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David
Sun December 14, 2003 10:51am
Video image of captured f

Video image of captured former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein displayed at a news conference in Baghdad Sunday Dec. 14, 2003.
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David
Sun December 14, 2003 10:51am
Video image of captured f

Video image of captured former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein being given a medical examination displayed at a news conference in Baghdad Sunday Dec. 14, 2003 in this image from television. Top U.S. administrator in Iraq L. Paul Bremer confirmed the capture of former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in a house near his hometown of Tikrit, eight months after the fall of Baghdad.
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David
Sun December 14, 2003 10:51am
Video image of captured f

Video image of captured former Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein displayed at a news conference in Baghdad Sunday, Dec. 14, 2003, in this image from television.
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David
Wed December 31, 2003 1:36am
Good news can be bad

Good news can be bad
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David
Sat January 3, 2004 11:33pm
CV59 - Forrestal Class Ai

Function: America's first class of "super" carrier.



History: Built in 1959, the Forrestal class carriers were the first of the "super" carriers, built specifically to accommodate modern jet aircraft. In addition to her many other special features, the Forrestal class sported an angled flight deck deck which permitted continual flight operations and multiple steam driven catapults for launching aircraft. Four ships of the Forrestal class were built; Forrestal (CV-59), Saratoga (CV-60), Ranger (CV-61), and Independence (CV-62.) All of the Forrestal carriers supported combat operations in Vietnam. On July 29th, 1967, while operating off the coast of Vietnam a weapons malfunction caused a combination fire and explosion chain reaction that would cause the greatest loss of life since the Franklin (CV-13) was bombed by the Japanese during World War II.



General Characteristics, Forrestal Class


Builders:
CV 61 - Newport News Shipbuilding Co., Newport News, VA


CV 62 - New York Naval Shipyard, Brooklyn, NY



Power Plant:
Eight Foster & Wheeler boilers, four Westinghouse steam turbines, four shafts, 260,000 shaft horsepower (Forrestal) 280,000 shaft horsepower (all others)



Date Deployed:
August 10, 1957; decommissioned July 10, 1993 (USS Ranger)


January 10, 1959; decommissioned September 30, 1998 (USS Independence)



Length, Overall:
1076 feet (323.85 meters)



Flight Deck Length:
252 feet (76.81 meters)



Beam:
130 feet (39.62 meters)



Displacement:
Approx. 79,300 tons full load



Speed:
30+ knots (34.52+mph, 55.55+ kph)




Crew:
Ship's Company: 3,019 - Air Wing: 2,480



Armament:
Three Mk 29 Launchers for NATO Sea Sparrow (RIM-7M) Surface to Air missile


One Mk 15 Mod 2 Close-In Weapon System (3 mounts)



Sensors:
One AN/SPS-48 air search radar


One AN/SPS-49 air search radar


One AN/SPS-67 surface search radar


Three Mk 91 fire control directors (Sea Sparrow)


Countermeasures:
One Mk 36 Mod 2 Super Rapid-Blooming Off Board Chaff System (SRBOC)


One AN/SLQ-29 electronic warfare suite


One AN/SLQ-25 towed torpedo decoy (Nixie)



Aircraft:
75







Ships:
USS Ranger (CV-61), Decommissioned, in Reserve
USS Independence (CV-62), Decommissioned, in Reserve




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David
Sat January 3, 2004 11:33pm
CV67 - John F. Kennedy Cl

Function: Centerpiece and Flagship of the Navy's "Forward....from the sea..." power projection mission.



