GwinnettForum | Number 25.71 | Sept. 12, 2025
ROYAL PRESENTATION: Suwanee resident Dean Reeves holds the Coronation Cup and speaks with King Charles of England on June 21, 2024. Reeves and his partner’s horse, the filly Porta Fortuna, had just won the Coronation Stakes at the Royal Ascot race track near London. For more on how Reeves got into horse racing, see Elliott Brack’s Perspective below. (Photo by Healy Racing Photography.)
TODAY’S FOCUS: Centerville residents asks county to deny funeral home
EEB PERSPECTIVE: How Dean Reeves became successful in horse racing
SPOTLIGHT: The 1818 Club
FEEDBACK: Suggests that President Trump offer Democrats olive branch
UPCOMING: Rowen begins study of watershed development at site
NOTABLE: Chamber Foundation board appoints directors
RECOMMENDED: Mansfield Park Revisited, by Joan Aiken
GEORGIA TIDBIT: State’s coastal waters have tremendous marine variety
MYSTERY PHOTO: Stark architecture may signal mystery location
LAGNIAPPE: Somewhere over the rainbow is in Norcross
CALENDAR: Rock the Park will take place in Lilburn Saturday
Centerville residents ask county to deny funeral home
(Editor’s note: GwinnettForum received this comment from residents of Centerville community, south of Snellville, concerned that a funeral home in their area would harm the area. Here is their news release in its entirety.—eeb).
SNELLVILLE, Ga. | Open letter to the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners and the developer of the proposed funeral home and crematory on Centerville Highway:
To the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners:
To the Developer and Funeral Director proposing this facility:
And to the Citizens of Gwinnett County:
We, concerned residents and members of Centerville Highway Corridor, LLC, strongly oppose the proposed development of a new funeral home, crematory, and pet crematory at 3662 Centerville Highway. This project threatens the health, safety, property values, and peace of our community — and we will not stand by quietly.
Our community has been blindsided by a stealth change in zoning law that stripped away public input on one of the most sensitive and controversial types of development. Until January 1, 2024, any crematory project in unincorporated Gwinnett County required a Special Use Permit (SUP) — a legal safeguard that ensured transparency, public hearings, and accountability. That requirement has now been quietly removed, bypassing the community’s right to weigh in. This is not only unethical — it is unacceptable.
Let us be clear: this is not just about a crematory. It is about process, fairness, and community rights.
Key points of opposition include:
- Loss of Public Input: The elimination of the SUP process prevents residents from voicing concerns.
- Traffic Congestion: The Zoning Board of Appeals granted a variance allowing 161 parking spaces where only 57 are required — a nearly 200 percent increase, that would worsen already problematic traffic on Centerville Highway.
- Property Values: Studies consistently show that proximity to crematories negatively affects home values, saleability, and residential desirability, as well as degrade the quality of life due to pollution and noise.
- Health and Environmental Risks: Crematories emit mercury, particulate matter, and other toxins regulated by the EPA. Georgia’s Nuisance Law (O.C.G.A. § 41-1-1) prohibits uses of property that “injure or endanger the comfort, health, or safety of others.” The introduction of a crematory is a nuisance by definition.
- Lack of Need: There are over 20 funeral homes currently operating in Gwinnett County — three within four miles of this proposed site. The idea that this facility is “needed” is false. The only parties who benefit are the developers.
The residents are urging the Gwinnett County Board of Commissioners to deny permits for the project, reinstate the SUP process, mandate comprehensive environmental and traffic studies, and represent the people who elected you.
We are also calling on the developer to withdraw the project and engage with the community, rather than exploit a zoning loophole.
This community is organized. This community is informed. And this community is united.
Respectfully,
Centerville Highway Corridor, LLC, on behalf of the residents of Centerville, Snellville, and the greater Gwinnett County community.
- Media Contact: Isaac R. Coleman, 678-571-6439, Centerville Highway Corridor, LLC
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How Reeves became successful in horse racing
By Elliott Brack
Editor and publisher, GwinnettForum
SEPT. 12, 2025 | Dean Reeves of Suwanee was told by a racing official there would be a delay. The official at the Royal Ascot near London, England, told him: “The King wants to present the trophy to you.”
