Rolling higher education into the shitbin thread

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there are slots to do undergrad adjuncting in remedial math, but seems to be precious little else

Just don't think this is really true. To take a good but not top-10 department, University of Illinois, here's their recent job placement info:

http://www.math.illinois.edu/GraduateProgram/doctoral-graduates.html

Lots of these people are going to industry jobs in finance or data science, and lots are going to academic postdocs (which are not adjunct instructorships.) Now you could say maybe the postdoctoral system in math just means these folks are all dumped from the academy three years after Ph.D. instead of right after?

Just googling some of those grads from 2012, who would have been on the TT market this year or last, I see Avsec has a second postdoc at Texas A&M, Butterfield is tenure-track at U Victoria, Choi I can't find, Cummins is TT at West Point, Dixit is TT at IIT-Gandhinagar, Hu is TT at Georgia Southern...

So I just don't think it makes sense to say it's a pipe dream for math Ph.D.s that they're going to get a non-adjunct faculty job; a large proportion still do.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 04:17 (eight years ago) link

Times Higher Education is launching a new ranking system in September, having decided that the current systems for ranking US schools is 'not fit for purpose'.

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/world-university-rankings/us-college-ranking-launched-by-times-higher-education

Is anyone at NAFSA this week? I'd intended to go this year but it got nixed. Seeing that David Brooks is giving the plenary speech might mean i dodged a bullet.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 10:02 (eight years ago) link

https://twitter.com/Limerick1914/status/737541019797848066

with leaders like this the future is bright

dear god

Queens has a good anthropology department, iirc. That doesn't necessarily mean that anyone wants to study it there. It looks like a gloss on market forces at work. Not unrelated:

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/tuition-fees-force-students-pick-degrees-salary-prospects

That goes double (or treble) for lucrative international students.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 12:51 (eight years ago) link

a few theoretical premises / hypotheticals, if i may ~

1. class inequality in the US has been dramatic for some time and continues to slide toward neo-feudalism

2. as in all other prestige professions, those born into privilege are the most "marketable" and thus over-represented in academia

3. to reflect 'the world as it is', why not dispense with the marxist pretenses of our humanities departments altogether, and award college admission and professorships at birth? AP classes and SAT tests would then only be taken by the "smart" comfortable / active / rich kids, to determine where they end up at school (although sooner or later, we might want to consider fine-tuning that, too, to accord with increasing feudalism)

4. the collective sigh of relief among the children of say, the bottom 66%, realizing they're not allowed to take AP classes or SATs like their "smart" comfortable counterparts, could very well release the engines of personal industry, and get this country moving again. first, they might get off their lazy butts and start working earlier. second, instead of taking out student loans upon high school graduation, the bottom two-thirds could take out small business loans. in any event, the money the government would save no longer subsidizing the advanced educations of people not born into comfortable circumstances could then be applied to further tax cuts on the job creators, which can only benefit the less industrious classes who'd be jobhunting at younger and younger ages, a virtuous circle

5. in the short term, this would mean shutting down a ton of schools, but you can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs. another drawback would be the shrinking of the NCAA, but perhaps it's time to have basketball and football minor leagues, anyways? the college music scene would likewise shrink, but hey, the obscurer the audience the better!

reggie (qualmsley), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:05 (eight years ago) link

xxxpost
I wonder how much the econ job market system contributes to their culture of assholishness. They gossip and backstab to rival the cast of Mean Girls: http://www.econjobrumors.com/

But that doesn't mean it's not somehow "efficient"...

Dan I., Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:11 (eight years ago) link

What could sociology, anthropology, and history possibly have to do with the analysis of society?

jmm, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 14:12 (eight years ago) link

i love EJMR but i think the ass-holishness on display there is just typical conservative message board trolls and doesn't reflect irl. the fact that the polisci and sociology equivalents are just as toxic kinda proves that. all the econ grad students i know are nice people who are disturbed by the stuff written there anonymously by peers

de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 16:09 (eight years ago) link

the hundred or so people i know IRL who are university faculty (most adjunct) and what they've mentioned in person or in facebook posts on the subject. Almost all are arts and humanities ppl.

So the majority of them are MFA's or MM's (or whatever the official U.S. Music Master's degree is called now) who pursued jobs in higher education partially in order to advance their careers as composers, artists, writers, etc.

I dunno, the music sessionals I've known have generally either taught a tonne of courses or done other jobs as well (mostly music lessons or some kind of performance/conducting gig but I know people who have done manual labour). I did quite a bit of temping for a while until I was in a place where I could do well enough with other teaching work. I don't necessarily think there should be a really easy ride to tenure and a six-figure salary or anything but I think the labour situation could fairly be described as exploitative in a number of places. The fact that other people are also facing exploitative conditions does not change this.

