NEW on 3/10: Learning about soils, lots of Gwinnett candidates

GwinnettForum  |  Number 19.94 |  March 10, 2020

SUWANEE OFFICER RICHARD POPE is readying to lead another Citizens Police Academy. This program begins on April 6, and runs for 10 weeks. For more details on the program, see Upcoming below.

IN THIS EDITION

TODAY’S FOCUS: Master Gardeners on March 16 To Hear Cris Force about Healthy Soils 
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Whew! Total of 135 Candidates Running on Gwinnett Primary Ballot 
SPOTLIGHT: Gateway85 Gwinnett 
FEEDBACK: Government Has Role To Play, But Not To Be Central To Our Lives
UPCOMING: Gwinnett Rotarians Anticipating Visit by Rotary International President
NOTABLE: Braselton Community Now Has Its Own Paid Weekly Newspaper
RECOMMENDED: A Silken Thread by Kim Vogel Sawyer
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Appalachian Studies Pioneer Helen Lewis Lives in Abington, Va.
MYSTERY PHOTO: Winding Road, Seashore, Hills May Guide You To Mystery Photo
LAGNIAPPE: Flowering Trees Throughout Gwinnett Give Another Indication of Coming of Spring
CALENDAR: Lilburn, Norcross Planning Festivities Around St. Patrick’s Day

TODAY’S FOCUS

Master Gardeners  to hear March 16 about healthy soils 

By Tixie Fowler

LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga.  | On March 16 at 7 p.m., Master Gardener Cris Force will share her award-winning insights into development of healthy soils in a Gwinnett Master Gardener presentation that explores a growing national concern – the health of soil and its impact on our selves, our communities and landscapes.

Force

In April of 2019, the USDA’s Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) announced it would provide $1.9 million to continue funding Soil Science Collaborative Research projects focused on soil science and soil survey research. This concern for the important natural resources issues facing our nation is echoed by the International Master Gardeners Organization (IMGO) which also supports research leading to innovative solutions for improving soils.

The IMGO recently recognized Cris Force and fellow Master Gardener Linda Hlozansky for their research in a project called the “No-Till Mycorrhizal Sweet Potato Garden Experiment.” In the Gwinnett Master Gardener presentation on March 16, Force will share the discoveries that earned her team first place in the Research category of the IMGO’s 2019 Search for Excellence Awards.

Force notes that recent scientific study is revealing far more than the health of plants are at stake when considering how we all treat our soils. Current research is indicating that soil conditions also affect the health of our children and ourselves, and even play a role in climate change. In her March presentation, Force will share how mycorrhizal fungi make our soil healthy and how the destructive horticultural practices of the 20th century can be reversed.

A Master Gardener for 12 years, Force is active in Master Gardener Volunteers of Cobb County. She serves on the Education Committee as chair of the School Gardens Sub-Committee, and is co-chair of her organization’s book club, Thyme to Read.

  • Gwinnett’s master gardeners  meet on the third Monday of each month at the Bethesda Senior Center, 225 Bethesda Church Road, Lawrenceville. These events are free and open to the public. People are welcome to bring a covered dish to share for a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m. or just arrive in time for the program which begins at 7 p.m. For program updates and to find out about any cancellations, visit www.gwinnettmastergardeners.com. 
  • Have a comment?  Send to: elliott@brack.net

EEB PERSPECTIVE

Whew! 135 candidates running on Gwinnett primary ballot

By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum

MARCH 10, 2020  | The 2020 primary in Gwinnett opened the floodgates for candidates, as there are 135 people on the Gwinnett ballot seeking to get elected and begin serving January 1, 2021.  

However, only 17 political candidates are moving to the General Election without an opponent, including four Superior Court and four State Court candidates, plus the magistrate judge.  The clerk of court and the probate court judge also have no primary opposition, and therefore will take office on January 1.

The most candidates are seeking to represent the 7th District in Washington, to replace Republican Rob Woodall.  Seven Republicans and six Democrats are running for this seat in Congress. In the Fourth District, four candidates, including Incumbent Hank Johnson, vie for this seat, while for the 10th Congressional race, two people are in contention against Republican Jody Hice.