Reeves’ horse, the filly Porta Fortuna, on June 21, 2024, won one of England’s key horse races, the Coronation Cup. And a few minutes later, there was Reeves, in the required English full dress of top hat and tails, shaking hands with King Charles of England at the presentation.
How did all this happen?
Reeves’ profession is as co-owner, with Eric Young, of Reeves-Young of Sugar Hill, which is the largest engineering firm in Gwinnett, with 750 employees. They also have offices in Greenville, S.C., Nashville, Tenn., plus a new one in Savannah.

Reeves, 73, is now chairman of the firm his father started in 1952 in Brookhaven, finding a new machine for digging trenches for plumbers, which expanded into digging water lines, sewer lines and storm drainage. He came to work with his father after graduating from Georgia Tech. After finding success by expanding the company and getting multiple contracts in Atlanta, especially with the Atlanta Beltline, by looking toward the future, he moved the company to Suwanee in 2007.
While on vacation in Turks and Caicos Islands in 2007, a friend asked if he would like to go in with him and buy a race horse. That floored Reeves, for he had never thought of the idea. Reeves was already a fan of horseracing, having attended the Kentucky Derby most years since 1976. He soon found out that buying race horses was fascinating and difficult but somewhat expensive. And soon after, he and a partner bought their first race horse in 2009 at the Keeneland sale in Kentucky.
In 2009, he and his wife, Patti, formed Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, and he became thoroughly interested in the sport. Today, he has a stable of over 50 horses at their training facility at Two Springs Farm, near Micanopy, Fla., where they have 70 stalls.
He now spends most of the summer racing season in Saratoga, N.Y., with his two year old horses trying to earn themselves a contender for the Kentucky Derby.
“We have three horses this year who look like they could qualify for the Derby in 2026. They are Holding Power, Talkin’ and Golden Tornado, named for the color of my alma mater, yellow and gold, and which, with the green my wife added, are our racing colors.” The racing season for two year olds begins in October,” Reeves says. “Beginning this fall, the horses will have to earn enough points to become a Derby qualifier.”
A trainer called Reeves one day in 2010, then sent film of a race at Gulfstream Park in Florida. “We ought to buy the winner,” the trainer told him. But Reeves saw it differently: “I think we ought to buy the horse that placed second. I like the way he looks, and his athletic ability, and he’s big, 17 hands high.” Soon after, they bought the horse. That was Mucho Macho Man, who was third in the 2011 Kentucky Derby, and later won the 2013 Breeder’s Cup Challenge. He now stands for stud, living in Canada.
Meanwhile, Dean and Patti have seen horseracing overseas, in England, France, Ireland, Dubai and Saudi Arabia.
Porta Fortuna also won the Royal Queen race in 2003, giving Reeves a chance to see Queen Elizabeth that year.
Reeves reflects: “Who would think a boy from Georgia would, because of horse racing, see Queen Elizabeth and shake hands with King Charles?”
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The 1818 Club
The public spiritedness of our sponsors allows us to bring GwinnettForum.com to you at no cost to readers. Today’s underwriter is The 1818 Club, named for the year that Gwinnett County received its charter. The 1818 Club is a member-owned, private dining experience providing the best in food, service and meeting accommodations for its members. Whatever your business or social dining needs, the 1818 Club has the proper facilities, recently renovated, to gracefully host your gatherings.
- 100-seat formal dining room open for breakfast and lunch.
- The Capital Room is open for breakfast, lunch and dinner as well as cocktails.
- Three private rooms can be used for dining or meeting space. AV is offered in each room.
- The 220 seat Virgil Williams Grand Ballroom divides into three sections, all with AV.
- Gwinnett Room for upscale dining, with Frankie’s menu available.
Our top-notch service team enhances your experience by providing a sophisticated social atmosphere, engaging events and a full serving of dining and entertainment opportunities. If you want an urbane and central site to entertain people, consider joining the 1818 Club. For more details, visit https://www.the1818club.org/Home.
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Suggests that Trump offer Democrats olive branch
Editor, the Forum:
In these days where it seems that the only platform the Democrats support is, whatever Trump wants, they are against it. Now would be a good time for our president to extend the olive branch. Give them what they want.
