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American Journal of Psychotherapy 1995: Vol 49 Index PDF

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Preview American Journal of Psychotherapy 1995: Vol 49 Index

INDEX (A = Abstract; B = Book Review; CR = Case Report; E = Editorial; GA = Guest Article; GE = Guest Editorial; N = Notes and Comments; O = Original Article; R = Reviewer; S = Software Review) A “Clinical complexity, ideological singularity as de- fense against,” (O) 540 Abuse, suggestions of, (B) 150 “Clinical setting, the phallic child in a,” (O) 428 “Acting out and the Narrative Function: Reconsider- CLONINGER, C.R. (B) 302 ing Peter Blos’s Concept of the Second Individua- Cognitive-Behavioral Strategies in Crisis Intervention, tion Process,” (O) 548 (B) 582 Addictions Counseling, (B) 299 COHEN,J. . (R) 452 “Addictive Sexual Behavior,” (O) 473 Coherence in Psychotic Discourse, (B) 466 ADLER, D.A., (R) 295 Common Principles of Psychotherapy (B) 451 ALBECK, J.H., (R) 155 COMMONS, MLL. (R) 459 Alliance, working, (B) 306 Communication, therapeutic, (B) 455 AMADA, G., (R) 465 Constructing the Self. Constructing America. A Cultural ANDREASEN, N.C., (B) 458 History of Psychotherapy, (B) 588 Assessing Experience in Psychotherapy, (B) 452 “Countertransference-Derived Elaboration of Reli- ATWOOD, G.E., (R) 294 gious Conflicts and Representational States” (O) AWAD, G.A., (O) 28; (R) 149, 304 68 “Countertransferential difficulties, technical and,” B (O) 504 BECK, R.L., (R) 586 Countertransference, management of, with borderline “Brief therapy, therapist’s experience, training, and patients (B) 305 skill in,” (O) 95 Crisis intervention, cognitive-behavioral strategies in, (B) BLOCK,J. , (B) 151 “Borderline Patient: Update on the Diagnosis, Critical Interventions in Psychotherapy, (B) 583 Theory, and Treatment from a Psychodynamic Cruel Compassion: Psychiatric Control of Society’s Perspective,” (O) 317 Unwanted, (B) 460 “Blos’s concept of the second individuation process,” CUSHMAN, P., (B) 588 (O) 548 CZANDER, W.M., (B) 600 BOGART, G.E., (R) 308 Borderline patients, management of countertransference with, (B) 305 D BOOK, H.E. (O) 504 DAHLMEIER,J. , (R) 152 BORDUIN, C.M., (R) 152 DATTILIO, F.M. (B) 582 BRAUN,J. , (B) 156 DAVIS, G.E., (S) 309 Bridge to Recovery: An Introduction to 12-Step Pro- DAVIS, G.L., (S) 309 grams, A, (B) 308 DAWES, R.M., (B) 295 BRINK, T.L., (R) 600 BROG, M.A., (O) 385 Death of Intimacy, The. Barriers to Meaningful Interper- BROWN, P.M., (B) 594 sonal Relationships. (B) 594 BUDMAN, S.H., (O) 95 “Decision to Remove Homosexuality from the DSM: Twenty Years Later,” (O) 416 Cc “Depressives, psychotherapy based on identity prob- lems of,” (O) 197 CAMPBELL, R., (B) 597 “Desensitization/reprocessing in resolving trauma,” CARY, G.L. (R) 599 (O) 282 CHANCE, S.E., (O) 514 “Developmental disorder, pervasive, of young chil- Change, the new language of (B) 454 dren,” (O) 28 CHESSICK, R.D., (O) 159, 171; (R) 294, 449, 450 “Discourse analysis, psychotherapeutic,” (O) 371 “Children with pervasive developmental disorder, Dissociation: Clinical and Theoretical Perspectives, (B) outpatient treatment program for,” (O) 28 599 “Childhood gender identity disorder,” (O) 260 “DSM, the decision to remove homosexuality from,” CHIPMAN, A., (O) 558; (R) 