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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

United Negro College Fund
AbbreviationUNCF
FoundedApril 25, 1944; 79 years ago (1944-04-25)
FounderFrederick D. Patterson 
Mary McLeod Bethune
TypeEducational
13-1624241[1]
Legal status501(c)(3)[1]
PurposeTo build a pathway of educational support from K–12 through college and career.
Headquarters1805 7th Street NW
Washington, D.C. 20001
Coordinates38°54′51″N 77°01′17″W / 38.9143°N 77.0214°W / 38.9143; -77.0214
Area served
United States
Dr. Michael L. Lomax[2]
Revenue (2018)
$89,277,523[3]
Expenses (2018)$171,722,769[3]
Endowment$103,734,086 (2018)[3]
Employees (2017)
281[3]
Volunteers (2017)
2,584[3]
Websitewww.uncf.org

The United Negro College Fund, also known as UNCF, is an American philanthropic organization that funds scholarships for underrepresented students and general operating support for 37 private Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). In 1943, Dr. Frederick D. Patterson (then president of what is now Tuskegee University) wrote to The Pittsburgh Courier proposing the creation of an alliance of Black colleges that would raise money for their mutual benefit. UNCF was founded on April 25, 1944, under the leadership of Dr. Patterson, Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune, and others on the belief that there is strength in numbers—that HBCUs ought to make a joint effort to appeal for funds—as well as the belief that education was crucial to Black economic and social mobility. At the start, UNCF served 27 member colleges and universities, totaling 12,000 students. Its first campaign received the support of many prominent Americans including President Franklin D. Roosevelt and John D. Rockefeller, II. During its first annual campaign, the collective effort raised $765,000, equivalent to $10 million today, which is three times what its member institutions had raised separately the previous year.

At a time when a college education is more important—and more expensive—than ever, each year, UNCF enables nearly 50,000 students to attend its 37 member historically Black colleges and universities and other institutions and help over 8,000 students to graduate annually by:

·      Providing operating funds that make it possible for UNCF’s member HBCUs to offer their students quality academic programs in a small-college environment and still keep their average tuition approximately 27% lower than comparable institutions.

·      Awarding nearly 11,000 scholarships and internships each year so students from low- and moderate-income families can afford college tuition, books and room and board.

·      Serving as a national advocate for the importance of HBCUs, minority education and college readiness by representing HBCUs’ and students’ public policy interests in Washington, DC, and in cities around the country and in the media.

UNCF aims to increase the total annual number of African American college graduates by focusing on activities that ensure more students are college-ready, enroll in college and persist to graduation. This is done through a three-pillar strategy—positioning member institutions as a viable college option for students and investing in institutional capacity to improve student outcomes; creating transformational support programs to ensure students are enrolling and persisting through college completion; building awareness of educational attainment and cultivating college-going behaviors within the African American community. UNCF envisions a nation where all Americans have equal access to a college education that prepares them for rich intellectual lives, competitive and fulfilling careers, engaged citizenship and service to our nation. Its mission in the 21st century is to “build a robust and nationally recognized pipeline of underrepresented students who, because of UNCF support, become highly qualified college graduates and to ensure that our network of member institutions is a respected model of best practice in moving students to and through college.”

UNCF is headquartered at 1805 7th Street, NW in Washington, D.C.[4]

UNCF's ninth president and chief executive officer is Dr. Michael L. Lomax. Past presidents of the UNCF include Benjamin E. Mays, William H. Gray[5] and Vernon Jordan.[6]

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Transcription

Organization

History

In 1944 William J. Trent, a long-time activist for education for black people, joined with Tuskegee Institute President Frederick D. Patterson and Mary McLeod Bethune to found the UNCF, a nonprofit that united college presidents to raise money collectively through an "appeal to the national conscience". As the first executive director from the organization's start in 1944 until 1964, Trent raised $78 million for historically Black colleges so they could become "strong citadels of learning, carriers of the American dream, seedbeds of social evolution and revolution".[7] In 2008, reflecting shifting attitudes toward the word Negro in its name, the UNCF shifted from using its full name to using only its initials, releasing a new logo with the initials alone and featuring their slogan more prominently.[8][9]

UNCF Member Institutions

Thirty-seven historically Black colleges and universities currently belong to the UNCF network of member institutions. UNCF provides these colleges and universities with a range of support that enables them to keep their academic programs strong and their tuitions affordable.

