ࡱ> @ hbjbj .uu`jjjjjjj~4:~(OZD> NNNNNNN$OR0RRNjG@G@G@NjjN7K7K7KG@ jjN7KG@N7K7Kjj7KN ÇQFR7KSKTN0(O7KSFS7K~~jjjjSj7K ( 7K1D 9=NN~~d $ -K ~~ICNIRP constantly seeks to extend and improve its knowledge base in order to ensure that it continues to provide sound science-based advice on non-ionizing radiation protection. This task has become increasingly complex and demanding, particularly with the rapid expansion of new technologies employing electromagnetic fields, radiofrequency radiation and optical devices that could result in an increase in the exposure of people. ICNIRP recognises the need to benefit from as wide a range of professional expertise and scientific/technical knowledge as possible and, to achieve this, has invited a number of key experts in specific areas in the role of Consulting Members. Consulting members are invited to help ICNIRP through the work programme of each Standing Committee. They bring to ICNIRP specific expertise, often in a specific and highly technical area, and required for a specific task in hand. They also provide a broadening of the scientific consultation that ICNIRP employs to review its publications.  MembershipDr. E. Azizi Sheba Medical Center, Israel  HYPERLINK "mailto:esaz1@post.tau.ac.il" esaz1@post.tau.ac.ilDr. Esther Azizi is a Senior Lecturer of Dermatology in The Sackler School of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, (equivalent to Associate Professor in the U.S.A) and deputy head of the Department of Dermatology, Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer, Israel. Her main research interests are photodermatology, with an emphasis on UV-carcinogenesis, in particular - sun-induced skin cancer and malignant melanoma. She has a longstanding interest in dermatological oncology, as well as in primary and secondary prevention of sun-induced skin cancer and melanoma in high risk population groups. Her work spans epidemiologic and biometric risk assessments of acute and chronic hazards of solar UVR to human skin.Dr. D. Black Gillies Clinic, Auckland, New-Zealand  HYPERLINK "mailto:d.black@auckland.ac.nz" d.black@auckland.ac.nzDr David Black is an Occupational and Environmental Physician currently working at Gillies Clinic in Auckland and as a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Medicine at the Auckland Medical School. Dr Black originally trained in radio engineering, and worked in that industry for ten years before entering Medical School in 1977. He began an academic interest in Radiofrequency Safety while an academic at the university of Otago Medical School in 1986. Since that time he has qualified as a Specialist in Occupational Medicine and was Chief Medical Officer of Air New Zealand until 1997. His practice is now divided between clinical and academic Occupational and Environmental Medicine and consulting in Radiofrequency Safety.Prof.Dr.E.W.Breitbart CentreofDermatology, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:euroskin@t-online.de" euroskin@t-online.deProf. Dr. Eckhard Breitbart is the head of the Centre of Dermatology, Buxtehude, Germany, and is working since many years in the fields of clinical and experimental skin cancer research. Prof. Dr. Breitbart is a member of the Standing Committee on Non-Ionizing Radiation of the German National Radiation Protection Board and of various national and international scientific and medical societies. He is the President of the European Society of Skin Cancer Prevention, EUROSKIN, whose aim is to reduce skin cancer incidence and mortality by promoting and co-ordinating collaboration between European specialists in the fields of skin cancer research and prevention. At the national level, he is instructed by the government to establish an independant Skin-Cancer Screening within the scope of the legal Cancer Early Detection Programme in Germany. Dr. J. Brix Bavarian Ministry of Health Munich, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:jutta.brix@stmgev.bayern.de" jutta.brix@stmgev.bayern.deDr. Jutta Brix received her diploma in biology and her PhD degree in neurobiology from the Technical University in Munich. In 1992 she started working at the German Federal Office of Radiation Protection (BfS) where she became head of the group Non-Ionizing Radiation Effects in 1998. Since August 2002 she works with the Bavarian Ministry of Health, Nutrition and Consumer Protection, where cellular phone technology and health effects are at the core of her tasks within non-ionising radiation. Her main interests centre on biological effects of non-ionizing radiation in the frequency range 0 to 300 GHz covering all aspects of NIR protection. Since 2000, she has been a member of the editorial board of the