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Thibado steps down as Elmwood Police Chief

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Chief Chris Thibado swearing in Officer Darren Ekholm on December 2, 2024. Submitted photo

with Chris Thibado

ELMWOOD, WI – On December 2, 2024, Officer Darren Ekholm was sworn in as the new full-time officer in the Village of Elmwood by Police Chief, Chris Thibado.

“Darren came to us with over twenty-five years of law enforcement experience,” said Thibado. “Since being hired in December, Darren has forged great relationships in the Village and has continuously excelled in everything he has done. Officer Ekholm plans to continue to grow the department and has no plans to go anywhere.”

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 24, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Sweet Tooth: Knoke’s Chocolates & Nuts – An interview with Dave Knoke (Part II)

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Knoke's homemade sweet treats are just waiting to satisfy your sweet tooth. Submitted photo

Story and photos by Tom Lindfors (Submitted by Amanda Connelly, SCEDC)

HUDSON, WI – This is an interview with the St. Croix County Economic Development Corporation’s (SCEDC) 2024 Small Business of the Year winner “Knoke’s Chocolates & Nuts” owner Dave Knoke.

“If someone else can make a better box of chocolates then buy it, because I think mine are awfully good.” – Dave Knoke

Founder and owner of Knoke’s Chocolates & Nuts, Dave Knoke, is exceptionally proud of the homemade confections and nuts he has been making, tasting and selling for more than 20 years from his shop on Locust Street in Hudson, Wisconsin. Here is the remainder of the interview.

Customers – Knoke is working to increase his online business. He currently derives 65 percent of his business from his retail store, 30 percent from wholesale to retailers like Kowalski’s and area wineries and the balance from online sales. He knows that number can grow.

“We’re still refining the online side. The business is there. We just have to address it more efficiently,” Knoke said.

Technology is not Knoke’s strong suit, so he has a team of younger employees working to improve his website’s commerce capacity while he works out shipping options.

For all practical purposes Knoke has been the face of his business, literally a one-man show, since he took over in 2005. Making candy in the window between visits from neighborly business owners eager to share advice and customers critiquing his concoctions has made him a fixture in the community.

Today that simple act of making candy in the window and connecting with a passersby is translated into short videos posted to social media that draw thousands of views by potential customers.

Knoke learned early to value his customers’ critiques. Listening to them not only improved his products, it helped to build dependable relationships.

“Our customers are our best critics,” Knoke said. “And a lot of those people have stuck with me.”

He recalled an early episode where he was experimenting with dipping apples. The next day he tried one of the apples and found it had hardened too much. Then he remembered, “Oh shoot, I sold some.”

Sure, enough a customer returned that morning and reported, “That apple wasn’t very good.” Knoke acknowledged, “You’re right, it was a little hard…”

Over time Knoke mastered recipes Smith had shared with him and began to experiment with his own including caramels, truffles, turtles and chocolate covered potato chips. He also learned the value of managing the availability of specific sweets, making them more desirable and growing customers’ expectations.

“I don’t do caramel apples until Labor Day weekend, and I’ll dip them until Thanksgiving,” Knoke said. “I only do chocolate covered strawberries during the week of Valentine’s Day. People know to call to reserve their order. I sell over 4,000 strawberries.”

As his reputation for quality candy grew, so did his business.

“One guy can only make so much candy.” Knoke said.

A business he had built from the ground up with his own hands now provided livelihoods for employees. It became more than just his story.

Future – In 2014 Knoke purchased what is now his production facility, an old nut roasting plant on Harvey Street. Today he makes 80-90% of all his products in-house.

When asked about his biggest challenge, Knoke hesitated before saying, “finding a successor.”

He realizes the business is still very dependent on him and his expertise and no one is waiting in the wings at the moment. It is something he is beginning to think about.

He is not ruling out one of his three children taking over the business, but he wants it to be their decision. “I don’t want to force them, and I don’t want them to do it because they feel like they should,” he said. “Growing up as a farm kid in the late seventies I saw too many farmers turn the farm over to the kid and five years later the farm is gone, or the farmer has to step back in.”

