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No regrets, only memories – Massachusetts Daily Collegian

I wasn’t supposed to be at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for all four years. I was going to transfer to Boston University after a year. I came into UMass thinking I would do just one year before taking my guaranteed transfer offer with BU. This all changed for me when I stepped into the […]

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I wasn’t supposed to be at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for all four years. I was going to transfer to Boston University after a year.

I came into UMass thinking I would do just one year before taking my guaranteed transfer offer with BU. This all changed for me when I stepped into the Massachusetts Daily Collegian office in the Student Union.

My one dream going into college was to cover college hockey, which I thought was impossible as a freshman going to a school that was coming off of a National Championship.

After going up to the then-Sports Editor Lulu Kesin and volunteering to be on the field hockey beat and having a lengthy conversation with Colin McCarthy about college hockey, the dream didn’t seem so impossible.

At the first field hockey game I covered, Lulu offered me a spot on the hockey beat alongside Colin and Sophie Weller. While she gave me a few days to think about it, I knew right then and there that I was going to take it.

Over that season I would have new experiences, interviewing top college players and head coaches. I also found new mentors in Colin and Sophie who I still credit for my love and passion for journalism.

One of the people I credit the most for how I conduct myself in press conferences is head coach Greg Carvel. He’s one of the only head coaches I know that has made it a point to challenge student media to be better and push us to ask the best questions.

Hockey Sports Information Director Jillian Jakuba has also been such a large part of my time with the Daily Collegian. Always willing to give the hockey beat media when we need it and supporting us, she’s one of the people I will miss the most.

While covering events like the Hockey East Championship, the NCAA Tournament and going to places like Belfast, Northern Ireland will be some of my fondest memories, the relationships I built will be some of the biggest things I’ll take away from the Daily Collegian.

Walking into the press box and seeing Colin, Sophie, Sydney Ciano, Matt Skillings, Scottie Marro, Caroline Burge, Devin Lippman and Mike Maynard every week was always fun. Win or lose, I knew that after the game, there would not be a dull moment.

Sitting with them shaped my writing and made me a better journalist in my four years. I know that no matter where I go in the world, I have lifelong friends in all of them.

Sitting in the cold Earl Lorden Field stands with Mike and Owen Shelffo or sitting in the heat at Gladchuk Field Complex with Lucy Postera will also be some of my fondest memories.

A majority of my time at UMass was spent in the Daily Collegian office behind the Student Union stairs. Through that, I built friendships with people from other sections and built stronger relationships with the people in the sports section.

Johnny Depin is someone I know I’ll always be friends with, with our friendship dating back to freshman year. Our handshake and trips to the dining hall won’t be forgotten.

I don’t know where my sports career will take me, but no matter what, the Daily Collegian will always be a part of me.

Four years, over 160 stories, six features, four NCAA Tournaments and 18 hockey rinks later (19 if you count Fenway Park), I’m prepared for a career in sports.

While there have been times where I think about what would have happened if I did leave UMass, I know I made the right choice. As my favorite Formula 1 driver Daniel Ricciardo once said, “No regrets. Only memories.”

Kayla Gregoire was an Assistant Sports Editor. She can be reached at [email protected].



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MCLA Graduation Highlights Love, Kindness, Justice / iBerkshires.com

MCLA James Birge awaits the graduates’ traditional walk through the college’s gates on the way to commencement. See more photos here.  NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — MCLA’s Class of 2025 was reminded to move forward with love, kindness, and pursuing what is just. “I grew up wanting to be like my grandmother. When my […]

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MCLA James Birge awaits the graduates’ traditional walk through the college’s gates on the way to commencement. See more photos here. 


NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — MCLA’s Class of 2025 was reminded to move forward with love, kindness, and pursuing what is just.

“I grew up wanting to be like my grandmother. When my grandmother was alive, she always talked about us living in the end times, but somehow her acceptance that we were living in the world’s last movement made her capacity for kindness even higher. It made her want to be better at love,” said keynote speaker Kiese Laymon, an award-winning author and Rice University professor.

