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NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

Conflicts between President Trump and courts spark constitutional crisis questions
Every day it seems new conflicts arise between President Trump and the courts. Prompting another round of the question: Are we in a constitutional crisis?

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

Amtrak will take over renovation of New York's Penn Station. Some riders have doubts
Amtrak will be taking over renovations at New York's Penn Station, according to a letter sent by the Federal Railroad Administration.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

The podcast 'Folktales From Sudan' tells us about a culture currently under attack
In the news, Sudan is often discussed a place devastated by a civil war and home to the world's largest humanitarian crisis. But a podcast sharing Sudanese folklore shows more about the culture.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

The busiest ports in North America are set to take a hit with new tariffs
A huge amount of U.S. imports and exports come through the L.A. and Long Beach ports. Port officials say truckers, longshore members and customs house brokers will see less work and fewer hours ahead.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

The CDC staff in charge of injury prevention — a lead cause of death — has been cut
Injury is the leading cause of death for people under the age of 45. But much of the staff at the CDC responsible for studying how to track and prevent injuries were cut during the recent firings.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

Some asylum seekers wonder if it's worth staying in the U.S. to fight their cases
Would-be refugees with pending asylum cases are unsure whether the Trump administration's revocation of temporary protected status applies to them.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

A good (and heroic!) dog leads Arizona toddler to safety
A toddler wandered away from home in Arizona and many feared the worst after seeing mountain lions during their search. A ranch dog found him and guided him to safety.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

A semiconductor agency is seeing cuts, even though Trump wants to bolster U.S. tech
A big focus of the Trump administration is to shore up U.S. dominance in cutting edge technology like semiconductor chips and AI. But it's slashing employees at the agency that works on these issues.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

Researchers were surprised to find some medieval books covered in seal skins
12th century French monks used animal skins to bind and cover their books. One group of books covers didn't look at all like the others. Protein fingerprint and DNA analysis revealed them to be not local cows or sheep, but seals from as far away as Greenland. The find highlights the extent of medieval trade.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

NPR obtained documents showing major upcoming changes that could limit human rights
Each year the State Department releases its Country Reports on Human Rights. NPR has obtained internal State department documents that show major changes coming this year

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

How 'weak' Supreme Court rulings led to this week's immigration news
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with University of Virginia law professor Amanda Frost about the latest escalation in the conflict between the Trump administration and the courts.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

History shows revoking Harvard's tax status won't be easy — or fast
A presidential effort to revoke Harvard University's tax-exempt status could run up against a number of challenges, including violating federal law.

NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

Chinese manufacturers on TikTok claim they make the world's luxury goods. Is that true?


NPR Headline News
Apr 18, 2025

5 takeaways from the week: Nearing a constitutional crisis?
The week was dominated by news about the Maryland man illegally deported to El Salvador. But there was also concern over tariffs and Robert F. Kennedy's work as Health and Human Services secretary.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

A look at Trump and Maine's standoff over transgender athletes policy
Maine's Democratic Gov. Janet Mills says her state's not backing down against possible cuts in school and other funding threatened by the Trump administration over the state's policy on transgender athletes in sports.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

This week in science: Drumming crabs, lab-made nuggets and LSD without the trip
NPR science podcast Short Wave brings us the stories of how Fiddler crabs drum their mating songs into the sand, growing chicken nuggets in the lab, and a drug like LSD -- without the trip.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Black Christian leaders call for more solidarity with LGBTQ people in their churches
Christian leaders gathered outside the U.S. Capitol building this week to call for more solidarity with LGBTQ people. We look at the conversations Black churches are having.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

What to know about Canada's Mark Carney
Canada's new Prime Minister Mark Carney entered politics as trade relations with the U.S. hit a low point. The former central banker's economic chops may propel him to victory in the next election.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Trump's Forest Service cuts have people in tinder dry New Mexico on edge
The Trump administration's dramatic staffing cuts at federal lands agencies like the Forest Service are causing anxiety in tinder dry New Mexico, where the wildfire threat is already severe this Spring.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

'Sinners' is a blood-drenched, blues-infected thriller
Twin brothers, both played by Michael B. Jordan, return to their Mississippi hometown in 1932 to start a juke joint in Ryan Coogler's otherworldly tale of race and music, Sinners.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

