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January 20, 2012

ER (a real one). I Still Hate the NCAA (Rutgers vs. St John’s Revisited) How to Fix the Economy by December. No Wire Hangers and No More Winter (Snow Fooling?) Linda Chorney Out West. January 20, 2011

Filed under: November 2009 — Tags: , , , , — earthood @ 12:25 pm

 

 

 

Snow

Snow

With Linda Chorney during a NJ Discover TV shoot.

Before we talk about the paucity of Jersey winter snow, here are a few words about Linda. Life is a bowl of cherries as my friend, Linda Chorney sings on her Grammy nominated album “Emotional Jukebox.” I said goodbye to her the other day as she headed west to warmer climate and proximity to Los Angeles for the February 12th Grammy show. Being a tease sometimes, I did mention that the temperature in New Jersey from the day she left hit 85 degrees. I tongue and cheek the institution of global warming, which is real and might make me a millionaire one day. The millionaire deal; if I live well inland, and the waters of the Atlantic Ocean rise because of melting glaciers and ice formations, then one day, but only for a short period of time, according to the Army Corp of Engineers, whom I play scrabble with on line, I’ll have beach front property. One of the corpsmen told me the beach front property deal might only last one season and to sell quickly then run to Western Pennsylvania.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Snow

from the movie 'Mommie Dearest' Faye Dunaway as Joan Crawford is yelling "no more wire hangers"

Snow

speaking of wire hangers. i took this pix 2 weeks ago in downtown Brooklyn USA

Because a few Facebook groups are concerned with meteorology (many of the groupies are known in some parlances as snow weenies; those folks who live for blizzards and paralyzing snows and read a plethora of futuristic computer reports and charts like North Atlantic oscillation) I’ve decided that New Jersey will not have any snow this winter so I don’t have to buy a snow blower (my source of snow removal moved into his own NYC apartment last June). Passing mid-January the other day, and no sign of significant snow well into February (the weenies are depressed and are already looking at long range forecasts for next December. Well some of them. Others have just given up and are hanging out in Reddit) I’ve been gloating on my decision not to buy a snow blower. My next door neighbor, Charlie Brown, agrees with my wisdom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Snow

 

Snow

Joan Crawford. She doesn't look like she hated wire hangers. Go figure.

Yesterday, ceremoniously I ran around the house in shorts and a red Rutgers tee-shirt yelling, “No wire hangers and no more winter snow.” My tolerant wife of many moons thought I was crazy after all these years. I call it unbridled enthusiasm. Oh the ‘no wire hangers;’ it comes from the movie ‘Mommie Dearest’ when actress and Pepsi stockholder Joan Crawford, a very bad lady, yells those words constantly to her abused little daughter, Christina, who later wrote the mother of all tell-all books about her mother.

So I never watched ER the TV show. Actually I never really watch much television; a lot of underlying reasons for such behavior. Give me liberty, some news, biography, discovery, college sports, history and old movies and I’m OK you’re OK.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Snow

J. R. Ewing. Can you believe I bought a hat like that in suburban Jersey

 

Years ago CBS  TV produced ‘Dallas’ starring Larry Hagman, glamourizing oil rich Texans. One season the story line went off a tangent and CBS resolved that by coming back and scripting the whole year as a dream; an easy way to get out of a bad original script, except viewers like me, who actually wore a J. R. Ewing cowboy hat around the streets of suburban Jersey, wasted a viewing year. No wire hangers and no more insipid television. My wife watched ER.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Snow

a generic ER pix

 

Snow

they say hospital food is a turn off.

So this wife comes home from work last week with a sore throat and high fever. A higher fever the following morning means emergency room. I love the word triage; makes me think of ménage. I’ve got 6 years of pharmacy studies under my skin so I know things.  We’ve got vitals and a pulse off the chart and with an abnormally high fever and sore throat, probably a strep throat; an untoward bug for a lady adult to have. I would’ve rushed blood tests to make sure it was strep and get her on IV antibiotics, start cardiac drugs to slow the heart (pulse), throw in a blood thinner(anti-pyretic for the fever) because atrial fibrillation. But hours go by, nothing happens and ineptitude is in the air ducts and heating system. And that poor downtrodden weary patient rep in a suit too short, exposing faded argyle socks; he avoided additional contact with this husband who had all kinds of acquaintances and threats to run to yet another suburban hospital for appropriate care.

