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59 Sentences With "employes"

How to use employes in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "employes" and check conjugation/comparative form for "employes". Mastering all the usages of "employes" from sentence examples published by news publications.

According to its website, SpaceX employes more than 6,000 people.
This actually isn't the most unusual item employes have come across while sorting donations, Boury said.
Cadwalader Jones Tells Him He'll Regret the Day / Employes Appear to Vote / Both Sides Say Meeting Was Packed — Haines Must Go or the Society Collapse, Reformers Declare.
The company has about 58,000 employes in China, compared to 100,013 in the United States, although its US employment level is significantly lower than it once was.
This way, the manager gets a chance to learn alongside everyone else, and the other employes aren't distracted from their work with requests to do the heavy lifting.
The company I was working for was doing many of the things that are being requested of the Vegandale businesses now… What they were doing was offering their employes just living wages, I was getting paid $10 an hour plus tips, locally sourced goods, and over 60 percent of employees were from Parkdale.
The Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes (BMWE) – later to become the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes Division of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (BMWED) – is a national union representing the workers who build and maintain the tracks, bridges, buildings and other structures on the railroads of the United States.
Kearney, Richard C. and Carnevale, David G. Labor Relations in the Public Sector. 3rd ed. New York: CRC Press, 2001. Railway Employes' Dept. v.
Greyston has a social worker on-site to assist employes solve problems, such as transportation issues, child care, and housing, which may interfere with their work.
"Missing Rainier Employes Return." Ellensburg Daily Record, August 17, 1946. In 1910, a USGS crew made the first recorded summit of the peaks.Nelson, Jim, and Potterfield, Peter.
"'Charge It' on the KATY!". KATY Employes' Magazine February 1947 pp.[2]-[3], 15. Beginning in 1954 the New Haven Railroad offered its own credit card, the New Haven Railroad Rail Charge Card.
"The Ranier National Park Branch." The Milwaukee Employes' Magazine (sic), June: 12–15. Page 12. After his early activity in Wisconsin, Bagley was active in Washington and later became president of the Tacoma Eastern Railroad.
The design employes a number of other decorative elements, including a Lombard band, blinded arcades, decorative brickwork and two coats of arms. The complex was listed in the Danish registry of protected buildings and places in 1989.
But the decline of the railroads left the RLEA's member unions with fewer and fewer members. The AFL- CIO disbanded its Railway Employes Department in October 1980.AFL-CIO. Proceedings of the 14th Constitutional Convention of the AFL-CIO.
Fronius employes more than 5,400 people worldwide in 2020. In addition to the company's headquarter in Pettenbach and other sites in Wels, Thalheim, Sattledt and Steinhaus, Fronius also has a production site in the Czech Republic. Fronius also has 34 subsidiaries.
But the strike and dissatisfaction with CSEA's leadership led some CSEA members to ask for representation by SEIU. With Hardy's strong backing, the union was able to gather enough signatures on petitions to trigger a vote in two of the four units where workers were represented by CSEA, but SEIU lost the vote by a 3-to-1 margin in December 1972.Stetson, "State Employes Will Vote This Week," New York Times, December 3, 1972; Johnson, "State Institutional Employes to Stay in Civil Service Union," New York Times, December 9, 1972; "State's Professional Aides Vote to Retain Association," New York Times, December 10, 1972.
In 1967, it changed names again to the "Brotherhood of Railway, Airline, Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employes", commonly known as BRAC. Finally, in 1987, after absorbing members from a half dozen other unions that merged with BRAC, the organization adopted its current name.
Stakeholders of HIIG is the Stifting Internet und Gesellschaft which consists of a foundation council and an executive committee. HIIG is led by five directors. Post-docs, doctoral candidates, associate researchers, guest researchers and scientific employes research at HIIG. The Management is led by Karina Preiß since the founding of HIIG.
WaferTech, a subsidiary of TSMC, is a pure-play semiconductor foundry located in Camas, Washington, USA. It is the second largest pure-play foundry in the United States. The facility employs 1100 workers. The largest is GlobalFoundries Fab 8 in Malta, NY, which employes over 3,000 workers with over under rooftop.
