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  #211  
Old 01-31-2007, 11:12 AM
Still BLUTANG Still BLUTANG is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by CrimsonTide4 View Post
Reverend Dr. Jo Ann Browning is co-Pastor of Ebenezer African Methodist Episcopal Church in Fort Washington, MD. She is married to the Reverend Dr. Grainger Browning, Jr., who is the senior pastor. She is the very proud mother of two children, Grainger III and Candace, and two grandchildren, Kaylah Jo Ann Browning and Grainger Browning IV.
that's my church!
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  #212  
Old 02-05-2007, 06:44 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Soror McLenden's

Years away didn't diminish McLenden's commitment to service

By Paul R. Jefferson,
Staff Writer




A busy return

No one has to tell Ethel McLenden when it's time to get moving.

Since returning to Wilmington 20 years ago after a career as a sociology professor at Kentucky State University in Frankfort, the former educator has been on the move leading and organizing, teaching and listening, and putting her own good works and those of Delta Sigma Theta sorority at the forefront of behind-the-scenes community service.
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  #213  
Old 02-05-2007, 06:45 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Thumbs up Soror McLenden's Commitment to Service

Years away didn't diminish McLenden's commitment to service

By Paul R. Jefferson,
Staff Writer


A busy return

No one has to tell Ethel McLenden when it's time to get moving.

Since returning to Wilmington 20 years ago after a career as a sociology professor at Kentucky State University in Frankfort, the former educator has been on the move leading and organizing, teaching and listening, and putting her own good works and those of Delta Sigma Theta sorority at the forefront of behind-the-scenes community service.

http://www.starnewsonline.com/apps/p...0349/-1/news31
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  #214  
Old 02-09-2007, 03:00 AM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Soror Joan Higginbotham Will Present to Soror Height A NCNW Photo Carried Into Space

On the last Discovery mission in December, astronaut Joan Higginbotham carried with her into space a photo in tribute to one of her heroes.

Ms. Higginbotham will present the photo, a portrait of the National Council of Negro Women’s historic headquarters at 633 Pennsylvania Avenue, to Dorothy I. Height, Chair Emerita of NWNW at ceremonies at the building on Febuary 13th from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

“The accomplishment of Joan Higginbotham represents the fruit of every march and sit-in of the Civil Rights Movement, and most importantly, the potential that every young African American girl and boy has within themselves," stated Dorothy I. Height.

The landmark building where Abraham Lincoln sat for photo portraits by Matthew Brady is the only building on the corridor of power owned by women and people of color. Dorothy I. Height is a receipient of the Congressional Gold Medal and the Presidential Medal of Freedom. She will turn 95 years old next month. For more information, visit www.ncnw.org.

http://www.ncnw.org/images/astronaut.pdf
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  #215  
Old 03-15-2007, 09:51 AM
StarFish106 StarFish106 is offline
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Univ of Penn awarding Honorary Degrees

The commencement speaker and honorary recepients were announced this week.


James A Baker III - commencement speaker


Honorary Degree Recipients

Aaron Beck
Caroline Bynum
Mildred Dresselhaus
Aretha Franklin
Shirley Clarke Franklin c/o '69 (Masters)
Ruth Bader Ginsberg

Commencement is May 14, 2007
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  #216  
Old 03-27-2007, 11:10 AM
divainred divainred is offline
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Smile Soror to become the next President of Bennett College

http://www.news-record.com/apps/pbcs...C0101/70326004

Bennett College names president

From Staff Reports
ADVERTISEMENT

GREENSBORO - Julianne Malveaux has been named president of Bennett College, the school announced today at a news conference.

Malveaux, an economist, author and commentator, will succeed Johnnetta Cole, who announced in 2006 that she plans to step down at the end of this academic year. Malveaux will begin her appointment June 1.

(Listen to audio from the press conference and a one-on-one interview. Also listen to interviews with Sharrelle Barber, Bennett's SGA president, and Robin Gray a junior anthropology major who has taken classes with Malveaux.)

Malveaux appears regularly on CNN and BET. She has also hosted talk radio programs in Washington, San Francisco and New York. As a writer and syndicated columnist, her work appears regularly in USA Today, Diverse Issues in Higher Education, Ms. Magazine, Essence and the Progressive.

Malveaux serves on the boards of the Economic Policy Institute, Women Building for the Future - Future PAC, The Recreation Wish List Committee of Washington and the Liberian Education Trust.

