623:, a new re-development proposal for the Centre Market Place was considered by expansion from the recent "Power Plant" amusement and retail complex on Pratt Street's old Pier 4 and the Inner Harbor. "The Brokerage" building was constructed on a north-south axis above the historic site of the old Maryland Institute/Centre Market for restaurants, bars, night clubs and a concert hall with some retail stores in the old remaining historic 1905–07 commercial buildings still remaining along the west side of Market Place and the north side of intersecting Water Street. Across the square with the still-flowing former horse fountain on the east side was constructed the
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680:" revitalization beginning in the late 1960s. But by the 2000s, the financial pressures on the later state-operated academically troubled junior college and the economic pressure of increasing commercial/residential development in the Inner Harbor/Harbor East areas, led to the sale of the southern Lockwood Building to be razed after only two decades, and to be replaced by a newer development (renamed "Lockwood Place") between East Pratt and Lombard Streets, facing the waterfront and the "
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371:(then a college founded 1826, of various curriculums including mechanical arts besides today's art and design for which it is now world-famous), which was built on brick arches above a second market house with two large clock towers at each end in 1851, and held an additional large assembly hall/auditorium and classrooms on the second floor. This was one of the largest and notable buildings in America at that time, and was the site of several pre-
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featuring a beautiful marble and stone fountain specifically designated by a noted animal-loving philanthropist, General A. E. Booth, for the laboring horses of the busy and crowded commercial district who toiled under heavy weights, reins, blinders, stirrups and heavily loaded cargo wagons, at the end of their ancient era and the beginning of motorized trucks and lorries and their smells of gasoline and diesel fuel odors.
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501:" (in the renamed southern portion of old colonial "Jones Town") and the future "Harbor East" of high-rise hotels, office and apartment skyscrapers developed in the 1990s, followed by "Harbor Point" to the southeast on the small heavily polluted soil of the peninsula jutting into the Inner Harbor, formerly the site of a large ugly Allied-Signal chrome manufacturing/refining works since the
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684:" development with additional upper-level parking garages, offices, apartments/condos, and ground-floor restaurants and night clubs along East Pratt Street. The remaining "Bard Building" is now shuttered and awaits some re-direction from the BCCC Board of Trustees and administration after three decades as to its downtown mission and opportunities of having a two-campus institution.
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Harrison, Frederick and Gay
Streets running north to south between the east/west Fayette, Baltimore, Lombard and Pratt Streets. This concept was in the days before additional commercial and residential development had moved east and south across the Falls and began butting up against the tightly packed alley-streets with small brick and a few wooden rowhouses and restaurants of
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664:) and Dr. William Lockwood. Dr. Bard, a legendary local educational leader, had a vision of a downtown campus to direct his vision of an "urban mission" for years to supplement the college's older, more traditional campus from the 1950s in northwest Baltimore on Liberty Heights Avenue. He was a firm supporter of former mayors
521:, used by various railway lines, the Falls emerges again at Mount Royal Avenue in a somewhat natural setting with small trees and shrubs surrounding its course with occasional concrete culverts continuing north out of the city, past the old stone / brick mills, raceways, culverts and dams of valley villages of
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and saw the canal boats, canoes, paddle boats, with restaurants, music clubs and strolling tourists along the peaceful route that has since become world-famous attracting tourist visitors from the whole nation, so he attempted to create that vision he called "Fallswalk", for the route along the lower
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of April 19, 1861 which had solidified
Baltimore's reputation and nickname as "Mobtown." It was also the only time that he spoke alive in the city although having traveled through several times in his earlier brief congressional career and presidential administration. The Maryland Institute and the
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to the northeast across the Falls - spanned by a vital link in early 18th century local commerce and growth, a wooden bridge which was built which resulted in the naming of "Bridge Street" (later to be renamed North Gay Street, after a local family) and led to the merger of the two villages by 1745.
