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Page 1: JULY 5, 2020 | 14TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIMEsaintmichaelparish.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/July-5-2020.pdf · 1 NORMAL MASS TIMES: DOWNTOWN: 1055 Boundary St. SE Monday–Thursday:

JULY 5, 2020 | 14TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIME

Page 2: JULY 5, 2020 | 14TH SUNDAY IN ORDINARY TIMEsaintmichaelparish.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/July-5-2020.pdf · 1 NORMAL MASS TIMES: DOWNTOWN: 1055 Boundary St. SE Monday–Thursday:

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NORMAL MASS TIMES: DOWNTOWN: 1055 Boundary St. SE

Monday–Thursday: 12NooN

Friday & Saturday: 9am

Saturday: 5pm

Sunday: 7:30am, 9:30am, 11:30am & 5pm

WESTSIDE CHAPEL: 1835 Overhulse Rd. NW

1st and 3rd Thursday: 6:30am

Sunday: 8:30am & 10:30am 2nd Sunday: 1:30pm (Vietnamese)RECONCILIATION TIMES (DOWNTOWN): Saturdays: 2–4pm

PASTOR: Fr. Jim LeePAROCHIAL VICAR: Fr. Lou CunninghamDEACONS: Rob Rensel John Bergford

MISSIONOur mission is to place God first in all things, to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ, and to grow in holiness through prayer, sacraments, and service.

1208 11th Ave. SE, Olympia 98501 (360) 754-4667 www.saintmichaelparish.org

OFFICE HOURS Monday–Thursday: 9am–5pm Friday: 9am–1pm

CALVARY CEMETERY (360) 292-7138 3850 Cleveland Ave., Tumwater 98501

ST. MICHAEL SCHOOL (360) 754-5131

ST. VINCENT DE PAUL SOCIETY (360) 352-7554 Closed until further notice CLOTHING BANK See article on reopening, pg. 6

PREGNANCY AID (360) 956-7413 See article on reopening, pg. 6

SAINT MICHAEL PARISH mass intentions

Cover: Artist unknown

follow us on Instagram @smp.olympiafollow us on facebook @saintmichael parish

We would like to stay in touch with every parishioner! If there are any changes in your contact information, please contact Mona at [email protected] or call her at (360) 292-7141.

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7. 6 MONDAY

12NooN Bob Heleniak U

7.7 TUESDAY

12NooN Ralph Flores, Jr. U

7.8 WEDNESDAY

12NooN Kate Hurd U

7.9 THURSDAY

12NooN Meagan Smith U

7.10 FRIDAY

9am Nadya Skene

7.11 SATURDAY (Reconciliation: 3pm)

9am Joshua Roberts

5pm Dorothy Welcher

7.12 SUNDAY

7:30am Mary Earrame

9:30am Lien Luu

11:30am Andy & Jean Lechner U

5pm People of SMP

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This is certainly a different kind of Fourth of July weekend. For many, rather than being a joyous celebration with neighbors and communities, with parades and festivities, rising numbers and renewed fears because of COVID-19 are keeping us distant from one another and afraid.Our nation is also undergoing a time of self-scrutiny and examination of blatant and often unconscious racism, bigotry and injustice that has affected our social, political, economic and religious life.With all of this, the effects of societal sin are also spreading like an uncontrollable virus: judgementalism, anger, social media slandering, hate groups, vandalism, violence and the like. More than ever, as people of faith we need to live, “Not as debtors to the flesh... For if you live according to the flesh, you will die, but if you live by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body and you will live… You are in the spirit, if only the Spirit of God dwells in you.”Last Wednesday was a memorial of St. Junipero Serra. In response to the defacing of the statue in Golden Gate Park, Archbishop Cordileone of San Francisco wrote this op-ed piece for the Los Angeles Times. I offer it for your reflections:

