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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 4
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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 4

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Asbury Park Pressi
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Asbury Park, New Jersey
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Press 0c. A-Co LAS For service times and DEATHS This is a complete list of obitu- Gall, Anthony, 10, Freehold aries the Park Press re- Freeman Funeral Home, Freehold Asbury Some obituar- Granoff, Irving, 80, Interlaken ceived for today. Memorial Home, Park Farry Asbury ies may not appear in this Hines, Cammy, 30, Asbury Park edition. Jackson Funeral Home, Neptune Krallk, Diana 81, Brick Township Barbiere, Joseph, 73, of Toms River Colonial Funeral Home, Brick Township Silverton Memorial Funeral Home, Toms Malloy, Edna 76, Middletown River Township Bilby, Samuel 86, Belmar Middletown John F. Pfleger Funeral Home, Township Reilly Funeral Home, Belmar Mowat, Catherine 78, Middletown Bradfield, Isabel.

79, Middletown Township Township John F. Pfleger Funeral Home, Worden-Hoidal Funeral Home, Red Bank Middletown Township Brennan, James 48, Berkeley Quinn, Lawrence 54, Seaside Park Timothy E. Ryan Home for Funerals, Township Seaside Park Mastapeter Funeral Home, Berkeley Rackowski, Mary Lorraine, 83, Township Carl, Florence Evelyn, 71, Freehold Farmingdale Memorial Home, Freehold Higgins Memorial Home, Freehold Higgins Schmid, John Joseph 36, Red Bank Cruz, Arsenio 66, Long Branch Waitt Funeral Home, Marlboro Township Hoffman Funeral Home, Long Branch Solewin, Marle A A. Rossman, 87, Brick Fair, Vergle Mae, 69, Freehold Township Freeman Funeral Home, Freehold Colonial Funeral Home, Brick Township Forte, Emmanuel, 83, Berkeley Weseloh, Mary Ellen, 76, Neptune City Township Johnson Funeral Home, Wall Township Carmona-Bolen Home for Funerals, Toms Zakrzewski, Jan, 72, of Red Bank River John E. Day Funeral Home, Red Bank OCEAN JOSEPH BARBIERE, 73, of TOMS RIVER, died yesterday at Community Medical Center, Toms River.

He was a supervisor of custodians at the Paramus Board of Education for 20 years, retiring in 1984. He was a World War II Army Air Corps veteran and a communicant of St. Maximilian Kolbe Roman Catholic Church in Toms River. Mr. Barbiere was born in Newark and lived in Paramus before moving to Toms River in 1985.

Surviving are his wife, Josephine Errigo Barbiere; a son, Joseph, Paramus; two daughters, Mary Ann DiSanza and Debra Ann Anastasia, both of Toms River; a sister, Mary Salmeri, Lyndhurst Township; and five grandchildren. Silverton Memorial Funeral Home, Toms River, is in charge of arrangements. JAMES A. BRENNAN, 48, of the Bayville section of BERKELEY TOWNSHIP, died Saturday at home. He was a production foreman at Fluid Packaging Lakewood, for 10 years.

Prior to that he owned and operated the Caddyshack Lounge at the Cedar Creek Golf Course, Bayville, for three years, and was also employed with Sonny and Rickey's Summer Boardwalk Concession Stands, Seaside Heights, for many years. He was an active member of the Berkeley Township Softball League. Mr. Brennan was born in Kingston, N.Y., and lived in Bayville for many years. Surviving are his wife, Patricia Martinucci Brennan; a daughter, Nicole Brennan, Cedar Rapids, Iowa; two stepsons, Scott Jensen and Lane Boertmann, both of Bayville; a stepdaughter, Dawn Boertmann, Island Heights; his mother, Carol Finnerty, Somerville; two brothers, Thomas, Lakehurst, and Michael, Somerville; two sisters, Nancy Sundermann, Somerville, and Kathy Ferran', Forked River section of Lacey Township; and one grandson.