Knoke thinks it is more likely one of his employees who has learned the ropes and been a part of growing the business would be mentored to take over the business.

“There’s a process I need to start going through. I need to find a general manager,” Knoke said.

“When I’m done, I’d like to be done with it completely, but hopefully the name sticks.”

In January 2023, Knoke purchased the building that is today synonymous with Knoke’s Chocolates & Nuts, at 218 Locust Street. It resides right between the two buildings previously associated with his business except those were rented. “I think when I purchased the building, I’m in now downtown and I remodeled it and moved in and opened up, it became mine and I felt like I had made it,” Knoke said. “People began to recognize and associate Knoke’s with Hudson.”

One of Knoke’s great joys is seeing a new generation of candy customers come through the door. Parents who were once children buying ice cream at the counter now visit the shop with their own children in tow continuing the Knoke’s tradition.

If you are looking to catch up with Dave, try Sunday afternoons.

“I like coming in on Sundays downtown just to see what’s going on. People stop and just want to talk,” Knoke said. “Pretty soon I’m just in the way. I tell people I’m more of a hindrance than a help.”

Sweet tooth? – “It used to be pretty big but now it’s more about portion control,” Knoke said. “Now one turtle is enough. It used to be two or three or four… I’ve definitely cut back. It’s definitely still there, it’s just matured.”

Just the Facts: Knoke’s Chocolates & Nuts, Dave Knoke – Owner. Formed: 2000. Address

218 Locust St., Hudson, WI 54016 – 715-381-9866. Website: knokeschocolatesandnuts.com. Employees: 20 – Sq. ft. 5,750.

Re-release of Rock Elm history book

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We are very excited to announce a reprint of Lavern Flanders’ book on the history of Rock Elm Township! It goes on sale the weekend of July 25-27 at our History Center in Elmwood. By Julie Huebel

By Julie Huebel, Pierce County Historical Association

ELMWOOD, WI – In all the excitement of preparing for the release of a new book printed by the Pierce County Historical Association, there unfortunately will not be a new installment of the Elmwood alphabet series this week.

The PCHA is very excited to announce a reprint of Lavern Flanders’ book on the history of Rock Elm Township!  It goes on sale the weekend of July 25-27 at our History Center in Elmwood.  This is the weekend of Elmwood’s UFO Days celebration. We will have special hours from 10-6 on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday where you can pick up your copy! The book is also available for purchase during our regular weekly hours on Thursday 12-6 (hours changing to 12-4 in September).  After UFO Days weekend, you will find the book for sale at both of our History Centers in Elmwood and Bay City.  (Refer to our website listed below for details on locations and hours.)

The book has been completely remastered by a team of our volunteers, text retyped, photos rescanned, index created, along with some minor updates in instances where we have access to information that wasn’t known at the time of the first printing.  This reprint has been printed as a hardcover and will be available for purchase for $40.  Later this year, it will become available for purchase from our website store (PierceCountyHistorical.org).

It’s an absolute treasure trove of local history and we are so happy to offer all of Lavern’s research and hard work to the public again after being out of print for decades. By purchasing a copy you are supporting our important mission: “To discover, collect, preserve, and share the heritage of Pierce County.” You can also become a member of the Pierce County Historical Association to help support our ongoing projects.

The Woodville Lions Club July meeting is a hot one at the Jordahl Building

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Woodville Lions Club Past President Jeff Brewer is the Grill Master for the Lions July 2025 meeting. Photo by Paul J. Seeling

WOODVILLE, WI – The Woodville Lions Club held their regular monthly meeting for July at the Jordahl Building in Woodville, and it was a hot one! The temperature was a sizzling 88 degrees at 6:30 p.m. when the Regular Meeting started. There was virtually no breeze to cool the Lions off as the 14 dedicated Woodville Lions gathered outdoors at the Jordahl Building for this traditional summer gathering for a meal of those “World Famous” Lions hamburgers and cheeseburgers.