Description: Hosting 85 aircraft and carrying enough supplies to sustain her Air Wing and escorts for 90 days, the modern U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, in effect, represents a mobile piece of American real estate, capable of projecting the power and influence of the United States any where in the world. With the end of the Cold War the navy carrier mission has shifted from maintaining Sea Lanes of Communication and confronting the Soviet Navy to addressing regional threats to U.S. interests. While still fully capable of dominating the open seas, the Navy, through the Carrier Battle Groups, now focuses on supporting near shore "littoral zone" and inshore U.S. ground operations. While the Ticonderoga class Guided Missile Cruisers and Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyers possess an awesome amount of firepower, they lack the flexibility of the carrier air wing. By swapping out and adjusting the number of aircraft aboard, the aircraft carrier can tailor its air wing to meet mission needs. Though powered by eight conventional boilers, the Kennedy was originally supposed to be nuclear powered, but budget constraints forced its conversion to conventional boilers. The USS John F. Kennedy became the first active carrier assigned to the Naval Reserve fleet in September of 1995, where she supports active Navy training.



General Characteristics, John F. Kennedy Class


Builders:
Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, VA



Power Plant:
Eight Foster & Wheeler boilers, four Westinghouse steam turbines, four shafts, 280,000 total shaft horsepower



Date Deployed:
September 7, 1964



Length, Overall:
1052 feet (320.65 meters)



Flight Deck Length:
252 feet (76.81 meters)



Beam:
130 feet (39.62 meters)



Displacement:
82,000 long tons (83,315.95 metric tons) full load



Speed:
30+ knots (34.52+mph, 55.55+ kph)



Crew:
Ship's Company: 3,117
Air Wing: 2,480




Armament:
Three Mk 29 Launchers for NATO Sea Sparrow (RIM-7M) Surface to Air missile


One Mk 15 Mod 2 Close-In Weapon System (3 mounts)



Sensors:
One AN/SPS-49 air search radar


One AN/SPS-67 surface search radar


One AN/SPS-64 navigational radar


Three Mk 91 fire control directors (Sea Sparrow)



Countermeasures:
One Mk 36 Mod 2 Super Rapid-Blooming Off Board Chaff System (SRBOC)


One AN/SLQ-32(v)3 electronic warfare suite


One AN/SLQ-25 towed torpedo decoy (Nixiee)



Aircraft:
Approximately 85


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David
Sat January 3, 2004 11:33pm
CVN68 - Nimitz Class Airc

Function: Centerpiece and Flagship of the Navy's "Forward....from the sea..." power projection mission.



Description: Hosting 85 aircraft and carrying enough supplies to sustain her Air Wing and escorts for 90 days, the modern U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, in effect, represents a mobile piece of American real estate, capable of projecting the power and influence of the United States any where in the world. With the end of the Cold War the navy carrier mission has shifted from maintaining Sea Lanes of Communication and confronting the Soviet Navy to addressing regional threats to U.S. interests. While still fully capable of dominating the open seas, the Navy, through the Carrier Battle Groups, now focuses on supporting near shore "littoral zone" and inshore U.S. ground operations. While the Ticonderoga class Guided Missile Cruisers and Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyers possess an awsome amount of firepower, they lack the flexability of the carrier air wing. By swaping out and adjusting the number of aircraft aboard, the aircraft carrier can tailor its air wing to meet mission needs. The Nimitz-class carriers, eight operational and one under construction, are the largest, most powerful, warships in the world. The USS Nimitz (CVN 68) underwent its first refueling during a 33-month Refueling Complex Overhaul at Newport News Shipbuilding in Newport News, Va., in 1998.



General Characteristics, Nimitz Class


Cost:
About $4.5 billion each



Builders:
Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, VA



Power Plant:
Eight Westinghouse A2W nuclear reactors, four geared steam turbines, four shafts



Date Deployed:
May 3, 1975 (USS Nimitz)



Length, Overall:
1,092 feet (332.85 meters)



Flight Deck Length:
252 feet (76.81 meters)



Beam:
134 feet (40.84 meters)



Displacement:
Approx. 97,000 long tons (98,556.67 metric tons) full load



Speed:
30+ knots (34.52+mph, 55.55+ kph)



