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Proposal on campus faith groups restricting membership up to Brownback

image KSU
image KSU

MELISSA HELLMANN, Associated Press

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Kansas lawmakers have approved a long-delayed proposal allowing faith-based groups on college campuses to restrict their membership to like-minded people.

The Republican-controlled House voted 81-41 on Wednesday to send the bill to Gov. Sam Brownback, a strong supporter of religious rights. The conservative Republican hasn’t said whether he’ll sign the bill.

Supporters say it’s a victory for the freedom to exercise religious beliefs, but opponents say it’s a veiled attempt to legalize discrimination.

The bill stems from a handful of on-campus incidents, including a lawsuit filed by a Christian group after Washburn University said the group couldn’t require that student members recognize the Bible, not the Book of Mormon, as the word of God. The issue emerged after a Mormon student was forbidden from leading the group’s Bible study.

Video reviewed of attacker accused of shouting ‘Trump’ at Kan. gas station

image from Wichita Police store video
image from Wichita Police store video

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Wichita police are reviewing video from a gas station where two college students say they were attacked by a white man shouting racial epithets and the name of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump.

Lt. Jeff Gilmore says the video provides a view of the weekend altercation that’s being investigated as a potential hate crime. The Wichita Eagle reports that police aren’t immediately able to determine the accused attacker’s identity.

Wichita State University student body vice president Khondoker Usama, who’s Muslim, says he was pushed and that a Hispanic friend was punched and kicked. A police report says the friend suffered a bruised lip. Usama says a black customer also was called a racial epithet.

Usama says the man left on his motorcycle, after circling and shouting Trump’s name.

2 adults, child hospitalized after vehicle rolls in Sheridan County

KHPSHERIDAN COUNTY- Three people were injured in an accident just before 3p.m. on Wednesday in Sheridan County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol a 2005 Ford Escape driven by Corbin S. Sherlock, 27, St. Francis, was northbound on Kansas 23 five miles south of Dresden.

The vehicle went off the roadway to the right.

The driver overcorrected and the vehicle traveled left of center went off the road overturned and rolled.

Sherlock and passengers Esther M. Confer, 72, and Kelynn Jacobs, 12, both of St. Francis, were transported to the Sheridan County Health Complex.

All three were properly restrained at the time of he accident, according to the KHP.

Police: 3 arrested at Salina motel after tip from the public

Sarah Miller
Sarah Miller

SALINA- Law enforcement authorities in Saline County are investigating 3 suspects on drug charges.

A tip from the public led Drug Task Force agents to the room of Sarah Miller, 32, Salina, at the Super 8 Motel, 705 W. Schilling, according to Lt. Bill Cox, Commander of the I-135/I-70 Drug Task Force.

After Miller gave agents consent to search the room, they discovered about a half an ounce of methamphetamine along packaging materials and scales.

Cox said police also arrested two others in the room that were also found to be in possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

29-year-old Cory Berens and 25-year-old Elizabeth Berens were booked in the Saline County Jail on requested charged of possession of methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

Elizabeth Berens
Elizabeth Berens

Miller was booked into jail on requested charges of drug possession with intent to sell and drug paraphernalia possession. She was also booked on requested charges stemming from a previous case.

Puppy stolen from backyard kennel; public’s help sought

shortstop missing dog 2
Ten-week-old ShortStop was stolen from her backyard kennel Tuesday night.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

Rhian Herl was not expecting the silence that greeted her when she went into her Hays backyard late Tuesday night to bring her young puppy into the house.

“I got home from work about 10:30 p.m. My roommate told me she hadn’t brought ShortStop in yet, so I went out to the kennel,” Herl said Wednesday afternoon.

“I made a joke on the way out that ‘someone probably stole her as quiet as she is being’ because she loves to talk.”

It turned out not to be a joke.

shortstop missing dog 4 with Rhian
Rhian Herl and her Husky puppy ShortStop, who was stolen from her backyard kennel in Hays Tuesday night.

“The kennel was locked up as normal, but no puppy,” Herl said. “We discovered there was no hole or spot she could have escaped from and immediately called the Hays Police Department.” The Humane Society of the High Plains is also on the lookout for ShortStop, she added.

