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작성자 중사3주먈 작성일 2017-01-21 22:23 조회수 58

 

안녕하세요 ※

 

 

Today  watched a movie and Korean program. When I was watching a Korean program, I wrote everything in English that people in that program talked. It took a lot of time, but it was quite similar. Although studying English is hard, I'll keep studying like that to be good at English.
The title of the movie I watched was Harry Potter 3, which is a very famous movie. I used to hate fantasy genre movie but I like it now. l want to watch the American movies without any subtitles someday, so I'll study listening and speaking. Let's do it!

 

When Korea plans to conduct ICT ODA to Rwanda, it should consider problems such as lack of human resources and corrupted governmental organizations.

 

korea loses in kimchi war

 

By Kim Yon-se
Staff Reporter

South Korea imported more kimchi than it exported in the first half, losing its luster as the original maker of the spicy fermented cabbage.

Korea saw the trade balance of kimchi, one of the most internationally acknowledged Korean traditional dishes, post a deficit the first time ever in the first six months of the year.

According to the Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corp., Korea imported kimchi worth $40.3 million during the January-June period exporting $33.6 million worth.

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

An official of the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation said Korea should have done something to win back the lost market share to Asia’s fastest-growing economy.

``It seems to be a bit late to undo what’s been already done. Even some Korean kimchi makers have moved their facilities to China to sell their products to their home country in a boomerang export,’’ he said.

There was a heated kimchi trade war between Seoul and Beijing last year.

Parasite eggs in nine samples of the 16 Chinese kimchi products were detected last October and imports were briefly banned. In retaliation, China slapped an import ban on South Korean-made kimchi and several side dishes at the end of October.

Kimchi imports started at 10 tons in the late 1990s but have risen steadily year after year.

 

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said in a statement issued Monday that the U.S. recognizes that Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade preserves Korea's right to take measures necessary to protect public health.

 

The statement clearly sought to calm fears over the possibility of importing beef tainted with mad cow disease as a result of a new agreement between Seoul and Washington that lifts the ban on U.S. beef here. days now, protestors have taken to the streets, gathering in large candlelit vigils to express their opposition to the new agreement.

 

Under growing public pressure, Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said last Thursday that Korea would suspend imports and inspect all U.S. beef in quarantine if a new case of bovine spongim encephalopathy is found in the United States. The lack of such provision in the agreement signed in April is one of the major points of contention those opposed to the deal.

 

On Tuesday, President Lee Myung-bak welcomed the U.S. statement. "The U.S. government has acknowledged Koreans' fears about mad cow disease," Lee said during a weekly Cabinet meeting. "All problems have been settled well, as the U.S. government accepts our decision," he said.

 

The administration should feel great shame that it took vigorous action by the public to bring about what should have been included in the new agreement in the first place. Had it not been the expression of concern by the public, the prime minister would not have said that Korea would suspend beef imports if mad cow disease were to be discovered in the United States. Indeed, had it not been the activism of ordinary citizens, the United States - in all likelihood - would not have made a statement recognizing Korea's right to suspend beef imports. The government should thank the people giving it the opportunity to reclaim its sovereignty over food safety in the country.

 

Whether "all problems have been settled" - as Lee put it - still remains to be seen. The government should see to it that the United States' acceptance of the Korean policy of immediately suspending beef imports if mad cow disease is discovered in the United States is written into the beef import agreement bee it is promulgated. Relying on a "gentlemen's agreement," as eign Affairs and Trade Minister Yoo Myung-hwan expressed Schwab's statement, is not sufficient.

 

Furthermore, the government's explanation its misunderstanding of the United States' new regulation on animal feeds, announced a week after the signing of the beef agreement, is not satisfactory. Investigation must be made into how such serious oversight - whether accidental or intentional - occurred.

 

In the meantime, nine government inspectors are in the United States to conduct on-site inspections at the 31 slaughterhouses due to export beef to Korea. The inspectors have less than two weeks to check whether the slaughterhouses are properly identifying cattle more than 30 months old, and properly identifying and removing specified risk materials.

 

Although they have limited time to accomplish their mission, they must do a thorough job - there is no reason the inspectors to go all the way to the slaughterhouses - on taxpayers' money - just to give a rubber-stamp approval to U.S. beef. If the inspectors are found to have not done their job properly, the government will have one more problem on its hands.

Kim-koo was a person who attracted Corean Independence army.

  When he was young, he was a general in Dong-hak, which is an army group of farmers.

