ࡱ>  @ `bjbj5*5* |W@W@#hWf D h| oT ".Lz"Ȯ Ԯ~nnnnnnn$ rR]tn zzzn z^nz0 z ~nz~n\M 6 T Psݸ0OF2lL?oxo&PttT Tz t ]ܮ J0ܮܮܮnn $ I$_F^d $_ HOLOCAUST ERA ASSETS CONFERENCE Prague, June 2009 A REVIEW: SOCIAL WELFARE FOR JEWISH NAZI VICTIMS The personal history of every victim of Nazi persecution, as well as the story of each victims struggle to adjust to normal society after enduring hell on earth, is unique. Nonetheless, trends and patterns describing the circumstances facing Holocaust victims as a group can and need to be made detailing the assistance many of them require. This report will describe the growing challenges Holocaust victims face and what has been and might be done to address them. This report has three parts. The first describes the general social circumstances of Holocaust victims worldwide many are currently experiencing, and almost all can anticipate, the need for supportive services, including long-term care and health care, to ease the difficulties that accompany aging. The second reviews the social welfare services that the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference) has been and continues to be involved with in assisting Holocaust victims. The final part mindful that current funding sources are diminishing and already are proving inadequate focuses on the collective obligation of all countries to support victims in response to their increasing needs. I. GENERAL SOCIAL CIRCUMSTANCES In the 64 years since the end of the Holocaust, the number of Nazi victims worldwide has declined and continues to decline as part of the human condition. Currently, it is estimated that there are approximately 600,000 Jewish victims of Nazi persecution dispersed around the world, with the largest number living in Israel, the United States, and the countries of the former Soviet Union (FSU). The resilience, refusal to succumb to tragedy, and profound commitment of Holocaust victims to rebuilding their lives and making sure that what happened to them and their families is remembered, in perpetuity, is truly remarkable and reflects an extraordinary strength. Nonetheless, all victims of Nazism are now elderly, their median age is 79, and many increasingly suffer from illness and are in urgent need of continual assistance. Jewish Nazi victims are both part of, but distinct from, other elderly in their countries of residence. The personal history of each individual survivor as a victim of Nazi persecution, combined with memories of Nazi persecution and post-war adjustment, has created a group that has aged differently and has different, more acute, needs than other elderly. Holocaust victims are not merely a subset of the frail elderly. They are more likely than other elderly to be socially isolated and, as a result, are more likely to live in poverty and to be in poorer health. Indeed, the Holocaust victims poverty is often aggravated by non-existent or weakened familial and social support networks, as often there is no spouse or adult children nearby to provide financial and emotional support. Many victims who live on their own never married (or remarried) after the war. Among those who did marry, many are childless. Certainly, extended family networks such as siblings, in-laws, and cousins are dramatically reduced in this population. Thus, the Nazi victim population, for the most part, is more socially isolated than other older adults.  The majority of Holocaust victims are women, who have longer life expectancy than their male counterparts and face a higher risk of poverty. Indeed, income for older women between the ages of 67 and 80, in general, declines at rates two to three times greater than it does for older men (13-15% vs. 4-7%). This is largely due to the lower pensions that they receive, due to life-time earnings and lower rates of victims benefits. Many victims live alone as a result of having lost their entire family during the Holocaust, particularly those in the FSU. Nazi victims are more likely than other elderly to suffer from certain illnesses that result in functional limitations and disability, such as osteroporosis, as well as cognitive impairments (see discussion below), and, as a result, sink further into poverty. This combination of poverty and isolation results in Holocaust victims being in poorer physical and mental health than their contemporaries without comparative wartime experiences. Health researchers have found that both immediate and long-term health problems for survivors of the Holocaust and other genocides include disease, injuries and trauma all of which are chronic, lifelong and difficult to treat, and confer an increased burden on victims. Older adults with strong social supports report the fewest health complaints and more of their needs being met regarding their care. In comparison, Holocaust victims in both self-assessments and health surveys present with higher rates of chronic co-morbidities and acute conditions than both other elderly Jews and other elderly in general. These chronic co-morbidities and acute conditions are exacerbated by the survivors social isolation. Survivors are also more likely than other older adults to suffer from chronic pain syndrome. Among the most noticeable differences are the following: Holocaust victims have higher rates of osteoporosis and hip fractures than other elderly; higher cancer rates; higher rates of functional limitations and disability; and higher rates of cognitive impairments and mental health problems, exacerbated by trigger events. Cognitive impairments and mental health problems are particularly troubling among Holocaust victims. Cognitive impairment has been documented to be more prevalent in groups who have survived genocide than in the general population. As a natural part of the aging process, memories change over time and are reinterpreted to the present social context. For Nazi victims, however, cognitive impairment may change the impact of war trauma by confusing events of the past in time and place. In the case of Alzheimers Disease and other forms of senile dementia, the loss of short-term memoryand the reliance on long-term memorycan be especially painful and can place victims particularly at risk. Loss of short-term memory may, for example, mean a loss of recognition of post-war accomplishments, such as success in building new lives in new countries, raising and educating responsible and caring children, and living to see and enjoy their grandchildren. As their minds deteriorate, Holocaust victims may be unable to control the intrusion of painful, long-term memories, and traumas of years past may become their only reality. Wartime experience also places Nazi victims at risk to suffer more from post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorders and long-standing adjustment disorders than other older adults. Research on the Holocaust victim population has shown that their behavioral and cognitive functions are affected in both particular and more acute ways than that of the average aged population who did not have similar life experiences. For example, rates of clinical depression among Holocaust victims are higher than in the general population. Concentration camp survivors under psychiatric care are almost twice as likely to exhibit suicidal ideation, i.e., the wish for death or the passive or active thinking and planning of ending ones life, than other older Jewish adults under psychiatric care who are not Nazi victims. Among Holocaust victims who have been admitted to a psychiatric facility, actual suicide attempt rates are higher than for the elderly population in general. Moreover, as victims grow older, they are confronted by events that trigger, or bring back, difficult memories which, in turn, provoke adverse emotional or physical reactions. These trigger events are more likely to occur when someone is ill, cognitively or physically impaired or just feeling vulnerable. They can even result from normal day-to-day activities or situations. For example, even food and nutrition programs combined with a socialization element geared for victims which seem innocuous may unwittingly create uncomfortable food-related situations. As a result, several U.S. communities have replaced the soup kitchen model, which requires that victims queue up for food, with a congregate meal model, in which victims are served their food. Similarly, long-term care in a skilled nursing facility is the least preferred option for Holocaust victims, by both the victims themselves and the professionals involved in their care. A female Nazi victim reported to her psychiatrist that she felt that the small daily indignities she faced in the nursing home were worse than her experiences in a labor campshe could not bear feeling like a victim again, even in small measure. A wide range of seemingly standard scenarios in institutionalization settings may serve as triggers for vulnerable Holocaust victims. These often include institutional/hospital beds with bars/railings on the side, uniformed staff (guards), showering facilities in institutional settings, etc. For Nazi victims, unfortunately, time does not heal all wounds. Too often, their wartime injuries and horrific memories are aggravated with the passage of time and become increasingly stressful. Moreover, demographic studies indicate that, while the absolute number of living Nazi victims will decrease, the percentage of those still living and requiring aid will increase. As such, we will certainly continue to see for the next 4-5 years an increase in their needs. Simply put, the assistance Holocaust victims will require will grow in the next few years. Based on a study by the Brookdale Institute in Israel, the chart below shows the absolute number of Nazi victims living (not in institutions) in Israel. Each year, as expected, the number decreases. YearNumber of Nazi Victims in Community2007228,4002008215,0002009201,7002010188,6002011175,7002012163,2002013150,700 However, during that same period, within the same population, the percentage of those severely disabled increases. As a result, the total number of severely disabled Nazi victims is projected to increase through 2013. YearNumber of Nazi Victims in CommunityNumber of Nazi Victims in Community with severe disability2007228,40014,3002008215,00014,6002009201,70014,6002010188,60015,0002011175,70015,4002012163,20015,5002013150,70015,600 Further, even after the projected peak of need is reached in 2013, there will be substantial numbers of poor Holocaust victims who will have substantial social welfare and medical needs for several years beyond 2013. In fact, projections show that in 2022 the number of Holocaust victims from among the non-institutionalized Holocaust victims in Israel with the same level of poverty and disability will be 75% of what it will be in 2013. However, three years later, in 2025, the figure drops to 58%, illustrating the sharp drop anticipated thereafter. (See Appendix A.) Notwithstanding the vast disparities among Holocaust victims in income, medical care and long-term care services in the countries in which Nazi victims reside, broadly speaking, as victims grow older, they will become increasingly frail and disabled and, wherever they reside, in greater need of ongoing medical care and other attention owing to their wartime experiences. Further, as the demand for ongoing social services intensifies among those who are disabled, home-and community based services represent the survivors best chance to avoid feeling like victims again. In a cruel irony, the very population that is most unable to bear institutionalization is the same population with the least amount of family support to delay or avoid institutionalization. On a practical level, it is more cost effective for society to maintain Holocaust victims at home. On a moral level, society has an obligation to compensate these survivors for the paucity of familial structure which was destroyed by the hands of these very societies. These factors, combined with the unique characteristics of Jewish victims of the Holocaust, point to the need for a wider discussion concerning the current and future needs of the Jewish victims of Nazi persecution worldwide. Holocaust victims suffer from multiple problems and needs associated with aging. They are poorer, more socially isolated and more likely to suffer from certain illnesses than other elderly, which are exacerbated because of their Holocaust-related experiences. As they age, even normal day to day activities or situations may conjure up lingering traumatic wartime memories. While the total number of Nazi victims is diminishing, as the remaining victims grow older, their need for social welfare and health care services, especially home care, is dramatically increasing. The next section summarizes certain activities of the Claims Conference and its almost six decade battle to secure the rights of and assistance for Holocaust victims. II. CLAIMS CONFERENCE From its early days, the Claims Conference has vigorously pressed for the establishment and expansion of Holocaust-related compensation and other benefits programs for Jewish Holocaust victims. (A summary of the compensation programs is provided in Appendix B, attached to this report.) Over the course of its activities over the years, the priorities of the Claims Conference have evolved from rehabilitating victims in the immediate post-war period to caring for needy, vulnerable victims in the past decade, seeking to help ease the burdens they face to allow them to live out their days with a measure of dignity. While there are many Holocaust victims who recovered fully from the trauma of the Shoah, rebuilding their lives and establishing financial independence, there are literally hundreds of thousands of Holocaust victims who today live in poverty. Many Holocaust victims are forced to choose among food, rent, and medicine, as surely all three are unattainable. In addition, there is a tier in society of near-poor, those who meagerly eek out an existence just above abject poverty but for whom economic disaster is one or two bad months away. For these victims, the funeral expenses of a spouse, unanticipated medical expenses from the sudden onset of a new condition, or changes in economics, such as increased fuel prices or a sharp drop in governmental subsidies for basic necessities, wreak havoc. Further, for those Holocaust victims with families, such as children or nieces and nephews, the economy can change the situation of the near poor survivor, who is getting small but important aid from the family member, to a source of funding for the recently unemployed family member. Any of these events can send near poor Holocaust victims spiraling downward into financial disaster, necessitating reliance on communal sources. The goal of the Claims Conference programs is to partner with agencies to provide assistance to achieve and maintain a dignified quality of life for victims. For those who suffered beyond compare, surely this is the least that we must provide. The bulk of services provided to Holocaust victims, as is the case with all older adults, comes from government support. However, government entitlement programs contain significant gaps that condemn many Holocaust victims to live choosing between food and medicine. Simply put, there are hundreds of thousands of Jews who survived the Shoah and today are old, alone, poor, and sick. In this light, the Claims Conference funds organizations and institutions around the world that provide essential social welfare services for Holocaust victims. The Claims Conference