There are seven candidates seeking the post as chairman of the County Commission, four Democrats and three Republicans. That includes Republicans George Awuku, Marcia Neaton and David Post. Democrats running for chairman include Nicole Love Hendrickson, Andy Morgan, Desmond A. Nembhard, Curt Thompson, and Lee Thompson Jr. 

Three current office holders on the County Commission did not qualify to run again, meaning two people will have seniority on the County Commission each having served only two years.

For the other commission seats, three people seek the District One Commission post, while eight candidates run for the District 3 seat. 

Three current School Board members have again qualified to run, and all have opposition. Two Democrats seek the Post 1 position held by Incumbent Republican Carol Boyce; one Democrat has qualified to run against Incumbent Republican Mary Kay Murphy; and one Democrat will run for post 5 against Incumbent Democrat Louise Radloff. 

There are six political candidates who have no primary nor General Election opponents. They are Senators Sheikh Rahman and Gloria Bennett; House members  Scott Holcomb, Karen Bennett, Pedro Marin and Dewey McClain.  

Superior Court judges who are unopposed are Karen Byers, Ronnie Batchelor, Tadia Whitner and Warren Davis.  State Court judges unopposed are Carla Brown and Emily Brantley, while newcomer Veronica Cope is unopposed for the Doran seat. Chief Magistrate Krista Blum also has no opponent.

Probate Judge Christopher Ballar will get another term unopposed, while Tiana P. Garner, now chief deputy to the Clerk of Court, is running for that position without opposition. 

Republican Incumbent District Attorney Danny Porter is running for another term, with opposition from Democrats Patsy Austin-Gatson and Wes Person. 

Tax Commissioner Republican Richard Steele has drawn three Democratic opponents, Regina Carden, Maureen McIvor and Tiffany Parker. 

Six candidates are seeking to replace Republican Butch Conway as sheriff. The Democrats seeking this seat are Curtis Clemons, Benjamin Haynes, Floyd Scott and Kebo Taylor. Republicans running are Louis Solis and Ken VanNus.

Whew! All this says 2020 is going to be a big campaign season in Gwinnett. The general primary will be on May 19, and there are sure to be runoffs on July 21.  All this sets the stage for the General Election on November 3.

If all this  draws your interest, and you are not registered, you have until April 20 to register to vote in the General Primary.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Gateway85 Gwinnett 

The public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. Gateway85 Gwinnett is a self-taxing community improvement district that includes just over 800 commercial property owners with a property value of over $1 billion. Gateway85 includes the southwestern part of Gwinnett County including properties along Jimmy Carter Boulevard, Buford Highway, Indian Trail Road, and Beaver Ruin Road. Gateway 85 is one of six CIDs to be created in Gwinnett County and is the largest of all CIDs in the state. The community is an economic powerhouse that helps fuel the regional economy. More than 3,000 businesses (employing roughly 34,000 people) call Gateway85 home. The jobs in the district account for almost 12 percent of Gwinnett County’s total employment and support $2 billion in annual payroll. Gateway85’s mission is to improve property values through increased security, decreased traffic congestion, and general improvements to the curb appeal of the area. The CID moved their offices to 1770 Indian Trail-Lilburn Road, Norcross and recently rebranded to reflect the strong future of this area.  It was previously known as Gwinnett Village Community Improvement District. For more information visit  https://www.gateway85.com/ or call 770-449-6542. 

  • For a list of other sponsors of this forum, click here.

 FEEDBACK

Government has role to play, but not to be central to our lives

Editor, the Forum:

It’s always fascinating how some people come to their conclusions through overly-simplified rationales. Thus, conservatives want to “protect their fortunes” by shrinking government. Is it possible that conservatives simply believe that a government that governs least…governs best?  

The Founders never intended for an overarching federal government to encroach on every part of our daily lives.  That the government closest to the people (i.e., at the local level) is best-positioned to address the needs of their respective constituencies?

Conservatives simply believe in limited government, love of country, faith in God, the centrality of the family unit, respect for those who protect us from harm, and communities that come together through various (non-government) institutions to serve their needs. Conservatives also believe in the wisdom of the Founding Fathers, who – despite their flaws – crafted a brilliant document that has served us well for almost 250 years. Yet these “geniuses” of today think they know better. 

