Marcia Goodrich, Tech Topics editor, 906-487-2343 Megan Gilge, Tech Topics editorial assistant, 906-487-2343 You can reach us via e-mail here. The deadline for submitting information for Tech Topics is 5:00 p.m. the Friday before anticipated publication. Subscribe
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1. TOMPKINS INITIATES LEADERSHIP TRANSITIONThe following is the text of a letter sent from President Curt Tompkins to Board of Control Chair David Brule March 16. "I believe that the time has arrived to begin the transition in leadership of Michigan Technological University. I therefore request that the Board of Control meet to discuss the process and timing of transition to a new president. As always, I will do what is best for the University." Board of Control Secretary Dale Tahtinen is attempting to schedule the meeting March 26. When a meeting date and location are finalized, the campus and general public will be notified. ____________ 2. QUALITY REMAINS DESPITE STATE CUTS, TOMPKINS TELLS SENATE SUBCOMMITTEEDespite an $8 million drop in state appropriations, quality is holding its own at Michigan Tech, according to President Curt Tompkins. Tompkins testified before the state Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Higher Education March 12. "Nationally, we rank second only to Georgia Tech among public technological universities, according to US News & World Report," he said. He also pointed out that four of the university's engineering departments rank in the top 15 in the country, in terms of the number of degrees awarded. Tompkins noted that enrollment increased this year, despite large tuition increases imposed after a 15 percent cut from the state in the last 18 months. But he also raised concerns about what future cuts might to do to service levels. "The number of tenured and tenure-track faculty positions has been reduced by nearly 5 percent since fiscal year 2002 as a result of budget reductions," Tompkins said. "We have had to increase the size of many lecture sections and, in some courses, reduce their frequency from twice a year to once a year," he said. Tompkins said Michigan Tech continues to have a solid reputation with businesses, noting that the university leads all state universities and ranks tenth nationally in the proportion of research funded by industry. He also noted that Michigan Tech ranks second among state universities in the ratio of federal research expenditures to state appropriations. ____________ 3. FIVE SLEDS FINISH ENDURANCE RUNFewer than half of the entries in the SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge made it to Copper Harbor March 16, a testament to how much can go wrong in 100 miles. Last year's three top finishers--the University of Idaho, Michigan Tech and Kettering University--all had breakdowns during the initial part of the contest, a 75-lap tour around the 1-kilometer winter driving track located at Michigan Tech's Keweenaw Research Center. Six of the 14 competing teams survived the lap portion of the run to head north along a groomed snowmobile trail to Michigan's northernmost community. When the Universite de Technologie Superieure team from Montreal ran out of gas a few miles shy of the finish, the field was reduced to five: Clarkson University, the University of Maine, Minnesota State University at Mankato, the University of Wisconsin at Madison and the University of Wisconsin at Platteville. The UW Madison finish was all the sweeter for being a brand new experience. "This is the first year we've gone over five miles," said team member Steve Lukas. Plus, they accomplished the feat with a unique design. Team members believe the sled's hybrid gas-electric engine may be the only one of its kind. Clarkson driver Jesse Moss called the ride "awesome," and not just for the view of Lake Superior from atop Brockway Mountain. "The trails are really, really good," he said. "The sled ran absolutely perfect. And we still have half a tank of gas." Moss had another reason to be happy. "This is a first for Clarkson, to finish the 100-miler," he said. Michigan Tech's sled had to pull out of the endurance run early when a weld failed on the fuel tank. The tank was repaired, though Wednesday the team was grappling with an electrical problem. All entrants will have a chance to compete in the other Challenge events, however, which continue through this week. ____________ 4. MICHIGAN TECH NOW OFFERING ENGINEERING DEGREES AT DELTA, HENRY FORD COMMUNITY COLLEGESBeginning this fall, students at Henry Ford Community College, in Dearborn, and Delta College, in University Center, will have the opportunity to earn a bachelor's degree in engineering from Michigan Tech. And they won't ever have to leave their local campus. Michigan Tech will offer two Bachelor of Science in Engineering (BSE) degrees: one with a minor in product design and one with a minor in