currently funds social service programs, with an emphasis on home- and community-based services, in 43 countries. The Claims Conference and its partner agencies have designed long-term care programs based on home- and community-based services to ensure quality of care in an environment that will ensure that Holocaust victims live out the rest of their days in dignity and comfort. Using a Continuum of Care model, in which the Claims Conference works with local agencies to create and sustain services that take into account the particular conditions and needs of victims in their communities, criteria have been established that seek to ensure that the needs of Holocaust victims will be met. Continuum of Care includes case management, and continues with home care, health care, psychological services, food programs, emergency assistance, supportive communities, senior day centers, and housing security, shelter, and institutionalization. Case Management: The starting point for quality of care in home- and community-based services is case management. Surely, in many countries in North America, Western Europe and in Israel, Nazi victims can draw upon services provided by public assistance and non-government organizations (NGOs). However, all too often, Holocaust victims do not in fact, cannot fully benefit from these programs. There are many reasons for this. First, it may be that they are unaware of such help. Additionally, Holocaust victims may be resistant to it for a whole range of reasons (many stemming from formative years experiences with being known by authorities and/or psychological perception of needing to be strong and never being able to admit frailty, knowing that it would lead to death in the camps). For some, as they become increasingly isolated because of frailty and impairment, they are physically or mentally unable to access assistance. Finally, for others, the process is overwhelming and can engender frustrating barriers such as extraordinary complexity in navigating bureaucracy, forms and delays. For poor and near-poor victims who are aging, often vulnerable and devoid of strong familial support, managing the tasks of daily living can be daunting, never mind facing the complex web of assistance programs that may keep them from living in severe privation. The reality is that in most societies public benefits, when available, are delivered in an overburdened, overly complex system. Aging elderly and frail victims often require professional guidance to understand and access the public and NGO assistance that is available to them. In professional case management, case workers are available to vulnerable clients to help guide them. Case management consists of ongoing interaction between a social worker and a client. It begins with a comprehensive assessment of the clients environmental, health, financial, social and physical situation. Case workers monitor the overall conditions of their clients and respond quickly to changes in their clients physical, psychological, medical and financial condition. In addition, the case worker connects clients with public and private programs and family resources. Even in countries and U.S. states that provide publicly-funded home- and community-based services that ensure a dignified level of in-home care, it is essential that the case managers arranging for such care understand the particularities of Holocaust victims. Case workers strive to provide seamless delivery service. For example, the care of a Nazi victim receiving 12 hours of home care per week may be funded by different Claims Conference sources, other private philanthropic funds and public sources (e.g., Medicaid in the United States or Bituach Leumi/National Insurance Institute in Israel). It is incumbent upon the case worker to ensure that service is continuous and ideally from the same home health care agency. Further, case workers are trained to handle the special sensitivities of Holocaust victims. Case managers also ensure that all elements in the continuum of care model are integrated. For example, a case worker at the Cummings Jewish Centre for Seniors in Montreal, Canada, ensured that a 79-year-old client with a broken arm would receive assistance with medical care, medical equipment, transportation, home-delivered meals, clothing and other services. Before the intervention of the agencys case manager, the victim did not receive any services that would enable her to remain in her home. Home Care: Studies indicate that the largest area of unmet needs for Nazi victims continues to be home care services. As victims age, they, like general older adult populations, will experience significant limitations in their physical, mental and social functions. However, there are two differences between the general adult populations and Holocaust victims. First, as we have shown in Section I of this paper, Holocaust victims, as a result of what they endured, are more infirm, more isolated, poorer and more vulnerable to psychological distress than their counterparts who did not undergo the trauma of the Shoah. Second, nursing home and other forms of institutionalized long-term care are particularly traumatic for many victims, who often experience such care as a recurrence of their treatment at the hands of the Nazis. Home care services, on the other hand, allow Holocaust victims to remain in their homes as long as possible, even after they are disabled, by providing them assistance with activities of daily living, including bathing, dressing, eating and housekeeping and personal nursing care for those who need assistance with medication or medical equipment. Further, home care workers ensure that minor home modifications, such as guard rails in or near toilets and in bath tubs, ramps for the wheel-chair bound and special telephones for the hearing-impaired, are properly installed and maintained. The provision of even minimal home care, such as a few hours of chore/housekeeping services per week, allows Holocaust victims to remain among familiar surroundings, significantly improving the quality of their daily life. Health Care: As previously mentioned, the physical and mental health needs of Holocaust victims differ significantly from other elderly. In general, their physical and mental health tends to be poorer than their contemporaries, including other elderly living in poverty. Subjective assessments of personal health by Jewish Nazi victims in Israel and the United States reflect similar disparity between Holocaust victims and non-victims. In Israel, nearly two-thirds of Jewish Nazi victims have reported that their health is not so good or bad, whereas in the United States, just over 60 per cent per cent of Jewish Nazi victims described their health as fair or poor. Particularly troubling are the general health conditions of Holocaust victims who have either remained in the FSU or have emigrated from the FSU to Israel, the United States, Germany and other countries. When compared to other Holocaust victims, regardless of where they currently live, their general health measures are worse. While a number of the countries where Holocaust victims reside have universal health care for the elderly, many of these health care schemes require some cost-sharing for medical services, hospitalization, prescription drugs and durable medical equipment. These costs can add up for individuals on fixed incomes with chronic medical conditions. Further, there are many goods and services either excluded from public coverage or with high cost-sharing requirements that victims desperately need, such as eyeglasses, hearing aids, orthodics, prosthetic devices, incontinence pads, bed pans, wheel chairs and orthopedic beds, chairs and shoes. The Claims Conference has worked with local Jewish communities to develop health programs through its grants to help provide such critical additional assistance. However, despite these efforts, skyrocketing costs for medicines and co-pays, supplemental insurance, and items not covered under national programs make proper health care unattainable for hundreds of thousands of Holocaust victims. Claims Conference grants also emphasize preventative medicine: Many Holocaust victims living on their own have personal emergency alert systems and have received home modifications, such as installation of safety devices and prophylactic, or non-slip aids, such as handrails in bathrooms and toilets, as discussed above, in the section on in-home services (at p. 10). Further, many agencies have begun to provide subsidies for medical treatment or have established clinics that rely on the pro bono medical services of professionals who are sensitive to the needs of Holocaust victims. Dental Services: Even when universal health care is available for the elderly, dental care, which is a key component of maintaining physical health, is often overlooked. Dental disease is a prime example of the disease, injuries and trauma discussed above, which victims of the Holocaust endure as a result of their substantial malnutrition during war-time years. Poor dental care leads to bacterial infections, which in turn exacerbate the co-morbidities that older adults have, such as cardio-vascular disease. At the same time, other co-morbidities, such as diabetes, affect oral health. Poor dental health is particularly acute for victims who spent the post-war years in Eastern Europe or the FSU, regardless of where they live today. Moreover, other poor and near-poor victims in countries with significant health care for older adults often suffer from a gap in entitlements. In the United States, for example, the Medicare program does not include dental care and dental care under Medicaid is severely limited. Hence, the Claims Conference has worked with its partner agencies to establish dental services that address the needs of Holocaust victims. For example, the Jewish Family and Childrens Service of Greater Boston established a dental clinic that provided extensive services to 90 Holocaust victims in 2008. Such dental care programs include emergency treatment for relief of pain and infection, x-rays to assess state of oral health, and provide for the cost of dentures and denture repairs. Through the Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims in Israel, the Claims Conference has subsidized dentures for thousands of Holocaust victims. The Claims Conference also assists victims who cannot afford the high cost-sharing requirements of many public dental care programs. Psychological Services: Holocaust victims special psychological needs have been known for many years. As mentioned above, loss of cognitive function, particularly short-term memory, regardless of degree, is particularly traumatic for survivors and post-war accomplishments are often overshadowed by wartime experiences. Moreover, the natural decline of social and familial supportsthe loss of a spouse, the high level of international geographical mobility of adult children of survivors resulting in a split of networks across different countries, declining income as a result of both smaller household size and declining health, is often debilitating both physically (manifest in increased loss of mobility) and psychologically (presented as clinical depression) for victims. After a lifetime of pursuing activities and making decisions in concert with others, whether they were family members or friends in the best of times, or other concentration camp inmates in the worst of times, victims suddenly find themselves painfully alone. Elderly persons have the highest rates of suicide among any age group, but aging Holocaust victims are at increased risk of attempting suicide. Many of the Claims Conferences partner agencies serving this population have also provided therapeutic interventions including counseling and Jewish spiritual care, support groups for Holocaust victims, and support programs for family members and caregivers. Through Claims Conference support, 9,000 Holocaust victims in Israel receive psychological counseling through the organization Amcha, and 3,000 are members of Amchas day clubs. Food Programs: Food programs are an essential component of home- and community-based services. Many Holocaust victims are at risk of food insecurity that is, limited or uncertain availability of, or ability to acquire, adequate and safe foods and hunger. Inadequate diets may contribute to or exacerbate disease. Moreover, food programs decrease the isolation of victims, either by combining a home-delivered hot meal to a client (meals-on-wheels) with a friendly visit from a case worker or trained volunteer, or by inviting clients to congregate meals, with victims and others, which are frequently held at local Jewish communal centers. In addition, in the warm home model, small groups of Holocaust victims gather at one victims house for a meal. Beyond the nutritional value, socialization occurs as warm home participants are usually clustered (organized by social welfare agency) around common war time experiences and locations. Other food programs include food vouchers/cash grants that enable victims to purchase groceries and the provision of food packages, which are particularly important for those living in areas in the FSU and other parts of Central and Eastern Europe, as well as the homebound. For example, throughout the FSU, a network of Jewish social service agencies called Hesed organizations ( Hesed is Hebrew term for acts of loving kindness) are providing, with Claims Conference funding in 2009, more than 353,000 hot meals in communal settings, more than 508,000 meals-on-wheels, 169,000 fresh foods sets, and 148,000 food packages. In addition, the Claims Conference is working with Jewish communal organizations in many other countries that provide hunger relief, including dozens of communal meal settings (soup kitchens) in Israel and even food delivery programs in Western countries such as the United States, Australia, Canada and the United Kingdom. Emergency Assistance: Emergency Assistance programs provide short- term financial assistance to victims in acute or crisis situations. Funds are applied toward housing costs to prevent eviction, utility payments to prevent shut-offs, emergency relocation, dental care, medical care, home care, client transportation and other services such as winter clothing and funeral expenses. Emergency funds are used as a stop-gap measure until a victim can receive public funds or a long term solution can be found. For example, emergency home care would include short-term nursing hours, as opposed to long-term care, after a hospital stay. The goal of the program is to be flexible enough to respond to whatever the problem is. Client Transportation: In order for Holocaust victims to avail themselves of many of the various services described, they must have access to reliable transportation. Client transportation programs enable victims to obtain social services outside of the home, such as respite care and Caf Europa programs, as well as participate in other social, recreational and cultural events, congregate meals, religious services, medical appointments, shopping and other errands.  