For the 22nd time in school history, the Lincoln Pius X girls soccer team is going to the state tournament.
High School Sports
District glance
For the 22nd time in school history, the Lincoln Pius X girls soccer team is going to the state tournament. The Class B No. 2 Thunderbolts led 3-0 at halftime on its home field Saturday and found the back of the next frequently in the second period, defeating Lexington 10-0. Gen Sovereign, Mackenzie Nickolite and […]

The Class B No. 2 Thunderbolts led 3-0 at halftime on its home field Saturday and found the back of the next frequently in the second period, defeating Lexington 10-0.
Gen Sovereign, Mackenzie Nickolite and Margaret O’Donnell each had a pair of goals for Pius X (12-3).
This is the fourth consecutive season the Thunderbolts have made the state tournament. They will begin this year’s run by taking on No. 4 Omaha Mercy at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday at Creighton’s Morrison Stadium.
B-7 at Kearney Catholic: Norris went on the road and won 5-1 against Kearney Catholic to make the state tournament. The Titans led 3-0 at halftime with two goals coming from Ize Tidball. Norris, who had now made the state tournament for five consecutive seasons, will play No. 5 Scotus Central Catholic at 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday.
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BOYS SOCCER
B-1 at Bennington: Waverly fell to No. 1 Bennington 7-0 in its district final, ending its season at 10-7. The Viking boys last made the state tournament in 2022. Austin Kaiser led Bennington with two goals.
A-2 at Papillion-La Vista South: No. 10 Lincoln Southwest lost its district final 7-3 to No. 3 Papillion-La Vista South. The Titans jumped out to a 4-0 lead before the Silver Hawks scored their three runs in the sixth inning. Luke Mitchell and Brandon Clark both had two hits for Southwest, and Caison Seymour had the lone extra-base hit with a double.
Top Journal Star photos for May 2025
Lincoln Southeast’s Samir Sidiqi (from left) Davis Kalnins (4), and Carson Dant (18) are joined by their teammates as they celebrate their 1-0 win over Papillion-La Vista South in the A-7 district championship match on Thursday, May 8, 2025, at Seacrest Field.
World War II veteran William Brown (center) awaits his medal as those seated to his left inspect theirs on Thursday in the Capitol Rotunda.
A pair of gosling chicks wade through a patch of dandelions after their mother while at Pioneers Park on Wednesday, May 7, 2025, in Lincoln.
Baby Geese, otherwise known as goslings, are impressive birds. Within 24 hours after they hatch they can dive underwater 30 to 40 feet. Unlike songbirds, waterfowl like Canada geese have young that are born with downy feathers and can walk and swim almost immediately. These goslings stick close to their mother to learn survival skills.
Steve Smith, Civic Nebraska communications director, celebrates after a partial result was released at Lincoln for Fair Housing’s election watch party on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, at The Gathering Grove.
Lincoln East’s Elizabeth Burhoop (first right) embraces MaKynlie Cade (20) as they celebrate Burhoops goal with their teammates during the first half of the A-5 district championship match on Wednesday, May 7, 2025, at Seacrest Field.
A mother goose sits on her eggs near the site where the Pershing Mural will be relocated on Thursday, May 8, 2025, at Wyuka Park in Lincoln.
John Yoakum (from left), Lincoln City Council incumbent Sändra Washington, Hannah Wroblewski, and Luis Sotelo react to election night results during a watch party hosted by the Lancaster County Democratic Party at The Hub Cafe on Tuesday.
Runners in the 5th and 6th grade section sprint up K Street during the 1-mile Mayor’s Run on Saturday, May 3, 2025, in Lincoln.
Leann Lundstedt votes on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, at the F Street Community Center in Lincoln.
Nebraska’s Lauren Camenzind (right) celebrates her solo home run against Maryland with head coach Rhonda Revelle (center) and assistant coach Diane Miller on Friday at Bowlin Stadium.
Friends, family and community members pray over Dale Miksch (left) b before taking one last ride with him and starting off down the trailhead near the Good Life Fitness off of Van Dorn St. on Saturday, May 3, 2025, in Lincoln.