municipal engineering. The programs are designed to accommodate those who work during the day or need flexibility in scheduling. The engineering courses are taught by Michigan Tech faculty through distance learning methods. The BSE with a minor in product design features a technical emphasis on mechanical engineering. The program focuses on the modeling and analysis tools used by the design engineer. The BSE with a minor in municipal engineering has a technical emphasis on civil engineering and prepares students for careers in land development, traffic planning, water and wastewater treatment and municipal planning. For more information, call 487-2327 or e-mail disted at mtu.edu. The degrees are also available through Northwestern Michigan College in Traverse City. ____________ 5. GRAD STUDENT HELPS RENAME HIGHWAY TO HONOR SACAJAWEAby Megan Gilge, Tech Topics editorial assistant It's near Sacajawea's traditional birthplace as well as stagecoach and rail routes from the mining boom of the 1800s. The Shoshone trade routes ran along its length, and people still travel along it today. A 120-mile stretch of Idaho highway is now known as the Sacajawea Historic Byway, due in part to the efforts of a Michigan Tech graduate student. Adrienne Blauser, a master's student in the School of Forest Resources and Environmental Sciences, spent four months in the 3,000-person town of Salmon, Idaho, as an Americorps VISTA volunteer last year, spearheading the drive to rename the highway. Blauser's passion is community development, and when she heard about the dormant effort to rename the highway, she saw an opportunity to help the struggling community by encouraging tourism. "We've actually seen an increase of people asking for information [about Lewis and Clark]," said Bill Vermaas of the Idaho Department of Transportation. In cooperation with the Chamber of Commerce, she worked to prepare the proposal for the new state-level designation. She met with community leaders in the four counties crossed by the highway and researched 41 points of interest to include in the proposal. Blauser was working under deadline. "The guide is only published every four years, so I had to get it in by January," she said. Her main interest is community development. She has her own consulting firm, Evolution Marketing ( http://www.EvolutionMarketing.biz ) and is currently working on a proposal to complete a comprehensive corridor management plan for the Sacajawea Historic Byway. Her work on the highway did not go unnoticed. After completing her master's degree, Blauser will return to Salmon where she will take up a position as director of the Sacajawea Interpretive Center (http://www.sacajaweacenter.org/ ). If you want to know more about how highways are designated as scenic or historical byways, Blauser will share her insights at her graduate seminar at 2:30 p.m. on Thursday, March 25, in Noblet G002. ____________ 6. MICHIGAN SLEDDERS BOOST CLEAN SNOWMOBILE CHALLENGEAs college students from across the continent descend on Michigan Tech this week for the SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge, they'll be joined by scores of sledding enthusiasts. Volunteers from the Michigan Snowmobile Association are donating their time, effort and expertise to serve as liaisons for the 15 university teams. "Plus, company people are coming in from all over," said Lori Witting (Educational Opportunity), who is helping to coordinate the event. The Clean Snowmobile Challenge is the Society of Automotive Engineers' newest collegiate design competition. Teams of engineering students from participating schools take a stock snowmobile and then reengineer it to reduce emissions and noise while maintaining or improving performance. The sleds will compete Monday through Saturday, March 15-20, at MTU's Keweenaw Research Center, known for its vehicle test grounds and the Midwest's finest winter driving track. Representatives from Harley Davidson, Bombardier, Bosch, General Motors, Horiba, Land and Sea and Arctic Cat will be here to assist. Gage Products employees will also be on hand-the company is donating all the fuel for the Challenge entries. "Many local businesses have also provided cash and in-kind support, along with the cities of Houghton and Hancock," Witting said. "The support has been phenomenal." And, as at last year's inaugural event, the Michigan Snowmobile Association is on hand to help make the Challenge run smoothly. "We're coming with 16 people," said MSA president Rick Brown of downstate Lawton. "We've got a lot of guys on board. I had a hard time limiting the number who could come. The guys enjoyed it so much last year they wanted to come back." The Clean Snowmobile Challenge appeals to the MSA members on more than one level. "We think it's important to contribute to and shape the future of snowmobiling," Brown said. "Snowmobilers are environmentalists, and