Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/5/11

An anthology penned by writers from rural Alaska recently won three national book awards, while its co-editors, University of Alaska Fairbanks professors John Creed and Susan Andrews, were honored for their cultural journalism project.

“Purely Alaska: Authentic Voices from the Far North,” features stories from 23 rural Alaska writers. The anthology, published by Epicenter Press, won a bronze medal in Foreward Magazine’s 2011 Book of the Year competition, a second-place award in the nonfiction anthology category of the Independent Book Publishers Association’s Benjamin Franklin Book Awards and an honorable mention in the Eric Hoffer Awards for Short Prose & Independent Books’ culture category.

“Purely Alaska” is a follow-up to “Authentic Alaska: Voices of Its Native Writers.” Both anthologies have their roots in Creed and Andrews’ cultural journalism project, Chukchi News & Information Service, which was founded in Kotzebue in 1988. The project works with UAF Chukchi Campus students and helps them get their work published in local newspapers and statewide news websites. The Alaska Professional Communicators recognized Creed and Andrews for their work on the project.

Contributors to “Purely Alaska” include Andrews and Creed, Steve Werle, Noatak; Iva Baker, Kotzebue; R.A. Dillon, Kotzebue; Nancy Berkey, Thorne Bay; Marcus Miller, Haines; Karl Puckett, Kotzebue; Burtov Haviland, Jr., Kotzebue; Amy Reisland-Speer, Denali National Park; Gina Pope, Kokhanok; Joli Morgan, Bethel; Sonja Whitethorn, Petersburg; Lucy Nuqarrluk Daniels, Golovin; China Kantner, Kotzebue; Steve Pilz, Ambler; Emma Snyder, Kotzebue; Robert Andrews, Haines; Kathryn Lenniger, Nenana; Wilma Payne, McGrath; Terry Wilson, Nome; Al Bowling, Deering; and Katie Cruthers, Kotzebue.

Creed and Andrews will be signing copies of their books Friday, Oct. 7 from 6-10 p.m. at the Barnes & Noble on East Northern Lights Boulevard in Anchorage.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: John Creed at [email protected] or Susan Andrews at [email protected].

NW/10-5-11/084-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 6 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
10/4/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host two days of panel discussions focused on the effects of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. The discussions will take place Oct. 5-6 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Wood Center ballroom on the UAF campus.

The presentations will focus on ANCSA’s economic, environmental, social and cultural effects on Alaska. Alaska Native leaders, state and university officials, former state and United States senators and local business leaders, as well as many others, will speak.

The event is part of UAF’s ANCSA Impact Series, which marks the 40th anniversary of act. All discussions are free and open to the public. No advance registration is required. There will also be a live webcast available at www.alaskalivestream.com. The agenda and full program, with biographies of presenters, are at ancsa.community.uaf.edu.

The ANCSA Impact Series is made possible through support from: Conoco Phillips, BP, the University of Alaska and multiple departments at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Kay Thomas, Alaska Native Studies, at 907-474-6528 or [email protected].

ON THE WEB: ancsa.community.uaf.edu

NW/10-4-11/081-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On October - 5 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
9/6/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host Byron Mallott for a free public lecture Tuesday, Sept. 13, at 4 p.m. in the Wood Center Ballroom on the UAF campus.

Mallott will discuss the history of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act. The event will be webstreamed live at www.alaskalivestream.com.

Mallott was born and raised in Yakutat, Alaska. He was elected the city’s mayor at age 22. He went on to serve under every Alaska governor since statehood and was the state’s first commissioner of the Department of Community and Regional Affairs. In addition to his service in state government, Mallott served as the mayor of the City and Borough of Juneau, a term as president of the Alaska Federation of Natives, and co-chair of the Commission on Rural Governance and Empowerment. He is the founding president of the First Alaskans Institute and has served on numerous corporate and nonprofit boards.

Mallott’s talk is part of a series of public lectures and presentations hosted by the UAF Department of Alaska Native Studies and Rural Development to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the passage of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Kay Thomas, Alaska Native Studies, at 907-474-6528 or [email protected].

