Women's National Book Association

WNBA Announces Winners of 2008 Pannell Award

For immediate release

Contact:

Mary Grey James
WNBA Pannell Chair
615-213-5362, Mary.james at ingrambook.com

The Women's National Book Association is proud to announce the winners of this year's Lucile Micheels Pannell Award given annually since 1983 to two bookstores that excel in contributing to their communities in ways that bring books and young people together. The winner in the General Bookstore category is Kepler's Books and Magazines in Menlo Park, CA; the winner in the Children's Specialty Store category is The Flying Pig Bookstore in Shelburne, VT. Honorable Mention is awarded to Vero Beach Book Center in Vero Beach, Fl.

A jury of five book industry professionals deliberated for four weeks, then selected the winners based on creativity, responsiveness to community needs and an understanding of young readers. Jurors noted that the staff at Kepler's has done "an amazing job resurrecting a store that was on the verge of closing just three years ago." With initiatives like their African Library Project, they are raising awareness of books for young people, not just in their community, but in parts of the world where children do not have books of their own. The Flying Pig Bookstore "is more than a bookstore" in that the owners—Elizabeth Bluemle and Josie Leavitt—"have created a place that gives back to everyone who wants to be part of the book community;" as well as sharing their knowledge and experience with other booksellers at national and regional organizations, such as the New England Children's Booksellers Assn. and NEBA/NEIBA. The jury admired the creative programming at Vero Beach Book Center, like the Coral Reef which was designed in a way that customers young and old could learn while being entertained.

In addition to WNBA, the Pannell Award is underwritten by a generous gift from Penguin Young Readers Group. Each winner will receive a check for $1000 and a framed piece of original art by a children's book illustrator. This year's art was contributed by Janet Stevens, an award-winning illustrator of many books including her latest, Help Me, Mr. Mutt!; and Chris Van Dusen, illustrator of the bestselling Mercy Watson Series by Kate Dicamillo, including this summer's Mercy Watson Thinks Like a Pig. The presentation of the awards will be at the "Celebration of Bookselling" at BEA on May 29th in Los Angeles.

The Women's National Book Association, founded in 1917, is a national organization of women and men who work with and value books. WNBA, an all-volunteer organization, exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the book community. To learn more about WNBA or the Pannell Award, visit www.wnba-books.org.

Women's National Book Association Celebrates
Its 90th Anniversary By Designating
October as National Reading Group Month

For immediate release

Contact:

Susannah Greenberg, Public Relations,
Women's National Book Association,
212-208-4629, publicity at bookbuzz.com
or
Jill Tardiff, National Reading Group Month Committee Chair,
Women's National Book Association,
201-656-7220, jtardiff-wnbanational at att.net

The Women's National Book Association (WNBA) is pleased to announce the launch of National Reading Group Month (NRGM) in October 2007 to mark the 90th anniversary of the Association's founding.

"Part of WNBA's mission is to promote reading and the value of books, so we are proud to organize the first-ever National Reading Group Month. Reading groups inspire, transform and educate. They foster community and instill an appreciation for the written word," says Laurie Beckelman, president of the WNBA.

"The launch of National Reading Group Month is a perfect way to celebrate our 90th anniversary, one that will create a legacy that grows richer year by year, as more and more friends of the book step up with new and creative ways to support reading groups."

The mission of National Reading Group Month is four-fold:

WNBA has chapters in Boston, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Nashville, New York City, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. All the chapters will mark the month with special festivities but the celebration will be nationwide and open to all. Booklovers of all stripes -- readers, publishers, librarians, authors, booksellers, and more -- will join in.

The Advisory Board to NRGM includes: Martha Burns, National Reading Group Month, Co-creator; John Y. Cole, Center for the Book, Library of Congress, Director; Shireen Dodson, The Mother-Daughter Book Club, Author; Alice Dillon, National Reading Group Month, Co-creator; Carol Fitzgerald, The Book Report Network/ReadingGroupGuides.com, Co-founder and President; April L. Judge, New Jersey Library Association, Director, West Caldwell PL; Ann Kent, book group expo, Founder; Barbara Mead, Reading Group Choices, President; Nancy Pearl, “America's Favorite Librarian” and Book Lust Series Author.