if we want to continue to snowmobile in the forest, we have to change the way we think about the sport." In addition, working with the team members was an unexpected pleasure. "The students impressed me quite a bit," Brown said. "I've never been to college, and I'd never had much use for college kids. But these young adults I met last year changed my mind. "They were cool to be around, they were serious about what they were doing, and they were very knowledgeable. They wanted to make things better," he said. "It was great to meet people who love snowmobiling and want to change the future of it." "And there are gals twisting wrenches, and they are just as knowledgeable as the guys," Brown noted. "We wouldn't miss it this year for the world." For more information, visit http://www.mtu.edu/snowmobile ____________ 7. MTU, KBIC RECEIVE GRANT FROM INDIAN HEALTH SERVICEEducational Opportunity has received a $52,566 grant from the federal Department of Health and Human Services Indian Health Service through the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community. The award will fund cultural and educational precollege programming for 45 Native American middle and high school students from KBIC. Precollege students, parents and other adults from KBIC have taken part in a series of nine Saturday cultural sessions coordinated by Lori Sherman, Native American outreach coordinator, including the Native American Speakers Forum, the Michigan Tech Pow-Wow, Parade of Nations, the NASA MAEL presentation (Mobile Aerospace Education Laboratory), a drumming social and a drum-making workshop. In addition, these students will be on campus March 27 for a hands-on career exploration, "The World Around You." In this event organized by Youth Programs, students will explore careers in biomedical engineering, ecology and biology, computer science and wireless integrated microsystems. Year one of this (up to) three-year grant will conclude with the KBIC Native American students attending a week-long career awareness exploration at Michigan Tech's Summer Youth Program. SYP will provide the students with in-depth, hands-on, high-tech learning while also familiarizing students with campus and college life through a residential program experience. Combining cultural enrichment, precollege outreach, parental and school involvement, this collaboration has the potential to significantly increase the number of Native American students applying to Michigan Tech. The long term goal of the program is to address shortages of graduates and prospective employees, thereby helping to meet the demands of recruiting corporations. For more information about the KBIC/Michigan Technological University partnership, contact Chris Anderson, executive director of Educational Opportunity and special assistant to the president for institutional diversity, or Lori Sherman, Native American outreach coordinator at 487-3539. For more information about Youth Programs, call John B. Lehman, coordinator of Youth Programs, at 487-2219, or visit http://youthprograms.mtu.edu ____________ 8. TEACHING AT TECH: HEAT AND HUMILITYby William Kennedy, director, Center for Teaching, Learning and Faculty Development My rapidly diminishing mental capacities have resulted in an increasing tendency towards reductionist thinking on my part. I have always been suspicious of reductionists. I recall a prof who routinely proffered simplistic aphorisms such as, "A third of the students don't need your help, and a third of the students are beyond your help, so you should spend your time with the other third who need and will accept your counsel and assistance." The first time I heard him use this "three-thirds" device, it sounded almost sagelike. By the ninth or tenth time he dredged up this mind-numbing generalization, it rang quite hollow. Yogi Berra once observed that "baseball is 90 percent mental--the other half is physical." Same school of thought. A corporate training type once observed that people remember "10 percent of what they read, 20 percent of what they hear, 30 percent of what they see, 50 percent of what they both see and hear, 70 percent of what they say or discuss with others, 80 percent of what they do or experience personally, 90 percent of what they say and do and 95 percent of what they teach someone else." Highly respected engineering education and active learning guru Jim Stice cited this obviously over-generalized old saw from the corporate training and development world in an Engineering Education article some years back. Don't get me wrong, I think there is wisdom in this homespun yarn, but the scope of the claim and the illusory precision of the numbers are a little much to stomach. It's sort of like believing that the question 20 scores represent a coherent and complete valuation of a faculty member's teaching. Now that I have alerted you to the dangers of what I