By helping Holocaust victims get out and about, particularly those with vision and hearing difficulties who are afraid to go out on their own, the client transportation programs relieve victims feelings of isolation and enable them to feel more independent. Socialization Programs: An Israeli study found that Holocaust victims expressed a strong desire to participate in social activities and to receive emotional and social support. The need to find meaning and feel connected, especially with other victims who can understand and share experiences from the past and present, is critical. Surprisingly, only 19 per cent of the victims surveyed reported attending social clubs, though many others expressed interest. To counter this trend, most agencies serving Holocaust victims, and in many instances victims themselves, have formed socialization programs, commonly known as Caf Europa. Caf Europa programs provide Jewish Nazi victims with an opportunity to socialize within a support network. Further, speakers provide information on a range of topics from compensation and restitution issues to older adult health care issues to general interest topics. Such groups are meeting in virtually every place that Holocaust victims live from Buenos Aires to Budapest. In Los Angeles, for example, Holocaust victims and college students meet to discuss victims lives before, during and after the war. These programs provide victims with a social framework and comfortable environment where they can be entertained and make friends among their peers. The sense of doing things collectively is extremely important to the Holocaust victim population and the isolation many feel now is in complete contrast to how they felt when they were younger, even in the worst of circumstances. As one Holocaust victim noted, When we had to stand at attention for hours, we stood together, propping up one another when weak. When we dug ditches we did it together, one holding and moving the arms and shovel for another who didnt have strength that day. We were desperate, but never alone. Community-Based Programs (Supportive Communities and Senior Day Centers): Supportive Communities Community-based efforts to maintain Holocaust victims in their homes and add dignity to their lives are important pieces in the continuum of care. In neighborhoods with substantial numbers of Nazi victims, the supportive communities model helps to address the needs of aging and increasingly frail victims. Through joining a neighborhood association, members are provided with services such as personal emergency alert systems, home modifications, counseling, security and socialization programs. For elderly living alone the knowledge that someone will check in on them on a regular basis is a comfort and can be life-saving. In Israel, the Claims Conference is providing subventions for any low-income Holocaust victim who wishes to participate in one of the several hundred supportive communities throughout the country. Senior Day Centers Similarly, senior day centers provide activities to combat loneliness and isolation associated with old age. Programs are combinations of health and social services designed to help prevent the premature placement into long term care facilities, offer participants opportunities to socialize, enjoy peer support, and receive medical and social services in a stimulating environment while sustaining independence and provide assistance to families and caregivers (often spouses who themselves may be Holocaust victims) who are responsible for an impaired older adult. The support given at the senior day center allows participants to preserve their precious independence while providing beneficial respite to family members and caregivers. The Claims Conference offers subventions toward the cost of participation for thousands of low-income Holocaust victims who attend one of 140 senior day centers across Israel. Housing Security, Shelter, and Institutionalization: Notwithstanding these home- and community-based efforts, the Claims Conference recognizes that, despite efforts to keep Holocaust victims at home as long as possible, as this population gets older and more infirm, many will no longer be able to remain in their homes, particularly if they live alone. In Israel, the Claims Conference funds capital projects that shelter and/or provide institutional settings for Holocaust victims. This includes support for old age homes, psychiatric hospitals, senior day care centers, geriatric centers and hospitals, sheltered housing, and nursing units on kibbutzim. The lack of affordable stable housing for many elderly further exacerbates the economic pressure felt by Holocaust victims. As housing costs drain individual savings and inflate the cost of living, the struggle of the near poor is intensified. Understanding the enormity of the finances required to address these issues, the Claims Conferences only possible response has been to provide emergency cash assistance to help alleviate a crisis situation while case managers help to develop a care plan. Additional facilities for congregate living and sheltered housing are required. Despite the Continuum of Care that these services are geared to provide, there remain many unmet needs. In the past decade, Holocaust victims have seen the average public pension benefit decline in the majority of countries in which they live, raising the risk of more of them falling into poverty. Even in Western Europe, there has been a notable drop in the generosity of pension benefits in several countries, including Belgium, Denmark, Greece and the United Kingdom. In Israel, the value of the old-age pension benefit has declined as well and the government introduced higher eligibility standards for elder care programs. These phenomena have also occurred in Central and East European countries as they transitioned to market systems. The net result has been massive changes to public pension systems, hurting most those who were already living close to poverty. Most of the activities of the Claims Conference have been funded by Successor Organization funds (proceeds from restituted unclaimed property in the former East Germany) as well as other sources (see discussion below). Since 2005, the Federal Republic of Germany also began to address these needs (see fn. 33 above). Claims Conference funding for social welfare programs has had a huge impact on Holocaust victims; however, the needs are beyond current Claims Conference resources. Further, the funding sources that, for example, support current Claims Conference allocations for social services will not last nearly as long as Holocaust victims are in need. Substantial, additional funding sources will have to be developed. III. ADDRESSING THE CURRENT AND FUTURE NEEDS OF NAZI VICTIMS The work which must be done to assist Holocaust victims in their waning years is far from complete. As Jewish victims of Nazism enter the last chapter of their lives lives shaped by the appalling experiences and terror they were forced to endure during the Holocaust many require special care to address their health and other needs. These victims, including those who succeeded in rehabilitating themselves after the war against the greatest odds and with minimal if any assistance, have, in the latter years of their lives, found themselves in distress and without adequate resources to meet their essential needs, including the costs of medication and other critical services. The identification of the many challenges Nazi victims must inevitably confront in their remaining years, and helping to educate governmental and social service leaders to respond to their special plight, as well as providing financial and planning assistance throughout the world, must be a central mission of the Prague Conference and its aftermath. Providing crucial assistance to these elderly people in need who, understandably, are not capable of coping with the consequences that human malevolence together with time have wrought, must become an international commitment. Care for these Holocaust victims over the next two decades cannot be the exclusive obligation of any particular country or organization, but the collective responsibility of all. Over the years, the Claims Conference has applied proceeds of sales of property it has obtained in the former East Germany as the Successor Organization to general social welfare services which assist Nazi victims. In addition, the Claims Conference has distributed and continues to administer social service grants from a number of other Holocaust-related benefits programs, including the following: Swiss Banks Settlement, through funds allotted to the Looted Assets Class; the Hungarian Gold Train Settlement; the International Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance Claims (ICHEIC); and international Nazi Persecutee Relief Fund from governments of Austria, France, Spain, and the United States.  For services in 2009, the Claims Conference has allocated a total of approximately $170 million. The funds are from the flowing sources: Successor Organization $92,000,000 German Government $39,000,000 ICHEIC (Insurance Settlements) $20,000,000 Swiss Banks Settlement $ 5,000,000 Hungarian Gold Train Settlement $ 4,200,000 Other $ 9,800,000 However, many of these sources of funding are running out: Source of Funding Estimated End Date Successor Organization 4 -5 years (Claims Conference has already indicated intention to allocate $117 million annually for these purposes from SO funds in 2010-2012) German Government Subject to annual negotiations ICHEIC (Insurance Settlements) December 31, 2009 Swiss Banks Settlement June 30, 2011 Hungarian Gold Train Settlement December 31, 2010 Other December 31, 2009 It must be noted that there are several other sources of funding available from restitution sources, such as the German Foundation Remembrance Responsibility and the Future Future Fund, Fondation pour la Memoire de la Shoah, and similar funds in other European countries, such as Austria, Netherlands, et alia. While these funds may go on in perpetuity, each provides a much smaller amount of annual funding, only a portion of which is devoted to social welfare needs of Holocaust victims. In addition, there has been a restitution body created in Israel, The Company for Restitution of Holocaust Victims Assets, which may have significant sums available for distribution. Funding derived from unclaimed assets within the control of the Claims Conference has overwhelmingly been used for the social welfare needs of needy Holocaust victims. Indeed, funds generated from properties in East Germany have been used for social welfare needs of Holocaust victims regardless of country in which they currently live or country of origin. This act of Jewish solidarity has enabled tens of thousands of poor elderly Holocaust victims to live their final days with some dignity. As the funds from available sources deplete, long before there is a substantial decrease in the pressing needs of Holocaust victims, alternate and additional sources of funding must be found. It is for this reason that we call upon signatory countries and the EU to establish fund(s) to provide for the social welfare needs of vulnerable Holocaust survivors. We must not abandon these people, again. Toward the goal of enabling Holocaust victims to live their remaining years with the dignity they deserve, the Claims Conference recommends that the Participating States, as well as the European Union, support and encourage, as a high priority, the following actions: The establishment of an international assistance fund, or of discrete national assistance funds, for Nazi victims, in which all countries would participate and which would provide funding for critical services required by the most vulnerable of elderly Holocaust victims such as hunger relief, medicine, or home care and access to the medical and social support programs offered in their home countries; Efforts to ensure passage and implementation of Nazi victim assistance legislation which, among other matters, improves the social and legal status of Holocaust victims in their home countries and which exempts from taxes or needs-based benefits any Holocaust-related assistance received by Holocaust victims or their heirs; Strengthening and otherwise improving existing programs which care for Holocaust victims; The establishment or the reinforcement of programs which provide payments that acknowledge even if only symbolically the suffering endured by Holocaust victims and ensuring that such payments are linked to inflation and cost of living increases; and The establishment of a center which would be responsible for researching the current status of assistance programs for Holocaust victims, disseminating information about such programs, facilitating international cooperation regarding aid for Holocaust victims and otherwise lobbying on their behalf. Time is truly of the essence and is not an ally in this necessary and correct mission to assist the aging, substantially impoverished and increasingly disabled Nazi victim population.  Appendix B SUMMARY: CLAIMS CONFERENCE INVOLVEMENT IN HOLOCAUST-RELATED COMPENSATION PROGRAMS A. BACKGROUND In 1951, Konrad Adenauer, the first Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany, declared to a special session of the Bundestag: Unspeakable crimes have been committed in the name of the German people which impose upon them the obligation to make moral and material amends, both as regards the individual damage which Jews have suffered and as regards Jewish property for which there are no longer individual claimants. Not long after this acknowledgment of Germanys responsibility to Jewish victims of Nazi persecution, representatives of 23 major national and international Jewish organizations, from eight nations, met in New York. While emphasizing that no indemnity, however, large, can make good the destruction of human life and cultural values, or atone for the murder of the Jews during the Holocaust, this group established the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany the Claims Conference. Organized to seek material restitution for Jewish victims of Nazi persecution, the Claims Conference had two fundamental objectives: (i) to obtain support for the relief, rehabilitation and resettlement of Jewish victims of Nazi persecution, including assistance in rebuilding Jewish communities and institutions devastated by the Nazis; and (ii) to obtain indemnification for injuries inflicted on individual victims of Nazi persecution and restitution for properties confiscated by the Nazis. Following extensive negotiations, the Federal Republic of Germany, Israel and the Claims Conference, in September 1952, signed the Luxembourg Agreements, which served as the basis for the German federal indemnification and restitution programs for Nazi victims. In the agreements, West Germany made a commitment to enact laws which would compensate Nazi victims for damage arising from Nazi persecution, and agreed to pay DM 3 billion to Israel in the form of goods and services. West Germany also allocated DM 450 million to the Claims Conference which, during the period 1952-1964, it distributed to help rebuild Jewish communities devastated by the Nazis, revive Jewish cultural life in Europe, and assist individual Jewish Nazi victims with relief, rehabilitation and resettlement services in 40 nations. Since that time, the Claims Conference has continued to vigorously press for the establishment and expansion of Holocaust-related benefits from Germany and others. B. HOLOCAUST-RELATED COMPENSATION PROGRAMS 1. GERMANY As a result of negotiations with the Claims Conference, which continue to this day, Germany has helped establish and fund a number of Holocaust-related annuities and other compensation programs. While the Claims Conference typically administers such compensation programs processing applications, actively assisting claimants in establishing eligibility by helping to search for necessary documentation and making payments the German government always determines their eligibility criteria.  