A native San Franciscan, Malveaux received her bachelor's and master's degrees in economics from Boston College, and a Ph.D in economics from MIT.

"This institution has played a pivotal role in civil rights history, and Bennett Belles are women who have thoroughly inspired me," Malveaux said in remarks prepared before the news conference. "I have been blessed to develop a national platform as an activist and advocate for economic justice, access to education and the rights of African American women, and it is from this platform that I am delighted to begin my time as Bennett College president."

The college announced in February that it had whittled a pool of 71 candidates down to three unnamed finalists.

Bennett College for Women was founded in 1873 as a coeducational institution and in 1926 was reorganized as a college for women.
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  #217  
Old 03-27-2007, 10:48 PM
ladygreek ladygreek is offline
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^^^ It seems sorors have a lock on the presidency of Bennett - LOL. Geaux Julianne!
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  #218  
Old 03-28-2007, 06:49 PM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Thumbs up Soror Shirley Ann Jackson to Receive the Vannevar Bush Award

Shirley Ann Jackson, Leader in Higher Education and Government, to Receive the Vannevar Bush Award


First African-American woman to receive prize is noted for leadership by example



Vannevar Bush Award recipient Shirley Ann Jackson heads Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Credit and Larger Version


March 22, 2007


Shirley Ann Jackson, who has led a national movement to respond to what she calls a "quiet crisis" in the science and engineering work force, will receive the Vannevar Bush Award for a lifetime of achievements in scientific research, education and senior statesman-like contributions to public policy.

Currently, Jackson is president of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) and the first African-American woman to receive the Bush award in its 27-year history.

Jackson also is being recognized for her advocacy on global energy security, and for innovations she implemented as chairwoman of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (1995-1999), and for her role in leading an institutional transformation at the nation's oldest technology university.

The National Science Board (NSB) established the Vannevar Bush Award in 1980 to honor Bush's unique contributions to public service. The annual award recognizes an individual who, through public service activities in science and technology, has made an outstanding "contribution toward the welfare of mankind and the Nation."

"Shirley Ann Jackson has been a leader on many fronts, and she has incorporated scientific approaches into all of her work, especially on policy issues of international importance and in reforming one of the nation's important educational institutions," said NSB Chairman Steven C. Beering. "She's a national treasure deserving of the Vannevar Bush Award for her widely valued public service and contributions to the nation and the international community."

NSB will honor Jackson May 14 in a ceremony at the State Department in Washington, D.C., where she was born and raised.

Waking the Nation To A "Quiet Crisis"

Jackson has been stating her concern about impending retirements in fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) in both academe and industry for almost a decade, saying there are not enough students in the pipeline to replace the record number of retirements on the horizon in these fields. She notes the country's economic and national security depends upon its capacity for innovation--scientists, engineers and mathematicians whose numbers will dwindle over the next decade unless the trend is reversed.

She believes that waking up to the "quiet crisis" requires engaging everyone, including women and minorities who have traditionally been underrepresented in STEM fields. The crisis is "quiet," Jackson says, because it takes decades to educate future scientists and engineers, so "the impact unfolds gradually."

She says science is in crisis because "without innovation we fail--as a nation and as a world." And, she reasons that the ebbs and flows in science funding across disciplines have a "deleterious impact on the creation of a new generation of scientists and engineers"--and, therefore, our innovative capacity against a backdrop of increasing capabilities abroad.

Jackson has lectured on this topic extensively around the world. In 2002, she authored the major report, The Quiet Crisis, then took her campaign to Washington, D.C., in 2004 when she became president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

She was actively involved in the Council on Competitiveness' National Innovation Initiative, was among the authors of the National Academies' Rising Above the Gathering Storm report, and is on the National Governors Association Innovation America Task Force.

Jackson says it is now "time to turn rhetoric into reality," and says the solution must come from government, business and academe.

Jackson believes global energy security is the greatest challenge of our time, and has suggested energy research as a national focal point to address it much like President Kennedy's post-Sputnik call to action brought an influx of resources into science and engineering at that time. "Energy security is the space race of this millennium," she says.

Leading a Renaissance at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Jackson's impact at Rensselaer has grown swiftly and assuredly. In 7 years, she has revitalized and transformed the 183-year-old university into a financially solid, broad-based academic institution with a much greater diversity in the sciences and technology and a much-enhanced concentration of multidisciplinary academic programs--a true renaissance for the oldest technology university in the nation.