NW/9-6-11/054-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On September - 7 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

The University of Alaska Fairbanks Interior-Aleutians Campus is offering a series of five ready-to-air public service announcements focusing on diabetes prevention and care for youths.

Juniors and seniors in the Trailmarkers Upward Bound programs at Lathrop High School and Effie Kokrine Charter School created the PSAs. The students met on the UAF campus for four intensive days of study drawn from the nationally recognized curriculum, “Diabetes Education in Tribal Schools.” The students contributed to a list, “110 Tips to Fight Diabetes” and wrote scripts for radio PSAs. Jerry Evans of KUAC worked with the students to coach them and record and produce the PSAs.
Radio stations can download the PSAs by visiting http://www.uafnews.com/?p=3853.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Sarah McConnell at 907-474-6080 or [email protected].

Download PSAs here:
Credit: This message is provided as a public service by students in the Trailmarkers Upward Bound program at Lathrop High School and the Effie Kokrine Charter School.
PSA_activity
PSA_lunch
PSA_prevention
PSA_snacks
PSA_symptoms

NW/8-25-2011/043-12

Posted by Marmian Grimes On August - 25 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marie Gilbert 
907-474-7412
7/14/11

Six students from the Rural Alaska Honors Institute will be living the life of an arctic field scientist at the Institute of Arctic Biology Toolik Field Station on the North Slope next week as part of a special research course hosted by scientists from the University of Alaska Fairbanks and the National Science Foundation’s Arctic Systems Science thermokarst project.

“We want to expose high schools students to different types of ongoing biology and wildlife research and to inspire them to pursue careers in science,” said Kimberley Maher, a UAF research assistant and a coordinator of the arctic field trip. “RAHI has a great reputation for working with high school students and Toolik Field Station is a perfect venue.”

The students, selected because of their interest in science and willingness to camp for a week without a shower, will have the opportunity to hear, see, feel and smell what it’s like to do research in the field.

“I understand things best when I’m outside, actively learning – not sitting in a chair,” Maher said, who is also an outreach coordinator for the thermokarst project.

The six students, who recently completed RAHI’s six-week program at UAF, are from the Alaska communities of Noatak, Kwethluk, Palmer, Sand Point, and Unalakleet.

With rubber boots and head nets donned and an ample supply of bug dope applied, the students will spend a day exploring tundra landscapes that have collapsed and formed slumps and huge open holes, called thermokarsts, as the result of thawing permafrost. They will learn how scientists determine the age of thermokarsts, how to drill deep soil cores into permafrost, how to identify and describe the plants affected by the slumping soils and what these activities tell scientists about a changing arctic landscape.

Another day will be spent along the Kuparuk River helping scientists collect and sort aquatic insects called macroinvertebrates. They will learn about watershed and witness how the river and the surrounding tundra interact.

The students will meet with an undergraduate student from North Carolina who works as a research assistant at Toolik Field Station and learn about what she does and how she got her arctic science job. They will also attend the weekly science lecture at Toolik Field Station where they can mingle with scientists and students from around the world.

“I am delighted for this special opportunity for RAHI students, after six weeks of learning in the classroom, to now get out into the field and experience real live research,” said Denise Wartes, RAHI program manager.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Kimberley Maher, UAF research assistant, 907-474-7603, [email protected]. Denise Wartes, Rural Alaska Honors Institute program manager, 907-474-6866, [email protected].

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

National Science Foundation, Award #0806394. Collaborative Research: Spatial and Temporal Influences of Thermokarst Failures on Surface Processes in Arctic Landscapes. http://thermokarst.psu.edu/ Breck Bowden, principal investigator, [email protected], 802-656-2513. Recent work has documented that thermokarst failures are abundant and appear to have become more numerous around Toolik Lake on the eastern North Slope and in the western Noatak River basin in Alaska. A widespread and long-term increase in the incidence of thermokarst failures may have important impacts on the structure and function of arctic headwater landscapes. This research will use a systems approach to address hypotheses about how thermokarst failures influence the structure and function of the arctic landscape.