Crew:
Ship's Company: 3,200 - Air Wing 2,480




Armament:
Three Mk 29 Launchers for NATO Sea Sparrow (RIM-7M) Surface to Air missile


One Mk 15 Mod 2 Close-In Weapon System (3 mounts on Nimitz and Dwight D. Eisenhower, and 4 mounts on Carl Vinson and later ships of the class)



Sensors:
One AN/SPS-48 air search radar


One AN/SPS-49 air search radar


One AN/SPS-67 surface search radar


One AN/SPS-64 navigational radar


Three Mk 91 fire control directors (Sea Sparrow)



Countermeasures:
One Mk 36 Mod 2 Super Rapid-Blooming Off Board Chaff System (SRBOC)


One AN/SLQ-32(v)3 electronic warfare suite


One AN/SLQ-25 towed torpedo decoy (Nixiee)



Aircraft:
85







Ships:
USS Nimitz (CVN-68), Norfolk, VA
USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (CVN-69), Norfolk, VA
USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70), Bremerton, WA
USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71), Norfolk, VA
USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN 72), Everett, WA
USS George Washington (CVN 73), Norfolk, VA
USS John C. Stennis (CVN-74), San Diego, CA
USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75), Norfolk, VA
Ronald Reagan (CVN-76) (under construction)




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David
Sat January 3, 2004 11:34pm
CVN65 - Enterprise Class

Function: Centerpiece and Flagship of the Navy's "Forward....from the sea..." power projection mission.



Description: Hosting 85 aircraft and carrying enough supplies to sustain her air wing and escorts for 90 days, the modern U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, in effect, represents a mobile piece of American real estate, capable of projecting the power and influence of the United States any where in the world. With the end of the Cold War the navy carrier mission has shifted from maintaining Sea Lanes of Communication and confronting the Soviet Navy to addressing regional threats to U.S. interests. While still fully capable of dominating the open seas, the Navy, through the Carrier Battle Groups, now focuses on supporting near shore "littoral zone" and inshore U.S. ground operations. While the Ticonderoga class Guided Missile Cruisers and Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyers possess an awesome amount of firepower, they lack the flexibility of the carrier air wing. By swapping out and adjusting the number of aircraft aboard, the aircraft carrier can tailor its air wing to meet mission needs. The Enterprise is the first American nuclear-powered aircraft carrier and is expected to remain in service until 2013, when it will be replaced by the CVX-78.



General Characteristics, Enterprise Class


Builders:
Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, VA



Power Plant:
Eight Westinghouse A2W nuclear reactors, four geared steam turbines, four shafts



Date Deployed:
November 25, 1961 (USS Enterprise)



Length, Overall:
1,040 feet (335.64 meters)



Flight Deck Length:
252 feet (76.81 meters)



Beam:
133 feet (40.54 meters)



Displacement:
89,600 long tons (91,037.91 metric tons) full load



Speed:
30+ knots (34.52+mph, 55.55+ kph)



Crew:
Ship's Company: 3,350 - Air Wing 2,480




Armament:
Three Mk 29 Launchers for NATO Sea Sparrow (RIM-7M) Surface to Air missile


One Mk 15 Mod 2 Close-In Weapon System (3 mounts)



Sensors:
One AN/SPS-48 air search radar


One AN/SPS-49 air search radar


One AN/SPS-67 surface search radar


One AN/SPS-64 navigational radar


Three Mk 91 fire control directors (Sea Sparrow)



Countermeasures:
One Mk 36 Mod 2 Super Rapid-Blooming Off Board Chaff System (SRBOC)


One AN/SLQ-32(v)3 electronic warfare suite


One AN/SLQ-25 towed torpedo decoy (Nixiee)



Aircraft:
85







Ship:
USS Enterprise (CVN 65), Norfolk, VA




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David
Sun January 4, 2004 12:31am
SSN637 - Sturgeon Class F

Function: America's front-line fast attack nuclear submarine during the '60s and '70s.