Journal of the Bioelectromagnetics Society.Dr. E. Cardis, InternationalAgency for Research on Cancer, France  HYPERLINK "mailto:cardis@iarc.fr" cardis@iarc.frDr. P. Chadwick MicrowaveConsultantsLtd, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:phil.chadwick@mcluk.org" phil.chadwick@mcluk.org Dr. Philip Chadwick is a Chartered Physicist; his PhD project involved the measurement of lean muscle mass in people using radiofrequency electromagnetic fields. His primary interests are public and occupational exposure assessment, the practical application of exposure guidelines and dosimetry. He has also worked on public health policy (including the application of precautionary approaches) and in the management of large EMF research programmes. After some years with the UK's National Radiological Protection Board and Department of Health, he is now a Director of MCL, an independent UK-based scientific research and consultancy organisation specialising in the interaction of electromagnetic fields with people. Dr. Philip Chadwick is a member of IEEE SCC28, the USA-based EMF exposure standards group, and the editorial board of the International EMF Dosimetry Project. He is also a member of CENELEC TC211 (the European committee setting standards for the comparison of emissions from devices with human exposure guidelines) and its working groups on antitheft devices, industrial heating and generic and basic standards.Dr. S. Eggert Federal Institute Occupational Safety and Health, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:eggert.siegfried@baua.bund.de" eggert.siegfried@baua.bund.de Dr. Siegfried Eggert is working as a scientist in the research group for vibration and electromagnetic fields at the Federal Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Berlin, Germany. The main areas of his work comprise research on biological effects of electromagnetic fields of the entire frequency range (presently em-radiation of mo-bile telecommunication equipment), in particular design of exposure equipment, do-simetry and determination of exposure in workplaces (measurement and evaluation of EM-fields). He is also advising the German Federal Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs in this field. Dr. Eggert is member of the German-Swiss Radiation Protection Association and of the German Standardisation Committee within the German Commission for Electri-cal, Electronic and Information Technology of DIN and VDE. Dr. M. Feychting KarolinskaInstitutet, Stockholm, Sweden  HYPERLINK "mailto:Maria.Feychting@imm.ki.se" Maria.Feychting@imm.ki.seDr. Maria Feychting is associate professor in epidemiology at the Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. Her main research interests are possible adverse health effects of exposure to extremly low frequency electric and magnetic fields, with a focus on chronic diseases such as cancer and neurodegenerative diseases. She has conducted epidemiological studies on residential and occupational ELF EMF exposure in relation to childhood leukemia and other cancers in children and adults. Her work has also aimed at improving exposure assessment in epidemiological studies. Dr. Feychting was a member of the 1998 NIEHS working group on the health assessment of health effects of ELF EMF exposure.James K. Franks US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine  HYPERLINK "mailto:James.Franks@apg.amedd.army.mil" James.Franks@ apg.amedd.army.milMr. Franks is a physicist and Assistant Program Manager of the Laser/Optical Radiation Program at the US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM). He has been involved in occupational health hazards from lasers and other high intensity optical sources for the past 30 years and has participated in the formation of the ANSI standards for the safe use of lasers. He was awarded the status of Master Consultant at the US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine in 1991. He represents the USACHPPM as a voting member of the ANSI Z136 committee on the safe use of lasers. He represents the US Army on the US Department of Defense (DOD) Laser System Safety Working Group. He was elected a fellow of the Laser Institute of America in 1994.Prof. V. P. Gabel University Clinic of Regensburg, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:gabel@eye-regensburg.de" gabel@eye-regensburg.deProf. Gabel received a MD from the Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) at Munich, Germany in 1966. After a specialization in ophthalmology at the University Eye Hopital, Munich, he earned in 1974 a PhD in ophtalmology from the Faculty of Medicine at the LMU, Munich. From 1978 to 1991 he was the head of the medical group of the Hermann Wacker Laboratory for laser application in medicine. Since 1991 he is Professor for Ophtalmology at the University at Regensburg and Chairman of the University Eye Hospital, Regensburg. 