 

 

 

 

 

Snow

Snow

On the other side of midnight and a curtain separating ER beds is an aged European lady, barely able to speak English. She’s alone and rang for the nurse for an hour, calling out for help in broken guttural sounds but no help comes because life is for the living and she has no one to be an advocate; there’s neglect, uncaring and microbes all over this sad excuse for an ER. The old woman even called in desperation to a custodian with mop. Then it hit me. She was Father Damien Karras’s mother from the movie ‘The Exorcist.’ A cold wind blew on my face; chills ran up and down my extremities. I could hear her calling for ‘Dimmy,’ a term of endearment for her son.  Out of gripping fear of Mrs. Karras, and being possessed, I started walking to the nurse station to help her when finally a nurse approached with an extra blanket; the poor woman was cold; it’s the winter of my discontent with Emergency Room care in suburban New Jersey. One of my favorite movies was ‘The Hospital’ starring George C. Scott. Had I slipped through that wormhole, time stuck in celluloid? For three days I drifted into medieval times of plagues and famine. They sucked her blood three times a day for every kind of test; I later learned some of those tests were wasted days and nights; just good for the paper chase of reporting to the insurance company to pump a bill up and secure profits for the hospital. I know that.  What a business for someone to check and cross check hospital tests with what’s billed and what’s actually done or the best yet, needed.  I surmise major crimes of deceit. It’s all in the game as Tommy Edwards sang. Get thee to a nunnery but stay the hell away from suburban Jersey ER rooms.

You Tube Tommy Edwards “It’s All in the Game”

 

 

 

 

Snow

the joy of honest college sports as Rutgers fans rush court after upsetting #10 Florida. No cheating refs)

 

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(the sports cover of the NY Post the day after refs fixed the St John’s game)

If you are so moved or curious, you can go back and look at my blogs from March 11th 2011 and April 23rd 2011 when I began hating the NCAA (watchdog of college sports). It all began last March when Rutgers Men’s basketball team played St. John’s in Madison Square Garden’s Big East Tournament. All the big money wanted St. John’s to win and play Syracuse the next day. Near the end of the game, Rutgers (a huge underdog) was about to upset St. John’s and cause a lot of bettors to lose ( I wouldn’t be surprised if one of those losers was the head of the Big East Conference.) So the three referees (under the eyes of the NCAA) did everything they could to help St. John’s by not calling five egregious fouls on them which would’ve put Rutgers on the foul line and then in front of the world and the announcers (and me) walked off the court with nearly two seconds left which was enough time for Rutgers to make a three point shot and win.

 

 

 

Snow

(more college sports joy; with the Pinstripe Bowl trophy before Rutgers wins it the next day)

Unheard of in college sports but imagine the pay day these referees got for fixing the game and all the money gamblers made. The NCAA loosely comments on the game and moves the three crooked referees out of Madison Square Garden for the remainder of the tournament. Personally, I hate the NCAA because no one oversees them; a neat monopoly. Some of NCAA executives make $300,000 a year plus for more than 30 years. They spit in the eye and there’s still silence across the land. I bring this up because one of the referees from the St. John’s game (Jim Burr) officiated at Rutgers versus West Virginia last week. Rutgers somehow got seven fouls called against them early in the game and West Virginia had none against them. I listened to the announcers when a West Virginia player threw a vicious elbow at a Rutgers player, enough for a flagrant foul, but nothing was called against West Virginia and Jim Burr was there and the NCAA is a vile crooked organization. Now I need a bowl of oatmeal sprinkled with raisins from sunny California.

I champion the absurdities of life. The American Red Cross President and CEO Marsha J. Evans salary for the year was $651,957 plus expenses and we all donate to them. I’m also a bit of cynic. The hype is beginning for the end of the world next December. I expect the hype to pick up and become intense by summer, somehow coordinated with the political landscape. Enough people start to buy into the hype, become fatalists and start living for each day by spending large amounts of money on seven-layer cakes, new zoot suits, a weekend in Dubai, a new car, a few packs of cigarettes and six month subscriptions to periodicals.