The transformation of Rensselaer under Jackson's Rensselaer Plan has been spectacular. Her $1.4 billion campaign has already received more than $1.2 billion in gifts and gift commitments, including one anonymous, unrestricted gift of $360 million. The work has helped Jackson deepen research activities through a tripling of awards, attracting a much broader array of faculty and intellectual leaders, and stimulating entrepreneurial educational activities. Jackson's managerial plan linking programs, plans, and resource budgeting and allocation has helped Rensselaer become a national model for the transformation of higher education. Meanwhile, the 2007 Kaplan-Newsweek How to Get into College Guide cites the institution as one of 25 schools on an elite "new Ivies" list. As of the end of February, Rensselaer received more than 10,100 enrollment applications for the 2007-2008 school year, 46 percent more than the previous year, and 81 percent greater than the pool for 2005-2006. Over the past 2 years, applications from women increased 96 percent, and 147 percent from historically underrepresented students.

(See: http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcen...tappvar=page(1) )

In addition to honoring her work at Rensselaer, the award recognizes Jackson for a lifetime of achievements in science and technology (S&T), such as success in pioneering exploration; leadership and creativity that inspires others into S&T careers; notable public service; and contributions to the nation and mankind.

A theoretical physicist at Fermilab for two years, then at the former AT&T Bell Laboratories in New Jersey from 1976-91, Jackson distinguished herself in studies and papers published in the fields of solid state and quantum physics and optical physics. Her particular contributions on optical and electronic properties of layered materials.

In 1985, she was tapped by the first of three New Jersey governors who sought her service on various commissions and task forces in the state, beginning with her appointment to the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology, on which she served for a decade.

In 1991, Jackson turned to education, joining Rutgers University as a physics professor. There, her reputation became known as a researcher, teacher, manager and policy advocate.

Leading Change at the NRC

Jackson's work at Rutgers got the attention of the White House, and in 1995, President Clinton appointed her to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Coming into an agency often criticized for being too closely linked to industry, Jackson toughened standards of safety and instituted an entirely new framework for managing the safety and security of U.S. nuclear power plants. The concept Jackson introduced, called "risk-informed, performance-based regulation," was a science-based policy that was implemented across NRC regulatory programs.

Jackson tenaciously and effectively managed the new system, which is credited with improving the safety and economy of nuclear power production nationwide and laying the groundwork for the recent re-emergence of nuclear power in the United States. As elements of this system were adopted by other nations, Jackson expanded the commission's international influence. She spearheaded formation of the International Nuclear Regulators Association, for which she served as its first chairman from 1997 until 1999.

Opening Doors for Others: A Lifetime of Firsts

Described by Time Magazine in 2005 as "perhaps the ultimate role model for women in science," Jackson achieved many firsts in her career. In 1973, she completed the doctoral degree in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), historically becoming the first African-American woman to receive a doctorate of any kind from MIT. Jackson was the first African American to sit on, and then chair, the NRC. She also was the first African-American woman to be elected to the National Academy of Engineering and to preside over a major national research university.

Although proud of her groundbreaking achievements, Jackson prefers to focus on her track record in public policy and as an advocate for science and education. She speaks publicly of the nation's need to invest more heavily in basic scientific research and for other scientists to become more actively engaged in public policy. She recently told a gathering at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government "the exponential rise in the volume and availability of information" influences the perception of science and scientists' roles, and the "acceptance of both." Her concerns focus on how this glut of information affects the public in "choos[ing] its truth and settl[ing] upon what it will accept as fact." Jackson says it is imperative that scientists exert consistent leadership to counter confusion over science and mistrust of their work.

-NSF-

In 1945, at President Franklin D. Roosevelt's urging, Vannevar Bush reported a series of recommendations for a post-war system of federal research and education to broaden the nation's scientific and technological expertise in many fields. His book, Science: The Endless Frontier, is often cited as the document spurring the eventual formation of the National Science Foundation in 1950.

The National Science Board is an independent 24-member body of policy advisors to the president and Congress on matters of science and engineering research, and is the policy making and oversight body for the National Science Foundation (NSF), an independent federal agency that supports almost all areas of fundamental research nationwide.

http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=108494


Additional Achievements:

Under Jackson's leadership, Rensselaer's expanding research efforts now include an entrepreneurial Ph.D. program in fuel-cell technology. The program, funded under NSF's Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship(s), trains students in manufacturing processes, materials development and modeling so the high-efficiency and environmentally friendly power generators can be put to efficient use.

