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<br />("~~ r' <br /> <br />32 <br /> <br />The Denver Post Sun.. July 26,1981 <br /> <br />~- ~-, <br /> <br />.~t:.9...1. <br /> <br />"" <br /> <br />-, <br /> <br />There Was Time for Tears, but Rebuilding Couldn't Wait <br /> <br />BY BETSY HOWARO <br />5PKlOltoTINDenv.,PoIt <br /> <br />Big Thompson Canyon residt'nt Joe <br />{;reeli. still has the mementoes he and <br />his wilt> treasure tn their rustic home <br />thrOugh which you can Sf'(! a secluded <br />bend of the qUiet riwr below. <br />Two mounted df't'r hf."aru. With their <br />homo; locked togellK>r and a smiling. <br />~tuffed red fox perch on the Uving. <br />room walls, <br />But 100 yards dow1L<rtream, 15 of <br />Creek's Cedar Cove neighbors ","pre <br />Idlled tn the July 31, It'i6, flood which <br />nppl'd through the canyon. Homes <br />that weren't swept away Wf're S(>\'('rl'- <br />I}' damaged. <br /> <br />TilE SWOLLE.I\i Rig Thompson <br />River mLSSed Joe and Beulah Creek's <br />house by a rooL <br />Creek and hl.l; wU'e had started on a <br />trip Lo Wyoming the afternoon of the <br />flood and heard about the deV<i:>Ultion <br />the next day wMe in Lcinder. So the <br />couple turnt'd back. <br />"We didn't know If we had a place <br />left becall<;e we heard everything was <br />gone," Creek said. <br />Closed roads oulside or laramie <br />hampert'd their way. Wtwn the C<luple <br />rinallv rt'ached Loveland, at thl' can. <br />yon's' eastern edge. broadca~1ers on <br />local radIO stations mstructed them to <br />report to the school house. <br />",\s they walked in the door. tht>lr <br />hurd their sufllrised neighbors gasp. <br />"There's Joe and 8l'ulah," <br /> <br />I~ TIIEIR ARSESn;. the vaca. <br />tioning eouple had been put on the <br />mlsslOglist. <br />Although Cnoek's house Ilo'as un. <br /> <br />louched. his fronl yard was srourt'd. <br />his bndge and drive vanished. and the <br />Oood waters lore down all powprlines. <br />leaving the house without electricity. <br />But with ttK> help of neighbors, he <br />readwd his home I1w next day. A <br />small generator kl'pt his meat-packt'd <br />fnoe7,t>r From thawing. He pulled out <br />some of the meat and threw a huge <br />bari)(>cue. <br />Then he went to bat For his neigh- <br />bors. <br />"AFter thl' flood, .....e were trying to <br />fmd oul how to get t'Verybody togeth- <br />er." said Creek, who worked in Cali- <br />fomta in aircraft elt'ctrorucs before <br />moving to thE' canyon m 19jj3, <br />"We had to find oul what we were <br />going to do to help evt'rybody. All tht> <br />problems weren't alike." <br /> <br />When more than 150 persons <br />showed up at the first meetings short. <br />ly after the flood. Creek suggested the <br />mas..~ve group break up into five <br />groups to handle the needs more ef. <br />fectiwly. <br /> <br />HE ISSTIGATED an IfiventoI')' <br />form so each family could list their <br />nt't!d.s. Some nerot'd a pLact' to stay. <br />Othen needed clothing. <br />Mrs. Cn>ek added, "A 101 of them <br />were retired people who had put all of <br />their money in one home. Then all of a <br />sudden. lht>y lost it." <br /> <br />Cn't'k attracted mt'dia attentlon at <br />onl' point when he became angerl'd at <br />tangles that began complicating gov. <br />ernment aid during a ml't'ting with <br />govt'1'IJment official'!. "I don't mind <br />what I say in meetings. especially <br />when I get irkl'd." he said. <br />Cm'k walked over to Mrs. Bt-rtha <br /> <br />Bailey in a crowdt'd meeting room at <br />the Lowland Elk:; Lodge Aug. H _ <br />two weeks after the flood. "I want you <br />all to look at l.hi.s