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Pulitzer Prize Winners for Beat Reporting

 

2005 - Amy Dockser Marcus of Wall Street Journal - For her masterful stories about patients, families & physicians that illuminated the often unseen world of cancer survivors.

Nominated Finalists)

Ronald Brownstein of Los Angeles Times - For the clarity, consistency & quality of his political reporting during a presidential election year.

Dana Priest of Washington Post - For her determined, deeply sourced & insightful coverage of United States intelligence operations.

2004 - (Nominated Finalists)

Ellen Barry of Boston Globe - For her fresh, thoroughly reported & powerfully written stories about neglected people with mental health problems in Massachusetts.

Barton Gellman of Washington Post - For his authoritative & provocative coverage of the search for forbidden weapons in Iraq.

2003 - Diana K. Sugg of Baltimore Sun - For her absorbing, often poignant stories that illuminated complex medical issues through the lives of people.

Daniel Golden of Wall Street Journal - For his compelling & meticulously documented stories on admission preferences given to the children of alumni & donors at American universities.

(Nominated Finalists)

David Cay Johnston of New York Times - For his stories that displayed exquisite command of complicated U.S. tax laws & of how corporations & invidiuals twist them to their advantage.

Cameron W. Barr of Christian Science Monitor - For the extraordinary clarity, diversity & context in his ongoing coverage of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

2002 - Gretchen Morgenson of New York Times - For her trenchant & incisive Wall Street coverage.

(Nominated Finalists)

Patrick Healy of Boston Globe - For his reporting on education, including a compassionate examination of student suicides at Massachusetts Institute of Technology & revelations of grade inflation at Harvard University, coverage that spawned reforms.

Jack Kelley* of USA Today - For his wide-ranging & prescient reporting on centers of foreign terrorism, often conducted at personal risk.

*In 2004, after investigating allegations of journalistic misconduct on the part of Mr. Kelley, USA Today concluded that four of the articles in this 2002 entry contained false information. Had the Board known of this at the time it would have disqualified the entry. Mr. Kelley defended his work in general but apologized for "serious mistakes."

2001 - David Cay Johnston of New York Times - For his penetrating & enterprising reporting that exposed loopholes & inequities in the U.S. tax code, which was instrumental in bringing about reforms.

(Nominated Finalists)

Virginia Ellis of Los Angeles Times - For her persistent reporting that exposed extensive financial improprieties by a state insurance commissioner, who later resigned.

Rebecca Smith of Wall Street Journal - For her prescient & knowledgeable reporting on the electricity shortage faced by the U.S., & the country's failed efforts to deregulate energy.

2000 - George Dohrmann of St. Paul Pioneer Press - For his determined reporting, despite negative reader reaction, that revealed academic fraud in the men’s basketball program at the University of Minnesota.

(Nominated Finalists)

David Cay Johnston of New York Times - For his lucid coverage of problems resulting from the reorganization of the Internal Revenue Service.

Robert O'Harrow, Jr. of Washington Post - For his innovative stories on threats to personal privacy in the digital age.

1999 - Chuck Philips & Michael A. Hiltzik of Los Angeles Times - For their stories on corruption in the entertainment industry, including a charity sham sponsored by the National Academy of Recording Arts & Sciences, illegal detoxification programs for wealthy celebrities, & a resurgence of radio payola.

(Nominated Finalists)

Blair Kamin of Chicago Tribune - For his lucid coverage of city architecture, including an influential series supporting the development of Chicago's lakefront area. (Originally submitted in Criticism & returned by the Board to that category.)

Barton Gellman of Washington Post - For his penetrating coverage of the inner workings of the United Nations Special Commission as it sought to impact & disarm Iraqi weapons.

1998 - Linda Greenhouse of New York Times
For her consistently illuminating coverage of the United States Supreme Court.

(Nominated Finalists)

Jason DeParle of New York Times - For his coverage of the successes & frustrations of the national effort to reform welfare.

Keith Bradsher of New York Times - For his reporting that disclosed safety & environmental problems posed by sport utility vehicles & other light trucks.

Laurie Garrett of Newsday, Long Island, N.Y. - For her reporting on the public health care crisis in the countries of the former Soviet Union.