Jackson presided over new renovations to Academy Hall Student Life Center (left) and a construction of new Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies (right), an interdisciplinary research facility that has attracted students and new faculty.

http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_images....108494&org=NSF
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  #219  
Old 04-26-2007, 05:57 PM
VandalSquirrel VandalSquirrel is offline
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Delta from Washington State University - Law Student at University of Idaho

University of Idaho second-year law student Tiana Stowers has been awarded a prestigious fellowship with the Harvard Legal Aid Bureau. The bureau provides pro bono legal service in civil matters to low income clients. Their commitment to ensuring equal access to justice is one that Stowers shares.

“I am passionate about issues that deal with women and children – social services and policies, government benefits, housing and education," said Stowers. "I was a teenage single parent. I wanted to have my child and still continue to pursue my education and career goals, but it’s very difficult to pursue your dreams on welfare. There are barriers in our system that prevent young mothers from being more than just average. You are either barely making it on your own, or you are dependent on the state to survive.”

Stowers has worked for the past decade to help change that, and now focuses on law and public policy that relates to domestic violence and victims rights for women and children.

In high school, Stowers participated in Running Start, a statewide program that allowed her to finish high school and earn college credit simultaneously. She began her career working as a legal assistant for a private practice on Mercer Island shortly after high school graduation and completion of a legal administrative assistant program. She served as a legal assistant for approximately a year before leaving for Washington State University. In her first two years as a student at WSU, she worked as a clerical assistant at the Center for Human Rights, and continued her work as a legal assistant when home in the Seattle area on student breaks. She eventually worked her way up to a paralegal position at a small family law practice in Seattle. While both working and attending school, Stowers also raised her son, Antonio McKale Wiggins Jr., now 12.

She earned a bachelor’s degree in political science from WSU (2005), and looks forward to her juris doctorate from the University of Idaho in 2008. She has volunteered with non-profit organizations to ensure quality child care and education, and has organized volunteer law clinics to educate young parents about child custody and child support issues.

Stowers competed with a large pool of highly qualified applicants, many from top 20 law schools, who apply each year for the HLAB summer fellowship. She is one of 12 fellows chosen for 2007.

Last summer she interned with the New Destiny Housing Corporation, a New York non-profit specializing in affordable housing solutions for domestic violence survivors and their children. Her job included researching the new housing policy initiated in New York City, which inadvertently made it more difficult for domestic violence survivors and victims to find housing. The failure of that policy sent many women back to their batterers, and was reflected in higher death rates for battered women in New York.

“My internship with New Destiny was a remarkable experience because it allowed me to see the far reaching effects of law and policy,” said Stowers. “I saw first hand the complications that policymakers and government officials face when establishing and implementing new law and policy, and how difficult it is for citizens to hold their officials accountable when the implementation of such law and policy impede upon their constitutional rights. I was so moved by my internship experience that I wrote a research paper for my local government class that used the DV housing crisis in New York as a framework to establish an argument for finding a municipality liable where its law and policy enhances danger that its domestic violence victims face.”

As a HLAB Fellow, Stowers will serve as a student advocate, litigating in civil court for clients who otherwise could not afford legal representation. Essentially, she will function as a working lawyer. Oversight of the 12 fellows is provided by credentialed attorneys. Her University of Idaho education has helped prepare her to take on that role.

“I worked as a family law paralegal for a while, so I have practical hands-on experience working with clients and with document preparation,” said Stowers. “Working as a paralegal I learned a lot, but I did not learn the theory behind law that allows you to see the big picture. Now I understand how much work attorneys actually do before they turn over assignments to their paralegals. I’m learning the other side of law – research and theory. My experience here at the University of Idaho helped me see that part.”

Stowers takes her success, challenges and hard work in stride. That perspective comes from being one of “a long line” of strong women. Her grandmother raised 13 children, worked and attended school. Her mother also was at one time a single teenage parent who worked and pursued a college education with two young children. Her stepmother did the same. “I’m just one of a whole bunch of strong women who have done this,” said Stowers. “Juggling the responsibilities of home, work and school is nothing new. Women do this all the time.”