The Jordahl Building is the storage facility where the Woodville Lions Club keeps their three parade floats, Syttende Mai picnic tables, etc. It is like a large three car garage without any installation, heating or air conditioning. None of the Lions could recall why the July summer meeting was traditionally held there in lieu of the air-conditioned Lions Den (Woodville Community Center); it just is…

Past President Jeff Brewer was the Grill Master while the Board of Directors met. There were cold beverages available for the members who arrived to start the Regular Meeting.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 24, 2025 issue of the Woodville Leader newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Hidden in the Fine Print: Smelter tower’s fate tied to school referendum

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The full smelter operation. Photo courtesy of PCHA

SPRING VALLEY, WI – Standing sentinel over Spring Valley for over a hundred years is a mysterious brick structure – what remains of Spring Valley’s iron industry– a smelter tower.

On Tuesday, July 15, 2025, conversation quickly circulated on social media around the topic of the recent Spring Valley School referendum.

Contained in the forty plus projects outlined in the referendum, funds are earmarked for the removal of the historic smelter tower located on the edge of the football field.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the July 24, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Support for serious illness – palliative care is here to help

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Palliative care can help you improve your quality of life and understand your treatment options. Drawing credit NIH website

From the National Institutes of Health July newsletter

BETHESDA, MD – Being diagnosed with a serious illness is life-changing. Many decisions must be made, with many unknowns. But there are experts who can help you navigate the complicated landscape of a long-term, serious illness. Palliative care specialists focus on comfort care and improving your quality of life during a serious illness.

“Palliative care is a holistic approach to medicine and caregiving,” explains Dr. Matthew DeCamp, a physician at University of Colorado, Anschutz Medical Campus. “It places the patient’s quality of life and needs and values front and center.”

Sometimes, palliative care is confused with hospice care. Both offer comfort care and symptom management. Hospice is a type of palliative care that’s only offered at the end of life. It requires all treatments be stopped. But other types of palliative care can be offered alongside life-saving treatments.

“Embracing palliative care does not mean that you’re giving up on treatment,” says Dr. Alexis Bakos, an aging expert at National Institutes of Health (NIH). “Ideally, palliative care should be offered at the very beginning of a diagnosis of any serious illness.”

What makes an illness “serious?” A high risk of death or one that lowers your quality of life or ability to perform daily tasks. Examples include chronic heart and lung diseases, cancer, neurodegenerative diseases like dementia and Parkinson’s, and many others.

A palliative care team can assist with many aspects of a serious illness. They can help you find ways to cope with physical, psychological, emotional, or spiritual suffering. They can support you with symptom management and assist health care providers in coordinating your care.

The palliative team can also help you create an advance care plan. This describes your wishes for future medical treatments. It includes who you want to make your medical decisions if you’re not able to. The team can also support you with end-of-life care, hospice care, and bereavement if needed.

Making a Plan — “The goal of palliative care is to lessen symptoms and enhance quality of life,” says Dr. Lori Wiener, a palliative care expert for children with cancer at NIH. “And there’s good data to support that early palliative care integration improves health-related quality of life.”

But what makes a better quality of life can be different for everyone. “The palliative care provider will meet with you really early on. They’ll find out about your medical history and the symptoms that are most distressing to you,” says Wiener. “They will learn your preferences for care and communication.” Then, the provider can work with you to make sure your advance care plan reflects your concerns and goals.

“Unfortunately, advance care planning conversations often don’t happen until too late,” Wiener says. “If you wait until you are experiencing a medical crisis or if you are at the end of your life, you don’t really have the time to contemplate what is most important to you.”

Wiener’s team studies ways to help children with cancer communicate their care wishes to their family and health care providers. They’ve created an advance care planning guide, called “Voicing My CHOiCES.” It helps teens and young adults consider and document their values, hopes, and fears.