Mastapeter Funeral Home, Bayville section of Berkeley Township, is in charge of arrangements. EMMANUEL "MANNY" FORTE, 83, of Holiday City, BERKELEY TOWNSHIP, died yesterday at Community Medical Center, Toms River. He was an equipment mechanic for Operating Engineers Local 825, Newark, for 25 years retiring in 1974. He was a communicant of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Toms River.

He was a member of the Men's Club and the Fishing Club at Holiday City, and the East Dover Old Guard. He SERVICES BARBIERE Joseph of Toms River on December 10, 1995. Beloved husband of Josephine (nee Errigo). Devoted father of Joseph, Ann Mrs. Anastasia.

Mary Ann DiSanza and Mrs. Debra Brother of Mary Salmeri and the late Sam. Loving grandfather of 5. Home, Funeral 2482 from Church the Silver- ton Memorial Funeral Toms River, Tuesday, 9 a.m. Funeral Mass St.

Maximilian Kolbe Church, Toms River. Toms Entombment Ocean County Memorial Park, River. Visiting Monday 2-4 7-9 p.m. BILBY Samuel J. of Belmar on Dec.

9, 1995. Beloved husband of Margaret (nee Geoghegan). Father of Joseph G. Bilby. Grandfather 3.

Mass of Christian Burial Tues. 10 a.m., Church of St. Rose. Interment St. Anne's Cemetery, Glendola.

Visiting Mon. 2-4 7-9 p.m. at the Reilly Funeral Home, 8th Ave. Belmar. GRANOFF Funeral services for Irving Granoff, 80.

of Interlaken who died suddenly on December 9, 1995, will be held at the Farry Memorial Home, 403 Third Avenue, Asbury Park, on Tues. Dec. 12th at 11:00 with burial following at the Beth El Cemetery, Paramus, N. J. Friends may call at the funeral home on Tuesday from 10-11.

JWV Post 125 services on Tuesday morning. HINES Cammy, age 30. of Asbury Park, N.J. Beloved mother of Tyheisa. Daughter of John Washington stepdaughter of Gwendolyn (Fruitbowl) Washington.

Sister of Karen. Celeste, devoted Melissa, and Andrew. Stepsister of friend of Randy. A host of uncles, aunts, nephews, nieces, cousins and friends. Funeral Tuesday, Dec.

12. 1995, 7:00 p.m. from Greater C. Emmanuel Pet. Church, Neptune, N.J.

Pator Webb, off. Interment Monmouth Memorial Park. Friends may call at the church Tuesday 5:00 p.m. to service time. KRALIK Diana A.

(nee Augustine) age 81 of Brick on Dec. 10, 1995. Beloved wife of the late Benjamin. Devoted mother of Marilyn Kralik and Janet Maizone. Also survived by three grandchildren.

Funeral Mass will be offered on Wednesday at 9:15 a.m. at St. Dominic's Church in Brick. Interment at Holy Cross Cemetery in No. Arling: ton.

Visiting hours are Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 at Colonial Funeral Home, 2170 Highway 88 in Brick. MALLOY Edna M. (nee May) 76, of Middletown; the formally late of Joseph Whiting, died on 1983. Dec. 1995.

Devoted Loving mother wife of Barbara Mizer. Grandmother of 2. Relatives and friends are respectfully invited to attend funeral services Wed. 10 a.m. in the John F.

Pfleger Funeral Home, 115 Tindall Middletown. iting Monday and Tuesday 2-4 7-9 p.m. Interment in the spring at Valley View Cemetery, Ticonderoga, N.Y OBITUARIES other was a former member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Orange. Mr. Forte was born in Orange and lived there most of his life until moving to Holiday City in 1972.

Surviving are his wife, Mildred Poliseno Forte; two daughters, Janet R. Legge, West Caldwell, and Diana Kincaid, Toms River; a sister, Angelica Salvatore, West Long Branch; five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Carmona-Bolen Home for Funerals, Toms River, is in charge of arrangements. DIANA A. KRALIK, 81, of BRICK TOWNSHIP, died yesterday at home.

She was a member of the Knights of Lithuania, Newark, the Golden Age Club and Senior Happening Club in Brick, the Amicai Soroum of the Benedictine Academy, Elizabeth, and the Lavallette Seniors. She was a communicant of St. Dominic's Roman Catholic Church, Brick. Mrs. Kralik was born in Newark and lived there until moving to Brick 13 years ago.

