maxey mark pauline 1993 japan
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ST
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: 1993
F£ai4-t6
A Report by Mark and Pauline Maxey | mm ^latt^^332
u 2
-
/ u N K L e r r e f i /
To
the friends
of
the
Kyushu
Christian
Mission ^ s
Kanoya, Kagoshitna 893 Japan -
Box
417, N. Vernon IN 47265 I
LINKLETTER
303
MARCH
1993 |H|| |
^ ..d'
MAKOTO
YUSE
-
LECTURER
-
FEBRUARY
14-16,1993
£ ^ 1
If
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V3F W W : W 3 f e 4 e 4 e : f e 4
Dear Christian f r i e n d s
To re-use a worn-out
greeting, Please
forgive us our long silence. Actually,
we
haven t been
silent
but we haven t got
the
words into prin t until now. It
is
a challeng
to be on
the
opposite
side
of
the world
and s t i l l try to keep in touch with
friends
and
family. For a far away place,
we are
s t i l l able to keep in touch with the wor ld ..Act
ually i t is
amazing. Thanks
to satelli tes
up
in
space,
we
could spend several hours a day
{or night) watching the world via television. CNN has a
daily
morning broadcast and
at
nigh t t he re is another
half-hour
broadcast. These programs can be watched in
Japanese
Or
(press
a button) and watch and listen in English. Evening is best because you can watch
t h e news and e a t one
o f
P a u li n e s d e li ci ou s
meals
a t th e same t i m e .
Mail and
pub li ca ti ons a re safely
and sure ly de livered. Sometimes there
is
a de
la y due to wind, waves
or wea ther, but
eventually all the news gets to
us..more than
we
need, use
or
want. We also get a daily newspaper, The
Japan
Times, which arrives here in
Kanoya,24 hours after
i t
is published {in Tokyo). The papers
are
flown to the northern tip
of our island, put on a night t rain, and
delivered
to our house the next day at 6 A.M.
Once
a month no paper is
printed
in order
to
give the newsboys a day off.
That s
not much
of a
holiday,
but i t s more
vacation than
I got in many years of
peddling
newspapers.
Well, enough of reviewing the past. Once in awhile, though, i t s good
to
look back to see
where you ve been and to get a
fix
on where we are
going.
The news is that we ve got a new president. He
avoided
th e draft which is not a
plus for him and he began hi s presidential career by launching a campaign to le t homosexuals
serve in
the
armed
forces.
To
the
best of
my
knowledge,
the
armed
services
were
never
open
to
homosexuals. This has been a
long-term
prohibition in
th e
military. I don t think i t is
going to change. Bill Hallsted of G r i f f i t h Indiana notes t h a t Pres.
Clinton
has
marked
the beginning of his term by four decisons: (1) Begin action to
rescind
all laws regu
lating abortion on demand. {2)
Lifted
the ban on th e use
of
fetal tissue from aborted
babies
for
medical
research,making i t easier to use human tissue rather
than
animal t i ssu
for
research.
(3) He has rescinded the ban on the use of federal money to abort babies.
This means that tax dollars are paying for abortions. (4) The President
acted
promptly to
allow homosexuals to
serve
in the military.
. . Fortunately, the
military
is
a long
way
from
accepting homosexuals
in
the
armed
forces. A
t r i a l balloon
has been lof ted
which
declares
that homsosexuals
are
a
protected
minority under
current
civil rights
laws.
These
regulations directly
attack
Christian
beliefs and practices. Now
is the
time, i f
ever, for believers to stand up and speak out
against
these a nt i-Ch ri st ia n p ra cti ce s.
Will
President
Clinton
or
General Powell win
the
battle?
I m
on
the
general s side.
Makoto Yuse was our lecturer for our 31st training
course.
I t
is
a
long
way from
his
home in Nagoya {north
of
Osaka) to our house
at water s
edge heading south. We gave
him an arduous schedule and promised to see
that
he was warm
at night, fed
by
day,
and
blest
and prayed for by all of us.
We
began
with
the farthest away
churches f i r s t :
Kushikino
church le d
by Naganori Tanij i r i ; Kagoshima church led by Koichi Homori; Yoshino
church, le d by Walter Maxey; Kokubu church also le d by Walter Maxey and Kajiki church
led by Junko Daikusono. These were cold nights with
warm
felloship and solid teaching. .