Further information is available at:

http://wnba-books.org. Check the web site for updates and more details on WNBA's National Reading Group Month events to take place in October.

Sponsors / Endorsements:

Sponsored in part by Counterpoint/Soft Skull, HarperCollins Publishers, Penguin Group Inc., The Random House Publishing Group, Simon & Schuster, Sutter Home Family Vineyards, and Susannah Greenberg Public Relations.

Endorsed by book group expo, The Book Report Network, New Jersey Library Association and New Jersey State Library, New York Center for Independent Publishing, and Reading Group Choices.

The American Booksellers Association and Book Sense applaud the efforts of WNBA in the National Reading Group Month initiative.

WNBA NRGM Advisory Board, Sponsors and Endorsement URLs

National Reading Group Month / WNBA Events scheduled include:

  • WNBA-NYC hosts the NRGM Signature Event on Monday, October 29 (6 to 9 p.m.), at the New York Center for Independent Publishing, 20 W. 44th Street, New York, NY. The evening includes a read-a-thon featuring authors Laura Dave, Wally Lamb, Matthew Sharpe, Beverly Swerling, and Adriana Trigiani, along with author interviews and book signings, refreshments and gift bags. Carol Fitzgerald, founder and president of The Book Report Network and ReadingGroupGuides. com is emcee. An informal reading group Q&A highlights Shireen Dodson, reading group facilitator and author of The Mother-Daughter Book Club, and Barbara Mead, president of Reading Group Choices.

    Visit www.wnba-nyc.org/register.html for further details and to purchase tickets. Email nrgm at wnba-nyc.org with other inquiries. Ten percent of ticket sales from the NRGM Signature Event will go to the U.S. Fund for UNICEF.

  • WNBA-Boston on Sunday, October 28 (3 p.m.), at the Boston Back Bay Hilton, a wine and cheese reception, with author Jennifer Haigh. Tips for successful book groups and a chance to meet members of other groups also featured. Contact: Katherine Dibble, kdibble at att.net.

  • WNBA-Detroit on Saturday, October 27 (1 p.m.), at Milford Public Library, Milford, MI, with chapter member Brenda Ervin of Brenda's Barn Door Publishing (www.barndoorpublishing.com) speaks about books relating to family farms in conjunction with Michigan’s official "October Is Farm Market and Farm Family Month." For details, go to: www.wnba-books.org/detroit/programs.

  • WNBA-Los Angeles on Sunday, October 28 (2 to 5 p.m.), at Dutton's Brentwood Bookstore, with author Hillary Carlip. Contact: Ruth Light, ruthabc at ca.rr.com.

  • WNBA-Nashville on Thursday, November 1 (Time TBD), at regular monthly meeting location, with a panel of local WNBA authors. Specially invited guests include members of Nashville-area reading or book discussion groups. Contact: Andrea Lindsey, lindseya at rcs.k12.tn.us.

  • WNBA-San Francisco on Wednesday, October 10 (7 p.m.), at BookShop West Portal with author Beth Lisick. Contact: Mary Knippel, copywriter at coastside.net.

  • WNBA-D.C. promotes NRGM at its fall brunch and Thursday, October 25 program (Time TBD). Contact: Liddie Smith, liddiewnba at comcast.net.

    And NRGM library partners,

  • Monmouth County Library Headquarters, Manalapan, NJ on Tuesday, October 30 (7 p.m.), with authors Beth Gutcheon and Jamie Saul, and Reading Group Choices president, Barbara Mead. Contact: April Judge, judge at bccls.org.


    WNBA Announces Winners of 2007 Pannell Award

    For immediate release

    Contact:
    Mary Grey James
    (615) 213-5362, mary.james at ingrambook.com

    The Women's National Book Association is proud to announce the winners of this year's Lucile Micheels Pannell Award given annually since 1983 to two retail bookstores that excel at inspiring the interest of young people in books and reading. The winner in the General Bookstore category is Books & Books of Coral Gables, Florida; the winner in the Children's Bookstore category is Wonderland Books of Rockford, Illinois. The awards will be presented by Mary Grey James, WNBA Pannell Chair, at ABA's Annual Celebration of Bookselling on the evening of May 31st at the ABA Marriott Hotel in Brooklyn.