1997 - Byron Acohido of Seattle Times - For his coverage of the aerospace industry, notably an exhaustive investigation of rudder control problems on the Boeing 737, which contributed to new FAA requirements for major improvements.

(Nominated Finalists)

Celia W. Dugger of New York Times - For her coverage of the plight of a young African woman who was jailed by U.S. immigration officials after she fled her homeland & its tribal rite of genital mutilation to seek asylum in the country, which prompted worldwide reaction.

Craig Flournoy of Dallas Morning News - For his coverage of low-income housing programs, including the disclosure that Dallas officials had misspent or failed to utilize millions of federal dollars allocated for impoverished areas.

1996 - Bob Keeler of Newsday, Long Island, N.Y. - For his detailed portrait of a progressive local Catholic parish & its parishioners.

(Nominated Finalists)

Alison Grant of Plain Dealer of Cleveland - For articles uncovering corrupt dealings between contractors & city officials in the suburb of Beachwood that resulted in indictments & significant reforms.

Fred Schulte & Jenni Bergal of Sun-Sentinel, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. - For disclosing problems & abuses in the state's tax-funded Medicaid health maintenance organizations.

1995 - David Shribman of Boston Globe - For his analytical reporting on Washington developments & the national scene.

(Nominated Finalists)

Jason DeParle of New York Times - For Washington D.C. welfare & social policy coverage that focused on the condition of the poor & Federal Government actions affecting them.

Tom Hallman Jr. of Oregonian, Portland - For the series "Extreme Indifference," on the prosecution of a drunken driver convicted of killing four pedestrians, & for his reporting on public safety.

Michael J. Berens of Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch - For a series revealing inequities in the county municipal court system, including the widespread jailing of individuals too poor to pay fines for minor offenses & the release of other, more serious offenders who were able to pay.

1994 - Eric Freedman & Jim Mitzelfeld of Detroit News - For dogged reporting that disclosed flagrant spending abuses at Michigan's House Fiscal Agency.

(Nominated Finalists)

Joan Connell of Newhouse News Service - For her reporting & writing on religion, ethics & morality.

John Woestendiek of Philadelphia Inquirer - For his coverage of the promise & perils of city youth.

1993 - Paul Ingrassia & Joseph B. White of Wall Street Journal
For often exclusive coverage of General Motors' management turmoil.

(Nominated Finalists)

Jesse Katz of Los Angeles Times - For a series of portraits & analyses that illuminated the causes & effects of Los Angeles gang life

Fawn Vrazo of Philadelphia Inquirer - For her comprehensive coverage of women's health issues.

1992 - Deborah Blum of Sacramento (Calif.) Bee - For her series, "The Monkey Wars," which explored the complex ethical & moral questions surrounding primate research.

(Nominated Finalists)

Russ Conway of Eagle-Tribune, Lawrence, Mass. - For his reporting about questionable business practices in professional hockey.

Gregg Jones of the now defunct Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock - For stories about the state's faltering rural health-care system.

1991 - Natalie Angier of New York Times - For her compelling & illuminating reports on a variety of scientific topics.

(Nominated Finalists)

David Shaw of Los Angeles Times - For reporting on media coverage of a variety of public issues.

Scott Harper of Capital, Annapolis, Md. - For reporting that uncovered hazing, sexual harassment & generally biased treatment of female cadets at the U.S. Naval Academy & prompted six congressional & naval investigations.

1990 - Tamar Stieber of Albuquerque Journal - For persistent reporting that linked a rare blood disorder to an over-the-counter dietary supplement, L-Tryptophan, & led to a national recall of the product.

(Nominated Finalists)

Jim Dwyer of New York Newsday - For his coverage of the New York City subway system

Claire Speigel of Los Angeles Times - For an investigation of mismanagement & abuses at a Los Angeles medical center, stories that led to improvements in patient care & policies at the hospital.

1989 - Edward Humes of Orange County Register - For his in-depth reporting on the military establishment in Southern California.

(Nominated Finalists)

Mike Masterson & Chuck Cook of Arizona Republic - For their stories about risks to elderly Americans from prescription errors, drug interactions & medication abuse.