Herl and her roommate figured ShortStop, a 10-week-old white purebred female Husky, was taken from her kennel between 5 and 8 p.m. Tuesday, March 15, in their backyard, 217 W. 6th Street.

shortstop missing dog 3ShortStop has a dark stripe down her back and tail and blue eyes. “She responds well to her name and loves people,” Herl wrote in “Missing Puppy” posters she’s distributed around town. ShortStop is not wearing any collar or tags. “We took them off so she wouldn’t chew on them in the kennel like she does,” explained Herl.

If you have any information about the puppy’s whereabouts, call Herl at (785) 259-3840.

Investigation of alleged Great Bend school bus assault not a predictable process

courtesy photo
courtesy photo

GREAT BEND -On March 3rd, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation informed the Barton County Sheriff’s Office that the Bureau had declined participation in the investigation into an alleged battery that occurred February 3rd on a Great Bend High School activity bus.

The KBI cited excessive caseload due to the shooting incident in Hesston, as well as a substantial current caseload.

“The school bus investigation is a high priority for the sheriff’s office and we are in the process of interviewing witnesses,” said Barton County Sheriff Brian Bellendir. “We are working to get all the information.”

The alleged assault was initially reported to the Saline County Sheriff, but their investigation showed that the incident was believed to have occurred in Barton County.

“This is not a short or predictable process,” said Bellendir. “The investigation is going to go where the investigation goes and if we have to follow more leads it will take longer,” he said.

As for an alleged assault that took place on an activities bus on February 6th, that case is now in the hands of the Ellsworth County Attorney.

Ellsworth County Sheriff Tracy Ploutz’s investigation into that incident resulted with four victims of battery, five suspects committing the battery, two victims of criminal restraint, and three suspects for the criminal restraint but no suspects of sexual assault.

The Ellsworth County Attorney says he has not filed charges yet and doesn’t know if or when they could be filed.

Gladys Marie Jacobs

Gladys Marie Jacobs, Quinter, was called home by the Lord, on Monday, Mar. 14, 2016 at the age of 86.  She was born Gladys Goetz in Victoria, KS, on Oct. 2, 1929.

She was preceded in death by her husband of 51 years, Gilbert “Gib” Jacobs.  She was a loving mother of six children:  Jim (Sandy) of Phillipsburg, Doug (Carole) of Garden City, Mike (Stacia) of Belvidere, Norma Jean  of Hays, Mark of Victoria, and Matt (Terra) of Florence, KY.  She was a devoted grandmother of eleven grandchildren, Jari, Kellen, and Jennifer; Travis, Brandi, and Vaska; Danielle, Joshua, Tanner, Gunner, and Hunter; and at last count, nine great grandchildren, with more on the way.

Her house was open to all, and thus she considered several others as her own.  Loving, loyal, accountable, responsible and protective of all, earned her the nickname of “Bear” one of the original “Momma Grizzlies”.  She will be remembered and missed.

Gladys was a graduate of Victoria High School and Fort Hays State.  She was a high school English teacher, and a religious educator at St. Michael Catholic church in Collyer.

Her family extends their sincerest thanks for everyone who was a part of her life…

Funeral Mass and the Rite of Christian Burial will be Saturday, March 19, 2016 at 10:30 St. Michael Catholic Church, in Collyer.

Visitation will be from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m., with a parish vigil and rosary starting at 7:00 p.m., all at the funeral home in Quinter.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to Developmental Services of Northwest Kansas (DSNWK), or Jay Johnson Public Library.  Donations made to the organization may be sent to Schmitt Funeral Home, 901 South Main, Quinter, KS  67752.

Condolences may be sent to the family online at www.schmittfuneral.com.

More discussion on consolidating Kansas school districts

Sen. Steve Fitzgerald
Sen. Steve Fitzgerald

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — A Republican state senator is suggesting that Kansas move to consolidate public school districts as it works to make education funding fairer.