157, 593 (O) 416 CLAMAN, L., (R) 463 DUPONT, R.L. (B) 308 “Clinical Approach to Childhood Gender Identity Dyadic Transaction, The, (B) 298 Disorder, A” (O) 260 Dysphorias, premenstrual, (B) 470 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Vol. 49, No. 4, Fall 1995 606 INDEX (A = Abstract; B = Book Review; CR = Case Report; E = Editorial; GA = Guest Article; GE = Guest Editorial; N = Notes and Comments; O = Original Article; R = Reviewer; S = Software Review) A “Clinical complexity, ideological singularity as de- fense against,” (O) 540 Abuse, suggestions of, (B) 150 “Clinical setting, the phallic child in a,” (O) 428 “Acting out and the Narrative Function: Reconsider- CLONINGER, C.R. (B) 302 ing Peter Blos’s Concept of the Second Individua- Cognitive-Behavioral Strategies in Crisis Intervention, tion Process,” (O) 548 (B) 582 Addictions Counseling, (B) 299 COHEN,J. . (R) 452 “Addictive Sexual Behavior,” (O) 473 Coherence in Psychotic Discourse, (B) 466 ADLER, D.A., (R) 295 Common Principles of Psychotherapy (B) 451 ALBECK, J.H., (R) 155 COMMONS, MLL. (R) 459 Alliance, working, (B) 306 Communication, therapeutic, (B) 455 AMADA, G., (R) 465 Constructing the Self. Constructing America. A Cultural ANDREASEN, N.C., (B) 458 History of Psychotherapy, (B) 588 Assessing Experience in Psychotherapy, (B) 452 “Countertransference-Derived Elaboration of Reli- ATWOOD, G.E., (R) 294 gious Conflicts and Representational States” (O) AWAD, G.A., (O) 28; (R) 149, 304 68 “Countertransferential difficulties, technical and,” B (O) 504 BECK, R.L., (R) 586 Countertransference, management of, with borderline “Brief therapy, therapist’s experience, training, and patients (B) 305 skill in,” (O) 95 Crisis intervention, cognitive-behavioral strategies in, (B) BLOCK,J. , (B) 151 “Borderline Patient: Update on the Diagnosis, Critical Interventions in Psychotherapy, (B) 583 Theory, and Treatment from a Psychodynamic Cruel Compassion: Psychiatric Control of Society’s Perspective,” (O) 317 Unwanted, (B) 460 “Blos’s concept of the second individuation process,” CUSHMAN, P., (B) 588 (O) 548 CZANDER, W.M., (B) 600 BOGART, G.E., (R) 308 Borderline patients, management of countertransference with, (B) 305 D BOOK, H.E. (O) 504 DAHLMEIER,J. , (R) 152 BORDUIN, C.M., (R) 152 DATTILIO, F.M. (B) 582 BRAUN,J. , (B) 156 DAVIS, G.E., (S) 309 Bridge to Recovery: An Introduction to 12-Step Pro- DAVIS, G.L., (S) 309 grams, A, (B) 308 DAWES, R.M., (B) 295 BRINK, T.L., (R) 600 BROG, M.A., (O) 385 Death of Intimacy, The. Barriers to Meaningful Interper- BROWN, P.M., (B) 594 sonal Relationships. (B) 594 BUDMAN, S.H., (O) 95 “Decision to Remove Homosexuality from the DSM: Twenty Years Later,” (O) 416 Cc “Depressives, psychotherapy based on identity prob- lems of,” (O) 197 CAMPBELL, R., (B) 597 “Desensitization/reprocessing in resolving trauma,” CARY, G.L. (R) 599 (O) 282 CHANCE, S.E., (O) 514 “Developmental disorder, pervasive, of young chil- Change, the new language of (B) 454 dren,” (O) 28 CHESSICK, R.D., (O) 159, 171; (R) 294, 449, 450 “Discourse analysis, psychotherapeutic,” (O) 371 “Children with pervasive developmental disorder, Dissociation: Clinical and Theoretical Perspectives, (B) outpatient treatment program for,” (O) 28 599 “Childhood gender identity disorder,” (O) 260 “DSM, the decision