Dennis Anderson of St. Paul Pioneer Press Dispatch
For his stories detailing the problems & abuses that endanger America's waterfowl

1988 - Walt Bogdanich of Wall Street Journal - For his chilling series of reports on faulty testing by American medical laboratories.

(Nominated Finalists)

Natalie Fobes of Seattle Times - For stories & photographs portraying the Pacific salmon's struggle to survive man-made hazards

Staff of Lexington Herald-Leader - For its report on the rise & fall of Spendthrift Farm, the famed Kentucky horse breeders.

1987 - Alex S. Jones of New York Times - For "The Fall of the House of Bingham," a skillful & sensitive report of a powerful newspaper family's bickering & how it led to the sale of a famed media empire.

(Nominated Finalists)

1986 - Edna Buchanan of Miami Herald - For her versatile & consistently excellent police beat reporting.

(Nominated Finalists)

Irene Wielawski of Providence Journal-Bulletin - For medical reporting that consistently examined the human side of complex health care issues.

Angelo Cataldi of Philadelphia Inquirer - For articles that profiled the Philadelphia Eagles football team's 1986 season under new head coach Buddy Ryan.

1985 - Andrew Schneider & Mary Pat Flaherty of Pittsburgh Press - For their investigation of violations & failures in the organ transplantation system in the United States.

(Nominated Finalists)

Bruce Buursma of Chicago Tribune - For his informed & clear reporting on religion, which included articles on Billy Graham, Pope John Paul II, born-again believers & the Catholic Church in Africa.

William K. Robertson of Miami Herald - For his literary-journalistic account of rediscovering Mark Twain's Mississippi River in honor of the 100th anniversary of "Huckleberry Finn."

1984 - Newsday team of reporters of Newsday, Long Island, N.Y. - For their enterprising & comprehensive coverage of the Baby Jane Doe case & its far-reaching social & political implications.

(Nominated Finalists)

Leslie A. Scism of Bucks County (Pa.) Courier Times - For her investigation of Anna Catherina Emmerick Academy, which linked the religious school's activities to right-wing extremist groups & revealed that it housed weaponry & explosives.

1983 - Editorial Staff of Fort Wayne (Ind.) News-Sentinel - For its courageous & resourceful coverage of a devastating flood in March 1982.

(Nominated Finalists)

Dallas Morning News Team of Dallas Morning News - For its coverage & analysis of the financial collapse of Braniff International Airlines.

Staff of Rochester (N.Y.) Democrat & Chronicle - For its coverage of an accident at Ginna nuclear power plant that helped to avert public panic.

1982 - Kansas City Star & Kansas City Times - For coverage of the Hyatt Regency Hotel disaster & identification of its causes.

(Nominated Finalists)

Ken Wells of Miami Herald - For his series on Florida's water problems.

Lucy Morgan of St. Petersburg Times - For her series on drug smuggling in Dixie County, Florida.

Staff of Louisville Courier-Journal - For its coverage of an explosion in the Louisville sewer system

1981 - Staff of Longview (Wash.) Daily News - For its coverage of the Mt. St. Helens story, including the photographs by Roger A. Werth.          

(Nominated Finalists)

Newsroom Staff of Miami Herald - For "Three Days of Rage: The Miami Riots."

Staff of Baltimore News American - For "The Snowball Tragedy," a story of the gap between the young & the elderly.

1980 - Staff of Philadelphia Inquirer - For coverage of the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island.

(Nominated Finalists)

Staff of Chicago Tribune - For coverage of the worst air crash in history & the blizzard of 1979.

Staff of Greensboro (N.C.) Daily News - For coverage of a shootout of the Ku Klux Klan

1979 - San Diego (Calif.) Evening Tribune of San Diego (Calif.) Evening Tribune - For its coverage of the collision of a Pacific Southwest air liner with a small plane over its city.

(Nominated Finalists)

1978 - Richard Whitt of Louisville Courier-Journal - For his coverage of a fire that took 164 lives at the Beverly Hills Supper Club at Southgate, Ky., & subsequent investigation of the lack of enforcement of state fire codes.