  But, Dong-hak was not enough strong to defeat Japan.

 

  When the Dong-hak was defeated by Japan, he just drifting somewhere. When he found a Japan's general, he killed the general without any weapon. By this happening, he was prisoned and he got capital punishment. But he jump over the prison's wall with long stick and he ran away far.

 

  He went to Manjoo(Manjoo is the place that our nation had borned. Here is colder than the North pole When the winter, wind blows.) and made the Corean Independence Institution and elected to there's president. He sent Ahn-joonggeun to Haulbin and let him to kill Japan's highest general Itto Hiroboomi and Ahn succeeded to kill the general. He sent Yun-bonggil to Jangchoong and tried to kill Japan's king, but he failed.

  He fought with Japan in Manjoo and always won. He had never lost. When the World II war began, he gathered all his army and planned to go to Korean peninsula and let Independence Korea from Japan by power. But The yesterday to his attacking day, Japan surrendered to USA, and He couldn't kill Japan.

  The Famous story : General Kim-jwajin was attracting 2,800's Corean army. They defeated 56,000's Japan army in Chungsanri.

  When he went back to Seoul, he was killed by a young man who attracted by USA. After he died, Manjoo was robbed by China. After he died, Korean peninsula was divided to two countries(North and South). And USA and the people attracted by USA like Lee-sungman had been spoiling South Korea bee Park-jeonghee did the 5-18 revolution.

 

  But as the people was being, we succeeded to grow up and now if our country is reunified, our country is the 3rd strong nation in the world.

 

Famous War in Corea

  Korea has 2000th's big war. No country did the war a lot like Korea.

 

In Aicient

  Soo(China) vs Koguryu(Korea's a part)  [Soo : Military 1,130,000, Navy : 500,000]

                                                                         [Koguryu : Military 50,00., Navy : 20,000]

  Soo's enemy was 1,630.000 and Koguryu's enemy was just 70,000. But the Winner was Koguryu. Koguryu killed 550,000 in Hwang Ha, the chiness yellow river. And they are all died in Sal-soo. But Koguryu's enemy lost 20,000. And after Koguryu's counterattack, over 2 million's chiness was died by Kogurian.

  After this war, Koguryu made a bone monument, which is called Gyung-Gwan. It was highere than usual mountains.

  I think this war is The World War I.

 

  Now, we're recovering Koguryu's power. The day that Korea defeat USA is not far a lot. It will be come true soon.

 

 

  If you want to know about Korea a lot, Learn Korean language. As you don't know Korean language, it would hard to you to find the inmation about Korea. And The sites about Korean history are all telling lie. So I help you once, but at next, learn korean language and find the inmation by youth.

 

 

 

 

 

On Tuesday, President Lee Myung-bak welcomed the U.S. statement. "The U.S. government has acknowledged Koreans' fears about mad cow disease," Lee said during a weekly Cabinet meeting. "All problems have been settled well, as the U.S. government accepts our decision," he said.

 

The administration should feel great shame that it took vigorous action by the public to bring about what should have been included in the new agreement in the first place. Had it not been the expression of concern by the public, the prime minister would not have said that Korea would suspend beef imports if mad cow disease were to be discovered in the United States. Indeed, had it not been the activism of ordinary citizens, the United States - in all likelihood - would not have made a statement recognizing Korea's right to suspend beef imports. The government should thank the people giving it the opportunity to reclaim its sovereignty over food safety in the country.

 

Whether "all problems have been settled" - as Lee put it - still remains to be seen. The government should see to it that the United States' acceptance of the Korean policy of immediately suspending beef imports if mad cow disease is discovered in the United States is written into the beef import agreement bee it is promulgated. Relying on a "gentlemen's agreement," as eign Affairs and Trade Minister Yoo Myung-hwan expressed Schwab's statement, is not sufficient.

 

Furthermore, the government's explanation its misunderstanding of the United States' new regulation on animal feeds, announced a week after the signing of the beef agreement, is not satisfactory. Investigation must be made into how

 

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

An official of the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation said Korea should have done something to win back the lost market share to Asia’s fastest-growing economy.

``It seems to be a bit late to undo what’s been already done. Even some Korean kimchi makers have moved their facilities to China to sell their products to their home country in a boomerang export,’’ he said.

There was a heated kimchi trade war between Seoul and Beijing last year.

Parasite eggs in nine samples of the 16 Chinese kimchi products were detected last October and imports were briefly banned. In retaliation, China slapped an import ban on South Korean-made kimchi and several side dishes at the end of October.