“She understood that all great human beings do not get a ceremony, but we must be ceremonious to all human beings in this world.”

Per tradition, graduates marched through the iron gates on Church Street before receiving 187 undergraduate and 38 graduate degrees in the sciences, arts, business, education, and more. This was the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts’ 126th annual commencement.

“MCLA is a small institution, but it delivers big results,” said Paul Paradiso, who earned a master of business administration.

“I’m standing here alone only because I’ve been surrounded by a community of students and faculty. We’re here because of both group effort and individual drive. We work independently on projects, yet none of us got here entirely on our own.”

President James Birge reminded students that this day is a culmination of years of academic work and accomplishment.

“During your time at MCLA, you have compiled a long list of accomplishments and inspired us with your success in the classroom, in the lab, on the stage, in the gallery, on the athletic playing surfaces, and in the community. You’ve studied abroad, conducted research, participated in service trips and internships, and created community service programs to meet the needs you saw in our community,” he said.

“You were inducted into honor societies, held office in the student government, produced works of art, theater, dance, and spoken word, scored goals, runs, and baskets, and crossed finish lines. Some of you returned to school after time off, bringing with you professional and life experiences that enriched class discussions and that underscored the importance of lifelong learning.”

Birge said he and his colleagues are called to their work at MCLA by one common purpose: to contribute to the education of the next generation of leaders.

Brigh Cote, a communications major with a concentration in public relations and corporate communication, explained that she has transferred colleges twice and joined the Army, where she currently serves as a sergeant. Cote’s time at MCLA has “meant the world for me” for a variety of reasons, one being its inclusive nature.

“The very first time I heard about this school, I was sitting in my kitchen after having a meeting with my previous college that informed me that I was being fined $50 for being in a relationship with someone of the same sex. I knew I had to get out of a place like that,” she explained.

“How could I attend a college where being myself cost me money? I immediately began googling hockey teams that needed players, when my sister called me to tell me that a college named Massachusetts, College of Liberal Arts, was looking for players as they were about to start a program. I emailed the coach, and it wasn’t even 20 minutes after I sent the email that we set up a phone call.”

Cote had only one question for MCLA’s hockey coach: Can I be gay on your team?  She reported that the line went silent for a minute before her phone buzzed and a photo of two LGBTQ+ mugs appeared on the screen.

“He returned to the phone and said, ‘I will have to ask my athletic director and her wife to see if that will be a problem,'” Cote reported, followed by laughs and cheers from the crowd.

During her first hockey season, which was also the first time in MCLA history that the women’s team was established to take part in a regular season, little girls from around the city would stand outside the team’s door before they entered the ice and gave out high-fives.


“I learned a lot from them without them even knowing. At the last home game of the season, I’m about to take the ice for the third period when I feel the tap on my shoulder. It was one of the little girl’s moms, and she told me, ‘I just wanted to tell you, you’re my daughter’s favorite player. You’re super feisty, and she enjoys watching you play,’ I said, ‘Thank you,’ and I had to skate onto the ice,” she explained.

“…It hit me at that moment that we had an impact on this town, showing little girls from the Berkshires that they could be just like us.”

A “heartbreaking” injury in 2024 ended Cote’s college athletic career, but she became the official voice of the MCLA women’s hockey league. “This had helped me overcome the intense feelings I had because of not playing, but gave me a sense of purpose,” she explained.

Cote told fellow graduates to be the person they once needed.

“Be the teammate, the friend, the voice, the encouragement, the safe space, because out there, someone is hoping to find the kind of community we have built here at MCLA,” she said.

“Don’t shrink yourself to fit into places that you weren’t built for. Expand them, fill them with your truth.”

During the ceremony, honorary doctorates were conferred to Laymon, NAACP Berkshire County Branch President Dennis L. Powell, North Adams Public Schools Superintendent Barbara Malkas, and state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier.

Laymon spoke about Sesame Street, grandmothers, and style.