History: Following in the steps of the Skipjack and Permit class nuclear submarines, the Sturgeon class incorporated a a new hull design and sensor package. Larger than either of the two earlier designs while using the same reactor plant, the Sturgeon sacrificed speed for increased weapons payload and crew efficiency. Beginning with the Archerfish (SSN678) the hull was lengthened an additional 10 feet. In addition to their regular duties as anti submarine platforms, the Sturgeon class submarines were also tasked with coastal reconnaissance and electronic intelligence gathering. Furthermore, between 1982 and 1991 six 637 class boats (SSN 678-680, 682, 684, and 686) were modified to carry the SEAL Dry Deck Shelter (DDS.) The DDS is a submersible air lock and storage area allowing for the transporting, delivery and recovery of SEAL teams and all their associated equipment. The Sturgeon class submarines were slowly phased out of front line service by the faster, more capable Los Angeles class submarines during the 80's and 90's though those still in service continue to perform intelligence gathering and support special operations missions.



General Characteristics, Sturgeon Class


Builders:
General Dynamics Electric Boat Division


General Dynamics Quincy Shipbuilding Division


Ingalls Shipbuilding


Portsmouth Naval Shipyard


San Francisco Naval Shipyard


Newport News Shipbuilding



Power Plant:
One S5W nuclear reactor, two steam turbines, one shaft, 15,000 shaft horse power



Date Deployed:
March 3, 1967 (USS Sturgeon)



Length, Overall:
292 feet (89 meters)


SSN 678-687 302 feet (91.44 meters)



Beam:
32 feet (9.75 meters)



Draft:
28.8 feet



Displacement:
4,780 tons submerged


SSN 678-687 4,960 tons submerged



Speed:
20+ knots (23.02+ miles per hour, 37.05 +kph)



Crew:
12 Officers, 95 Enlisted

Armament:
Mk 48 ADCAP Torpedoes, launched from four 533mm torpedo tubes.


Harpoon anti-ship missiles (tube launched)


Tomahawk anti-ship/ land attack missiles (tube launched)



Sensors:
BSY-2 combat data system



Radar:
1 AN/BPS-14/15 navigation and fire control radar



Sonar:
1 TB-16 passive towed sonar array


1 TB-23 passive "thin line" towed sonar array


1 AN/BQG-5 wide aperture flank array


1 AN/BQQ-2/5 low frequency spherical bow sonar array


1 AN/BQS-12/13 active sonar array


1 AN/BQR-6 active sonar array (in submarines equipped with the BQQ-2)


1 AN/BQR-7 passive sonar array (in submarines equipped with the BQQ-2)



Optics:
1 Type 2 attack periscope


1 Type 18 search periscope



Countermeasures:
WLR-9 acoustic intercept receiver


WLQ-4 ESM





Ships:
USS Parche (SSN-683), Bangor, WA
USS L. Mendel Rivers (SSN-686), Norfolk, VA




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David
Sun January 4, 2004 12:31am
SSN688 - Los Angeles Clas

Function: Nuclear powered Fast Attack submarine.



History: Deployed on November 13, 1976, the Los Angeles (SSN688) fast attack submarine marked a technological leap forward in submarine design. Built from the screw forward as a dedicated antisubmarine warfare (ASW) platform, the Los Angeles class submarines were designed to guard American Carrier Battle Groups by hunting Soviet submarines and anti-surface warfare (ASUW) capitol ships like the Kirov class BCGN. The Los Angeles submarines were faster, quieter, carried more sophisticated sensors and possessed better weapons than any other submarine in existence. In addition to their primary function as offensive ASW weapons the 688 boats perform a number of additional duties to include sub surface precision land attack strikes (using tube launched Tomahawk cruise missiles), intelligence gathering, mine warfare, and special operations support (SEAL deployment and recovery). In fact, their performance was so revolutionary that beginning with USS Providence (SSN719) the hull was lengthened to accommodate 12 vertical launch system (VLS) tubes to allow the submarines to launch Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles. Nearing the end of their 30-year lives, the Los Angeles class submarines are slowly being replaced by the Improved Los Angeles (San Juan SSN751), the Seawolf (SSN21) and ultimately by the Virginia class (SSN774).