a. BEG The Federal Republic of Germany enacted the Bundesentschadigungsgesetz, or BEG, a series of indemnification laws which established the primary compensation program for Nazi victims in the 1950s. These laws were intended to compensate individuals persecuted for political, racial, religious or ideological reasons, and who suffered physical injury or loss of freedom, property, income, professional and financial advancement as a result of such persecution. These indemnification laws, however, failed to cover all Nazi victims. Eligibility, for example, was limited to Nazi victims who were former or current German citizens, or who had a recognized status as refugees and stateless persons, who resided in the West, and who filed claims by the 1965 (later extended to 1969) deadline. To address certain shortcomings of the German indemnification program and try to provide additional Holocaust-related compensation for Jewish victims of Nazism, especially those in need, the Claims Conference became an advocate for expanding the BEG and for establishing other compensation programs for Jewish Nazi victims. As a result, the Claims Conference has negotiated over twenty separate agreements with German and Austrian government and industry. These programs have led to compensation payments, collectively, to more than 500,000 Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. Today, approximately 200,000 Nazi victims continue to receive payments from programs negotiated by the Claims Conference, in addition to the 48,000 Nazi victims, living in Israel, who receive pensions from the Israeli Ministry of Finance. Several of the compensation programs are described in the following pages. b. HARDSHIP FUND Many who survived the Holocaust escaped the Nazi onslaught by fleeing to the East. After the war, however, they were forced to remain in the Soviet bloc countries, either unaware of or unable to apply to the BEG, the German federal indemnification program. By the time these victims of Nazi persecution, who had received no Holocaust-related compensation while behind the Iron Curtain, finally managed to immigrate to the West, they had missed the BEG claims deadline or otherwise did not qualify under the German law. Unable to reopen the BEG filing deadline, the Claims Conference nonetheless was able to persuade Germany to compensate the growing number of Jewish Nazi victims who were migrs from Soviet bloc countries. Ultimately, the Claims Conference was successful in pressing the Federal Republic of Germany to establish, in 1980, the Hardship Fund. Many of those eligible for the Hardship Fund were Jewish victims of Nazism who had emigrated from communist controlled countries to the West after 1969, had suffered in their health because of National Socialist violence and therefore (are) in a hardship situation, and had not been able to file for BEG pensions from Germany before its deadline expired. While the German government determined its eligibility criteria, the Claims Conference administers the Hardship Fund by processing applications, responding to inquiries, helping to locate documentation, and making one-time payments of 2,556 Euros to eligible Jewish victims. Estimating that 80,000 victims would benefit, Germany initially committed DM 400 million to the Hardship Fund in 1980. However, in light of subsequent events, including the collapse of communism in Europe and the Soviet Union and the related, mass immigration from Soviet bloc countries to the West, approximately 325,000 Nazi victims (180,000 of whom live(d) in Israel) have been approved for a Hardship Fund payment, amounting to over $850 million paid. In addition, the Claims Conference continues to approve of approximately 5,000 Hardship Fund applications annually. Leningrad Fund. In 2008, the Claims Conference concluded an agreement with Germany which provided for one-time Hardship Fund payments to certain Jewish victims of the Nazi siege of Leningrad. As a result, Jewish individuals who were in Leningrad at some time during the siege, between September 1941 and January 1944, or fled from Leningrad during that period, are eligible for a 2,556 Euro payment, as long as they meet the other eligibility criteria of the Hardship Fund. This program represents the first time that Germany has recognized the persecution of Jews who endured any part of the 900 day siege of Leningrad. c. ARTICLE 2 FUND Unlike West Germany, which acknowledged its obligation to Holocaust victims, the communist regime of the German Democratic Republic flatly denied any such responsibility. However, as West and East Germany addressed issues related to their proposed union, the Claims Conference was determined that the newly unified Germany be required to compensate victims of the Holocaust who had not previously received indemnification. With the active support of the U.S. government, Claims Conference negotiations led to a commitment from Germany for additional Holocaust-related compensation. Thus, Article 2 of the Implementation Agreement to the German Unification Treaty (of October 3, 1990) reads, in part, as follows: The Federal Government is prepared, in continuation of the policy of the German Federal Republic, to enter into agreements with the Claims Conference for additional Fund arrangements in order to provide hardship payments to persecutees who thus far received no or only minimal compensation according to the legislative provisions of the German Federal Republic. The resulting program known as the Article 2 Fund is administered by the Claims Conference pursuant to guidelines determined by the German government. Eligible survivors who had been in concentration camps or ghettoes, in hiding, or lived under false identity for specified periods of time, and whose current income was below specified levels receive a monthly pension of 291 Euros. Payments under the Article 2 Fund began in August 1995 and, as of December 2008, the Claims Conference had approved more than 78,200 applicants for such monthly pensions and has paid approximately $2.5 billion. d. CEEF In 1998, the Central and Eastern Europe Fund (CEEF), another consequence of Claims Conference negotiations with Germany was established. Under the CEEF, victims of Nazi persecution currently living in Central and East Europe, or countries of the former Soviet Union for the first time, received compensation for their suffering during the Holocaust. The CEEF is administered by the Claims Conference and is governed by the Article 2 Fund eligibility criteria mandated by Germany. As of January 1, 2010, the monthly payment under the CEEF will increase to 240 Euros for all beneficiaries. 23,547 Holocaust survivors in Central and East European countries and the former Soviet Union have been approved for CEEF pensions as of December 31, 2008 and a total of approximately $350 million had been paid out to them. e. BUDAPEST FUND In the summer of 2008, the Claims Conference secured funding from Germany for certain Jewish survivors of the Nazi occupation of Budapest. In recognition of the imprisonment and suffering in Budapest, Jewish survivors who currently reside in Eastern Europe and have not previously received any payments from Holocaust-related compensation programs are eligible for a one-time payment of 1,900 Euros from the Claims Conference Budapest Fund. Through this program, an estimated 6,500 survivors will, in total, be paid approximately 12.3 million Euros. f. FOUNDATION FOR FORMER SLAVE AND FORCED LABORERS Beginning in 1998, several class action lawsuits, brought by former slave and forced laborers, were filed in the United States against German companies. The lawsuits charged, among other claims, that the companies had used slave and forced labor during World War II and had Aryanized properties. Following protracted negotiations, which included the Claims Conference, the legal actions were resolved, in 2000, and a global settlement of the claims reached. As a result of the global settlement, Germany adopted legislation effectuating the Foundation Remembrance, Responsibility and Future (German Foundation), a fund of approximately $5 billion (DM 10 billion), to which both the German government and more than 5,000 German companies contributed, to compensate surviving former slave and forced laborers under the Nazis. The agreement to establish such a fund was the culmination of years of effort to compel the government and businesses of Germany to acknowledge their uses of slave and forced labor during World War II. (i) Slave and Forced Labor Program Once the German government and German industry agreed to establish the $5 billion foundation, it became the responsibility of the Claims Conference to administer and process applications (in eight different languages) from, and make payments to Jewish survivors around the world who established they had been slave or forced laborers, except those in the Czech Republic, Poland and the former Soviet Union, where separate national foundations handled the Jewish claims. The Claims Conference also assisted survivors in obtaining documentation of persecution histories and in preparing claims through a network of social service and Jewish communal organizations around the world. By the time the Claims Conference made its final payments for the German Foundation program, on December 31, 2006, it had distributed $1.2 billion to 146,136 Jewish survivors and 19,952 heirs of survivors. Fund for Victims of Medical Experiments and Other Injuries The Claims Conference also administered the German Foundations Fund for Victims of Medical Experiments and Other Injuries for Jewish claimants (except for victims of medical experiments residing in the Czech Republic, Poland and the former Soviet Union). In researching applications submitted to this program, the Claims Conference uncovered significant new evidence that had not been previously documented, about medical experimentation in the Third Reich. The Claims Conference research of previously unrecorded experiments not only enabled many victims to be declared eligible for compensation, but also led to the compilation of the most comprehensive list in existence of Nazi medical experiments. This project rescued a piece of history that would otherwise have been forever lost with the last of the survivors. By the conclusion of this program, the Claims Conference made payments to approximately 2,500 Jewish victims of Nazi medical experiments of 6,700 Euros (about $8,600) each, for a total of 16.6 million Euros (about $20.7 million). g. GHETTO FUND As a result of additional negotiations with Germany, in September 2007, Germany announced the establishment of a new fund which would issue one-time payments of 2,000 Euros to Holocaust survivors who performed voluntary work in ghettos, subject to other eligibility criteria imposed by the German government. The German government expects that 50,000 survivors will likely be eligible for payment. The Claims Conference is not involved in the administration of these symbolic, one-time, Ghetto Fund payments. 2. SWITZERLAND: SWISS BANKS SETTLEMENT In 1996 and 1997, a series of class action lawsuits against certain Swiss banks and other financial entities brought by Holocaust survivors claimed, among other matters, that the Swiss financial institutions collaborated with and aided the Nazi regime, by knowingly retaining and concealing assets of Holocaust victims, and by accepting and laundering illegally obtained Nazi loot and profits of slave labor. The lawsuits were settled in 1999 and a $1.25 billion Settlement Agreement for the Swiss Banks litigation was signed and endorsed by 17 major Jewish organizations.  The Settlement Agreement established the following five classes of claimants who would share in the $1.25 billion settlement fund: the Deposited Assets Class Nazi victims and their heirs who had accounts in Swiss banks; Slave Labor Class I claimants who performed slave labor for German and other companies which may have transacted their profits through Swiss entities; the Refugees Class individuals who were denied entry into or expelled from Switzerland, or were mistreated in Switzerland; Slave Labor Class II claimants who performed slave labor for Swiss entities; and the Looted Assets Class claimants whose assets were seized by the Nazis and handled through Switzerland or Swiss entities. Eventually, a de facto sixth class of beneficiaries was created consisting of Nazi victims and their heirs who had purchased insurance policies between 1920 and 1945 from certain insurance companies. A distribution plan for the $1.25 billion settlement was approved by the presiding Court. Under the supervision of the Court and its Special Master, the Claims Conference assumed responsibility for and implemented several direct compensation programs related to the settlement, including Slave Labor Class I and the Swiss Refugees Class. a. SLAVE LABOR CLASS I As compensation for the profits obtained from the use of slave labor, which the Nazis transacted through Swiss banks, symbolic payments were made to Jewish and other former slave laborers. Each eligible survivor who received a German Foundation payment for slave or forced labor from the Claims Conference, also received a $1,450 Slave Labor Class I payment from the Swiss Banks Settlement. The Claims Conference made payments to the Jewish claimants around the world who qualified for Slave Labor Class I. By the end of the program, in May 2008, the Claims Conference had sent 173,926 Jewish survivors and heirs of survivors a total of approximately $252 million. b. SWISS REFUGEES CLASS The Claims Conference also compensated Jewish refugees who had fled to Switzerland to escape the Nazis and were turned back at the border, who had been expelled from Switzerland, or who had been mistreated while in the country. By the programs conclusion, in 2005, the Claims Conference had paid a total of $10.6 million to 3,858 former Swiss refugees. In undertaking research about and paying a group of Holocaust survivors whose experiences had never before been formally recognized, this program enabled a previously shrouded aspect of the Holocaust, hidden in the myth of Swiss neutrality, to emerge through the heretofore untold stories of thousands of survivors. 