Sen. Steve Fitzgerald of Leavenworth raised the issue Wednesday during a committee hearing on a bill to redistribute $39 million during the 2016-17 school year to help poor districts.

The bill is a response to a Kansas Supreme Court ruling last month that the state has been unfairly shorting poor school districts on their aid.

A district’s wealth has been measured by its average property value per student. If a small district loses a few students, its wealth can appear to rise significantly.

Fitzgerald said the situation would be less volatile with fewer large school districts. The state now has 286 districts.

Meanwhile, Kansas Senate Ways and Means Committee’s chairman says he hopes a school funding bill will clear the Legislature by the end of next week.

Republican Sen. Ty Masterson of Andover said Wednesday that lawmakers need to respond quickly to a Kansas Supreme Court decision last month.

The court said the state was shorting poor school districts on their state aid. The justices ordered a fix by June 30 and threatened to keep schools closed unless lawmakers meet the deadline.

Masterson drafted a plan to redistribute $39 million among school districts for the 2016-17 school year.

Under new rule, man resentenced in fatal Kansas shooting

Baker- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections
Baker- photo Kan. Dept. of Corrections

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A man has been resentenced to seven years and eight months in prison in an October 2010 shooting that killed one man and injured another in Kansas City, Kansas.

The Wyandotte County prosecutor’s office announced Tuesday that Terran J. Baker also was ordered earlier this month to register as a violent offender upon his release and pay $5,000 in restitution.

The new prison term is 10 months shorter than what he was sentenced to in 2012 after pleading guilty to voluntary manslaughter in the death of Bernard Love and aggravated battery.

Baker sought relief under a new rule of criminal history classification, and a three judge panel ruled in December that Baker must be resentenced.

Sen. Roberts, others react to Obama’s Supreme Court nomination

Screen Shot 2016-03-16 at 9.43.04 AMWASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Pat Roberts (R-Kan.) on Wednesday was critical of President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to be justice of the United States Supreme Court:

“By nominating a replacement for Justice Scalia, President Obama is attempting to deny the American people a voice on the next Supreme Court justice.

The next justice will have an effect on the courts for decades to come and should not be rushed through by a lame-duck president during an election year. This is not about the nominee, it is about giving the American people and the next president a role in selecting the next Supreme Court justice.”

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders is calling Judge Merrick Garland a strong nominee for the Supreme Court and arguing that refusing to hold hearings for his nomination would be unprecedented.

President Barack Obama nominated Garland for the high court on Wednesday. Garland is the chief judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. The Republican-led Senate must confirm his nomination to the court.

In a statement, Sanders notes that the 63-year-old Garland has decades of experience on the bench. Sanders says Obama has done his job by nominating Garland and that Senate Republicans now must do theirs.

Sanders is calling on Republicans to hold confirmation hearings and bring the nomination to the floor of the Senate if Garland is approved by the Judiciary Committee.

___

1:45 p.m.

Some advocacy groups on both sides of the political spectrum are taking issue with President Barack Obama’s nominee to serve on the Supreme Court.

The committee responsible for helping GOP candidates win their Senate races, the National Republican Senatorial Committee, describes federal appeals court judge Merrick Garland as a “liberal, an activist and one of Obama’s most reliable allies in the judicial system.”

A group that backs candidates who oppose abortion rights, the Susan B. Anthony List, says it doesn’t know Garland but knows that anyone Obama nominates will join the voting bloc on the court that consistently upholds abortion on demand.

Some groups are saying Garland isn’t liberal enough. A group started by former Gov. Howard Dean, Democracy for America, says it’s deeply disappointed that Obama didn’t add “another progressive woman of color to the court.” Instead, the group says, Obama’s pick seems designed to appease intransigent Republicans rather than inspire the grassroots.

___

1:25 p.m.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich says President Barack Obama should not rush to nominate a Supreme Court justice because of the “polarization” in Congress.

Speaking to a crowd at Villanova University, the Republican presidential candidate said Wednesday that the president shouldn’t “stiff the legislative body” by rushing to a decision that isn’t in the country’s best interest.

Said Kasich: “If I think I’m gonna blow something up in the seventh year, I’m not gonna do it.”