Hi! I'm twice-coloured! (Sund4r), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 18:00 (eight years ago) link

i'm not quite sure how to work it so that 'area studies' get to be saved but lately i've been feelin the crazy idea that academics should start pushing back hard against usefulness in schools, anything that's not a traditional academic subject is to be axed, banished to the vocational schools

i guess this would solve nothing tho, since aside from STEM-related fields needed to get the engineers out the door it would mean universities' revenue streams would vanish

j., Tuesday, 31 May 2016 18:04 (eight years ago) link

I worry that we'd end up with a lot of musicologists who can't play.

Hi! I'm twice-coloured! (Sund4r), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 18:14 (eight years ago) link

The jump in the number of students between 1980 and now, and particularly over the last ten years, has been extraordinary and I'd guess mostly driven by people who were the first in their families to go to college or the children of first generation immigrants. Usefulness isn't just built into the political agenda, it's in the agenda of millions of families where the risk of fronting up college fees needs to be tied to demonstrable increases in conventional employment prospects. Obviously there are questions over how demonstrable those prospects remain but I can't really see much of a way back from here. Business / marketing / finance are also absolutely crucial to the international student demographic, who'll be increasingly important in the the U.S. in the future.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 18:15 (eight years ago) link

actually i was partly thinking of uselessness as a proxy for (the freedom for) rigorousness and student motivation (perhaps again in the freedom from certain occluding motivations). in my adjuncting adventures i've kicked around to a pretty representative range of the levels of institution in my region, had traditionally/untraditionally good/bad students at all of them, but it seems like the most poisonous combination, pedagogically, has been the ones who are only at college because they (economically) have to be, pursuing a practical major (in that mid range of the ones housed in universities, never traditionally in vocational schools) which has no real or even speculative need for anything like scientific/systematic knowledge, and are fundamentally incurious. it seems as if the traditional disciplines, trying to play the administrative numbers games, just cannot win with those students, thus just cannot win with the administrators.

this is a serious question, but, like, what do marketing majors even study

j., Tuesday, 31 May 2016 18:40 (eight years ago) link

Every marketing course I've ever seen has been a combination of business fundamentals (intro to business statistics, management theory, finance, business ethics, etc), psych modules and more specific content (retail marketing, digital marketing, etc). As an undergraduate course it does often look like it has been cobbled together but there is also a fairly serious academic discipline behind it that gets fleshed out more at post-grad level and does cross over with the more traditional ideas of applied social science research.

There clearly needs to be viable, respected alternative routes for people who fundamentally don't want to be at university but feel they have no other options though. Whether that is vocational study, apprenticeships or something else, I don't know. Germany is an interesting example of a country that is arguably more 'over credentialed' than even the U.S. but still retains a strong alternative path for less academic students.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 19:20 (eight years ago) link

it's mean the way vocational schools and the like are under-emphasized in secondary schools. kids who aren't great at school are made to feel like society has no use for them.

Treeship, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 19:29 (eight years ago) link

even though i agree about incurious marketing students i feel like explicitly railing against 'usefulness' backfires in practice

de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 19:33 (eight years ago) link

I dunno, the music sessionals I've known have generally either taught a tonne of courses or done other jobs as well (mostly music lessons or some kind of performance/conducting gig

uh, those are all perfectly respectable. Those aren't at all the types of "wouldn't stoop to x" jobs.

It's a supply and demand problem, as has been mentioned by others in the past dozen posts. Should "we" create more economic opportunities for all the MFAs etc or should there just be less of them? And what hasn't been discussed is education for education's sake. If someone wants a Master's in Music Composition or an MFA in visual art, because it will make them a more emotionally/intellectually fulfilled person, then why shouldn't they? Why should they have to reproduce the means of production by becoming a professor or a professional artist or musician?