As a result of this and other support, member institutions educate more than 50,000 students each year and have produced over 500,000 graduates. The economic impact of member institutions extends beyond just the students they educate. In 2017, UNCF commissioned a landmark study to measure this impact; HBCUs Make America Strong: The Positive Economic Impact of Historically Black Colleges and Universities which details the individual impacts each institution has on its communities.

Alabama

Arkansas

Florida

Georgia

Louisiana

Mississippi

North Carolina

Ohio

South Carolina

Tennessee

Texas

Virginia

Supporters

John D. Rockefeller, II, was essential to UNCF’s founding in 1944. In fact, UNCF was the first charity to which he gave his public support. He donated $25,000, equivalent to $300,000 today, and wrote letters to other businesspeople and philanthropists to garner support for UNCF. Mary McLeod Bethune, founder of Bethune-Cookman College, won the support of President Franklin D. and Eleanor Roosevelt. During his term, President Truman also supported the fledgling organization.

In 1957, Sen. John F. Kennedy donated the proceeds from his Pulitzer Prize to UNCF. Nancy Wilson and Clifton Davis made history in 1974 when they hosted the first UNCF telethon, “Something Special,” and raised $300,000. In 1989, after years of supporting HBCUs, President George H.W. Bush created the Presidential Advisory Board on HBCUs to advise the president and the U.S. Secretary of Education on best strategies to strengthen HBCUs. In 1991, Bush and 50 governors urged Congress to fund matching grants for students at HBCUs. Bush donated a portion of the proceeds of his autobiography, Looking Forward, to UNCF. And in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, both George H.W. Bush and former President Bill Clinton partnered with UNCF to raise $20 million to support HBCUs damaged by the storm.

In June 2020, Netflix founder Reed Hastings donated $120 million to the UNCF to be used as scholarship funds for students enrolled at UNCF institutions. His donation was the largest in UNCF history.[10][11]

In January 2023, UNCF received its largest philanthropic corporate gift of $190 million from Fidelity Investments to launch the Fidelity Scholars Program.[12]

In January 2024, UNCF announced that Lilly Endowment Inc. had awarded a $100 million unrestricted grant to support UNCF’s capital campaign.[13] It was the largest unrestricted grant UNCF had ever received.

Scholarships and Programs

UNCF scholarships and programs help to put a college education within reach of students from low-and moderate-income families and increase their recipients’ chances of graduating. UNCF annually awards more than 12,000 scholarships worth about $70 million. African American UNCF scholarship recipients have a 70% six-year graduation rate, more than 1.5 times the 42% six-year graduation rate for all African American college students nationwide and higher than the 62% six-year graduation rate for all students. UNCF scholarships’ rates of success, extrapolated to the entire population of African American college students, would increase the annual number of African Americans earning college degrees by 15,876 annually, contributing significantly to the country’s college completion goals. UNCF programs include:

Fund II/UNCF STEM Scholars Program—A $48 million initiative designed to create a national pipeline to prepare African American students for careers in technology and innovation.

UNCF Emergency Student Aid—A just-in-time scholarship program that enables UNCF-member college students to meet unexpected financial emergencies, so they can stay in college, graduate and begin their careers.

Fidelity Scholars Program—A $190 million partnership with Fidelity Investments assisting students in certain geographic regions that have mid-level GPAs with scholarship funds and other services attend, thrive and graduate from college.

In 1999, UNCF announced its administration of the Gates Millennium Scholars Program, which is funded by a $1.6 billion grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The program is aimed at increasing the number of African Americans, Hispanics, Native Americans and Asian Americans enrolling in and completing undergraduate and graduate degree programs. Individuals with academic promise, significant unmet financial need and demonstrated leadership are eligible for renewable awards. UNCF administers the program in partnership with the Hispanic Scholarship Fund, the American Indian Graduate Center Scholars, and the Asian & Pacific Islander American Scholarship Fund.