CASCARONES
Cracking cascarones -or decorated confetti eggs—is a playful tradition during Easter in the Mexican American culture from the Southwest, as a gesture of goodwill and a way to bring good luck. This year, despite soaring egg prices, the tradition lives on.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Cascarones, a playful and colorful tradition that unites friends and family around Easter season
Cracking cascarones -or decorated confetti eggs—is a playful tradition during Easter in the Mexican American culture from the Southwest, as a gesture of goodwill and a way to bring good luck. This year, despite soaring egg prices, the tradition lives on.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Sen. Chris Van Hollen on trying to visit wrongfully deported constituent in El Salvador
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., about his campaign to release Kilmar Abrego Garcia. The Maryland man was illegally deported to a prison in El Salvador.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Some Harvard researchers have received stop work orders. One shares their story
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Dr. Donald Ingber of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University, about the impact of the stop-work orders that went out this week for federally-funded research.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Secretary of State Rubio meets Macron in Paris to discuss Ukraine peace settlement
Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with President Macron in Paris to discuss a peace settlement for Ukraine. France hosted top diplomats from the U.S., Germany, the U.K. and Ukraine.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Actor Hugh Bonneville finds the humor and poignancy in Chekhov's Uncle Vanya
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with actor Hugh Bonneville about his starring role in the play Uncle Vanya, which is showing at D.C.'s Harman Hall.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

How tariffs could impact the availability of baby products
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Steven Dunn founder and CEO of Munchkin a U.S.-based company selling lifestyle products for mothers, babies and children. Dunn has written an open letter to President Trump and Congress about how tariffs could harm his business and American families.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

LA schools superintendent says he'll protect undocumented students 'to the very end'
DHS said it was conducting wellness checks on students who arrived unaccompanied to the border. The head of the Los Angeles Unified School District has a different account.

NPR Headline News
Apr 17, 2025

Supreme Court to hear challenge to Trump's birthright citizenship order in May
Trump issued an executive order on day one of his administration that sought to limit birthright citizenship, an idea widely considered a fringe view because the Supreme Court ruled to the contrary 127 years ago, and that decision has never been disturbed.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

The Boston Marathon marks 50 years since it first included wheelchair athletes
The Boston Marathon marks the anniversary of an important tradition. It was a half-century ago that Boston became the first major marathon to include a division for wheelchair athletes.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

NPR CEO Katherine Maher addresses future of federal funding for public media
Katherine Maher, president and CEO of National Public Radio, talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about the White House proposal to eliminate federal funding for public media.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

Trump administration is likely in criminal contempt in deportation case, judge rules
A federal judge ruled that there is "probable cause" to find the Trump administration in criminal contempt of court for violating his order last month to halt deportations under the Alien Enemies Act.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

For one griot, the unearthing of this ancient West African capital offers vindication
Stories of the kingdom of Kaabu's reign have been told for generations through a kind of traditional song. Now, an archaeological dig has confirming the histories told and retold by griots.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

These video streaming services are designed for people with dementia
People with dementia sometimes get agitated and frustrated. New services provide a sort of Netflix for dementia, with videos designed for this population — leaving out confusing plots or jarring ads.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

Top U.K. court defines women under equalities law as someone born biologically female
On Wednesday, Britain's top court clarified the legal definition of a woman: Someone born biologically female. The ruling has implications for transgender rights.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

For these veterans, the secret to crossing political divides starts with a beer
In an effort to reach across political divides, a group of vets has been holding regular gatherings to talk about it all over a beer.  They call the events "Pints and Patriotism."  NPR went to one recent meeting to gauge the mood.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

The legality of sending U.S. citizens to El Salvador
Matt Ford, who covers the courts for The New Republic talks about Trump's idea to send '"homegrown criminals"-- U.S. citizens -- to prisons in El Salvador. He says it'd be flagrantly unconstitutional.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

Two small studies show how stem cells could help treat Parkinson's
Two new studies suggest that stem cells are close to helping people with Parkinson's disease. The results are a victory for scientists who have spent decades trying to treat it with brain cells.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

Austin churches answer prayers for affordable housing — by building it themselves
As fewer people attend church in the U.S., some religious institutions are wondering what to do with the land they own. In Austin, Texas, the answer is to build affordable housing.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

Mourning the loss of federal funds to prepare teachers to work in rural areas
Many schools are mourning the loss of federal funds considered essential. One program in particular would help prepare teachers to work in rural areas where teachers are especially needed.