lady." Creek said, <br />"":\'('rylhing she hAd .....ent down thaI <br />river. And her son we-nt with it." <br />Then he told the county. state- and <br />fffieral orticial.s gatht>red at tht> mee-t. <br />ing of 250 residenL'l, "When you go get <br />aid for ll'l, look at thiS lady and think <br />what you're doing. <br />"Don't just give tht>.se people loans. <br />Give them something they can b\'e <br />with, something; they can be proud <br />of." <br />Then he sat down, <br />BUT illS mvolVt'ment didn't stop. <br />spotlIng a neffi for 1m> rt'('Oru.1ruction <br />of bridges to residents' homes. Creek <br />apprO<tcht'd the the county and evt'n. <br />tually got approval to revive the coun. <br />ty'sbridgedistrict. <br />Before it was over Creek and other <br />members of the panel had replacl'd 32 <br />bndges at a cost or $250.000 <br />^ group of Lo\'eland churches do. <br />natl'd $100.000. an amount matched bv <br />the SUl.te. Residents who lost bridges <br />chippl.>d in the remaining $50,000, <br />Crl'ek's own bridge cQt,1 126.000 lo <br />rl'pl.we. or which ht> paid $1.300. <br />Creek stiU is pushing for creation of <br />a Sl'eond campground up the canyon. <br />using land in the 100-year nood zone, <br />But t'verythltlg elw has returned pret- <br />ty much to normal for him and his <br />neighbors. <br />"Jll'il now It'sgelUng back lo .....he-n. <br />you ('an hardly lell it happened." he <br />said. "But it's been interesting. The <br />human tl'lations brought a lot of us <br />dOSl'rtogelhl'r." <br /> <br /> <br />Ptlolo s-t:101 10Th' O"'we<-P....l.., SIe_CDlIeCt.... <br />BEULAH AND JOE (RUK STAND ON THEIR PROPERTY THAT BORDERS THE BIG THOMPSON RIVER <br />The flood mined their house by only 0 foot but 5wept away their bridge and rood, <br /> <br />Warning System Improved, but It Can Happen Again--A,nywhere <br /> <br />BY BETSY HOWARD <br /> <br />SlI'8CloI to T'" Oe.."..._, <br /> <br />DeSJnte ,a new nood.warnmg sys. <br />tern, a disaster ~imilar to the one that <br />swept away 144 li\'l's along the Big <br />Thompson River liv~ years ago couk! <br />happen again. <br />That's the conclusion of Ellis Bur. <br />ton, meteorologlst-in-Charge at the <br />National Weather S...rvi.ce m Denver. <br />Flood warning. Burton says. takes <br />urne. <br />The night of the Big Thomp;on dis. <br />aster. up to a foot of rain fell in four <br />hours in parts of the canyon. Within <br />the first 30 minutes. the last.moving <br />water already had lulled some people <br />camping or in therr homes along the <br />usually quiet stream. <br />"Tht>re's no communication systPlfi <br /> <br /> <br />m the world that could get mlorma. <br />tion on rainfall in the canyon to a fore- <br />ca..ter's office and back out to the <br />("dnvon to warn resident.!l in time," <br />Burton said in a tplephone interview. <br />And there's no way in the foresee- <br />able future to warn t'verybody m a <br />single canyon. he says. <br />"WATER CAN COME up in five to <br />15 mmutes here because of the eleva. <br />tion and run-off." In flatter region.s. <br />more advance warning is possible bl." <br />cau.-;e water can take- as long as four <br />hours to rise. <br />Burton Illustrated how much water <br />caml' roaring down the canyon the <br />night of the nood. The 12 inches of <br />rain that night equalE'd about rive bU. <br />lion gallons of water - or I1w amounl <br />01 water that tumbles over New <br /> <br />Red <br />Fenwick <br />Back to Sandlots, Folks: <br />Real Baseball Still Lives <br /> <br />HENSO~ AND the other 1.500 <br />~ cowboys who ponil'd up big money <br />JUSt to get in the game at Cheyenne. <br />weren't soothed by expert massagers <br />P:'lliI For by the rodeo prodUcers. They <br />didn't fillJheir bellies at the C<lmpa- <br />. ny's eatery, and they paid for their <br />. o.