1977 - Margo Huston of Milwaukee Journal - For her reports on the elderly & the process of aging

1976 - Gene Miller of Miami Herald - For his persistent & courageous reporting over eight & one-half years that led to the exoneration & release of two men who had twice been tried for murder & wrongfully convicted & sentenced to death in Florida

1975 - Staff of Xenia (Ohio) Daily Gazette - For its coverage, under enormous difficulties, of the tornado that wrecked the city on April 3, 1974

1974 - Arthur M. Petacque & Hugh F. Hough of Chicago Sun-Times - For uncovering new evidence that led to the reopening of efforts to solve the 1966 murder of Valerie Percy.

1973 - Richard Cooper & John Machacek of Rochester (N.Y.) Times-Union - For their coverage of the Attica (N.Y.) prison riot.

1972 - Chicago Tribune of Chicago Tribune - For uncovering flagrant violations of voting procedures in the primary election of March 21, 1972.

1971 - Staff of Akron (Ohio) Beacon Journal - For its coverage of the Kent State University tragedy on May 4, 1970.

1970 - Thomas Fitzpatrick of Chicago Sun-Times - For his article about the violence of youthful radicals in Chicago, "A Wild Night's Ride With SDS."

1969 - John Fetterman of Louisville Times & Courier-Journal - For his article, "Pfc. Gibson Comes Home," the story of an American soldier whose body was returned to his native town from Vietnam for burial.

1968 - Detroit Free Press Staff - For its coverage of the Detroit riots of 1967, recognizing both the brilliance of its detailed spot news staff work & its swift & accurate investigation into the underlying causes of the tragedy.

1967 - Louisville Courier-Journal - For its successful campaign to control the Kentucky strip mining industry, a notable advance in the national effort for the conservation of natural resources.

Robert V. Cox of Chambersburg (Pennsylvania) Public Opinion - For his vivid deadline reporting of a mountain manhunt that ended with the killing of a deranged sniper who had terrorized the community.

1966 - Staff of Los Angeles Times - For its coverage of the Watts riots

1965 - Melvin H. Ruder of Hungry Horse News, a weekly in Columbia Falls, Montana - For his daring & resourceful coverage of a disastrous flood that threatened his community, an individual effort in the finest tradition of spot news reporting.

1964 - Norman C. Miller, Jr. of Wall Street Journal - For his comprehensive account of a multi-million dollar vegetable oil swindle in New Jersey.

1963 - Sylvan Fox, Anthony Shannon & William Longgood of New York World-Telegram & Sun - For their reporting of an air crash in Jamaica Bay, killing 95 persons on March 1, 1962.

Oscar Griffin, Jr. of Pecos (Texas) Independent & Enterprise
who as editor initiated the exposure of the Billie Sol Estes scandal & thereby brought a major fraud on the United States government to national attention with resultant investigation, prosecution & conviction of Estes.

1962 - Robert D. Mulllins of Deseret News, Salt Lake City - For his resourceful coverage of a murder & kidnapping at Dead Horse Point, Utah.

George Bliss of Chicago Tribune - For his initiative in uncovering scandals in the Metropolitan Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, with resultant remedial action.

1961 - Sanche De Gramont of New York Herald Tribune - For his moving account of the death of Leonard Warren on the Metropolitan Opera stage

Edgar May of Buffalo (N.Y.) Evening News - For his series of articles on New York State's public welfare services entitled, "Our Costly Dilemma," based in part on his three-month employment as a State case worker. The series brought about reforms that attracted nation-wide attention.

1960 - Jack Nelson of Atlanta Constitution - For the excellent reporting in his series of articles on mental institutions in Georgia

Miriam Ottenberg of Evening Star, Washington, D.C. - For a series of seven articles exposing a used-car racket in Washington, D.C., that victimized many unwary buyers. The series led to new regulations to protect the public & served to alert other communities to such sharp practices.

1959 - Miss Mary Lou Werner of Evening Star, Washington, D.C. - For her comprehensive year-long coverage of the integration crisis in Virginia which demonstrated admirable qualities of accuracy, speed & the ability to interpret the news under deadline pressure in the course of a difficult & taxing assignment.

John Harold Brislin of Scranton (Pa.) Tribune & Scrantonian - For displaying courage, initiative & resourcefulness in his effective four-year campaign to halt labor violence in his home city, as a result of which ten corrupt union officials were sent to jail & a local union was embolden to clean out racketeering elements.