One of Miksch’s final wishes was to take one last bike ride. As he began to notice a further decline in his health, he conveyed his wishes to the staff at Grace Space, they organized a ride and members of the community came out to support and commemorate Miksch’s request.
Lincoln Southwest’s Taylor Schuster competes in the long jump on Tuesday, May 6, 2025, at Union Bank Stadium.
Lancaster County Attorney Pat Condon (left) responds to a question from Our Saviors Lutheran Church’s Rev. Tobi White (right) about adult pre-trial diversion during the annual Nehemiah Action Assembly at St. Mark’s United Methodist Church on Thursday, May 1, 2025, in Lincoln.
Justice in Action, an interfaith coalition representing 27 faith communities, gathered over 1,000 people at St. Mark’s United Methodist Church for the event. The assembly focused on three major issues: mental health, jail overcrowding, and eviction.
Black Hills State University’s Terran Talsma pulls a steer to the ground during the steer wrestling competition on Friday, May 2, 2025, at the Sandhills Global Event Center in Lincoln.
Bryan Olesen sings with the band AMFM before it is announced if his daughter, Jadyn, will be advancing to the next round of the Voice on Monday, May 5, 2025, at the Bourbon Theatre in Lincoln.
Runners start the 48th Annual Lincoln Marathon on Sunday, May 4, 2025, on Vine Street in Lincoln.
Jihad Muhammad poses for a photo in front of the Pizzomatic vending machine he installed at an old Wells Fargo ATM near 48th and O streets. The pizza vending allows customers to order a fresh pizza that’s available in minutes.
Kearney Police Chief Bryan Waugh (right) speaks at a news conference on Thursday at the Capitol where Gov. Jim Pillen named Waugh to be the next superintendent of Nebraska State Patrol.
Protesters holding signs against the Trump administration begin to march during an anti-Trump protest Thursday outside the state Capitol.
High School Sports
Thursday's local scoreboard for June 19
Legion baseball Thursday’s results East Grand Forks 10,Omaha Electric 9 EGF 160 021 0 – 10 9 3 ADVERTISEMENT OMA 004 104 0 – 9 9 2 WP – Satterlund; LP – Bush Highlights – EGF: Jace Van Eps 2×3, HR, 2 runs, 3 RBI, Erickson 1×4, 2B, 2 RBI, McDonald 2×2, 2B, Nowacki 1×3, […]


Legion baseball
Thursday’s results
East Grand Forks 10,Omaha Electric 9
EGF 160 021 0 – 10 9 3
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OMA 004 104 0 – 9 9 2
WP – Satterlund; LP – Bush
Highlights – EGF: Jace Van Eps 2×3, HR, 2 runs, 3 RBI, Erickson 1×4, 2B, 2 RBI, McDonald 2×2, 2B, Nowacki 1×3, 2 RBI, L. Anderson 1×3, 2B
Union Bank 4,East Grand Forks 1
UNI 002 000 2 – 4 10 0
EGF 000 010 0 – 1 5 2
WP – Culhane; LP – Hams
Highlights – EGF: Erickson 2×3, RBI, Varnson 1×3, run; UB: Vanis 4×4, 2B, Newton 2×3, 2 RBI, Yanez 2×4, 2B
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Grand Forks Royals 6,Westview 3
GRA 030 000 03 – 6 6 1
WES 001 000 20 – 3 1 2
WP – Haagenson; LP – Brown
Highlights – GF: Schauer 3×4, 2B, Hensrud 2×3, Haagenson 9 Ks; W: Sweeney 1×1
Bennington 10,Grand Forks Royals 2
GRA 100 10 – 2 6 1
BEN 111 52 – 10 9 0
WP – Utterback; LP – Tostenson
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Highlights – GF: Haagenson 2×2, 2 2Bs, Larson 2×2, 2B; B: Kortan 2×3, HR, 3 RBI, Gifford 2×2, 2B, 3 runs
Grand Forks Blues 16,Jamestown Blues 6
JAM 401 01 – 6 8 5
GRA 530 44 – 16 9 1
WP – Twedt; LP – Anderson