Surviving are two daughters, Marilyn Kralik, Island Heights, and Janet Malzone, Flemington; and three grandchildren. Colonial Funeral Home, Brick Township, is in charge of arrangements. LAWRENCE A. QUINN, 54, of SEASIDE PARK, and Mill Valley, died Saturday at Community Medical Center, Toms River. He was a member of the American Institute of Graphic Arts and worked as a graphic artist for a number of New York firms, including Buckley Dunton; Hobart Macintosh; Quinn and Boden, and J.V.M.

Graphics. He was a communicant of St. Catharine's Roman Catholic Church, Seaside Park. Mr. Quinn was born in Westfield and lived in Brooklyn, establishing homes in both Seaside Park and Mill Valley three years ago.

Surviving are his wife, Joyce Burnstein Quinn; a son, Matthew, Mill Valley; two daughters, Jennifer and Vanessa Quinn, both of Mill Valley; his mother, Mary C. Ryan Quinn, Seaside Park; two brothers, Michael of Connecticut, and John, Springfield; four sisters, Kathleen McHare, Morristown, Elizabeth McKenna, Washington D.C., Ellen Quinn, Seaside Park, and Constance Hourihan, Glen Arm, Md. Timothy E. Ryan Home for Funerals, Seaside Park, is in charge of arrangements. MARIE A.

ROSSMAN SOLEWIN, 87, of BRICK TOWNSHIP, died Saturday at home. She worked in the manufacturing department of Benja- SERVICES MOWAT Catherine L. (nee Bonsper) 78 of North Middletown on Dec. 10, 1995. Loving wife of the late Thomas.

Dear sister of Frederick Bonsper. Ellen Georges and Mary 'Laughlin. Funeral Wed. 8:30 a.m. from the John F.

Pfleger Funeral Home, 115 Tindall Middletown. Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at St. Catherine's R.C. Church, North Middletown, at 9:30 a.m. Visiting on Tuesday 2-4 7-9 p.m.

RACKOWSKI Mary Lorraine, 83, of Farmingdale on Dec. 10, 1995. Widow of Francis Rackowski. Mother of Pauline Gallo and Frances Getta, and sister of Edward Zebrowski. Also survived by five grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren.

Calling hours will be held at the Higgins Memorial Home, 20 Center Freehold on Tuesday 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. The Funeral Liturgy will be celebrated at St. Rose of Lima Church, Freehold on Wednesday at 10 a.m. followed by interment at St. Rose of Lima Cemetery, Freehold.

SOLEWIN Marie A. (nee Rossman) age 87 of Brick on Dec. 9, 1995. Beloved wife of the late John. Devoted aunt of Robert Rossman, Dorothy Quinn and Charles Moroney.

Funeral Mass will be offered Dominic's on Church Wednesday in Brick. at 10:00 Interment a.m. at St. Mary's Cemetery in Rahway. Visiting hours are Wednesday morning from 8:30 to 9:30 a.m.

at Colonial Funeral Home, 2170 Highway 88 in Brick. ZAKRZEWSKI Jan of Red Bank, N.J. formerly of Brooklyn, N.Y. on December 10, 1995. Husband of Anastasia (nee Magiera).

Father of Stefan Zakrzewski, Sophie McGill and Jane Creaby. Grandfather of Kevin, Nichola, Matthew Creaby, Peter and Kate McGill. Father-in-law of Bernie McGill, Jim Creaby, and Vivian Zakrzewski. Uncle of several nieces and nephews. Visitation Tuesday and Wednesday 2-4 Riverside p.m.

at the John E. Day Funeral Home, 85 Red Bank, N.J. Relatives and friends may gather at the John E. Day Funeral Home Thursday 9 a.m. for the Rite of Committal followed by a 10 a.m.

Funeral Liturgy at St. Catharine's R.C. Church, Holmdel, N.J. IN MEMORIAM PEPE SR. Sam to Happy Birthday Sam, We love you and miss you very much.