Statues of Saint Junípero Serra deserve to staySalvatore Joseph Cordileone is the archbishop of San Francisco. To the protesters who tore down his statue in Los Angeles this month, the priest, friar and saint Junípero Serra represents “hate, bigotry and colonization,” as one activist put it.Nothing would have made Serra sadder, for the real man was a profound lover of all people and especially of the indigenous peoples he came to serve.Seen through the lens of the present, many heroes of history may seem unworthy of their pedestals. But some, such as Serra, still deserve our esteem.Who, then, is Junípero Serra after all?First and foremost, Serra represents the true spirit of a church identified with the poor and outcast. He left his home, his family, his sinecure as a philosophy professor to offer the very best thing he had to the California people: the news that God Himself loved them enough to send His only Son to die on a cross to redeem them. Saint Junípero Serra is “the Apostle of California.”Serra repeatedly intervened for mercy on behalf of indigenous rebels against Spanish authorities. He famously walked to Mexico City with a painful ulcerated leg to obtain the authority to discipline the military who were abusing the indigenous people. Then he walked back.And his legacy lives on. The 21 missions founded by Serra and his brother Franciscans are the state’s oldest structures and among its most visited historic monuments. The churches are a physical sign of the Catholic Church’s respect for local cultures, enriched and transformed by the love of Jesus Christ. Mission architecture is widely copied precisely because its innovation speaks so strikingly

to Southwestern culture.There is no denying that Native Americans in California endured grave human rights abuses. They suffered wrongs during all three eras: the Spanish colonization (known as the Mission era), the Mexican secularization and the American era.But Serra should not bear the weight of all that went wrong and all who did wrong. If we looked at him with clear eyes, we would see Serra as one of the first American champions of the human rights of indigenous peoples, a man who protested abusive police powers by government authorities.The deaths that occurred during the Mission era were primarily from disease. The greater, more deliberate devastation happened later, when secular governments took control. As UCLA historian Benjamin Madley writes in his book “American Genocide”:

“Murders and massacres filled the archives.”As Santa Clara University historian Robert Senkewicz told the National Catholic Reporter, “We do know what did happen when religious groups were not present to try to protect native peoples.” The genocide of native peoples happened primarily during the gold rush, he points out, “when Americans offered bounties for Indian scalps and the native peoples of Northern California were brutally decimated and oppressed.”History is often not kind to heroes. George Washington sacrificed to found a great country. He also owned slaves he freed only upon his death. Leland Stanford, founder of a great university, was an abolitionist but also continued genocidal policies against the Indians. Haight-Ashbury, the San Francisco symbol of free love, is named after Henry Haight, who in 1867 called the Chinese a “servile, effeminate and inferior race” that would “pollute and desecrate” Americans’ democratic heritage. He was elected governor of California in a landslide.We are not yet a nation that lives up to our founding creed of liberty and justice for all. We can and must do better. That is precisely why we ought to look to Serra as an inspiration to heroic virtue and as an emblem of American diversity. His is the path to peace, equality and racial justice.The first Hispanic American saint, he is also the first saint to be canonized on U.S. soil and by the first pope from the Americas. At the canonization ceremony, Pope Francis said Serra represents a fearless willingness to engage with the other with the love of Christ: “He learned how to bring to birth and nurture God’s life in the faces of everyone he met; he made them his brothers and sisters.”Father Junípero Serra died a beloved figure, mourned by indigenous people and Spaniards alike: a symbol of reconciliation, of hope and of the profound love he bore toward the people he strove to serve. His life reminds us of a core tenet of the Catholic faith: that the spirit of poverty, service and simplicity is the way to peaceIn Christ Jesus, our surest hope, I love you.

pastor’s notebook

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Ask Fr. Lou

This is an ongoing series from Fr. Lou for the Year of the Eucharist about the Mass. If you have other questions, he still wants to hear them! Email him at [email protected] and he will try to briefly answer you. Let us know about Whom we love, so that we might love Him all the more!Trying to answer this in 500-words-or-less is going to be chal-lenging! Eucharist comes from the Greek, meaning “Thanks-giving.” In Greek it is both a noun and a verb: a thanksgiving and … a thanks giving! In the life of the Church, the Mass—the ritual action of the Church where we unite ourselves to Christ as he offers Himself in perfect worship to the Father—was called many different names, one of those which was also the Eucharist.