UNCF also manages a variety of scholarship programs, such as the UNCF/Koch Scholars Program, K-12 Education Fellowship and the Frederick Douglass Bicentennial Scholarship Program.

To find and apply for a UNCF scholarship:

·      Go to UNCF.org/Scholarships to explore UNCF scholarships available to those who meet the following criteria:

·      Minimum GPA of 2.5 on a 4.0 scale

·      Full-time enrollment in a college or university, presently or prospectively

·      FAFSA application filed

·      Financial needs verified by the financial aid director of the college or university that students wish to attend

Growth

UNCF has seen remarkable growth since its founding. In 1948, about 15,000 students had graduated from UNCF-member institutions. By 1972, that number was up to 120,000. It was in this year that UNCF coined its iconic “A mind is a terrible thing to waste.”® motto, which later became one of the most famous advertising slogans in history. The motto, which has been used in numerous award-winning UNCF ad campaigns, was created by Forest Long, of the advertising agency Young & Rubicam, in partnership with the Ad Council.[14]

A lesser-known slogan UNCF also uses, in reference to its intended beneficiaries, points out that they're "not asking for a handout, just a hand."[15] In the ’70s and ’80s, UNCF made an important step by incorporating scholarships into its organizational mission. Prior to this, UNCF exclusively funded its member institutions.

In 1991, Rep. William H. Gray, III, became UNCF’s eighth president. By 1994, Gray had brought in $250 million of the nearly $1 billion UNCF had raised since its founding. Also in that year, UNCF-member college enrollment reached an all-time high of 54,000 students, a 28% increase since 1986.

The Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute was founded in 1996 as a part of UNCF’s commitment to producing research on the educational status of African Americans from pre-school through college and in 2006 UNCF formed the Institute for Capacity Building to provide direct support and technical assistance to their member institutions.  

The Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute

The UNCF Frederick D. Patterson Research Institute (FDPRI) is the nation’s foremost research organization focusing on the educational status of African Americans from pre-school through college.

Committed to understanding and expanding the pathways that lead to educational attainment, FDPRI conducts and disseminates research that informs policymakers, educators, philanthropists and the public on how to best improve educational opportunities and outcomes of African Americans and other underrepresented minorities. FDPRI’s research focuses on pathways to educational attainment, as well as the obstacles and barriers that African American and other underrepresented minorities encounter on their educational journeys. The economic impact report, social mobility report and various programmatic evaluations.

Institute for Capacity Building

In 2006, UNCF formed the Institute for Capacity Building (ICB) to further its partnerships with HBCUs and support their ongoing transformation. Since its founding, UNCF ICB has provided a range of direct support and technical assistance to 42 Black colleges and universities by:

·      Promoting the adoption of best practices emerging from the country’s network of HBCUs and Predominantly Black Institutions (PBIs).

·      Advocating for policy and fundraising priorities to help Black institutions and students thrive.

·      Innovating new partnerships, processes, technologies and strategies, all focused on institutional sustainability.

·      Storytelling, by marshaling research, evaluation, communications and communities of practice to offer accurate perspectives on HBCUs and Black students.

The UNITE Conference

UNITE is the nation’s premier annual gathering for accelerating strategies for Black higher education and support for the institutional transformation of Black colleges and universities.

UNITE is organized each year by UNCF’s Institute for Capacity Building, whose mission is to partner with HBCUs and PBIs to help them propel student success, community impact, and the advancement of educational equity and racial justice.

K-12 Advocacy

As the nation's largest and most effective minority education organization, UNCF has always been committed to increasing the number of African American college graduates. In the past decade, they have expanded their focus to include increasing the number of African Americans who are college ready. The organization provides research and statistics on the experiences of Black children, families and communities as they navigate K-12 education and pursue a higher education.