am about to do, I will proceed with a renewed sense of abandon to offer my own "folk wisdom" about teaching and learning. My opinion is that a college education should increase a student's knowledge in a variety of domains, increase her/his ability to do things with that knowledge in a variety of domains and increase his/her tendency to apply that knowledge ethically and humanely. Aristotle called it ethos, pathos and logos and argued that it is a package deal. Lose one leg of this three-legged stool, and the other two serve no purpose. Unbalanced education might be worse than no education at all. "Talking and testing" are sufficient teaching tools if, and only if, the goal of our instruction is to rapidly transmit a body of information from the teacher's mouth to the student's pencil. If you measure success as good short-term recall with limited ability for subsequent application, lecturing is almost always the best choice in terms of efficacy and economy. If you're shooting for more, different tools should be employed. Active learning techniques (discussion, simulations, group work, games, projects, problem-based learning, case studies etc.) are most always much messier to implement, more time-consuming to produce and refine, more difficult to control and tend to produce less measurable throughput on paper and pencil tests than straight lecturing. An additional challenge involves convincing students that they may be learning more by preparing and giving a speech than by listening to the expert lecture about making speeches and then passing a test on the "elements of public speaking." Another surprising hurdle for proponents of active learning are those students that truly excel at "talk and test" openly resenting being compelled to participate in the messier and more time-consuming teaching and learning alternatives. When you've been adored as a race horse all your life, it's difficult to understand why it's useful to be yoked with the work horses from time to time. Creating educational environments that challenge students to test the power and the limitations of their recently enriched cognitive insights is absolutely critical to producing lasting and durable learning. A great educational program should encourage students to spend as much time and effort looking inward as they spend internalizing others' hard-earned insights into the inner workings of world around them. As Yogi Berra once opined, "It ain't the heat, it's the humility." 9. WATERCOLOR ARTIST DICKERSON AT MTU NEXT WEEKArtist Vera Dickerson, a signature member of the National Watercolor Society, will present four lecture-demonstrations as the fine arts department's Guest Artist in Residence on March 25-26. Dickerson's two-hour presentations, which are free and open to the public, are scheduled for Thursday, March 25, at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m., and Friday, March 26, at 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. in McArdle Theatre. The public is invited to attend one or more sessions. Professor Mary Ann Beckwith (Fine Arts), coordinator of the Guest Artist Residency program, describes Dickerson as an inspiring artist and teacher whose well-known workshops draw students from throughout the U.S. Co-founder of The Studio School in Roanoke, Va., Dickerson's work uses layers of acrylics, both transparent and opaque, as well as line and stamped images to build her award-winning compositions. Her work has been honored with prizes in many juried national exhibitions and selected for major corporate and gallery collections. In addition to the public demonstrations on Thursday and Friday, Dickerson will present a two-day workshop on Saturday and Sunday, March 27-28, which requires advance registration and a fee. Community members are welcome; contact the Department of Fine Arts, 487-2067, for registration information. ____________ 10. YOU'RE INVITED: CLEAN SNOWMOBILE CHALLENGE AND BANQUET SATURDAYThe public is invited to watch contenders put their dream machines through their paces Saturday at the Keweenaw Research Center, during the culmination of the SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge. Afterwards, they can stop by the Michigan Tech campus to see the sleds on display. Tickets are also available for the awards banquet, which begins at 6 p.m. Saturday at Michigan Tech's Memorial Union Ballroom. The Clean Snowmobile Challenge is the Society of Automotive Engineers' newest collegiate design competition. Teams of engineering students from participating schools take a stock snowmobile and then reengineer it to reduce emissions and noise while maintaining or improving performance. Michigan Tech is among 15 schools from across the U.S. and Canada participating in the Challenge. The handling event begins at 10 a.m. Saturday and runs to about noon. After a week of grueling tests, students from participating