A couple years ago, they really wanted to expand the Supreme Court to 12 members. They were all fired up about it. It was really important to them.
So, just to appease the loyal committed opposition party, I think President Trump should offer to do it now, just to make them happy! You know, bring the two parties together.
Whattya think?
– Dave Simmons, Norcross
Dear Dave: The problem is Trump doesn’t think that way. He only wants to crush the opposition. —eeb
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, and include your hometown. The views of letters are the opinion of the contributor. We reserve the right to edit for clarity and length. Send feedback and letters to: ebrack2@gmail.com.
Rowen begins study of watershed development at site
The Rowen Foundation, in partnership with the Odum School of Ecology at the University of Georgia (UGA), Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC) and Spelman College, announces the launch of a comprehensive research program focused on ecologically sustainable watershed development at the Rowen site.
The study will examine how Rowen’s development interacts with the area’s forest streams, wetlands and freshwater ecosystems over a two-and-a-half-year period. Supported by $175,000 in funding from the Rowen Foundation and Georgia Power, the project will collect high-resolution data across three key onsite watersheds, which feed into the Apalachee River.
Mason Ailstock, Rowen Foundation president and CEO, says: “This research represents Rowen’s commitment to ensuring that progress and healthy watersheds go hand in hand. It will help us better understand how to design and manage infrastructure in ways that sustain biodiversity and natural systems as we build Georgia’s largest knowledge community.”
Led by a diverse team of researchers, including Dr. Seth Wenger and Dr. Rhett Jackson from the University of Georgia, Dr. Elizabeth Sudduth from Georgia Gwinnett College, Dr. Na’Taki Jelks from Spelman College and others, the study will:
- Monitor water quality using multiprobe stations and monthly sampling
- Conduct macroinvertebrate and stream metabolism assessments
- Evaluate stormwater infrastructure performance
- Host a community BioBlitz event in spring 2026 to inventory birds, riparian plants, mammals, amphibians, fish, and other organisms
- Produce biannual reports to inform adaptive design strategies
The study will also create mentorship and field research opportunities for students from UGA, GGC and Spelman. The Odum School of Ecology at UGA will design an undergraduate practicum tied to the study that will train up to 20 students.
In alignment with the Living Lab model, the team will build a scientific advisory committee to help interpret results and advise on future construction and land management. Outreach efforts will include interactive web content, video storytelling and engagement opportunities for businesses and residents. This study is Rowen’s 6th “Living Lab” project.
Initial activities begin soon, with water quality and macroinvertebrate monitoring starting in the summer of 2025 and continuing through December 2027.
Lilburn to open updated community garden Saturday
The City of Lilburn invites the community to join a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Saturday, September 13 at 10 a.m. to officially unveil recent beautification improvements at the Lilburn Community Garden located at 16 Camp Creek Drive. The garden is located across the railroad tracks from Lilburn City Park.
Funded through SPLOST, the project has transformed the garden’s entrance and gathering spaces with thoughtful enhancements, including:
- A new split-rail fence and updates to the original garden sign;
- Fresh pavers around the American flagpole;
- A welcoming seating area with shade sails and Adirondack chairs;
- Decorative lighting (installation forthcoming); and
- An array of new native plantings to highlight seasonal beauty and support pollinators.
The nonprofit group that operates the garden continues to serve the community in meaningful ways. In 2024 alone, gardeners donated more than 400 pounds of fresh produce to the Lilburn Co-Op, providing healthy food options to local families in need.
Chamber Foundation board appoints directors
The Gwinnett Chamber Foundation (GCF), an affiliate of the Gwinnett Chamber, has announced the appointment of its 2025–2026 Board of Directors. Comprising respected business and community leaders, the board will provide strategic guidance to advance the Foundation’s mission of empowering small businesses with resources that promote growth, resilience, and long-term sustainability.
Deirdra Cox, executive director of the GCF, says: “Gwinnett County is home to one of the most diverse and dynamic business communities in the nation, and the Foundation is proud to strengthen that ecosystem. This board represents leaders committed to ensuring small business owners have access to opportunities that help them thrive.”
