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10 KiB
Standard ML
235 lines
10 KiB
Standard ML
NOTE: The following is from the UPI newswire services. More information
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can be found in option "T".
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) _ A "space Coke can" for carbonated beverages will
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be tested during the next space shuttle flight set to start July 12, the space
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agency announced Thursday.
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The National Aeronautics and Space Administration said the Coca-Cola Co.
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developed at its own expense and initiative a way to dispense carbonated drinks
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in weightlessness.
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Up to now, NASA said it was not possible for astronauts to consume carbonated
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beverages in weightlessness "because there was no adequate way to dispense
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carbonated beverages."
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"The new technology will provide an alternative source of liquid consumption
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for astronauts," NASA said.
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The upcoming test is part of an agreement between NASA and Coca-Cola under
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which the company will grant NASA a license to use the space can design for
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unrestricted use in dispensing beverages in space.
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NASA said other companies are welcome to propose different technology to
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achieve the same purpose.
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_________
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44 upi 06-20-85 02:32 ped
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Hangar accident blamed on human error
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By WILLIAM HARWOOD
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UPI Science Writer
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) _ A hangar accident that damaged the shuttle
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Discovery last March was caused in part by disregard of a "Do Not Operate" tag
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on a broken hoist, a NASA report said Thursday.
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Although the Lockheed Space Operations Co. was responsible for operation and
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maintenance of the work platform hoist that failed, the investigation board
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said "this company inherited the system and a certain tradition of its misuse
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by NASA and its predecessor contractors."
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The accident occurred March 8 when a cable in the hoist for a 2,500-pound
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mobile service platform broke and dropped the platform on Discovery's left-side
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payload bay door, puncturing it in two places and injuring a technician.
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Gary Sutherland suffered a broken leg in the incident and Discovery's flight
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was delayed 18 days, until April 12, so the payload bay door damage could be
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repaired at a cost of $200,000.
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"The mishap can be characterized as the logical culmination of a series of
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events and conditions which pushed the mechanical components to and beyond
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their limits," the accident report said.
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The report said factors contributing to the accident included improper
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operation of the service platform, poor operating instructions, violations of
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safety rules and inadequate maintenance.
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A Lockheed techincian reported that a switch failed on the hoist March 4 and
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one of two redundant cable links was severed, the report said. The entire
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system then was flagged with the "Do Not Operate" tag.
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Despite the tag, the hoist was used at least twice between March 4 and March
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8, causing great strain to the master link in the remaining cable assembly, the
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report said.
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When the platform was moved March 8, the jolt was enough to fracture the
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remaining cable link and the platform fell.
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The report said the Lockheed technicians who admitted using the platform March
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6 "stated that they saw some tags, believed them to be old tags and proceeded
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to operate the platform."
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_________
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The only _ satellite launched)
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By WILLIAM HARWOOD
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UPI Science Writer
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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI) _ Discovery's crew launched a boxy satellite today
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to look for evidence of a black hole at the core of the Milky Way and ground
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crews promised no more foul-ups for a rescheduled "Star Wars" test.
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Astronaut Shannon Lucid, using the shuttle's 50-foot-long robot arm, released
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the 2,190-pound Spartan satellite at 12:02 p.m.
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If all goes well, the automated observatory will be retrieved Saturday after
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spending 45 hours on its own recording X-rays from the heart of the Milky Way
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and from a cluster of galaxies in the Perseus constellation.
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Scientists hope to use the data to learn more about the evolution of the
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universe and whether black holes, objects with such intense gravity even light
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cannot escape, are common in the cosmos.
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Commander Daniel Brandenstein, co-pilot John Creighton and crewmates Shannon
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Lucid, Steven Nagel, John Fabian, Frenchman Patrick Baudry and Saudi Prince
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Sultan Salman Al-Saud have sailed through the first three days of the 18th
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shuttle mission.
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The only glitch in what is shaping up as the smoothest flight in the shuttle
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program came Wednesday when the first space test of a "Star Wars" missile
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defense experiment was bungled.
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Flight director Milt Heflin said Brandenstein was given incorrect information
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to orient the shuttle to reflect a laser beam fired from Hawaii back to the
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ground station for analysis.
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The test was rescheduled today for Friday and a morning teleprinter message
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from ground controllers promised to "get the altitude right for your next
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attempt."
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Otherwise, the flight has proceeded so smoothly mission controllers beamed up
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a recording of "The Sounds of Silence" early today because the crew has had so
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little to say.
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"We were trying to pick a theme song for this flight and we thought that was
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appropriate," said Robert Springer in mission control.
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"Yeah, we thought that might be a subtle hint," Nagel replied.