to remove homosexuality from,” CHIPMAN, A., (O) 558; (R) 157, 593 (O) 416 CLAMAN, L., (R) 463 DUPONT, R.L. (B) 308 “Clinical Approach to Childhood Gender Identity Dyadic Transaction, The, (B) 298 Disorder, A” (O) 260 Dysphorias, premenstrual, (B) 470 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, Vol. 49, No. 4, Fall 1995 606 E GERSON, E.S., (B) 302 GILL, M.M. (R) 446 EDGERTON,J. , (B) 597 GIOVACCHINI, P.L. (R) 447 Ego, the wisdom of, (B) 456 GLICKHAUF-HUGHES, C., (O) 514; (R) 469 EISENSTEIN, S. , (B) 298 GOLD, J.H., (B) 470 “Empathic relating, interactional obstacles to,” (O) GOLDBERG, C., (R) 594 350 GOLDSTEIN, W.N. (O) 317 “Empathy, phenomenology of,” (O) 163 GOODWIN, D.W., (R) 597 ERICKSON, K-K. (B) 584 GREENBERG, L.S., (B) 306 Guest Editor’s Introduc- Erickson, M.H., Jay Haley on, (B) 462 tion to “Hermeneutics and Psychoanalytically “Erotic Transference: Some Technical and Counter- Oriented Psychotherapy” (O) 213 transferential Difficulties,” (O) 504 Guest Editor’s Introduction to Essence of a Single-Session Success, The, (B) 584 “Psychotherapy Based on Identity Problems of ETEZADY M.H., (B) 149; 303 Depressives” (O) 196 European Review of Social Psychology, (B) 465 Guntrip, H.J.S., collected papers of, (B) 468 “Evolution, science of, and psychoanalysis,” (O) 47 Existential Family Therapy Using the Concepts of Victor Frankel, (B) 461 H Existential psychotherapy with personality disorders, (B) HALDIPUR, C.V., (R) 598 586 HALEY, J., (B) 462 “Eye Movement Desensitization/Reprocessing: Its HARGRAVE, T.D., (B) 152 Use in Resolving the Trauma Caused by the Loss of HAZELL,J. , (B) 468 a War Buddy,” (CR) 282 Healing Homosexuality: Case Stories of Reparative Therapy, (B) 301 F Hegel’s phenomenology: The sociality of reason, (B) 292 “Hermeneutics and Psychoanalytically Oriented Psy- Faces in the Cloud: Intersubjectivity and Personality chotherapy” (O) 215 Theory, (B) 294 HEWSTONE, M., (B) 465 Factitious disorders, inside the strange world of, (B) 591 HILGARD, E.R., (B) 463 FAIDLEY, A.J., (B) 452 HILGARD, J.R., (B) 463 Families and Forgiveness: Healing Wounds in the Hitler legacy, (B) 153 Intergenerational Family, (B) 152 HOEHN-SARIC, R. (R) 305 Family Myths: Living Our Roles, Betraying Ourselves Homosexuality, healing, (B) 301 (B) 151 “Homosexuality, the decision to remove, from Family systems theory, internal, (B) 585 DSM,” (O) 416 FELDMAN, M., (B) 591 HORVATH, A.O., (B) 306 FORD, C.V., (B) 591 House of Cards: Psychology and Psychotherapy Built on Forgiveness, families and, (B) 152 Myth (B) 295 FRAYN, D.H., (R) 467 “How Useful are Clinical Reports Concerning the FREE, N., (O) 59 Consequences of Therapist-Patient Sex?” (O) 237 FREEBURY, D.R., (R) 448 HUDLICKA, E., (R) 454 FREEMAN, A., (B) 582 HUGHES, J.M., (B) 464 FREEMAN, L., (B) 301 HUNTER,J ., (CR) 428 FREUD, S.. (R) 458, 589 HUSZONEK,J. , (R) 459 Freud, speculations after, (B) 590 Hypnosis in the Reliofe Pfain , (B) 462 FRIEDMAN, S., (B) 454 From Freud’s Consulting Room: The Unconscious in a I Scientific Age, (B) 464 Fundamentals of Psychiatric Treatment Planning (B) “Identity problems of depressives,” (O) 197 451 “Ideological Singularity as a Defense Against Clinical Complexity,” (O) 540 G “Image of the Psychotherapist in Literature, The,” (O) 405 GABBARD, G., (B) 305 Impasse and Innovation in