1982 he was granted the Senator Hermann Wacker Award and received in 2000 the Award of the Retina Research Foundation. His scientific interests are: laser application in retinal diseases :intraocular tamponades :subretinal prosthesis.Dr. A. Glansholm, Swedish Radiation Protection Authority, Sweden  HYPERLINK "mailto:anders.glansholm@ssi.se" anders.glansholm@ssi.seProf. Dr. J. Jefferys University of Birmingham, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:j.g.r.jefferys@bham.ac.uk" j.g.r.jefferys@bham.ac.ukProfessor John Jefferys heads a research group at Birmingham University Medical School carrying out in vitro neurophysiological investigations into epilepsy and prion disease using rat and occasionally human brain tissue, mostly hippocampal slice work. He has also carried out studies of the effects of weak electric fields on brain tissue excitability and has reviewed this subject recently in Physiological Reviews (1995; 75 689-723).Dr. J. Juutilainen University of Kuopio, Finland  HYPERLINK "mailto:jukka.juutilainen@uku.fi" jukka.juutilainen@uku.fi Dr. Jukka Juutilainen is a Professor of Radiation Biology and Radiation Epidemiology at the Department of Environmental Sciences of the University of Kuopio, Finland. He has worked as an Associate Editor for Electro- and Magnetobiology in 1993-1997 and for Bioelectromagnetics in 1998-2001. His research and teaching cover adverse health effects and risk assessment of radiation (both non-ionizing and ionizing). His team conducts multidisciplinary research using all approaches from epidemiology and exposure assessment to cell and molecular biology. The main research areas have been assessment of possible developmental and carcinogenic effects of low frequency and RF electromagnetic fields, and combined effects with known carcinogenic/genotoxic factors such as UV or ionizing radiation. Dr. M. Kojima, Kanazawa Medical University, Japan  HYPERLINK "mailto:m-kojima@kanazawa-med.ac.jp" m-kojima@kanazawa-med.ac.jp Dr. Masami Kojima is actively working in UV cataract research in animal models, ocular dosimetry and clinical studies.R. Landry FDA, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:rjl@cdrh.fda.gov" rjl@cdrh.fda.gov Mr. Landry is a Senior Physicist and optical radiation safety expert with the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). He has been involved in health hazards from lasers and other high intensity optical sources of radiation for the past 35 years and has participated in the formation of the ISO and ANSI standards for the safe use of lasers and noncoherent sources of optical radiation. His primary research interests include optical radiation safety of medical devices and radiologic products and optical radiation metrology. Mr. Landry served as Chief of the Electro-Optics Branch of the FDA from 1977 through 1991. He also served as Secretary of the International Electro-technical Committee TC 76 for laser products and the safe use of lasers, and is presently involved in the development of ISO standards for the optical radiation safety of ophtalmic instruments.Prof. Dr. N. Leitgeb University of Graz, Austria  HYPERLINK "mailto:leitgeb@bmt.tu-graz.ac.at" leitgeb@bmt.tu-graz.ac.atDr. Norbert Leitgeb is educated in the interdisciplinary field of biomedical engineering with knowledge both in (electro)technical and medical subjects. He is professor of clinical engineering and head of the department of clinical engineering at the Institute of Biomedical Engineering as well as vice head of the testing institute of medical technology, both at the Graz University of Technology, Austria. His main research interests are safety technology and biological effects of electromagnetic fields, in particular in respect to electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Dr. Leitgeb is a member of national bodies concerned with developing exposure limits for electromagnetic fields in Austria and Germany and the past 8 years chairman of the WG basic research within the European project COST244 "Biomedical Effects of Electromagnetic Fields".Prof. Dr. M.A. Mainster University of Kansas Medical Center, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:martin.mainster@worldnet.att.net" martin.mainster@worldnet.att.netDr. Mainster is a Professor Emeritus in Ophthalmology at the University of Kansas where he specializes in macular and retinal vascular disorders. He received his Ph.D. in physics from North Carolina State University in 1968 and his M.D. from the University of Texas Medical Center in 1975. He completed an ophthalmology residency at Scott and White Hospital in 1979 and a retinal disease fellowship at Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary in 1981. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the Royal College of Ophthalmologists. He has received the American Academy of Ophthalmologys Honor and Senior Achievement Awards. He has written over 100 peer-reviewed scientific publications and holds 6 patents. He is a consultant to the Physical Agents TLV Committee of the ACGIH, a member of ANSIs Subcommittee on Laser Bioeffects,a member of the Committee on Light and Retinal Disease of the CIE, and a media spokesperson for the American Academy of Ophthalmology. He is a member of the Standing Committee on Optics of ICNIRP since 1998.Dr. G. Mariutti, National Institute of Health (ISS), ItalyProf. J. Marshall Department of Ophtalmology St Thomas' Hospital London, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:june.krafft@kcl.ac.uk" june.krafft@kcl.ac.ukProfessor John Marshall is the Frost Professor of Ophthalmology at St Thomas' Hospital. He graduated from London University in 1965 and obtained his PhD in 1968 with a thesis entitled "Laser induced damage in the Retina". His research over the past thirty years has concentrated on the inter-relationships between light and ageing, the mechanisms underlying age-related, diabetic and inherited retinal disease, and the development of lasers for use in ophthalmic diagnosis and surgery. This work has resulted in over three hundred research papers and numerous book chapters and books. It has also resulted in the development of the Excimer laser for the correction of refractive disorders and the worlds first Diode laser for treating eye problems of diabetes, glaucoma and ageing. He is editor and co-editor of a number of international journals. He has been awarded the Nettleship Medal of the Ophthalmological Society of the United Kingdom, the Mackenzie Medal, the Raynor Medal, the Ridley Medal and the Ashton Medal. He has been visiting professor at numerous universities on every continent. He sits on many national and international committees concerned with protecting the public against the possible damaging effects of lasers and other artificial light sources. He is currently the Chairman of the Medical Advisory Board and Trustee of the British Retinitis Pigmentosa Society. He is also a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and an Honorary Fellow of The College of Optometrists. Prof. J. Mellerio Physiology Section University of Westminster, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:J.Mellerio@westminster.ac.uk" J.Mellerio@westminster.ac.ukProf Mellerio's research interests have centred on the hazards of light to the eye and in the 1960's he worked with one of the first lasers intended for ophthalmic surgery. He has worked on the way Nd:YAG lasers formed plasmas and lesions in ophthalmic surgery and on various light activated damaging mechanisms. The need for ocular protection from non-ionising radiation has led Prof Mellerio to become involved with sunglasses, their design, specification and performance testing. Because sunglasses are often coloured and may thus distort colour recognition of signals he subsequently became involved with the way coloured signal lights from Light Emitting Diodes (LED's) are perceived as colours. LED's and his interest in the effects of light have combined into ways of measuring macular pigment, a protective antioxidant present in the central retina. He is now concerned with developing ways of measuring this so that a person's tendency to develop age-related macular degeneration in the eye might be predicted. He is currently a staff physiologist and teaches at the University of Westminster, London. Prof. Dr. M. Norval University of Edinburgh, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:MN@srv1.med.ed.ac.uk" MN@srv1.med.ed.ac.ukDr. Mary Norval is Professor of Photoimmunology in the Medical Microbiology Section, University of Edinburgh Medical School, Scotland. Her main research interests centre on the skin immune system and how it is modulated by UV exposure. She has concentrated on evaluating the impact of UV on resistance to microbial agents, particularly herpes simplex virus which has been studied in human subjects and in murine models. In addition she has investigated the role of urocanic acid as an initiator of UV-induced immunosuppression. Professor Norval has been a member of the United Nations Environment Panel on Ozone Depletion since 2000.Dr.P.Reilly, Metatec Associates, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:jpreilly@ieee.org" jpreilly@ieee.org Dr. Patrick Reilly