The Constitution is not a “living, breathing document,” as many liberals would have us believe. The infrastructure is clearly embedded within the document to make it more relevant to today’s world. For those not schooled in civics, these are called ”amendments” to the Constitution, and there is a clearly-defined process by which these changes can be enacted. Government, of course, has a role to play, but it was never intended to become central to our daily lives. Therein lies the difference between the two sides of the debate.

— Gregg Stopher, Peachtree Corners

Dear Gregg: Your thoughts, too, may be over-simplified, but they give me cause to pause. Look soon for something from GwinnettForum slightly agreeing with you. –eeb

Agrees on recent poor debate; Where are conservatives? 

Editor, the Forum: 

Let me  agree with Andy Brack’s summary of the recent poorly managed Democratic debate. Debates serve a valuable service when differences of opinion are offered and the observer can pick which opinion (and candidate) aligns with their own.  

Unfortunately, the last debate made the candidates caught looking like school kids trying to outshout each other to get the teacher’s  attention and approval.  Have  we ever needed a differentiation in politics on the major issues more than right now?   

Where are the conservatives (the country sorely needs) that will rise above the clamor  and actually help us begin to right the ship?  

— John Moore, Duluth 

Writer underestimates Georgians, whose ancestors survived on peas

Editor, the Forum: 

Contributor Jack Bernard argues against preserving civil war monuments, since no Georgian should be proud of them, and that they obscure the horrors of slavery which our ancestors either participated in one form or another.  

I think he underestimates Georgians, most of who have the capacity to recognize the monuments for the positives, and independence of their legacy, while at the same time coming to grips with its burden.  

This later recognition is in another way observed for many families on New Year’s Day with a meal of black-eyed peas – the only crop that Sherman’s march of destruction across our state did not destroy. Peas allowed many families to survive that horrible war year. If Jack wants to continue his struggle against white supremacy, he should attend and protest at this year’s  American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference.

— Joe Briggs, Suwanee

What he learns from reading the obituaries closely

Editor, the Forum: 

If you do not take a local newspaper, you are missing out on an exercise in writing prose.  My wife, my older sister, and I would not miss them for the world.  

You will see such things as this, which I saw a few weeks ago.  “Harry Smith, 68, took off his business suit yesterday and traded it for a pair of wings as he is headed for heaven.”  

Here is one out of a Chattanooga newspaper: “Heaven just got a little funnier with the arrival of Todd Christopher Roberson.”  A lot of them say that so and so died and “went to be with the Lord today.”  

Whoever writes ones like that need to read their Bibles more carefully.  That dude will rest six feet underground until he is resurrected.  This one “passed on February 27, 2020, at home, exactly where she wanted to be.”  This one “became absent from the body and present with the Lord.

The ones that I like are the ones that say that Fred Smith died surrounded by his family.  I, of course, do not know the size of his family, but if there are enough there, they used up all the oxygen and Fred suffocated.  

Some of these things are written by the funeral home; they are just filling in a form.  The phrase that appears in a lot of them is “he was of the Baptist/Methodist/Presbyterian, etc.” (That means he wasn’t an actual member of a church.) All of those churches are denominations, not faiths; they are all Christian, and that is the faith.  

— Raleigh Perry, Buford

Send us your thoughts:  We encourage you to send us your letters and thoughts on issues raised in GwinnettForum.  Please limit comments to 300 words. We reserve the right to edit for clarity and length. Send feedback and letters to:  elliott@brack.net

UPCOMING

Rotary International president to visit Gwinnett Rotarians

The president of Rotary International, Mark Maloney of Decatur, Ala., is planning a visit to  the Infinite Energy Forum on April 14 at 10: 30 a.m. The eight Rotary Clubs of Gwinnett County are hosting this event, a “Peace and Prosperity” symposium. 

Maloney

Other distinguished presenters include Dr. Saloni Firasta-Vastani, Emory Business School; Victoria Huynh, from the Center for Pan Asian Community Services; Mitesh Patel, BAPS Shri Swaminararyan Mandir; Anthony Rodriguez, Aurora Theatre; and a representative from the Georgia Rotary Student program.

Mark Daniel Maloney is a principal in the law firm of Blackburn, Maloney, and Schuppert LLC, with a focus on taxation, estate planning, and agricultural law. He represents large farming operations in the Southeastern and Midwestern United States, and has chaired the American Bar Association’s Committee on Agriculture in the section of taxation. 