The team also developed an electronic distress screening tool, called “Checking IN.” This tool assesses what’s most distressing to the child. It asks about symptoms that interfere with their life when they check in to their appointment. Then, it provides a report to the doctor ahead of time. Emotional and physical distress are often missed in children and teens with serious illnesses. Checking IN helps doctors learn about youths’ needs before their visit.

Gaining a Better Understanding — Planning for a serious illness can be complicated. “Patients and families often remain unaware of how their serious illness may progress,” says DeCamp. “They may not know how long they might be expected to live or how long or what types of symptoms they might have. Physicians, nurses, and other members of the care team are also historically not very good at predicting the course of a disease.”

Artificial intelligence (AI) tools have become available to help predict the course of a person’s disease, or prognosis. “Understanding prognosis is one critical piece of information that people need for their future life and care plans,” DeCamp says. “The promise of AI-based tools is that we can make better predictions for clinicians, patients, and families to enable them to get care that’s most consistent with their wishes.”

DeCamp is studying ethical issues around using an AI tool that calculates a “mortality score.” This score estimates a patient’s chance of survival over the next six to 12 months.

Sometimes these scores are automatically included in medical records, DeCamp says. So a patient may accidentally see it when they don’t want to know their chances of survival. Or health care staff may be able to view the scores, despite the families not wanting them to.

Knowing the mortality score has the potential to change how a patient is treated. “If we become overly focused on that number, it could affect how we talk to patients,” DeCamp explains. “It could also affect the way patients and families make decisions versus what palliative care is really about, which is providing care across all of physical, social, psychological, and spiritual needs.”

The accuracy of AI predictions depends on many factors. These include whether the AI was trained using data from people with backgrounds and health conditions like the patient’s. DeCamp’s team is hoping to help address these types of ethical issues as AI tools become more available.

Getting the Help You Need — If you’ve been diagnosed with a serious illness, ask your doctor about pallia-tive care. Some providers may not offer it to you early on. Others may not offer it at all. But your provider may be able to refer you to a palliative care specialist.

“Earlier NIH research was focused on making sure that primary care clinicians were aware of palliative care,” Bakos explains. Now, NIH is looking at how to involve more specialists in palliative care conversations, such as emergency department physicians, neurologists, and intensive care unit providers.

Palliative care can help you improve your quality of life and understand your treatment options. It’s available as soon as you are diagnosed with a serious illness. Learn more about palliative care, go to: nia.nih.gov/health/hospice-and-palliative-care/what-are-palliative-care-and-hospice-care#what-is-palliative-care.

Another fatal two vehicle crash reported in St. Croix County

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Contributed photo

Submitted by Sheriff Scott Knudson, St. Croix County Sheriff’s Office

TOWN OF ERIN PRAIRIE, WI – The St. Croix County Emergency Communication Center received a call at about 6:53 p.m. on Thursday, July 3, 2025, reporting a crash, with injuries, at the intersection of County Trunk Highway (CTH) T and County Trunk Highway G, in Erin Prairie Township, in St. Croix County Wisconsin.

Deputies arrived on scene and located a two-vehicle crash. A 2023 Harley Davidson Motorcycle, operated by Richard A. VanWagner, age 61, from New Richmond, Wisconsin had been traveling northbound through the intersection on CTH T. A 2006 Buick Lacrosse, operated by Cadence T. Miller, age 19, from Roberts, WI was traveling eastbound on CTH G and struck the motorcycle.

Mr. VanWagner had a stop sign on CTH T and failed to yield to traffic that was traveling on CTH G, which had the right of way. He was not wearing a helmet at the time of crash and was taken by ambulance to Regions Hospital in St. Paul, Minnesota.

Ms. Miller was treated at the scene and released. She was wearing a seatbelt at the time of the crash.

On Sunday, July 6, 2025, Richard VanWagner died as a result of the injuries he sustained on July 3.

The St. Croix County Sheriff’s Office was assisted by the New Richmond Fire Department, New Richmond Ambulance and the Wisconsin State Patrol.

This incident represents the sixth traffic fatality recorded by St. Croix County in 2025.