His grandmother did not have a commencement ceremony at home in Mississippi because she could not go to any high school, college, or university, and instead, had to drop out of high school to work.

“My grandmother was the greatest human being in my life, but she could not vote in our state by law until her late 30s. Her third child, my mother, did not go to school with white children until she was a junior in high school in 1969. Sesame Street also debuted in 1969,” he explained.

Six months later, Mississippi voted to remove the children’s show from televisions across the state. The rationale leaked to the New York Times was “Some of the members of the commission were very much opposed to showing the series because it used a highly integrated cast of children,” Laymon reported.

Twenty-two days later, his grandmother joined others in publicly challenging the decision not to air Sesame Street and won. Six years after the show aired, Laymon was born and received the teachings of Sesame Street along with those of a “Palestinian, Jewish character in this big old book called the Bible named Jesus.”

“‘They’re the same teachings,’ she would say,” he reported.

“Treat folks as we want to be treated, share, be honest, be kind, admit mistakes, accept others’ mistakes, and revise, and finally, fight tyranny by all means necessary. I wasn’t a great student, but I was a great student of my grandma.”

He said his grandmother passed away a few months ago at the age of 95, around the time of statewide diversity, equity, and inclusion bans.

“Our desire to organize, our capacity for kindness, and our desire to revise all that we have is the only thing that will save us; it is all that has ever saved us from tyranny,” Laymon said, asking that graduates exhibit love in honor of his grandmother.

Tags: graduation 2025,   MCLA,   





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Colby Advances to NCAA Quarterfinals in Win Over Stevens

Next Game: Wesleyan University 5/18/2025 | 2:00 PM May. 18 (Sun) / 2:00 PM  Wesleyan University History Waterville, Maine. – The Mules faced off against the Ducks of Stevens in the Third Round of the NCAA Tournament. Colby defeated Stevens 17-6, advancing to the Quarter Finals.  The Ducks and […]

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Waterville, Maine. – The Mules faced off against the Ducks of Stevens in the Third Round of the NCAA Tournament. Colby defeated Stevens 17-6, advancing to the Quarter Finals. 

The Ducks and Mules spent the first half in a near stalemate due to excellent defensive pressure by both teams. The first quarter saw more action from Stevens, who scored two goals to Colby’s one, but the Mules reciprocated in the second quarter with four goals to the Ducks’ three, resulting in a 5-5 tie at the half. The Mules would kick it into high gear offensively in the second half while keeping their defense strong. Colby came out swinging, scoring two goals in the first three minutes of the second half. When Stevens answered with a goal of their own, the Mules made sure that would never happen again. Pushing again offensively, Colby settled into a 13-6 lead. In the fourth quarter, the Mules kept going and scored an additional four goals while holding Stevens at zero. This resulted in a 17-6 win for Colby.

Jillian Kane’s nine saves were one part of an outstanding defensive game by the Mules. Kat Munter and Gisele Uva caused four turnovers each, and Avery Del Cole caused two, further contributing massively to the defensive push by Colby. Julia Jardina was the lead scorer for the Mules with five, and Charlotte Michener was close behind with four, Ainsley Dion with three, and Kins Helmer with two. Gennie Littlejohn led the team in assists with two. 

The Mules next face off against fellow NESCAC team Wesleyan University. The match will take place Sunday, May 18, at 2 pm at home.



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Colby Advances to NCAA Quarterfinals in Win Over Stevens

Next Game: Wesleyan University 5/18/2025 | 2:00 PM May. 18 (Sun) / 2:00 PM  Wesleyan University History Waterville, Maine. – The Mules faced off against the Ducks of Stevens in the Third Round of the NCAA Tournament. Colby defeated Stevens 17-6, advancing to the Quarter Finals.  The Ducks and Mules spent the first half in […]

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Colby Advances to NCAA Quarterfinals in Win Over Stevens


Wesleyan University

Next Game:
Wesleyan University
5/18/2025 | 2:00 PM

May. 18 (Sun) / 2:00 PM

 Wesleyan University

History

Waterville, Maine. – The Mules faced off against the Ducks of Stevens in the Third Round of the NCAA Tournament. Colby defeated Stevens 17-6, advancing to the Quarter Finals. 