Kimchi imports started at 10 tons in the late 1990s but have risen steadily year after year.

 

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said in a statement issued Monday that the U.S. recognizes that Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade preserves Korea's right to take measures necessary to protect public health.

 

The statement clearly sought to calm fears over the possibility of importing beef tainted with mad cow disease as a result of a new agreement between Seoul and Washington that lifts the ban on U.S. beef here. days now, protestors have taken to the streets, gathering in large candlelit vigils to express their opposition to the new agreement.

 

South Korea imported more kimchi than it exported in the first half, losing its luster as the original maker of the spicy fermented cabbage.

Korea saw the trade balance of kimchi, one of the most internationally acknowledged Korean traditional dishes, post a deficit the first time ever in the first six months of the year.

According to the Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corp., Korea imported kimchi worth $40.3 million during the January-June period exporting $33.6 million worth.

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

An official of the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation said Korea should have done something to win back the lost market share to Asia’s fastest-growing economy.

``It seems to be a bit late to undo what’s been already done. Even some Korean kimchi makers have moved their facilities to China to sell their products to their home country in a boomerang export,’’ he said.

There was a heated kimchi trade war between Seoul and Beijing last year.

Parasite eggs in nine samples of the 16 Chinese kimchi products were detected last October and imports were briefly banned. In retaliation, China slapped an import ban on South Korean-made kimchi and several side dishes at the end of October.

Kimchi imports started at 10 tons in the late 1990s but have risen steadily year after year.

 

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said in a statement issued Monday that the U.S. recognizes that Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade preserves Korea's right to take measures necessary to protect public health.

 

The statement clearly sought to calm fears over the possibility of importing beef tainted with mad cow disease as a result of a new agreement between Seoul and Washington that lifts the ban on U.S. beef here. days now, protestors have taken to the streets, gathering in large candlelit vigils to express their opposition to the new agreement.

 

Under growing public pressure, Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said last Thursday that Korea would suspend imports and inspect all U.S. beef in quarantine if a new case of bovine spongim encephalopathy is found in the United States. The lack of such provision in the agreement signed in April is one of the major points of contention those opposed to the deal.

 

On Tuesday, President Lee Myung-bak welcomed the U.S. statement. "The U.S. government has acknowledged Koreans' fears about mad cow disease," Lee said during a weekly Cabinet meeting. "All problems have been settled well, as the U.S. government accepts our decision," he said.

 

The administration should feel great shame that it took vigorous action by the public to bring about what should have been included in the new agreement in the first place. Had it not been the expression of concern by the public, the prime minister would not have said that Korea would suspend beef imports if mad cow disease were to be discovered in the United States. Indeed, had it not been the activism of ordinary citizens, the United States - in all likelihood - would not have made a statement recognizing Korea's right to suspend beef imports. The government should thank the people giving it the opportunity to reclaim its sovereignty over food safety in the country.

 

Today I watched a movie and Korean program. When I was watching a Korean program, I wrote everything in English that people in that program talked. It took a lot of time, but it was quite similar. Although studying English is hard, I'll keep studying like that to be good at English.
The title of the movie I watched was Harry Potter 3, which is a very famous movie. I used to hate fantasy genre movie but I like it now. l want to watch the American movies without any subtitles someday, so I'll study listening and speaking. Let's do it!

 

When Korea plans to conduct ICT ODA to Rwanda, it should consider problems such as lack of human resources and corrupted governmental organizations.

 

korea loses in kimchi war

 

By Kim Yon-se
Staff Reporter

South Korea imported more kimchi than it exported in the first half, losing its luster as the original maker of the spicy fermented cabbage.

Korea saw the trade balance of kimchi, one of the most internationally acknowledged Korean traditional dishes, post a deficit the first time ever in the first six months of the year.

According to the Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corp., Korea imported kimchi worth $40.3 million during the January-June period exporting $33.6 million worth.

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

An official of the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation said Korea should have done something to win back the lost market share to Asia’s fastest-growing economy.

``It seems to be a bit late to undo what’s been already done. Even some Korean kimchi makers have moved their facilities to China to sell their products to their home country in a boomerang export,’’ he said.

There was a heated kimchi trade war between Seoul and Beijing last year.

Parasite eggs in nine samples of the 16 Chinese kimchi products were detected last October and imports were briefly banned. In retaliation, China slapped an import ban on South Korean-made kimchi and several side dishes at the end of October.