This crash remains under investigation.

DNR rejects 2,000 acres from Ridge Breeze manure spreading plan after public pushback

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This is a picture of the virtual DNR Public Hearing held in Elmwood on July 11, 2024, on the Ridge Breeze Dairy expansion proposal. Photo by Paul J. Seeling

Submitted by Danny Akenson, Field Organizer, GROWW

PIERCE COUNTY, WI – In June of 2025, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) rejected most of a factory farm’s request to spread manure on land in Pierce County. The factory farm, Ridge Breeze Dairy, had submitted over 2,600 acres for approval—but the DNR only approved about 600 acres. This decision came after a public hearing and comment period in March that was attended by Pierce County residents concerned about the harm that could be done to water quality if these acres were approved.

Following the public hearing, the DNR found that some testimony provided warranted further action. In the determination letter for the proposal provided by the DNR, it states “Department and county staff investigated fields that had been identified in the comments as having significant erosion. Approximately 2/3 of the acreage included in the original application was removed or rejected due to erosion and fields not meeting tolerable soil loss.”

“We are glad to see that the DNR took our comments seriously and rejected these problematic fields,” said Danny Akenson, field organizer for Grassroots Organizing Western Wisconsin (GROWW). “It shouldn’t be left up to volunteers and residents to watch after Ridge Breeze in order to protect their water and their homes. If not for the testimonies submitted, these acres could have been rubber stamped. Ridge Breeze needs to be held to a higher standard. They are putting profits over the health and safety of our region.”

A week after the determination, Ridge Breeze resubmitted the fields, claiming the problems had been fixed. Local residents will be requesting a second review of the fields.

GROWW members have been organizing in opposition to Ridge Breeze’s expansion for two years, while calling for more stringent regulations of large corporate agribusiness operations like Ridge Breeze. In April, GROWW, along with five individual Pierce County residents, took legal action to block a DNR permit that would allow Ridge Breeze to expand its herd from 1,700 to more than 6,500 dairy cows. Nonprofit law firm Midwest Environmental Advocates is providing legal representation in the permit challenge.

Meanwhile, GROWW members are also organizing throughout Western Wisconsin to bring local Operations Ordinances to towns in the area. The ordinance addresses various holes in state regulations where factory farms like Ridge Breeze are unregulated. The Town of Maiden Rock passed the ordinance in 2024 and several other local towns are now exploring the ordinance.

GROWW is a grassroots organization based in Western Wisconsin. Together, we work toward a future where we all make ends meet, live with dignity, and have a voice in shaping the decisions that impact us. To get connected or learn more about GROWW, visit us at GRO-WW.org, on Instagram at @GrowWisconsin, or on Facebook at Facebook.com/GROWWisconsin.

Wisconsin Task Force 1 assists in search efforts in Texas

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Gear is loaded on to one of several WEM trailers heading to the Lone Star State. Photo by WEM

Submitted by Wisconsin Emergency Management Public Information Officer

MADISON, WI — Members of Wisconsin’s Urban Search and Rescue Task Force, known as Wisconsin Task Force 1 (WI-TF1), are currently on their way to Texas to assist with search efforts following devastating flooding in portions of the state.

“Wisconsin Task Force 1 brings together individuals from across the state with specialized training and capabilities to support not only our own communities, but also communities experiencing emergencies throughout the country,” said Wisconsin Emergency Management Administrator Greg Engle. “We are a more resilient nation when states support one another during emergencies. Our hearts go out to the families and communities affected by this terrible disaster.”

Five members of WI-TF1 as well as three K9s left Wisconsin Tuesday morning from the Regional All-Climate Training (REACT) Center located at Volk Field in Camp Douglas. The team also brought specialized equipment to assist with search efforts, including a utility all-terrain vehicle and medical supplies.

The task force members are expected to arrive in the Lone Star State on Wednesday. The Texas Division of Emergency Management made the request through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, which is a nationwide mutual aid system. They requested WI-TF1 for 14 days, but the request may be shortened or lengthened based on need.