    Each winner will receive a check for $1000 and a framed piece of original art. This year's art was contributed by Wendell Minor, an artist well known for his work in children's literature, most recently Ghost Ship by Mary Higgins Clark, as well as his jacket art for books by Pat Conroy, David McCullough, and many others; and Belle Yang, the subject of an upcoming PBS program and an artist known for her use of color and sense of joy in her children's books, such as Hannah Is My Name and this fall's Come Home to Me.

    For the first time, the WNBA Pannell Award is underwritten by a generous gift from Penguin Young Readers Group, a leading publisher of books for young people. In announcing Penguin's support, Doug Whiteman, President, called the Pannell "a worthy cause" in its recognition of retail bookstores that creatively bring books and young people together.

    A jury of five book industry professionals deliberated for four weeks, then selected the winners based on creativity, responsiveness to community needs, passion, and understanding of young readers. Wonderland Books was cited for having an overall commitment to community outreach as actual "good works" beyond typical store marketing or promotional motivation, such as their work with Head Start and their programs aimed at developmentally delayed children. Books & Books, a well-established store long active in the American Bookseller Association, was commended, in particular, for reaching out to the growing young adult market with its High School Photography Exhibit, a rock concert tie-in to Laurie Halse Anderson's Twisted, and fencing/ballet/drumming/yoga workshops--all related to making books accessible to young people.

    Other nominees impressed the jurors as all being good candidates for making a difference in their communities: All for Kids in Seattle for giving city-wide children a chance to meet authors and illustrators during its 60th birthday celebration; Little Shop of Stories, the recipient of Atlanta Magazine's "Best of Atlanta Best Kids' Outing" Award, for serving a multicultural community with a sense of fun and energy; Tome on the Range in Las Vegas, NM for having the enthusiastic backing of a small town without the benefit of author visits; Vroman's of Pasadena, CA for its monthly family nights, annual bookmark design contest and Young Reader's account in which a child has his/her own personal charge account; and Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza in Albany, NY for its many testimonials from grateful customers.

    This year's Pannell Award Jury consisted of:

    Jill Bailey, Penguin Group USA
    Kate DeRosier, Candlewick Press
    Peggy Kohlepp, Tulane University Bookstore
    Anne Irish, Consultant
    Dawn Zahorik, Scholastic

    The Women's National Book Association, founded in 1917, is a national organization of women and men who work with and value books. WNBA, an all-volunteer organization, exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the book community. To learn more about the organization or the Pannell Award, visit www.wnba-books.org.


    WNBA Pannell Award Partners with Penguin Young Readers Group

    For immediate release

    Contact:
    Mary Grey James
    (615) 213-5362, mary.james at ingrambook.com

    The Women's National Book Association is pleased to announce a new partner in presenting the 2007 WNBA Pannell Award at this year's BookExpo America on June 2nd. Penguin Young Readers Group has agreed to underwrite the award to recognize and publicly applaud the work of booksellers who stimulate, promote and encourage the interest of young people in books.

    Named for Lucile Micheels Pannell, a model bookseller who was also a founding member of a WNBA chapter, the Pannell Award was established in 1981 by WNBA and is given to two bookstores—a children's specialty bookstore and a general bookstore--annually at BEA. In addition to receiving recognition in the book industry, each Pannell recipient receives a $1,000 check and a framed piece of original art by a children's book illustrator.

    In explaining Penguin's decision to underwrite the Pannell in 2007, Doug Whiteman, President of Penguin Young Readers Group, cited the award as being a “worthy cause” and expressed enthusiasm for its mission of promoting reading and the enjoyment of books for young people. Penguin Young Readers Group is a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc. located at 345 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014. Long a leader in children's book publishing, it represents some of the most recognized names in the book industry—Viking Children's Books, Frederick Warne, Philomel Books, Dutton Children's Books, Dial Books for Young Readers and G.P. Putnam's Sons; as well as new innovative imprints for older readers, including Razorbill and Sleuth.

    WNBA is a national organization of women and men who work to promote reading and to support the role of women in the book community. Founded in 1917, WNBA has eight chapters across the country. Its members include those who are employed in the book industry, as well as those who have an appreciation for books. In addition to the WNBA Pannell Award, the organization serves as a Reading Promotion Partner in the Library of Congress Center for the Book and also is a non-governmental organization affiliated with the United Nations, fostering reading in Third World nations.