The Rural Alaska Honors Institute, 907-474-5876, http://www.uaf.edu/rahi/.  The University of Alaska Fairbank’s Rural Alaska Honors Institute is a six-week, summer, college preparatory bridge program for Alaska Native and rural high school juniors and seniors with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0. Conceived by the University of Alaska and the Alaska Federation of Natives after a series of meetings because of their mutual concern about the retention rate of Alaska Native and rural students, RAHI was one of their solutions to assist them in obtaining higher education.

Institute of Arctic Biology Toolik Field Station. toolik.alaska.edu. 907-474-7412. IAB’s Toolik Field Station, located in the northern foothills of the Brooks Range in northern Alaska on the southeast shore of Toolik Lake, is a world-renowned arctic climate change research station. This location affords access to three major physiographic provinces including the Brooks Range, the Arctic Foothills and the Arctic Coastal Plain. The Station also serves as a base camp for researchers working along the ecological transect from tundra to taiga to boreal forest along the Dalton Highway, from Prudhoe Bay to Fairbanks, Alaska.

NOTE TO EDITORS: Kimberley Maher and the RAHI students will be traveling from Fairbanks to Toolik Field Station, North Slope, Alaska on Sunday, July 17, 2011 and will be unavailable. Maher will have limited email access from July 18-21.

MEG/07-14-11/008-11

Posted by Sharon Burke On July - 15 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
7/11/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks Rural Alaska Honors Institute will honor RAHI students at a graduation ceremony on Wednesday, July 13, at 1 p.m. in the Schaible Auditorium with a public reception to follow at 2:30 p.m. outside the Brooks Building.

The 59 students participating in this year’s program come from 41 communities across Alaska. They spent six weeks living in UAF residence halls, building their academic skills and learning firsthand about college life. They earned up to 10 college credits.

Organized in 1983 at the request of the Alaska Federation of Natives, RAHI aims to help increase college success for rural and Alaska Native students. Hundreds of RAHI graduates have gone on to earn graduate, baccalaureate and associate degrees. Many have joined Alaska’s professional workforce and many more are pursuing postsecondary education.

This year’s graduation keynote speaker, Randall Yates, is a 1998 and 1999 RAHI alumnus from Ketchikan.  He is currently an attorney, having earned his bachelor’s degree from Oregon State University and law degree from the University of California Berkley.

RAHI sponsors include several UAF departments, New York Life, Alyeska Pipeline Service Co., Wells Fargo, Rasmuson Foundation, the Alaska INBRE program, the Department of Education’s Future Educators of Alaska, the National Science Foundation-funded Alaska EPSCoR program, the National Institutes of Health-funded Alaska BioPrep program and The Boeing Corporation.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Denise Wartes, RAHI director, at 907-474-6886 or 800-478-6886 or via email at [email protected].

RAHI graduates
Jordan Andrews, Mt. Village
Maggie Beans, St. Mary’s
Savannah Beckstrom, Yakutat
Isabella Booth, Metlakatla
IanJon Brower, Barrow
Sierra Chandler, Ketchikan
Christopher Clement, Sitka
Bianca David, Barrow
Deirdre Dayton, Fairbanks
Diloola Erickson, Galena
Lori Evan, Goodnews Bay
Michael Fernandez, Unalaska
Abigayle Fisher, Kaktovik
Kristen Foster, Noatak
Andrea Gump, Hooper Bay
Carlton Hautala, Kwenthluk
Kendrick Hautala, Kwenthluk
Sidney Huhndorf, Galena
Kathrin Huntington, Galena
Bess Jacobson, Kodiak
Stephanie Joekay, Oscarville
Jennifer Jones, Chignik Bay
Lawson Kalistook, Bethel
Jalene Kanayurak, Barrow
Jorden Lisac, Dillingham
Damien Lockuk, Togiak
Frederica Matumeak, Barrow
Hannah Meyer, Tenakee Springs
Chelsea Mills, Kake
Marissa Mills, Palmer
Hailley Myers, Yakutat
Drayton Newman, King Cove
Francis Nicholai, Napaskiak
Kimberly Nicholai, Napaskiak
Agnes Nichols, Cordova
Ana Otton, Koyuk
Euliana Polushkin, Homer
Guy Prasartkaew, Dillingham
Megan Russell, Sand Point
Ravenlin Sanford, Tok
Kimberlyn Sheldon, Noorvik
Emma Simple, Venetie
Michelle Slwooko, Gambell
Mary Ray Smith, Hooper Bay
Darien Southall, Unalakleet
Salina Tom, Newtok
Vincent Tomalonis, White Mountain
Ruby Walden, Tok
Davida Walker, Holy Cross
Edwin Waskey, Mt. Village
Daphne Williams, Nulato
RAHI II
Marina Anderson, Craig
Richard Bekeris, Sitka
Britney Caspersen, Metlakatla
Robert Doerning, Cold Bay
Tiana Elkins, Barrow
Courtney-Jay Knowles, Valdez
Brandon Kowalski, Fairbanks
Melissa Streitmatter, Unalaska