The area of the ancient developed into one of the most densely populated districts (abitato) of Rome since the early Middle Ages. The maze of narrow alleys was criss-crossed by three narrow thoroughfares: the (lit. "papal road"), ihnabited by curial employes the (lit. "pilgrims' road") artisan and business road and the (lit.
With Hardy's strong backing, the newly formed union was able to gather enough signatures on petitions to trigger a representational vote in two of the four units where workers were represented by CSEA, but SEIU lost the vote by a 3-to-1 margin in December 1972.Stetson, "State Employes Will Vote This Week," New York Times, December 3, 1972; Johnson, "State Institutional Employes to Stay in Civil Service Union," New York Times, December 9, 1972; "State's Professional Aides Vote to Retain Association," New York Times, December 10, 1972. A second strike planned by CSEA leaders was called off after delegates overwhelmingly repudiated a strike resolution supported by the union's leaders.Carroll, "State Workers Postpone Strike After Rift Develops," New York Times, April 1, 1975.
Johns Manville suppressed the report. From approximately 1930-1950, attorney Vandiver Brown handled involvement in such lawsuits. Files and testimony alleged that "[Johns-Manville] maintained a policy into the 1970s of not telling its employes that their physical examinations showed signs of asbestosis". In 1943 Johns Manville suppressed a report confirming the link between asbestos and cancer.
In 1880, Marguerite changed the company to a société en commandite, or a partnership with her top managers that continued the "family" nature of the Bon Marché even after her death. With no heirs, Marguerite willed her fortune to the employes of the Bon Marche and her social works, including a hospital and a home for unwed mothers.
Zona Maie Griswold was born in Mulhall, Oklahoma and raised in Dallas, Texas,"Zona Maie Griswold" Music News (May 25, 1917): 27. the daughter of John Nelson Griswold and Florence Belle Young Griswold. Her father worked as a railroad freight agent;"Made Traffic Manager" Santa Fe Employes' Magazine (April 1910): 64. her mother was a song composer.
14, pages 552–555. and in the succeeding year devised a method of testing the mirror of a reflecting telescope to determine its shape.L. Foucault (1858) "Description des procédés employes pour reconnaitre la configuration des surfaces optiques" (Description of the methods used to recognize the configuration of optical surfaces), Comptes rendus ... , vol. 47, pages 958–959.
In 1890, the Western Salt Company put down its first shaft to mine salt in Lyons.One of World's Largest Salt Producting Centers on Frisco Lines at Lyons, Kansas; The Frisco Employes' Magazine; November 1926. In the 1970s, the federal government was interested in using a local site for the burial of high-level nuclear waste.Brown, Taylor Kate.
Implementation of the contract was rocky. Workers engaged in several job actions (such as work slow-downs) before receiving their raises in March 1940."Mackay Messages Subject to Delays," New York Times, January 31, 1940; "Mackay Service Back to Normal," New York Times, February 2, 1940; "Mackay Employes Get Pay Rise," New York Times, March 23, 1940. ARTA workers struck again at Mackay Radio in 1948.
"Don't Blink: You Might Miss Changes in Umbrella Groups." Journal of Commerce. May 12, 1994. The RLEA still represented the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes, the American Train Dispatchers unit of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen, the Sheet Metal Workers International Association, the United Association (which represented boilermakers), the International Association of Fire Fighters, and UNITE HERE (representing railroad restaurant employees).
U.S. District Court Judge James R. Miller, Jr. ruled in favor of Beck and the 19 other co-plaintiffs in March 1983.Beck, 487 U.S. at 740. Beck et al. claimed that CWA had not only breached its duty of fair representation but had also violated the agency fee payers' First Amendment rights as enunciated by the Supreme Court in Railway Employes' Dept. v. Hanson.
Group portrait of the Victorian branch executive of the union, taken in 1919 The Federation (originally the Federated Millers and Mill Employes' Association) was formed as a result of a meeting in Adelaide in May 1910. At the first annual meeting held in Melbourne in March 1911, the following officers were elected: President, Mr. T. Drum (N.S.W.); vice- president, Mr. W. Bain (S.A.); general secretary, Mr. G. Lewis (N.