He has been active in Decatur’s religious community, chairing his church’s finance council and a local Catholic school board. He has also served as president of the Community Foundation of Greater Decatur, chair of Morgan County Meals on Wheels, and director of the United Way of Morgan County and the Decatur-Morgan County Chamber of Commerce.

A Rotarian since 1980, Maloney was an adviser to the 2004 Osaka Convention Committee and chaired the 2014 Sydney Convention Committee. Prior to serving as a district governor, Maloney led a Group Study Exchange to Nigeria.

  • Rotary clubs through the area are invited to attend, as well as the public. Tickets are $55. Register online at https://bit.ly/3c9CniN

Apply by April 1 for Suwanee Citizens Police Academy

The Suwanee Citizens Police Academy is looking for participants in the Suwanee Citizens Police Academy. This program allows residents a better understanding of the day-to-day functions of police officers, as well as an opportunity to patrol Suwanee’s streets alongside an officer. The ten-week program will be offered Monday evenings beginning on April 6. Classes will be from 6:30-9 p.m. at the Suwanee Police Training Center, 2966 Lawrenceville-Suwanee Road.

The academy offers classroom training and hands-on experiences in crime scene processing, traffic stops, building searches, crime prevention, and narcotics identification and provides an understanding of the risks and responsibilities of officers. The program is designed to open and maintain communication between citizens and the police department. 

Classes are free and open to the public, but space is limited and preference is given to Suwanee residents or those who work in the City of Suwanee. A criminal and driver history background is required for all applicants. For additional information and an application, visit Suwanee.com or contact Officer Richard Pope at rpope@suwanee.com or 770-904-7641. Notarized applications are due April 1.

 NOTABLE

Braselton community now has paid weekly newspaper

The Braselton community is being served these days with a new paid-circulation newspaper.  

The Braselton News debuted February 12, and consists of between 16-20 pages per issue. Subscription rate for new customers in the early phase  is $10.10 a year. The new newspaper comes from Main Street Newspapers, headquartered at the Jackson Herald in Jefferson.  

Alex Buffington, wife of Co-Publisher Mike Buffington, is the editor of The Braselton News.

Co-Publisher Scott Buffington says that the company recognized the need for a regular newspaper with more news as growth came to the four-county Jackson, Gwinnett, Hall and Barrow area, which converge near Braselton. “We started with subscriptions to the county-wide Jackson Herald in this area, but recognized the need for more news coverage of the Braselton area.”   

Already the newspaper has reached a paid circulation of 2,000. “Each week we get calls from people who said they didn’t get the free newspaper, and we explain the new concept, and many of them are subscribing,” Buffington says. He anticipates that the area will eventually support a circulation of at least between 2,500 and 3,000. 

Main Street News also publishes a quarterly magazine, Braselton Today, which will come to subscribers of The Braselton News as an insert. The company also has three other weekly newspapers, including The Barrow News-Journal in Winder; The Banks County News in Comer; and the Madison County Journal in Danielsville. 

Suwanee’s Doherty is event director of year for SFEA

Doherty

The City of Suwanee is proud to announce that Event and Outreach Manager Amy Doherty was named Event Director of the Year by the Southeast Festivals and Events Association (SFEA). Doherty has produced nearly 500 events in the last 14 years for the City of Suwanee. 

Suwanee City Manager Marty Allen says: “In all, we estimate over 250,000 people enjoy Suwanee events annually – not including those who frequent the weekly farmers market stalls year-round.”

The best and brightest of the event industry were spotlighted at the 17th annual SFEA Kaleidoscope Awards in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, held in conjunction with the SFEA Annual Conference. Top festivals and events throughout the southeast were recognized for their outstanding contribution to the events industry, including multiple Suwanee events: 

Gold Awards

  • Best Vendor – Performance Race Services.

Silver Awards

  • Best Volunteer – Kate Fanale;
  • Best Poster – Suwanee Fest 2019; and 
  • Best Creative Idea – Parker’s Passport.

Bronze Awards

  • Best Event within an Event – North Gwinnett Arts Association Lantern Classes for Glow in the Dark.