NW/7-11-2011/005-12

Posted by Pat Cruse On July - 12 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
6/29/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host Willie Hensley and his daughter, Elizabeth Hensley, for a free public lecture Thursday, July 7, at 7 p.m. in the Schaible Auditorium on the UAF campus.

The Hensleys will discuss the history of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act and offer the perspective of a younger generation. The event will be webstreamed live at www.alaskalivestream.com.

William L. Iggiagruk Hensley is an Inupiaq from Kotzebue who is known for his service to Alaska. He served in the state House and Senate for 10 years, was the director of NANA Regional Corporation, is a former commerce commissioner for the State of Alaska, and is retired from Alyeska Pipeline Service Company. He is a co-founder of the Alaska Federation of Natives, the Northwest Alaska Native Association and the Alaska Village Electric Cooperative.

Elizabeth Saagulik Hensley is from Anchorage and Kotzebue. She holds an undergraduate degree in Native American studies and anthropology from Dartmouth College and a law degree from the University of Arizona College of Law. Her legal experience has involved indigenous government and economic development. She worked as a legislative aide to state Rep. Reggie Joule and is currently senior policy advisor to the assistant secretary for Indian affairs at the federal Department of the Interior.

This event is the first in a series of public lectures and presentations by the UAF Department of Alaska Native Studies and Rural Development to commemorate 40 years since the passage of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act of 1971.

Willie Hensley will also sign his book, “Fifty Miles From Tomorrow,” following the lecture. Copies of the book will also be available for purchase for $15.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Kay Thomas, Alaska Native Studies, at 907-474-6528 or [email protected]. Marmian Grimes, UAF public information officer, at 907-474-7902 or via e-mail at [email protected].

ON THE WEB: www.uaf.edu/rahi

NW/6-29-11/267-11

Posted by Pat Cruse On June - 30 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Usibelli winners

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Winners of the 2011 Usibelli Awards are Roger Hansen, left for service, Vladimir Romanovsky for research, and Greg Owens for teaching.

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
4/3/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks has announced recipients of the 2011 Emil Usibelli Distinguished Teaching, Research and Public Service Awards.

Gregory Owens, associate professor of mathematics in the College of Rural and Community Development, received the teaching award; Vladimir Romanovsky, professor of geophysics in the College of Natural Science and Mathematics and the Geophysical Institute, received the research award; and Roger Hansen, research professor at the Geophysical Institute and state seismologist and director at the Alaska Earthquake Information Center, received the service award. All three were honored at a reception Monday at the UA Museum of the North.

Owens

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Associate Professor Greg Owens was awarded the 2011 Usibelli Award for Teaching. Owens teaches math in UAF's developmental education program within the College of Rural and Community Development.