STEM

The growing need for science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) expertise in today’s job market means that society cannot afford to overlook talented STEM graduates from HBCUs. HBCUs represent just 3 percent of all higher-education institutions in the United States, yet they produce 25 percent of African American graduates in STEM fields. This is significant because African Americans continue to make up a lower share of STEM graduates relative to their share of the adult population. According to the Pew Research Center, HBCUs are powerful engines of social mobility,[16] and a 2021 UNCF FDPRI study found that more than twice as many HBCU students come from low-income backgrounds compared to the national average of 4-year institutions (51% vs. 23%) and more than five times as many compared to Ivy Plus institutions (9%). Additionally, more than twice as many HBCU students moved into the middle class or higher compared to the national average of 4-year institutions (34% vs. 16%) and almost five times as many compared to Ivy Plus institutions (7%).

Government Affairs and Public Policy

UNCF’s Government Affairs and Public Policy work is centered on investing in better futures for young people by ensuring that the needs of students of color and the colleges and universities they attend are prioritized by policymakers.

Their efforts center on two key goals:

1) Ensuring lawmakers have the information they need to make smart, well-informed decisions about UNCF students and member HBCUs, and

2) Ensuring that stakeholders have the information and tools they need to make their voices heard.

Fundraising and the Lou Rawls Parade of Stars

United Negro College Fund headquarters in Washington, D.C.

UNCF has received charitable donations for its scholarship programs. One of the more high-profile donations made was by then-senator and future U.S. President John F. Kennedy who donated the money from the Pulitzer Prize for his book Profiles in Courage to the Fund. When President Barack Obama won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009 he donated $125,000 of the prize money to UNCF.[17] Another significant donation was made in 1990 by Walter Annenberg, who donated $50 million to the fund.[18]

Beginning in 1980, singer Lou Rawls began the "Lou Rawls Parade of Stars" telethon to benefit UNCF. The annual event, now known as "An Evening of Stars®", consisted of stories of successful African American students who graduated or benefited from one of the many UNCF-member HBCUs and who received support from UNCF. The telethon featured comedy and musical performances from various artists in support of UNCF’s efforts.

In January 2004, Rawls was honored by UNCF for his more than 25 years of charity work with the organization. Instead of Rawls' hosting and performing, he was given the seat of honor and celebrated by his performing colleagues, including Stevie Wonder, The O'Jays, Gerald Levert, Ashanti, and several others. Before his death in January 2006, Rawls' last performance was a taping for the 2006 telethon that honored Wonder, months before entering the hospital after being diagnosed with cancer earlier in the year.[19] The event has raised over $200 million in 27 shows for UNCF through 2016.

In addition to the telethon, UNCF engages in several other fundraising activities, including the “Mayor’s Masked Ball,” which started in Atlanta, GA, in 1984 by baseball legend Hank Aaron and then Mayor Andrew Young. Due to the success of the event, it has now spread across 14 cities in the United States.[20] Other fundraising events include "Walk for Education" held annually in Los Angeles, California, which includes a five kilometer walk/run. In Houston, Texas, the Cypresswood Golf Club hosts an annual golf tournament in April.[21]

In June 2020, Netflix founder Reed Hastings donated $120 million to the UNCF to be used as scholarship funds for students enrolled at UNCF institutions. His donation was the largest in UNCF history.[10][11]

On Jan. 11, 2024, UNCF announced that Lilly Endowment, Inc., had awarded a $100 million unrestricted grant to support UNCF’s capital campaign. It was the largest unrestricted grant UNCF had ever received.

UNCF’s bold $1 billion capital campaign[22] includes five components: student scholarships, unrestricted funds to enhance the endowments for historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs), capacity-building programs for member HBCUs (such as technology, training and research), cash reserves and endowed funds for UNCF and support for UNCF’s annual campaign.

UNCF decided to deploy Lilly Endowment’s $100 million unrestricted grant to the capital campaign’s objective of building a pooled endowment fund that will increase the endowments at UNCF’s 37 member institutions by $10 million each.