 

 

Snow

(the 3 complicit refs and head of big east who obviously ‘adjusted game outcome’ and NCAA looks the other way)

The effect becomes measurable across the land.  Consumer spending increases and factory orders are up and unemployment drops. Economy is booming by the time kids knock on your door and ask for ‘Trick or Treat.” A lady on the street where I grew up in Newark preferred to give us a trick with a deck of cards. She had a heavy Fidel Castro accent and disappeared one day and not until now, being a fully matured cynic, do I wonder what happened to her. And I’m suddenly inspired to close off this blog by saying what Walter Cronkite used to say and he was the most trusted man in America, “And that’s the way it is”  How’s that for a blog ending?

 

 

 

 

Snow

Walter Cronkite

 

Snow

(Seven layer cake sales to soar staring in summer?)

 

Snow

Two friends get published and go to basketball games.

 

 

 

 

 

 

One Important note. Here’s a wonderful music video to listen/watch on You Tube featuring Linda Chorney, right from here in New Jersey, Grammy nominated for Best Americana Album.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=F3XLPk_9juo

Also a great article about Linda Chorney in Huffington Post:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/huff-wires/20120120/us-music-grammywatch-chorney/

Also a very worthwhile cause to read up on:

Butterfly Circle of Friends.    http://www.butterflycircleoffriends.org/

 

 

CONTACT INFORMATION

website:  http://vichywater.net

Facebook:  Cal Schwartz

Twitter:  Earthood

Email: earthood@gmail.comSnow

book trailer. hey its 65 seconds long

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=qj2ko9gcC_M

 

 

 

IMPORTANT LINKS

If on Facebook check out this NJ Discover site:

 

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000125711074

 

OR   www.njdiscover.com   Snow

 

ARE you in search of another blog that is also outspoken, unique BUT refreshingly, topically unbridled which means uninhibited ????  Meet   LINDA CHORNEY:

http://lindachorney.wordpress.com/

 

 

Immortality Institute (which represents advocacy and research for unlimited lifespan)

http://www.imminst.org/

 

LINKS TO VIDEOS.  Please Watch.

 

1.   ZOMBIE WALK   October 22, 2011

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfFA-y115nc&feature=autoshare

 

2.  VETERANS DAY NJ VIETNAM MEMORIAL

Nov 11, 2011

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYwkaa_xreg&feature=related

 

3.  RANDALL HAYWOOD & JAZZ CONCERT

Nov 19, 2011

Randall Haywood and Victor Jones Interview from Chico’s House of Jazz Asbury Park

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TNohzH8AHvM&feature=player_embedded

 

 

Linda Chorney’s Album

Snow

January 6, 2012

Dumplings With Tuna Salad Filler. Flexitarianism. Fossil Fuels. New Year(S). College Sports Fixation. Rutgers. No Mention of Living to 150. January 6, 2012

Filed under: November 2009 — Tags: , , , , — earthood @ 1:18 pm

RutgersBefore I jump into my Rutgers sweatshirt and hat, as I need to get in the mood for blogging on this cold, partly cloudy Friday morning, I found ‘Dangling Conversation’ by Simon and Garfunkel on You Tube. Here’s the link. Go listen.

Dangling Conversation You Tube

 

About the time Jimmy Hendrix (Rolling Stone just wrote that he is the number one guitarist of all time) changed his name to Jimi back in September 1966, I heard ‘Dangling’ for the first time. It was a bit haunting; I thought they were singing about me. I had a girlfriend and our relationship was disintegrating and I was taking a strange course in college. I kept looking in the mirror.

“Yes, we speak of things that matter,

With words that must be said,

Can analysis be worthwhile?

Is the theater really dead?”