While Bro.Yuse was with us, i t was a good time
to
hold
our
monthly preacher s meet
ing
at
the Kagoshima church. We talked over our work as well as our future plans, ending
with
prayers
by
all . Then we visited together
as
we
enjoyed an ample box lunch. These
monthly meetings are the glue
that
keeps us
in
contact both
with
each other• also
with
th e b e l i e v e r s we
s e r v e .
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Following
the minister s meeting,
Bro. Tadayoshi
Ikeda,
Makoto Yuse and
myself went south by boat
to
the island of Tanegashima.
Bro.
Ikeda and his
wife,
Hisako,
have
labored
there many
years.
They have a strong
church, many
believers and a great
influence
on
that
island. The two
night meeting there
was
blessed
with good
attendance
and
i n t e r e s t .
I was blessed
with
a
cold
which got worse and
worse. When
I
finally
got back
home, I was
out of
action
for
a week - something unusual for me. In
spi te
o f s icknes s,
i t was an encouragement for us to have this time with the church and i t s people on the
is land. Rain or
shine,
wind or storm, hot or
cold,
th i s
church
functions and serves .
Bro.
Yuse
and I
flew
back
to
Kagoshima
airport.
He
went
to
his
home
in Nagoya.
Son,
Walter,
met
me
at the airport and we made a
beeline
to Kanoyar following, however,
the
beautiful
shoreline of Kagoshima bay. Walter was
the
guest speaker of the day at
the Kanoya Rotary Club. He gave a humdinger of a talk on th e
subject ,
Being an Inter
na t iona l Person.
Thanks
to excellent local
and
international
phone and mail
service, we are
able
to keep in touch by pressing a few
buttons
on the telephone. Times have changed -
and
for
the
better.
Son Greg, wife Beverly,and
daughter Meredith,
mind the
home front
in Cincinnati, Ohio. Greg is a most honorable patron of the local Japanese
store
that
stocks
the Japanese food that he l ikes. . Good customer that he
is
the store owner
now
calTs Gregory, senseT , the honorable
name
for t easer .
During the 40 years that we have lived in Japan, we have watched
the
transpor
tation
system
move
from bad
roads
and steam
engines
spouting
ash
and
cinde rs to
an ex
cellent travel system -
air , land
and sea. Recently,
A
Juve
of
Sueyoshi and myself
flew north
for
a meeting in Okayama Prefecture. On the way, the airport socked in . We
landed on a neighboring
island
and were bused back to our original landing
site.
The
bus t r ip was
fantastic.
A series of high bridges
now connect
the two islands. I am
not
able to est imate the amount
of money spent
and
the
engineering required to link these
2 major islands. I also would
not
want to be on one of
those
bridges in a typhoon.
The next two days, we
were
guests of Audrey WEST
and
Keith SUMMERS a t th e
Okayama
Christian Center. Niro KENJI joined us from Osaka. We had two days under Audrey s
auspices
for planning, praying
and fellowship -
all the while
looking forward
to
our
continued
missionary servi ce , but tr es sed
by
our common fai th and
mutual committment to
evangelism
in
Japan.
We
are
always
encouraged
by
the
people
that
come
our
way.
Last
month
we
enjoyed
the visi t of Dr.and Mrs. S.
M
Chang from Korea.
We
were able to enjoy a meal together
and
to
have a
good
visit afterward. Dr. Chang is founder and
president
of Kyung-Nam
Christian
College and Dongseo
University,
both in Busan, Korea s southernmost
city.
The
evangelical
community
in
Japan is
hosting
a
nation-wide evangelistic
campaign
to be held in the city of Nagoya (which is half-way between Osaka and Tokyo on
Novem
ber-
5,
6^7
.-This- ci4:yis^a long
4ft;ay-fwm-4js
-but^
comraiuxixatjxins-are_fin.e^
J/te_welcome
move- _
ment toward a
fa ith th at causes
us
to
respond to
that
ancient and
ever-present
command
that
the Apostle Peter gave. He said; Change your hearts and
lives
and be baptized, each one
of you,
in
the
name of
Jesus
Christ. Then
God
will fo rg ive
your sins,
and you will
re-
cieve the gift of
the
Holy Spiri t . This promise is for
you. I t
is also
for
your children,
and
for the
people
who are far
away.