    Women's National Book Association Launches
    New Network Membership:
    WNBA Opens Chapter Membership to All

    For Immediate Release:

    Contact:
    Susannah Greenberg, Public Relations, Women's National Book Association, 212-208-4629, publicity at bookbuzz.com
    or
    Sylvia Cross, Network Membership Chair, Women's National Book Association,
    262-650-1414, scross at wirr.com

    The Women's National Book Association, www.wnba-books.org, is pleased to announce a new membership category: Network Membership. If you live in a city without a WNBA chapter, you can join any of the eight chapters of the organization and are entitled to all rights and privileges of that chapter and national membership. WNBA has chapters in Boston, Dallas, Detroit, Los Angeles, Nashville, New York, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C.

    "By launching the new network membership, WNBA creates an opportunity for all book lovers, no matter where they live, to join and enjoy online the many benefits of this active organization of professionals: lively panels on publishing topics with leading experts; informative newsletters and Web sites; networking; and more," says Sylvia Cross, Network Membership Chair for the Women's National Book Association.

    Further information is available at: http://wnba-books.org/join/network.php

    Benefits of Membership include:

    Education

      * Learn about trends and issues in the book industry and literary world
      * Listen online to streaming audio of New York publishing panels. Recent programs available include: "Dangerous Books"; "Young Literary Agents on Publishing: Changing the Industry One Book at a Time"; and "Everyone's a Critic: The Rise and Resonance of Literary Blogging".
      * Receive The Bookwoman, WNBA's national newsletter, three times a year

    Connection

      * Network with WNBA professionals via the online National Directory
      * Attend WNBA events anywhere in the country
      * Access your chapter's and National's Members Only sections of the WNBA Web sites

    Through WNBA's National Newsletter The Bookwoman You Can:

      * Publish articles or book reviews
      * Publicize books or articles you've published
      * Advertise your skills or business

    On the Web:
      * List your areas of specialization in the online National Directory

    The Women's National Book Association, which is about to celebrate its 90th anniversary, was established before women in America even had the right to vote. It is a broad based non profit organization with members across the country, three distinguished national awards, and a history of lively events in its eight chapter cities and elsewhere. As a national organization of women and men who work with and value books, WNBA exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the book world.

    The organization recently gave its 2006 WNBA Award to Perri Klass, M.D. for her many books and articles, and for her impact as a leader of Reach Out and Read, where she currently serves as its medical director and president. The ceremony was held December 3, 2006 at The New York Society Library.

    WNBA created the Ann Heidbreder Eastman Grant, to provide funds for librarians who are interested in learning about the publishing process. In 2006 it went to Linda Moskovics, who manages the Allied Gardens/Benjamin Branch of the San Diego Public Library System.

    WNBA established the Lucile Micheels Pannell Awards for booksellers who actively encourage children's and young people's interest in books. The awards are presented annually at a breakfast at BookExpoAmerica. The 2006 recipients were: Northshire Bookstore of Manchester Center, Vermont Children's Specialty Store and A Likely Story Children's Bookstore of Alexandria, Virginia.

    Recent WNBA events have been covered in the Boston Globe, the New York Times, C-SPAN, NPR, Publishers Weekly, and more.

    ###

    Further information is available at:

    http://wnba-books.org/join/network.php

    ###

    Contact: Susannah Greenberg, Public Relations, Women's National Book Association, 212-208-4629, publicity at bookbuzz.com
    or
    Sylvia Cross, Network Membership Chair, Women's National Book Association,
    262-650-1414, scross at wirr.com

    Women's National Book Association, Inc. P.O. Box 237, FDR Station, New York, NY 10150. Phone and fax: 212 208 4629
    http://www.wnba-books.org


    WNBA Announces Children's Bookseller Award Nominees

    CONTACT INFORMATION
    Mary Grey James, Pannell Chair
    615-213-5362
    mary.james at ingrambook.com

    The Women's National Book Association is proud to announce the nominees for this year's WNBA Pannell Award. Established in 1981 to honor Lucile Micheels Pannell, a model bookwoman and children's bookseller, the Pannell Award recognizes retail bookstores that excel at inspiring the interest of young people in books and reading. WNBA will present the Award to two bookstores (one general and one children's bookstore) at BookExpo America 2007 in New York on June lst.