This is definitely tied to socioeconomic class, but, this pressure to have a career in what you studied in college feels more pronounced now than when I was in college.

sarahell, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 19:56 (eight years ago) link

given the cost of college in america, degrees are either 'investments' or luxury goods and if you get a job in your field then you avoid feeling like you bought a luxury good.

iatee, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:12 (eight years ago) link

Otm

de l'asshole (flopson), Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link

what's wrong with luxury goods?

sarahell, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:24 (eight years ago) link

and "cost" is relative.

sarahell, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:25 (eight years ago) link

nothing's wrong with them, but unlike buying a sportscar a lot of people only find that their degrees were luxury goods after they made the purchase

iatee, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:44 (eight years ago) link

yeah, it's as if they told everyone that a sports car was the ticket to a well paying job and a comfortable lifestyle and then when you got home they were just lol now you can pay this off for the next 20 years except w/ the sports car you resell it but no one will buy yr diploma even from a fancy college

Mordy, Tuesday, 31 May 2016 20:45 (eight years ago) link

anything that's not a traditional academic subject is to be axed, banished to the vocational schools

Coming back to this for a moment, i do think it's at least plausible that a substantial cohort of students might, in the future, decide that a traditional academic university environment isn't the best place to learn business skills. Given the option of studying a degree-level course at a mid-to-low level college / university with little to no 'brand recognition' or studying a vocationally-orientated degree course with a theoretical path to direct employment at IBM College or the Chevron School of Management, i think a lot of people would probably lean towards the latter.

Sumsung does this reasonably successfully in Germany, Canada and the UK, typically at a lower level and in partnership with traditional colleges, but it has the potential to take a much larger segment of the market. One FTSE 100 company in the UK has launched its own stand-alone degrees rubber stamped by a trad university and aims, in the future, to have degree-awarding powers of its own.

This inevitably means the "corporatisation of higher education" and has been resisted on those grounds, and also poses a potential revenue threat to traditional universities, but it could lead to refocusing of attention.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 07:48 (eight years ago) link

*Samsung

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 07:48 (eight years ago) link

at regional public schools in the u.s. there is a LOT of talk about partnerships between business—often quite local—and universities/colleges, at i know not what levels of remove in terms of money and influence. naturally businesses prefer to offload their training costs onto the taxpayers as much as possible, and lawmakers love to service business interests in politically and ideologically mutually-beneficial ways, but given how savagely lawmakers have been imposing austerity conditions on public schools i wonder just how long this can carry on before they turn things around and start letting business credential its own people to meet its needs directly, rather than using business needs serve as the standard against which supposed failures to (efficiently) educate are occurring.

j., Wednesday, 1 June 2016 08:03 (eight years ago) link

London Met, one of the most commercially-focused of the new UK universities, is cutting 400 jobs, getting rid of two campus sites and aiming to reduce student numbers to 10,000.

They currently have a student to staff ratio of about 4 to 1, which seems pretty low.

http://www.theguardian.com/higher-education-network/2016/may/31/london-university-scraps-400-jobs-and-two-campuses

Also looking to move some of their courses to blended learning.

“What we’re doing is being on the front foot responding to the policy context,” Raftery said. “We’ve got to be way more digital, have way more blended learning... that is built around complex lives, whether students are working or raising kids. This is the reality of our demographic, they’re working their way through university.”

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 13:25 (eight years ago) link

On a similar theme:

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/futurelearn-launches-first-moocs-offering-academic-credits

The courses will be free to take, but to collect the credits students will have to purchase a new form of accreditation called a certificate of achievement for each module, costing between £39 and £59 each. They would then have to complete a final assessment, costing several hundred pounds.

Sir Alan Langlands, Leeds’ vice-chancellor, argued that offering credit online could prove to be a valuable recruitment tool for campus-based courses.

“We are very conscious of the fact that, when we start recruiting next for students for 2018, many of them will have been born after the year 2000,” said Sir Alan. “I think young people are going to take a different attitude: they will want high quality, but they will also want flexibility as learners, and maybe some of them won’t want all this to be restricted by geography.

“Developing this longer-term position on digital learning seems very timely from our point of view.”

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 13:37 (eight years ago) link

"digital learning" can significantly lower operation and commuting costs but it's beneath the dignity of many of the privileged who've succeeded as faculty and their younger cohort at prestigious schools *there, in person* to network, make career connections, "have fun", and evaluate lifetime mating and investment opportunities, so implementation could lag. ultimately though perhaps the underclasses can happily be kept out of the "good" schools altogether, by dangling the convenience of online learning?

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 13:59 (eight years ago) link

something that bugs me about this "there are too many graduates in X" arguments is like... ok, there aren't professorships waiting for everyone, but, its nonetheless actually possible to not treat people that are just instructors and not on tenure track like actual professionals and not just disposable faces, even if there are a fair supply of people potentially willing to adjunct.

and if you pay people properly to do professional development you'll probably get much better instructors over the long haul -- so partly i feel like somehow academia has actually devalued the teaching aspect very drastically even as you have a huge influx of students, and thats weird to me.

germane geir hongro (s.clover), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 21:28 (eight years ago) link

teaching is for suckers. successful academics are researchers, first, last, and always

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/want-to-know-why-professors-dont-teach/article1202892/

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 22:22 (eight years ago) link

One FTSE 100 company in the UK has launched its own stand-alone degrees rubber stamped by a trad university and aims, in the future, to have degree-awarding powers of its own.