3. AUSTRIA Although its original mandate called for the Claims Conference to engage with Germany regarding Holocaust-related benefits, in 1953, the Claims Conference formed the Committee for Jewish Claims on Austria, to pursue compensation and other assistance for Nazi victims from Austria. In 1956, Claims Conference negotiations with Austria led to the enactment of the Assistance Fund Act (Hilfsfondsgesetz or Hilsfonds). The Hilsfonds provided a one-time payment to Austrian victims of National Socialism, who resided outside of Austria and had not received previous benefits under another Austrian compensation law. By 1976, the Hilsfonds had paid out a total of 115 million Euros. The Claims Conference reached a further agreement with the Austrian government and business community in 2001, which resulted in the establishment of three funds providing limited compensation for confiscated property and for deficiencies in social welfare benefits described below: a. AUSTRIAN NATIONAL FUND FOR NAZI VICTIMS Established in 1995, the National Fund provided a one-time payment of 5,087 Euros to approximately 27,000 victims of Nazi persecution in or from Austria, totaling 197 million Euros. A subsequent agreement negotiated with the Claims Conference in 2001 provided supplemental payments of $7,000 for loss of rental apartments, business leases, household furniture and/or personal belongings for surviving, former Austrian Jews. Through May 2008, the 20,500 supplemental payments which were made amounted to a total of $143.5 million. b. GENERAL SETTLEMENT FUND This fund provided $210 million to deal with issues that the Austrian National Fund did not address, such as claims for real estate, liquidated businesses, bank accounts, securities, mortgages, insurance policies, and the loss of education and jobs. The General Settlement Fund also entertained claims for the return of Jewish communal and private property, as well as for Jewish cultural items which had been confiscated and were held by the Austrian government. As of May 2008, the 9,900 payments made amounted to $87 million. c. SOCIAL WELFARE BENEFITS The 2001 Claims Conference agreement with Austria provided Jewish Holocaust victims of Austrian descent, living abroad, with nursing care payments similar to those received by victims of Nazi persecution living in Austria. As a result, increased nursing payments, totaling approximately $1 million monthly, are being made to 1,500 Jewish Austrian victims. The 2001 agreement also entitled certain Austrians living abroad with the right to an Austrian pension. Thus, an additional 900 Austrian Nazi victims born between 1933 -1938 and living outside of Austria receive a total of $280,000 in monthly pension payments. Apart from the Holocaust-related benefits provided by these compensation and restitution programs, Austria also made $11.4 million available to the Claims Conference for direct payments to certain former slave and forced laborers who worked in Austria in the period 1938-1945, with any remainder to be applied to Holocaust victims in the greatest need in Eastern Europe and the countries of the former Soviet Union, as additional slave labor compensation. In addition, from 2004-2007, the Claims Conference made annual allocations from its Austrian Holocaust Survivor Emergency Assistance Program to local social service agencies totaling $11.5 million. This funding was the result of agreements the Claims Conference struck with the Bank of Austria and the Austrian Ministry of Social Affairs. C. PROPERTY RESTITUTION IN THE FORMER EAST GERMANY Over the past fifteen years, the Claims Conference also has provided funding for programs and projects around the world which assist Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. The funds are allocated to institutions and organizations which shelter and provide essential social services for elderly, needy Nazi victims, with a small share earmarked for projects for the research, education and documentation of the Shoah to ensure preservation of its history and the broad dissemination of its lessons. These allocations are funded primarily from the proceeds of the sale of unclaimed Jewish property in the former East Germany for which the Claims Conference is the legal successor. 1. CLAIMS CONFERENCE AS SUCCESSOR ORGANIZATION In 1990, the new government of a reunified Germany passed legislation to restitute property that had been nationalized by the former East German Communist regime.The Claims Conference negotiated intensely to include in this legislation the restitution of Jewish property that was either sold after 1933 under duress or confiscated by the Nazis. As a result, original Jewish owners and heirs gained the right to file claims for property in the former East Germany. The German government imposed an application deadline, which, under pressure from the Claims Conference, was extended twice to Dec. 31, 1992 for real estate claims, and June 30, 1993 for claims for movable property. Following publication by the German government of the legislation, tens of thousands of owners and heirs filed claims and recovered assets as a result of these negotiations carried out by the Claims Conference. The Claims Conference also negotiated to become the legal successor to individual Jewish property and property of dissolved Jewish communities and organizations that went unclaimed after Dec. 31, 1992. In the absence of a claim from an entitled heir, if the Claims Conference filed a claim and successfully proves the original Jewish ownership of the property, it is entitled to recover property. Before the deadline, the Claims Conference conducted a massive research effort to identify all possible Jewish properties. Had the Claims Conference not taken this step, Jewish assets that remained unclaimed after the filing deadline would have remained with the aryanizers, the owners at the time, or reverted to the German government. The resulting Successor Organization of the Claims Conference sells recovered property or receives compensation and has been responsible for more than $1 billion in grants, primarily to social welfare agencies around the world that assist the neediest and most vulnerable Jewish victims of Nazi persecution and that engage in Shoah research, education and documentation.These grants provide the major funds to help provide a social safety net for Nazi victims around the world. At this juncture, the Claims Conference already has sold the largest and most valuable of the former East Germany properties which have been recovered. The remaining properties the Claims Conference seeks to sell will generate significantly less revenue than previously recovered assets. Further, the compensation awards it will receive for properties which cannot be returned in rem will, generally, be much smaller in amount than the proceeds which would be obtained from the sales of the same properties if they were restituted. Much of the remaining income of the Claims Conference, as Successor Organization, will derive from compensation payments (rather than from the sales of restituted properties). Current projections for future Successor Organization income for 2008 and onward are, deducting estimated payment of Goodwill Fund applications (see below), roughly between $250 and $400 million at the current exchange rate. 2. GOODWILL FUND The Claims Conference also maintains a Goodwill Fund to make payments to certain original owners or heirs who did not file claims by the German government deadline of 1992, but who filed applications with the Claims Conference by March 31, 2004 and certain applicants who filed thereafter. As of December 31, 2008, the Claims Conference had paid out approximately 554 million Euros under the Goodwill Fund. 3. ALLOCATIONS As noted, a Claims Conference priority has been to care for needy, vulnerable Jewish victims of Nazi persecution, seeking to help ease the burdens they face and allow them to live out their days with a measure of dignity. Toward this end, the Claims Conference has funded organizations and institutions around the world which provide essential social services for Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. The allocations have been applied to, among other projects, the construction and renovation of sheltered housing and nursing homes in Israel, food packages in the former Soviet Union, home care and other social welfare services which assist victims throughout the world. Hundreds of thousands of victims worldwide have benefited from such assistance. While funds have been received from various sources over the years, the allocations today are primarily supported through the recovery and sale by the Claims Conference of unclaimed Jewish property in the former East Germany. The vast majority of such allocations from Successor Organization funds are dedicated to social care programs for elderly, needy Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. A small percentage of Claims Conference institutional allocations goes to support Holocaust research, education and documentation. Such grants represent part of the effort to ensure that the memory and lessons of the Holocaust are preserved for current and future generations. In addition to Successor Organization derived monies, other sources of funding for the social welfare programs have included the following: During 1981-1994, German government grants were committed to the Claims Conference, in conjunction with the funding of compensation programs the Claims Conference administered, for distribution to institutions which shelter or provide social care to elderly Nazi victims, including old age homes, psychiatric institutions, and social welfare agencies. Daimler-Benz (1988-1997) and Volkswagen (1992-2002) funds were applied to grants to Jewish institutions providing shelter or social care for elderly victims of Nazi persecution. A humanitarian fund established as part of the negotiations leading to the establishment of the German Foundation Remembrance, Responsibility and the Future was used (2001-2002) to provide essential social services for elderly, needy Nazi victims. The Austrian Government Fund (1991-2003) was used for institutional projects benefiting elderly Jewish victims of Nazi persecution from Austria. D. CONCLUSION Since its formation in 1951, the Claims Conference has continually sought to secure Holocaust-related benefits for Jewish victims of Nazi persecution. That effort continues to this day as in its regularly scheduled meetings with representatives of the German Ministry of Finance and other German government officials, the Claims Conference continues to press a number of issues of concern to Jewish victims of Nazism. For example, at its annual negotiations with the German government in June 2008, the Claims Conference obtained an additional, estimated $360 million for programs for Holocaust victims over the next decade. These monies represent increased payments for existing programs, the expansion of programs to cover more victims through liberalized eligibility criteria, funding for home care, and payments for two groups of Jews whose experiences during the Shoah in the siege of Leningrad and the Budapest Ghetto (see pp. 6, 8) had never before been acknowledged by Germany. In sum, the German government has provided more than $60 billion in satisfaction of claims under laws and/or programs established as a result of negotiations with the Claims Conference. More than 278,000 victims have received life time pensions under the German federal indemnification laws, with tens of thousands of these Nazi victims continuing to benefit from the pensions. Hundreds of thousands more Jewish Nazi victims received one-time payments or pensions under other German funded, Holocaust-related compensation programs, such as the Article 2 Fund, CEEF or Hardship Fund. Further, Claims Conference negotiations have resulted in the establishment of Holocaust-related funds from German and Austrian industry, and the Austrian government. Further, the Claims Conference has sought to address the needs of the aging Jewish victims of Nazi persecution through grants to social service organizations, primarily funded today from the proceeds of sales of unclaimed Jewish property located in what formerly was East Germany. In this way, hundreds of millions of dollars have been distributed to agencies which help Nazi victims in need, in over 50 countries.  There are no official data on the number of Holocaust victims alive today; however, several demographic reports have been prepared over the last several years. All of these reports, such as Holocaust Survivors in Israel: Population Estimates and Utilization of Services for Nursing Care at Home, Presented to the Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims in Israel (Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute Draft, June 22, 2008) indicating that the Nazi victim population of Israel currently is estimated to be 218,000, can be found at the Claims Conference website:  HYPERLINK "http://www.claimscon.org" www.claimscon.org. Current estimates suggest that the following eleven countries are home to 85-90% of Holocaust victims: Israel, United States, Russia, Ukraine, France, Germany, Canada, Hungary, United Kingdom, Belarus, and Australia.  See Pearl Beck & Ron Miller, Nazi Victims of the Holocaust: In-Home Service Needs, 2005: Review and Cost Estimate Projections, Prepared for the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, (April 14, 2005), at 1. In 2005, the median age of a victim was 75.  See Beck & Miller (2005), op. cit. at 5 and Laurence Kotler-Berkowitz, Lorraine Blass & Danyelle Neuman, Nazi Victims Residing in the United States (New York: United Jewish Communities, 2004) at 9 and 23. In addition, the general poverty is made even worse by unavailable medical care. For example, in countries of the former Soviet Union, voluntary health professionals lack basic equipment and access to medical care for the Jewish elderly is almost non-existent. See Spencer Foreman, M.D., Report of Findings on Annual Visits to the FSU, 1996-1999 (December 1999), at 2.  See Beck & Miller (2005), op. cit. at 6; Kotler-Berkowitz et al. (2004), op. cit., at 11  See Ron Miller, Pearl Beck & Berna Torr, Nazi Victims Residing in the United States, Canada, Central & Western Europe. Estimates & Projections: 2008-2030. Preliminary Tables. Prepared for the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (November 21, 2008).  See Barbara A. Butrica, How Economic Security Changes During Retirement (Boston: Boston College, Center for Retirement Research, 2007),  HYPERLINK "http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41" http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41 Accessed June 12, 2009.  See Andrew Hahn, Shahar Hecht, Tom Leavitt, Leonard Saxe, Elizabeth Tighe & Amy Sales, Jewish Elderly Nazi Victims: A Synthesis of Comparative Information on Hardship and Need in the United States, Israel, and the Former Soviet Union. Report Prepared by the Joint Distribution Committee. (Waltham, MA: Brandeis University, 2004). Beck Also see Beck & Miller, (2005), op. cit. at 6.; Kotler-Berkowitz et al. (2004), op. cit. at 11 and Jenny Brodsky, Background Material for Meeting of Steering Committee on Holocaust Survivors (Jerusalem: JDC Brookdale Institute of Gerontology and Human Development and WHO Collaborating Center for Research on Health for the Elderly, November 14, 2000).  As victims get older, their economic security decreases. Life-changing events during retirement, such as the onset of poor health or the death of a spouse, can cause unexpected shocks to wealth and income. More than two-fifths of older adults have significantly less income at age 80 than they did at age 67. See Butrica (2007), op. cit.  See Reva N. Adler, James Smith, Paul Fishman, & Eric B. Larson, To Prevent, React, and Rebuild: Health Research and the Prevention of Genocide, Health Services Research, 39:6 (December 2004): 2027-2051.  See Ralf Schwarzer & Ute Schulz, The Role of Stressful Life Events (Berlin: Freie Universitt Berlin, Department of Health Psychology, 2001).  HYPERLINK "http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdf" http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdf. Accessed June 23, 2009.  