Love, Mom, Dad Marge and family details, see Services listing Anthony fought FREEHOLD The rare genetic disease that 10-year-old Anthony Gall had I been battling since 1991 claimed his life Saturday. His mother, Debora, said Anthony died peacefully in his sleep of adrenoleukodystrophy, or ALD, at Voorhees Pediatrics Facility in Voorhees Township. "At least I know he didn't suffer," she said. "I didn't want him to be in any pain." He first became ill in July 1991, and his condition deteriorated rapidly. Anthony lost his sight, speech and ability to walk.

Shortly after Anthony was diagnosed with the rare genetic disease, his mother purchased a cure known a as Lorenzo's Oil, which was the subject of the movie by the same name starring Nick Nolte and Susan Sarandon. But after two months on Lorenzo's Oil, Anthony, who had already stopped walking and talking, became progressively worse and lost his ability to eat. Anthony was born in Toms River and was a lifelong Freehold resident. He was enrolled in the preschool program at the Park Avenue School for two years before developing the disease. In addition to his mother, surviv- min Moore Paint Newark, for 46 years, retiring in 1972.

She was a communicant of St. Dominic's Roman Catholic Church, Brick, and was a member of its Altar Rosary Society. Ms. Solewin was born in Carteret and lived there until moving to Brick 21 years ago. Surviving are a nephew, Robert Rossman, Lancaster, a niece, Dorothy Quinn, Beachwood; and one great-nephew.

Colonial Funeral Home, Brick Township, is in charge of arrangements. MONMOUTH FLORENCE EVELYN CARL, 71, of FREEHOLD, died Saturday at the Beachview Care Facility, Keansburg. She was a retired nurse's aide. Mrs. Carl was born in Camden and lived in Florida before moving to Freehold four years ago.

Her daughter, Florence Sharpe, died in 1994. Surviving are two daughters, Deborah Mary Albertson, Lakewood, and Pamela A. Kovach, North Middletown section of Middletown Township; a sister, Clara Young, Haddonfield; seven grandchildren and five great Higgins Memorial Home, Freehold, is in charge of arrangements. EDNA M. MALLOY, 76, of MIDDLETOWN TOWNSHIP, died Saturday at home.

She was a retired clerical worker for Ciba Giegy, New York. Mrs. Malloy was born in Queens and lived inWestchester, N.Y., Hague, N.Y., and the Whiting section of Manchester Township before moving to Middletown. Her husband, Joseph, died in 1983. Surviving are a daughter, Barbara Mizer, Middletown; and two grandchildren.

John F. Pfleger Funeral Home, Middletown Township, is in charge of arrangements. JOHN JOSEPH SCHMID 36, of RED BANK, died Friday at the home of a friend in Keansburg. He was a construction worker for Dream Builders, Keansburg, for the past six years. He was an Air Force veteran, and a volunteer with the Kiwanis Club, Middletown Township.

He was a communicant of St. Ann's Roman Catholic Church, Keansburg. Mr. Schmid was born in New York and lived in Keansburg most of his life before moving to Red Bank in 1977. Surviving are his mother, Margaret "Peg" Schmid, Red Bank; two stepsons, Michael and Ritchie, at home; a stepdaughter, Joelle, also at home; his brother, David, Red Bank; two sisters, Margaret Rugg, Brick Township, and Lorraine Schmid, Red Bank; and his companion, Helen Laskay.

Waitt Funeral Home, Morganville section of CORRECTIONS JOHANNA MARIE VAN BOKKEM, 87, of RUMSON, who died Saturday, is survived by a daughter, Carol DeStasio, of Long Branch. The daughter's name was misspelled in the Asbury Park Sunday Press. Subway clerk dies from severe burns Gall, 10, disease Anthony Gall, Freehold, is held by his mother, Deborah. ing are his stepfather, Thomas G. Molyneux, his brother, Marcus Kane Molyneux, at home; 1 his maternal grandparents, Evelyn Dusebout Davison, Naples, and Anthony Petronella, Washington Township.