Former UNCF Scholars

Graduates of UNCF member institutions and recipients of UNCF scholarships have included many Black people in the fields of business, politics, health care and the arts. Some prominent UNCF alumni include: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and leader in the civil rights movement; Marian Wright Edelman, Children’s Defense Fund Founder; Alexis Herman, former U.S. Secretary of Labor; movie director Spike Lee; actor Samuel L. Jackson; General Chappie James, the U.S. Air Force’s first black four-star general; and Dr. David Satcher, a former U.S. Surgeon General and director of the Centers for Disease Control.[23]

Alumni Association

The UNCF National Alumni Council (NAC) is a UNCF-sponsored organization of concerned graduates, current students of the 37 member institutions supported by UNCF and individuals who want to advance the cause of Black higher education. The NAC was founded in 1946 by Fisk University alumnus James E. Stamps. Its mission is to support, promote, influence and strengthen HBCUs.

UNCF Today

Dr. Michael L. Lomax took his current position as UNCF’s president and CEO in 2004. Today, UNCF is the nation’s largest private scholarship provider to students of color and the most effective minority education organization.


Member HBCUs (Table Version)[24]

Name City State Established Endowment Religious affiliation Sporting affiliations
Allen University Columbia South Carolina 1870 $0.31 million African Methodist Episcopal Church NAIA, AAC
Benedict College Columbia South Carolina 1870 $21.6 million American Baptist Churches USA NCAA Division II, SIAC
Bennett College Greensboro North Carolina 1873 $13.7 million United Methodist Church unaffiliated
Bethune-Cookman University Daytona Beach Florida 1904 $28.9 million United Methodist Church NCAA Division I FCS, SWAC
Claflin University Orangeburg South Carolina 1869 $28.6 million United Methodist Church NCAA Division II, CIAA
Clark Atlanta University Atlanta Georgia 1865 $72.5 million United Methodist Church NCAA Division II, SIAC
Dillard University New Orleans Louisiana 1869 $94.2 million United Church of Christ,

United Methodist Church

NAIA, GCAC
Edward Waters College Jacksonville Florida 1866 $1.68 million African Methodist Episcopal Church NCAA Division II, SIAC
Fisk University Nashville Tennessee 1866 $25.5 million United Church of Christ NAIA, GCAC
Florida Memorial University Miami Gardens Florida 1879 $4.0 million American Baptist Churches USA NAIA, TSC
Huston–Tillotson University Austin Texas 1875 $10.9 million United Methodist Church,

United Church of Christ

NAIA, RRAC
Interdenominational Theological Center Atlanta Georgia 1958 $7.68 million n/a n/a
Jarvis Christian College Hawkins Texas 1912 $10.7 million Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) NAIA, RRAC
Johnson C. Smith University Charlotte North Carolina 1867 $69.0 million Presbyterian Church (USA) NCAA Division II, CIAA
Lane College Jackson Tennessee 1882 $4.9 million Christian Methodist Episcopal Church NCAA Division II, SIAC
LeMoyne-Owen College Memphis Tennessee 1968 $52 million United Church of Christ NCAA Division II, SIAC
Livingstone College Salisbury North Carolina 1879 $4.97 million African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church NCAA Division II, CIAA
Miles College Birmingham Alabama 1898 $23.3 million CME Church NCAA Division II, SIAC
Morehouse College Atlanta Georgia 1867 $156.0 million n/a NCAA Division II, SIAC
Morris College Sumter South Carolina 1908 $10.3 million Baptist Educational and Missionary Convention of South Carolina NAIAIndependent
Oakwood University Huntsville Alabama 1896 $19.7 million Seventh-day Adventist Church USCAA Division I
Paine College Augusta Georgia 1882 $12.1 million United Methodist Church,

Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

NCCAA
Philander Smith College Little Rock Arkansas 1877 $9.28 million United Methodist Church NAIA, GCAC
Rust College Holly Springs Mississippi 1866 $37.0 million United Methodist Church NAIA, GCAC
Saint Augustine's University Raleigh North Carolina 1867 $20.6 million Episcopal Church NCAA Division II, CIAA
Shaw University Raleigh North Carolina 1865 $10.9 million National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.,