In overall self-assessments, Holocaust victims report that they are in poorer health than both other Jewish and other American elderly. Kotler-Berkowitz et al. (2004) found that just over 60% of victims described their health as fair or poor, compared to 30% of other Jewish and American elderly. In Russia, 57% of Jewish Nazi victims have some level of disability, compared to 53% of all older Russians. These differences exist in other Soviet successor states as well. Particularly noticeable are differences in vision and mobility between victims and other elderly. See Elizabeth Tighe, Leonard Saxe & Fern Chertok, Jewish Elderly Nazi Victims in the Former Soviet Union. Ongoing Needs and Comparison to Conditions in Europe, Israel and the United States (Waltham, MA: Brandeis University Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies and the Steinhardt Social Research Institute, December 2007), at 19-20. Health surveys in Israel found that higher rates of hypertension among victims than among all elderly Israelis (52% vs. 46%), higher rates of cancer (7% vs. 5%), and higher rates of osteoporosis (18% vs. 15%). See Brodsky (2000), op. cit. Also see Jenny Brodsky & Sergio DellaPergola, Health Problems and Socioeconomic Neediness Among Shoah Survivors in Israel (Jerusalem: Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute and The A. Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, April 20, 2005), and A. Mark Clarfield, Elliot Rosenberg, Jenny Brodsky & Netta Bentur, Healthy Aging Around the World: Israel Too? Israel Medical Association Journal 6 (September 2004): 516-520.  Adler et al (2004), op. cit., at 2036. See also A. Yaari, E. Eisenberg, R. Adler, & J. Birkhan, Chronic Pain in Holocaust Survivors, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 17:3 (1999): 181-187.  Holocaust victims are nearly twice as likely as other elderly to suffer from osteoporosis resulting in hip fractures. Such injuries often lead to continued disability and loss of independence, as many never regain their pre-fracture ambulatory status. See Beck & Miller (2005), at 4; Miller et al. (2008), at 14, 20 and 26. See also A.J. Foldes, J. Brodsky, & N. Bentur, Increased Prevalence of Hip Fractures Among Nazi Victims of the Holocaust: Summary of Research Study (Jerusalem: JDC-Brookdale Institute 2004), at 4.  See Brodsky (2000), op cit. and N. Vin-Raviv, Incidence and Survival Characteristics of Malignant Diseases among Holocaust Survivors That Have Immigrated to Israel (MPH thesis, University of Haifa, 2006). Using the 1997 Israeli Elderly Survey, Brodsky found a slightly higher cancer incidence rate for Holocaust victims. In addition, Vin-Raviv, found that Holocaust victims are more likely to be diagnosed at later stages, which, in turn, reduces their five-year survival rates by 5-13%, depending on the type of cancer.  Holocaust victims are more likely to have self-care or mobility limitations than either other elderly Jews or other older adults in their countries of residence. Kotler-Berkowitz et al. (2004) found that 36% of all Nazi victims and 23% of all elderly Jews reported that someone in household has health condition that limits activities. Among all Americans age 65 and over, roughly one-fifth have self-care or mobility limitation. As a result, victims need constant support services to assist with the activities of daily life, such as bathing, dressing, getting in and out of bed, and toileting. There is also a greater need for durable medical equipment, adaptive devices such as canes, wheelchairs, and telephones for the hearing impaired, particularly among female victims, who are more likely to live alone and, therefore, have greater personal assistance needs than male victims.  Adler et al. (2004), op. cit. at 2036.  Paula David, The Social Workers Perspective in Caring for Aging Holocaust Survivors: A Practice Manual, eds. Paula David & Sandi Pelly (Toronto: Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care, 2003).  Adler et al (2004), op. cit. at 2036. See also J. Sadavoy, Survivors: A Review of Late-Life Effects of Prior Psychological Trauma, American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 5:4 (1997): 287-301.  Paula David, Aging Survivors of the Holocaust in Long Term Care: Unique Needs, Unique Responsibilities in Journal of Social Work in Long Term Care. I(3) (2002).  David K. Conn, Diana Clarke & Robert Van Reekum, Depression in Holocaust Survivors: Profile and Treatment Outcome in a Geriatric Day Hospital Program, International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 15 (2000): 331-337.  See D. E. Clarke, A. Colantonio, R. Heslegrave, A. Rhodes, P. Links, & D. Conn, Holocaust Experience and Suicidal Ideation in High-Risk Older Adults, American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 12:1 (February 2004): 65-74. Also see Y. Barak, D. Aizenberg, H. Szor, M. Swartz, R. Maor, & H. Y. Knobler, Increased Risk of Attempted Suicide Amongst Aging Holocaust Survivors, American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 13:8 (August 2005): 701-704.  See David (2003), op. cit.  See Amy J. Sindler, Nancy S. Wellman, & Oren Baruch Stier, Holocaust Survivors Report Long-Term Effects on Attitudes toward Food, Journal of Nutrition Education & Behavior, 36 (2004): 189-196.  See Mark E. Agronin, From a Place of Fire and Weeping, Lessons on Memory, Aging and Hope, The New York Times, December 22, 2008,  HYPERLINK "http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/health/23case.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=holocaust&st=cse" http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/health/23case.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=holocaust&st=cse. Accessed June 12, 2009.  See Holocaust Survivors in Israel: Population Estimates and Utilization of Services for Nursing Care at Home, Presented to the Foundation for the Benefit of Holocaust Victims in Israel (Myers-JDC-Brookdale Institute Draft, June 22, 2008).  The situation for Nazi victims in the FSU and other former Eastern bloc countries is and will continue to be particularly challenging and tenuous, as Holocaust victims have spent a greater number of years being persecuted both during and after World War II and are in poorer health and have poorer health outcomes, than victims in other countries with adequate services to help them. Smaller per capita GDP and lower expenditures for health-related services have resulted in a health and long-term care system that consistently underperforms when compared to Israel, the UNITED STATES or Western Europe. Following the fall of communism and the collapse of the cradle to grave welfare system, many vulnerable populations were left in poverty and without government support to keep them from the most abject conditions. Indeed, poverty among the elderly in Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Romania and the Russian Federation falls below the $4/day threshold established by the United Nations Development Project (UNDP) for transitioning economies, while poverty levels in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine hover around the $1/day bare subsistence level that the UNDP has established for the least developed nations. At the same time, survivors living in these areas, particularly in the FSU, may need and demand a higher or, certainly, a similar level of care than survivors living elsewhere, but these countries are less able to support services for them. See Lev Krichevsky, Jewish Centers Offer Safety Net for Elderly in Former Soviet Union, JTA Daily News Bulletin, October 29, 1999; Mark G. Field & Judyth L. Twigg, Introduction in Russias Torn Safety Nets: Health and Social Welfare during the Transition (New York: St. Martins Press, 2000) at 3; and Tighe et al. (2007), op. cit. at 8-12, 15 and 20.  While institutionalization is generally resisted by the elderly, it is particularly abhorred by Nazi victims seeking to avoid memories of their personal traumatic wartime experience. See Beck & Miller (2005), op cit. at 1. Also see S. Letzter-Pouw & P. Werner, The Willingness To Enter a Nursing Home; A Comparison of Holocaust Survivors With Elderly People Who Did Not Experience The Holocaust, in Journal of Gerontological Social Work, 40(4) (2004).  In the United States, Medicaid programs are state-based. Some states, such as Massachusetts and New York provide a more substantial amount of home care, while others, such as Pennsylvania and Florida provide very little. Similarly, in Europe, long-term care insurance laws in Germany, and to a lesser extent Austria and the Netherlands, allow for relatively high level of care at home.  For example, Selfhelp Community Services in New York City assigns its case workers to make home visits to survivors in New York City, complementing the home- and community-based services they receive from public funds. Case workers frequently combine their home visits with the delivery of a meal and use the visit to observe discrete changes in the clients living conditions that may need attention.  As an example, the home health worker, unfamiliar with particular triggers of Holocaust victims, may become frustrated by the elderly wheel chair confined client who refuses to be pushed into the shower for bathing. While the untrained worker is simply trying to bathe the client, the Holocaust victim is experiencing severe trauma recalling the concentration camp experience and all of the associations with showers and being forced into them.  See Beck & Miller (2005), op. cit., Miller et al. (2008), op. cit. and J. Brodsky, S. Be'er, & Y. Shnoor, Holocaust Survivors in Israel: Current and Projected Needs for Home Nursing Care (Jerusalem: JDC-Brookdale Institute, 2003).  Yael Danieli, "As Survivors Age, Part 1, in National Center for PTSD Clinical Quarterly, Winter 1994, at 3, and studies cited therein.  Such home care has, in recent years, become a principal focus of Claims Conference efforts. For programs in 20042009, the Claims Conference obtained, through negotiations with the German government, a total of 81 million Euros for in-home services for Nazi victims. This amount includes 30 million Euros for services in 2009. These funds were allocated for programs to 42 agencies assisting Holocaust victims in 17 countries.  See Brodsky et al. (2003), op. cit.  Kotler-Berkowitz et al. (2004), op cit.  See Tighe et al. (2007), op. cit). Also see Ukeles Associates, Inc., Special Report. Nazi Victims in the New York Area: Selected Topics, 2002. Prepared for UJA-Federation of New York. The Jewish Community Study of New York 2002. (New York: UJA-Federation of New York, 2003), at 23. The UJA study found that no respondents from the FSU thought that their health was excellent, while 85% reported fair or poor health.  In 2007, over 820 Holocaust survivors in Romania received assistance for medical expenses through the Federation of Jewish Communities of Romania. In Bosnia-Herzegovina, La Benevolencia established a community pharmacy, which dispersed medication to nearly 200 survivors in 2008.  See Adler et al. (2004), op. cit. and David (2003), op. cit.  As noted above, adult children of Holocaust victims in the FSU are more likely to live in other countries than the children of victims in other countries. This does not mean, however, that children are geographically proximate. For nearly Jewish demographic studies have noted increased geographical mobility of adults, so that even when Holocaust victims and their adult children live in the same country, they are sometimes thousands of miles apart, particularly in the United States, where retirement communities abound in states such as Arizona and Florida. See, for example, Sidney Goldstein & Alice Goldstein, Jews on the Move. Implications for Jewish Identity (New York: SUNY Press, 1996) as well as Sergio DellaPergola, Neediness Among Jewish Shoah Survivors. A Key to Global Resource Allocation (Jerusalem: The Hebrew University and the Jewish People Policy Planning Institute, 2004).  Barak et al, op. cit. (2005). See also Y. Barak & H. Szor, Lifelong posttraumatic stress disorder: evidence from aging Holocaust survivors, Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 2000; 2:1-6; S. Robinson, The current mental state of aging Holocaust survivors, Gerontology (Israel) 1996; 73:39-41; and S. Robinson, M. Rapaport-Bar-Sever & J. Rapaport, The present state of people who survived the Holocaust as children, Acta Psychiatry Scandanavia 1994; 89:242-245.  S. A. Anderson, Core indicators of nutritional state for difficult-to-sample populations, Journal of Nutrition, 120 (11s):1557-1600 (1990).  F. M. Torres-Gil, Malnutrition and the Elderly, Nutrition Reviews 54(1):S7-S8 (1996).  S. B. Roberts, Energy regulation and aging: Recent findings and their implications, Nutrition Reviews, 58(4):91-97 (2000).  As examples, in Brooklyn, New York, the Jewish Community Council of Greater Coney Island served 12,127 meals to 1,440 Holocaust victims as part of its Sunday Senior Program in 2006. It also delivered 5,957 meals to Holocaust victims at home. The Jewish Centre of Aging in Sydney, Australia served 25,700 meals in 2006, either at the Centre or through its home-delivered Kosher Meals-on-Wheels program. For list of additional programs, see the Claims Conference website at ww.claimscon.org or the Claims Conference Annual Report.  In Brooklyn, New York, the Jewish Community Center of Greater Coney Island provided more than 8,561 trips to 1,045 clients during 2007. In Toronto, Canada, the Circle of Care Transportation Service boasts a fleet of four vehicles, six drivers, and operates 4.5 days per week, as well as in the evenings for special outings. The service provides about 800 rides monthly. In the Czech Republic, a handicapped accessible van enables Holocaust victims with limited mobility to participate in communal meals and get to medical appointments.  Jenny Brodsky & Yaron King, A Survey of Disabled Victims of Nazi Persecution and Disabled Veterans of War against the Nazis. (Jerusalem: JDC-Brookdale Institute of Gerontology and Human Development, November 1997).  Auschwitz survivor as quoted in Agronin, op. cit.  It should be noted that well over half of the Senior Day Centers in Israel were established with Claims Conference funding as well.  The Hungarian Gold Train Settlement (HGTS) concluded a class action lawsuit brought by Jewish Hungarian Holocaust survivors against the U.S. government regarding the handling of property contained on the Hungarian Gold Train. The Hungarian Gold Train was a train taken into custody by the U.S. Army in Austria, in May 1945, as it transported personal property which had been illegally taken by the Hungarian government from the Jews of Hungary. As part of the HGTS, the U.S. government agreed to pay $25 million, of which $21 million is being used to fund social service programs for the benefit of eligible Jewish Hungarian Holocaust survivors over a five-year period. The Claims Conference administers the distribution of these funds for survivors of Hungarian descent worldwide. The Claims Conference has been administering social welfare grants on behalf of the International Commission on Holocaust Era Assets Insurance Claims (ICHEIC) to agencies in 32 countries which provide essential social services to needy Jewish victims of Nazism. The ICHEIC funds were used primarily to provide home care, as well as other services enabling Holocaust victims to remain living in their own homes, which include provision of food packages, hot meals, medical equipment and medications. The Nazi Persecutee Relief Fund, an international fund created as a result of the 1997 Nazi Gold Conference, provided resources for the relief of needy victims of Nazi persecution who had received very little or no compensation for their persecution. Contributions, from approximately 20 countries, were channeled through non-governmental organizations, including the Claims Conference.  