The 2025–2026 Gwinnett Chamber Foundation Board of Directors:
- Jonathan Holmes, Mighty 8th Media
- Jue Wang, T Dallas Smith and Co.
- Rob Drake, Synchronize Solutions
- Deven Cason, Georgia Power
- Deirdra Cox, Gwinnett Chamber Foundation
- Lanier Levett, Gregory B. Levett and Sons
- Matthew Yarbrough (Board Chair), Council for Quality Growth
- Kristi Hunter (Treasurer), United Community Bank
- Colleen Japuntich, NEMA, Inc.
- Nick Masino, Gwinnett Chamber and Partnership Gwinnett
- Renae Keitt (Secretary), ARK Temporary Staffing
- Aysha Abdullatif, Spherion Greater Atlanta
- Erika Bridges, Simon Properties
- Alvin Keitt, ARK Temporary Staffing
- Tasha Allen (Vice Chair), Georgia Chamber
- Sara Irvani, Okabashi Brands, Inc.
- Ruthann Savage, Savage Dynamic Consulting
- Joy Mitchell, Office Creations, Inc.
- Salmaan Ajani, Amazing Energy Solutions
- Jay Patel, JMS Family Office
- Eunicia Peret, Excelstra
- Cole Porter, Porter Steel, Inc. and
- Veronica Reyes, TruFund
Since its inception, the Gwinnett Chamber Foundation has focused on supporting the success of small businesses through leadership development, educational initiatives, and targeted grant funding. In its first year, the Foundation invested nearly $100,000 in grants to advance local businesses and plans to expand certification and resource programs throughout 2025 and 2026.
Mansfield Park Revisited, by Joan Aiken
From Karen J. Harris, Stone Mountain: Mansfield Park featured Fanny Price and Edmund Bertram happily married at the end of the story. It also had Fanny’s sister, Susan Price, living at Mansfield Park as a companion to Lady Bertram, the mother of Edmund, Tom, Julia and Maria. Mansfield Park Revisited, a sequel by Joan Aiken, a writer who pens delightful possible sequels to Jane Austen novels, has re-created a likely conclusion to the fortunes of the Mansfield Park residents with enjoyable results. The multilayered community of Mansfield and surrounding environs includes the longtime residents, impactful visitors Henry and Mary Crawford, and Pastor Wadham and his sister, Mrs. Osborne. Navigating the mores of the characters in all their unvarnished demeanors finds Susan Price entangled in a romance, scandal, surprise and redemption. Mansfield Park Revisited is a rousing and engaging read that will have the reader searching for other possible sequels by Joan Aiken.
- An invitation: what books, restaurants, movies or web sites have you enjoyed recently? Send us your recent selection, along with a short paragraph (150 words) as to why you liked this, plus what you plan to visit or read next. Click here to send an email.
State’s coastal waters have tremendous marine variety
The coastal and offshore waters of Georgia provide a tremendous and varied resource. The continental shelf off Georgia is about 80 miles wide and is the widest in the South Atlantic Bight, which extends from Cape Canaveral, Fla., to Cape Hatteras, N.C. The Gulf Stream marks the eastern boundary of the shelf.
With respect to natural resources, commercially important fishes such as snapper and grouper collect along bottom reefs throughout the middle of the shelf waters. Numerous commercial and recreational migratory fish also pass through these waters seasonally, including Spanish mackerel, king mackerel, cobia, wahoo, and dolphin fish. Several migratory species are known to spawn in the offshore waters, often near the Gulf Stream: these include menhaden, bluefish, mackerel, and squid.
On the inner shelf the shrimp fishery provides a large fraction of the total value of the seafood industry. The offshore waters are also the migratory routes of several species of marine turtles, which nest on Georgia beaches; several of these species are threatened throughout their ranges, so the hatching success on Georgia beaches is critical. The extremely endangered North Atlantic right whale, currently thought to number less than 350, uses the shelf waters off Georgia and northeastern Florida during winter as its calving grounds.
The land/ocean interface creates a contiguous boundary along 21 peripheral states and is thereby vital for such activities as commerce, resource exploitation, and strategic security. Continental shelf waters, by connecting rivers to the open ocean, serve as a conduit for freshwater flow from the continent.