I t is for
every
person
that
the lord
calls
to
him-
self. -
Acts
2:38-39.
HIS SERVICE Mark
Maxey
Pub l i ca t ion
o f
CHRIST IAN MISSION
B ox 417
rth V ern on , I nd ia na 47265
Address
Return Requested
e d i t o r
HORIZONS
BOX 24 r»7
_tWXVILLE T
37901
c
6 4 4
Non-Profi t Organiza
U.
S . POSTAGE
PAID
Louisville, Kentuck
Pe rm i t N o . 53 7
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19-17
A
Report by
Mark
and
Pauline Maxey
/ yNKLe r r e t v
To th e frie nd s o f the
Kyushu Chri st ian Mission
Kanoya, Kagoshima 893
Japan
- Box
417 N.
Vernon IN 47265
LINKLETTER 304
JULY 1993
DEAR
CHR ISTIAN FRI ENDS ,
In days
of old
when I was
not
so
old,
I
go t
lots
of work done in no time a t
a l l
Now-a-days.
lots
of good things ge t done and somethings never ge t done
But mostly work gets div ided up into sec tions: what
has to be done
today;
what can be put off
t i l l
to
morrow and
other things
which
may never got
done -
at
l eas t
not
by me.
Pauline
and I came
to this
town Kanoya)
43 years ago this fall. We ve been collecting,storing,
discarding,
reading
and
writing
and... .ever
since.
I ve got 28
file
drawers
full
of things of that have
happened and
filed
t i l l another day. If I cleaned
out
one
f i le drawer
a day I
might
get
i t
done
in
a
month.
I m
going to
think
about
i t
fo r while, how
ever before I
actually
do i t Big projects like this
require some thought. . . .
In Japan i t
is
no trouble to find things
that are
thousands of
years old,
hundreds of
years
old and
lots of
things happening which should have
quit happening a lot time ago. For example there is
Mt. Sakurajima, very
much
an active volcano. The bull
dozers are st i l l trying to
remove
the lava that blocks
access
to
the
homes,
the
businesses,the
ferries that
provide access to the island and
its
people*
A
full
days
drive to
the
nor thwest corner
of Kyushu will bring one to
Mt.
Unzen.
It
has been
pouring
out lava for many
months
now - killing the
unwary, burning
homes
and blocking roads.
And
jus t
now, this week,
in mid-July, a
tow
ering
tidal
wave, eight
stories
high and
traveling
400
miles
an
hour has
crashed on
th e
small
island
of
Okushiri .
a
few
miles o ff
from the
i sl an d o f
Hokkaido.
As
this
le t ter
was pu t in
the
mail, 144 people were
killed and 125
are missing.
The final count
will
be
known some time l a t e r His tor i ca l ly th es e d ea th -
dealing
tidal
waves come about every ten
years.
Only
a determined people would continue
to maintain their
families
and their
l ives in spite
of
the hardships
and di f f icul t ies they
fac i
Last year,
Osaka
Bible Seminary had its
largest graduating class. The thought then was that
student
enrollment
had reached
i ts
peak and
that the
student
body
would
shrink. This has not happened. We
were
glad
when Masato Yoshii, a young
man from
a Christ
ian family, resigned his post as teacher at an is
land
school and enrolled a t
Osaka
Bible Seminary.
e
is off
to a good start.
Memebers
of
the
Yoshii
family
have made
their mark in the on-going of the
Christian faith in Japan. y guess is that they will
continue to do so in
the
years ahead.
ay
their
like
i n c r e a s e
Bill Bake r and
Pau l
Cla rk :
come
to t each encourage
us
Grandparents look on as Trent Maxey Grad
uates from
Christ ian
Academv-Tokvo. 1993
T i
Paul
and F aith A xto n v^ith son
Zachary and daughter, Erin.
wm
Chu r c h a t t h e
t own
o f
T su c h i u r a
led
by
Paul
and
Faith Axton
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Ralph
Waldo
Emerson
said,
The ornament
of
a
house
Is the friends
who
visit it. The people who
visit
us are more than ornaments.