Psychoanalysis: Clinical Case GALANTER, M., (B) 300 Seminars (B) 447 GARDNER, S., (B) 596 In Defense of Schreber: Soul Murder and Psychiatry (B) GARFIELD, D.., (R) 455 449 “Gender-appropriate, behavior, psychiatrists’ and “Individuation process, second,” (O) 548 non-physician psychotherapists’ beliefs about,” (O) “Influence of Activators, Biological Factors, and the 59 Childhood Environment on the Psychological Genetic Approaches to Mental Disorders, (B) 302 Organization, The” Part II (O) 19 GEDO, J.E., (B) 447 “Interactional Obstacles to Empathic Relating in the GEHRIE, M.J., (B) 447 Psychotherapy of Narcissistic Disorders,” (O) 350 “Gender identity disorder, childhood,” (O) 260 Internal Family Systems Therapy, (B) 585 GERBER, L., (R) 156 Intersubjectivity and personality theory, (B) 294 607 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY Intimacy, death of, (B) 594 “Mother-daughter relationship, the, reinventing,” “Introduction, Overview of the Model, and Personal- (O) 526 ity Organization”, Part I (O) 7 MUNCHOW, M., (B) 589 IVEY, G., (O) 350 MYERS, W.A., (O) 473 J N Jay Haley on Milton H. Erickson, (B) 462 “Narcissistic disorders, interactional obstacles to JORDAN, K.B., (O) 225 empathic relating in the psychotherapy of,” (O) 350 K “Narrative and Psychotherapy—The Phenomenology of Healing,” (O) 180 KAPIT, H.E., (R) 601 “Narrative function, the, acting out and,” (O) 548 KAPLAN, M., (O) 59 Neurosis in the young, treatment of, (B) 149, 303 KARASU, T.B., (E) 3; (O) 484 New Language of Change: Constructive Collaboration in KENNEDY, J.A., (B) 451 Psychotherapy, (B) 454 KINZIE, J.D., (R) 461 New Maladies of the Soul, (B) 594 KLEBER, H.D., (B) 300 NICOLOSL,J. , (B) 301 KLEINKE, C.L., (B) 451 NISSIM-SABAT, M., (O) 163 KLINE, P., (B) 467 KRAUS, A., (O) 196, 197 KRISTEVA,J. , (B) 594 O KUTZ,L ., (O) 118 OMER, H., (B) 583 KUTZ, SJ., (O) 118 “Open heart surgery, psychosis after,” (O) 171 “Outpatient Treatment Program for Young Children L with Pervasive Developmental Disorder, An,” (O) L’ABATE, L., (OQ) 225; (R) 308 28 LANG, H., (O) 213, 215 LANGER, K.G., (R) 470 \ LAKOVICS, M., (R) 585 Pain, relief of, hypnosis in, (B) 463 LANGS, R., (O) 47; (R) 451 LANKTON, S.R., (B) 584 Panic disorder, treatment of, (B) 304 LANTZ, J.E., (B) 461 Patient or Pretender: Inside the Strange World of LETTNER, L.M., (B) 452 Factitious Disorders, (B) 591 Personality disorders, pragmatic existential psychotherapy LEVENSON, H., (O) 95 LEVY N.A., (B) 298 with, (B) 586 LEWIS, B., (O) 371; (R) 297, 591 Personality, intersubjectivity and, (B) 294 LEWIS, J.M., (R) 462 Personality: The Psychometric View, (B) 467 LIFTON, RJ., (B) 155 Personal Relations Therapy: The Collected Papers of LIPTON, M.L., (B) 459 H.J.S. Guntrip, (B) 468 LOCK,J ., (O) 548 “Phallic Child: Its Emergence and Meaning in a “Looking Back—And Forward,” (E) 3 Clinical Setting, The,” (CR) 428 LOTHANE, Z., (B) 449 “Phenomena of Pine’s Four Psychologies: Their LOWELL, W.E., (S) 309 Contrast and Interplay as Exhibited in the Beatles’ LYNN, S.J., (B) 599 White Album,” (O) 385 “Phenomenology, application of, to psychiatry and M psychotherapy,” (O) 159 “Phenomenology of empathy, towards a,” (C) 163 “Managed care, meeting,” (O) 558 “Pine’s Management of Countertransference with Borderline Fourp sychologies, their interplay in the