Stowers heads to Cambridge, Mass., to begin the fellowship in mid-May.

***The head of the Human Rights Office at Idaho is also a Delta***

http://www.supportui.uidaho.edu/defa...ampaign=042407

Another article from the student paper about her.
http://www.uiargonaut.com/content/view/3705/88/
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  #220  
Old 06-12-2007, 11:09 PM
jitterbug13 jitterbug13 is offline
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Soror wins Miss Black USA

http://www.tennessean.com/apps/pbcs....EWS01/70606015
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  #221  
Old 08-12-2007, 04:42 AM
Ms Public Service Ms Public Service is offline
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Soror Sheryl Lee Ralph Speaks to Women Physicians at the National Medical Association

Award Winning Actress Sheryl Lee Ralph Speaks to Women Physicians at the National Medical Association Convention in Hawaii


Albert W. Morris, MD, NMA President with Actress Sheryl Lee Ralph
and Carolyn Barley Britton, MD, NMA Board Chair

Honolulu, HI (BlackNews.com) - Actor Sheryl Lee Ralph looked radiant as she recounted her long-time love of advocating for HIV in conjunction with her outstanding career. "While my vocation is acting and producing, my avocation is healthcare. It's a remarkable feeling to know that you've positively impacted an individual's life by simply doing what you love to do--help people."

Sheryl was referring to her seventeen-year commitment to speaking out about HIV/AIDS. It is this passion which influenced Ms. Ralph's decision to appear at The Council on the Concerns of Women Physicians' Annual Awards Luncheon at the annual convention of the National Medical Association (NMA) in Honolulu, Hawaii. The NMA is the oldest African American medical organization in the country, representing 30,000 physicians. The convention runs through August 9th.

On a lighter note, Sheryl mentioned that there were several physicians and one dentist in her family and that she had, in fact, been expected to become a doctor, but "organic chemistry took me out, so I became an actor!"

Ms. Ralph's eyes lit up when asked about her upcoming ventures. "I've been a part of 'Divas Simply Singing' for sixteen years. Our Seventeenth Annual 'Divas Simply Singing' will take place in Southern California this fall."

The Council on the Concerns of Women Physicians (CCWP) is a council of the NMA House of Delegates. CCWP was instrumental in the creation of the NMA's Women in Medicine Section. Its annual Awards Luncheon has become a not-to-be-missed event. This year's award recipients were Sandra L. Gadson, M.D. of Gary, Indiana. Dr. Gadson received the Service Award. Ingrid Taylor, M.D., St. Louis, Missouri received the Woman in Medicine Award and Lauren Wood, M.D., of Bethesda, Maryland was given the Pfizer Pharmaceuticals Research Award.


CONTACT:
Alisa Mosley
National Medical Association
202-207-1554
amosley@nmanet.org

http://www.blacknews.com/pr/national...iation101.html
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  #222  
Old 10-01-2007, 12:13 PM
PearlRhapsoDST PearlRhapsoDST is offline
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Proud Delta Moment

One of my line sisters emailed this link to me, and the story really touched me. It is about a first generation college student who is a single mother and came from a very rough home. She went to Indiana University and pledged Delta Sigma Theta. Her Sorors took on her dreams of her one day becoming a lawyer, and they all persevered together to help her accomplish it. It brought a tear to my eye and made me so proud to be a member of Delta Sigma Theta, and I just wanted to share it with you all.

http://abcnews. go.com/Video/ playerIndex? id=1585810
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  #223  
Old 10-01-2007, 02:54 PM
ladygreek ladygreek is offline
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Soror, this indeed was a great story of triumph. But please notice the date of the video--it has been posted before.
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Last edited by ladygreek; 10-01-2007 at 02:59 PM.
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  #224  
Old 10-01-2007, 03:24 PM
PearlRhapsoDST PearlRhapsoDST is offline
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Originally Posted by ladygreek View Post
Soror, this indeed was a great story of triumph. But please notice the date of the video--it has been posted before.
I'll have to do better. In my excitement to contribute, I didn't look at the date.

Thank you for bringing it to my attention Soror.
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  #225  
Old 10-02-2007, 11:08 PM
ladygreek ladygreek is offline
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Originally Posted by PearlRhapsoDST View Post
I'll have to do better. In my excitement to contribute, I didn't look at the date.

Thank you for bringing it to my attention Soror.
I love your energy.
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