Due to the tremendous population growth along the East Coast, however, coastal waters receive contaminated effluent from the nation’s industrial and agricultural centers. Further, the total discharge of freshwater into shelf regions has decreased 15 percent during the last half of the twentieth century because of increased water use.
As the human population has grown, so have nutrient concentrations. These nutrients result in increased plant growth (eutrophication), which has caused long-term changes in the global carbon cycle. Productive shelf waters can potentially absorb much of the excess carbon dioxide, a major greenhouse gas, that mankind is loading into the atmosphere, but ironically, the ability of the offshore waters to absorb carbon dioxide depends upon the very nutrients that cause eutrophication. Thus, cleaning up one mess (too many nutrients) may actually hinder the ocean’s ability to help cleanse our atmosphere.
Because of the value of the offshore natural resources, scientific research in the coastal and offshore waters of Georgia has been conducted since the 1970s. The Skidaway Institute of Oceanography, located in Savannah, is an autonomous research unit of the University of Georgia. Research activities at the institute are conducted on scales ranging from local economic and environmental issues to global processes and phenomena. In addition, the Skidaway Institute serves regional and statewide educational and management needs for access to marine research facilities. Coastal marshes and nearshore water are studied at the University of Georgia Marine Institute on Sapelo Island.
- To view the Georgia Encyclopedia article online, go to https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org
Stark architecture may signal this mystery location
Today’s Mystery Photo is a relatively stark scene, showing no people. Yet its distinct architecture may signal its location. Figure out this puzzle and send your answer to ebrack2@gmail.com, and include your home town.
The previous mystery was recognized by Fran Worrall of Lawrenceville: “It’s the steeples on the administration building at Mercer University in Macon. Founded in 1833, Mercer is a comprehensive center of undergraduate, graduate and professional education. Its 9,100 students are enrolled in 12 colleges on major campuses in Macon and Atlanta, in medical school sites in Macon, Savannah and Columbus, and at regional academic centers. Mercer is ranked among the top tier and best values of national research universities by U.S. News and World Report.” The photo was taken by Matt Smith for Mercer.
Also recognizing the photo were Ross Lenhart, Stone Mountain; Jay Altman, Columbia, S.C.; Bill McLees, Norcross; George Graf, Palmyra, Va.; and Allan Peel, San Antonio, Texas, who adds: “This Victorian Gothic-style building in the mystery photo was designed by Chicago architect Gurdon P. Randall (1821–1884) and built between February 1872 and the fall of 1874. When completed, it served as the entirety of the Mercer University campus, including classrooms, private faculty studies, a library, meeting spaces, and even residential quarters for the president and his family.
“The building was renamed the R. Kirby Godsey Administration Building in 2006 to honor the retirement of Raleigh Kirby Godsey (1936-present), the 17th president of the university, who served from July 1, 1979, until his retirement on June 30, 2006, making him the longest-serving president of the university in its history. And I must add that this is the alma mater of the editor and publisher of GwinnettForum.”
- SHARE A MYSTERY PHOTO: If you have a photo that you believe will stump readers, send it along (but make sure to tell us what it is because it may stump us too!) Click here to send an email and please mark it as a photo submission. Thanks.
Somewhere over the rainbow is in Norcross
The annual photo contest is ongoing at the Norcross Gallery and Studio, supported by the City of Norcross. Photos will be on display at the Norcross Gallery through September 27, and in City Hall after the Gallery exhibit closes. Geoff Hammett captured a magic moment in his A Summer Shower with a Rainbow, when a welcoming afternoon rain shower refracted the sunlight into an amazing display of color, arranged in two separate groups, a double rainbow! Artist of the Month is Marcia Shirley, whose brilliant landscapes and floral art are being shown at Café 45 in Norcross through October 13.
Rock the Park will take place in Lilburn Saturday
Film Screening: Becoming Jane will take place at the Collins Hill Branch Library on September 12 at 3 p.m. Join the group for an afternoon movie and popcorn, celebrating the 250th birthday anniversary of Jane Austen.
Rock the Park will close out the summer event series in Lilburn. It will be on Saturday, September 13 starting at 7 p.m. Attendees are invited to bring chairs, blankets, coolers and snacks, while food trucks will be nearby. Opening act Little Hopes will take the stage at 7 p.m. to showcase their take on Americana country-rock music.