Instead of thinking of this as complicated, think of it as a rich-ness, that all these different titles for the Mass enhance our understanding of what we are doing and praying. The ritual action of the Church where Christ offers Himself in perfect worship to the Father is an action of giving thanks! We, God’s holy people, offer to God this great “sacrifice of praise” and “it is truly right and just, our duty and our salvation always and everywhere to give you thanks, Lord Holy Father, almighty and eternal God, through Christ your Son, our Lord!” We are so grateful to partake in such a great offering, a total gift. And a gift given to us by God to grow closer to Him is called grace.

In the life of the Church, the word “Eucharist” has become the standard word to denote the “Blessed Sacrament of the Altar” —as St. Augustine put it—that is, the bread and wine that is consecrated during the offering of the Mass where Jesus Christ becomes truly and substantially present, known as the Body

and Blood, Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ. We could say at the Eucharist we consecrate the Eucharist … but that gets pret-ty confusing. What we always want to remember is that the Eucharist cannot be separated from the altar—that is, Christ’s permanent presence is not separate from His perpetual and saving action on earth: “Therefore, O Lord, as we celebrate the memorial of the blessed passion, the resurrection from the dead, and glorious ascension into Heaven of Christ, your Son, our Lord…”

During this year, I hope to delve into the great connection be-tween the Mass and the Eucharist so that, as we understand the Mass more and more, we can offer ourselves more fully to the Father through Jesus and receive the Eucharist with hearts aflame for the One whom we receive, worship, and confide in to bring us to the Father.

FOR FURTHER READING SEE:

Eucharist

The Blessed Eucharist as a Sacrament

The Sacrament of the Eucharist in Thomas AquinasPresence on FORMED:Mirae Caritats of Leo XIII

Catechism of the Catholic Church, 1322-1419

Do you have a question? Email Fr. Lou at [email protected] and he will try to briefly answer it for you and the parish. If you have a question about the faith, others probably do, too.

What is the Eucharist?

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Join Fr. Lou in a new reading group of the book Religious Sense by Lu-igi Giussani (available on Amazon.com) on Wednesdays at 7pm start-ing August 5. For more information on Fr. Luigi Giussani, click here. All are welcome—everybody can start with us, even if you haven't bought the book yet!Contact Fr. Lou at [email protected] for more informa-tion and to get on the email list. We don't know yet if this will be a virtual class or in person, so email Fr. Lou and he'll keep you updated!

Q:

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Sometime it is difficult to maintain six feet of distance from another person, and this is where face masks have a role. Despite a lack of symptoms, individuals can still spread the virus to others they are in contact with. This is why the CDC, WHO, and many local agencies have strongly recommended we all wear face masks when out in public.There are two main types of face masks: cloth and medical. Medical face masks are disposable and intended for single use. Though the shortage of medical masks has eased, the WHO and CDC both continue to recommend cloth masks for the general public. The WHO does recommend medical masks for those over age 60 and/or at increased risk of seri-ous COVID-19 complications.Face masks should be worn in public settings where social dis-tancing measures are difficult to maintain, such as in grocery stores, especially in areas of significant community-based transmission.

Here are a few pointers:• Place your mask over your mouth and nose• Tie it behind your head or use ear loops and make sure it's

snug• Don't touch your mask while wearing it• If you accidentally touch your mask, wash or sanitize

your hands• Remove the mask by untying it or lifting off the ear loops

without touching the front of the mask or your face• Wash your hands immediately after removing your mask• Regularly wash your mask with soap and water in the

washing machine. It's fine to launder it with other clothes (many people prefer not to dry it in a dryer as it may alter the shape/fit)

• Don't put masks on anyone who has trouble breathing, or is unconscious or otherwise unable to remove the mask without help

• Don't put masks on children under two years of age• Don't use face masks as a substitute for social distancing

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How to properly wear a mask

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First Communion is Happening!