They
are people
of
energy and can do .
They
have to be that kind
of people to come and
visit
us. If you put your
finger
on the word Tokyo on a map, and then
trace
i t
down to the end of the
island
of Kyushu, you will
be almost
here. Actually, i t is
a two hour
ride
from
the
Kagoshima airport
to our
home
in
Kanoya.
When
you
arrive
at our place, you are all set to
say with
sincerity,
I m
glad
to
be
here.
Paul Clark, President
of Osaka Bible Semin
ary brought Prof. Bill Baker down to Kanoya for a
short but meaningful
stay. He
spoke to our monthly
ministers
meeting and
also
at
th e churches a t Kano
ya and Yoshino. His messages were well
received.
We also had
plenty
of time to exchange ideas and
hopes
for
the future
of
Osaka Seminary as well as
our i nd iv id u al minis t r i es
One of the places I lil^ to take
visitors
to
is the monument that honors Francis Xavier (1506-
1552) Xavier was the first missionary to
come
to
Japan. Loyola said
that
Xavier
was
the lumpiest
dough
he ever kneaded. Xavier found another lump
f
dough
in the unlettered believer, Anjiro.
This
along with Xavier and f ive others arrived in
Kagoshima on
August 15,
1549
to begin his mission
endeavors. He
had
100 converts before moving
north. The Catholic faith is strong in
Kagoshima
till this
day.
Unfortunately, various buildings
and obstructions
now
make i t difficult to find
Xavier's monument.
Keep
asking,
however.
It can
be found.
May
is always a
great
month to look forward
to. Walter has his E C English Bible Class) camp
then.
The camp
this spring
was
one of the best to
be
held with excellent participation by all.
Another
thing about
May
is
that
i t
is
income
time. It al\vays
interests me that
the IRS can al
find you at this time of year. Mail
from
the
and a visit to the local tax office is the sign
f one
year past.
I saw a remarkable
thing
the
other
Sunday
at
church^ Miss Kariya, the.Sunday School
ha d f in ished her c lass
Pauline
an d I were
e only ones there.
We
waited. A car came. One per
got out. Soon,
another
car
and one person.
In
order five cars arrived
with
people in each
Pub l i ca t i on o f
CHRISTIAN
MISSION
Box
417
Vern on , I nd ia na
47265
Return
Requested
ca r and
presently
the service began. What was
amazing was
the
fact that
up t i l l a few
months
almost
nobody came to
church in
a
car.
Time and
change has surrounded us.
Aging is always with us. Pau lin e and I have
spent some time in
th e
hosoital for tes ts and exa
inations. Our doctor was specially concerned to k
whether
we had
polyps in our inner workings.
It
t
a
lot
of unpleasantness and a couple of days
at
hospital
to
find out
we
had no problem
there.
The Japanese
school
system
ends
their
scho
year in
MarchA
begins again in April. Shuts
down
for a month in August. Begins
again
the first pa
of September. Somehow, I never get
used
to bein
in a two-part
system: following
the calendar yea
of the
West
with the mind and the Japanese
system
with its different holidays and vacations. Even a
all
these years in Japan, habit takes over mind
it comes
to
annual
events
which
are
oft
repeated
It has been our privilege to
have
part of
family in Japan during all the years
we
have been
here. But
life
moves on relentlessly. Pauline
an
I
took
a plane ride to
Tokyo
to
be
present for
graduation
of
grandson,
Trent
Maxey
He
is a
big
man in many ways and we know he will be
found
in
service of both God
and
man. At his height, he w
always
be
a man to look
up
to. Keep him in you
prayers as
he goes
to the
U.S.
for college.
Having
traveled
all
the way to Tokyo to att
Trent's graduation.
also got to
spend
time wi
Paul and
Faith Axton and Erin
and
Zachary - our
grandchildren.
It
was real great.
On Sunday, we attended the church at Tsuch
followed
by
a joyous time of fellowship afterward
Another day, I
was
taking a walk. All of a sudden
a car pulled up
along
side of me. The lady driver
out,
bowed
to
me,
gave
me
a
word
of greeting, go
her car and drove on. Later I
found
out that her
vand
had been
stationed in
Kanoya.
