a little on edge. There are stores within Christiania, as well as restaurants and coffee shops. They love organic food, and everything is very homegrown feeling. They produce bikes which are immensely popular (and also immensely expensive) in Copenhagen, which I will post pictures of.
We knew we were getting close when we saw this!
My Danish class entering Christiania
Art everywhere! There's a skateboarding ramp in there.
organic food at the restaurant/grocery store
one of the houses
police raid...riot helmets and all
Christiania bike...it has a giant bin in the front...like a wheelbarrow and bike in one
Where's Gandalf?
Christiania: You are my heart
Danish class treking back to the EU
Me in front of Christiania
I'm afraid that is going to have to be it for now. I still have to update on London and this past weekend (I went to Ribe, the oldest town in Denmark!), but that will have to come later. As I said, it's real school and the next two weeks I will be beyond swamped with exams, papers, and presentations. Hej hej!
I mentioned before my long tour that my Danish class visited Chrisitinia, which I now have time to fully discuss. Christiania was born in 1971 when some squatters moved into recently abandoned military barracks. Before long, it became a large settlement which the government couldn't get rid of. Any attempts by police to remove people led to rioting, so the Danish government decided to treat it as a social experiment and let it be. The community has had a lot of trouble with drugs in the past, so they made a law banning hard drugs. They put a lot of work into helping junkies get over their addiction by buying a farm in northern Denmark where they were able to get rehabilitation services. Other laws of Christiania forbid private cars, violence, weapons, bulletproof clothing, sale of stolen goods, fireworks, and motorcycle gangs/paraphanalia. Interestingly, Christiania is mostly men, and a lot of the residents are older--leftovers from the hippie generation. Christiania is actively trying to get the Danish government to legalize marijuana (or hash as they call it here), and they openly sell it on the aptly named Pusher Street. Since there was a police raid while I was there, there were no hash sales going on, and everyone was a little on edge. There are stores within Christiania, as well as restaurants and coffee shops. They love organic food, and everything is very homegrown feeling. They produce bikes which are immensely popular (and also immensely expensive) in Copenhagen, which I will post pictures of.
We knew we were getting close when we saw this!
My Danish class entering Christiania
Art everywhere! There's a skateboarding ramp in there.
organic food at the restaurant/grocery store
one of the houses
police raid...riot helmets and all
Christiania bike...it has a giant bin in the front...like a wheelbarrow and bike in one
Where's Gandalf?
Christiania: You are my heart
Danish class treking back to the EU
Me in front of Christiania
I'm afraid that is going to have to be it for now. I still have to update on London and this past weekend (I went to Ribe, the oldest town in Denmark!), but that will have to come later. As I said, it's real school and the next two weeks I will be beyond swamped with exams, papers, and presentations. Hej hej!
Saturday, March 6, 2010
Quick Update II
Hello everyone, just a quick update. I got back from London last night, and I obviously have a LOT to talk about, but I am afraid it is going to have to wait a little bit as I still do not have my computer (and therefore cannot upload pictures) and I am sick (London has very poor air quality), so I don't feel like doing much besides lying in my bed. London was amazing and I will post about it ASAP!
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Quick Update
Hey all, just a quick update...sorry I haven't posted this week, but my computer got a virus, unfortunately, so I have not really had much access to a computer lately. I am jetting out to London for my long study tour tomorrow and will be gone until next Friday, so I still won't have access to the internet. I will update about this past week ASAP...you especially need to hear about my visit to Christiania. I would recommend looking it up in the meantime...it's a very interesting place. Anyway, have a good week everyone!
Saturday, February 20, 2010
A Walk Around Copenhagen
I realize I haven't put up even a single picture of Copenhagen itself so far, and I think since I've been here over a month it's high time I do. Enjoy!
Christiansborg Slot. You can see on the pillars where it was damaged during one of its three major fires.
Christiansborg Slot. The Queen makes speeches from that balcony.
The Old Stock Market Exchange
The famous spire of the Old Stock Market Exchange. It is three dragons with their tails entined and three crowns on top: one for Denmark, one for Norway, and one for Sweden, formally all part of the Danish Kingdom.
We weren't even sure if we were allowed back here.
The Black Diamond--part of the Royal Library
inside the Royal Library
The Opera House--Copenhageners looooove to hate it
Amalienborg Palace-where the Royal Family lives!
Royal Guard
Danishness outside Sankt Peder's Bageri
MMMMMM...FESTALAVNBOLLER!
Copenhagen Fashion week on Strøget
salesgirls dancing on displays in a store during Copenhagen Fashion week
street performer
LIVE underwear models in the window during Copenhagen Fashion week
Nyhavn
Sankt Peder's Kirke
Sankt Peder's Bageri <3 <3 <3
Christiansborg Slot. You can see on the pillars where it was damaged during one of its three major fires.
Christiansborg Slot. The Queen makes speeches from that balcony.
The Old Stock Market Exchange
The famous spire of the Old Stock Market Exchange. It is three dragons with their tails entined and three crowns on top: one for Denmark, one for Norway, and one for Sweden, formally all part of the Danish Kingdom.
We weren't even sure if we were allowed back here.
The Black Diamond--part of the Royal Library
inside the Royal Library
The Opera House--Copenhageners looooove to hate it
Amalienborg Palace-where the Royal Family lives!
Royal Guard
Danishness outside Sankt Peder's Bageri
MMMMMM...FESTALAVNBOLLER!
Copenhagen Fashion week on Strøget
salesgirls dancing on displays in a store during Copenhagen Fashion week
street performer
LIVE underwear models in the window during Copenhagen Fashion week
Nyhavn
Sankt Peder's Kirke
Sankt Peder's Bageri <3 <3 <3
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