The Ducks and Mules spent the first half in a near stalemate due to excellent defensive pressure by both teams. The first quarter saw more action from Stevens, who scored two goals to Colby’s one, but the Mules reciprocated in the second quarter with four goals to the Ducks’ three, resulting in a 5-5 tie at the half. The Mules would kick it into high gear offensively in the second half while keeping their defense strong. Colby came out swinging, scoring two goals in the first three minutes of the second half. When Stevens answered with a goal of their own, the Mules made sure that would never happen again. Pushing again offensively, Colby settled into a 13-6 lead. In the fourth quarter, the Mules kept going and scored an additional four goals while holding Stevens at zero. This resulted in a 17-6 win for Colby.

Jillian Kane’s nine saves were one part of an outstanding defensive game by the Mules. Kat Munter and Gisele Uva caused four turnovers each, and Avery Del Cole caused two, further contributing massively to the defensive push by Colby. Julia Jardina was the lead scorer for the Mules with five, and Charlotte Michener was close behind with four, Ainsley Dion with three, and Kins Helmer with two. Gennie Littlejohn led the team in assists with two. 

The Mules next face off against fellow NESCAC team Wesleyan University. The match will take place Sunday, May 18, at 2 pm at home.

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Carter Berger – Men’s Ice Hockey

Hockey East Post Season Honors: Hockey East All-Academic Team – 2020 2020-21 (Sophomore Season):  Played in 21 games as a sophomore…Posted nine points on the year, scoring a goal with eight assists…Was a +2 on the year…Totaled 39 shots, a 1.86 per game average…Blocked six shots…Had two assists on the power play…Scored his lone goal […]

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Hockey East Post Season Honors:

Hockey East All-Academic Team – 2020


2020-21 (Sophomore Season):  Played in 21 games as a sophomore…Posted nine points on the year, scoring a goal with eight assists…Was a +2 on the year…Totaled 39 shots, a 1.86 per game average…Blocked six shots…Had two assists on the power play…Scored his lone goal on the year in a 4-2 win at home over Maine (Feb. 27)…Had a streak of four-straight games (Jan. 15-23) with an assist.

2019-20 (Freshman Season):  Appeared in 31 games during his first season in Storrs…Finished the season with 10 points coming on a pair of goals and eight assists…Was a +4 for the season…Had a goal and an assist on the power play…Had 11 blocked shots…Scored his first collegiate goal in a 7-4 win at home over Vermont (Dec. 7)…Had a goal and two assists, a career-high three points, in a 3-2 upset at home over No. 8 Massachusetts (Feb. 28)…Had his first collegiate point with an assist in his college debut vs. Army West Point (Oct. 11)…Had a five-game point streak over November and December where he collected a goal and four assists.   

In the NHL Draft:  Drafted in the 4th round (106th overall) by the Florida Panthers in the 2019 NHL Entry Draft.

Before UConn:  He played for three seasons with Victoria in the BCHL prior to coming to UConn…He played in 154 games with 108 total points on 41 goals and 67 assists…In 2018-19, he led all BCHL defensemen in scoring with 63 points in 54 games, averaging 1.17 points per game and was a BCHL first team All-Star…He was ninth among all league scorers in the final statistical rankings…He posted 27 goals and 36 assists and had 19 power play points including eight goals…In 2017-18, Berger, a left-handed shot, collected 34 points (10g/24a) while leading his team to a first place finish…He had eight points (1g/7a) in 12 playoff games…Attended Belmont Secondary school in Victoria, British Columbia.

Personal:  Born September 17, 1999…Carter Bruce Berger is the son of Bruce and Fiona Berger…Has a brother, Bailey…His father, Bruce, was a swimmer at the University of California, Berkley and his mom, Fiona, swam at the University of British Columbia…Is undecided on a major.