~ "uniforms." too. <br /> <br />Thisili the very essence or sports <br />~mpetition. The big Ie-aguers have' <br />..dl>,monstrated In their cuITt'nt strike, <br />that they don't know tht> meaning of <br />11. <br />o- <br /> <br /> <br />k > <br />'. it . v <br />. .:*L1~'.1AU".JPWII\.~1ir-..l~~IW.J"tJb.~.....J <br /> <br />All the sports fans I've talked to re- <br />cently are fed up with major league <br />baseball's silly balk in the bolt. They <br />may rind some comfort, however. in <br />two notable facts. <br />The fin.1 is that the American com- <br />petitive spirit. far from sufft'ring an <br />acutt' seizure of rigor mortis, contino <br />ues to prosper in the nation's rodeo <br />arenas. <br />The seeond bright spot is that once <br />some of the hot air and other causes <br />of puffiness are knOCkl>d out of a num- <br />ber 01 pampered big league baseball <br />stars. and some of them permanently <br />benched. top-flight baseball actually <br />may rise to the high level of quality <br />sport now enjoyed by rodeo. <br />But berore that can happen, the big <br />names of the grassy diamond must ac. <br />cept the tact that baseball IS a com- <br />petitive sport and not a highly lucra- <br />tive art-Iorm entertainment in which <br />the participants are actors instead or <br />spinted and loyal players. <br />A.S A. COMEDIAN, for instance. I <br />don't think Pete Rose couId get to lirst <br />base in competition with Minnie Pearl <br />or Roy Clark on TV's "lIee Haw," 4J1d <br />he certainly is no LarT)' Hagman or <br />Alan Aida. <br />To compare Pete's motivation with <br />that of champion bronc rider Yonty <br />Henson would put baseball's brtghtest <br />~1ar and his less lustrous contempo- <br />raries in the deepest celiar in Kansas. <br />The farot'd "Texas Twb1er" com. <br />peted \1goro1l.'ily in the 85th Cheyenne <br />rrontler Days, which end l.hi.s Sunday. <br />And be paid for the opportunity to pit <br />his skil1s and bones against other com. <br />petitors. with his own hard-earned <br />money. <br />Moreover, the conte~1anl m the <br />winner-lake-all sport of rodeo. paid his <br />own trawl expenses to and from the <br />rodeo. If he didn't come o(f a wtnner. <br />be dkin't get paid. It.s a::; simple. as <br />..... <br /> <br />E,,'en though a Hne fast-ball pitcher <br />may command a salary that looks like <br />a bill from an Arab oilman, he isn't <br />worth as much as a plumber when <br />there's a leak In. the basement. <br />Personally. pal. this profess1onal <br />rube finds much to be happy about in <br />the no-runs-no-hiL.,..no-games s1tua- <br />Uon. Americans at long last. are going <br />back to the sandlot.!l and the bush <br />leagues for their baseball jollies. Once <br />more the "hometown team" of guys 'll -~ <br />who play ror the sport or it and not rnr Fta.&her ft'ea-l~.' nn'o""~,. -nt <br />the money that's in It. is the horsehide 'I ,-'1 U~. .,-, <br />aP:,I~;r:~~~;;. more 'Pinled To Child A.,'bust cli_. '::~.' es <br />baseball at Bears' Stadium or old 1 !'!_ ~ . <br />Merchant.!l' Park than ever took place BY ROBERT TULL Yr, S'iri~ the hrst.t~- . n the family <br />SMcloltDTMDHw..._t ,;..~ .m Call1o" "'. :::::"........ "-ugh'~r <br />on televtl:iion. To. heck with the big u,~ ">1"""-1 .."" Ud .., <br />leagues. Let's alfiroot for the home. ha,~~only OCI::,. oiiillf~tended class- <br />team." GOLDEN - A 40-year-old. Lake- es;l~arner :atng.tner reported- <br />. wood man pleadt'd innocent~l1day in Iy hid done so .