 RECOMMENDED

A Silken Thread by Kim Vogel Sawyer

From Karen Harris, Stone Mountain:  Eighteen year old Laurel Millard, the youngest of five children, is told by her brothers and sisters that she must be responsible for their widowed mother rather than have her own family. This is a shock since Laurel has always dreamed of meeting the man who will make her heart sing. Willie Sharp is a young worker whose widowed father is recovering from a stroke and is dependent upon Willie’s ability to provide for the family. Quincy Tate is Willie’s best friend. Langdon Rochester is the heir to his family steam-powered-engine empire in the days leading up to the Cotton Exposition in 1895 Atlanta. When circumstances bring these four lives together, issues of Faith in God’s Will for each life, forgiveness, and integrity are put to test. This is a feel- good story which shows that perseverance and unconditional regard can and often is rewarded with one’s heart’s desire.

An invitation: what books, restaurants, movies or web sites have you enjoyed recently? Send us your recent selection, along with a short paragraph (100 words) as to why you liked this, plus what you plan to visit or read next.  Send to: elliott@brack.net 

GEORGIA TIDBIT

Appalachian studies pioneer Lewis lives in Virginia

(From previous edition)

After working for several years as a social worker in Richmond, Virginia, Helen M. Lewis moved with her husband in 1955 to Wise, in the heart of southwest Virginia’s coal country, where she became a librarian and lecturer at Clinch Valley College. There she discovered Appalachia, the mountainous region that was home to some of the most impoverished and isolated communities in the nation. Drawn to the region’s people and traditions, Lewis came to despise the human exploitation and environmental devastation caused by the coal and chemical industries. She considered their activities modern-day versions of colonialism and blamed them for many of the problems faced by southern highlanders.

Lewis

During the 1960s Lewis researched coal mining mechanization and its impact on families in the region as part of her doctoral studies at the University of Kentucky, where in 1970 she earned her Ph.D. in sociology. She rejoined the faculty at Clinch Valley in 1969, teaching sociology and anthropology, and breaking new academic ground by creating curricula in both rural sociology and Appalachian Studies. 

She and her husband divorced in 1974, and in 1977 she joined the staff of the Highlander Research and Education Center (formerly known as the Highlander Folk School) in New Market, Tenn. Over the next 20 years there, her commitment to the region both deepened and broadened, as reflected in her scholarship and her activism.

During her time at Highlander (and in visiting stints at Berea College in Berea, K;. Toccoa Falls College in Toccoa Falls, Ga.; and Appalachian State University in Boone, N.C., among others), Lewis embraced a variety of issues affecting Appalachian communities, including social and environmental justice, rural community development, the empowerment of women, improved access to health care, opposition to strip mining, and comparative cultural study of coal workers in Appalachia and in Wales, United Kingdom. For several years, she worked closely with the residents of Ivanhoe, Va., which resulted in a two-volume oral history project published in 1990. Among her many other published works are two coauthored books, Colonialism in Modern America: The Appalachian Case (1978) and Mountain Sisters: From Convent to Community in Appalachia (2003), a history chronicling an order of nuns in Kentucky.

Upon her retirement from Highlander in 1997, Lewis moved back to her home state of Georgia and spent the next 15 years in Morganton, in Fannin County, though she continued to be much in demand as a teacher and lecturer throughout the region. In 2002 she served as president of the Appalachian Studies Association and presided over its annual meeting at Unicoi State Park in Helen

She currently lives in Abingdon, Virginia.

In 2012 longtime colleagues Judith Jennings and Patricia Beaver published a biographical compilation of interviews, essays, and oral histories by and about Lewis entitled Helen Matthews Lewis: Living Social Justice in Appalachia. In 2016 the acclaimed Atlanta actress Brenda Bynum wrote and performed What Am I Supposed To Do Now?, a one-woman play based on Lewis’s life and career, with productions at the Craddock Center in Gilmer County and in Abingdon.

Lewis’s papers are held in the special collections at Appalachian State University.

 MYSTERY PHOTO

Winding road, seashore, hills may be clues to Mystery Photo

A winding road, a seashore, some tall hills…..where is this?  Some of you may have visited this scene, somewhat unique in its setting. Figure out where this is and send your idea to elliott@brack.net, and be sure to include your hometown.