Viewing hours will be from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Tuesday at Freeman Funeral Home in Freehold. Also, from 9 to 10 a.m. on Wednesday, followed by a service at Mausoleum Memorial Gardens in Woodbridge Township.

Keniston W. Trainor Marlboro Township, is in charge of rangements. ELSEWHERE ERNEST L. BOYER, who helped shape American education as president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching since 1979 and as commissioner of education in the Carter administration, died Friday of cancer in PRINCETON. He was 67.

Mr. Boyer became commissioner of education in the Department of Health, Education and Welfare in 1977. Congress split HEW into the Education Department and the Health and Human Services Department in 1979. He was appointed to national education commissions by Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter. Last year, Mr.

Boyer received the Charles Frankel Prize in the Humanities, a presidential citation. Mr. Boyer served as chancellor of education at the State University of New York for several years in the 1970s. Associated Press HALLER JONES, the mother of former surgeon general Joycelyn Elders, died Thursday in TEXARKANA, TEXAS. She was 81.

Mrs. Jones raised eight children in all after graduating from high school in the early 1930s, working on a farm and then later as a nurse's aide in a nursing home. Mrs. Elders was fired as surgeon general last December, her mother took it in stride saying, "there was a reason for everything." Associated Press ROBERT F. WALDRON, a former secretary to President Lyndon B.

Johnson and an interior designer in Washington for 26 years, died Friday of AIDS in WASHINGTON. He was 68. Mr. Waldron's interior design clients included Lady Bird Johnson, and her daughter Lynda Robb as well as corporations such as Occidental Petroleum, and embassies and ambassadors abroad. In 1955, he came to Washington and began working as administrative assistant to Rep.

Homer Thornberry, D- Texas, and later worked for Rep. J.J. Pickle, D-Texas. He was an aide to Johnson when he was Senate minority leader and was his secretary in the early 1960s. Mr.

Waldron joined the firm of S.D. Jeffrey Associates as a designer in 1965. He operated his own firm from 1968 to 1994. A native of Arp, Texas, he attended the Federal Institute of Business in Texas and graduated from Northwestern University. He also attended the University of Texas law school and the New York School of Design.

Mr. Waldrop served in the Navy during World War II and was a member of the Air Force reserve from 1961 to 1964. Associated Press THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW YORK A subway token booth clerk died yesterday after a two-week fight to recover from severe burns he suffered in a botched robbery that was a virtual replay of a scene from the movie "Money Train." He died on a weekend when police reported three more attacks on token booths in a wave of six such incidents. Two men were arrested last night after allegedly trying to squirt flammable liquid into a booth in Brooklyn's Williamsburg section. Police were uncertain whether the suspects had tried to set a fire.

The token clerk who died, Harry Kaufman, 50, had been in extremely critical condition since he arrived at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center on Nov. 26 with second- and third-degree burns over 80 percent of his body. Hospital spokeswoman Myrna Manners said Kaufman died of "a combination of severe lung damage and severe burn injuries." She said he had one skin graft operation on Nov. 29, but his condition was "too unstable to undergo any further operations." "It's a tragedy," Manners said. "Despite everything that the burn team did, he passed away.

This was a very, very severe injury." He was severely burned in the first attack on a token booth on Nov. 26, when two men squeezed a flammable liquid into his Brooklyn token booth and ignited it, causing an explosion that demolished the booth. In one of the latest attacks, a fire was set at 8:55 p.m. in a Queens station of the Number 7 or Flushing line on Saturday. The flames were extinguished within minutes and caused no injury.

Yesterday, an unidentified man tossed a match through the token slot at the Park Slope subway station of the R-train, but the booth's fire suppression system quickly doused the flames, police said. In the second attack yesterday, two suspects were arrested in the Williamsburg section as they fled the station at Union Avenue and Broadway on the line after pouring an undetermined liquid into the token booth slot, said Officer Doram Tamari, a police spokesman. Police identified the suspects as Frankie Perez, 18, of Brooklyn, and David Deangelo, 19, of Queens. The arrests were the first since the wave of token booth attacks started with the torching of Kaufman's booth two weeks ago. Tamari said police didn't know whether the suspects in custody were in any way linked to the other attacks.