Highlights – J: Maulding 3×3, 2 2Bs, 4 RBI, Trumbauer 2×3, Dobson 1×2, 2B, 2 runs; GF: Widstrup 2×3, 2 runs, 2 RBI, 2B, Bouvette 1×4, 2B, 4 RBI, Houser 2×2, Waldorf 1×2, 2B, 2 runs, 2 RBI
Prep baseball
Minn. Northwest Conference
All-conference team
Ada-Borup-West – Austin McCraven, Ames Fassino; Badger/Greenbush-Middle River – Taylor Davy; Fertile-Beltrami – Caleb Sather, Easton Petry; Fosston – Jakob Rudie, Will Christen; Kittson County Central – Brock Scalese; Norman Co. East/Ulen-Hitterdal – Will Jirik; Northern Freeze – Isaak Anderson, Alex Bray; Red Lake County – Will Gieseke, Gunnar Halverson, Ben Gullingsrud; Sacred Heart – Parker Erickson, Elliot Arntson, Nick Satterlund, Isaac Sundby; West Marshall – Derek Moehrle, Blaine Smith, Ethan Ellerbush; Win-E-Mac – Braylon Hamre, Bergen Howard, Owen Strom
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Conference awards
MVP – Parker Erickson, Sacred Heart
Offensive Player of the Year – Austin McCraven, ABW
Pitcher of the Year – Braylon Hamre, WEM
Coach of the Year – Mike Gullingsrud, RLC
All-Section 8A
Ada-Borup-West – Austin McCraven; Blackduck – Wilson Lien, Jayden Rockis; Fertile-Beltrami – Kolby Hemma, Bryer Strem; Fosston – Ryne Duppong, Jake Howard, Jakob Rudie; Mahnomen-Waubun – Easton Bevins; Norman County East/Ulen-Hitterdal – Trig Anderson; Red Lake County – Will Gieseke, Ben Gullingsrud, Kegan Schmitz, Brock Seeger, Gunnar Halverson; EGF Sacred Heart – Elliot Arntson, Parker Erickson, David Larson; West Marshall – Derek Moehrle; Win-E-Mac – Braylon Hamre, Bergen Howard, Kolten Schow, Owen Strom
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Coach of the Year – Mike Gullingsrud, Red Lake County
All-Section 8AA
Dilworth-Glyndon-Felton – Wes Hoover, Alex Anderson, Dylan Anderson; EGF Senior High – Jace VanEps, Brody Anderson, Carson McDonald, Rylee Hams; Hawley – Tommy Slette, Wyatt Jetvig; Ottertail Central – Erik Fick, Kale Misegades; Park Rapids – Deshawn Clark; Perham – Ashton Detloff, Drew Ellington, Ty Rooney, Gavin Griffin, Alex Blume; Roseau – A.J. Klint, Eli Wensloff; Thief River Falls – Gannon Zutz, Jaxon Hams, Noah Gonzales, Bodhi Mossestad; Warroad – Liam Grover, Kason Pietruszewski
Coach of the Year – James Mulcahy, Perham
High School Sports
Warren County School Board Highlights Major Reductions in School Incidents, Staffing Gains
At its June 18 work session, the Warren County School Board heard a series of detailed reports highlighting positive trends in school safety, student discipline, and substitute teacher coverage across the division. The session began with a year-end update from School Resource Officer Sergeant Kristin Hajduk and continued with key data from Superintendent Dr. Chris […]

At its June 18 work session, the Warren County School Board heard a series of detailed reports highlighting positive trends in school safety, student discipline, and substitute teacher coverage across the division. The session began with a year-end update from School Resource Officer Sergeant Kristin Hajduk and continued with key data from Superintendent Dr. Chris Ballenger and Education Staffing Solutions representative Amy Chandlee.
SRO Report: Criminal Investigations Drop by Over Half
Sergeant Kristin Hajduk opened the reports segment by presenting her annual review of school safety activity, comparing the 2023–24 and 2024–25 school years. Her data revealed a dramatic 57% decrease in criminal investigations across the division. Last year, SROs handled 280 criminal cases. This year, the number dropped to 120.