~ at home. <br />I'ella on the. fit'xt barstool who hap. Jefferson County Court ~., mis. ~ children Wkliaulhoritles that <br />'Pt:11S to be a veteran of the fracas in demeanor child abl1S(' charge~ihat he the JatiK!r. woo l~rks as a jan- <br />Vietnam, sa)'S'...IJ:le~s ~ppy as an ape 1II rarely let his two children ou1!.'fof the itor.rand a melJ; ~~ger, some- <br />an apple ot~tm~ Wlth tl)e way our house and forbade them to', ,"attend limA came, and beat <br />country's new;::fJ is going. ,school for several years. .~r~'.'\ lhH1. Game <br />A couple of -4eks ago, he said, old_ Albert R. Apodaca. 10500 W.;'Eighth IeI' the a ,,~-uance of a <br />"Whi.skers" ,KhOmeini d~laied thif. Ave., Apt. 1. was arrested lune 22. SW11I1ons, t twg. -ungsters were <br />Iran is "al $ar" with the United Lake","ood Police Sgt. JerrrjlGarner p~ad Ul fos@;carli'b}"theJefferson: <br />States. said. <, Coul L: .x;- ~ <br />Nn anonymous caller ,......ia-:nouried Iy Social'l5ervices Departmentt" <br />lilI po~ satd. Soctil'services ~-t.aff mem; <br />police,,a)l'w days earlie~~!ing that bef(said FridaylQiy..did not have the <br />he never saw the two fJ!!Jgnborhood aU.t."!'nty to \'eri1:~ther the dill- <br />children leave the apartment. Garner drt'nare still in ~~are. <br />~rd. Juvenile Detectiye,;Steve Now in. , <br />,\:l'stfgated and found that 'Apodaca's ~podaca told jxhicl' that the chil- <br />c'liiIdrt'n, April. II. and!A'llan, 12, re- dr-:~ had attended school. Police <br />po~ed the). were restii~t'd to the che'dted the Jefferson County R-l <br />holISe. Their molht'r. al"lO'ii'rhome. re- SdlJol District and found no "atten- <br />posed that the falhl'r had ordered daU!e records. however. <br />tlwm all not to step outside. pobce reo :'['be lathl'r was assignl'd public de. <br />ports ~how. !l'uder "tatUn Guerra. and a pretrial <br />l'hl'l boy had not been to SdlOOJ ht'aling Wa'i set lor Aug. 'll <br /> <br />Now that they have nashed their <br />union cards. I wonder what might <br />happen to the Work! Series If the elec- <br />tricians at the home stand went on <br />strike. Would the Phillies or the Red <br />Sox cross the picket line? Would the <br />mogul'l of swat come out for an 8-m- <br />ning game with double pay for over. <br />time? <br /> <br />WITH SALARIES that would make <br />the discoverers of penicilltn look like <br />welfart' clienL.. and a university pll.'Si- <br />dent a poverty.stricken peasant, the <br />big leagues have made baseball more <br />financially fetehtng than a career as a <br />surgeon, lawyer, corporation execu. <br />tive or scienw.1. <br /> <br />"Then he commenced shooting his <br />own generals and jailing his politieal <br />buddies, and the Iranians started kill- <br />ing each other. At this rate," the veb: <br />said, "we'll win this war without firing <br />a shot. but with lhe heaviest enemy <br />casualties we've ever scorl'd." <br /> <br />And. ob, yes. there are some big r0- <br />deos coming up at Colorado Springs. <br />Pueblo and the Colorado State t'ail'. <br />and at Ca:.-per and Douglas, Wyo.. for <br />the Central Wyoming and ~tate fairs. <br /> <br />York's Niagara ralls m a SlX-mtnute <br />petiod. <br />"All that was going down the can- <br />yon," Burton said. <br /> <br />The National Weather Servi.ee had <br />been working to develop a nood.wam. <br />ing sy~1em pnor to the di..'i.ab1er. The <br />tragedy expedJtl'd the effOlt. <br /> <br />When service meteorologists ob- <br />serve a slow-moving storm ~)'stem <br />bearing heavy moisture, they contact <br />Geophysical Research and Develop- <br />ment. a private mpteorologlcal firm <br />that contact.!l spotter.; in the eanyons. <br /> <br />via! notifies tht