The National Labor Relations Act, as amended, allows unions to require that non-union members pay agency fees to cover collective bargaining costs and prevent free rider problems. The Supreme Court has ruled in a number of cases that requiring non-members to pay agency fees is both constitutional and legal, provided a number of conditions are met. In Railway Employes' Dept. v. Hanson, 351 U.S. 225 (1956).
Several rail labor unions objected to the criteria, going so far as to picket the award ceremonies. Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes (BMWE) General Chairman Paul Beard created the "Harassment Award" as a satire of the Harriman Awards to raise awareness of management practices that bred intimidation and disciplinary actions against reporting accidents. In 1999 the FRA invited discussions with representatives of rail labor unions to discuss the problem.
DataArt employes over 3000 people in 20 locations in the US, Europe, and Latin America. DataArt’s development offices are located in: Russia (Saint Petersburg, Voronezh), Ukraine (Kyiv, Lviv, Kharkiv, Dnipro, Odessa, Kherson), Poland (Wroclaw, Lublin), Bulgaria (Sofia), Argentina (Buenos Aires). The company is headquartered in New York. Sales & representative offices of the company are located in: United States (New York City, Dallas, Pittsfield), United Kingdom (London), Europe (Munich, Germany and Zug, Switzerland), Armenia (Yerevan).
The studio cast Googie Withers to star; she had been a hit in Pink String and Sealing Wax. Lead roles were given to Australians John McCallum, who had been put under long-term contract to Rank, and Chips Rafferty, who had just starred in The Overlanders for Ealing. The casting of Withers and Kent was announced in July 1946.DISNEY DROPS 459 OF 1,073 EMPLOYES: New York Times 30 July 1946: 31.
The plane struck the power line, turned a loop and crashed almost nose first into the ground. It made a hole three feet deep in the earth. A huge ball of fire burst from the ship and in a second it was a mass of flames, easily seen from the Cheyenne airport where employes [sic] had been watching the plane. Before aid could reach the two lieutenants they were burned to death.
The union was founded in 1899 by 33 railroad clerks meeting in Sedalia, Missouri, who formed an organization named the "Order of Railroad Clerks of America". The organization renamed itself the "Brotherhood of Railway Clerks", in line with other railway "brotherhoods" of the time. With that name, it took part in the Illinois Central shopmen's strike of 1911. In 1919, it renamed itself the "Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employes" to reflect its broadened jurisdiction.
Structured like an association rather than a union, CSEA hesitated to engage in militant labor action or strike, and yet it had a rocky relationship with the state: The union struck for two days at the beginning of April 1972Clarity, "State Employes Begin a Walkout," New York Times, April 1, 1972. and won a 5.5 percent pay hike.Clarity, "State Strike Ends As Workers Win Raise and Bonus," New York Times, April 3, 1972. But the strike and dissatisfaction with CSEA's leadership led some CSEA members to ask for representation by SEIU.
Scalise struck all buildings and hotels around Grand Central Station and Times Square on March 10 (adding another 300 buildings to those struck, bringing the total to more than 2,500). The strike's expansion proved too much for the employers,"All-Night Parley On Strike Brings Agreement Nearer," New York Times, March 12, 1936. and an agreement on the union's terms was reached on March 14."Service Strike Is Settled By the Mayor's New Board," New York Times, March 15, 1936; "Service Employes Back On Job Today," New York Times, March 16, 1936.
30, 1929 Officers and employees of Harris, Forbes in Grand Central Terminal on their way to celebrate the opening of the firm's new offices in 1911 > Harris, Forbes & Co. began in 1882 as N. W. Harris & Co. At that time > Founder Norman Wait Harris had an office on Chicago's Clark Street, three > employes and $30,000. But he also had two ideas. First idea was to send > salesmen out to sell bonds. In 1882 such procedure was regarded as > undignified; Mr. Harris and his men were termed doorbell ringers.
In 1947 the International Typographical Union made an attempt to organize the mechanical workers of the newspaper. Pickets were at the building to demand a closed-shop contract.United Press, "Newspaper Picketed," July 30, 1947, image 4 A strike was called, and about half of all employees refused to cross the picket line.International News Service, "Inglewood Newspaper Employes Out On Strike," Lincoln (Nebraska) Star, July 31, 1947, image 2 Publisher Edwin A. Dean offered a contract hinging on the results of a National Labor Relations Board vote, but he was turned down.