Sergeant Kristin Hajduk presents the annual School Resource Officer report, noting a 57% drop in criminal investigations and an 80% reduction in court petitions across Warren County schools.
“I think that just kind of speaks for the positive relationships and the things we’ve built with our students and schools,” Hajduk told the board.
The number of juvenile court petitions also saw a sharp reduction—down by 80% compared to the previous year. Sergeant Hajduk explained that the SRO program emphasized working with school administrators and families to resolve many situations informally when appropriate, rather than sending every case through the juvenile justice system.
“We want to make sure that kids are still being held accountable,” Hajduk said, “but not necessarily pushed into court when it can be addressed through the school or family.”
Other key decreases included a 76% drop in threat-related incidents, an 80% drop in weapons-related cases, and a 48% reduction in marijuana and THC vape possession. The most significant decline was in general vape-related offenses, largely due to changes in Virginia law that removed criminal penalties for simple possession in many cases.
Hajduk also introduced two new reporting categories—pending and prosecution declined—to provide more clarity about cases still under review or not pursued by juvenile intake. Additionally, she broke down data by offense types and demographics to give the board a fuller picture of the year’s safety landscape.
Discipline Report: Middle Schools See Dramatic Improvement
Dr. Chris Ballenger, delivering the final discipline report of his tenure as superintendent, followed with a school-by-school comparison of May 2025 discipline incidents versus the same month in 2024.

Superintendent Dr. Chris Ballenger shares the May 2025 discipline report during his final school board meeting, highlighting major reductions in incidents at both middle schools.
Several elementary schools showed mixed trends. A.S. Rhodes reported seven incidents in May, up from zero the previous year. E. Wilson Morrison saw a slight decline, while Hilda J. Barbour cut its total in half—from 10 down to five. Leslie Fox Keyes Elementary experienced an increase from 12 to 18 incidents, and Ressie Jeffries reported a modest uptick as well.
“Unwanted or inappropriate physical contact was one of the main areas where we saw an increase,” Ballenger noted, especially at the elementary level.
But it was the middle schools that showed the most dramatic turnaround. Skyline Middle School dropped from 55 incidents in May 2024 to just 11 in May 2025. Warren County Middle School followed a similar path, reducing its total from 52 to 9.
“I really want to thank our middle school administration and staff,” Ballenger said. “That’s a huge reduction, and it reflects the consistent work they’re doing with students.”
At the high school level, results were more varied. Skyline High School saw an increase of 23 incidents compared to last year, while Warren County High School recorded a decrease from 38 to 17. Non-traditional programs, such as the Diversified Minds initiative, reported only two incidents for the month.
ESS Report: Fill Rates Improve, Staff Morale on the Rise
The evening’s final report came from Amy Chandlee, representing Education Staffing Solutions (ESS), the contractor responsible for substitute teacher staffing in Warren County Public Schools. Chandlee, who has worked closely with administrators this year, shared promising statistics and updates on community engagement.

Amy Chandlee of ESS reports a 99% effective substitute fill rate in May, earning praise from board members for improved staffing and strong community engagement.
May’s base fill rate reached 80%, and when in-building permanent substitutes were factored in, the district achieved an actual fill rate of over 99%. That marks the third consecutive month with at least 80% coverage—up from 75% for the 2023–24 school year overall.
Chandlee said more than 7,100 substitute jobs were filled this school year, and ESS hired 75 new staff members since last August. Another 20 to 25 are already in the hiring pipeline for next year.
“We’ve had new hires jump right in—they’re eager, they’re excited, and that enthusiasm is showing in the buildings,” she said.
Feedback from building administrators and office staff was overwhelmingly positive. A recent internal survey showed that 89.4% of respondents rated ESS’s performance as “good” or “excellent.” Classroom management was highlighted as a top area for additional training, which Chandlee said would be offered through summer enrichment programs.
Board members praised Chandlee for her leadership and the noticeable improvement in substitute support this year. School Board member Melanie Salins, who had previously voiced concerns about ESS service, publicly commended her: “You really have turned this around,” they said.
Chandlee expressed appreciation for the support and noted her personal investment in the work.