___

12:50 p.m.

Hillary Clinton says Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland has a “brilliant legal mind and a long history of bipartisan support and admiration” and it’s up to the Senate to perform their Constitutional duty “they swore to undertake.”

Clinton says the confirmation of a justice “should not be an exercise in political brinkmanship and partisan posturing.” She says it’s a “serious obligation” that doesn’t depend “on the party affiliation of a sitting president, nor does the Constitution make an exception to that duty in an election year.”

She notes the Senate has never taken more than 125 days to vote on a Supreme Court nominee and Garland deserves a “full and fair hearing followed by a vote.”

___

11:55 a.m.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says the American people must have a voice in November on filling the Supreme Court vacancy.

In a speech on the Senate floor on Wednesday, the Kentucky Republican made it clear that the GOP-led Senate will not consider President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, but will wait until after the next president is in place.

McConnell said the view of the GOP is “give the people a voice in the filling of this vacancy.”

Democrats and the White House are pressuring the GOP to act. Obama, in announcing his nominee, said Garland would be making the customary visit to Capitol Hill to meet with senators on Thursday. The Senate is planning a two-week break at the end of the week.

__

11:50 a.m.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley isn’t swayed by President Barack Obama’s pick for a Supreme Court nominee.

President Barack Obama nominated appeals court judge Merrick Garland to replace Justice Antonin Scalia, who died last month. Senate Republicans have said for weeks that they won’t hold a hearing or a vote on Obama’s nominee.

In a statement issued just after Garland spoke in the White House Rose Garden, Republican Grassley said “a lifetime appointment that could dramatically impact individual freedoms and change the direction of the court for at least a generation is too important to get bogged down in politics.”

He said this year is an opportunity for the country to have an honest debate about the role of the Supreme Court.

___

11:45 a.m.

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid evoked Republican front-runner Donald Trump in calling on Republicans to consider the nomination of Merrick Garland for the Supreme Court.

In a statement Wednesday, Reid said Trump had called on the GOP to block the nominee. The Nevada Democrat says Republicans face a choice of “blindly taking their marching orders from Donald Trump, or doing their jobs and providing fair consideration to this highly-qualified nominee.”

Despite unified opposition to considering any nominee in an election year, Reid said he was optimistic that “cooler heads will prevail” and “sensible Republicans” will treat Garland fairly

__

11:35 a.m.

Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland says fidelity to the law and the Constitution has been the cornerstone of his professional life. He’s promising to bring that same principle to the high court if confirmed.

Garland was visibly emotional as he accepted President Barack Obama’s nomination in the White House Rose Garden with his family watching. He says being nominated by President Barack Obama is the greatest honor of his life, other than marrying his wife. He says there could be no higher public service in his view.

Garland says judges must put aside their personal views and preferences, and follow the law instead of making it. He says that’s a hallmark of the judge he’s tried to be for the last 18 years.

Garland is currently the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

__

11:25 a.m.

President Barack Obama says allowing the Supreme Court confirmation process to become an extension of the presidential race would be wrong. He says that would betray America’s best traditions.

Obama is urging Senate Republicans to grant hearings and a confirmation vote to Merrick Garland, Obama’s nominee to replace the late Justice Antonin Scalia. He says if they don’t, it would be an abdication for the Senate’s constitutional duty and would show the nominating process is “beyond repair.”

Obama says the Supreme Court is supposed to be above politics.

The president says Garland will travel to Capitol Hill on Thursday to meet one-on-one with senators.

 

SCHROCK: Should parents dictate school content?

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

Aside from blatantly attempting to shut down sex education through “opt-in,” Kansas HB2199 poses an interesting question: “To what extent should parents control the content taught in public schools?”

This bill requires school districts to “…provide all instructional materials on human sexuality, including any teaching plans and syllabi to any parent or legal guardian who requests such materials before such parent or legal guardian makes a decision of whether or not to allow such student to be provided such instruction.”

So why shouldn’t ALL school materials require parent approval before they are taught in the classroom?