The new San Francisco Curb Exchange started activities on January 2, 1928, using the unlisted securities formerly on the San Francisco Stock and Bond Exchange. Per the agreement behind the formation of the curb market, all members of the Stock and Bond Exchange held memberships in the new curb exchange. The Curb had an authorized 100 charter members, 67 from the Stock and Bond Exchange, and the remaining made available for sale. On the second day of a strike by United Financial Employes, there was violence outside the Curb Exchange and NYSE on March 30, 1948.
The Railway Labor Executives' Association (RLEA) was formed August 16–18, 1926, in Washington, D.C.Rand School of Social Science, 1927, p. 86. The membership of the association was the president (or his or her representative) of each member union, and each union received a single vote in the organization's decision-making processes regardless of its size. The president of the Railway Employes' Department, a division of the American Federation of Labor (AFL; and later the AFL-CIO) was also a member and had a vote. The organization was voluntary, which meant that no member was bound by its decisions.
During 1965, a minority stockholder in the Thunderbird sued Wells, Jones, and others over a dispute regarding the Del Webb purchase. In 1966, Tom Hanley's union organization, the American Federation of Gaming and Casino Employes, alleged that Sahara and Thunderbird workers were harassed by management after trying to organize into a union. Table game dealers also filed a $100,000 lawsuit against the Thunderbird, alleging that the resort refused to pay them overtime wages. Picketing also took place in front of the Thunderbird, accusing the resort of antisemitism after the firing of a Jewish table game dealer, Howard Bock.
In March 2014 the first tourism BID was delivered in Loch Ness and Inverness. The first themed BID in Scotland was delivered in December 2013, the Sauchiehall Street Evening Economy BID. In 2016 the world's first food and drink BID was delivered in East Lothian with the levy based on the number of full-time employes, also a first. The development and interest in the BIDs model in Scotland continues to grow and the flexibility of the legislation and the model is now being recognised with the development of the Borders Railway BIDs Corridor, and four canal BIDs led by Scottish Waterways Trust.
The Australian Tramway and Motor Omnibus Employees' AssociationThe Victorian and South Australian branches used the spelling "Employes" or "Employés" from its foundation in 1910 to at least the early 1950s. was an Australian trade union, in operation from 1910 to 1950 and from 1950 until 1993. It was founded as the Australian Tramway Employees Union, but was renamed to include bus employees in 1934. The union was deregistered on 16 March 1950 for having "repudiated arbitration and decisions of a constituted authority" due to the actions of the Victorian branch in the 1950 Victorian tramway strike.
He began his apprenticeship in the printing trade in 1872, and on completing his indentures joined the South Australian Register as a compositor, simultaneously becoming a member of the Typographical Society (later S.A. Branch of the Printing Industry Employes' Union of Australia). He was elected father of the Register "chapel" (workplace union branch) in 1884, and left the compositor's frame to take up the position of reader and in the same year was elected president of the Typographical Society. In 1886, he represented the Typographical Society at the Fourth Intercolonial Trade Union Congress, held at Adelaide. He was, with Andrew Kirkpatrick, a delegate to the second triennial meeting of the Australasian Typographical Union, held in Melbourne.
Another of the union's major growth spurts came in 1979, when it raided the Civil Service Employees Association (CSEA). In existence since 1910, CSEA had won representation rights for New York State's 140,000 public employees after the state passed a public employee collective bargaining law in 1968. Structured like an association rather than a union, CSEA hesitated to engage in militant labor action or strike, and yet it had a rocky relationship with the state: The union struck for two days at the beginning of April 1972Clarity, "State Employes Begin a Walkout," New York Times, April 1, 1972. and won a 5.5 percent pay hike.Clarity, "State Strike Ends As Workers Win Raise and Bonus," New York Times, April 3, 1972.
In the 1998 election to succeed Carey, James P. Hoffa was elected handily. He became president of the Teamsters on March 19, 1999, and took the union in a more moderate direction, tempering the union's support for Democrats and attempting to come to terms with powerful Republicans in Congress. The union has merged in recent years with a number of unions from other industries, including the Graphic Communications International Union, a printing industry union, and the Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, both from the railway industry. On July 25, 2005, the Teamsters disaffiliated from the AFL–CIO and became a founding member of the new national trade union center, the Change to Win Federation.