“I have three kids in the school system,” she said. “If I can support in any way, I’m happy to.”
Photos and Video by Mark Williams, Royal Examiner.
High School Sports
2026 4
College basketball coaches around the country have been attending events around the country the last six weeks, scouting recruits mainly in the 2026 and 2027 classes. 2026 recruits are starting to lock in official visits over the coming months as they are set to begin their senior years. Many of these visits will take place […]

College basketball coaches around the country have been attending events around the country the last six weeks, scouting recruits mainly in the 2026 and 2027 classes.
2026 recruits are starting to lock in official visits over the coming months as they are set to begin their senior years. Many of these visits will take place later this summer and into fall before the high school basketball season starts.
One visit BYU has locked in is talented 2026 Guard Austin Goosby. Sources close to Austin tell me that he has scheduled an official visit to BYU September 26-28. September is still a few months away, so we’ll see if that date gets adjusted as we move closer.
Austin is arguably the best LDS prospect in the country and is rated as the #30 overall recruit in the 2026 class according to 247 Sports. Austin lives in the Dallas area but has family on his mom’s side that lives in Utah. He has one cousin that is attending BYU and other on a mission after starting at BYU.
Austin took an unofficial visit to BYU the weekend of March 8 and attended the BYU-Utah game in the Marriott Center. I spoke with his dad after that visit.
“Kevin Young is a basketball genius; it’s a whole other level of intelligence.” Austin’s dad told me after the visit. “We were blown away by Coach Young and BYU.”
Austin has offers from all over. Duke offered him this past week, and he also has offers from Texas, Kansas, Baylor, Texas A&M, UCLA, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Miami, Florida State, Kansas State, and others.
Texas should be right at or near the top of Austin’s list during his recruitment. Austin’s brother, Trevor, is an offensive lineman on the football team and the family is a UT family.
Austin is one of the top priorities for BYU this class. Kevin Young has been in consistent communication with Austin, and BYU established themselves as a real player in Austin’s recruitment after Austin’s visit back in May.
You can watch highlights of Austin below. Austin is a talented scoring wing that can really get to the basket and knockdown outside shots. He projects as a NBA player and would likely be in school for multiple seasons.
High School Sports
USDA data highlights monopoly risk in rural grocery markets
General Manager Brian Horak walks down an aisle at Post 60 Market in Emerson, Nebraska. Locals opened the market as a cooperative in 2022 after the tiny town lost its only grocery store (Kevin Hardy/Stateline). June 19, 2025 6:00 am If you live in a small town, you probably have fewer grocery stores than you […]


General Manager Brian Horak walks down an aisle at Post 60 Market in Emerson, Nebraska. Locals opened the market as a cooperative in 2022 after the tiny town lost its only grocery store (Kevin Hardy/Stateline).
If you live in a small town, you probably have fewer grocery stores than you did 30 years ago — and fewer choices inside them.
Independent grocers have disappeared, replaced by big national chains that now decide what’s on the shelves, how much it costs, and who gets to profit.
In 1990, the top four grocery chains controlled just 13% of nationwide sales. By 2019, the top four retailers — Walmart, Kroger, Costco, and Ahold Delhaize — controlled 34% of U.S. grocery sales, according to the USDA.
That concentration hasn’t gone unnoticed. Just last year, the Federal Trade Commission and nine states sued to block a $25 billion merger between grocery giants Kroger and Albertsons, arguing that the deal would harm both shoppers and workers by reducing competition, increasing prices, and consolidating power into fewer hands. The merger has since unraveled, but only after a court battle and mounting public pressure.
In rural counties, market concentration more than doubled between 1990 and 2019, according to USDA data.
One way to measure concentration is the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI), a tool used to track monopoly risk. In rural areas, HHI scores jumped from 3,104 to 5,584 — more than twice the threshold where federal antitrust regulators start to worry about competition. According to a 2023 USDA report, the USDA considers anything above 2,500 is considered highly concentrated.
Now that trend may speed up. The White House has proposed nearly $7 billion in USDA budget cuts, including $721 million from Rural Development programs — the ones that help small towns open grocery stores and other local businesses. One program on the chopping block is the Rural Business-Cooperative Service. Loan funding for community facilities and rural businesses would also drop by 45%, with no new grant dollars offered.