The Claims Conference helps to locate relevant evidence at a wide variety of archives, including German indemnification agencies, the International Tracing Service, concentration camp records, archives in the former Soviet Union, the Russian Red Cross, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and Yad Vashem in Israel. Such research not only assists survivors with their compensation claims, but has added to the known history of the Shoah, helping to ensure that survivors stories remain after they are gone. Focusing on Holocaust-related compensation, in other words, also has become part of the process of bringing about the restitution of history.  For 2009, the government of Israel has increased benefits earmarked for Holocaust survivors including expanded eligibility for pension payments, additional benefits for recipients of the Claims Conference Article 2 Fund, special payments to Holocaust survivors who meet poverty guidelines.  Under this Program for Former Slave and Forced Laborers, along with the Swiss Banks Settlement programs (describe at pp. 10-12), the Claims Conference made payments to claimants in a total of 75 countries.  The documentation indicated that 178 different types of medical experiments were conducted in more than 30 camps and ghettos. The Nazi actions, which include Dr. Josef Mengeles infamous experimentation on twins and dwarves, were gruesome and included experiments performed without anesthesia, injections to attempt to change the color of peoples eyes, sterilization, injection of infectious diseases and poisons, and unnecessary amputations and organ removals.  Since 1997, the German government has awarded pensions to Holocaust survivors, based upon work they performed for some form of remuneration in Polish ghettos, similar to Lodz, during World War II. In 2002, this pension program was expanded through supplemental German legislation the Gesetz zur Zahlbarmachung von Renten aus Besch affigungen in einem Ghetto known as the Ghetto Pension or ZRBG. Under the ZRBG, a former resident of any European ghetto which was incorporated into or annexed by the German Reich qualified for a Ghetto Pension, providing certain work-related conditions were met. However, since its beginning in 2002, the Ghetto Pension program was plagued with difficulties. The Claims Conference, in conjunction with U.S. legislators and the Israeli government, actively pressed German authorities to resolve the problems associated with the Ghetto Pension, particularly its high rejection rate. For example, as of late 2007, 64,000 of the 70,000 applications submitted had been denied. The result was the establishment of the Ghetto Fund.  During the course of the lawsuits and settlement discussion, the findings of the Volcker and Bergier commissions, established to explore Switzerlands role during the Holocaust era, were instructive to the ultimate settlement and distribution recommendations made. The Independent Committee of Eminent Persons known as the Volcker Committee arose out of an agreement among the Swiss Bankers Association, the World Jewish Restitution Organization and the World Jewish Congress in 1996. The final report of the Volcker Committee showed the following: some 6.8 million Swiss bank accounts were open or opened the period 1933-1945; documents relating to approximately 2.7 million of the accounts had been destroyed; thus, records relating to approximately 4.1 million Holocaust-era Swiss accounts still existed. While the Committee determined that 36,000 of these accounts had a probable or possible relationship to victims of Nazi persecution with a value of approximately $643 million to $1.36 billion, including interest, the Swiss Federal Banking Commission authorized the Swiss Banks to publish [21,000] accounts that are deemed by the Volcker Committee to have a probability of being related to victims of the Holocaust and to create a central database containing [the approximately 36,000] accounts the Volcker Committee considers to be probably or possibly related to Holocaust victims. The Swiss Parliament established the Bergier Commission in 1996 to examine the period prior to, during and immediately after the Second World War and to specifically investigate how money and assets found their way into Switzerland in connection with Nazi politics. The Commission concluded that the Swiss National Bank played a significant role in handling Reichsbank gold, that it did not act in good faith in engaging in gold transactions with the Nazis, and that the commercial banks played a less significant, but equally noteworthy role. The Commission also condemned the Swiss decisions to encourage Germany to mark the passports of Jewish persons with a J stamp in 1938, to seal its borders to racially persecuted persons in 1942, and to refuse to help people in mortal danger. In its final report, the Bergier Commission concluded that the Swiss Banks had failed to adequately survey dormant accounts or locate heirs of unclaimed accounts after the war.  The Claims Conference also was involved in allocating certain of the Swiss Banks Settlement funds to organizations which provided assistance to Holocaust survivors. By the end of 2007, at the direction of the Court monitoring the Settlement, the Claims Conference had distributed approximately $33.1 million to organizations around the world which provided social welfare services to Jewish Holocaust survivors.  In large part, the establishment of the Committee for Jewish Claims on Austria was the result of Germanys refusal to accept any obligations for Austria. While Germany maintained that Austria also was guilty of Nazi crimes, Austria invoked the Moscow Declaration of 1943, in which the Allies regarded Austria as an occupied country, not as a Reich collaborator.  The payments, however, only represent between 10-15% of the estimated value of properties in question.  Thus, for example, as of June 2008, monthly payments to 65,800 survivors worldwide who are recipients of Article 2 Fund and CEEF pensions were raised 8 percent. In addition, the Claims Conference secured an agreement making certain Jewish Nazi victims who were citizens of West European countries when persecuted and had received previous payment from a compensation agreement Germany had reached with one of a number of West European countries eligible for an Article 2 Fund pension, if they had been in a concentration camp or ghetto, or if they received payment from certain German sources based on loss of a family member. Such Nazi victims (known as Western Persecutes) had not previously qualified to receive compensation from the Article 2 Fund, CEEF or the Hardship Fund.     PAGE  PAGE 1 SOCIAL WELFARE FOR JEWISH NAZI VICTIMS Decrease in number of Nazi victims Increase in number of Nazi victims with severe disability  EMBED AcroExch.Document.7  Appendix A #567@AOghijȶubOb<1&hLEhUOJQJhLEh2`OJQJ%hjhYmP5>*CJOJQJ\aJ%h,|hG j5>*CJ OJQJ\aJ %h,|hYmP5>*CJ OJQJ\aJ "h,|h5CJ OJQJ\aJ "h,|hYmP5CJ OJQJ\aJ h,|hQDCJ OJQJaJ hQDhQD5OJQJ\"h>)h,|5CJOJQJ]aJ%h>)h,|5:CJ$OJQJ\aJ$hUh,|6OJQJ]+jh&h,|5CJHOJQJU\aJH#567AhijF G ! # $ E F `gd3R@v`vgd^v`vgd32Nv`vgd:v`vgd5T$a$gd gdj$a$gdQD$a$gd,|$a$gd,|$a$gd,|+yД_& 9 : D ^ o {     + . S W   ' : E G ` e t ׹׹׹woh32NOJQJhLEh'OJQJhLEh4'fOJQJhLEhjOJQJhLEhXOJQJhLEh0oOJQJhLEh{OJQJhLEh'OJQJhLEhfTROJQJhOJQJhLEhUOJQJhLEhkAOJQJhLEhUOJQJh:OJQJ+ 2 C T X | " $ ' C E F V Z !"#xxxm\!jhLEhj0JOJQJUhLEh^OJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh5>*OJQJ\hLEh5OJQJ\hLEhUOJQJh:OJQJhLEh0oOJQJhLEhUOJQJhLEhjOJQJhLEh{OJQJhLEh5TOJQJhLEhB]OJQJhLEh'OJQJ$#EF ",23!/1234]ɾɳɳtc!jhLEh0JOJQJUhLEhOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh4'fOJQJhLEh5TOJQJhLEhUOJQJh:OJQJhLEhYOJQJhLEh;POJQJhLEhN 7OJQJhLEh` OJQJhLEhwfOJQJhLEh0oOJQJhLEhOJQJ"    xy!!%%++f,g,v`vgd \tv`vgdhv`vgdwFv`vgdlv`vgd\Hv`vgd)`gdjv`vgdQgdjv`vgd:JX`yDdyze{(  ߹߹ߦzo^!jhLEhe0JOJQJUhLEh^OJQJh)OJQJhQOJQJhLEheOJQJ!jhLEhAt0JOJQJUhLEhAtOJQJh'wOJQJhLEhYOJQJhOJQJhLEh4'fOJQJhlOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEhkAOJQJ$   '-8| ?Q:;ܸܰܝvkcXPkEPkhLEhkAOJQJh|#OJQJhLEh0oOJQJh\HOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh (OJQJhLEhEOJQJ!jhLEhqB0JOJQJUhLEhOJQJhOJQJh32NOJQJ!jhLEhe0JOJQJUhLEh2`OJQJh)OJQJhLEhqBOJQJhLEh gOJQJhLEh (5OJQJ\;<%&ABDnv"AIJȽȽȬӡxpepZephhOJQJhLEhOJQJhOJQJhLEhYOJQJhLEh%oOJQJhLEh(OJQJh\HOJQJhLEhEOJQJ!jhLEh g0JOJQJUhLEh3kOJQJhLEh gOJQJh32NOJQJhXMOJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEh0JOJQJU#  >DE[_`inx*/5GKYdefghƻ⻝⻳ѻyyh32NOJQJ!jhLEh0JOJQJUhLEh3kOJQJhLEh !xOJQJhLEhOJQJhOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh (OJQJ!jhLEh%o0JOJQJUhLEh%oOJQJhhOJQJhLEh5VOJQJ.+,.8=hrx;Eyƻyhyh]RGhLEh5VOJQJhLEh8aOJQJhLEhD/OJQJ!jhLEhyh0JOJQJUhlOJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEh (0JOJQJUhhOJQJhLEh (OJQJhLEhX|-OJQJhLEhOJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEhL 0JOJQJUhLEhOJQJhOJQJhLEhL OJQJabbd  R ` p !!!!*!:!V!`!f!h!!!! ""!"("-""""ɳɨɨɄyhLEh5VOJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEh70JOJQJUhl`OJQJhLEhGOJQJhLEhX|-OJQJhLEht#]OJQJhLEhOJQJhwFOJQJ!jhLEhqO0JOJQJUhhOJQJhLEh8aOJQJ.""""#####$$r$w$$$%%3%9%m%t%z%%%%%%%%%%%%&&q&z&&&&㤙}rgrr}}hLEh0oOJQJhLEhkAOJQJhLEhGOJQJ!jhLEhf60JOJQJUhLEhf6OJQJhl`OJQJhLEhR cOJQJhLEht#]OJQJhGdh6OJQJ]hLEhX|-OJQJhhOJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEh0JOJQJU'&&&&&&&'''>'A'N'T''''''''((((((+(5(b(h({(}((((((())0)߸߸ߚߏÏÏÇnfh:OJQJ!jhLEhK0JOJQJUhqCOJQJhlOJQJhLEhKOJQJhhOJQJhLEh0OJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh`OJQJhLEhX|-OJQJ!jhLEhX|-0JOJQJUhLEhGOJQJhLEhf6OJQJhLEh!efOJQJ(0)1)>)D)a)))))))*$*%*u*v*x******++++++c,e,g,r,,ϼϫ}rg_ggTghLEh0OJQJh?OJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh0oOJQJhlOJQJhlhlOJQJh!efOJQJhvx+OJQJhLEhGOJQJ!jhLEhf60JOJQJUhLEh7OJQJh:OJQJhLEhf6OJQJhwFOJQJhhOJQJhLEhKOJQJhLEhX|-OJQJ ,,,,,,,,,,,--,-6-;-I-M-U-W-]-`-h-o-q-------- .........׼״Ϭϴמ꓋zrrhZOJQJ!jhLEh\0JOJQJUh\OJQJhLEh&OJQJhvx+hvx+5OJQJ\hwFOJQJh?OJQJh68.OJQJhvx+hvx+OJQJhl`OJQJhvx+OJQJhLEh0oOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEh?"?OJQJ(g,--.....Akd k$$Ifl0 Xb b  t0644 lap $$Ifa$gdAv`vgd?v`vgdvx+v`vgd68...0/1/// 0 000506080r0t0x0y00000000000000000000000000000000001111111222343ԾԫԣhlOJQJhl`OJQJh=`hZOJQJhvx+OJQJh\h\5OJQJ\h\OJQJh?OJQJhZOJQJ&jh!efOJQJU_H mHnHu=......j|kdk$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA....vj $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA|kdk$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la.../vj $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA|kd@l$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la// //vj $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA|kdl$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la///!/vj $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA|kdl$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la!/"/'///vj $$Ifa$gdA $$Ifa$gdA|kd?m$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 la//0/1/ 0 0060s0ypg[[[ $$Ifa$gdZv`vgdvx+v`vgd?v`vgd\|kdm$$Ifl0 Xb b t0644 las0t0y000J>22 $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdm$$IflDFfi i i  t06    44 lap00000ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdn$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la00000ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdn$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la00000ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdKo$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la00000ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdo$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la00000ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdp$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la00001ocWW $$Ifa$gdZ $$Ifa$gdZkdbp$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la111F3G3X7Y7|:ojaaXOFv`vgd:v`vgd!efv`vgdlv`vgd\gd\kdp$$IflFfi i i t06    44 la435383C3E3G3H3k3333333444~44444444545g5555vk``O!jhLEh!ef0JOJQJUhLEhOJQJhLEh[@OJQJhLEh?"?OJQJhLEhOJQJ!jhLEh0JOJQJUhl`OJQJh:OJQJhLEh&OJQJhlOJQJhLEhOJQJhLEhLOJQJh\OJQJh?OJQJhLEh\5>*OJQJ\hLEh\OJQJ55666666(7)72747B7M7S7V7Y7777 888/8<8M89:]:a:b:v:y:{:|:}:::::::;;";ºʲݲʲʲʪݢvvvvhLEhOJQJhLEh0OJQJhLEhGbOJQJhLEhK_OJQJhwFOJQJh.pOJQJh:OJQJh?OJQJhhOJQJhLEhxOJQJh\OJQJhUfOJQJhlOJQJh!efOJQJhLEhOJQJ,|:}:$;%;&;<;=;==sCtCDDiIjIKPLPiUkUcWdWgddbQv`vgdz[Zv`vgddbQv`vgd=gd(jv`vgdfv`vgdlv`vgd $gdjv`vgd:gdGb";%;&;';*;=;;;;<A<B<[<\<^<p<q<<<<<<<<<<<< =!="=)=<=h=l===O>ο{{p{p{pp{ph`hfOJQJh(jOJQJhLEhK#OJQJhLEhLEOJQJhLEhUfOJQJhUfOJQJhwFOJQJh:OJQJhLEhrOJQJhLEhrgKOJQJhLEh 5>*OJQJ\hLEh&5OJQJ\hLEh5OJQJ\hLEhxOJQJhLEh|OJQJ%O>X>Y>>>>>>>>>>>>>>#?C?_@`@@@@@@@AAA A@AQAhAiAyAzAAAiBjBCCCCCD E%E&EWE[E\EEEFFGG+H0HQHbHmHpH~HHHHHHIȽȽвȽȽȽнhLEh OJQJhLEh-zOJQJh-zOJQJh OJQJhwFOJQJh~OJQJhfOJQJhUfOJQJhlOJQJFIhIiIjI|IIJJJJJJJJ'KRK}KKKWLXLLLLLLL*M1MMMMMMMMM)N*N/N2NNNNNNOOOO,PJPƾhfOJQJh2Mh2MOJQJh2MOJQJhvx+OJQJh~OJQJhdbQOJQJhz[ZOJQJh=OJQJhLEh=OJQJ hLEh(j56OJQJ\]hLEh(jOJQJhLEh-zOJQJhlOJQJ3JPLPpP|PPQQQQ,R.RRRRRRRR+S2S3S4S6S7S~SSSSST[J0JOJQJUhhOJQJhOJQJhGlOJQJ!jhLEh0JOJQJUh<\OJQJhOJQJhMd%OJQJ hMd%hMd%56OJQJ\]hbhMd%OJQJhbhkOJQJh.OJQJh&OJQJh68.OJQJ)mssssst)tOtTtttttt/u?uuu*v1v2vQvvvvvv.w5wRwǼǬǛ|p|^|^|ULhR`OJQJ\h $OJQJ\#jhLEh(jH*OJQJU\hLEhNuOJQJ\hLEh(jOJQJ\h $OJQJhLEh(jOJQJ hLEh(j56OJQJ\]hdbQOJQJh<\OJQJhLEh<\OJQJhLEhdbQOJQJhR`OJQJhOJQJjh*0JOJQJUh.OJQJh*OJQJttuuzz-}.}`av`vgdwQvv`vgdS/gdMd%1`1gdS/ !v`vgdS/`gd(jv`vgd $v`vgd9Y\v`vgdvx+gd(jv`vgd.v`vgd*Rw[wwwwwwwxBxCxExxxsyyyzz{?{|j||||'}(})},}-}.}ƾܭܥܾܕ}odhLEhvx+OJQJjhK@0JOJQJUh,OJQJhR`OJQJh9Y\OJQJh(jOJQJh.OJQJhvx+OJQJ jhLEh(jH*OJQJUh $OJQJhLEhQ ;OJQJhqCh(jOJQJhLEh(jOJQJhLEh(jOJQJ\hLEhLEOJQJ\.}E}}}~~)5;ThpzՀۀ܁݁ށtgVtNthtOJQJ!jhMd%h(j0JOJQJUhMd%h(j0JOJQJhMd%h(jOJQJhMd%h(jOJQJ\hLEh(jOJQJ\hLEhwQvOJQJ hLEh(j56OJQJ\]hLEh(jOJQJmH sH hLEh]COJQJhLEhLEOJQJh $OJQJhLEh(jOJQJ(hLEh(j56OJQJ\]mH sH -:AH҃݃'(7LV]dntvτ BCzνΧβββΧΟβΧββΟwhMd%hwQvOJQJ\hMd%h(jOJQJ\htOJQJh5OJQJhS/OJQJhMd%hLEOJQJhMd%h^OJQJ!jhMd%h^0JOJQJUhMd%h>aOJQJ hMd%h(j56OJQJ\]hMd%h(jOJQJhMd%h $OJQJ.υۅ7?iއ@DT޴ީujjY!jhMd%h(j0JOJQJUhMd%h>aOJQJhMd%h^OJQJhMd%hwQvOJQJhMd%htOJQJhtOJQJhMd%hLEOJQJhMd%h(jOJQJhMd%hLEOJQJ\hK@OJQJ\hMd%hS/OJQJ\hS/OJQJ\hMd%hwQvOJQJ\htOJQJ\hMd%h(jOJQJ\!!"#bxy͊787Pɍʍ6|ؐ^_`asӿǬzl^PhMd%56OJQJ\]h(%'56OJQJ\]jhA0JOJQJUhA0JCJOJQJaJ hMd%hMd%0JCJOJQJaJhMd%hMd%OJQJhMd%OJQJhS/OJQJhMd%h(%'OJQJh5OJQJhS/hS/>*OJQJhS/56OJQJ\]h556OJQJ\] hMd%h(%'56OJQJ\]s|> '4>DÓ͓OQR`!>HL^ciȖϖopy~ƾֶƾƾƮƦΛ֛֛֓ֈ}hLEh>aOJQJhLEhS/OJQJhopOJQJhLEhj_LOJQJhOJQJhqCOJQJhhOJQJh5OJQJhMd%OJQJhS/OJQJhLEh(jOJQJhMd%56OJQJ\] hLEh(j56OJQJ\]-a?@ʜ˜{|vw89gd-z`gdjv`vgd[1`1gdop1^1gd 1^1`gd-'gdjv`vgd v`vgdv`vgdS/v`vgd(jv`vgdqCޙYšؚٚښݚ;<07CSߵ׭̥̝׏sehLEh\ 5OJQJ\hLEh5OJQJ\hLEh 5OJQJ\hLEh-'5OJQJ\h(jOJQJhopOJQJh<[OJQJhOJQJhLEhwQv5>*OJQJ\hLEh(jOJQJh OJQJhLEh>aOJQJhLEhj_LOJQJhLEhwQvOJQJ%ɜʜ˜Ԝڜ02Kt؝۝ߝ %,BhvݞޞߞLM`ĸvvjvjhLEhbOJQJ\hbOJQJ\hLEhIcOJQJ\hLEh OJQJ\hLEh8tOJQJ\hopOJQJ\hLEhndOJQJ\hLEh+OJQJ\hLEh 5OJQJ\hLEh 5>*OJQJ\hLEh5>*OJQJ\hLEh\ 5>*OJQJ\)`fwz|68^Ƞڠ۠ݠ.7Rdv¡Сuwע@LOۺۮۮ󢮐hLEhHlOJQJ\hOJQJ\h[OJQJ\hLEhxOJQJ\hLEhUOJQJ\hLEhNgAOJQJ\hbOJQJ\hLEh OJQJ\hLEh+OJQJ\hLEh8tOJQJ\hLEhndOJQJ\1O456~ΧϧPWhiѩةϪЪҪ IJǼϋϴ}pfph5OJQJ^JhLEh-zOJQJ^Jh5h56OJQJ]hS/OJQJhLEh-z>*OJQJhS/OJQJ\hLEhS/OJQJ\h5OJQJhLEh OJQJh-zOJQJh OJQJ!jhLEh-z0JOJQJUhLEh-z0JOJQJhLEh-zOJQJ%9åĥ 9`"#K P^`Pgd-zgd5v`vgdS/gd-zv`vgd v`vgdbKLIJ?