Urban Dr.unage and <br />.1000 Control 01Slrict. ~'hich warn.s <br />canyon residents through the civil de- <br />fense syslem that danger is impend. <br />'"", <br />Yoreca~1er John Schwab was one of <br />two National Weather Service rore- <br />casters working the night of the Big <br />Thompson flood. Then. as now, it was <br />l1It service's responsibility to issue <br />t~flash-nood warning, but there was <br />a~g. <br />~Wt' didn't hear much about what <br />w~ gOing on up there." Schwab re- <br />caled. "We didn't get a county report <br />onlthe heavy rains until quite late, <br />Intn the sht>riH's office. <br />(But that wasn't therr faul!," he <br />~ "They weren't quite aware of <br />\'lre. Wfiit was going on. They were pretty <br />When conditions warrant, the ser- U1:" <br />A'ft'l!Jr76"Yfih-s; F&w <br />Flood Sca,.~Remain <br /> <br />80TH SPOTTERS AND automatic <br />t"din measuring devict'S send back re- <br />ports on conditions. That information <br />is relayl'd back to the Weather Ser. <br /> <br />Comh"," from pave 31. blotmg a new highway through the <br />tOO-year flood. say a 200-year flood. nilntains before settling on rebuild. <br />you could loSe portions of the high- ~ <br />way," Bower said. "You can have two '" April 31, 1180. another flood <br />33G-)'ear noods one after another," he U~atened the Big Thompson canyon <br />admitted. t,lUt suggested the odds are ~ liver rose eight feet. More than <br />overwhelmingly against such back.to- 12hs1dent.!l were evacuated from the <br />hack disasters. c<Syon, but other than shaken nerves, <br />daIIage was minimal. <br />TO }<'LOOD-PROOF the road. Jkause people still bye along flood. <br />Bower said, the highway was rpbuilt prp.e canyons m Lartmer and other <br />at a similar grade. but the entire cqillties, some concern exists as to <br />length was raised above the level 01 a bOw prepared Lartmer and other <br />IOO-year nood. ())Iondo counties would be in case of <br />Boulders as large as office desks futUl"E noods. <br />were placed in long piles along the ""Hert>ley, director of emergency <br />stream bank to prevent water from '>> Co <br />washing out dirt. under the road. maJagemenr" Jor \~rtmer unty, is <br />reSlOfiSlble for seeing that aid is pro- <br />Where watpr velocity was high, con. vidtd. But lmergency management <br />crete and boulder retaining walls - eHUts have been,hampered by budget <br />called nprap- protect the road bed. euU and a lack of coordination, be <br />The stenle. pink-tmted riprap says <br />st.~n~ out ~ost In the Narrows - ~ "lreparedness has fallen through <br />twisting section of the road hemmed the c-acks." he said during a lunch <br />m by sheer dark-grey cliffs. at the break while attending a natural Iw:. <br />mouth or the canyon. That ~tion was ants ...O~ at the Hilton Harvest <br />one of the most COblly to repaIr. House In BoUlder last, week. <br />An advisory commission appointed At the um-eatbl~'t8.1nood, Lartmer <br />by Gnv, Dick Lamm unanimously do. had no "i~ Hensley poinls <br />ctde<! after the flood to rebuild U.S. 34 outi"No oDe uew;wnat their respon. <br />after studying alternate routes to sibilties were. ~i"l";' t <br />Estes Park and Rocky Mountain Na. For the tll:'eaii:be has been di. <br />tional Park from Inlerstale.25. r~r. HenSle~ .""":~!tfo~g such <br />The comnussion, of which Bower a J;lIOgram..Hw i'fs'l.With different <br />was a member. studit'd diverting traf- go"lmm.ents 7'~~t.St.ate ~ city <br />fie to U.s. 3fi out of Longmont but dis- -u deSIgn a}~~~'l sceneno for <br />covered that road didn't have.tbe ca. all~enciestofonow. . <br />pacity to handle a double loa-d. On a ~ laws ~~:q; each govern. <br />typical summer weekend. that route me4a.l entij)!