I taught for my first five years in Kentucky where the local dialect used “Hit hain’t got no…” for “it doesn’t have any….” As teachers, one of our important roles was to help our students rise above the local grammar or they would not have much chance to succeed in society. We likewise are professionally responsible for increasing our students’ abilities in reading, science, art, music, social studies and math beyond the level of their parents.

If you think that only backwoods Kentucky might have low expectations for academics, consider the statement in the Hugoton USD application for hiring unqualified teachers under the CISD system: “The subject of math is an excellent example of how a teacher in Kansas virtually has to have a Ph.D. in math to earn highly qualified status at the high school level.” Kansas standards for math teachers do require more math than the average parent understands, but it is hardly Ph.D. level. The failure of that school’s leadership to understand the academic level in modern math reflects how 1800’s thinking survives today.

hb 2199Of course, HB2199 is narrowly targeted at sex education, assuming that a parent’s knowledge in this field is “gud enuff.” But unless a child’s parent is a medical doctor specializing in neuro-hormonal pathology, that is no longer the case. Our 21st Century understanding of basic human reproductive biology has gone way beyond lessons in “simple plumbing.” With one-couple-out-of-seven infertile, far more detailed reproductive knowledge is critical in this modern era of infertility treatments and obstetric procedures. Sometimes there is ambiguity in anatomy and the doctor cannot say “It’s a boy” or “It’s a girl.” Usually XY chromosomes result in a male and XX chromosomes cause a female; but there are variations from XO to XXY, XXYY etc. Sometimes an XY person has female anatomy while another XX person appears male. This is science that few parents know.

I remember my parents marveling at the new things I was learning in middle school in the 1950s that they had never been taught. That was an age when door-to-door surveys revealed that everyone thought tomorrow would be better than today, because today was better than yesterday. And we expected that our children would have a better life than us. That drive forward was propelled by ever-advancing education.
But today, surveys show that we believe tomorrow will not be better for us or our children. And the HB2199 fig leaf bill is an endorsement of an earlier century of ignorance.

In all public school classes, teachers require student “understanding,” not “belief.” It is important for our next generation to understand concepts even if they do not accept them.

For parents who want their child to remain ignorant about human sexuality, they already have several mechanisms to remove their student without denying the subject to other students. Local school districts are already required to offer parents either opt-out or opt-in for sex education in health. It is a local school board decision. HB2199 takes away that local control and mandates opt-in at the state level.
For those parents who have an objection to their child taking ANY course work that contradicts their religious beliefs, they can always exercise their religious “opt-out” provided by K.S.A. 72-1111(f).

House Bill 2199 is a bad bill. “Opt-in” shuts down coursework for all students, not just opt-out students. Not only is it not necessary, it is a step back in time reinforcing the ignorance of a prior century.

Media Study students from FHSU Informatics Dept. take 10 firsts, 2 seconds in statewide contest

Digital media students from the Department of Informatics at Fort Hays State University grabbed ten 1st place awards and two 2nd place awards during the annual student media competition sponsored by the Kansas Association of Broadcasters.

Students submitted their projects online, and they were judged online by various judges across the state. The winners will receive their awards at the KAB seminar and awards ceremony on April 5 at the Emporia State University Memorial Union.

Todd Elsen, executive producer of the Tiger Media Network, which is the converged outlet for digital media at Fort Hays State, said the student winners were rewarded in the annual competition for their hard work and dedication. The students participated in a contest where the entrants came from universities and community colleges in Kansas, including the University of Kansas, Kansas State University and all the other universities in the Kansas Board of Regents system.

“Students from the Digital Media Program in the FHSU Department of Informatics have a proud history of performing well in the annual KAB competition,” he said. “Student participation and improvement has been dramatic since 2013, when they grabbed one 1st place, one 2nd place, and three honorable mentions. This year the dramatic improvement continues despite multiple program and faculty changes, with a dozen 1st and 2nd place showings. The Digital Media students continue to excel at their craft and show that Fort Hays State University is a destination of choice.”