When Donny Loeber, formerly of Norcross, sent in the most recent Mystery Photo, he wrote that it was “from the White Cliffs in Picardy. This photo was taken near Ault, France.  I think this one might be mistaken for the White Cliffs of Dover.”  

He was right as numerous guessers immediately fell to that conclusion. However, three people came to the right conclusion, including George Graf of Palmyra, Va.; Susan McBrayer of Sugar Hill (finally), and Virginia Klaer of Duluth, who wrote: “I think the mystery photo is La Cote d’ Al batre. The 80 mile long stretch of coast line runs between Etretat and Dieppe, in Normandy, France.  The Alabaster Coast gets its name from the milk, white color of the waters along the coast.”

Because of a problem with email, we missed several messages about the March 3 Mystery Photo.

Allen Peel of San Antonio, Tex., re-sent his findings: “It is the ‘Monument to the Revolution,’ an iconic 1938 landmark commemorating the Mexican Revolution (1910-1920). Also known as the ‘Arch of the Revolution’, it is located in the Plaza de la República in the center of downtown Mexico City. The photo shows the east facade of the arch and was taken facing west along Av. De la República.  The monument is the tallest triumphal arch in the world, measuring 220 ft high. The monument’s massive columns also serve as a series of crypts forming one mausoleum — also known as the ‘Pantheon of Outstanding Men of the Revolution’ — honoring revolutionary heroes including Francisco I. Madero and the hard man rebel himself — Francisco ‘Pancho’ Villa.

“In 2010, the monument was extensively renovated, including the addition of a vertigo-inducing, glass elevator ‘ride’ that compares favorably with a Six Flags attraction. Looking closely at the mystery photo you can see what looks like a ladder in the middle of the monument. It is actually the sleek panoramic elevator that shoots up over 190-feet in a matter of seconds to arrive at an access deck inside the monument’s stone and copper dome. From there you can climb a spiral staircase within the dome to the observation deck on top for some impressive 360-degree views of the surrounding Mexico City skyline.”

LAGNIAPPE

Blooms are popping!

All around Gwinnett County these days, the flowering trees are abud with blossoms. Roving Photographer Frank Sharp saw these pink blossoms in the parking lot at Costco in Duluth. The recent rains have brought these flowering trees to life, creating beauty all over the county. And yes, it’s not even spring yet, though we are now into the Daylight Saving Time of year.  Watch out and get out of the way for spring. We’ve been missing it.

 CALENDAR

Lilburn, Norcross planning St. Patrick’s Day festivities

Gwinnett Health and Human Services invites all to a Town Hall event, “Great Connections,” on Thursday, March 12 from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Rhodes Jordan Community Center in Lawrenceville. The event will celebrate Gwinnett’s collective progress as well as showcase community partners and agencies carrying out the work of the current Gwinnett Community Health Improvement Plan. Development of Gwinnett as a county depends on structures that prioritize the well-being of its residents who act as catalysts to reach communal goals. For more information, call 770 995 3339.

Second Annual Lilburnchaun Parade will take place in Lilburn City Park on Saturday, March 14 from 4-6 p.m.  Dress in your most festive St. Patrick’s Day attire and you might just be crowned one of this year’s Lilburchauns! The event includes a parade around the park, entertainment, children’s activities, and more! Lilburn is Inviting all Leprechauns and Lilburchauns to participate! This walking parade will take place inside Lilburn City Park.

Third Annual Irish Fest will be Saturday, March 14, from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. in downtown Norcross. In collaboration with St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, celebrating their 50th anniversary, merchants will be offering Irish-themed activities and fare to mark the occasion. This will consist of live music, dancing, face painting and plenty of food offerings. South Peachtree Street will be closed to accommodate the festivities. So put on something green and come on out to Irish Fest 2020! 

Southern Values is the title of one of the current exhibits at the Hudgens Center for the Arts and Learning in Duluth. It will be on display through April 25.  Curated by Mary Stanley, the show features work from three southern women artists: Shanequa Gay; Amanda Greene; and Joni Mabe. These artists pay homage to that which is Southern. All three have a special talent for finding beauty and value in the simple pleasures of daily life. The artists talk about this exhibit on March 28 from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.

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