1958 - Fargo (N.D.) Forum - For its swift, vivid & detailed news & picture coverage of a tornado which struck Fargo on June 20. Proceeding under considerable difficulty & overcoming many handicaps, a small but skilled staff put out a complete tornado edition within five hours after the disaster.

George Beveridge of Evening Star, Washington, D.C. - For his excellent & thought-provoking series, "Metro, City of Tomorrow," describing in depth the urban problems of Washington, D.C., which stimulated widespread public consideration of these problems & encouraged further studies by both public & private agencies.

1957 - Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune - For its prompt & efficient coverage of the crash of two air liners over the Grand Canyon, in which 128 persons were killed. This was a team job that surmounted great difficulties in distance, time & terrain.

Wallace Turner & William Lambert of Portland Oregonian - For their expose of vice & corruption in Portland involving some municipal officials & officers of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers of America, Western Conference. They fulfilled their assignments despite great handicaps & the risk of reprisal from lawless elements.

1956 - Lee Hills of Detroit Free Press - For his aggressive, resourceful & comprehensive front page reporting of the United Automobile Workers' negotiations with Ford & General Motors for a guaranteed annual wage

Arthur Daley of New York Times - For his outstanding coverage & commentary on the world of sports in his daily column, "Sports of the Times."

1955 - Mrs. Caro Brown of Alice (Tex.) Daily Echo - For a series of news stories dealing with the successful attack on one-man political rule in neighboring Duval County, written under unusual pressure both of edition time & difficult, even dangerous, circumstances. Mrs. Brown dug into the facts behind the dramatic daily events, as well, & obtained her stories in spite of the bitterest political opposition, showing professional skill & courage.

Roland Kenneth Towery of Cuero (Tex.) Record - For his series of articles exclusively exposing a scandal in the administration of the Veterans' Land Program in Texas. This 32-year-old World War II veteran, a former prisoner of the Japanese, made these irregularities a state-wide & subsequently a national issue, & stimulated state action to rectify conditions in the land program.

1954 - Vicksburg (Miss.) Sunday Post-Herald - For its outstanding coverage of the tornado of December 5, 1953, under extraordinary difficulties.

Alvin Scott McCoy of Kansas City (Mo.) Star - For a series of exclusive stories which led to the resignation under fire of C. Wesley Roberts as Republican National Chairman.

1953 - Editorial Staff of Providence Journal & Evening Bulletin - For their spontaneous & cooperative coverage of a bank robbery & police chase leading to the capture of the bandit.

Edward J. Mowery of New York World-Telegram & Sun - For his reporting of the facts which brought vindication & freedom to Louis Hoffner.

1952 - George De Carvalho of San Francisco Chronicle - For his stories of a "ransom racket" extorting money from Chinese in the United States for relations held in Red China.

1951 -Edward S. Montgomery of San Francisco Examiner - For his series of articles on tax frauds which culminated in an expose within the Bureau of Internal Revenue.

1950 - Meyer Berger of New York Times - For his 4,000 word story on the mass killings by Howard Unruh in Camden, N.J.

1949 -Malcolm Johnson of New York Sun - For his series of 24 articles entitled "Crime on the Waterfront" in New York City.

1948 -George E. Goodwin of Atlanta Journal - For his story of the Telfair County vote fraud, published in 1947.

1947 - Frederick Woltman of New York World-Telegram - For his articles during 1946 on the infiltration of Communism in the U.S.

Brooks Atkinson of New York Times - For distinguished correspondence during 1946, as exemplified by his series of articles on Russia

1946 - William Leonard Laurence of New York Times - For his eye-witness account of the atom-bombing of Nagasaki & his subsequent ten articles on the development, production, & significance of the atomic bomb.

1945 - Jack S. McDowell of San Francisco Call-Bulletin - For his campaign to encourage blood donations.

Harold V. (Hal) Boyle of Associated Press - For distinguished war correspondence during the year 1944

1944 - Paul Schoenstein & Associates of New York Journal-American - For a news story published on August 12, 1943, which saved the life of a two-year-old girl in the Lutheran Hospital of New York City by obtaining penicillin.

