To All,
Good Monday morning January 2, 2023.
All the best as we all clean up after the Holidays. How many of you found something you thought you had lost for the last year that got packed up mistake last year.
Warm regards
skip
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This day in Naval and Marine Corps History
January. 2
1943—USS Argonaut (SM1) sinks the Japanese guard boat Ebon Maru in the Bismarck Sea.
1944—Aerial mine laying operations continue in the Marshall Islands. Five PV-1s (VB 137) and one PBY-5 (VP 72) mine Jabor Anchorage, Jaluit.
1944—USS Finback (SS 230) sinks a Japanese merchant tanker in the East China Sea.
1969 - Operation Barrier Reef began in Mekong Delta, Vietnam
2000—Retired Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt, Jr., the 19th Chief of Naval Operations, dies at Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
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Today in History January 2
1492 Catholic forces under King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella take the town of Granada, the last Muslim kingdom in Spain.
1758 The French begin bombardment of Madras, India.
1839 Photography pioneer Louis Daguerre takes the first photograph of the moon.
1861 The USS Brooklyn is readied at Norfolk to aid Fort Sumter.
1863 In the second day of hard fighting at Stone's River, near Murfreesboro, Tenn., Union troops defeat the Confederates.
1903 President Theodore Roosevelt closes a post office in Indianola, Mississippi, for refusing to hire a Black postmistress.
1904 U.S. Marines are sent to Santo Domingo to aid the government against rebel forces.
1905 After a six-month siege, Russians surrender Port Arthur to the Japanese.
1918 Russian Bolsheviks threaten to re-enter the war unless Germany returns occupied territory.
1932 Japanese forces in Manchuria set up a puppet government known as Manchukuo.
1936 In Berlin, Nazi officials claim that their treatment of Jews is not the business of the League of Nations.
1942 In the Philippines, the city of Manila and the U.S. Naval base at Cavite fall to Japanese forces.
1943 The Allies capture Buna in New Guinea.
1963 In Vietnam, the Viet Cong down five U.S. helicopters in the Mekong Delta. 30 Americans are reported dead.
1966 American G.I.s move into the Mekong Delta for the first time.
1973 The United States admits the accidental bombing of a Hanoi hospital.
1980 President Jimmy Carter asks the U.S. Senate to delay the arms treaty ratification in response to Soviet action in Afghanistan.
1981 British police arrest the "Yorkshire Ripper" serial killer, Peter Sutcliffe.
1999 A severe winter storm hits the Midwestern US; in Chicago temperatures plunge to -13 ºF and19 inches of snow fell; 68 deaths are blamed on the storm.
2006 A coal mine explosion in Sago, West Virginia, kills 12 miners and critically injures another. This accident and another within weeks lead to the first changes in federal mining laws in decades.
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ROLLING THUNDER REMEMBERED Thanks to the Bear
OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER (1965-1968)…
For The List for Monday, 2 January 2023… Bear🇺🇸⚓️🐻
OPERATION ROLLING THUNDER (1965-1968)…
From the archives of rollingthunderremembered.com post for 2 January 1968… Peace hopes crushed…back to killing…
This following work accounts for every fixed wing loss of the Vietnam War and you can use it to read more about the losses in The Bear's Daily account. Even better it allows you to add your updated information to the work to update for history…skip
Vietnam Air Losses
Access Chris Hobson and Dave Lovelady's work at: https://www.VietnamAirLosses.com.
This is a list of all Helicopter Pilots Who Died in the Vietnam War . Listed by last name and has other info https://www.vhpa.org/KIA/KIAINDEX.HTM
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Thanks to Al
Monday Morning Humor--Epiphany
When I am very busy, but still want to keep in touch, guess what I do…I send jokes.
When I have nothing to say, but still want to keep contact…I send jokes.
When I do have something to say, but don't know what, and don't know how…I send jokes.
To let you know that: you are still remembered, you are still important, you are still loved, you are still cared for or you are still wanted, guess what you get? Jokes from me.