BPC accumulated a huge number of non-performing loans (NPL), in the period ending in December 2017. The NPL ratio ballooned from 4.5 percent in 2016 to 23.2 percent in 2017. In May 2017, the government of Angola created a public entity for asset recovery called Recredit, for the sole purpose of buying bad loans from BPC, Angola’s largest bank by assets at that time. Initially capitalized with US$2 billion, the government borrowed another US$3.5 billion from the International Monetary Fund to further recapitalize Recredit and thereby provide liquidity to BPC in order to lend more to Angolan businesses. Other rationalization measures include trimming down the number of employes from 4,820 to 3,220, by letting 1,600 go, either through regular retirement, early retirement or termination.
Adding fuel to the investigations were recent amendments to the Welfare and Pension Plans Disclosure Act, making "theft, embezzlement, kickbacks or bribery in connection with benefit plans a Federal Crime." In addition, the New York State Department of Labor was now required to submit any reports of possible criminal activity discovered in fund annual reports to the United States Department of Labor. The investigations led to the sentencing of Max Davis, secretary-treasurer of the Independent Brotherhood of Production, Maintenance & Operating Employes [sic], Local 10 in New York, on September 13, 1963 for embezzling $16,500 from a union welfare fund on which he was trustee. It was the first conviction since the amendments were passed classifying misappropriation of the funds as a federal crime.
After marrying in 1908, Hill further increased his stature in the labour movement in 1910 by becoming secretary of the South Australian branch of the Australian Tramway Employes' Association and its federal president in 1912. Hill then gained Australian Labor Party pre-selection for the South Australian House of Assembly electorate of East Torrens, which he duly won at the 1915 election. In parliament Hill was considered "a slow thinker and unimpressive orator" but gained statewide recognition for his role as President of the Anti- Conscription Council, an issue so divisive during World War I that it caused the 1916 Labor split. In the wake of the split, Hill resigned his East Torrens seat in 1917 to unsuccessfully contest the Australian Senate elections as an anti-conscriptionist Labor candidate.
On January 26, 1903, it became publicly known that Milton S. Hershey made the decision to build a chocolate factory on the farms to the south west of Derry Church and Spring Creek, Pennsylvania. Hershey acquired over 400 acres of land in his initial purchase, which also included water rights to Spring Creek. The land straddling along Spring Creek, and the land north to nearby Union Deposit, was not included with the initial purchases. Having control of the water rights to Spring Creek, Hershey gained control of Brecht's dam, which was to be "converted into a lake for boating and other purposes of recreation for the town and Mr. Hershey's employes [sic]." In mid-1904, Hershey offered a $100 prize to the person who suggested "the most suitable name" for the new town.
Donald Hubert Louis Banfield (16 September 1916 – 4 June 2014) was a trade unionist and politician in the State of South Australia. He was born in Plympton, South Australia and served with the RAAF during World War II. In 1951 he was secretary of the Boot Trade Employes' Federation. He was elected for the Labor Party to a Central district No. 1 in March 1965, held the seat through the 1975 elections, when the Legislative Council reverted to election by the State acting as a single electorate, and retired in 1979. He served as Minister for Health March 1973 to March 1979 and Chief Secretary June 1975 to October 1977; he briefly served as 42nd Attorney-General of South Australia from 15 March 1979 to 30 April 1979.
This case was later followed up with the decision of R v Morgentaler, which proved significant both because it struck down the criminalization of abortion but also because of its expansion of due process rights into the civil context. The Dickson Court era also saw the beginning of a major shift in Canadian administrative law, with the "pragmatic and functional approach" appearing in Union des Employes de Service, Local 298 v Bibeault. The last years of the Dickson Court saw an entire revision of the area of conflict of laws by Justice Gérard La Forest in the decisions of Morguard Investments Ltd v De Savoye [1990] 3 SCR 1077. This would continue in the Lamer Court era with subsequent decisions such as Hunt v T&N; plc, [1993] 4 SCR 289 and Tolofson v Jensen, [1994] 3 SCR 1022.