Lionheart Theatre in Norcross will present Radio TBS, Trailer Park Broadcasting Scandals by Mark Landon Smith from September 12-25. Times are Friday and Saturday at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2 p.m. Call for tickets at 404 919 4022.
Gwinnett Ballet Theatre’s Casino Royale: A Night of Jetés and Jackpots is scheduled to be held on Saturday, September 13, at the Gas South District Theatre. The Director’s Gala is where the ballet presents and celebrates the upcoming season, a kickoff party unlike any other in Gwinnett County.
Gwinnett Historical Society will meet at the Hooper-Renwick Library in Lawrenceville on September 15 at 6:15 p.m. Hear from the exhibit’s curator, Cammie Mansfield. The library is located at 56 Neal Boulevard. All are welcome, and the event is free.
Water conservation: Learn practical ways to conserve water while landscaping and gardening. This program will be presented September 16 at 6 p.m. at the Suwanee Branch of Gwinnett County Public Library.
Don your dancing slippers and join us for a dance! Members of Atlanta Historic Dance will perform Regency-era dances, followed by instruction. This will take place on September 17 at 6:30 p.m. at the Norcross Branch of Gwinnett County Public library. This is part of the Gwinnett Reads Jane Austen series.
Fan Appreciation Weekend will be Friday, September 19 through Sunday, September 21 at CoolRay Field, as the Gwinnett Stripers honor the fans who made the 2025 season great. The weekend closes out the final homestand of 2025, a six-game series against the Indianapolis Indians (Triple-A, Pittsburgh Pirates) from September 16-21.
Returning for its 14th year, the Peachtree Corners Festival will take to the Town Green and surrounding area for a full weekend of entertainment and family fun, September 20 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and September 21 from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. The community celebration will offer a dynamic mix of live performances, vendor booths, good food and hands-on activities for all ages — all with free admission and parking.
Suwanee’s most dino-mite tradition is back for its 41st year! Suwanee Fest returns to Town Center Park on Saturday, September 20 (9 a.m. to 7 p.m.) and Sunday, September 21 (noon to 5 p. m.) for a weekend of award-winning fun, food, entertainment, and community spirit. Named one of the Southeast’s best festivals, Suwanee Fest draws thousands each year. The weekend kicks off with the Suwanee Fest Parade on Saturday at 9 a.m., stomping through Main Street, Suwanee Dam Road, and Buford Highway. This year’s Grand Marshal is Dr. Mary Kay Murphy, a lifelong public education advocate.
Gwinnett’s first Literary Arts Festival will take place Saturday, September 20 at the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse. Local authors, artists, and other vendors are being sought for this showcase of talent and artistry! The event will take place outdoors on the Square in downtown Lawrenceville from 3 to 7 p.m. Contact the county at 770-822-5450 if you have any questions or would like more information regarding this event.
Habits for Healing will be presented at the Norcross Branch of Gwinnett County Public Library at 11 a.m. on September 20. Learn practical ways to heal your past, start fresh, and create a life that honors the truth of who you are today.
Ribbon-cutting of the Bryson Park/Hood /Road Roundabout is scheduled for Tuesday, September 23 at 10 a.m. at the park, located at 5075 Lawrenceville Highway in Lilburn. Join city and county officials as they mark this milestone that enhances accessibility, boosts mobility and improves safety for all.
The annual Public Safety Fall Festival is back for a fun-packed day on Saturday, September 27 at Coolray Field. From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., meet Gwinnett’s first responders and enjoy food, giveaways, demonstrations, displays, and the Motorcycle Training Challenge with multiple police agencies showcasing the best of motorcycle courses. Kids can also enjoy a touch-a-truck with a SWAT personnel carrier, fire trucks, and other specialized vehicles. For more information, email PDCommunityAffairs@GwinnettCounty.com. Coolray Field is located at 2500 Buford Drive in Lawrenceville.
Alma Mexicana Atlanta will be presented at the Lilburn Branch of Gwinnett Public Library on September 27. Come for a multicultural experience to learn about the folkloric dances and traditions of Mexican culture.
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