So my friends, next time you get jokes from me, don't think that I have sent you just jokes, but that...I HAVE THOUGHT OF YOU TODAY!
Now I understand that we all may be very busy, so if you prefer to NOT receiving Monday Morning Humor, just hit "Reply" and let me know and I will remove you from my distribution.
And now some Epiphany (aka 12th Day of Christmas or Day of the Wise Men) humor…
Unbeknownst to most theologians: there was a fourth wise man who was turned away for bringing fruitcake.
Sheepishly the wise man said to the baby Jesus, "Just to be perfectly clear, these gifts are for your birthday AND Christmas."
Some report that after the three wise men left, the three wise women arrived with gifts of fresh diapers, lots of formula, and casseroles for two weeks.
The three wise men walk intothe stable and see Joseph, Mary, and baby Jesus. Joseph asks why they are disturbing them as his wife had just given birth and needed rest. The first wise man said "I have brought gold for the child."
Joseph thanked him but ask that they leave. Then the second wise man said "I have brought frankincense for the child."
Again Joseph thanked him but was getting annoyed as they were interrupting a special moment between him and his wife. He then, forcefully, asked then to leave when the third wise man said "But wait there's myrrh!"
Joseph took time to write some thank you notes.
To the third wise man he wrote, "Thank you for your gift. It's myrrh-rific!"
What would have happened if it had been three Wise Women instead of three Wise Men?
• They would have asked directions, arrived on time, helped deliver the baby, cleaned the stable, made a casserole, and brought practical gifts.
But what they would have said when they left…?
• "Did you see the sandals Mary was wearing with that gown?"
• "Can you believe that they let all of those disgusting animals in the house?"
• "And that donkey that they are riding has seen better days too!"
• "Want to bet on how long it will take until you get your casserole dish back?"
Just the other day, I realized that I've never had an epiphany. I was like wow.
Have a great week and a great 2023,
Al
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From the List archives
Thanks to Chuck
Iranian F-14 Tomcat Ace Reveals His Iraqi MiG-Killing Secrets - YouTube
Gents,
Ward does a superb job as always. Set speed to 1.25 and enjoy!
Happy New Year to you and yours!
All the best,
CAP
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L3HYrasBB4k
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Thanks to Carl…..
Arnold Palmer was my idol growing up and I played golf almost every day my last two years in High School. I even had Arnold Palmer golf clubs. I was part of Arnie's Army skip
Arnold Palmer, a Great Athlete who Died of Heart Failure | Dr. Gabe Mirkin on Health
(Note: Dr Mirkin is a vegetarian!)
https://www.drmirkin.com/histories-and-mysteries/arnold-palmer-the-king-of-golf.html
Arnold Palmer, a Great Athlete who Died of Heart Failure
December 26, 2022
Arnold Palmer was called "The King" because he was considered to be among the world's greatest and most popular golfers of all time. From 1955 to 1973, he won 92 national and international championships, with 62 of them on the U.S. PGA Tour. In 2004 at age 75, he gave President Bush golf tips before being awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He also designed more than 300 golf courses in 37 states, 25 countries, and five continents. At the time of his death, his multiple business ventures left him with a net worth of $875 million.
On Sept 19, 2016, Palmer was hospitalized, most likely for bypass surgery to increase blood flow to his heart, and he died of heart failure on Sept 25, 2016. Heart disease is the major killer of North American men today, and exercise markedly helps to prevent heart failure. Top level golf requires more than just coordination; it requires tremendous strength to drive a golf ball a great distance. Other professional golfers, including Gary Player, Greg Norman, and Tiger Woods, are avid weightlifters. Increasing strength can improve golf scores (International Journal of Golf Science, 2020;8(1)).
The legacy of Arnold Palmer - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h1rlkXoRNKw
A History of Poor Lifestyle Choices
How could one of the world's greatest and most famous athletes die of heart failure, a disease that is caused largely by an unhealthful lifestyle? There may have been a genetic component, since his father died at the age of 71 of a massive heart attack after playing 27 holes of golf. However, Palmer had several poor lifestyle habits in his lifetime:
• Cigarettes. He smoked one to two packs of cigarettes per day for about 15 years at the height of his professional career. He even made several television commercials endorsing cigarettes. In 1964, the Surgeon General's report encouraged him to start on the long fight to give up cigarettes and he urged the public to give up smoking because "Cigarette smoking has a negative effect on every organ in the body."