General Characteristics, Los Angeles Class


Cost:
About $900 million each



Builders:
General Dynamics Electric Boat Division



Power Plant:
One S6G nuclear reactor, one shaft, 35,000 shaft horse power



Date Deployed:
November 13, 1976 (USS Los Angeles)



Length, Overall:
360 feet (109.73 meters)



Beam:
33 feet (10.06 meters)



Draft:
35 feet (10.67 meters)



Displacement:
6,927 tons (7,010.73 metric tons) submerged



Speed:
32 knots submerged



Crew:
13 Officers; 121 Enlisted



Armament:
Mk 48 ADCAP Torpedoes, launched from four 533mm torpedo tubes


Harpoon anti-ship missiles (tube launched)


Tomahawk anti-ship/ land attack missiles (tube launched SSN688 - SSN718, VLS launched SSN719 - SSN751)




Sensors:
BSY-1 combat data system



Radar:
1 AN/BPS-5 surface search radar


1 AN/BPS-15 navigation and fire control radar



Sonar:
1 TB-16 passive towed sonar array


1 TB-23 passive "thin line" towed sonar array


1 AN/BQG-5 wide aperture flank array


1 AN/BQQ-5 low frequency spherical bow sonar array


1 AN/BQS-15 close range active sonar (ice detection)


Mine and Ice Detection and Avoidance System (MIDAS)


SADS-TG active detection sonar)



Optics:
1 Type 2 attack periscope


1 Type 18 search periscope



Countermeasures:
WLR-9 acoustic intercept receiver


WLQ-4 ESM


WLY-1 torpedo decoy





Ships:
USS Los Angeles (SSN-688), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Philadelphia (SSN-690), Groton, CT
USS Memphis (SSN-691), Groton, CT
USS Bremerton (SSN-698), San Diego, CA
USS Jacksonville (SSN-699), Norfolk, VA
USS Dallas (SSN-700), Groton, CT
USS La Jolla (SSN-701), San Diego, CA
USS City of Corpus Christi (SSN-705), Groton, CT
USS Albuquerque (SSN-706), Groton, CT
USS Portsmouth (SSN-707), San Diego, CA
USS Minneapolis-St. Paul (SSN-708), Norfolk, VA
USS Hyman G. Rickover (SSN-709), Norfolk, VA
USS Augusta (SSN 710), Groton, CT
USS San Francisco (SSN-711), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Houston (SSN-713), San Diego, CA
USS Norfolk (SSN-714), Norfolk, VA
USS Buffalo (SSN-715), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Salt Lake City (SSN-716), San Diego, CA
USS Olympia (SSN-717), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Honolulu (SSN-718), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Providence (SSN-719), Groton, CT
USS Pittsburgh (SSN-720), Groton, CT
USS Chicago (SSN-721), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Key West (SSN-722), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Oklahoma City (SSN-723), Norfolk, VA
USS Louisville (SSN-724), Pearl Harbor, HI
USS Helena (SSN-725), San Diego, CA
USS Newport News (SSN-750), Norfolk, VA




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David
Sun January 4, 2004 12:31am
LSV-2: Large Scale Vehicl

Function: The world's largest unmanned autonomous submarine. LSV 2 Cutthroat will offer the capability to conduct a wide variety of studies dramatically improving the acoustic and operational performance of future submarines.

Entered Navy: 2001.



Description: LSV 2 Cutthroat will provide submarine design engineers a platform to test advanced submarine technologies.


Cutthroat, a 205-ton, large scale submarine test vehicle, will be used to affordably explore and test emerging technologies and to conduct physics-based experiments. Specific emphasis will be on stealth, hydrodynamics, hydroacoustics and propulsion designs to permit technology insertion into current and future submarines.