We are so happy to announce that we will start to celebrate first Holy Communion for our children starting Thursday, July 9 at our Noon Mass. The Thursday NooN Mass will be reserved for first communicants and their families each week until all our children have received. We ask that you keep our children in prayer as they receive Jesus in the Eucharist for the first time. and we invite everyone to watch these Masses on Facebook Live so that the whole body of Christ can participate in this beautiful moment.CONTACT

Elizabeth Lyons at (360) 292-7109 or [email protected]

Fr. Jim Reboot!Rejuvenated, restored, and remodeled! We present the new and improved Phase III Father Jim.

SMP Young Adults

Priest: the first office held by Our Lord Jesus Christ, who is Priest, Prophet, and King. But what does it mean to be a priest? And what impact does this have on the Catholic laity? Join the SMP Young Adults on Tuesday, July 14 at 6pm for a virtual talk by seminarian Simon Stehr that will explore the momentous priestly identity of every baptized person and its essential connection with the Holy Eucharist. RSVP to Caiti Schmitz at [email protected] to get the link for the talk.

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Need a Midweek Prayer Boost?

This Wednesday evening at 6pm, join our current summer seminarian Simon Stehr for an organ recital via Facebook LIVE. It's an awesome way to connect your "home church" with the rest of the Saint Michael Parish community! Stay tuned to our Facebook page for other upcoming events: facebook.com/saintmichaelparish

Agape Service Project

Even though we have had to cancel our volunteer youth groups for the summer, our staff continues to run our social services. The families we serve—farm workers of Whatcom County—are always essential workers, but especially so during the global pandemic. And yet, as they work to feed us, they receive little to no aid or governmental support. Help us serve them this summer! Just click the links below:Financially contributeDonate needed food bank items

Donate diapers and wipesJoin the Agape Prayer Team

QUESTIONS?Kelsey Harrington, Director at [email protected]

Clothing Bank & Pregnancy Aide

We are reopening the Saint Vincent de Paul Clothing Bank to receive donations on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 9am–1pm. We have worked hard to implement COVID-19 precautions to protect volunteers and clients and are partnering with Catholic Community Services to get the clothing out to folks in need. We welcome clean, gently used clothing for infants, children and adults, especially men’s jeans and socks. All items will be screened. If you are interested in volunteering to receive donations at the Clothing Bank, please contact Becky at [email protected] or to help in sorting items, please contact Mike at (360) 970-9250.Pregnancy Aid will reopen to clients for drop-in during their regular hours as well:Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday: 2–4pmWednesday: 9–12pm

Financial Freedom?

What does financial freedom mean to you?Is it your ability to sleep peacefully at night knowing your four walls (food, housing, utilities and transportation) are safe?Is it your ability to change financial course abruptly when emergencies happen?Is it your ability to make plans for the future?Are you able to plan and execute the family vacation everyone wants?Are you able to be generous with your giving to the Church and the charities you support?Your Saint Michael Parish Financial Peace University Core Team is here to assist you on this journey. Contact us at [email protected] to let us know how we can help! FPU Alumni: Our next meeting is July 25, 10am–noon.We have been meeting virtually via Zoom. If you have complet-ed this course, join us for ongoing support, community consul-tation, and sharing our success stories. All levels of the financial journey are represented. We make no judgments. Invitations come out the week before the meeting through SMP Connect. Contact us if you need assistance with regis-tering in the FPU Alumni Group.

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Rachel's CornerHOPE & HEALING AFTER ABORTION

“He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there shall be no more death or mourning, wailing or pain, [for] the old order has passed away. The one who sat on the throne said, ‘Behold, I make all things.” - Revelation 21:4-5Join us on a Rachel’s Vineyard Retreat™ and discover the peace of having Our Lord wipe away your tears from past abortion decisions and allow Him to make all things new in your heart again. It is His gift to you. Will you receive it? Fall 2020 Retreat: September 18–20

Call for a compassionate, confidential conversation.(206) 920-6413 | [email protected] | Visit ccsww.org/projectrachel or facebook.com/projectrachelww

Project Rachel is a program of Catholic Community Services. You are loved with an everlasting love!