This year’s award winners from Fort Hays State:

  • 1st Place, DJ Personality for Radio or News Anchor for TV, DJ Tank Show, Tim Abrams. Abrams, a Derby junior, is in his first year at Fort Hays State after transferring from Butler County Community College, where he started the DJ Tank Show. He is also one of the creators and host of the The Wave, FHSU’s local artist music program that airs on TMN TV and online.
  • 1st Place, Station Promotion Announcement, The Wave, Season 2 Premiere, Ricky Kerr. Kerr, a Wichita junior, is one of the creators and producers of The Wave.
  • 1st Place, Sports Play-by-Play, FHSU v. SBU Women, Tiger Sports Network Production Team. The Tiger Sports Network Production Team produced FHSU football and basketball this season and just returned from the MIAA Tournament in Kansas City, where they produced the pregame, halftime, postgame and press conferences that were streamed live to the world via the Internet.
  • 1st Place, Entertainment Program, Local Spice Episode 1, Sake 2 Me Sushi, Cooper Slough and Kaycee Beilman. Slough, a Goodland junior, and Beilman, a Hays senior, created Local Spice with the goal to focus on the food scene in Hays and the surrounding area.
  • 1st Place, 60 Second Commercial, PSA or non-commercial donor announcement, Kansas CASA with Bill Snyder, Tyler Parks. In addition to his work on this project, Parks, an Elkhart graduate student, has led and directed the Tiger Sports Network production team.
  • 1st Place, Station Promotion Announcement, Mineral Water Bowl, Tyler Parks.
  • 1st Place, Complete Sports Feature, Transfers (FHSU Football), Tyler Parks.
  • 1st Place, Sportscast, FHSU vs. UCM, Feb. 4, 2016, Tyler Parks.
  • 1st Place, DJ Personality for Radio or News Anchor for TV, KAB Anchor Performance, Garrett Sager. Sager, a Salina graduate student, has been a play-by-play announcer and color analyst for the Tiger Sports Network for the past several years.
  • 1st Place, Sports Play by Play, UCO vs FHSU, Garrett Sager.
  • 2nd Place, 30 Second Commercial, PSA or non-commercial donor announcement, Voting, Ricky Kerr. 2nd Place, Complete Sports Feature, “The Return of Craig Nicholson,” Garrett Sager.

Slough, Kerr, Sager, Abrams and Beilman are part time Eagle Communication employees.

HPD Activity Log March 15

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The Hays Police Department responded to 8 animal calls and 8 traffic stops Tuesday, March 15, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Unwanted Person–500 block W 7th St, Hays; 12:42 AM
Credit Card Violations–4300 block Vine St, Hays; 2/24 1:43 AM
Runaway Juvenile–1300 block Haney Dr, Hays; 12 AM; 12:30 AM
Drug Offenses–200 block E 25th St Ter, Hays; 6:52 AM
Theft of Vehicle–2800 block Indian Trl, Hays; 3/11 12 PM; 3/14 5 PM
Missing Person–1400 block E 29th St, Hays; 10:45 AM
Criminal Trespass–2500 block Vine St, Hays; 11:35 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–300 block W 16th St, Hays; 11:41 AM
Animal At Large–15th St and Marjorie Dr, Hays; 11:59 AM
Lost Animals ONLY–300 block W 12th St, Hays; 12 PM
Intoxicated Subject–2700 block Plaza Ave, Hays; 12:15 PM
Civil Dispute–1700 block Henry Dr, Hays; 1:33 PM
Probation/Parole Violation–100 block W 12th St, Hays; 2:29 PM
Abandoned Vehicle–500 block W 17th St, Hays; 2:32 PM
Found/Lost Property–2200 block Downing Ave, Hays; 3:09 PM
Animal At Large–400 block W 18th St, Hays; 4 PM
Mental Health Call–3700 Fairway Dr, Hays; 4:13 PM
Animal At Large–3700 block JP Dr, Hays; 4:20 PM
Civil Dispute–Hays; 4:22 PM
Civil Dispute–3000 block Indian Trl, Hays; 7:46 PM
Drug Offenses–2500 block Vine St, Hays; 9:05 PM; 9:10 PM
Theft (general)–200 block W 6th St, Hays; 4:50 PM; 10:55 PM

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