• Alcohol. He was a modest drinker of alcohol and he believed that it was safe to take one or two drinks a day. However, the recent literature shows that alcohol does not prevent heart attacks and there is no safe amount of alcohol. Even small amounts can increase risk for heart attacks and cancers.
• Overweight. If you look at his pictures over the years, you will see a very fit and slim athlete turn into a heavy person with a protruding belly. He talked about having a healthful diet with vegetables, fruits and nuts and avoiding fast foods, red meat and fried foods, but his excess weight indicates that he did not always follow his own advice. Having a big belly and small hips almost always means that a person has excess fat in his liver which can cause diabetes and, in turn, heart damage. A high rise in blood sugar after meals can damage every cell in your body. To prevent blood sugar levels from rising too high after meals, your pancreas releases insulin which lowers high blood sugar by driving sugar from your bloodstream into your liver. However, a liver full of fat does not accept the sugar and blood sugar levels remain high to cause plaques to form in arteries and damage the heart to cause heart attacks and heart failure.
• Inflammation. A person's own immune system can attack and destroy a person's arteries to cause plaques to form and block arteries. Then a plaque can break off to cause a heart attack. Any disease that damages tissues and any infection can turn on a person's immune system to cause inflammation.
Arnold Palmer Dies At 87 | Last Word: Obituaries | The New York Times - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IXNe5eScsQI
Other Health Problems
• Prostate cancer diagnosed at age 67 in 1997: From age 30 onward, he had seen the same physician every year for his annual physical exam and each time had a PSA blood test that is used to screen for prostate cancer. At age 64, the PSA test started to rise and for the next three years he received prostate biopsies that all came back negative for cancer. On the fourth year, his biopsy did show prostate cancer and he had his prostate with its cancer removed surgically followed by radiation therapy for seven weeks. Eight weeks after finishing treatment, he was back on the Senior PGA Tour, continued to play for the next nine years, and retired in 2006. As far as I know, his prostate cancer never returned. More than 95 percent of prostate cancers will not kill, but a small number can progress rapidly to kill a man. The problem is that doctors do not have a definitive test to tell which prostate cancers are likely to spread rapidly, although they do have statistical signs such as how the cancer cells look under a microscope (Gleason Score), and whether they have spread. Today, most men over age 60 with prostate cancer should be treated with "watchful waiting" as the treatments cause a very high degree of pain, discomfort, impotence and incontinence.
• Irregular heartbeats and high blood pressure: In August, 2014, at age 85, Palmer had a pacemaker implanted to control irregular heartbeats that made him dizzy. For many years before that, he had been on medications to treat high blood pressure, a condition that increases a person's chances of developing heart muscle damage and irregular heartbeats. He had also gained a lot of weight in his belly which convinced me that his liver was also full of fat, the major cause of high blood sugar levels, diabetes and heart damage. He was also showing signs of unsteadiness on his feet, another consequence of irregular heartbeats. Each complete blockage of blood flow to the heart muscle can result in scarring that replaces the damaged part of the heart muscle to eventually cause heart failure.
• Falls and bone fractures: In December, 2014, he dislocated his shoulder and fractured his collar bone when he tripped over his Labrador retriever, Mulligan. He was apparently debilitated by his heart disease by that time as he was having difficulty with walking and coordination.
• Tooth infection, a deep clot in his leg and intestinal bleeding: In 2015, he had a severe tooth infection that could have been a warning that his immunity was not working properly. That same year, he developed a deep clot in a leg vein. Clots in the veins in the legs can spread through the bloodstream to go to the brain to cause a stroke or to the lung to cause severe shortness of breath, so he was treated with an anti-clotting drug called Xarelto. At this time he was terribly unsteady on his feet and people had to help him walk.