Shoulder to ShoulderPARISHIONERS HELPING PARISHIONERS

How many times have we heard Fr. Jim marvel at the generosity of Saint Michael parishioners? We are blessed to be a family of families who truly care about one another. That spirit of generosity is clearly demonstrated in the Shoulder to Shoulder ministry, which works through a special fund set up to help parishioners who are struggling financially.Parishioners who find themselves in a financial crisis simply com-plete a confidential application, which is then screened by a com-mittee of parishioners who, in turn, make a funding recommen-dation to Fr. Jim. If approved, the parish issues a check directly to the service provider–the doctor, landlord or roof repair company, etc.– not the applicant.Applications are available on the parish website and are held in strict confidence.Questions about applying for Shoulder to Shoulder help?Call Chris Peterson, Parish Administrator at (360) 754-4667.

Small GroupsTAKING THE NEXTSTEP

Many groups continue to meet year round. We encourage all small groups to continue to meet during this time of isolation. Contact with our parish family is important. You can find the reading for the upcoming Sunday Gospel from the USCCB website. There is also a wonderful new tool from Evangelical Catholic called Nextstep that we asked all facilitators to use with their group for the eight weeks after Easter. Here are some comments from facilitators:

“For the last weeks, we incorporated Nextstep into our small group time. I found Nextstep to be a new tool for natural, gentle evangelization, built on deeper friendships. The leaders are so personable and real, giving great examples and suggestions. My personal favorite section was "Get more out of the Mass" - which reminded me again, about the treasured gift of the Mass.”

“There was new insight that the Sacrament of Reconciliation provides the grace for not only reconciliation with God, but also with others.”

“Reconciliation can help us be aware of living a virtuous life and can help develop better relationships with our friends, family and community.”If you would like to use Nextstep with your group or on your own just go to ecnextstep.com and set up an account (it's free!) Facilitators, please go through the Becoming a Guide module before starting the other modules with your group. Anyone can set up an account and go through the modules. Learn more about prayer, meditating on God’s word in Scripture, getting more out of Mass and being reconciled in confession.If you are not now part of a small group but would like to join one virtually, please contact Michaela Moreau at (360) 292-7104 or [email protected]

Download our app! Text smpgive app to 77977 | Text smpgive to 77977 for simple online giving!

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Download our app! Text smpgive app to 77977 | Text smpgive to 77977 for simple online giving! Subscribe to us on YouTube at: youtube.com/c/saintmichaelparish

Lunch and dinner provided on SaturdayEmail [email protected] for registration informationThis event is for incoming freshmen through graduated seniors

Prayer should Move Us to Action “LOVE BEGINS AT HOME, AND IT IS NOT HOW MUCH WE DO, BUT HOW MUCH LOVE WE PUT IN THE ACTION THAT WE DO."

– ST. MOTHER TERESA OF CALCUTTA

As we draw closer to the Lord in prayer, He helps us to see the needs of our brothers and sisters, starting with our family and community. Who do you see in need? Here some hints:• Stay in touch or connect with family members near and far.• Write a thank you note to workers in hospitals, nursing homes, grocery

stores, etc. Thank them for working hard to insure health and safety for all of us.

• Send snail mail! Make cards for elderly neighbors or the homebound to brighten someone’s day.

• Buy non-perishable food items and drop them off at your local parish or food pantry.

So, as St Mother Teresa says:

“Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin.”

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Pier Giorgio Frassati Group

of South Puget Sound Join us for our first hike

at Staircase Saturday July 11, 9AM

Meet at the Staircase Rapids Loop trailhead. A National Park

Pass is required.