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Ole Miss women marred in 24th place at NCAA Golf Championships

CARLSBAD, Calif. – The No. 14 Ole Miss women’s golf team opened up play Friday at the NCAA Championships, in Carlsbad, California, with a first round 301 (+13). The Rebels sit in 24th place as a team after the first 18 holes of play at Omni La Costa. Freshman Kajsalotta Svarvar led the way for the […]

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CARLSBAD, Calif. – The No. 14 Ole Miss women’s golf team opened up play Friday at the NCAA Championships, in Carlsbad, California, with a first round 301 (+13). The Rebels sit in 24th place as a team after the first 18 holes of play at Omni La Costa.

Freshman Kajsalotta Svarvar led the way for the Rebels, shooting even par during the opening round of play, sitting in a tie for 27th place. Svarvar made par on 14 total holes, with a birdie on No. 5 and 12, and a bogey on No. 9 and 15. The Halmstad, Sweden, native was a team-best 1-under on the four par-3 holes on the North Course.

Sophie Linder carded a 1-over, 73, for the Rebels and is tied for 46th place. The sophomore from Carthage, Tennessee, registered the first birdie of the day for Ole Miss at the par-4, No. 11. After two straight bogeys at No. 13 and 14, Linder got back on track with a birdie on No. 16. Linder was sitting at 1-under, but two bogeys in her final three holes put in her in the clubhouse at 1-over.

Nicole Gal (Photo: OMA)

Nicole Gal and Filippa Sundquist were also both in action for Ole Miss, each registering a 6-over, 78, during the first round. The Rebel duo is tied for 123rd individually. Gal tied Linder with a team-best three birdies in the first round.

Rounding out the Rebel lineup in California was Caitlyn Macnab. Macnab ended her day with an 80 (+8) to sit tied for 144th overall.

The Rebels’ second round from Carlsbad is set to tee off beginning at 10:20 a.m. CT Saturday morning on Hole 1.

THE REBELS

T27. Kajsalotta Svarvar: 72 (E)

T46. Sophie Linder: 73 (+1)

T123. Nicole Gal: 78 (+6)

T123. Filippa Sundquist: 78 (+6)

T144. Caitlyn Macnab: 80 (+8)

TEAM LEADERBOARD

  1. #24 Vanderbilt: 282 (-6)
  2. #25 Oklahoma State: 284 (-6)

T3. #8 Arizona State: 288 (-4)

T3. #5 Oregon: 288 (E)

T3 #6 Texas: 288 (E)

T3. #22 Florida: 288 (E)

  1. #27 Kansas State: 289 (+1)

T8. #11 Northwestern: 291 (+3)

T8. #31 Tennessee: 291 (+3)

  1. #9 USC: 292 (+4)

T11. #12 LSU: 293 (+5)

T11. #1 Stanford: 293 (+5)

T13. #23 Michigan State: 294 (+6)

T13. #10 Virginia: 294 (+6)

T13. #18 Mississippi State: 294 (+6)

T16. #32 Georgia Southern: 295 (+7)

T16. #28 UCLA: 295 (+7)

T16. #4 Florida State: 295 (+7)

T16. #13 Ohio State: 295 (+7)

  1. #37 Baylor: 296 (+8)

T21. #21 Kansas: 297 (+9)

T21. #2 Arkansas: 297 (+9)

T21. #3 South Carolina: 297 (+9)

  1. #14 Ole Miss: 301 (+13)
  2. #33 Oklahoma: 302 (+14)
  3. #41 Purdue: 303 (+15)
  4. #7 Wake Forest: 304 (+16)
  5. #29 Iowa State: 306 (+18)
  6. CSU Fullerton: 308 (+20)
  7. #35 UNLV: 310 (+22)



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UW-Stevens Point and UW-Whitewater Advance To NCAA Softball Super Regionals

Story Links MADISON, Wis.–For the first time in history, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) softball programs are headed to the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Softball Championship after University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and UW-Whitewater won regional titles on May 17.   UW-Stevens Point (31-13) won the Oshkosh, Wis., Regional […]

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MADISON, Wis.–For the first time in history, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) softball programs are headed to the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Softball Championship after University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and UW-Whitewater won regional titles on May 17.