NPR Headline News
Apr 16, 2025

In the middle of a hepatitis outbreak, U.S. shutters the one CDC lab that could help
All 27 scientists at the CDC's viral hepatitis lab were told their duties were "unnecessary." Ongoing outbreak investigations have now been halted.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

The White House is starting the process to eliminate finding for public media
The White House is proposing that virtually all federal funding for public media—that's NPR and PBS—be eliminated, starting a process that will reach Congress later in April.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

The White House is starting the process to eliminate funding for public media
The White House is proposing that virtually all federal funding for public media—that's NPR and PBS—be eliminated, starting a process that will reach Congress later in April.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Actor Julianne Nicholson gets a break from portraying grief in 'Paradise'
Julianne Nicholson is a pro at portraying grief. She does it in Mare of Eastown and Janet Planet. But she was relieved to get to do something different with her character Sinatra in Hulu's Paradise.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Chef Roy Choi — known for his barbeque — has dedicated his new book to vegetables
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with chef Roy Choi about his new cookbook, The Choi of Cooking: Flavor-Packed, Rule-Breaking Recipes for a Delicious Life.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

When the woodpecker you're mad at is yourself
Woodpeckers are vandalizing car window and mirrors in the town of Rockport, Mass.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

What does Nico Iamaleava's contract dispute say about college football's future?
Nico Iamaleava is leaving Tennessee after a public NIL renegotiation, days before the spring transfer portal window opens. NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to Richard Johnson from CBS Sports about the standoff between the university and the student athlete.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Student activist arrested by ICE at his citizenship appointment
Immigration officials called student Mohsen Mahdawi in for his U.S. citizenship interview. When he arrived, ICE arrested him. Experts say it's a new extreme in the crackdown on student activism.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Air Force brings back restrictions on pregnant pilots
Women pilots worry they will lose precious flight time as the Air Force rolls back the rules on flying while pregnant. The move comes as the Pentagon looks at standards across the military.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Colleges react to Harvard's battle with the Trump administration
The Trump administration cut $2 billion in federal grants for Harvard after it rejected what it saw as illegal government demands. Trump has now threatened to remove Harvard's tax exempt status.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Higher ed war heats up as Trump threatens Harvard's tax-exempt status
The president's comments came after the administration froze $2 billion in federal grants for Harvard after the university rejected what it saw as illegal government demands.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Sideline reporter Nick Gallo talks about the sideline shenanigans with OKC Thunder
The Oklahoma City Thunder are headed to the NBA playoffs later this week. While the team is known for its moves on the court, clips highlighting their affectionate teasing of sideline reporter, Nick Gallo, have become a viral sensation with fans.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

How 'South of Midnight' captured the sound of the American South
Music can change a person's entire gaming experience. That's the case with South of Midnight, now available on Xbox. Juana Summers talks to the game's composer about how his vision came to life.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

When an earthquake struck San Diego, these elephants formed an 'alert circle'
When a 5.2 earthquake hit near San Diego yesterday, the San Diego Zoo Safari Park caught its elephants on video taking action to protect their young, forming what experts call an "alert circle."

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

80 years after President Franklin Roosevelt's death, Trump cuts threaten his legacy
Descendants of FDR and others reflect on the unfinished business of the New Deal, Roosevelt's program to pull the U.S. out of the Great Depression, as the Trump administration slashes the government.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

D.C. opens its first LGBTQ senior home
Mary's House for Older Adults in Washington, D.C., is a new affordable housing project that is trying to ease the barriers LGBTQ seniors face when looking for safe, affordable housing.