The LSV 2 will provide the capability to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of new technologies that will result in major improvements in performance for the U.S. Navy's new attack submarine, USS Virginia (SSN 774). The LSV 2 is being designed and built by an industry team from Newport News Shipbuilding and General Dynamics/Electric Boat Company under contract from Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA).


After delivery in 2001, LSV 2 will operate on Lake Pend Oreille at the Acoustic Research Detachment in Bayview, Idaho, the Navy's laboratory for demonstrating submarine stealth technology. The facility is operated by the Naval Surface Warfare Center's Carderock Division.


Cutthroat, named after a native Idaho trout, was named in 1997 after a selection process by nearby Athol Elementary School. The Navy asked the school to decide on a name from a list of indigenous Idaho fish. Many of these students attended the keel-laying in October 1997 and signed their names on the hull during the November 2000 ceremony.


Cutthroat is similar to Kokanee (LSV-1), but more advanced. Enhancements include a larger overall scale ? 29 percent, vice 25 percent for Kokanee ? which will improve the fidelity of test data to full-scale results. Cutthroat is designed to be more modular than Kokanee, so that major modifications, including radical hull changes, can be made with less impact to other systems onboard the vessel. Another advantage is an increase in ODAS capability. The Cutthroat ODAS will have twice as many data channels recorded as Kokanee at delivery ? 512, vice 256 ? and this is upgradable to 1,536 recorded channels. The Cutthroat ODAS converts the data from analog to digital form and processes the data digitally. In Cutthroat, data recording can be configured electronically under computer control, whereas Kokanee uses a patch panel. Cutthroat is equipped with a 3,000 horsepower permanent-magnet, radial-gap electric propulsion motor, provided to the Navy under a unique partnership agreement with General Dynamics Electric Boat, the owner of the technology. This motor is easily upgradable to 6,000 horsepower. Other order-of-magnitude improvements were engineered into the guidance, navigation, control, and propulsion systems, including the addition of torque sensors and other sensors of mechanical data for better reconstruction of the scenario.



General Characteristics, LSV-2: Large Scale Vehicle 2


Contractor:
Newport News Shipbuilding and General Dynamics Electric Boat



Length:
111 feet (33.83 meters)



Diameter:
10 feet (3.05 meters)



Weight:
205 tons (205,000 metric tons)



Ships:
Cutthroat (LSV 2), christened on November 15, 2000


Propulsion:
Electric drive (3,000 shaft horsepower (shp) plant coupled with electric motor controller, expandable to 6,000 shp with additional motor controlled modules).



Armament:
None



Crew:
None



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David
Thu January 8, 2004 3:22pm
Eighth Armored Division

Worn from 1 April 1942 - 13 November 1945
Tab "Thundering Heard" nicknamed "Iron Snake"


Activated at Fort Knox, Kentucky. The Arabic number eight shows the division's designation. The tab is attributed to a remark made by a news correspondent who, after watching the Eighth Armored Division launch an attack across the Rhine River, said they looked like a "Thundering heard." The nickname: "Iron Snake" derives from an aerial observation of the division winding its way through the hills and valleys of Central Europe. From this perspective, the division looks like an "iron snake." Both inscriptions are unauthorized.



Campaigns:
WWII (Rhineland, Ardennes- Alsace, Central Europe).
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David
Tue June 14, 2005 4:00am
WORLD NEWS SUMMARY CDR AF

WORLD NEWS SUMMARY CDR AFRTS BC LOS ANGELES 27MAR91
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David
Tue June 14, 2005 4:03am
WORLD NEWS SUMMARY THE LA

WORLD NEWS SUMMARY THE LATEST WORLD NEWS 1 MAR 91
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David
Tue June 14, 2005 11:52am
NAVY NEWS SERVICE

NAVY NEWS SERVICE

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