~~SfPate, however. <br />and U.S. 34 each handles as many as "V~ don't_~~What to do." he <br />10.000 cars in a smgle day. say!, Inste841'll~tsttytngtocre- <br />THE COMMISSION also considered ateJoopera~V~r <br /> <br /> <br />-r .,~.{OO <br /> <br />~j <br />.\._-"-- <br /> <br />..... <br /> <br />f <br /> <br />Shetiff's officers were scrambling <br />because they thought at first the dam <br />ju."1 below Estes Park had broken. he <br />said. The base of the dam was dam- <br />aged by the rush of water but didn.t <br />give. <br /> <br />EARlJER IN THE day the seTVll'f' <br />had L'l&1Jed warnings of heavy rains In <br />the day. <br /> <br />Schwab had morutoted the 1965 <br />Platte River flood caused by several <br />days of rain, but he was unprepared <br />for the lq)ef'd and devastation of the <br />Big Thompson flood. <br /> <br />"I was shocked," he saKi, when lit> <br />learned of the Big Thompson disaster. <br />"I didn't hear of the full magnitude <br />unW thl' next momtng. <br /> <br />"Vou go through your mind the In- <br />formation we had. We responded to it. <br /> <br />We Jm.1 didn't know wbat was going <br />on up there." <br />A Big Thompson nood can happen <br />again, perhaps not in that canyon but <br />el'l('where in the state. Burton said. <br /> <br />"EVERY CANYON IN Colorado <br />has had that much water in it and WlII <br />again," be saJd. <br />But the most effective way 01 sav- <br />ing lives isn't going to cost mtllions, <br />The answer lies m a simple message. <br />Burton lauded the green.and-white <br />~'gns pob1ed at the mouths of many <br />Colorado canyons that depict water <br />and a figure hiking up the canyonside. <br />lIikers and motoriStll are warned to <br />ctimbtosafety. <br />People should hike at least 50 ft'et <br />up a canyon side in the event of a <br />flash flood. Burton said. "Fifty feet I <br />will take you well above the now." <br /> <br />~ <br /> <br />, . <br /> <br />.. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />h <br /> <br />, , <br /> <br /> <br />~rng C= : SPtRlR.INA: __ :':00 I U E <br />VITAMIN : iU'fj : ~..o.~.: PRUNES :VlTAMIN <br /> <br />99 ._~...~. $-:)gg . . <br />~:~~i!':sgc~ ~~; f'1sg:"i~19~.roo <br />... <br /> <br />I '4. eNC QUALITY AT llSS iiiAN CHEAPEiTCiir.iiiTi MAlL QRDER PRICES' <br />~......'COU--'CI~~'~D'DOlIlII...C..PlIIICU"OIIIIIIWI'..C~lll, <br /> <br />Bone Meal ~ ALFALfA! COO UVlR ! Brewer's I '""~'" KELP ~ DOLOMITE <br />& Do6omlte i 'A8l!l~ 011 C""~ Yeast "8' i ~~., Ii ""HT$ <br />69'" 4OC" 5169' 99'" 49' - 40C <br />~ ~~~ ~~!~ ~~~ ~J~ ~~~ ~~ <br />500"""+' 500'119+' ""l"" .. Hrol349 " ""1'''",' """I' <br />_'l.iUt DiidI-IH' _1-....., _......., _l-tU, DNIiIl't1Ml <br />Vitam....... _ M.at GARLlC+' "... ","m:~ ,..", ZINC <br />8.6..UTl>l Tablets I u'"'^" 'I> i l!!ilUtl~ t ..~,Ml;f~ 1,Qono 'Aa<.U'5 <br />5129" 6ge .. cnc" 5189 ' 5OC" 'X1C <br />~ "JOI~ "..~J.IIlU;J"",i;:;'" ".,Ij;\, ~"",I~~,u.' <br />15lf!1.B9 ' ""!J09...i. 5001309 ' 5OO!l\49 ' 5001<69 ' 3001100 <br />_..1....+ _I-'H\:"T _.......'! _1-,....,+ _1-1H'+ _"'H' <br />Vitamin t GEN.A-MIN I GINSENG ~~~~~~~"::,. PulasslUm ! Vitamin <br />~-k21ii' s ...Sltr1~~l .. 51'3"9'5" :ln69PLAcN ~J"Sl'''j9TS! A '&i <br />$U. ...~sn. ""Ji1!.. ,"'!,., ""'~~ ,..~~O.;;J',",' <br />15111199 . 15111299 ' 3001375 ' 5OOS309' 5001549 ' 15lf1199 <br />. . . <br />"'AN' 2'/399 ~~~~10Sl 2'/699 I "iAM,.Ti,/" 998 <br />HONEY~...."5 .",,, ",>1601 ......u '......'~ <br />._ ..".""...... __iiO. <br />SELENIUM 2/'A99 PAPAYA 2'/8981 sUP<, 2'/399 <br />>0..-. ''''0'' 'f ENlYME . GARUC . <br />.., '00.. 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