universities will run their snowmobiles through a zig-zag course designed to measure the sleds' speed and maneuverability. The snowmobiles will also be tested for acceleration. Everyone is welcome, and Boy Scouts from Lake Linden will be selling hot dogs and hot chocolate. Parking is available at the main KRC parking lot, near the end of Airpark Boulevard on the left. The handling event will be held directly across the road; the course will be marked with orange pylons. Admission is free. After the testing events, teams will display their sleds from 2 to 4 p.m. outside the R. L. Smith Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mechanics Building on the Michigan Tech campus. The public is invited to stop by, view the custom machines and talk to the participants. For more information on the Clean Snowmobile Challenge, contact KRC at 487-2750. Tickets for the awards banquet are $25 and are available by calling Lori Witting at 487-2263. The deadline for reserving your ticket is 3 p.m. Friday. The banquet kicks off at 6 p.m. with a social hour and cash bar. The buffet opens at 7 p.m. and includes barbecue baby back pork riblets, turkey with mashed potatoes and gravy, stuffed pasta shells florentine marinara, potatoes O'Brien, roasted garlic mashed potatoes, salad, rolls, vegetable trays, cheesecake and fruit pies. The awards ceremony follows at 8 p.m. ____________ 11. THE TROUPE PRESENTS ANNUAL COMEDY SHOWMichigan Tech's improvisational theater group, The Troupe, presents its annual Campus Comedy Show on Friday and Saturday, March 19 and 20, at 7:30 p.m. in McArdle Theatre. The 12-member ensemble creates its own comedy skits, improvising some of them on the spot using suggestions from the audience. This year's show features a take-off on the famous opening train scene from "The Music Man." Skits include spoofs of familiar stories and events, as well as classic comedy routines. The Troupe's comedy show appeals to all ages, so it's ideal for families with children. Tickets are available from the Rozsa Center Box Office, 487-3200, http://www.tickets.mtu.edu , and at the door for $8 general, $4 students. Directed for the past 13 years by Sue Stephens (Fine Arts), associate professor of theater, The Troupe performs frequently at Michigan Tech and in K-12 school districts. In addition to their comedy shows, the group presents acting workshops and educational programs on topics such as preventing alcohol and tobacco use and preserving the environment. On their 2004 spring break tour, the group presented workshops on improv techniques in downstate school districts. ____________ 12. TWO MORE EVENTS INCLUDED IN WOMEN'S WEEK CELEBRATIONTwo more events are included in this year's Women's Week Celebration held March 22-26. Massage practitioner Evelyn Ojeda-Fox will give free, 10-minute massages on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from noon to 1 p.m. On Wednesday, "Mothers: Biological, Adoptive and those Just Like a Mom" will be presented by David Zimmerman, former branch director of Catholic Social Services of the Upper Peninsula, and counselor Barb McLain. Joe Kirkish will present "A Pictorial Anthology of Mothers." Both presentations will be part of a brown bag lunch at noon in Memorial Union Ballroom B. Salad will be provided. For more information, please call Educational Opportunity at 487-2920. Women's Week is sponsored by Educational Opportunity; the Office of Student Activities; NASA; and the Visiting Women and Minority Lecturer/Scholar Series. ____________ 13. MOVING FORWARD: FORUM ON COPPER COUNTRY LAND-USE PLANNING MARCH 24A public forum on land-use planning in the Copper Country will be held Wednesday, March 24, 7:30-9 p.m. in M&M U115. The presenters are active participants in land-use planning in Houghton and Keweenaw Counties. Lori Hauswirth from the Western U.P. Planning and Development Region, Janet Shea of the Keweenaw County Zoning and Planning Board, and Keweenaw County Commissioner Don Keith will review the Keweenaw County land-use planning process since 2000 and plans to update that county's nearly 30-year-old zoning ordinance. The Houghton County Planning Commission will provide an update on their progress toward developing the county's first land-use plan, with the cooperation of local townships, villages and cities. Pat Coleman of U.P. Engineers and Architects will discuss a study, just getting under way, of the U.S. 41 corridor and waterfront areas in Franklin Township, which recently received a Michigan Coastal Zone Management grant. The program will also feature land-use maps and other planning resources developed by the Michigan Tech GEM Center for Science and Environmental Outreach and graduate students in the Environmental Decision Making course (SS5200), whose class project focuses on assisting planning efforts in Houghton County. A question-and-answer session will follow the presentations. Refreshments will be served, and the public is welcome. The forum is sponsored by the League of Women Voters of the Copper Country and the GEM Center for Science and Environmental Outreach. For more information, contact Kristine Bradof (kbradof at mtu.edu or 487-3341). 