Lessons from Arnold Palmer's Heart Failure
A regular exercise program helps to prevent all sorts of diseases and prolong lives. However, even the world's greatest athletes still have to follow the rules for healthful living. I recommend that you should try to exercise every day, never smoke or spend time with smokers, avoid or severely restrict alcohol, maintain a healthful weight, and follow a plant-based diet.
Arnold Daniel Palmer
September 10, 1929 – September 25, 2016
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Thanks to Tom
THIS YEAR @ NASA: TY@N (But WHAT happened to the This Week @ NASA??)
Folks-
To the point of the title – I don't know…. I haven't seen a TWAN for a month – and I have refrained from declaring it dead. Then THIS pops up! OK…the YEAR in review – I'll take it and hope the TWAN comes back in the new year!
And if I do get any information regarding the lack of these little tidbits, I WILL share with you without delay!
So let me leave you with a belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year 2023! (And the hope TWAN isn't gone!)
OUTSIDE READING:
https://www.space.com/artemis-1-orion-close-up-images-moon-flyby-nov-21?utm_source=notification
ENJOY!
Tom
AGENCYWIDE MESSAGE TO ALL NASA EMPLOYEES
Points of Contact: Rebecca Sirmons, rebecca.h.sirmons@nasa.gov, and Andre Valentine, andre.valentine-1@nasa.gov, Office of Communications, NASA Headquarters
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View This Year @ NASA 2022 (published Dec. 23, 2022)
Click on the image to watch This Year @ NASA 2022 (TY@N 2022).
As NASA caps off another astronomical year, the agency takes a look at all it has accomplished, including launching its mega Moon rocket for the first time and sending an uncrewed Orion spacecraft on a record-setting flight test around the Moon. NASA also kicked off a new era in astronomy with the Webb Space Telescope's record-breaking new imagery from the cosmos; moved an asteroid in humanity's first-ever planetary defense demonstration; worked with its partners, sent astronauts on regular missions to the International Space Station, tested new technologies, including an inflatable heat shield for Mars; continued development of quieter supersonic aircraft, and much more.
To learn more about NASA's many accomplishments in 2022, see: NASA's Big 2022: Historic Moon Mission, Webb Telescope Images, More
You may also watch This Year @ NASA 2022 (TY@N 2022) here at: https://youtu.be/Z5cayPF5qeQ.
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This notice is being sent to all NASA employees by NASA INC in the Office of Communications at NASA Headquarters.
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January 2
This Day in U S Military History
1942 – The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) convicts 33 members of a German spy ring headed by Fritz Joubert Duquesne in the largest espionage case in United States history—the Duquesne Spy Ring. Of those arrested on the charge of espionage, 19 pleaded guilty. The remaining 14 men who entered pleas of not guilty were brought to jury trial in Federal District Court, Brooklyn, New York, on September 3, 1941; and all found guilty on December 13, 1941. On January 2, 1942, the group was sentenced to serve a total of over 300 years in prison. The German spies who formed the Duquesne spy ring were placed in key jobs in the United States to get information that could be used in the event of war and to carry out acts of sabotage: one person opened a restaurant and used his position to get information from his customers; another person worked on an airline so that he could report Allied ships that were crossing the Atlantic Ocean; others in the ring worked as delivery people so that they could deliver secret messages alongside normal messages. William G. Sebold, who had been recruited as a spy for Germany, was a major factor in the FBI's successful resolution of this case through his work as a double agent for the United States government. For nearly two years the FBI ran a radio station in New York for the ring, learning what Germany was sending to its spies in the United States while controlling the information that was being transmitted to Germany. Sebold's success as a counterespionage agent was demonstrated by the successful prosecution of the German agents. One German spymaster later commented that the ring's roundup delivered "the death blow" to their espionage efforts in the United States. FBI director J. Edgar Hoover called his concerted FBI swoop on Duquesne's ring the greatest spy roundup in U.S. history.
1943 – Japanese positions at Buna, New Guinea are stormed by troops from Eichelberger's US 1st Corps. Fighting continues around Sanananda.