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Three communications satellites owned by Mexico, the Arab League and American
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Telephone & Telegraph Co. have been successfully launched since blastoff
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Monday to earn NASA about $30 million.
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Spartan is a reusable, $3.5 million satellite designed to provide a relatively
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inexpensive way to conduct useful astronomy from orbit.
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Powerful bursts of X-rays from the core of the Milky Way, shrouded behind
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thick veils of interstellar dust and debris, seem to indicate the presence of a
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black hole possibly 4 million times more massive than the sun.
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By definition, black holes cannot be detected visually. But theory holds that
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as matter is sucked in it is accelerated and heated, which produces X-rays.
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Spartan automatically will record the radiation for analysis on the ground.
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The shuttle "Star Wars" test is a significant step in a program that could
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lead to a weapons system in which ground lasers would bounce blasts of energy
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off giant orbiting mirrors to destroy enemy missiles in flight.
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Bouncing a low-power laser beam from Hawaii off a mirror mounted in a shuttle
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window Wednesday, scientists had hoped To demonstrate the capability of
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correcting the beam for atmospheric distortion.
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But Brandenstein's flight plan contained the wrong information for the
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shuttle's guidance system to correctly point the shuttle _ and the mirror _ at
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the ground station 9,994 feet up Mount Haleakala on the island of Maui, Hawaii.
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Heflin said the flight plan called for the guidance information to be entered
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into the shuttle computers in feet when it should have been entered in nautical
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miles.
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So instead of aiming the mirror at a target 1,644 nautical miles high, the
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shuttle aimed at a target 9,994 miles high. The result: the mirror was
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pointed toward deep space instead of Hawaii.
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"It'll work the next time, assuming the weather is going to be good," said Air
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Force Lt. Gen. James Abrahamson, director of President Reagan's Strategic
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Defense Initiative _ commonly referred to as "Star Wars."
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____________
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36 upi 06-20-85 05:21 aed
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Astronaut joins private space firm
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By BETTY LUMAN
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HOUSTON (UPI) _ Joseph Allen says he never expected to retire as an astronaut
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at age 65, so he will leave NASA after 18 years to become vice president of a
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private space firm a few days after his 48th birthday.
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Allen, who rescued a 1,265-pound stranded satellite in November by flying over
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to it with a jet backpack, said Wednesday he is resigning from NASA effective
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July 1.
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The physicist was selected an astronaut-scientist in August 1967. He will
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become executive vice president of Space Industries Inc., a Houston firm
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pursuing ventures in the commerical use of space.
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"My memory is more filled now with wonderful events ... than I ever could
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have imagined when Alan Shepard called me those 18 years ago," he said.
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Allen, 48, said he is leaving NASA with "considerable nostalgia and sadness,
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but some excitement. I never pictured myself retiring at 65 from the astronaut
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office.
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"It's good news and good news. I found another job and it's still in the
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space business."
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Allen flew on two space missions _ the first fully operational flight of the
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shuttle in November 1982 and the spectacular salvage mission of two $35 million
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satellites two years later.
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On the 14th shuttle mission, Allen and Dale Gardner took turns on two
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different days to fly over to the Palapa and Westar satellites, grab them with
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a grappling hook and manhandle them into the shuttle Discovery's cargo bay with
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the help of the robot arm operated by astronaut Anna Fisher.
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It was the first time stranded satellites were plucked from orbit and returned
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to Earth for repair.
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Space Industries last year signed a memorandum of understanding with NASA to
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design and build the world's first man-tended space platform. It is
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negotiating agreements for launch of the platform in 1989.
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The president of SII is Dr. Maxime Faget, former director of engineering and
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development at the Johnson Space Center.
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Doug Lilly, another SII vice president, said plans call for the shuttle to
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dock with the platform so astronauts can work in a "shirt sleeve environment"
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on various experiments that then can be left alone for 30 to 90 days.
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_________
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By WILLIAM HARWOOD
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UPI Science Writer
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The rest of the 1985 launch schedule:
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_June 12: Discovery returns to service with a three-satellite payload;
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_July 15: Challenger is launched on a Spacelab mission;
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_Aug. 10: Discovery carries three communications satellites into orbit;
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_Sept.26: The new shuttle Atlantis, the fourth and final shuttle in NASA's
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fleet, blasts off on a secret military mission;
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_Oct. 16: The original shuttle Columbia, which has been under going
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modifications, returns to service for a Spacelab mission and its
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first flight since November 1983;
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_Nov. 8: Challenger is launched with three satellites;
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_Dec. 20: Columbia takes off on a satellite-launching mission.
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____________________________________________________________________________
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