 

Rutgers

Rutgers

Jimi Hendrix

Pharmaceutical Analysis at Rutgers Pharmacy School was the hardest course I ever took; the labs were five hours long; we saw day drift to darkness in every lab. And the lyrics speak about “can analysis be worthwhile?”  Of course they were singing about the kind of analysis (not Pharmaceutical Analysis) you do while inclined on a sofa with a metronome spitting out your $100/ hour charge. I never did sofa analysis and flunked the course but aced the lab so I just had to take the lecture portion over again. Perhaps when you all finish this blog installment, some might support the notion of my investigating some form of analysis. Well, I’m not inclined to do so. But the song transports me back to studying chemical pursuits in my battleship grey small bedroom in Maplewood, New Jersey, cigarette smoke wafting from an overflowing ashtray( I had the notion that nicotine kept you awake and I was studying Pharmacy/Pharmacology) and hearing nightly TV sounds of Vietnam War casualties drifting upstairs from the den. So this is the mood as my fingers now depress keys and birth these words.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

tuna? dumplings. i wish

 

Rutgers

Miss Crabtree. My favorite never had teacher from Little Rascals

And the blog title; ‘Dumplings with Tuna Salad Filler.’ Well it’s nothing more than streams of consciousness bordering on my favorite pastime; dwelling on absurdities of modern life. I used to eat tuna salad four times a week; now a couple of times per month. I hate mercury sloshing around my colon and getting absorbed. By the way zinc and calcium (600mg) supplements are good for the old colon (24% reduction in colon cancer? Perhaps). Atlantic Blue Fin tuna are almost extinct. Japan loves raw tuna for sushi so they keep over fishing. On New Year’s Eve my gang ordered dumplings in the small neighborhood Chinese restaurant we frequent. I passed on the doughy confection; it’s stuffed with meat and I stopped eating red meat in 1975. Truth is told; my stopping red meat back then was because of a six foot tall (I’m 6’ 5 ½”) blonde blue-eyed girl from Short Hills. Two dates and I moved on to less imposing un-chilly granite statues but stayed true to all the tenets of not eating red meat. However, guess what. I’ve been a flexitarian all these years. Flexitarianism means that you are an omnivore who predominantly eats a plant based diet but also eats animal meat occasionally. That’s me, Miss Crabtree. I do eat some chicken and turkey just no red meat.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

President Calvin Coolidge. Was I really named after him? But I'm not silent

 

Rutgers

walking uptown to Yankee Stadium on Dec 30th It's crowded.

The entire world is fossil fuels driven. I look at the Republican presidential campaign and lackluster candidates; one calling the other an outright liar liar; one having affairs and leaving a wife  because she was sick; one trying to do away with contraception. Where is Calvin Coolidge II when you need him? (They say history is treating my namesake, Calvin Coolidge in a much better light. Maybe he wasn’t that silent after all)  Back when I was studying Pharmaceutical Analysis, an acquaintance got his girlfriend pregnant and he had to get her one of those back alley illegal abortions and she almost died. I love all the promises, promises to change America and the world as part of the political ‘both sides of the aisle’ rhetoric. No one is changing the accelerating world; it’s just not going to happen; makes me want to go to Louis’ in the Bronx for the best veal in the city. But I don’t eat veal. What am I to do? Maybe go to Sarajevo for a long weekend. I know this great deli there; yes, they make this neat tuna fish salad with chopped up jalapenos and red peppers.

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

See if you can guess what I am now?

Now remember I’m just firing away here. A scene comes to mind from ‘Animal House’ when John Belushi (Bluto) stuffs his face with a hardboiled egg and dark green jello and asks Faber college cafeteria table sitters, “See if you can guess what I am now.” Get it? The climate is so messed up. Global warning warming is so real. I wonder when people board an airplane and sense something but never get off the plane because there’s nothing you can do about it. Fossil fuels are a great earth epitaph; so is its merchandising corporate world. Politicians know there is nothing you can do anymore. So they all jump in bed with the big guys, get elected, make a few speeches and juggle a few congressional cosmetic bills. Make the patient comfortable in hospice or assisted living. I wonder who wrote the book of love and if all prisoners in our over-crowded jails are going to be released as a humanitarian gesture a few weeks before Thanksgiving. I call the world’s inability to agree on the Kyoto Protocol the new ‘Tower of Babble.’ Ah fossil fuels. Canada walked away from the Kyoto Protocol because of all their oil which is stuck in tar sands. You need a lot of resources, water and pipe lines to work it right. Canada may have more oil than Saudi Arabia (I’m whispering by the way).