Ernest Taylor Pyle of Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance - For distinguished war correspondence during the year 1943

1943 - George Weller of Chicago Daily News - For his graphic story of how a U.S. Navy Pharmacist's Mate under enemy waters in a submarine performed an operation for appendicitis saving a sailor's life.

1942 - Stanton Delaplane of San Francisco Chronicle - For his articles on the movement of several California & Oregon counties to secede to form a forty ninth state.

1941 - Westbrook Pegler of New York World-Telegram - For his articles on scandals in the ranks of organized labor, which led to the exposure & conviction of George Scalise, a labor racketeer.

1940 - S. Burton Heath of New York World-Telegram - For his expose of the frauds perpetrated by Federal Judge Martin T. Manton, who resigned & was tried & imprisoned.

1939 - Thomas Lunsford Stokes of Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance - For his series of articles on alleged intimidation of workers for the Works Progress Administration in Pennsylvania & Kentucky during an election. The articles were published in The New York World-Telegram

1938 - Raymond Sprigle of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - For his series of articles, supported by photostats of the essential documents, exposing the one-time membership of Mr. Justice Hugo L. Black in the Ku Klux Klan.

1937 - John J. O'Neill, William L. Laurence, Howard W. Blakeslee, Gobind Behari Lal & David Dietz of New York Herald Tribune, New York Times, AP, Universal Service & Scripps-Howard - For their coverage of science at the tercentenary of Harvard University.

1936 - Lauren D. Lyman of New York Times - For his exclusive story revealing that the Charles A. Lindbergh family was leaving the United States to live in England.

1935 - William H. Taylor of New York Herald Tribune - For his series of articles on the international yacht races.

1934 - Royce Brier of San Francisco Chronicle - For his account of the lynching of the kidnappers, John M. Holmes & Thomas H. Thurmond in San Jose, Calif., on Nov. 26, 1933 after they had been jailed for abducting Brooke Hart, a merchant's son.

1933 - Francis A. Jamieson of Associated Press - For his prompt, full, skillful & prolonged coverage of news of the kidnapping of the infant son of Charles Lindbergh on March 1, 1932, from the first announcement of the kidnapping until after the discovery of the baby's body nearby the Lindbergh home on May 12.

1932 - W. C. Richards, D. D. Martin, J. S. Pooler, F. D. Webb & J. N. W. Sloan of Detroit Free Press - For their account of the parade of the America Legion during the 1931 convention in Detroit.

1931 - A. B. MacDonald of Kansas City (Mo.) Star - For his work in connection with a murder in Amarillo, Texas.

1930 - Russell D. Owen of New York Times - For his reports by radio of the Byrd Antarctic Expedition.

1929 - Paul Y. Anderson of St. Louis Post-Dispatch - For his highly effective work in bringing to light a situation which resulted in revealing the disposition of Liberty Bonds purchased & distributed by the Continental Trading Company in connection with naval oil leases.

1927 - John T. Rogers of St. Louis Post-Dispatch - For the inquiry leading to the impeachment of Judge George W. English of the U.S. Court for the Eastern District of Illinois.

1926 - William Burke Miller of Louisville Courier-Journal - For his work in connection with the story of the trapping in Sand Cave, Kentucky, of Floyd Collins.

1925 - James W. Mulroy & Alvin H. Goldstein of Chicago Daily News. - For their service toward the solution of the murder of Robert Franks, Jr., in Chicago on May 22, 1924, & the bringing to justice of Nathan F. Leopold & Richard Loeb.

1924 - Magner White of San Diego Sun - For his story of the eclipse of the sun

1923 - Alva Johnston of New York Times
For his reports of the proceedings of the convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Science held in Cambridge Mass., in December, 1922.

1922 - Kirke L. Simpson of Associated Press - For articles on the burial of "The Unknown Soldier."

1921 - Louis Seibold of New York World - For an interview with President Wilson.

1920 - John J. Leary, Jr. of New York World - For the series of articles written during the national coal strike in the winter of 1919

1918 - Harold A. Littledale of New York Evening Post - For series of articles exposing abuses in & leading to the reform of the New Jersey State prison.

1917 - Herbert Bayard Swope of New York World - For articles which appeared October 10, October 15 & from November 4 daily to November 22, 1916, inclusive, entitled, "Inside the German Empire."

 

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