Having recogni
me, she got out of her car to give a greeting. Th
the social amenities continue to
be
the glue of t
society.
Now
i t
is
tinic to bring this letter to a
close. May the Lord watch between me and thee w
we are
absent
one from
the
other. Mizpali '
IN HIS SERVICE MaXCt/
6
Non-Profit Organizatio
U. S.POSTAGE
PAID
Louisville. Kentucky
Permi t
No.
S3 7
E D I T OR
HORIZONS
BOX
7
KNOXVILLE
TN 3 7 9 0 1
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/o?^7
A
Report by
Mark
a n d Pauline
Maxey
/ u N K L e r r e R /
To
the f ri en ds o f the Kyushu Chris t ian
Mission
Kanoya,
Kagoshima
893
Japan
- Box
417»
N. Vernon
IN
4726S
L i n k l e t t e r
306
-
December
1993 -
Dear Christian
f r iends .
Greetings from Japan
and
pardon the long dry
spell - meaning you haven't heard from me in a
very
long time. OR to re-write an old slogan,
The
type
writer is strong
but
the typing fingers are
weak
Sometimes,
out
here in the middle of the worlds*
oceans
and
islands,
we get
to
asking
th e
questions;
not
only,
who weare but why
are
we here? I t
is
vital
that
we
keep a
firm
hold on both of
these statements.
We
are
here
for
a purpose. A
very
old
summation
said
that
we
are here
to
serve God
and
glorify Him
forever.
That's
hard
to do but i t
is
a challenge to us every day of
our
l ives.
I t seems
l ike
elements
are all
lined up
to tes t
our houses,
roads,
buildings
and r i v e r banks.
The
continual rains
have
turned the h i l l s i d e s into
rivers of mud. The
mud
washes
down
into
the
streams and out
into
the
ocean.
On the
way,
the
raging
torrents
destroys
the bridges,
the houses,
the
workplaces.. . i t
is
hard to think of
an
area
that
has escaped. 25 people in
our
area were
lost
in the mudslides in our peninsula
alone.
The government
sent troops
to
help.
They walked
carefully
over
all
mudslides, prodding
with long rods
into
the muck.
Many
bodies were found and recovered in
this
way.
Our camp grounds and buildings stood
the
t e s t The winds and
raging
streams
left our
camp
buildings intact, bu t roads,
walls,
foundations all suffered heavily.
The camp
parking
area was completly destroyed.
Now i t is covered
with boulders, rocks,
sand
and
gravel
.As a
resul t ,
we had
water , water everywhere but l i t t l e of i t
was
f i t to
drink ugust a
major typhoon went thru our
area.
Perhaps
foolishly I stood
by
a
front window for three hours watching this raging storm go by. Thankfully, we suffered
no major damage bu t everything that wasn't
fastened
down took flight.Over the years, the
electric
company
has
replaced
all
wooden
telephone
poles with
re-enforced
cement
poles.
They were a major improvement. But
after the
storm had
passed, the
poles were leanina
and
laying
In all directions. I t was a sorry sight. I t s going to take a lo t
of
time,
money and equipment to
bring
these l ines
back
to
normal
again,
as well
as
to repair and/
or repl ace the phones, antennas,
windows,
houses
and
bridges.
After
three months,much of
the damage
has been repaired but much-
is
not. The
church at Kushira suffered much damage. In fact, the roof
lifted
off OR flew off, thus
leaving what remained
of
the church house and
Its
contents to be ruined.
However the
Lord
provides.
Kiyoto Paula Yanagimoto
of
MiMet,
Alberta,
Canada
d L i t
Pauline
Speaks to the Annual
J o i n t Lad ie s Mee tin g
ltd toe neber ijaUe
;k i^ob
fjotu
) JfiE lobeii ufi.
l a r k
P a u l i n e M a x
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Kushira
Church Dedication
Songs of Pra ise
and Thank s
8/9/2019 Maxey Mark Pauline 1993 Japan
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/maxey-mark-pauline-1993-japan 6/6
One
of the minis t r ies
we have
had
dur
ing
the past
40
years
has been with
the
Christians
who l ive
in a special housing
area
about f ive
miles from our
house. The
people
there
have
suffered
from Hansen s
disease .The disease can be t r ea ted
but
not
cured.