WI-TF1 includes members from fire departments across the state and limited term employees of the REACT Center. The members that were deployed were from the REACT Center and the Green Bay, Janesville, and Menomonie fire departments.

WI-TF1 is a resource of Wisconsin Emergency Management (WEM), a division of the Wisconsin Department of Military Affairs. The task force is based out of the REACT Center.

You can follow the WI-TF1 mission in Texas on Wisconsin Emergency Management’s social media channels: Facebook (facebook.com/WisconsinEmergencyManagement ), Instagram (instagram.com/wisconsinemergencymanagement), and LinkedIn (linkedin.com/company/wisconsinemergencymanagement).

The ABC’s of Elmwood: S is for…

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Submitted photo

By Julie Huebel, Pierce County Historical Association

People all over the world witnessed a monumental event in medicine and a monumental event in local history back in 1983. A local man underwent open heart surgery on live television that was being broadcast to 90 US cities via their local public television stations and later continued to be shown on television all over the world. A 62-year-old retired insurance salesman, Bernard Schuler, underwent a triple bypass surgery by Dr. Edward Diethrich at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix, Arizona. This was the first open-heart surgery to be shown on live television. I watched an interview that the doctor and local television station did on the 30th anniversary of the surgery, they faced some backlash but still stood by their decision to televise the event to show people they didn’t need to be afraid of having this surgery. So, S is for Schuler.

Bernard “Bernie” Schuler was born in Elmwood in 1920 to Anthony Schuler and Mary Fesenmaier. He grew up in Elmwood, graduating from Elmwood High School in 1938. After school, he enlisted in the U.S. Marines and served in the Pacific Theater of WWII and was awarded two purple hearts. Upon returning to Elmwood, he and Virginia Traynor married in 1945. Bernie and Virgina had two sons, Dan and Jon. He passed away in 2012 at the age of 92, his wife “Ginnie” passing two years earlier.

Bernard’s father, Anthony, was born in Mound, Minnesota in 1885 to Peter, Sr. and Anna. Anthony and Mary married in Dunn County, Wisconsin in June of 1913. On the 1910 census, he was living in Seattle, Washington attending a business college there. He returned to the mid-west and operated the City Bakery in Durand by 1912, then he married, they went back and lived in Washington state for a time, they briefly had a restaurant in Elmwood in 1917, then later opened an insurance agency in Elmwood in 1918.

His first office in Elmwood was the old bank building that was moved to the back of the bank lot when the existing building that houses Citizen’s State Bank was built, he was there until 1921. The office was moved to a couple buildings on Main Street before locating to the building that most know as Schuler Insurance Agency in 1928. The Schuler family has sold the building in recent years with their office in Menmonie. Anthony was very civic-minded, serving on the boards of the: Elmwood School District, Village of Elmwood, Elmwood Fire Department, Elmwood’s Catholic Church, and on the Pierce County Board. He retired in 1953, passing away only two years later at age 69. He is buried in the Elmwood Catholic Cemetery at Farmhill. His son’s Bernard and Robert took over the family business.

Anthony’s father, Peter, was born in Pennsylvania about 1853. His parents were both from Germany and settled in Minnetrista Township, Hennepin County, MN. In 1870, he was 19 living in Minnetrista Township (near St. Bonifacius) with parents Lucas and Mary. He married Anna Feiereker the following year. Peter shows as owning land on the 1879 atlas. In 1880, Peter was farming and married with four of Anthony’s older siblings according to the federal census. On the 1898 atlas, Peter is farming on 231 acres in Minnetrista Township, just south of Whaletail Lake. The brick farmhouse still seems to be standing along with an older style barn.

Peter’s father, Lucas, was born in Germany in 1811, he married Anna Maria Altmeyer in 1846, about a year after her first husband died. They were living in Butler County, PA in 1850 farming. He died in 1892 at age 80 and is buried in Saint Bonifacius Catholic Cemetery in Hennepin County, MN.

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