Embody the spirit of Bl. Pier Giorgio Frassati, and join the SMP Frassati Group. Our first event will be a short 2 mile hike on the Staircase Rapids Loop trail, located near the Staircase Campground at Lake Cushman. Carpooling is available.

Join us in our commitment to pray the Frassati Prayer, engage in service projects to support our community, and go on hiking trips around the beautiful Puget Sound.

Prayer

All are welcome! Under 18 years old must be accompanied by an adult.

For more information about Frassati Groups visit https://frassatiusa.org Questions: contact Bene at [email protected]

Service Hiking

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MASS OF INVESTITURE WITH THE PALLIUM

Join us via Livestream as Archbishop Paul D. Etienne receives the sacred pallium from Archbishop Christophe Pierre, Apostolic Nuncio, representative of Pope Francis in the United States.

July 16 at 2pm

vimeo.com/archdioceseofseattle or facebook.com/ArchdioceseofSeattle

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Hilary Borngesser Mateo W.Tom & Leslie Ernesto Alice Baldo Joseph D'Souza Tami GrantThomas Hinchcliffe Terri McCarthy Rebecca & Dennis Robison Joe Francis Chris Maria Francis Shanin BrennanAllison BrennanLeslie Anne Bykonen Joan Bykonen Heather Elston Michael Groenier Darrell Midles Pat Marchesni Judy Lloyd Gannon Stauch Toni Barnes Jesusa Jones

Christine Pool Matthew McConnell Robert Greenlee Eileen Heelan Justin Ripley Craig Ripley Irene & Ed Stipic Kevin Michael Mauss Jesse Miller Kathy Carlson Billie Phillips V. L. Patrick family Joel & Cesar Annie Libby Brandon Sharp Ye-eun & Family Eileen Hugdahl Jim Shirreff Marge Pool Austin Miller Sharnice Cyprien Patrick BaughAnn Moody

Brian Barkis Kathleen Barkis Lucas Oakland Amy Looman Shannon Murphy Kathy Goris Russell OwensPaul & Leisa Owens Lauren & Jose Joya Mom B. Judy & Loren Lloyd Tanner Andrews Stan Brandt Margaret Bunnell Wayne Humpert Richard MonohonDakota Smith Sharon B. Florence Sullins Marcus W. Jr. Don and Pat Alder Ken RathbunDawn Carlson Sarah Rathbun

Ed Stevens Joshua Roberts Sandra Payne Mi-yong Gilman JoAnna Gaffney Leigh Phillips Dorothy Welcher Jan PutnamSteve Rice Kiro A. Linda Phillips Florence Sullins Sean B. Karrissa Van Almen M'liss Bentley Ilias Murr Nancy Summerill Larry & Dayle Patricia Flemings Lorraine Chavez Patrick Lea Helena Scuderi Mary Earrame Lloyd Patrick family

To submit prayer requests, call the parish office or submit your request via our website. If you or someone you know is homebound and wishes to receive regular calls to check on their welfare and even pray with them during this crisis, please call Benedetta Reece at (360) 292-7143.

PLEASE PRAY FOR:

July 1, 2019 – June 30, 2020Donations Received as of June 28, 2020

Sunday Stewardship $17,580

Online Giving $26,868

Sunday Loose Donations $2

Holy Days

Youth (Little House)Total Offertory $44,450

Total Year-to-Date $3,187,631

STEWARDSHIP OF TREASUREFORMED PICK OF THE WEEK

As a dedicated follower of Christ, Peter spreads the mes-sage of the Gospel across the land. As the tension between Christians and Romans grows throughout the film, Peter and Paul meet and join together in preaching about Christ.Sign up for free at formed.org/signup.

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For ad info. call 1-800-950-9952 • www.4lpi.com St. Michael Parish, Olympia, WA B 4C 05-1505

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SERVING THE LOCAL COMMUNITYIN THURSTON COUNTY SINCE 2005

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Call LPi today for advertising info (800) 950-9952