1943 – US troops on Guadalcanal launch another assault up Mount Austen. Some progress is made but the Gifu strongpoint remains in Japanese control.
1944 – On New Britain, the American 7th Marine Regiment launches attacks to expand its beachhead near Cape Gloucester but fails to meet its objectives.
1944 – US Task Force 38 (Admiral Barbey) lands 2400 troops of the 126th Regiment (General Martin) of the 32nd Division at Saidor. Both the airfield and the harbor are secured. An Allied cruiser and destroyer force, led by Admiral Crutchley, provides cover for the landing. To the east, Australian forces advance to Sialum.
1945 – In the Ardennes, Third Army troops take Bonnerue, Hubertmont and Remagne. In Alsace Seventh Army withdraws under German pressure.
1945 – About 1000 USAAF bombers nominally attack troop concentrations and communications in western Germany while about 1000 RAF bombers strike Nuremburg and Ludwigshafen.
1945 – An American Sikorsky helicopter is used in convoy escort duties for the first time.
1945 – In the Carolines, Fais Island is occupied by an American amphibious force.
1951 – For the first time, a C-47 dropped flares to illuminate B-26 and F-82 night attacks on enemy forces. The flares also deterred enemy night attacks on U.S. troops. Fifth Air Force withdrew forward-based F-86s assigned to the 4th FIW from enemy-threatened Kimpo Airfield near Seoul to the wing's home station at Johnson AB, Japan.
1967 – Operation Bolo: 30 US Air Force F-4 Phantom jets, operating from Ubon in Thailand, shoot down a third of North Vietnam's MiG-21s, loosing only one Phantom. Over the previous two years of Air Force and Navy air strikes, only 10 planes had been lost to enemy MiGs. American pilots were forbidden from attacking Hanoi's airfields fearing that killing Soviet or Chinese advisers that could be there would draw those nations more directly into the war. Knowing this, the Vietnamese People's Air Force would simply fly their MiGs through the American bombing formations and loiter just long enough to get the crews to drop their bombs and extra fuel early, preventing the strategic strikes without firing a shot. US 7th Air Force selected Colonel Robin Olds to lead an ambush to stop the harassment. To lure out the North Vietnamese, American F-4s would fly the same routes into the country as the heavyset F-105 bombers—and at the same altitudes and speeds while using the same radio call signs. Meanwhile, signal-snooping aircraft would keep track of the MiGs. Special C-130B-IIs would listen in on enemy radio chatter and feed information straight to American pilots throughout the mission. These specialized aircraft and personnel not only made sure the Vietnamese were responding as expected, but also kept watch in case Chinese jets decided to join the battle. Olds wanted to know if Russian or North Korean advisers were actually in the cockpits when the fighting started. Hanoi's pilots were caught completely off guard. When Olds' strike team started its attack, the C-130s picked up enemy pilots shocked to find that "the sky is full of F-4s," according to the declassified report. "Where are the F-105s? You briefed us to expect F-105s!" Seven MiGs were shot down. After a series of additional aerial ambushes, the Vietnamese People's Air Force grounded its MiGs and completely revised its procedures. At the end of the year, Washington approved strikes on Hanoi's air bases. During this operation, Col. Robin Olds shot down one of the MiGs, becoming the first and only U.S. Air Force ace with victories in both World War II and Vietnam.
Medal of Honor Citations for Actions Taken This Day
LENIHAN, JAMES
Rank and organization: Private, Company K, 5th U.S. Cavalry. Place and date: At Clear Creek, Ariz., 2 January 1873. Entered service at: – – – . Birth: Ireland. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallantry in action.
*EDWARDS, JUNIOR D.