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During the general mass re-construction of the city's "Burnt
District" in the next few years, three new three-story elaborate brick market buildings adjacent to each other on the east side of the square, running east and west were built by 1907, under the supervision of the Centre Market Commission
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neighborhood. During the 19th century, additional market houses under sponsorship of the municipal government were constructed in all quarters of the growing city such as "Hanover Market", "Belair Market", "Richmond Market", "Lafayette Market" (now "The Avenue Market"), "Hollins Market", "Northeast
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ended, that additional market houses throughout the expanding city were constructed including today's world-famous "Lexington Market" (old
Western Precincts Market) along West Lexington Street between Eutaw, Paca and Greene Streets in 1782 and the "Broadway Market" (old Eastern Precincts Market) at
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This was also the historic site of the original Centre Market at East
Baltimore Street (formerly "Long Street" when the town was laid out in 1730, and later known as "Market Street", recognizing the important place that it led to in the east), south to Water Street (former original shoreline of the
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Here leading further north above East
Baltimore Street to the streets where the original Falls were covered over by the newly constructed "Fallsway" and the sometimes flood-prone stream was diverted underground into three great concrete water tunnels during a flood-control public works project in
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dating from 1773, reorganized 1799). Newly constructed on the north side was the "Produce Market" for fruits and vegetables, in the middle was the "Fish Market" and to the south end was the "Retail/Wholesale Market" for various sundry dry items. A new plaza was also constructed that year (1907),
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border line. Eventually the two northern and southern wholesale markets, despite their distinctive industrial but elaborate brick and trim stone architecture were razed, leaving the central structure - Fish Market a lone survivor. It was used briefly as a background scene during several segments
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contained within its old late 19th-century stone retaining walls and its connecting grid of streets and alleys such as The
Fallsway (built over the subterranean diversion tunnels for the Falls in 1912-1914) and the web of tangled narrow colonial-era alley streets of Front, President, Concord,
568:, published 1873). Later in the decade, Six Flags expanded their downtown/Inner Harbor interests three blocks north to construct "The Brokerage" complex in the middle of the north end of Market Place bordering East Baltimore Street, on the eastern edge of downtown. This was adjacent to the
648:'s Charles Plaza (at North Charles and West Saratoga Streets) in the 1960s, which lasted until the late 2000s, when it was replaced by a newer "landmark" Cinema theatre further south on President Street Boulevard by the Katyrn Forest Massacre Memorial traffic circle/water fountain.
644:" museum was constructed a large "Harbor Park" structure with a parking garage on its upper floors and several convenience stores/eatery shops on the ground floor with a multi-screen movie theater, the first to be opened in downtown Baltimore since the former New Theatre in
407:). Although he passed through Baltimore numerous times, it was the only occasion that the 16th President spoke in the city. He noted the calmer differences in the southern-oriented city, especially then three years after the secessionist tumult resulting in the disastrous
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just south of the
National Mall and a continuing center of popularity by the national capital's Washingtonians. Hoping to build something uniquely similar here with the old historic elaborate brick buildings, their Jones Falls-side water access and with the burgeoning
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By 1984, the traffic concerns and space problems caused the local wholesale fish merchants and those in the other markets to consider moving their delivery and transport centers to a new auto and truck oriented complex built between
Baltimore and Washington in
576:. Across the Falls further east, was the new re-routing of the President Street Boulevard (running from the southern terminus of the Jones Falls Expressway ( to the southeast waterfront in the new hotel/commercial and apartments/condos towers development of "
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children's museum in the old
Wholesale Fish Market building, which was given a long-term lease by the City Council and government agencies (opened 1998). Although three blocks further north, the newly renamed "Power Plant Live!" now includes a new array of
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on the South Baltimore peninsula to Whetstone Point. The industrial / transport facilities were recently razed in the 1990s and replaced by a commercial re-development of "big box" stores and the printing plant of the major local daily newspaper, the
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stream. It was also traditionally known as the "Marsh Market" because of being on the site of the old Thomas "Harrison's Marsh" on the western banks of the Jones Falls during the colonial era 18th and early 19th centuries which separated old
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From 1978, on the west side of Market Place and continuing south across a bridge over East Lombard Street, stands the two-building "Harbor Campus" complex of the former Community College of Baltimore's (later renamed the
321:", which opened in 1980. These new attractions, joined with the recently constructed (1971) of a new exhibition structure for the ancient cultural institution Maryland Academy of Sciences (from 1797) in its
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of February 7–8, 1904, on the eastern edge of the blaze along with the rest of the downtown Baltimore business district in the Nation's third largest conflagration ever to hit an American city (Chicago's
360:" and others which dominated local trade, especially retail, but the most important, largest and center of the trade (including wholesale) was here at "Centre Market" on Market Place along the
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Here in 1763, the first public market house for both merged towns was constructed and became the most important center for commerce resulting in its original name of "Centre Market".