Owens first joined UAF in 1987 as a developmental math instructor at Student Support Services. He is known for both the high expectations he has for his students and his unwavering support of them. Throughout his career, he has refined his teaching techniques to better serve his students and address their individual learning needs. The developmental math course he created has allowed dozens of students to receive credit-by-exam for a 100-level core math class. His work with these students has been so successful that the math department adopted some of his teaching strategies for the Math 107 course. In addition, he has been an instructor with UAF’s Rural Alaska Honors Institute, a summer college preparatory program for rural high school students, for more than two decades.

“It is his calling and his passion and the students who have benefited from his excellent skills and dedication are now contributing to engineering firms, businesses, schools, tribal organizations and other roles in small and large communities across the state and beyond,” said Sue McHenry, who nominated Owens. “Because he consistently challenges students to stretch themselves past what they may feel their limits are, he teaches more than mathematics, and he impacts how his students view themselves and even how they challenge their children to set goals.”

His skills as an educator are well documented in more than a dozen letters from former students. They cite not only his effectiveness in teaching mathematical concepts, but also his profound effect on their self-confidence, academically, professionally and personally.

“Throughout it all, I have never lost sight of my primary task,” Owens said. “I’m still striving to improve the success rates of students in my classes and their subsequent math courses, because the goal of developmental education is to prepare a capable and diligent lifetime student.”

Owens holds a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from the University of Wisconsin-Platteville and a master’s degree in cross-cultural education from UAF.

Romanovsky

UAF photo by Todd ParisProfessor Vladimir Romanovsky is the recipient of the 2011 Usibelli Award for Research. Romanovsky is a specialist in permafrost with UAF's Geophysical Institute and the Department of Geology and Geophysics.

Romanovsky is among the world leaders in permafrost research. He is consistently sought out as an expert in who can explain complicated concepts to both the public and media and is a frequent collaborator with colleagues in a variety of disciplines.

He began his career in 1975 at Moscow State University. In 1992, he came to UAF as a research assistant at the Geophysical Institute.

His research and collaborative work monitoring permafrost in northern latitudes has provided an important record of change in the Arctic and subarctic and has added to worldwide understanding of climate change. His work also offers valuable contributions to the state.

“The progressive destabilization of some soils, besides directly documenting change in mean annual air temperature, will have dramatic effects on the man-made infrastructure of the Interior,” wrote geology and geophysics department chairman Bernard Oakley in his nomination letter. “Vlad’s work contributes directly to our ability to plan and effectively remediate effects on roads and buildings that are being compromised by the changing climate and plan future construction to minimize these impacts.”

As part of his research work during the last five years, Romanovsky has mentored 22 students and nine postdoctoral researchers and has been listed on more the $10 million in research grants, many of them with an interdisciplinary focus. He also teaches both graduate and undergraduate courses and incorporates his interdisciplinary philosophy into his teaching and service work.

“We are actively collaborating with biologists, soil scientists, hydrologists, biogeochemists, marine scientists, remote sensing scientists and others to promote the system science approach in developing a better understanding of the Arctic,” Romanovsky said.

Romanovsky holds master’s degrees in mathematics and geophysics and a doctorate in geology from Moscow State University and a doctorate in geophysics from UAF.

Hansen

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Professor Roger Hansen is the recipient of the 2011 Usibelli Award for Service. Hansen is Alaska State Seismologist and teaches seismology with UAF's Geophysical Institute.

Hansen is credited as one of the driving forces behind improved earthquake reporting in Alaska. He began his career in the 1970s and served in a variety of positions at public and private organizations in the U.S. and Norway. He came to UAF in 1994.

“At the time, there was little effort made to report information outside the research community,” Hansen said, noting that current practice is quite different. “Response agencies receive critical information about damaging earthquakes in minutes, if not second, via web pages, email, text messages, and fax and telephone. Additionally, using our tsunami modeling capabilities, we are distributing information for the development of evacuation routes and safe zones throughout Alaska’s vulnerable coastal communities.”

Hansen’s outreach and public information efforts cover a wide swath of the population, from public and school tours of his facility, to informational pamphlets and electronic media, to teacher education, to public lectures and media interviews. He serves on multiple public emergency-planning and hazard-mitigation committees and is frequently consulted as an expert in his field. In addition to his public service, he is active on a variety of university committees, all while continuing his own research activities and mentoring graduate students.