conducts research and consults on subjects related to bioelectric phenomena, bioelectric devices, and electromagnetic safety.Dr.C.Rem University Hospital Zurich, Switzerland  HYPERLINK "mailto:chreme@opht.unizh.ch" chreme@opht.unizh.ch Prof. Charlotte Rem is Professor of Ophthalmology at the Dept. of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Zurich. She is head of the Laboratory of Retinal Cell Biology. The main research area of her and her group is induced and inherited retinal degenerations with particular emphasis on light-induced apoptotic cell death. This paradigm is used as a model system to investigate induction, signaling and molecular mechanisms of apoptosis with the aim of developing treatment strategies for retinal degenerations. In almost all retinal degenerations, cell loss occurs by apoptosis, therefore the reduction or prevention of this cell loss would conserve vision in patients suffering from such diseases. She and her research group have developed several means to prevent apoptosis in various transgenic mouse models. Prof. Rem is consultant for the Society of Light Treatment and Biological Rhythms, sunglass manufacturers, and Alcon Pharmaceuticals, Ltd. Dr. E. van Rongen Health Council of the Netherlands  HYPERLINK "mailto:E.van.rongen@gr.nl" E.van.rongen@gr.nlDr. Eric van Rongen is a radiobiologist who was a researcher at the Dutch Research Institute TNO. He is currently Scientific Secretary to the Health Council and has coordinated and reported on the work of various ad hoc committees of the Council on non-ionizing radiation (ELF, RF em fields and UV radiation). His main focus is on the biological and health effects of non-ionizing radiation, primarily electromagnetic fields. His committee work has provided him with a broad expertise and knowledge on various practical implications of the protection of public health. Presently, he is secretary to the semi-permanent Electromagnetic Fields Committee and of the Standing Committee on Radiation Hygiene. He is also secretary of the Non-ionizing Radiation section of the Netherlands Society for Radiological Protection and member of the International Advisory Committee of the WHO EMF Project.Dr. R. Rox Anderson, Wellman Laboratories of Photomedicine, Boston, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:andersonrr@partners.org" andersonrr@partners.orgProf. T. Sarna Jagiellonian University, Poland  HYPERLINK "mailto:tsarna@mol.uj.edu.pl" tsarna@mol.uj.edu.plProf. Tadeusz Sarna is Professor and Chair of the Department of Biophysics, Faculty of Biotechnology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland. His main research interests concern phototoxic reactions to the human retina and the role of melanin and macular pigments in photoprotection. He has studied phototoxic potential of human RPE lipofuscin and of selected retinoids by determining their ability to photogenerate singlet oxygen, lipids hydroperoxides and other reactive oxygen species. In addition, he has investigated antioxidant properties of melanin and carotenoid pigments in model and cellular systems subjected to light-induced oxidative stress. Between 1997--1999, Professor Sarna has served as President of the European Society for Photobiology.Dr. H. Siekmann BIA, Institute for Occupational Safety, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:H.Siekmann@hvbg.de" H.Siekmann@hvbg.de Dr. Harald Siekmann is a physicist who was educated in nuclear physics in the Hahn-Meitner-Institute for Nuclear Physics (HMI) in Berlin and in the Company for Heavy Ion Research (GSI) in Darmstadt. When he went to BIA in Sankt Augustin his main working fields became ionizing radiation protection and chemical agents exposures. Later on he devoted to UV-, visible and infrared radiation and to lighting. With respect to optical radiation he is carrying out exposure measurements and assessments in workplaces, laboratory research, occupational diseases investigations, elaborations of regulations and standards for radiation protection. He is also a member of the non-ionizing radiation committee of the German radiation protection commission.Prof. Dr. J. Stolwijk USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:Stolwijk@prodigy.net" Stolwijk@prodigy.netProfessor Jan A.J. Stolwijk is a generalist in all questions of health effects, risk perception and risk assessment of NIR exposure and has special expertise in thermophysiological problems.Prof. Dr. F. Urbach Temple University Medical Practice, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:drfdu@gateway.net" DrFredU@aol.comProfessor Frederick Urbach is Emeritus Professor of Dermatology, at Temple University School of Medicine, in Philadelphia, PA. He