Beatles’ Patients, (B) 305 White Album,” (O) 385 MARMOR, J., (B) 298, 598 PINKARD,, T., (B) 292 “Martial arts, the, psychotherapeutic aspects of,” (O) PITA, D.D., (B) 299 118 “Positive feelings, clients’, (O) 514 MASER, J.D., (B) 304 “Postpartum depression, using maternal representa- McGOVERNJ,.P . (B) 308 tional patterns to evaluate,” (CR) 128 McWILLIAMS, N., (B) 448 Posttraumatic Stress Disorders: Additional Perspective, “Meeting Managed Care: An Identity and Value (B) 459 Crisis for Therapist,” (O) 558 POTASH, H.M., (B) 586 MEISSNER, W.W., (R) 595 Pragmatic Existential Psychotherapy with Personality Mental disorders, genetic approaches to, (B) 302 Disorders, (B) 586 MISHARA, A.L., (O) 180 Premenstrual Dysphorias: Myths and Realities, (B) 470 “Models, psychotherapeutic, of psychopathology,” Proceedings, 158 (O) 7, 19 “Programmed Writing and Therapy with Symbioti- Modernity, psychological aspects of, (B) 156 cally Enmeshed Patients,” (O) 225 608 Index “Projective Techniques on Psychotherapy,” (O) 244 RUBINSTEIN, G., (O) 416 Protean Self: Human Resilience in an Age of Fragmenta- tion, The, (B) 155 S PsyberNet--A Length-of-Stay Predictofro r Psychiatry, (S) 309 SANFORD, E.F., (R) 299 Psychiatric control of society’s unwanted, (B) 460 Schizophrenia: From Mind to Molecule, (B) 458 Psychiatric glossary, American, (B) 597 SCHORER, C.E., (R) 464 Psychiatry in Transition, (B) 598 Schreber, in defense of, (B) 449 “Psychoanalysis and the Science of Evolution,” (O) SCHULTZ-ROSS, R.A., (O) 540 47 SCHWARTZ, R.C., (B) 585 Psychoanalysis, impasse and innovation in, (B) 447 SEELYE, E.E., (R) 301 Psychoanalysis in Transition: A Personal View, (B) 446 Self, the, constructing, (B) 588 Psychoanalysis, philosophy and culture, (B) 590 Self, the protean, (B) 155 Psychoanalysis, rhetorical voice of, (B) 297 Separation Anxiety and the Dread of Abandonment in Psychoanalytic Diagnosis: Understanding Personality Adult Males, (B) 596 Structure in the Clinical Process, (B) 448 SERBAN, G., (R) 588 “Psychoanalytically oriented psychotherapy Herme- SEVERINO S., (B) 470 neutics and,” (O) 215 “Sex, therapist-patient, consequences of,” (O) 137 “Psychodynamic perspective, borderline patient from “Sexual behavior, addictive, (O) 473 a,” (O) 317 “Shame, unearthing, in the supervisory experience,” Psychodynamics of Work and Organizations, The. (O) 338 Theory and Application. (B) 600 S HAMDASANT, S., (B) 589 Psychological Aspects of Modernity, (B) 156 Sharing the Journey: Support Groups and America’s New Psychology and psychotherapy built on myth, (B) 295 Quest for Community. (B) 600 Psychology, social, European review of, (B) 465 SIASSI, L., (R) 466 “Psychopathology, therapeutic models of,” (O) 7, 19 SIMON, L., (B) 592 “Psychosis after Open Heart Surgery: A Phenomeno- Single-session success, essence of, (B) 584 logical Study,” (O) 171 “Singularity, ideological,” (O) 540 “Psychotherapeutic Aspects of the Martial Arts,” (O) SKOLNICK, V., (R) 300 118 Soctality of Reason, The, (B) 292 “Psychotherapeutic Discourse Analysis,” (O) 371 Soul, the, new maladies of, (B) 594 “Psychotherapist, the, image of, in literature,” (O) Speculations after Freud: Psychoanalysis, Philosophy and 405 Culture, (B) 589 Psychotherapy, assessing experience in, (B) 452 SPEED,J. , (O) 95 “Psychotherapy Based on Identity Problems