NPR Headline News
Apr 15, 2025

Mark Zuckerberg defends Meta in court against monopoly claims
In Zuckerberg's second day of testifying in the federal antitrust trial, he defended Meta's acquisitions of Instagram and WhatsApp. The U.S. government wants Meta to bust up the two companies.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

Peruvian author Mario Vargas Llosa dies at the age of 89
Mario Vargas Llosa, one of the most celebrated writers in Latin America and the first Peruvian to win the Nobel Prize in Literature, has died at 89. The author died on Sunday surrounded by his family.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

Veteran diplomats react to the Trump administration gutting the lead U.S. aid agency
Trump administration reforms at the State Department are shrinking the United States' diplomatic footprint globally.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

OK Go reflects on 20 years in the churn of video virality
Damian Kulash of OK Go reflects on the band's decades of creating elaborate one-take viral music videos.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

Xi Jinping visits Southeast Asia to strengthen ties
China's leader, Xi Jinping, embarks on a five-day, three-nation Southeast Asia tour, amid the trade war with the U.S.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

A vaccine expert worries child measles deaths are being 'normalized'
Ousted FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks talks about the current administration's policy on vaccines, and how that is impact its response to the on-going measles outbreak in the southwestern U.S.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

The biggest plot twist in a viral 'true crime' story? None of it was real
A viral "true crime" story was actually made up, generated by A.I. Reporter Henry Larson explores the ethical questions raised by this new frontier of content.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

A stranger helps a grieving daughter clean her mother's grass-covered gravestone
In 2023, Ashley Blas traveled to visit her mother's grave for the first time since the funeral, 30 years ago. A man she encountered ended up respecting her grave, too.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

More than a decade later, OK Go is back with a new album
The new album from OK Go, called And The Adjacent Possible, is the band's first in more than a decade.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

Move over Paleo diet, it's Dinosaur Time, a TikTok trend all about devouring veggies
Dinosaur time is a viral TikTok trend helping some people eat more vegetables. Nutritionists have other tips for getting enough veggies into the daily diet.

NPR Headline News
Apr 14, 2025

Venezuelan baseball players are defecting to Europe amid economic crisis
Venezuela's economic malaise and political paralysis under the country's increasingly authoritarian government is impacting its most beloved national pastime - baseball.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

Revisiting our favorite (and not so favorite) religious films
NPR's Michel Martin and Religion Correspondent Jason DeRose talk about their favorite -- and least favorite -- films about spirituality, including some hidden gems that might not seem religious at first glance.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

One lawyer's big worry about the Abrego Garcia case
The case of Kilmar Abrego Garcia has gripped the attention of people across the country. Legal experts say the case could have major implications for the rule of law and the separation of power. Some fear that now anyone can be sent to a foreign prison. Scott Detrow speaks with law professor Laurence Tribe.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

As U.S.-China tensions rise academics are caught in the crosshairs
As U.S.-China rivalry intensifies, Chinese nationals in the United States are being caught up in the tensions.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

A breakthrough in tracking biodiversity
Scientists have found a way to sample DNA out of the air on a nationwide scale -- making it possible to one day track the health and well being of species around the globe.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

How your awkwardness can be your strength
Cringing at the time you gave a speech with spinach in your teeth, or accidentally liked an ex's picture on social media? Awkward moments have a tendency to haunt us - even ones from decades ago. Life Kit reporter Andee Tagle breaks down why we get so embarrassed about the things we do and how we can experience those feelings a little less.

NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

A new book helps you explore Manhattan's history all on your own


NPR Headline News
Apr 13, 2025

An American composer's biological matter creates new music from beyond the grave
An art installation in Perth, Australia, seeks to extend the musical output of the late experimental composer Alvin Lucier, and asks interesting questions about the nature of creativity.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

U.S. and Iran conduct first round of nuclear talks
The U.S. and Iran have launched negotiations to strike a new deal that would scale back Iran's nuclear program.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

Reporter's Notebook: on federal judges and the Trump administration
NPR's Ryan Lucas speaks about his beat covering the federal judiciary during the tumult of the second Trump administration.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

Facing drug-related violence, Ecuador goes to the polls Sunday
Ecuadoreans will vote for their president this weekend, as the country is experiencing high levels of drug-related gang violence and an economic slowdown.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

China projects defiance in its response to U.S. tariffs
China has retaliated with tariffs on U.S. goods after President Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports. And though it is avoiding further escalation, the Chinese government is projecting defiance.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

High school teachers reflect on 100 years of 'The Great Gatsby'
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with two educators about teaching F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic novel The Great Gatsby 100 years after its publication.