Rank and organization: Sergeant First Class, U.S. Army, Company E, 23d Infantry Regiment, 2d Infantry Division. Place and date: Near Changbong-ni, Korea, 2 January 1951. Entered service at: Indianola, Iowa. Born: 7 October 1926, Indianola, lowa. G.O. No.: 13, 1 February 1952. Citation: Sfc. Edwards, Company E, distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty in action against the enemy. When his platoon, while assisting in the defense of a strategic hill, was forced out of its position and came under vicious raking fire from an enemy machine gun set up on adjacent high ground, Sfc. Edwards individually charged the hostile emplacement, throwing grenades as he advanced. The enemy withdrew but returned to deliver devastating fire when he had expended his ammunition. Securing a fresh supply of grenades, he again charged the emplacement, neutralized the weapon and killed the crew, but was forced back by hostile small-arms fire. When the enemy emplaced another machine gun and resumed fire, Sfc. Edwards again renewed his supply of grenades, rushed a third time through a vicious hail of fire, silenced this second gun and annihilated its crew. In this third daring assault he was mortally wounded but his indomitable courage and successful action enabled his platoon to regain and hold the vital strongpoint. Sfc. Edwards' consummate valor and gallant self-sacrifice reflect the utmost glory upon himself and are in keeping with the esteemed traditions of the infantry and military service.
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AMERICAN AEROSPACE EVENTS for January 2 FIRSTS, LASTS, AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOMPLISHMENTS. THANKS TO HAROLD "PHIL" MYERS CHIEF HISTORIAN AIR FORCE INTELLIGENCE, SURVEILLANCE, AND RECONNAISSANCE AGENCY
2 January
1933: Orville Wright received the Institute of Aeronautical Sciences' first honorary fellowship. (24)
1942: Gen Henry H. Arnold established a new Air Force, which later became Eighth Air Force. (4)
1948: In Japan, two USAF P-80 Shooting Stars attained 778 miles per hour with aid of tail winds. (24)
1951: KOREAN WAR. A C-47 dropped flares for the first time to illuminate B-26 and F-82 night attacks on enemy forces and deter enemy night attacks on U.S. troops. Fifth Air Force withdrew the 4th Fighter Interceptor Wing and its F-86s from Kimpo Airfield near Seoul, S. Korea, to Johnson AB, Japan. (28)
1952: A Sikorsky H-19 helicopter flew 1,800 miles from Great Falls, Mont., to Ladd AFB, Alaska, in five days. This was probably the longest flight made by a rotary wing aircraft to date. (5)
1953: Cessna Aircraft's T-37 design won the competition for the Air Force's primary jet trainer over 14 other entries. (5)
1954: Colonel Willard W. Millikan, Air National Guard, set a Federation Aeronautique Internationale record for a cross-country flight in an F-86F Sabre jet. He averaged 612 miles per hour, while flying from Los Angeles, Calif., to New York, N.Y., in 4 hours 8 minutes. (9) (24)
1957: Cessna's model 310 won the competition to provide a light, twin-engine administrative liaison and cargo plane to the Air Force. (5)
1962: PROJECT MULE TRAIN. The first 4 of 16 C-123 assault transports of the 346th Troop Carrier Squadron arrived at Tan Son Nhut AB, S. Vietnam. (17)
1967: OPERATION BOLO. F-4 Phantom pilots from the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing shot down seven North Vietnamese MiG-21s in a sweep mission over the Red River valley to set a one-day aerial victory record. This MiG suppression operation, dubbed the largest air battle of the war, and the most dramatic use of tactical deception, resulted in the downing of the MiGs. In the successful ruse, F-4C pilots simulated Rolling Thunder F-105 strike aircraft to draw the MiGs out. Colonel Robin Olds, the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing Commander, shot down a MiG and became the only USAF ace with aerial victories in World War II and the Vietnam War. (16) (17) (21)
1968: Col Henry Brown and Lt Col Joe B. Jordan became the first USAF pilots to use an F-111A's emergency escape module when their plane crashed near Edwards AFB, Calif. (3)
1980: Through 4 January, two C-141s from the 437th Military Airlift Wing at Charleston AFB, S.C., delivered 700 tents and 1,000 blankets to the homeless on Terceira Island in the Azores following an earthquake. (16)
1994: The F-4G Wild Weasel flew its last combat mission over Southern Iraq.
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