is working as a consultant for the Argus Center for Photobiology, in Horsham, PA, USA. His research interests are: Epidemiology of Skin Cancer, Experimental, Photocarcinogenesis and Photo-toxicity.Dr. E. Vogel Bavarian State Ministry of the Environment, Public Health and Consumer Protection, Germany  HYPERLINK "mailto:evi.vogel@stmugv.bayern.de" evi.vogel@stmugv.bayern.deDr. Evi Vogel received her diploma in physics with a minor in physiology and her PhD in radiation biophysics from the University at Erlangen, Germany. In 1994 she started working for the German Federal Office of Radiation Hygiene on non-ionising radiation and its application in medicine. Since 1998 she works with the Bavarian Ministry for Regional Development and Environmental Affairs, where her main tasks within non-ionising radiation are the design of communication programmes and the preparation of concepts for public acceptance, both mainly tailored for mobile telephony. She has been seconded to WHO/Geneva from 10/2000 to 3/2001, where she worked on the International EMF Project and additionnally contributed to set up the WHO Task Force on Environmental Health Risks.Dr. U. Wester, Swedish Radiation Protection Institute, Sweden  HYPERLINK "mailto:ulf.wester@ssi.se" ulf.wester@ssi.seDr Ulf Wester is an expert in UV measurement.Prof. M.L. Wolbarsht,Department of Psychology, Duke University Durham, NC, USA  HYPERLINK "mailto:deryag@psych.duke.edu" deryag@psych.duke.eduDr. A. R. Young St. Thomas's Hospital, UK  HYPERLINK "mailto:antony.r.young@kcl.ac.uk" antony.r.young@kcl.ac.ukDr. Antony Young is a leading photodermatological research worker.     8 9 L ` b c d x y 78kꒀkN;$hZdVh_0JCJOJQJ^JaJ8jhZdVh_B*CJOJQJU^JaJph)hyIh_B*CJOJQJ^JaJph#h_B*CJOJQJ^JaJph,jh_B*CJOJQJU^JaJph/hyIh_5B* CJOJQJ\^JaJph hyIh_,hyIh_<B* CJOJQJ^JaJphhyIh_CJaJ)hyIh_B* CJOJQJ^JaJph   $Ifgd_$KK]K^Ka$gd_Dkd$$IfK|&))634Kap $KKdd$If[$\$]K^Ka$gd_h  z 7u$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_.Kd$If\$].gd_\kdm$$If0|%_ |)34ap78q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34apklWX:;IJKLM{|01yz # #E#F#t#u###ѱѱѱџџџјѱѱ hyIh_#h_B* CJOJQJ^JaJphhyIh_CJaJ)hyIh_B*CJOJQJ^JaJph)hyIh_B* CJOJQJ^JaJph2jhyIh_B* CJOJQJU^JaJph<Wq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd`$$If0|%_ |)34apWXq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34apKLM%\kd $$If0|%_ |)34ap $Ifgd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd|$$If0|%_ |)34apM01 #q\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_ # ##l&q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd&$$If0|%_ |)34ap#l&m&&&&&''**Y*Z*****--------.... .!.T.U.....T0U00000003333 4 444O4P4k4l44444 5!5ŰŰŰŰŰŰ#h_B* CJOJQJ^JaJph)hyIh_B*CJOJQJ^JaJph2jhyIh_B* CJOJQJU^JaJphhyIh_CJaJ)hyIh_B* CJOJQJ^JaJph>l&m&'*q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap***-q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kdB$$If0|%_ |)34ap--. .q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap .!..T0q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd^$$If0|%_ |)34apT0U003q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap33o44q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kdz$$If0|%_ |)34ap44658q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34ap!515258888999 9m<n<<<<<==*A+A:A88!9m<q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34apm<n<=*Aq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34ap*A+AfAgAs$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKK$If]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34apgAhAAGs$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKK$If]K^Kgd_\kd. $$If0|%_ |)34apGGdHLq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34apLL/MOq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kdJ $$If0|%_ |)34apOOPPu$KKd$If\$]Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34apPPQTq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kdf $$If0|%_ |)34apPPQQQTTUU,U-U?U@UXXXXXXYY3Y4YKYLYOYPYYYYYYY\\\\\\] ]2]3]` `5`7`;`<`e`f`z`{`;aTTAUXq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd $$If0|%_ |)34apXXMYOYq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34apOYPYY\q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap\\6]`q$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_JJKd$If\$]J^Jgd_\kd$$If0|%_ |)34ap` `|`;aq$KKKd$If\$]K^Ka$gd_KKKd$If\$]K^Kgd_\kd,$$If0|%_ |)34ap;a*B*ph` z78  WXKLM01  lm"""%%& &!&&T(U((++o,,,6-00!1m4n45*9+9f9g9h99??d@DD/EGGHHHILLAMPPMQOQPQQTT6UX X|X;Y?ABCDEFGIJKLMNOPRSTUVWYZ[\]h78cxk  :I{yEtY"""%&&T&&&(((,O,k,, -1-011445999@E@b@DE-EGG HHHIM,M?MQ3QKQQQQTU2U;XeXzXxYYYb[[[^#_5____&`T`m``XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX _Hlt111029885 _Hlt111029886`@@`l> ? 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