Alaska’s seismic observatory is the busiest in the nation, said Geophysical Institute director Roger Smith, who nominated Hansen for the award.

“The measures of success of the observatory are precision of the data, the accuracy of calculations and reliability of the reports,” Smith said. “Under the leadership of Dr. Roger Hansen, the Alaska Earthquake Information Center strives for excellence in these areas and provides outstanding service to the state, nation and the seismological profession.”

Hansen holds bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of California, Berkeley.

The Emil Usibelli Distinguished Teaching, Research and Public Service Awards are considered one of the university’s most prestigious awards. They represent UAF’s tripartite mission and are funded annually from a $600,000 endowment established by Usibelli Coal Mine in 1992.

Each year, a committee that includes members from the faculty, the student body and a member of the UA Foundation Board of Trustees evaluates the nominees. Each of the winners receives a cash award of $10,000.

NOTE TO EDITORS: Photos of the recipients are available online at www.uafnews.com.

MG/5-3-11/220-11

Posted by Pat Cruse On May - 3 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Mt. St. Elias Dancers

UAF photo by Todd Paris
Members of the Mt. St. Elias Dancers from Yakutat perform at the UAF Festival of Native Arts.

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
3/3/11

The University of Alaska Fairbanks will host the 38th annual Festival of Native Arts March 3-5 in the Charles Davis Concert Hall, William R. Wood Center and Schaible Auditorium.

Festivities will begin at 6 p.m. each day and will continue until midnight. The annual potlatch will be held at the Wood Center on March 5 at noon, followed by a powwow from 2-4 p.m. This year’s event will also feature an Inupiaq Eskimo Film Festival featuring Ray Mala in “Eskimo” and “Igloo.” The film festival will run Saturday from 3 – 6 p.m. in Schaible Auditorium.

Dozens of Native dance groups artisans are expected to participate this year. Audience members are encouraged to arrive early to dance events, as seating is limited. All events are free and open to the public.

Native students and Student Orientation Services at UAF established the Fairbanks Festival of Native Arts in 1973. Originally, the festival focused each night on a specific Alaska Native culture. Today, it has grown in its depth and focus, and now features Native dance groups from throughout the state and nation, such as Stevens Village, Anaktuvak Pass, Atka and Chevak. Native artisans also specialize in arts and crafts from multiple indigenous cultures. Their work will be displayed at the craft bazaar in the Great Hall, which is outside the Davis Concert Hall.

The Festival of Native Arts is organized by student and community volunteers, in cooperation with local, federal and state organizations.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Call the Festival of Native Arts office at 907-474-6889 or e-mail [email protected].

ON THE WEB: www.uaf.edu/festival

MG/3-3-11/164-11

Posted by Pat Cruse On March - 3 - 2011 ADD COMMENTS

Marmian Grimes
907-474-7902
11/24/10

The University of Alaska Fairbanks Kuskokwim Campus will host several holiday events at the Yupiit Piciryarait Cultural Center in Bethel. Following is a schedule of upcoming events:

Saturday market and holiday sale
Nov. 27, 9 a.m. for vendors, 10 – 3 p.m. for shoppers
Local artists, crafters, photographers, fresh food vendors and more will be selling their items.

“A Holiday Evening of Bluegrass Music”
Dec. 4, 7 p.m.
Come to a holiday night out with the best bluegrass musicians in town. Enjoy good music and tasty treats. Admission is $7 and refreshments will be available for sale.

Special holiday evening market
Dec. 23, 5 p.m. for vendors, 6 – 8 p.m. for shoppers
The annual Perfect Pie Sale will be held for those who want the tastiest pies for their holiday dinner. Local artists, crafters, photographers, fresh food vendors and more will be selling their items.

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Reyne Athanas, 907-543-4538, Kuskokwim Campus Student Services, or by e-mail at [email protected].

PC/11-24-10/101-10

Posted by Marmian Grimes On November - 24 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

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