 

 

 

Rutgers

And I loved the movie ‘Gasland.’ 3,500,000 gallons of water are used/wasted for each well. And the people around the wells are getting sick just like in the movie ‘Erin Brockovich.’ Speaking of water; I have another acquaintance who said that a friend of his, who used to be a chief executive of a major oil company, told him not to worry about oil; there’s plenty of it, but worry about water instead. China’s largest freshwater lake has shrunk to its smallest size in years due to drought, state media and officials said just yesterday, endangering the ecology in the area and fishermen’s livelihoods.

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

with a tips bag of all things

Pennsylvania has come under fire lately as pollution from drilling in the Marcellus Shale threatens water resources across the state. But instead of ratcheting up oversight, Gov. Tom Corbett wants to hand authority over some of the state’s most critical environmental decisions to C. Alan Walker, a Pennsylvania energy executive with his own track record of running up against the state’s environmental regulations; more big business and fossil fuels again writing our epitaph. Nobody really cares. It’s the greatest addiction; fossil fuels. But the world seems more concerned about Kim Kardashian’s wedding and whether it was a fake. It was the top question asked in 2011 at Ask.com. It’s all accelerating. Moore’s Law describes how computer chips double in performance every 18 months. That’s accelerating too. We’re running out of time and space; perhaps they might have to get to the atomic level (electrons) to continue accelerating chips but electrons are too unreliable just like tuna salad with unwashed jalapenos.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

in front of Macy's window on 34th street December 30th

 

Rutgers

son and me under final time clock

At 3AM Thursday morning, I heard from a Facebook friend that I should consider going to Montevideo, Uruguay.  He lives in Iowa. I’ll think about it in syncopated time which is accelerating. I apologized to my almost 26 year old son for the last time a few months ago. I can’t stop eating chocolate and we can’t stop environmental degradation and hatred. Darfur is what I think about subliminally in my blogs. Go back in time and look. Back last May, my psychic friend Ruth from Seattle called and warned me about New Jersey feeling an earthquake. Of course I laughed and responded with what my generation x y z son has been saying to me all these years, “Yeah, right.” So on my birthday, August 23rd 2011, the earth moved here in New Jersey and I still hate corporations peddling fossil fuels and allied products. All earth bound politicians have given up the good fight. I think it’s time for me to watch ‘Casablanca’ tonight. Over Christmas, I watched ‘A Christmas Carol’ three times. There’s nothing quite like Scrooge (Alastair Sim) waking up Christmas morning reborn and overjoyed on how he can help Tiny Tim and his family. Finally, I’ve found the age old answer to “blood is thicker than water.” It isn’t. And next Christmas Eve, I know where I’ll be. And a final thanks to Hugh Everett and his 1954 Princeton PhD dissertation on parallel universes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

a character with tips bag. you know who it is.

 

Rutgers

ah. planet tralfamadore. no i-phones there?

I love college sports. I remember the old Ballantine Beer commercial logo, “purity, body, and flavor.”  I’ve (umbilical) attached to my alma mater, Rutgers University and their sports programs. So living the loco life, I find myself on campus 70 times between September and May for all gender’s sports (sounds like more than two genders available. Perhaps on Planet Tralfamadore there are more than two. I was told yesterday by another Facebook friend there are no I-Phones on that planet. I wonder why.) In Steve Jobs bio, I read about developing powers of intuition. Jobs haunts me for a lot of reasons; for one, with billions of dollars in his piggy bank, he still couldn’t buy more time or health.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

Bill Raftery from ESPN interviewing Rutgers coach Mike Rice with high scorer Eli Carter looking on after Florida win in double overtime.