Who is this, out of interest?

kinder, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 22:31 (eight years ago) link

no link yet to the study on how for-profit universities apparently actually damage the earning potential of people who attend them?

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 22:39 (eight years ago) link

Margaret Wente = the worst

Hi! I'm twice-coloured! (Sund4r), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 22:53 (eight years ago) link

xps, Pearson, validated by Royal Holloway.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Wednesday, 1 June 2016 23:05 (eight years ago) link

I kind of want to become a stockbroker.

Treeship, Wednesday, 1 June 2016 23:11 (eight years ago) link

xp - plenty of stockbrokers went to my college and got essentially "sports car" degrees, in that what they majored in had nothing to do with the nuts and bolts of being a stockbroker

sarahell, Thursday, 2 June 2016 04:54 (eight years ago) link

that's what i am thinking.... i have no love for finance, but i have other (more pro-social) small business ideas that i wouldn't want to pursue until i built up some savings and (lol) knew about business.

Treeship, Thursday, 2 June 2016 04:59 (eight years ago) link

so like, not necessarily being a stock broker, but i am increasingly considering trying to find a place in the private sector workforce that is not related to writing or teaching, the things i always thought of as "my things." still researching this stuff -- maybe not so fruitful to discuss on ilx.

Treeship, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:02 (eight years ago) link

you don't learn how to run a small business by becoming a stockbroker. you do so by working for one, though it definitely varies by business type, but a lot of stuff is the same, ... or you just start one and learn by trial and error.

sarahell, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:03 (eight years ago) link

yeah that's a good point. i think i mostly want to just be financially solvent so i can think about taking risks.

Treeship, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:04 (eight years ago) link

i definitely get the sense that us small business ppl are definitely a minority on ilx

sarahell, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:05 (eight years ago) link

but let me tell you, my college education was very valuable in that it taught me how to fill out forms. Like, I'm pretty damn good at filling out forms. Finding the instructions for the forms. Determining which instructions and boxes are relevant and irrelevant ... being good at filling out forms is a really valuable professional skill.

sarahell, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:10 (eight years ago) link

so much of adulthood seems to be filling out forms.

Treeship, Thursday, 2 June 2016 05:11 (eight years ago) link

no link yet to the study on how for-profit universities apparently actually damage the earning potential of people who attend them?

Again, it comes back to a massive failure of regulation and i don't think tightening the rules around funding and applying a 'gainful employment' metric that just looks at elevated earning potential comes close to solving it.

For-profit colleges probably do increase earnings potential, simply by virtue of people being able to apply to jobs that require college degrees, but if billions in federal funding is going to be ploughed into for-profit colleges, there has to be a much stronger regulatory framework for checking whether they're actually providing educational value as well. A lot of them are very good but clearly many that could meet the new criteria are still basically a waste of time and money. Stopping the GI bill funding courses with a 13% graduation rate is the easy part, tackling 'quality' in the for-profit and not-for-profit sector is much harder but absolutely essential in the long term if a degree is going to maintain any inherent value.

On a Raqqa tip (ShariVari), Thursday, 2 June 2016 07:35 (eight years ago) link

pro-tip - don't steal code :(

http://nymag.com/daily/intelligencer/2016/06/report-at-least-two-shot-on-ucla-campus.html

reggie (qualmsley), Thursday, 2 June 2016 15:43 (eight years ago) link

i read that the professor didn't steal code and the shooter was delusional

Treeship, Thursday, 2 June 2016 15:44 (eight years ago) link

any murderer is delusional imho

reggie (qualmsley), Thursday, 2 June 2016 15:56 (eight years ago) link

I'm so sorry table, that is so upsetting

c u (crüt), Monday, 3 June 2024 18:25 (two weeks ago) link

I'm very sorry to hear that table! the numbers cited in that IG post are eye-watering

higher ed is in such bad shape right now, I'm p fearful for its future

rob, Monday, 3 June 2024 19:16 (two weeks ago) link

there is an enrollment cliff but most of the problems are caused by mismanagement and profit-centered thinking at the hands of administrators. not surprising, but still infuriating.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Monday, 3 June 2024 22:11 (two weeks ago) link

damn sorry to hear, table, awful.

brimstead, Monday, 3 June 2024 22:15 (two weeks ago) link

That's really disturbing. It does feel like whatever foundations higher education rests on are increasingly fragile. But having the rug pulled out from under the whole university community like that has to be really jarring and, yes, infuriating.