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and came under bombardment attack along with neighboring Camp Look-Out (modern Leone-Riverside Park), Battery Babcock along the shoreline and famous
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about a license-revocation hearing before the newly established state Home Improvement Commission in locally raised, famous Hollywood producer,
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and others of his administration and tourism leaders, who had a wonderful vision of an eastern version of San Francisco's famous "
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the foot of Broadway - formerly known there too as Market Street (between Fleet and Thames Streets) above the waterfront of the
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But in the mid-1980s, the wholesale merchants could not be persuaded to stay and so moved out on the trucks to the
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along the connecting Interstate (95 and 295) and U.S. Route 1 highways. Despite the best efforts of then Mayor
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railroad/port terminal on the south side of the city, along the Middle Branch (formerly Ferry Branch) of the
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and opened in phases during 2001, 2002, and 2003. The entertainment complex gets its name from the nearby "
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about Baltimore's nostalgic, but amusing aluminum-siding salesmen of the early 1960s) in 1987.
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harbor "Basin" in colonial times) and east of South Frederick Street (alley) to the adjacent
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gave his "Liberty Speech" (also known as the "Baltimore Address") on April 18, 1864, at the "
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second markethouse below was unfortunately destroyed and lost near the end of the
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as the common compromise city for presidential nominations, where both candidates
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Competition for tourism dollars was fierce in the mid-1980s after the opening of "
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Collection of businesses in the Inner Harbor section of Baltimore, Maryland, US
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in 1968). The President of the U. R. & E. Company at the time was
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with their visions of a future downtown Baltimore with the original "
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public water reservoir of 1860 and its dam and further north to the
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which operated the recently unified public transportation system of
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is a collection of bars, restaurants and other businesses in the
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The complex is located along Market Place and is served by the
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national political party conventions (when Baltimore preceded
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676:" project in the late 1950s/early 1960s and the subsequent "
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Shot Tower/Market Place station for the new "Metro" (subway)
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and the historic ship USS Constellation (1854 Sloop of War)
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were nominated to be President. Another famous President,
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After Mayor Schaefer had moved on in that year to become
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re-developed in the late 1990s in a former coal-burning
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Here also was the old second building of the famous
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395:" event, one of several held throughout the
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223:, originally built in 1900-05 for the old
750:Learn how and when to remove this message
109:Learn how and when to remove this message
807:Pratt Street Power Plant, Baltimore City
1021:Maryland Center for History and Culture
259:, 1874 to 1901 and developed its large
1636:Baltimore–Washington metropolitan area
45:Please improve this article by adding
1691:Buildings and structures in Baltimore
249:Maryland Department of Transportation
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497:(renamed of colonial Jones Town), "
286:(Maryland Route 2) and the old 1917
225:United Railways and Electric Company
306:on Whetstone Point by the British
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1332:Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse
423:San Francisco earthquake and fire
401:United States Sanitary Commission
356:Market", "Cross Street Market", "
1706:Tourist attractions in Baltimore
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654:Baltimore City Community College
462:'s "Fish Cannery" complex, plus
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1711:2001 establishments in Maryland
564:Around The World in Eighty Days
201:Shot Tower/Market Place station
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1600:BWI Thurgood Marshall Airport
1153:Baltimore City Public Schools
517:1912-13-14. Further north at
294:. Earlier it was the site of
47:secondary or tertiary sources
1530:Johns Hopkins mens' lacrosse
666:Thomas L.J. D'Alesandro, Jr.
660:(first president of the new
403:, (a precursor to the later
314:, September 12-13-14, 1814.
1631:Baltimore metropolitan area
1348:Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
245:Mass Transit Administration
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1006:Baltimore Streetcar Museum
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544:In the early 1980s in the
282:Port Covington is east of
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1322:Howard Street Tunnel fire
1163:Colleges and Universities
802:Power Plant Live! website
513:beginnings in the 1840s.
243:(taken over by the state
241:Baltimore Transit Company
157:Power Plant Live! in 2017
1549:Maryland Cycling Classic
1277:Baltimore City Landmarks
1148:Enoch Pratt Free Library
762:www.powerplant live.com
705:This article includes a
546:Pratt Street Power Plant
429:under chairman, General
257:Western Maryland Railway
221:power generating station
1701:Inner Harbor, Baltimore
1393:McCormick & Company
1327:2015 Baltimore protests
1272:National Register sites
1112:Meyerhoff Symphony Hall
1026:Maryland Science Center
1011:B&O Railroad Museum
1001:Baltimore Museum of Art
734:more precise citations.