And what will corporations or rich relatives or the objects of Occupy do in future time?  Back to college sports; on December 29th Rutgers Men’s Basketball team played #10 ranked Florida here in New Jersey. I was there, four rows up from the floor when Rutgers defeated Florida in double overtime. I waited until the students rushed the court to celebrate first, then I ran out; perhaps the rushing is a better blood thinner than Plavix or aspirin.

 

 

Rutgers

me with relaxed Rutgers assistant coach David Cox

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

i rushed the court after the upset win by Rutgers. a blood thinner?

The next day, I was in Manhattan for the Pinstripe Bowl (Rutgers versus Iowa State) at Yankee Stadium. I walked from 33rd Street where several thousand Rutgers loyalists gathered at Legends bar for tailgating (me too); then slowly uptown, absorbing New York City on Christmas week. It was bumper to bumper people and quintessentially magically electric. I was on 34th Street, where a movie miracle occurred with little Natalie Wood (they’ve re-opened her death inquiry. How strange) standing in front of Macy’s holiday window. That’s worth a pinch on the left arm. A few blocks away, I saw Sponge Bob, Pooh and the Grinch, live and in colorful costume posing for pictures, each with a bag for tips. A women with child from out of town asked “who are they posing for?” I said, “This is New York City. It’s for themselves.” She laughed. I made an out-of-towner laugh. Rutgers easily defeated Iowa State, who was the only team to defeat Oklahoma State, who probably will finish #2 in the country.  So what happens to Rutgers rankings?

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

Rutgers tailgate at Legends before Pinstripe Bowl

 

Rutgers

Pre-game coin toss at Pinstripe Bowl

On the subway down to Grand Central Station after the game, I was packed tightly next to a couple from Iowa. It was their first trip ever to New York City and it was delightful talking to them. I love that bridging of New York subways of Madison Avenue county stuff. Finally, I described New York City to them my way. If the world pooled all the concrete, steel and glass together, found an island somewhere warmer and higher up from the coast and decided to build a bigger and better duplicate of New York, they couldn’t. Simply, there is nothing like this city anywhere in the universe and non-duplicitous. They agreed and were wonderfully congenial and warm. I thought to myself, welcome to mid-America ideals and values. They loved St. Patrick’s Cathedral. So do I. We shook hands as the subway doors opened and wished each other a happy healthy New Year. I whispered the plural, New Years. And that’s what I’m wishing you all right now. Plural.

 

 

 

 

 

Rutgers

a personalized New Years Greeting card. Remember my quest to live to 150 years

 

Rutgers

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

One Important note. Here’s a wonderful music video to listen/watch on You Tube featuring Linda Chorney, right from here in New Jersey, Grammy nominated for Best Americana Album.

Linda Chorney music video “Cherries”

 

Rutgers

(Linda Chorney and me with the largest collection of R magnets in central jersey during a NJ Discover TV shoot)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CONTACT INFORMATION

website:  http://vichywater.net/

Facebook:  Cal Schwartz

Twitter:  EarthoodRutgers

Email: earthood@gmail.com

 

book trailer. hey its 65 seconds long

 

 

Vichy Water book trailer 65 seconds long

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IMPORTANT LINKS

If on Facebook check out this NJ Discover site:

 

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000125711074

 

OR   www.njdiscover.com    Rutgers

 

ARE you in search of another blog that is also outspoken, unique BUT refreshingly, topically unbridled which means uninhibited ????  Meet   LINDA CHORNEY:

 http://lindachorney.wordpress.com/

 

Immortality Institute (which represents advocacy and research for unlimited lifespan)

http://www.imminst.org/

 

 

LINKS TO VIDEOS.  Please Watch.

 

1.   ZOMBIE WALK   October 22, 2011

 

zombie walk

 

2.  VETERANS DAY NJ VIETNAM MEMORIAL

 

Nov 11, 2011

 

Veterans Day at NJ Vietnam War Memorial

 

3.  RANDALL HAYWOOD & JAZZ CONCERT

 

Nov 19, 2011

 

Randall Haywood and Victor Jones Interview from Chico’s House of Jazz Asbury Park

 

 

 

Linda Chorney’s Album has been nominated for Best Americana Album Grammy!!!!!

 

Rutgers

 

 

 

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