Kimchi imports started at 10 tons in the late 1990s but have risen steadily year after year.

 

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said in a statement issued Monday that the U.S. recognizes that Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade preserves Korea's right to take measures necessary to protect public health.

 

The statement clearly sought to calm fears over the possibility of importing beef tainted with mad cow disease as a result of a new agreement between Seoul and Washington that lifts the ban on U.S. beef here. days now, protestors have taken to the streets, gathering in large candlelit vigils to express their opposition to the new agreement.

 

Under growing public pressure, Prime Minister Han Seung-soo said last Thursday that Korea would suspend imports and inspect all U.S. beef in quarantine if a new case of bovine spongim encephalopathy is found in the United States. The lack of such provision in the agreement signed in April is one of the major points of contention those opposed to the deal.

 

On Tuesday, President Lee Myung-bak welcomed the U.S. statement. "The U.S. government has acknowledged Koreans' fears about mad cow disease," Lee said during a weekly Cabinet meeting. "All problems have been settled well, as the U.S. government accepts our decision," he said.

 

The administration should feel great shame that it took vigorous action by the public to bring about what should have been included in the new agreement in the first place. Had it not been the expression of concern by the public, the prime minister would not have said that Korea would suspend beef imports if mad cow disease were to be discovered in the United States. Indeed, had it not been the activism of ordinary citizens, the United States - in all likelihood - would not have made a statement recognizing Korea's right to suspend beef imports. The government should thank the people giving it the opportunity to reclaim its sovereignty over food safety in the country.

 

Whether "all problems have been settled" - as Lee put it - still remains to be seen. The government should see to it that the United States' acceptance of the Korean policy of immediately suspending beef imports if mad cow disease is discovered in the United States is written into the beef import agreement bee it is promulgated. Relying on a "gentlemen's agreement," as eign Affairs and Trade Minister Yoo Myung-hwan expressed Schwab's statement, is not sufficient.

 

Furthermore, the government's explanation its misunderstanding of the United States' new regulation on animal feeds, announced a week after the signing of the beef agreement, is not satisfactory. Investigation must be made into how such serious oversight - whether accidental or intentional - occurred.

 

In the meantime, nine government inspectors are in the United States to conduct on-site inspections at the 31 slaughterhouses due to export beef to Korea. The inspectors have less than two weeks to check whether the slaughterhouses are properly identifying cattle more than 30 months old, and properly identifying and removing specified risk materials.

 

Although they have limited time to accomplish their mission, they must do a thorough job - there is no reason the inspectors to go all the way to the slaughterhouses - on taxpayers' money - just to give a rubber-stamp approval to U.S. beef. If the inspectors are found to have not done their job properly, the government will have one more problem on its hands.

Kim-koo was a person who attracted Corean Independence army.

  When he was young, he was a general in Dong-hak, which is an army group of farmers.

  But, Dong-hak was not enough strong to defeat Japan.

 

  When the Dong-hak was defeated by Japan, he just drifting somewhere. When he found a Japan's general, he killed the general without any weapon. By this happening, he was prisoned and he got capital punishment. But he jump over the prison's wall with long stick and he ran away far.

 

  He went to Manjoo(Manjoo is the place that our nation had borned. Here is colder than the North pole When the winter, wind blows.) and made the Corean Independence Institution and elected to there's president. He sent Ahn-joonggeun to Haulbin and let him to kill Japan's highest general Itto Hiroboomi and Ahn succeeded to kill the general. He sent Yun-bonggil to Jangchoong and tried to kill Japan's king, but he failed.

  He fought with Japan in Manjoo and always won. He had never lost. When the World II war began, he gathered all his army and planned to go to Korean peninsula and let Independence Korea from Japan by power. But The yesterday to his attacking day, Japan surrendered to USA, and He couldn't kill Japan.

  The Famous story : General Kim-jwajin was attracting 2,800's Corean army. They defeated 56,000's Japan army in Chungsanri.

  When he went back to Seoul, he was killed by a young man who attracted by USA. After he died, Manjoo was robbed by China. After he died, Korean peninsula was divided to two countries(North and South). And USA and the people attracted by USA like Lee-sungman had been spoiling South Korea bee Park-jeonghee did the 5-18 revolution.

 

  But as the people was being, we succeeded to grow up and now if our country is reunified, our country is the 3rd strong nation in the world.