    Each recipient will receive a check for $1,000 and a framed piece of original art by a children's book illustrator. For the first time, the Award will be sponsored also by Penguin Young Readers Group, a leading publisher of books for young people.

    The nominees represent a mix of well-established stores, as well as relatively new stores, located in diverse sections of the country:

    Children's Specialty Stores:

      All for Kids Books, Seattle WA
      Books, Bytes & Beyond, Glen Rock NJ
      Little Shop of Stories, Decatur GA
      Wonderland Books, Rockford IL

    General Stores:

      The Blue Marble, Ft. Thomas KY
      Books & Books, Coral Gables FL
      Book House of Stuyvesant Plaza, Albany NY
      Pages Bookstore, Flint MI
      Tome on the Range, Las Vegas NM
      Vroman's Bookstore, Pasadena CA

    The jury of five book industry professionals will select the Award winners based on the store's demonstration of creativity, responsiveness to community needs, passion and a genuine understanding of books for young people and their readers.

    The Women's National Book Association, founded in 1917, is a national organization of women and men who work with and value books. WNBA, an all-volunteer organization, exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the community of the book. To learn more about the organization and the Pannell Award, visit their web page at www.wnba-books.org.


    GLOBE EDITORIAL

    Doctor's order: a book

    November 20, 2006

    THE WNBA is giving out an award next month to a one-time Boston doctor -- but don't think basketball, think books.

    It's the Women's National Book Association, founded in 1917 by 15 women booksellers who had been denied membership in the all-male Bookseller's League. That year, women couldn't vote, but they were writing. Edith Wharton published the novel "Summer." Laura E. Richards and Maud Howe Elliott won the Pulitzer Prize for their biography about their mother, Julia Ward Howe.

    Today, the association has grown to "promote reading and to support the role of women in the community of the book." That includes granting an award to a woman who earns at least part of her income from books or related arts and whose work goes beyond the "responsibilities of her profession."

    This year's winner is Dr. Perri Klass, who worked at Boston Medical Center before moving in September to New York University, where she is a professor of pediatrics and journalism. Klass is a pediatrician and a prolific writer of fiction, essays, and books. She joins an august group: Past awards have gone to Rachel Carson, Pearl Buck, and Eleanor Roosevelt.

    Co-written with her mother, Sheila Solomon Klass, Perri Klass's recent book is a double memoir, two women writing from different views about shared lifetimes. The mouthful of a title is "Every Mother Is a Daughter: The Neverending Quest for Success, Inner Peace, and a Really Clean Kitchen (Recipes and Knitting Patterns Included)."

    "We're talking to each other, and we're talking to you," the readers, Klass said in an interview. It's a blend of history, emotion, and convergent and clashing memories.

    What helps put Klass's effort beyond the call of duty is her work with Reach Out and Read, a national organization that distributes children's books through the offices of pediatricians and family doctors. It's the right thing to do, and it's fun, Klass says, explaining how children's eyes light up when they get a book, and how the book can make it easier to do the basic medical work of assessing children's development, speech, and their interactions with parents. There is, Klass says, a "practical, concrete pleasure" in seeing a new book go home with a child.

    Born in 1989 at what was then Boston City Hospital, Reach Out and Read is now in 3,100 sites. In its 2006 fiscal year, the organization gave away 4.3 million books to 2.6 million children. The organization uses federal funding, private donations, and in some cases state funds. In 2000, Massachusetts was the first state to invest in the program.

    Congratulations are due to Klass. But this award is also a nod of gratitude for the great power of books.

    © Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.