of SPENCE, D. (B) 297 Depressives”’, (O) 197 SPERO, M.H., (O) 68 Psychotherapy, common principles of, (B) 451; construc- STEVENS, G., (B) 596 tive collaboration in, (B) 454; “narrative and,” (O) STOLOROW, R.D., (B) 294 180; psychology and, built on myth, (B) 295 STROEBE, W., (B) 465 “Projective techniques as,” (O) 244; “psychoana- STROCHAK, R.D., (R)153, 583 lytically oriented, Hermeneutics and,” (O) 215; Substance abuse, textbook of, (B) 300 transtheoretical practice of, (O) 484; “Supervision SUGAR, M. (O) 260 in the 1990s: Some Observations and Reflections,” Suggestions of Abuse—True and False Memories of (O) 568 Childhood Sexual Trauma, (B) 150 Psycho “therapy” —Theory, Practice, Modern and Post “Supervision, psychotherapy, in the 1990’s,” (O) 568 modern Influences, (B) 592 “Supervisory experience, unearthing shame in,” (O) Psychotic discourse, coherence in, (B) 466 338 Psychiatrists’ and Non-Physician Psychotherapists’ “Symbiotically enmeshed patients, programmed writ- Beliefs About Gender-Appropriate Behavior: A ing and therapy with,” (O) 225 Comparison,” (O) 59 SZASZ, T., (B) 460 SZYKIERSKY, D., (O) 405 R js RAINER, J.D., (R) 303 RAVIV, A., (O) 405 Talbot, N.L., (O) 338 REINHOLD, T., (B) 591 Textbook of Substance Abuse Treatment, (B) 300 “Religious conflicts, countertransference-derived Therapeutic Communication, (B) 455 elaboration of,” (O) 68 “Therapeutic Models of Psychopathology,” (O) 7 “Reinventing the Mother-Daughter Relationship,” “Therapist’s Experience, Training,, and Skills in Brief (O) 526 Therapy: A Bicoastal Survey,” (O) 95 Rhetorical Voice of Psychoanalysis, The, (B) 297 “Therapist-patient sex, consequences of,” (O) 137 RHUE, J.W., (B) 599 TOOLAN, J.M. (R) 456 RIBEIRO, B.T., (B) 466 “Towards a Phenomenology of Empathy.” (O) 163 ROCHKIND, M., (R) 151 TRAD, P.V., (In Memoriam) 1, (CR) 128 ROTH, N., (R) 600 Transaction, the, dyadic, (B) 198 609 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOTHERAPY “Transference, erotic,” (O) 504 W “Transtheoretical Practice of Psychotherapy,” (O) WACHTEL, P.L., (B) 455 484 Trauma, resolving, by eye movement desensitization/ WAISWOL, N., (O) 244 WATKINS, C.E., (O) 568 reprocessing, (B) 282 Treatment of Panic Disorder. A Consensus Development WEISER, D., (O) 118 Conference, (B) 304 WEISER, M., (O) 118 Treatment of the Neurosis in the Young: A Psychoana- WEST, M., (R) 306 lytic Perspective, (B) 149, 303 WETZLER, S., (R) 584 Treatment planning, psychiatric, fundamentals of, (B) WHITEMAN, D.B., (B) 153 WILKINSON, S., (B) 305 451 TRUANT, G.S., (O) 7 WILLIAMS, M.H., (O) 237 12-step program, introduction to, (B) 308 Wisdom of the Ego, The, (B) 456 WOLFE, B.E., (B) 304 U WOLSTEIN B., (R) 297 Working Alliance:Theory, Research, and Practice, The, Unconscious, the, in a scientific age, (B) 464 (B) 306 “Understanding and Differentiating Clients’ Positive WUTHNOYW, R., (B) 600 Feelings in Psychotherapy,” (O) 514 “Unearthing Shame in the Supervisory Experience,” Y (O) 338 Uprooted—A Hitler Legacy, (B) 153 YAPKO, M.D., (B) 150 “Using Maternal Representational Patterns to Evalu- YONGUE, S.E., (B) 592 ate Postpartum Depression,” (CR) 128 YOUNG, W.C. (O) 282 V Z VAILLANT, G.E., (B) 456 VAN MENS-VER- ZARR, MLL. (R) 309, 468 HULST, J., (O) 526 ZUGER, B., (R) 302

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