NPR Headline News
Apr 12, 2025

A Syrian city known for gold jewelry faces rising crime
Since antiquity, Aleppo has been famous for gold. But a post-war crime wave means jewelers no longer display gold in windows. The city is installing solar-powered streetlights to fight crime.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Academy Awards add a new category — for stunt design
The Academy Awards added a new category that recognizes stunt design. We talk to a veteran stunt coordinator about the long road to recognition for stunt professionals.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

College students say Trump administration's crackdown on activism incites fear
On campuses nationwide, students are saying that the Trump administration's efforts to crack down on antisemitism have caused a chilling effect on speech and political activity.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

For some students who protested war in Gaza, fear and silence is a new campus reality
On campuses nationwide, many students are saying that the Trump administration's efforts to crack down on antisemitism have caused a chilling effect on speech and political activity.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

How a Czech vinyl manufacturer became a giant in the record industry
Not long ago, a Czech record company was making its money producing harmless pop songs for the eastern bloc. Now they're helping facilitate the world's newfound addiction for vinyl records.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Bond market activity this week signals that something big might be changing
Usually when the stock market goes down, the bond market thrives. But the bond market has been struggling.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

What are your rights if border authorities ask for your phone?
Amid the recent news of a U.S. citizen being asked to turn over his phone to authorities at a border crossing, Sophia Cope of the Electronic Frontier Foundation has tips on digital civil liberties.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Chinese cultural center in San Francisco grapples with grant fallout
A small community-focused arts and culture center in San Francisco's Chinatown is reeling from the combined effects of being dropped, ghosted and confused by three major federal funding bodies.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Chinese Culture Center in San Francisco grapples with grant fallout
A small community-focused arts and culture center in San Francisco's Chinatown is reeling from the combined effects of being dropped, ghosted and confused by three major federal funding bodies.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

The internet is gaga over Walton Goggins. Here's why
NPR's Mia Venkat explains to All Things Considered host Ari Shapiro who the internet has been talking about all week.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Amy Sherald's dream comes true with 'American Sublime' at the Whitney Museum
Amy Sherald, who painted former First Lady Michelle Obama's portrait in 2018, has a major survey of her work opening this week at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Award-winning composer William Finn dies at 73
The award-winning composer and lyricist William Finn died this week. He's best known for "Falsettos" and "The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee."

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

A new study finds crows can recognize geometric shapes
A new study shows that like humans, crows can recognize geometric regularity, making them the first nonhuman animal known to have this ability.

NPR Headline News
Apr 11, 2025

Alaska high schoolers' 'Hadestown' production brings the house down
In Anchorage, enthusiasm has spread for a high school production of the musical Hadestown. It's led to an extended run, packed shows, and an invite to perform on the city's biggest stage.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

Supreme Court says Trump officials should help return wrongly deported Maryland man
The Supreme Court ordered the administration to "facilitate" the return of Kilmar Armando Abrego Garcia, who was mistakenly taken to El Salvador and remains in custody there.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

In his new book, Mark Hoppus talks about the sense of loss when Blink-182 broke up
In his new book, Blink-182 lead singer Mark Hoppus tells the story of how one of the biggest bands in the world broke up -- then overcame all the small things.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

Remembering Dominican merengue vocalist Rubby Pérez
The popular Dominican merengue vocalist Rubby Pérez died after a roof collapsed at a popular nightclub on Tuesday night. Here's what the loss means to the vibrant Dominican merengue scene.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

Drowning in Tariffs, American businesses try to stay afloat
Americans who run different kinds of businesses are trying to figure out what's going on with tariffs and how to respond.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

Fewer law firms are doing pro bono work for causes that are unpopular with Trump
The ripple effects of Trump's actions targeting specific law firms already are being felt beyond boardrooms, in declining interest in pro bono work for causes that are unpopular with the president.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

CDC workers were coordinating hurricane recovery when they were fired
The efforts to assess ongoing mental and physical needs of the community hard hit by Hurricane Helene were canceled.

NPR Headline News
Apr 10, 2025

Colon cancer survivors who exercise regularly live longer
A new study finds that regular exercise can help colon cancer survivors live longer lives after diagnosis, and in some cases, even longer than people who didn't have cancer.

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