    WNBA Announces 2006 Children's Bookseller Award Winners


    Contact information:
    Name: Eileen Hanning, WNBA Pannell Chair
    Phone: 703-998-8541
    Fax: 703-998-8818
    Email: eidh@yahoo.com
    Date: May 8, 2006

    The Women's National Book Association is proud to announce the winners of this year's Lucile Micheels Pannell Award. This year's Award for a general bookstore goes to Northshire Bookstore in Manchester Center, Vermont. The winner in the children's specialty category is A Likely Story Children's Bookstore in Alexandria, Virginia. The Awards will be presented at BookExpo America in Washington, D.C. at the Children's Book and Author Breakfast on Friday, May 19. The breakfast is sponsored by the American Booksellers Association-Children's Book Council Joint Committee, the Association of Booksellers for Children, and BookExpo America. Each winner will receive a check for $1000 and a framed piece of original art created by a children's book illustrator. This year's art was contributed by artists Marla Frazee and Graeme Base. In addition to the Award winners, the jury selected Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, Arizona for an honorable mention in the general store category.

    The Pannell Award was established in 1981, and first given in 1983, to honor Ms. Pannell, a model bookwoman and children's bookseller. The Award recognizes retail bookstores who excel at creatively bringing books and children together and inspiring children's interest in books and reading. After six weeks of deliberation, the jury of five book industry professionals selected Northshire and A Likely Story as the winners based on creativity, responsiveness to community needs, passion, and understanding of children's books and young readers.

    “The winners this year are both well-established stores–Northshire is 30 years old and A Likely Story is more than 20–but both have re-invented themselves over time to respond to the changing needs and interests of their communities,” explained Eileen Hanning, WNBA Pannell Award Chair. “The stores that won this year were chosen because their day-to-day practices are truly dedicated to the needs of young readers and their families. In addition, both stores take handselling so seriously they have training materials or programs to cultivate this essential art.”

    “Children's booksellers attending BEA this year have a wonderful opportunity to visit one of the winning stores. A Likely Story is less than nine miles from the Washington Convention Center, and only two blocks from the King Street Metro Station,” added Hanning. “I hope they'll take a break from prowling the exhibit hall and go see A Likely Story for themselves!”

    This is the second Pannell Award for A Likely Story. It won for the first time in 1988. The jury found this store to be a model of energy, enthusiasm and business sense. With a staff of just seven people (and one dog), A Likely Story conducts seven story times a week, including a Chapter By Chapter story time, distinct story times for children under and over two, and foreign language and musical story times. They conduct summer camps for readers of all ages and interests, snow day specials, and family nights. One juror remarked, “Their energy and enthusiasm are amazing. I am impressed by how much they have created that is mostly done with an expenditure of time and hard work.”

    After twenty years under the same owners, A Likely Story changed hands in 2004. Careful market analysis, revitalizing relationships with schools and community groups, and a marketing strategy based on a large volume of high-quality children's book-themed events for families keep this little store going strong.

    In the general store category, Northshire Bookstore impressed the jury with their store-wide commitment to all readers, not just the grown-up ones. Indeed, both the physical layout of their children's section–occupying the entire sunlit second floor of the store–and the warm and enthusiastic welcome teens receive in the store's café–to meet, study, or hang out–demonstrate how much Northshire values young readers. Their regular programming includes after-school programs where children can explore a topic in depth, grandparents' night (created to help these special book buyers feel more confident choosing books for the children in their lives), and ongoing crafts, story times, book groups, and poetry slams.

    Northshire puts the same passion and effort into the buying, staffing, marketing, merchandising, and graphics for its children's section as they do for the rest of the store. The value they place on even the youngest of their customers shines through in their business practices. “Northshire is the gold standard for how general bookstores should treat their sections for young people. Every aspect is given such careful thought and total commitment–no wonder they are the byword for bookselling excellence in our industry” exclaimed one Pannell juror.

    Like Northshire, Changing Hands Bookstore in Tempe, is also 30 years old. The jury awarded Changing Hands an honorable mention for their especially distinctive work with teen readers and with the Phoenix Zoo, as well as for their remarkably community-minded philosophy.

    This year's Pannell Award jury consisted of:
    Jill Bailey, Penguin Group USA and DK Books for Young Readers
    Geoffrey Hughes, Harcourt Trade Publishers
    Anne Irish, Children's Bookselling Consultuant
    Ellen Myrick, North-South Books
    Jason Wells, Abrams Books for Young Readers/Amulet Books

    The Women's National Book Association, founded in 1917, is a national organization of women and men who work with and value books. WNBA, an all-volunteer organization, exists to promote reading and to support the role of women in the community of the book. To learn more about the organization, visit their web site at www.wnba-books.org.


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