At the same time, the administration’s “Make America Healthy Again” initiative discusses improving nutrition, but proposes cuts to the very programs that help people buy food, including Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), school meal equipment, and farm-to-school efforts.
The bottom line? Rural communities already hit hardest by grocery consolidation are now facing even more roadblocks.
This article first appeared on Investigate Midwest and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://investigatemidwest.org/2025/06/18/usda-data-highlights-monopoly-risk-in-rural-grocery-markets/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } }
https://missouriindependent.com/briefs/usda-data-highlights-monopoly-risk-in-rural-grocery-markets/
High School Sports
HS Boys Lacrosse All
Meet our Boys Lacrosse All-CVC Team including Hopewell Valley’s Luke Caldwell as our Player of the Year and Matt Foret as our Coach of the Year Subscribe to continue reading this article. Already subscribed? To log in, click here. Originally Published: June 19, 2025 at 6:15 PM EDT 1


Meet our Boys Lacrosse All-CVC Team including Hopewell Valley’s Luke Caldwell as our Player of the Year and Matt Foret as our Coach of the Year
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High School Sports
Beeville ISD leaders deliver summer progress report, highlight growth and planning
Beeville ISD administrators presented a comprehensive update to the Board of Trustees this week, detailing major strides in summer learning, facility upgrades, financial stability and staff development as the district prepares for the 2025–26 school year. Chief of Staff Erika Vasquez opened with instructional highlights, applauding administrators for leading professional development sessions and supporting students […]


Beeville ISD administrators presented a comprehensive update to the Board of Trustees this week, detailing major strides in summer learning, facility upgrades, financial stability and staff development as the district prepares for the 2025–26 school year.
Chief of Staff Erika Vasquez opened with instructional highlights, applauding administrators for leading professional development sessions and supporting students through the district’s summer school and enrichment programs. Robotics and culinary camps saw strong participation, and Vasquez emphasized the ongoing curriculum planning by teachers to ensure a strong start in August.
COO Dr. Thomas Lawing outlined a busy summer of operations. He reported deep cleaning and maintenance work across campuses, inventory upgrades in the technology department, and several transportation updates. A new regular education bus will replace a delayed special education bus purchase, which will now be rescheduled for next fiscal year. The Child Nutrition department has already served 678 breakfasts and 1,614 lunches in the first two weeks of summer.
Bond projects are also moving forward, including the A.C. Jones High School restroom addition and auditorium renovations. A previously undetected leak was discovered during the demo process and will be addressed through a change order.
Chief of Police Art Gomez spoke on security initiatives, highlighting the district’s advanced level of preparedness. Officers participated in youth mental health and emergency response training, and Beeville ISD hosted a full-scale active attacker simulation involving multiple agencies. Gomez noted that other districts across Texas have reached out to learn from Beeville’s school-based law enforcement model.
Dr. Darryl Cobb, Chief of Human Resources, presented progress on the district’s “Grow Your Own” initiative with Grand Canyon University. Sixteen employees without undergraduate degrees began coursework in June, each receiving an average of $30,000 in grant funding. Participants are on track to earn degrees and certifications within two to three years, with some already expected to be classroom-ready by next year.
Chief Financial Officer Dela Castillo reported a projected year-end surplus of $40,000 and noted that outstanding purchase orders are being closed ahead of the annual audit. The Child Nutrition department is expected to finish in the black and contribute $180,000 in indirect costs to the general fund. The bond program has spent more than $6 million to date, and investments have earned more than $243,000 in interest.
Athletic Director Richard Vasquez shared a positive update on student athletics, noting that 18 student-athletes have committed to compete at the next level. Summer strength and conditioning programs, along with sports camps, are in full swing. Vasquez praised his coaching staff and credited their leadership for the minimal turnover going into the next school year. He also mentioned ongoing interviews for key coaching vacancies, including soccer and tennis.
Beeville ISD’s board expressed appreciation for the detailed updates and commended the district’s continued commitment to growth, safety, and academic and athletic excellence.
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