 

UW-Stevens Point (31-13) won the Oshkosh, Wis., Regional with a 3-1 victory over UW-Oshkosh. The Pointers opened regional competition with a 3-0 victory over Central College (Iowa) and followed that win with a 1-0 triumph over UW-Oshkosh. The Titans rebounded with a 5-2 victory before UW-Stevens Point won the deciding game. UW-Stevens Point will square off against Trine University (Ind.) (39-5) in a best-of-three Super Regional.

 

UW-Oshkosh opened regional play with a 6-0 triumph over Concordia University (Wis.) and beat the Falcons in their third game of the regional by a 4-1 margin in addition to its results against UW-Stevens Point. Brianna Bougie, Abby Garceau and Grace Nardi were named to the regional’s All-Tournament Team.

 

UW-Oshkosh finished the season with a 39-8 record and won the WIAC tournament title. The 39 wins are the second-most in program history. The Titans made their third consecutive NCAA appearance – and 12th overall.

 

UW-Whitewater (38-6) won the Cleveland, Ohio Regional with a 7-3 triumph over Case Western Reserve University (Ohio). The Warhawks opened with a 5-0 win over Penn College of Technology (Pa.) in a game that featured a no-hitter by the Warhawks’ Josie Hammen. UW-Whitewater then posted a 7-6 victory over Case Western Reserve before the regional-clinching win. The Warhawks will face Saint Mary’s University (Minn.) (42-4) in Super Regional action.

 

UW-Eau Claire also represented the conference in NCAA regional action in Angola, Ind. The Blugolds fell short 13-3 in five innings in their opening contest against Baldwin Wallace University (Ohio), but rebounded with a 4-1 victory over University of Pittsburgh Greensburg (Pa.). UW-Eau Claire then beat Baldwin Wallace 8-7 in 10 innings, before being eliminated by Trine University 9-1 in 5 innings. Kenna Strunsee, Molly Marquardt, and Brooklyn Swanepoel were named to the regional’s All-Tournament Team.

 

UW-Eau Claire completed the 2025 campaign with a 29-16 record and made their 14th NCAAA appearance. The 29 victories are the most since the 2012 season.

 

In UW-Stevens Point’s clinching game against UW-Oshkosh, the game was scoreless until the fifth inning when UW-Stevens Point’s Sophie Schmidt reached on a throwing error to start the inning. She moved to second on a sac bunt by Trinity Otto. With two outs, Kaitlyn Roberts drew a walk and three pitches later, Jesse Klicker launched a home run to center to give the Pointers a 3-0 lead.

 

The Titans broke up a no-hit bid in the sixth with an infield hit by Sarah Hammer. Two batters later, Cali Divito singled to second base. A successful double steal cut the deficit to 3-1.

Ashley Zygowski tossed the final 2.0 frames to earn the save – her nation-leading 11th of the season.

 

Klicker and Zygowski were named to the regional’s All-Tournament Team, while Morgan Harwood was selected the Most Outstanding Player. 

 

In the clinching game against Case Western Reserve, UW-Whitewater jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the second inning on a two-run single by Kaitlyn Weidemann.

 

Case Western Reserve tied the game with back-to-back home runs to open the fourth inning and added a couple of singles for their only lead of the game at 3-2.

UW-Whitewater responded immediately in their half of the frame, once again scoring with two outs. Emma Giese was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded and a wild pitch scored Weidemann for a 4-3 advantage.

UW-Whitewater added to its lead in the fifth inning on a run-scoring single down the right field line by Weidemann, and tacked on two more runs in the sixth inning on a two-run home run to left field by Grace Wickman.

Hammen, Wickman and Dani Peshia were named to the regional’s All-Tournament Team, while Weidemann was selected the Most Outstanding Player.

 

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