572:west bank, and the new
452:William Donald Schaefer
323:Maryland Science Center
139:39.289361°N 76.606889°W
1383:JoS. A. Bank Clothiers
1317:Baltimore riot of 1968
1297:Baltimore riot of 1861
1168:City Community College
991:Johns Hopkins Hospital
197:Baltimore Metro Subway
176:. It was developed by
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34:relies excessively on
1716:The Cordish Companies
288:Hanover Street Bridge
178:The Cordish Companies
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144:39.289361; -76.606889
1696:Culture of Baltimore
1657:Baltimore portal
1605:Martin State Airport
1525:Baltimore Grand Prix
1504:M&T Bank Stadium
1307:Great Baltimore Fire
1087:Charm City Art Space
670:Theodore R. McKeldin
621:Governor of Maryland
519:Pennsylvania Station
460:Monterey, California
414:Great Baltimore Fire
284:South Hanover Street
168:section of downtown
1615:Baltimore Belt Line
1558:Pimlico Race Course
1287:Battle of Baltimore
1282:Historical timeline
1061:Washington Monument
794:Architecture portal
358:North Avenue Market
348:American Revolution
312:Battle of Baltimore
135: /
58:"Power Plant Live!"
1056:Walters Art Museum
707:list of references
580:" and the future "
464:Washington, D.C.'s
437:Baltimore American
419:Great Fire of 1871
409:Pratt Street Riots
405:American Red Cross
369:Maryland Institute
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1610:Port of Baltimore
1368:DeBaufre Bakeries
1127:Power Plant Live!
1036:National Aquarium
852:City of Baltimore
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554:indoor theme park
481:San Antonio River
458:" and the nearby
456:Fisherman's Wharf
253:John Mifflin Hood
217:mixed-use project
186:East Pratt Street
162:Power Plant Live!
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32:This article
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1595:Penn Station
1544:Kinetic Race
1494:Camden Yards
1449:Gwynns Falls
1413:Under Armour
1194:City Council
1126:
1092:Hammerjack's
1031:Mount Vernon
986:Inner Harbor
976:Fort McHenry
966:Federal Hill
761:
746:
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726:Please help
718:
678:Inner Harbor
650:
618:
610:Danny DeVito
601:
589:Anne Arundel
586:
582:Harbor Point
561:
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541:state line.
539:Pennsylvania
515:
499:Little Italy
477:Inner Harbor
472:Maine Avenue
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304:Fort McHenry
292:Winan's Cove
281:
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190:Inner Harbor
166:Inner Harbor
161:
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130:76°36′24.8″W
127:39°17′21.7″N
120:
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99:October 2016
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1459:Herring Run
1408:Royal Farms
1051:Skyscrapers
981:Harborplace
971:Fells Point
954:Attractions
882:Ethnicities
732:introducing
682:Power Plant
630:restaurants
578:Harbor East
570:Jones Falls
558:Jules Verne
535:Lake Roland
533:to the old
507:Jesse Tyson
490:Jones Falls
431:Felix Agnus
364:west bank.
362:Jones Falls
353:Fells Point
340:Jones' Town
331:Jones Falls
319:Harborplace
300:War of 1812
235:, and some
188:facing the
182:Power Plant
142: /
1685:Categories
1590:MARC Train
1514:SECU Arena
1444:Druid Hill
1388:Legg Mason
1177:Government
1097:Hippodrome
1016:Public art
688:References
658:Harry Bard
604:(starring
495:"Old Town"
485:Texas city
308:Royal Navy
237:cable cars
229:streetcars
69:newspapers
36:references
1554:Preakness
1464:Patterson
1363:CoverGirl
1204:Delegates
1199:City Hall
1141:Education
740:July 2009
638:Annapolis
602:"Tin Men"
600:'s movie
550:Six Flags
527:Woodberry
397:Civil War
373:Civil War
170:Baltimore
1669:Category
1520:Marathon
1469:Sherwood
1341:Industry
1214:Archives
1209:Senators
961:Churches
233:trolleys
174:Maryland
1490:Orioles
1439:Cylburn
1434:Clifton
1429:Carroll
1373:Hecht's
1264:History
1122:Ottobar
996:Museums
909:Markets
872:Culture
728:improve
523:Hampden
377:Chicago
310:in the
247:of the
207:History
83:scholar
1500:Ravens
1483:Sports
1454:Leakin
1234:Police
1229:Health
1219:Courts
929:People
887:Events
867:Accent
860:Topics
612:, and
85:
78:
71:
64:
56:
1624:Misc.
1585:Buses
1510:Blast
1474:Wyman
1422:Parks
1184:Mayor
1117:Lyric
1046:Ships
919:Music
914:Media
877:Crime
713:, or
503:Issac
215:is a
90:JSTOR
76:books
1532:and
1224:Fire
902:Seal
897:Flag
892:Film
668:and
591:and
525:and
509:and
505:and
383:and
211:The
62:news
1066:Zoo
584:."
470:at
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