14. NCBI WORKSHOP MARCH 23Have you ever thought "I'm part of the majority; how can I be an ally to minorities?" "I'd like to do something to help. I just don't know where to start," or "As a minority member, my campus life would be better if others would . . . " A workshop on race, gender and ethnicity will be held by the Michigan Tech chapter of the National Coalition Building Institute (NCBI) Tuesday, March 23, from 6 to 8 p.m. in MUB Ballroom B1 and B2. Pizza will be served at 5:30 p.m. "Registration is not required," organizers said. "Just show up and learn how you can make a difference." For more information, call 487-3310 or visit http://www.admin.mtu.edu/ncbi/ ____________ 15. MEEM GRADUATE SEMINAR THURSDAYPatrick Kwon of Michigan State University will present a MEEM graduate seminar, "Enhancing the Nature of Tool Wear in Machining " Thursday, March 18, 3-4 p.m. in MEEM 112. IN PRINTAssistant Professor Ramakrishna Wusirika (Biological Sciences) coauthored an article, "The Wheat VRN2 Gene Is a Flowering Repressor Down-Regulated by Vernalization," in the March 12 edition of Science. Professor Barry Solomon (Social Sciences) published a chapter, "Energy Geography," in the book "Geography in America at the Dawn of the 21st Century," co-authored with M. J. Pasqualetti and D. Luchsinger, edited by Gary Gaile and Cort Willmott and published by Oxford University Press in February 2004. He coauthored an article, "Power to the People: Electric Utility Restructuring and the Commitment to Renewable Energy," in Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 94, No. 1 with Michael Heiman of Dickinson College. ____________ ON THE ROADExSEL (Excelling in Science & Engineering Learning) Program Coordinator Kerri Sleeman (Educational Opportunity) presented an invited paper, "Retention Efforts That Have an Impact: The Michigan Technological University ExSEL Program," coauthored by Amy Monte (Engineering Fundamentals) and Chris S. Anderson (Educational Opportunity) at the 2003 Annual National Association of Minority Engineering Program Administrators National Conference held in February in Orlando, Fla. ____________ CALENDAR: MARCH18--Thursday 3 p.m.--Patrick Kwon, "Enhancing the Nature of Tool Wear in Machining"--MEEM 112 19--Friday 7:30 p.m.--The Troupe's Campus Comedy Show--McArdle Theatre 20--Saturday 6 p.m.--SAE Clean Snowmobile Challenge Awards Banquet--Memorial Union Ballroom 7:30 p.m.--Chamber Orchestra Kremlin--Rozsa Center 7:30 p.m.--The Troupe's Campus Comedy Show--McArdle Theatre 22--Monday noon--Women's Week: Louise Kleba, "Women's Contributions to Aviation"--Memorial Union Ballroom B 23--Tuesday noon--Women's Week: Dr. Kamaljit Puri, "Heart Disease: The Silent Killer"--Memorial Union Ballroom B 5:30/6 p.m.--Pizza/NCBI Workshop--Memorial Union Ballroom B1-B2 24--Wednesday noon--Women's Week: David Zimmerman and Barb McLain, "Mothers: Biological, Adoptive and Those Just Like a Mom"--Memorial Union Ballroom B 7:30 p.m.--Forum on Keweenaw land-use planning--M&M U115 25--Thursday 10 a.m./7 p.m.--Vera Dickerson, watercolor presentation--McArdle Theatre noon--Women's Week: Annie Humphrey, "Journeys of Feeling, Her Song, Her Spirit, Her Voice, Reflecting Spirit"----Memorial Union Ballroom B 26--Friday 10 a.m./2 p.m.--Vera Dickerson, watercolor presentation--McArdle Theatre noon--Women's Week: Regina Vincent Clark, author and poet--Memorial Union Ballroom B 28--Sunday 10 a.m.--Men's Tennis, Findlay at MTU--Gates Tennis Center ____________ MICHIGAN TECH POSITION AVAILABLEJob descriptions will be available at 1 p.m. on Friday, or by e-mail at <JOBS@MTU.EDU>. The following position will be posted Friday, March 19, 2004, at 1 p.m. through noon, Friday, March 26, 2004, in the Human Resources Office or at http://www.admin.mtu.edu/hro/postings/ CHP Mechanic/Operator--Facilities Management-Energy Management (AFSCME internal and external posting) University employees are reminded to apply in writing prior to noon, Friday, March 26, 2004, to be considered as internal candidates for bargaining unit positions only. Applicants from the recall pool will be given first consideration for non-bargaining-unit positions only. Vacancy announcements are normally posted every Friday at 1 p.m. in the Human Resources Office. Complete job descriptions are available in the Human Resources Office or by calling 487-2280. More information regarding employment opportunities is available by calling the Job Line at 487-2895. Michigan Technological University is an equal opportunity educational institution/equal opportunity employer.
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