American Baptist Churches, USA

NCAA Division II, CIAA
Spelman College Atlanta Georgia 1881 $390.0 million n/a n/a
Stillman College Tuscaloosa Alabama 1876 $19.1 million Presbyterian Church (USA) NAIA, SSAC
Talladega College Talladega Alabama 1867 $2.59 million United Church of Christ NAIA, SSAC
Texas College Tyler Texas 1894 $5.43 million Christian Methodist Episcopal Church NAIARRAC, SAC
Tougaloo College Tougaloo Mississippi 1869 $17.6 million United Church of Christ,

Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)

NAIA, GCAC
Tuskegee University Tuskegee Alabama 1881 $129.0 million n/a NCAA Division II, SIAC
Virginia Union University Richmond Virginia 1865 $33.4 million American Baptist Churches USA NCAA Division II, CIAA
Voorhees College Denmark South Carolina 1897 $8.06 million Episcopal Church NAIAIndependent
Wilberforce University Wilberforce Ohio 1856 $6.71 million African Methodist Episcopal Church NAIAIndependent
Wiley College Marshall Texas 1879 $6.17 million United Methodist Church NAIA, RRAC
Xavier University of Louisiana New Orleans Louisiana 1925 $171.0 million Catholic (Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament) NAIA, RRAC

References

  1. ^ a b "United Negro College Fund Inc". Tax Exempt Organization Search. Internal Revenue Service. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  2. ^ "Dr. Michael L. Lomax". United Negro College Fund. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Form 990: Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax". United Negro College Fund Inc. Guidestar. March 31, 2018.
  4. ^ "Contact Us Archived 2013-10-02 at the Wayback Machine". United Negro College Fund. Accessed October 8, 2013.
  5. ^ "75+ Years Strong: Highlights from UNCF's History". UNCF. March 14, 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  6. ^ "UNCF Mourns the Passing of Vernon Jordan, Former Executive Director". UNCF. March 2, 2021. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  7. ^ Wharton Alumni Magazine, Spring 2007
  8. ^ Quenqua, Douglas (January 17, 2008). "Revising a Name, but Not a Familiar Slogan". The New York Times.
  9. ^ Schmidt, Peter (January 17, 2008). "United Negro College Fund Decides Its Great Tag Line Is a Terrible Thing to Waste". The Chronicle of Higher Education.
  10. ^ a b Bursztynsky, Jessica (June 17, 2020). "Netflix CEO Reed Hastings donating $120 million to historically Black institutions". CNBC. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  11. ^ a b "Netflix CEO is donating $120 million to HBCUs, wants it to celebrate "great black achievement"". www.cbsnews.com. June 17, 2020. Retrieved February 17, 2021.
  12. ^ https://jbhe.com/2023/01/uncf-receives-190-million-for-scholarships-for-students-from-underrepresented-groups/
  13. ^ "UNCF Receives $100 Million Grant from Lilly Endowment Inc. to Support Capital Campaign". UNCF. January 11, 2024. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  14. ^ See the UNCF website.
  15. ^ Gasman, Marybeth (2007). Envisioning Black Colleges: A History of the United Negro College Fund (page 192). Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  16. ^ Anderson, Monica. "A look at historically black colleges and universities as Howard turns 150". Pew Research Center. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  17. ^ "The President Donates Nobel Prize Money to Charity". whitehouse.gov. March 11, 2010. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  18. ^ B. Davis Schwartz Memorial Library Archived February 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ "United Negro College Fund :: An Evening of Stars Continues in Memory of Lou Rawls". www.prnewstoday.com. Archived from the original on March 13, 2007. Retrieved January 15, 2022.
  20. ^ Stirgus, Eric. "UNCF Mayor's Masked Ball marks 40 years of supporting Atlanta HBCUs". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. ISSN 1539-7459. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  21. ^ "UNCF Events". UNCF. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
  22. ^ "$100 million gift from Lilly Endowment to United Negro College Fund will support HBCU endowments". ABC News. Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  23. ^ "UNCF". UNCF. November 7, 2008. Archived from the original on October 2, 2013. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
  24. ^ "Member Colleges". UNCF. Retrieved February 27, 2022.

External links

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