 

Famous War in Corea

  Korea has 2000th's big war. No country did the war a lot like Korea.

 

In Aicient

  Soo(China) vs Koguryu(Korea's a part)  [Soo : Military 1,130,000, Navy : 500,000]

                                                                         [Koguryu : Military 50,00., Navy : 20,000]

  Soo's enemy was 1,630.000 and Koguryu's enemy was just 70,000. But the Winner was Koguryu. Koguryu killed 550,000 in Hwang Ha, the chiness yellow river. And they are all died in Sal-soo. But Koguryu's enemy lost 20,000. And after Koguryu's counterattack, over 2 million's chiness was died by Kogurian.

  After this war, Koguryu made a bone monument, which is called Gyung-Gwan. It was highere than usual mountains.

  I think this war is The World War I.

 

  Now, we're recovering Koguryu's power. The day that Korea defeat USA is not far a lot. It will be come true soon.

 

 

  If you want to know about Korea a lot, Learn Korean language. As you don't know Korean language, it would hard to you to find the inmation about Korea. And The sites about Korean history are all telling lie. So I help you once, but at next, learn korean language and find the inmation by youth.

 

 

 

 

 

On Tuesday, President Lee Myung-bak welcomed the U.S. statement. "The U.S. government has acknowledged Koreans' fears about mad cow disease," Lee said during a weekly Cabinet meeting. "All problems have been settled well, as the U.S. government accepts our decision," he said.

 

The administration should feel great shame that it took vigorous action by the public to bring about what should have been included in the new agreement in the first place. Had it not been the expression of concern by the public, the prime minister would not have said that Korea would suspend beef imports if mad cow disease were to be discovered in the United States. Indeed, had it not been the activism of ordinary citizens, the United States - in all likelihood - would not have made a statement recognizing Korea's right to suspend beef imports. The government should thank the people giving it the opportunity to reclaim its sovereignty over food safety in the country.

 

Whether "all problems have been settled" - as Lee put it - still remains to be seen. The government should see to it that the United States' acceptance of the Korean policy of immediately suspending beef imports if mad cow disease is discovered in the United States is written into the beef import agreement bee it is promulgated. Relying on a "gentlemen's agreement," as eign Affairs and Trade Minister Yoo Myung-hwan expressed Schwab's statement, is not sufficient.

 

Furthermore, the government's explanation its misunderstanding of the United States' new regulation on animal feeds, announced a week after the signing of the beef agreement, is not satisfactory. Investigation must be made into how

 

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

An official of the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation said Korea should have done something to win back the lost market share to Asia’s fastest-growing economy.

``It seems to be a bit late to undo what’s been already done. Even some Korean kimchi makers have moved their facilities to China to sell their products to their home country in a boomerang export,’’ he said.

There was a heated kimchi trade war between Seoul and Beijing last year.

Parasite eggs in nine samples of the 16 Chinese kimchi products were detected last October and imports were briefly banned. In retaliation, China slapped an import ban on South Korean-made kimchi and several side dishes at the end of October.

Kimchi imports started at 10 tons in the late 1990s but have risen steadily year after year.

 

U.S. Trade Representative Susan C. Schwab said in a statement issued Monday that the U.S. recognizes that Article XX of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade preserves Korea's right to take measures necessary to protect public health.

 

The statement clearly sought to calm fears over the possibility of importing beef tainted with mad cow disease as a result of a new agreement between Seoul and Washington that lifts the ban on U.S. beef here. days now, protestors have taken to the streets, gathering in large candlelit vigils to express their opposition to the new agreement.

 

South Korea imported more kimchi than it exported in the first half, losing its luster as the original maker of the spicy fermented cabbage.

Korea saw the trade balance of kimchi, one of the most internationally acknowledged Korean traditional dishes, post a deficit the first time ever in the first six months of the year.

According to the Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corp., Korea imported kimchi worth $40.3 million during the January-June period exporting $33.6 million worth.

The import volume reached 80,744 tons over the period, surging 62 percent from the same period of 2005. Exports declined 31 percent to 12,303 tons. Imports already exceeded exports in 2004 in terms of volume.

``Imports of cheaper Chinese kimchi have been soaring since last year due to the growing demand from domestic restaurants,’’ a corporation official Ha Jung-ah said.

She added that imports of kimchi are ecast to rise 65 percent over the next 10 years.

Citing research data, Ha said prices of Chinese cabbages are expected to fall between 25 and 30 percent in the cited 10-year period.

 

 

 

 

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