Some politicians blamed the attacks on a recently released hit movie called "Money Train." Starring Wesley Snipes and Woody Harrelson, the film twice shows a pyromaniac squirting gasoline into a token booth and lighting it, but the clerks escape uninjured. Kaufman, a 22-year Transit Authority employee who lived i in Brooklyn with his wife, Stella, and son Adrian, 17, reportedly was working overtime at the time of the attack to save money to send his son to college. Task force to attack high Camden crime THE ASSOCIATED PRESS CAMDEN A task force of federal, state and county agencies will tackle Camden's alarmingly high homicide and crime rates, according to a published report. State Attorney General Deborah T.Poritz could announce the task force's formation as early as this week, the Courier-Post of Cherry Hill Township reported in yesterday's editions. Gathering support from at least five federal agencies and various local authorities, the task force will chiefly target illegal gun, gang and drug activity in Camden.

The impoverished city has seen a record 58 homicides so far this year. Many are believed to be drug- related. "The governor has made a commitment to put together a comprehensive program to assist Camden," said Carl Golden, Gov. Whitman's chief spokesman He said no withdrawal date for the task force will be announced. The city's problems took a long time to develop, Golden said, and it would be unrealistic to expect them to be solved in a short time.

The governor's spokesman said the force will be a multimillion-dollar operation, although most of the funds will be diverted from existing programs. The FBI will help investigate murder cases, while federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents will track illegal gun activity. The federal Department of Housing and Urban Development will address residents' complaints, and a combined group of agencies will deal with illegal activity in the estimated 3,000 to 4,000 vacant buildings, according to Camden Police Chief Bob Pugh. Pugh has faced criticism and calls for his resignation from local residents' groups, but he told the newspaper that he is confident an ongoing state audit of his department will reveal a manpower shortage. Arrests by federal agents would carry stiffer penalties, said the chief.

Assigning state police to help the Camden County Sheriff's Department is also being discussed, said state police spokesman John Hagerty. Hagerty said state police already patrol interstate highways in the area. A final decision about putting unformed troopers in squad cars on the city's streets has not been made, he said. State police patrols have been used in Camden before. Between late 1992 and mid-1994, eight troopers patrolled city streets three times a week in tandem with Camden officers.

During the same time, as many as nine troopers investigated violent crime. As a result, Pugh said, violence declined markedly. "I think it's long overdue," said Leanna Brown of the Bergen-Lanning Neighborhood Association in South Camden. "A lot of people are afraid to leave their homes and they're afraid to stay in them," said Brown. "You can't go out at night.

You have to get a security system for your Anything authorities can do would be welcome, she said. Addition to Ford Edison plant reportedly will be started soon THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWARK Ford Motor Co. plans to begin building a $65 million addition to its assembly plant in Edison Township next year, according to a report in The Star-Ledger of Newark yesterday. The project would add a state-ofthe-art painting facility to the plant that manufactures Ranger trucks. The facility is expected to be completed in 1997.

Edison officials praised the project as a substantial in the community. The project will provide temporary employment for local building contractors but was not expected to provide more permanent jobs. Ford employs 1,717 people at the plant. The project will provide new property taxes for Edison. Ford, which paid $1.5 million in municipal taxes in 1995, is one of the township's largest commercial taxpayers.

The last major renovation at the plant came in 1990, when it was retooled to switch from producing Escorts to producing Rangers. Since Ford opened the plant in 1948, more than 5 million vehicles have rolled off the assembly line. Microsoft, NBC to merge? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS LOS ANGELES NBC's talks with Microsoft about joining forces to create a 24-hour news channel could lead to an even bigger deal in which the software maker would acquire up to 49 percent of the network, Weekly Variety reported yesterday. NBC and Microsoft executives have talked about a possible $4 billion merger, the trade publication re- ported, citing unidentified sources. The talks are part of NBC's search for a strategic partner who could give the network more clout and help develop new ways of distributing news and entertainment.

The merger would follow a trend: The Walt Disney Co. is acquiring Capital and Time Warner Inc. is buying Turner Broadcasting System..

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