But one
wonderful
thing
is
that
now
there is
medication and
good
treatment
a v a i l a b l e
As a
resul t
many
of
the
patients
a t
the
K ei -A i-En wh ere the church
meets
and
regular s erv ic es a re held) attend services
regularly
and
participate in:i ts activities.
Recently,
a t
the
en d of church service
there a
gray-haired lady came up to me,
in troduced
herse l f
and told
me
t h a t
I
had
bap ti zed her a t the Kei-Ai-En forty years
ago. What
a
joy to
meet her
again
and to
know that-s
he-had
not forgotten-her
fai th—
or
he r baptism nor the
one
who
had
baptized
he r P ra i se God
Over
th e
years,
practices
and
traditions
have
taken
r o o t a nd r emai ne d. One o f these
is the annual convent ion of a l l the
churches
and C h ris tia ns o f
our
area The
convent ion
is held
in a different
place
each
year.
The
min is te r whose
turn
t
i s
to lead th e con
vention that
year
is wholly responsible
for
the complete program. This year's
convention was
sponsored
by
and
Rhonda
Juve who serve the Sueyoshi church - about
30
miles
northeast of ou r home in Kanoya.
Not only was
this
convention very wel l
attended, t
was also a source
of
blessing
encouragement
and instruction. I
refer
speci fi al ly to
ancient
funeral practices
whic h have
been
a part of religious ceremon
ies
through the ages.
The
problem
is that these ceremonies
e become^a traditional paj^^t of the-Christ
ian religion - when they should n eve r have
een a part
of
Christian worship
whatever.
U N K k e T T C R
Publ ica t ion o f
CHRISTIAN
MISSION
B o x 417
North
Vernon,
Indiana
47265
Address Return Requested
have
become
a
traditional part of
the Christ
ian
religion
-
when
they should never
have
been
a
part
of Christian worship whatever.
Remembering
our loved ones
is
natural and
wholesome
for Christian people.
But
in
Japan
a different
practice
takes pl ace. Namely
that
of praying to the
dead
and for the dead.
This accompanied by incense, ringing of bells=
chanting, bowing, giving of money and of the
continuation of
memorial
prayers.
in
other
words,
the t radi t ional
Christ
ian funeral in Japan is a replica of Buddhist
prayers and practices•These have been deeply
planted in the funeral customs and ritual
for
centuries past. And Christians have been
accepting
paganism as
Christianity.
One of
th e
great events at the
annual
convention sponsored
at the
Sueyoshi Church
of
Christ,
was the preaching of two sermons
—by-Al Juve.
The
convention
was
great
in
every
aspect
but especially In the two sermons delivered
by
Juve.
He
gave a thorough presentation
nf
the Chris t ian fa i th
and what t
stands for
He said
specifically that
Christians
are
not
to par ticipate in Buddhist (or Shinto or
other
Oriental
fai th 's)
funeral
r i tes
and
practices.
I t seemed
to me t ha t
a f t e r
Bro. Juve
had
fin is hed his las t
sermon,
that a
l ight went
on the
hearts
of
the
people there. At last
they
had clear
picture of
what
I t
means
to
serving the
Living God
ND T
THE S ME TIME
reject
th e
ri tes
and
rituals
and
robes
and
symbols that pass for faith, forgiveness and
e t e r n a l
l i f e
A load h^s been l i f ted from many l ives
and
light
has
entered many hearts.
Thank you,
Juve for let t ing
the
l ight come
in .
God
bless
and keep you al l IN CHRIST.
A s pe ci al treat ha s -been twtf w«ek
visit
of Kiyoto,
and
Paula Y an ag im ot o -
all th e
way from th e town df
Millet-in
AU}epta,-Canada.-U s
a long way^from here^
to there
and
back again/ bu t it was a Joy to hav« them
here
with us fo r a very
good
visit. Maybe Air C an ad a
will help us ge t to Alberta^for a visit some day
6 4 4
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