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 02:04 (two weeks ago) link

I had read some news of the closing, sorry to hear you're caught up in it, table.

that is so terrible, table, I'm sorry.

not the one who's tryin' to dub your anime (Doctor Casino), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 02:43 (two weeks ago) link

What’s wild about the Hechinger report article is that UArts nor PAFA are not mentioned— these are the two art schools that have closed in Philly in the past year— but there are three other mergers or shutterings in the Philly area that are mentioned, namely the Salus-Drexel merger and the College of Sciences- SJU merger, as well as the Cabrini closure. These institutions are all within an hour drive of each other, so all told, five schools will have shuttered in the past two years in one metro area.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 03:07 (two weeks ago) link

I teach at a small regional comprehensive state school in WI that has had its own enrollment and $ issues of late. There have been a few private collages in the area that have closed and/or are clearly faltering, to the point where I have heard other faculty and admins expressing hope that we will be the benefactor of their losses in terms of students having fewer choices. Seems macabre but that is how much everyone is suffering.

I'm so sorry, table. And I read that Hechinger report yesterday with a chill.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 11:54 (two weeks ago) link

Really sorry about this, table. Kind of horrifying that the people in charge would fail to do the bare minimum to help students transition and keep faculty up to date.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 12:19 (two weeks ago) link

The school I taught at for many years (that RIFed me and my entire department) is being absorbed into another school. I don’t miss the stress of constant worry but I’m still actively sad about what was and why could have been. Brutal landscape for higher ed in general.

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 12:41 (two weeks ago) link

Why = what whoops

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 12:50 (two weeks ago) link

I also hit the paper ceiling at the school where I’m teaching where apparently I’m a Forever Adjunct bc I am capped at 2 classes but that’s not enough to live on so I have another job where I can make money and not grade papers in my free time.

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 12:52 (two weeks ago) link

I learned this weekend that Northwestern “bought” Mills College in California or something? And now it’s a completely different school with no arts program?

brimstead, Tuesday, 4 June 2024 13:26 (two weeks ago) link

They're buying a college in NYC now too.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 13:32 (two weeks ago) link

Anyway table this is horrible, abject mismanagement, sorry you have to go through it

Guayaquil (eephus!), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 13:33 (two weeks ago) link

Northeastern, not Northwestern. And guess who arranged the buyout of Manhattan Marymount to Northeastern? The president of the school where I worked. Her name is Kerry Walk, and I hope she suffers

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 15:39 (two weeks ago) link

Went to campus for the last time today to grab a few things. The program chair had to sign me in because none of our cards work anymore. He told me that his Dean had requested for him to use ChatGPT to make his communications more professional. (We’re a creative writing department, and she, too, is ostensibly a writer). He said his first thought when he got the news was “I am glad I don’t have to deal with this horrible person anymore.”

Also ran into two former students, both of whom started crying when they saw me. Had to give them hugs. Just brutal, guys.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 17:10 (two weeks ago) link

Terrible news — I saw the announcement of the closure on Twitter. Totally fucked.

Instead of create and send out, it pull back and consume (unperson), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 17:16 (two weeks ago) link

Students who transfer lose an average of 43 percent of the credits they’ve already earned and paid for, the Government Accountability Office found in the most recent comprehensive study of this problem.

That's ridiculous. What a dumb obstacle to being able to transfer.

jmm, Tuesday, 4 June 2024 17:20 (two weeks ago) link

that’s why a proper teach-out with onboarding to schools that will transfer credits is so important, and why UArts failed its students so miserably.

butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 17:26 (two weeks ago) link

Awful. Table, my sympathies. (Two of my college classmates are also - were also - on staff there so I’ve been hearing a lot about this.)

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 4 June 2024 21:44 (two weeks ago) link

I was sad to hear that University of the Arts closed. Two years ago the art school right behind my house, the San Francisco Art Institute, which like University of the Arts dates back to the 1870s, also closed abruptly. SFAI had a towering history with many famous artists who were graduates and/or educators. A beautiful and famous Diego Rivera mural is left behind. The reason given has been that such a small school with high costs and a small endowment isn’t going to work in today’s environment

I also learned from watching Kelly Reichardt’s Showing Up that it was filmed at the Oregon College of Art and Craft in Portland, by all accounts an amazing school that was over 100 years old, after it closed in 2019

Dan S, Wednesday, 5 June 2024 00:05 (two weeks ago) link


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