Cornerstone reads "Dedicated to the memory of those who offered their services in the defense of this country." Layton, Smith and Forsyth who designed the building. In 1919, Milton C. Garber, then mayor of Enid, and his commissioner aides, G. W. Pancoast and Jason W. Butts, proposed a bond issue for the construction of a building to memorialize the efforts of Garfield County soldiers in World War I.McKiddy, J.H., "ENID One of Oklahoma's Fairest and Most Progressive Cities", The Frisco Employes Magazine, September 1924 Sealed bids were accepted until September 1, 1919 on bonds of $250,000 for the construction of the convention hall.Municipal Journal & Public Works, Volume 47, No 8., page 28Industrial employment survey bulletin, Volumes 1-2, United States Employment Service, page 20 The building was constructed at a cost of $500,000 with an original capacity of 5,000.
Other services could not be written down, the letter stated, but a phone call would follow. The letter stated, > The Corporations Auxiliary Company, through its system of industrial > inspection, is prepared to keep a manufacturer closely and continuously > advised of conditions in his own particular plant, of breakage and leakage, > of agitation and organization, of the dissatisfaction and discontent, if > any, that exists, and of the feeling of the workmen at all times, making it > possible to give promotion strictly on merit, eradicate any discontent or > abuse, and render it easier to establish and maintain a constant harmonious > relation between himself and his employes [sic], thus assisting in > preventing strikes and all labor difficulties. This system is not an > experiment, but has become recognized in many factories, railroads, &c.;, as > a necessity, as much so as insurance.
By an overwhelming vote, the Executive Board > of the national Congress of Industrial Organizations concluded that "The > policies and activities of the United Public Workers of America are > consistently directed towards the achievement of the program and the > purposes of the Communist Party rather than the objectives and policies set > forth In the CIO constitution." > As a result of this expulsion, the United Public Workers of America is to > day outside the ranks of organized labor In our country and has been exposed > as an instrument of the Communist Party. > On behalf of the New York City CIO Council, I respectfully request you to > please Inform the City Departments of the change in the status of the United > Public Workers. I would further ask you instead to recognize the Government > and Civic Employes Organizing Committee—CIO which has been set up by the CIO > to represent CIO in this field.
The commission sought to determine federal loyalty standards and establish procedures for removal or disqualification of disloyal or subversive persons from federal posts. While President Truman empowered the commission to follow its own course, he asked that it pursue the following issues: > # Whether existing security procedures in the Executive Branch of the > Government furnish adequate protection against the employment or continuance > of employment of disloyal or subversive persons, and what agency or agencies > should be charged with prescribing and supervising security procedures. # > Whether responsibility for acting upon investigative reports dealing with > disloyal or subversive persons should be left to the agencies employing them > or whether a single agency should handle it. # What procedure should be > established for notifying allegedly disloyal or subversive employes or > applicants for employment of the charges made against them, and what > procedures should be established to guarantee a fair hearing on such > charges.
The Mobile and Ohio Railroad completed a line between Mobile, Alabama, and Columbus, Kentucky, in 1861,Interstate Commerce Commission, 143 I.C.C. 459 (1928): Valuation Docket No. 149, Mobile and Ohio Railroad Company et al. and the Mississippi Central Railroad, an Illinois Central Railroad predecessor, completed its north-south line between New Orleans, Louisiana and Cairo, Illinois in 1873.W. K. Ackerman, History of the Illinois Central Railroad Company and Representative Employes, 1900, p. 118 The Birmingham and Northwestern Railway opened a line between Jackson, where the M&O; and IC lines crossed, and Dyersburg in 1912 and was purchased by the Gulf, Mobile and Northern Railroad in 1924.James Hutton Lemly, The Gulf, Mobile and Ohio: A Railroad that Had to Expand or Expire, 1953, pp. 224, 266 Through mergers, all of these lines became part of the Illinois Central Gulf Railroad in 1972. The Gibson County Railroad Authority acquired the line between Jackson and Kenton in August 1984, and the new West Tennessee Railroad began operations in October that same year.Edward A. Lewis, American Shortline Railway Guide, 5th Edition, Kalmbach Publishing, 1996, pp.

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