@ծ֮gdj`gd v`vgd-z`gdS/gd-zJK }klmxyAEծ֮׮خN{ 齲|p|p|pd|hLEhOJQJ\hLEhsOJQJ\hLEhOJQJ\hLEhUOJQJ\hS/OJQJ\hLEh]OJQJ\h-zOJQJ\h 5OJQJ\hLEh-z5OJQJ\h5OJQJ^Jh OJQJ^JhcOJQJ^JhLEh-zOJQJ^JhS/OJQJ^J'!CDUV°"{}ıձ%=²òEڶڶکÏڜڅ{nahLEh!,OJQJ^JhLEhLEOJQJ^Jh7OJQJ^JhLEOJQJ^JhLEh OJQJ^JhLEhUOFOJQJ^JhLEhCOJQJ^JhLEhVCOJQJ^JhLEh7OJQJ^Jh/ OJQJ^JhLEhsOJQJ^JhLEhOJQJ\hLEhOJQJ\ |}²òb]gd7I & FEƀkֆ.gd-'^gd7I & FEƀkֆ.gd7òb]gd7I & FEƀkֆ.gd-'^gdLEI & FEƀ&.gdLE2rߴ47IJKPRlsuĵ 浨seWjh/UmHnHuh/CJOJQJ^JaJhWCJOJQJ^JaJhLEhWOJQJ^JhLEh0iOJQJ^JhLEh!,OJQJ^JhLEh-'OJQJ^JhLEh)OJQJ^JhLEh7OJQJ^JhLEOJQJ^JhLEhOJQJ^JhLEhsOJQJ^JhLEh\OJQJ^J"JK $$a$gdn\\gdW$a$gdOv`vgd7gdjI & FEƀkֆ.gdLE DnoqsuUrս)Ĺsk``RhLEh85OJQJ\hLEhHlOJQJh:OJQJhLEhW>*OJQJhLEhW5OJQJ\hLEhW5>*OJQJ\hLEhn\\5>*OJQJ\hLEhn\\5OJQJ\hLEhWOJQJhLEhW5OJQJ\^JhLEhO5OJQJ\^JhWCJOJQJ^JaJh/CJOJQJ^JaJ$%Dopq+,"#CDv`vgd8v`vgdHlv`vgd: ]^gdWv`vgdn\\gdWgdn\\$a$gdn\\)+ )+CDjv`vgdHlv`vgd:v`vgd/X`gd/Xv`vgd8gdW )WrY<vwCK{ xjmn׻׳׳׫׳ם׳ג׳ɄגגɄ||qhLEh^OJQJhhOJQJhLEhb+5OJQJ\hLEhHlOJQJjh*r0JOJQJUhOJQJh:OJQJhLEhW6OJQJ]hLEhW5OJQJ\hLEhWOJQJ!jhLEhW0JOJQJUhLEhW0JOJQJ,jk-.QRJK )*defv`vgdn`gdnv`vgd^ ]^gdWv`vgdOv`vgdb+gdW(`d<>dtxܵܧrrrhLEhE&z5OJQJ\hLEhE&zOJQJ!jhLEhW0JOJQJUhLEh{SVOJQJhLEhk5OJQJ\hLEhi=5OJQJ\hLEhHl5OJQJ\hLEhHlOJQJhLEhW5OJQJ\hLEh^OJQJhLEhWOJQJ,f{|gd{SV ^`gdk0`0gdWv`vgdk`gdWv`vgdi=`gdi=v`vgdngdW`gdHl  zv`vgdHl`gdWgd{SVv`vgd{SVv`vgd/ ^`gdE&zI & FEƀkֆ()gdE&zgdW 5tuv[\_`x1cswֵ֑֑֜znnn`hLEhA4N5OJQJ\hLEhW6OJQJhLEhOJQJhLEhWOJQJ\hLEhq7OJQJhLEhW0JOJQJhLEhW5OJQJhLEh{OJQJhLEhHlOJQJhLEh{SVOJQJhLEhWOJQJ!jhLEhW0JOJQJUhLEhW5OJQJ\% 56^_`xy01v`vgdv`vgdq7`gdq7v`vgdy`gd230`0gdWv`vgd23v`vgd{gdW&()EFv`vgdb`gdov`vgdz`gdz`gdA4N0`0gdWv`vgdA4N`gdWv`vgdgdW#$()EPQTU   * H i    ~rggghLEhHlOJQJhLEhW>*OJQJhLEh~x5>*OJQJ\hLEhW5>*OJQJ\hLEh~x5OJQJ\hbOJQJh:OJQJhLEho5OJQJ\!jhLEhW0JOJQJUhLEhz5OJQJ\hLEhWOJQJhLEhW5OJQJ\$       A cklEF'(`gdRgdRv`vgdRv`vgdGv`vgdHlgd~xgdWv`vgd:`gdW        klEF'(5U}~3QU#ļļļĭ萭rjbbh:OJQJh/ OJQJhLEhG5OJQJ\h0OJQJhROJQJhRhROJQJmH sH hLEhW5>*OJQJhRhWOJQJmH sH hRmH sH hRhRmH sH hLEhW5OJQJ\hLEhGOJQJhLEhWOJQJhLEhW5OJQJ$}~v`vgd-z`gdWv`vgd0gdRv`vgdRv`vgdGgdW!!""f\ gdWoFI & FEƀkֆgdWgdWI & FEƀkֆgdW"S#T#V#e#g# % %M'N'+`gdGv`vgd^gd:wgd0 gdWoFI & FEƀkֆgdW U#V#Z#e###%%F&L& ''I'J'(!(++++++,, -.ʿʷʷʦʷʞshZNhhWhS/6OJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJU h!gh/VhLEhJOJQJh%OJQJh/OJQJ!jhLEh:w0JOJQJUhGOJQJhLEh^OJQJhLEh:wOJQJhLEh:w5>*OJQJ\hLEh:w5OJQJ\hLEhr<5OJQJ\++,/./;0<02222USFEƀ֦gdegd3kgdR`gdgd32NgdwfgdlFEƀzFgd% ..<.=.>.O.P.+/.///0/3/M// 0090<0=0>0A0X0`0f0i0000庩嚏yk]N]hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/5>*OJQJh32NOJQJhWh32N6OJQJ]hWh32NOJQJhWh32N5>*OJQJ\!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJ]hWhS/0JOJQJ#jqhWhS/OJQJUhWhS/OJQJjhWhS/OJQJU0022.2g222222222222222222223333333 484y4z444Џпr`#jrhWhS/OJQJUjhWhS/OJQJUhWhS/5OJQJ\hiOJQJh/ 6OJQJ]h32NhS/5OJQJ\h32NhS/5>*OJQJ\!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/OJQJh/ OJQJ%233`5a588u9v9G:H:;;AABBgd (FEƀc֦gdgdL gdgd%ogdaJgd ggd32NgdgdS=44F5G5a5b5d5g5h5s5u55555555555366676Q6ظrrrrrr^J^J'HhԺFhWh32N6OJQJ]'HhӺFhWh32N6OJQJ]!HhҺFhWh32NOJQJ:HhѺFhWh32N5OJQJ\F*5\-hWh32N5>*OJQJ\F*>*hWh32N5>*OJQJ\!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJhWhS/0JOJQJjhWhS/OJQJUQ6666666666666777777777ݸݑ~p~ph~pW;W7HhʺFhWh32NOJQJF*5>*\!HhʺFhWh32NOJQJhiOJQJhWh32N6OJQJ]h32N6OJQJ]h32NOJQJhWh32NOJQJ7HhպFhWh32NOJQJF*5>*\IhWh32Nh|#OJQJcHdhdhdhպFF*5>*\!HhպFhWh32NOJQJ!HhԺFhWh32NOJQJ77"7+7w7888X9[9e9i9j9l9s9v9w9x9{9|9 :%:H:I:J:M:::&;նrfWjhWhS/OJQJUhWhS/6OJQJhWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/6OJQJ]h/ OJQJhWhS/5>*OJQJ\!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJ'HhֺFhWh32N6OJQJ]!HhֺFhWh32NOJQJh32NOJQJ!Hh˺FhWh32NOJQJ&;';(;e;f;;;<%<*<<<====>????@@@6@@AAlAAAAAAAƵƩƅwƩƅodoVƅoVwƵhWhS/6OJQJ]h32N6OJQJ]h32NOJQJhWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/OJQJ]hiOJQJ]hWhS/6OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJhWhS/0JOJQJjhWhS/OJQJU#jshWhS/OJQJU!AAAAAAAAAXBBBBCCCCCCCCDtDDDDDDDDDNE{EEEEFFoGvGzG{G6J7J>JDJyhwF6OJQJhiOJQJhwFOJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/5OJQJ\h/ OJQJ]hWhS/6OJQJh32NOJQJ]h32N6OJQJhWhS/OJQJ-BDDFF5J6J_J`J!K"KKKLLrMsM6OSOTOPPgdKgd5VgdX|-xgdR`gdgd/ gd7gdK#gdIgdigdyhgdwFgd (gd:DJMJUJYJ`JaJJJJJ"K#K*K0K8K@KDKKKSKKKKKZLLLֺ֬ŝviZN֬FhwFOJQJhWhS/6OJQJhWhS/5>*OJQJ\h/ OJQJ]mH sH h/ 6OJQJmH sH hwFOJQJ]mH sH hwF6OJQJmH sH hWhS/OJQJmH sH hWhS/6OJQJ]hWh68.OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJhWhS/OJQJ]h/ 6OJQJhwFOJQJ]LLLLLLL.M]MqMrMsMtMuMxMyM N5NVN^N_NNO6O7O8O;O*OJQJ\^J"hWhS/0J6OJQJ]^JhWhS/0JOJQJ^JhWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/6OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJhwFOJQJhwFhwF5OJQJ\&PPP P!PxPPPPQQQVQWQsQtQuQxQyQQQaRdRfRgRSTTT)X,X-XXXXXX,YJYKYcY㗩Ƹ~vnvvhz[ZOJQJhwFOJQJhWhS/6OJQJhWhS/0JOJQJ#jwuhWhS/OJQJUjhWhS/OJQJUhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJU(PrQsQeRfRYY[[\[\\y^z^;`<`%a&aaabcccgdS/gd6-$a$gdigddbQgd.gd(jgdlgd{gd!efgdwFgdgdigd\gdR`gd`cYjYpYzY{YYYKZNZOZeZlZtZ|Z&[K[M[O[T[X[Y[\[][j[k[[[\\z^{^<`=`X`ɸɩɩɐɈɸɀxɸɸg\hWhWOJQJ!jhWhW0JOJQJUhz[ZOJQJh{OJQJhwFOJQJhwFhwFOJQJhWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/5>*OJQJ\!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhS/OJQJhiOJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhiOJQJhi6OJQJ]!X`b`i`o`p`q`u`x````a a&a'aUaaaab%b{bbccdcfcicjcrcycccc穞yk``hz[Z6OJQJ]hWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hz[ZOJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhWhWOJQJZhi6OJQJ]hiOJQJhihW6OJQJ]hWhWOJQJhWhW6OJQJ] ccccccdeeeffffIjJj"l#lllgd(jgd*DC$EƀFgdgdgd&gdz[ZgddbQgd6-cccccccccccccccccHdddeefegeeeffffffffffණ{{lllaYhiOJQJh6OJQJ]hWhS/OJQJmH sH hWhS/6OJQJ]hz[ZOJQJhz[Z6OJQJ]hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhiOJQJ]^JhWhS/6OJQJ^JhWhS/OJQJ^J$jhWhS/H*OJQJU^J"fffffffffffffffCgJgggggh)hhhhhh/ibiiiii'jHjIjJjߴwwodhn0hjtOJQJhjtOJQJhn06OJQJ]hn0hn05>*OJQJ\hn0OJQJhqCOJQJh>[JOJQJh>[Jh>[JOJQJ!jh>[Jh>[J0JOJQJUh6OJQJ]hWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/OJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]hOJQJ%JjKjRjbjkjsjjjRk^kwkzkkl#l$lllllllmmhm{mmmmmmnjn{nnn%ooo㛐qhK@hK@CJ$OJQJaJ$hK@OJQJhqCOJQJhK@hK@OJQJ!jhK@hK@0JOJQJUhWhS/6OJQJhWhS/5>*OJQJ\hWhS/5OJQJ\hWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJU&lmmmmooqqrrrrbscs}v~vxxyxz||}gd*rgdWgdWgdS/gd-zgdAgd^gd>agd,gdK@gdqCgd(jooooqqqqrrrrrrcsdswwzz|||}}~~^_ʁ_`xˮˑˉˮ{ˮiˮ"hWhS/6CJOJQJ]aJh*rjh*r0JUh/ OJQJhWhS/6OJQJ]hWhS/CJOJQJaJ)jhWhS/0JCJOJQJUaJh,OJQJhWhS/OJQJ!jhWhS/0JOJQJUhK@hK@OJQJhK@hK@5OJQJ\)}~~]^_xy{|~gd&gdWgdWxyz|}ƔǔȔɔᷡkZIZ h%hS/CJOJQJ^JaJ h%h:CJOJQJ^JaJ6jh%h%0J5CJKHOJQJU\aJ*2hI0J5CJKHOJQJ\aJmHnHu**h%h%0J5CJKHOJQJ\aJ3jh%h%0J5CJKHOJQJU\aJ hS/0JjhS/0JUhS/ h/hS/h}^h%jh8Uh8ƔǔȔɔʔ˔͔̔ΔϔД#./gd!efgd%$a$gd: $ & Fa$gd%h]hgd> &`#$gd>gd/ɔʔ˔͔̔ΔϔД/0LMNOPQ[\^_`íҋtb^W h!gh/VhH#hqch/5B*OJQJ\phff%h/5B*CJOJQJ\aJphffh/h`ph/CJOJQJaJ%jTwhjh/CJOJQJUaJ+jM hjh/CJOJQJUVaJhjh/CJOJQJaJ%jhjh/CJOJQJUaJh68.h8hS/ h%hS/h}^h%/PQ\]^_`FEƀzFgd%$a$gd/001h0P:p// =!"#8$p%701h00P:p%= /!p"8#$8%x001h0P:p%/ =!"#8$p%&1h:p// =!"#8$p% kDd iZ0  # Abjpٚ8)|(rdjD\ n\jpٚ8)|(rPNG  IHDRPy9<sRGBIDATx^mIUݧΐC! CR Cf$Ň`}J > >Ex*IE@%LN&wYg}Råg}jWVUjU/mTKҩnZoiy;n0F#`0F#lJoir .#W_m.-m"i2F#`0F#`v6+D7z]ٵս_֥>CKk;̽0F#`0F#`&D`;yk+W^]~Uʄ|1#`0F#`0FlWh_XﷶzEcv{#`0F#`0F`rW_]^^cK~p 9='0F#`0F M]wUל_ય\{i;̽0F#`0F#`&G`xz+߿domoomukr0F#`0F#`v6 ZdbG rK_~5ǖ?Or~R%2m0F#`0F.,Wh"]<+H-rW|Kk]W_s%Jb_:~6x#`0F#`0F!,Wh"  -_^ZۻWPe.d7F#`0F#`@+/!?wu:RJ/7VWzgU30F#`0F#`ZX8u<Bk%l8lm+Ͽ_^-F#`0F#`ytSv[ZCϰ3V+%/|`#"fI4F#`0F#` p6--v{VIwviW;83{}A5F#`0F#`XX+TwՕg^v&P1o?qn^;S#`0F#`0Fa,WJ t9X[G7v8*DKK+YM49o0F#`0F: 89מsz,鱏 O~YV []Ro5_p_թ>̂o0F#`0F 8/UW]cl #tVcX*C]_ڵtYb7Ǎ0F#`0F#`X8T#s^R(48El۵Fh.]x{MuOdE0F#`0F#`@z|1!꺿z{זou#[Bp ꯮`r5לG{˻[ȯ#`0F#`0 zI*aa^oҵɧ 6U5A16|ِN:뽸DծZ>0)F#`0F#`|+Df%v|smkgVzK/F1ceGDPU IyzE-#`0F#`0 yABUaBKmh?pWז[ɤ YrS߽qֱn0F#`0F#K?sGpMClAV)G _]V"B)1F#`0F#`l~1@UñKW^vŗC!#Ȫs֪-`1]{ݕg1<ָϐ?F#`0F#`0[zY ! toe=X[|7\KU~C šG&!N.;TTIUuf40F#`0F#`0V-bDhcUgҮq V" U,-S/G ?F#`0F#`0[Wh=`KY~jګr*hWV.=4dp ?F#`0F#`0[T=縓9D6Txu{}78~Z&0F#`0F#`ry~xjX}egVNoP.+N=qg:#`0F#`0F-Q_Z%O{A]cخerWig~|k#`0F#`0Fl]wp r,z*g8l^2 i OF#`0F#`0 evu~'jyzw*Gb;մ#`0F#`0[b?W,?[>̯#TeE*^G8SOcz 2=tTW"6qA,爱 :ub2#ƪ;UIAl-qN3cX:^B#JR[6sj0F#`0F,[ Y,?O߸խPV%ZrEpR- Ė2neOe{{=$>b0F#`0F `wbh63HdUi>8{p|cq_Sy'  U]`8*> ˍFpC':6r0sf#0F#`0F#0C+֮)`%}衁+躯~?YVV/)>͕ql㪌0F#`0FyRFe6q,YRNgy٧V'W""Vyzk]K{K~|PaG"N:#`0F#`0;- xB .p;l3H=yiigp5,/Sr%" eRezOz]! uVVc0F#`0Fy6@.A &zQuzQ?܉8o`z<,FBe⋪F?vG?QwKGE/_lw7F#`0F#`v8[g_q ZQ쪀_o˜6VQ$z{O7is]wz7F#`0F#`v:[ao2;映CF#`0F#`A sǃ衊ߏ 5Ξ.9آ6$#`0F#`0{2n'y<:ll t'-MiF:#`0F#`0FfWhY^^]s\pnޮYI!DEs#`0F#`0F 'gs\uPYoY:~imڳ]x?=o0F#`0F#0mWaiGP:eqipwY䍀0F#`0F#І V"[ޠ3;tB\VHJ7F#`0F#` ~.UyG+tƙCD0F#`0F#`@;+T%nZYd}1vמ}48l?F#`0F#`0>^ߞS 4`geE9 6{c0F#`0F#x5O\,ĿB#`0F#`0Fm+T%ꯞqiU!m-# uwygwL'9#`0F#`0W6vAcMckkӃ v-~pe_|20F#`0F#`@&V&N;(B빤d+DV2Ns)_0F#`0F#`!BvkqXzK%T7=/]k0F#`0F#Ђbz.꫖WdVzT;⒥˲h0F#`0FA`q'(R]N #LH"Bme"=c\a0F#`0FE`qB@&G;9&T8u"4ڈ_ysϺN<{>ΤE e0F#`0FD`B0>+ y_']VU".g.45F]?~3!v[F#`0F#`X@+$_N6hp6]PET&hhϞXWBH!0F#`0F#`6XDh i }L뿜X_FsʉQ AGMd˩#`0F#`0J/K.xbp IgqZ:KO>(!Bo~-VNp-g֌0F#`0F#0#pz) jT%48q)CVb}fa姌0F#`0F# p^cWNϾK^da+!CUb~wzi_}H@91F#`0F#`t,Wh HYO:3 ~--yVuxx1;]i#`0F#`0FL:J ٽXA4N>jc|Փ'0F#`0F#mXPxrg^yu4*Pݧ0~>#n0F#`0F#^?\s?H Te~YO 옝F#`0F#` (Þ/e&H-`8w&8T~dgN:,EpZe,#`0F#`0F+' 8<;kC' #ёx<4w0F#`0F#`@F`BJ'HRN4* c4wyAuN9āh#`0F#`0F`qXGɲjBqU MW s]ye)1F#`0F#`#^|И…N:Ah'Z?{J\IK˽eVVO:*#`0F#`0F[p{ωmcgrRodC]^^>c31F#`0F#`Xw*O]crʩd U,BL$꠾ݻOܨ=o0F#`0F#ձB pqbkmee d}v.ǪSͺwι^}p#`0F#`0F!e;6N)z'p4| }DqKTZ6qƞho0F#`0Fyri>AʧGUN<f#`0F#`0y Wl$RM(/(JUQc6|!K #`0F#`0F+4ۻp/~ƞf&5y)oN=׃0-a*#`0F#`0F9DyN8AT<378L Op-c|qQ#`0F#`0F -s1 л8C6q/U'UIz\p"gT2>;3lU#`0F#`0F`2@g3 7PUF\':gBk>lp #`0F#`0F`!e^|grUWU۽fl!SY)rK%$#`0F#`0A`˼B"?6pQ wU~&5U˽gCd3ە#`0F#`0 - %Cw򳂯+D'x\iU)pYaz0F#`0Fm{]3' =T5p2WpI'[/{ו#`0F#`0F+ /ܫr PQ 7F#`0F#`2\Br1lN\}~Jmõ[1F#`0F#`@yCS椓N1Bv|--xѽ "j٦F#`0F#`D`˼B`v\г4='xUfߜ?E]|хmz#`0F#`0sF`˼BUO:9p 4d3F#`0F#` - t8wc=QBgt-p*q'~VL(EƱi[ pl0 @튀 $#`0FlWHq:\pޥ|j\){N e?vjI]E۽[M!Xe;V0.w;D̦0F#`- f+'t,.!ֵF&@j+LoRnfĂuˮ#0):]0F#`@ - i~ėe|BУirBvڞgjQY#~힝5ޮ#R y=#`0F@lWHܓw<"Ph8yw>O:΁BF{,枝7Y!0L۱Y!z0F#`Z2˯3ϬU!t)6Rg>L&m#ÖR04۲GMؑD(P`(zGbc0F#`ypq݈;р4sN=yϡ+OswF#O?{޷mlڕW^e9tuF#`0 G8m>a _|Z]UI6& Ʒ7$f46fQ/|;r!/gڔ+3Flgqg>AW]uA8=a{&f0F#`v s :+Gv(xs@F*4qCΪIV}і]ZEu-%W2=-7I'_|1%$=]BBl~3ٮvOHQ щ'pB:_.wi) x6F#`0ܽB|i]߫u?x+suuufyp,zǼ'=gy7{+:ѹW#DEU|YgŮ rQ:xt9{Hd8tL}x{vDvh4"e~}hw?yqF#`0j8WT'Vy+# +巚oۭ."k1aX/x ",BQ8mXɢ<1沩0PncRǠEg!Bo}[q TC\F7?8}7p}F#`؉lWqwgG68~uee{͸f ڢ/F7~FĉB]7*SM\xᅄQaoWFs]O~_\=A*wܵ~4TRD4wW1'E(½u/xӛ.Ȯy K`/ZXY(zYzi͛o0F# P1D}كm?"eb|mo{[{xؒC9}ՙ_Z6ȐJ V/c$"SF}!TҼ oQTnGP,QZ{ɷkw /|@|K?x6QwPa rQfbe,}z׻/#{G<:HSԧ=i1F#`($P1y%,/|~o¬\zcc UXw꯾A|bٛù_W9թvoܔ?H>*Oխnb|@zhѸ@ei,"2";hk;z __]p&7yC^X %WH £n 3oeWX*w -WyJ#9(J%u*\B7nB~k_[u;z`o|e4<d ]׸ pzM됓(gݐF OхZFbwe/{\ѭr$@-oy Cײ7F#`0ܽB PL/}Ãmc`DAvOp=q?kۮaiaX,o-wӝPw`Mb& (IBM^ƶV/`;N|zի^Jj7 9eMI0J}-cٻ:,8q e5WP7'*!-Xl׸)V/:.{S`-2ŋaf2 { 0F#`{n?_gA#{6~!C}! kFf Cl?אJO:WXn`.wY?XOBL֤^^9tʾ,ҡ,UzlKrGGXδ/ǹF#ÙSlI'S(2FbxT~ҥr'hG{~tln61U~#`0F`'#~,\!2;_Cz6{5 -ڱKk^HH;V^ fa4% Ͼuc߅|b _@oɍC*i%"8ƒֽ7dzaRӅ{Ti/d!NAyԉ-ԏO!$MZ)#{Ͳ2n> ;EB$i- }Ntsj0Fy#^!6H;,˭|zqh8b__WË"Ue-DzAX+ba 6F=yZUE9H+aMfRGR -!TŪO #,&cJEag??lq4UKkPdL6=_Q%mm}EMw-_s7+7F#`>fxBwֽ 't:LhhgϞսn!I[tvy;'/NTlj/E Pa#`'Z{Z ! w{Dm)Xo"OG}_ U_zBpMg_0rJTKؾt?C4vTUX6b`Y㎠X0_vn'3t%Hf#`03G`3Bj6|[>eBAI^=sdE%DVZhYbU^WFN$/~TxM\IxyT[.WcuzPH1A|*{ggl/B`'%D3<͎"P]B4: >p*\Hn/v!P%SV7R:_s_~g `:0F#`{g_>`VOho(;M}\B4&G^<9hiwXpp$+[,bą^^VE(re/{Yxyj-Л&\BZ7vgp~f-(,~"}yTS-q|'8׭L區0F#`{Xd;F-0/8jbTmC}ofHwZcs\)Șe<8*IaMBbzF Y< m!YPE&uꩧ'(}R"PWqmn?><<~Hƭ;"KWj=FGmd:bF#`0^-2WD\8Ҫ~Sw鯭.9l&zKU4RԱZZ$| /?c0;UGb T><65p&NQG&qedcan @ͱB-<KeJnQ#BACG"$N`BwdV2ŦEʐZhiN:p5odnZm/@L0F#` F XHhmյkS4rEZ~Gcx%GWm]VhZoiׁކ7 >_"V 7?xNK~o/D.7=.辴EiN&&EYV"t%KOO@dؿFb#a+^-x≤eëB]l>H8Ήcz eLImT}#G>O}ӞÁ2F#`0[@uǃ3*ϕW^uTA쐶얒I*Svu-Yӝ?2E˧c0^ZsWņkzZ-듼WEH輴k&8t$tWɟ rK&,+:~ޟXXgszFkH\`q`ác^ĀDMoz#" _\[_+%ufAeڿ-oG?ۃeÞLRJ|Ų3A*g4YӍOM`_5Ugk+?F`# =edv#ϝ*g&cc!2rxDǹy;۫p?m0ۋ5Sk0F#"P9&|ou[ɑ1 !!th8h=xfpt_?r'Җ%%ۙg#3~լZF1Yk-#ЍsB`9tGNFiiLJs溓yQ:C]" @/ZlUͺ0[)bM\p9Ph'ȃy4F#`@:e B򔧭; ŎNq1ɿW^wA,t;AI'\mݟ$`e'>ep{6#\(EI WHwPK(4BZ.ph\EU~2 ~尪2;;q[*lAi,, 5"ϼ=Ѽ6ΡWz m&I5ÓŻqoS`7yt;݉GU4gBB* .Emgy&O! T0oylqַuQGꪫc`Sa6K !rAMHnp 4z%P^_ݝ|g[`w~K_kIozӛf&TU7qL;#|b%p򖷼]J^;%FY|+_An7 hCZDD>P;i;Uux_?=S̽Bub1iQ[OyS2"LO2LY{0f6LxnDXP;l+3Yܖa"g>S  |ӟ0A(,WGk+1^$QhΞX- ">$":|u}|c\ _B){FZ~Add|qȊ "]pr6#Q*ܿ?pY\BJ8!hpYDUu#J>qOAz4܎) [AʩDm?~%Urd*j{Nʔ48r(a,亓WhĜ|9S_FY-|ab~ixpb-*AiO)Vsh Ǒp#u[z>ϝz]wȦY0[>77eϟcgK}{{WYT@>>B`?cE2R7ϵEg \HAL0'  G;N)iqATy,=R3}dיFa: 3bEXQxk& x\O>0?ydPl!+z["Z[.Vj \ۿo|?8nU"i.p- P, OŸй (:4Y s<h\ Ѐ!~`17A|x_`GuG0ɌLƈhG2p_C J7w{.T[Y ĈFGpc/z!Tg<&zE@ՍtyXb2[ A8ުS{yP ecdG|ObFe2Ao` ,zdn|<+~: FjN(Z9 T mGE(|HzpZP*F ^P"Y>E*5X!Uf̲֝n`4"Bզl CDЦhf0i+w茶X!qxohKҡHTc3VFͿi⫞PFhZ)$Y]I(-/%¦ ^ 5g!va>27 њ,*S#~,ӟ6Z|+MZPs5t;/FdK= `}*0qyzAXcM=Zj$>wDb#~2ƌBŰ0H 1g5r!\)[.hJ,GW:*׷y㌒1nW(#S7 y.i~M!TůЃcѫC L#)Ih<'+x cC(OOuw1 htaZ0S|h ؐWz1IbV_ͳ둬{߅;dY|3 --nw-ϒZh<OJF{ˤf:~ AtVUz\6B#XA'q8$s1Je6ƌ:(w1q,L2DB> 16NaU&l\G+6cIUex+b k1Ƞ0vPaa3 (h"/y='э={dNϣ&P%.VH{s,.?P`jոK_ozӛE=x(wݔ_o#|VQɘE=y "1AIV`pP&8a'z CO5Yg}`3< h(V 7z=ĬPRLW^ќmo¼~mٓO`- TmZ;: iXQEbC!z2eI?%uYuu kL9l P3阋t%-1(]l+j*[y*HAsB . P .G!bfT4$z"a];Rsf8DJbi,KٓNavIc 1tvv$ *9U1&!`/ 3pA< 9 Pکxu %?F/i03ݚ<&:xNtaOOI2 6ژ#irE13SKXq*f |byAPjg*D8d=vi gW{U{Q|e9-/ b^V'3!xԯyj yE')^aE(32y?$!C;# q0@*\]{4>5#ۜDZ_ v^CXّ+' n~2B/Cc_XB@Bf ҨF-# 呷:Rt5!y|$z #͓j`“dfuе\, ǰwLXjjW _יiq(+f6_Z_Cg.6 u:+1P%"Wt4%dlcMXzXȵ 8.:ұOq)K'Hb 1La(J)iQ?wX&)J34RN83‚$G#GF>֖ڂbw6QC`Yu,LbƤJ+jY2moSuFy,zc!ːmzX=" _|sIY-G>T ANh#jS/ ^a {HyxLX]^f/Kccv 13~Fڔ5MH+Q9vxPO[<Ģ˼חk~K6|Շia31=҆.C>QAZ:IhT6Jʳ&2n_и(YYk  D%g""1טdzTRG WzwID ç@4 sV,^ȼ̴ Wn&v.V >\ &;Q"?OE>cB)CWЖ`gb"aAs,3~p EUʂTG#c 8j "ƕ^})A8Ųm$ra~g /  :pQb Љ#f\@N5%w›__6mA/HYWz.p3?#=q|]XBu7 /UJ"!} +Nah"/CT'^|Ol +X>Gb5(/"ع0XF-fțq .Z6֦$M/X4*^3`iuKz),r%MƭEN}X9?hh<5 #W7U Ƽ6A4ưxV{[:81E#wzި ΋$[l4%!n[u:2\ /BUIw+ۖZ (5$$WVBK'>[NѨMTQ=Ҡ>/>2vb();Zudb&8!$܉YHɑ>l>SsD8"._z[eGx6%gSldzϙICEqI+ pB-*ԡ9!<(? UTbf RيjH&2y4=}&"?j0,׳ִ~"(#\)UU8'mt  "J=(H_. Z$MsPFE BL5=]j]h/ƕ@!x$"q]~] n)@ .1 %sgQ0ˌ-'V cscu"^ ˜(ٍ2d :XZR@Rxr$ʸqMx.E(^P@EuɉNUpG}|)F͂$8Z:%EЏ7֥BY( "hޡGAHv (YXO*lBk*sͯk+d*O!Xl~V%8"Otf2B"@\7T#aםHzg\ #Y@Qt a1jXֈp6 e OjqGů[pS<$-1sʼnռ_CBrIo w0E~,7a,hie$ G- mEsf.BfD$:]>QPsAT`cJOa貤Q'-6\~̣SڨZq!\T ot~)p[X;0P(U$6UVgZ~vL/k Ry c?&X_1zDGWS;10%<"OY*:5ϝdg>qKRW:(!HXD&m*sv}6|Q%w6 pTb0tNA<{0ЌM tSjMd3bCǸ_TL^0SNB6SN,AZGSLGw 9MB5B\rIKp(i_Rt&E h1zN+>)t! 5d΁0v-V%Ze@(HÅ$GoKhcetl}Lmʳ i_~٬*OЩKh&א+M,ѓ)k)DC$(V ġTHSeT#5D63f S1nfNquJ1xsM,71s!| GgI~$d A>GGlɃ$eћcA/ނb LtOTuzlj Ukk4( b sT,Uګ1TQ2_8M _6Νy1%" F iXQ !"3~͌TG.--Js5uN0NHX(Hb o*x Ҿ7kvQH~ # C`]X4jf `26&W|4ˡb 渤uʂ_vIu7 d JzH*nl,)s~'?A$ V{ր=9Ϲm0/'}gAR^Iۜs = Ca)!_#qrYu,/ d76:rYh\T#綾}ѯБE]%< #̽yY`w@ %tv1f92Z\(s(prφ)b؏~)TU #4tnYb]12D/ƸlrY&ӯ8W8Ts!@aW9?aW#Y~C[~#,RI! |gpf/YQg<#;%얷%Ǧ&vġBk%nSR0lh;EzPhi-bΣͳa䳔bzp("%\砘yɎ$~9KUQQ7ip$@ S~cx4kVժ(;zM9blqt=c"6If{6HƐ i5!>0جW)Q gǏf}r3Bb2 btZA[xh.!190Z$FcGaGdc4_x 05͏f=%];LHI 8-d r2{U y4IALpUL\:pF# [̔:0'9ѳqS*†װW_W*TS)ku (G>g'$dEg^&`[/́oo߿~Ϝ*/ȴ&*ӜL@p>ocmv /Crde[V P\/?8lXmy Hq?[Pw.qi$tP<.c46?KzPX! ).xvv:T5[Bof5  2mgf #tP,9i2:ܷ>ј;ގȸ,~`uDQ#UNm.ƅ<*#+¯a9"^aRI5fźvsIZ!z1I'Fz\K'J$a0}f|R^ H1>9AkLӽ(9SG37EZ Xn53̍ D ˜0UzF^JXՓH^+DdhD! k-\-F* Ӭ;AzG~eFԃnQxi s8GjhJpw/<*=NnޅKf!7JaǶDsa87k9ďW:Q_4Cc=,s":a9${"C}8XZx&#m] W`\Aщbp,c0IƯ*#utuS#,4_ah l $*Lx8*1XHyiOZ}[[C|bPmW~,<՚ExB%lV9y,<x< }d214X..tbKsFC9ov1+86_:qPӲRsF6ڽ̝a^󦕌I3r(,T tg((؃#[DmĔv%RL\#To~Ǜu$0A^C/:fa n, z):=UPv=Qa:lHT.x.\BzruÂ'`x?{wPO?}ȂI2-ffƯ}]HSX5u0-Xܕ<9 4p 8UfꄩS&gqjsCz:gipw@MD YUSxmpђ]7c IAfc_2qSҋ#(U[URAI!Y/bY7G/ Q(]b.W-R}+y,Un%jGkt nx N&2?˔)&o0r.\t!2? j䍷XQ{_Xxߥ0 1qkaCHBf2!꣐^+ԥSHb[)jc*%Jl7.BTǓQ\gaY|5S[ lES +N%L31*Β&2m'Ium TOi &겧I)E 6y4dE=zP'AQ}HTMȨ@VA񣃺hDȏ>ɳ;2b@GF+GXXr[X5j PnLZeԏ/*/hBǵ8.\;k#"OJ5XUoI>SP>^::%[Ԩ9 E-QRiq5̣OLVEHwPRPzȏ(~\. {\9k.uX+&J ͯ+.HpH-FέÕxN>f?KV+G9T_rXgEW<$忀@:op:C٦y@3zNnCD,;կub^FUwSR'@V!z.:@c|4/ӢA:YƶP079~]Ȕ"Is|I/降"a\ .Ȧ qak; h8nu>FTq`D%^%SΜU@ ׼aP<`{N1xMϪћ&W4.x#ꬌ|SEh|7RNFHx#"+̯G"vd=YB)G5Va@a I+۞[oe9GG?ى㺛jP v! ) KMS"F[Z'/?mc=xlэT0l$?|ŝ͹])r9i[ֺTv9a1( j0gJ^E2E  ŵ FWabӊZmފ/yxmu Pe/C?:(1)ϭE(|!+CИ5ȃL"W,d_7I R?-Ypn-ޙ/_3$wXH?R1;^ m@kCE'f|]<=zYx1 4L_W[36ќs\p]6:Wӈʸ$-NHyFÞ]IgMrF$s1?,JÐɆXጋq@38ık/x t 䟆;l/׸tJZTxrc.?|%^/wn-q(PVڅҚY=N#K7.!,If-w6O"|8nw]W))-o}M;BkSbF#㋉H!+lD|._l4·Cw"Ѿ`pŰcOzTUS!74p.Bbg$: SG[[Q>-xKNxC+221F3sQgNMĸ021)lYh+DOnrziig~}~(SRG>G>ꑠ7@y=d3/FN4sN,K V.N)aʉAӃw'nHnᐑ׼5K} o3UwAu!ѯZ I='t"Q}NuO^w'ϕ0\ZzBއU,' Y6a!zcK"@$%@_+z׻л ̃l3V%x#g.?ǦZ/@.FBtE H1ۯ4F6.ϐJ9UZ]hPQ|ejK>$2Md%L6_ZЎ>P_EIAN@oTޏ2<`j1\ 3aGȈG>~4A&+ED04♍.9jVgQ|:'o/;z,-D@ZP0=_QVȠFss<+f6#q02pzń4lfa$Q -/&C=)pJyoEqӰM!EqV:%I][?7e(brZR\oTbߑ͑ńSK%>)fk E;|UXg`a5ҘyeOGئL= d5bq }0MapH3=ѧvi,{~爂aMdǧ"fH`̀Sy,mAI̷w$u+&(QfGGH +ӟt$:|󶷽 +mR8rd&`-9bI'2܄GeF%RczY,(d>O)0~Qyq;qHʄD!uO~q@r\u ǣpz)w @\iB+eWe*lNLK&˦J.k{ bBM"Vh UU=QU?#1.B9:ְ82#찰0qx븤jxp uSQN-#%5N y`nWej&1fTO0%V%9@VYb>%suzKѳX+*07$'w?aTK&bł=bTg~|j](;|RJf,"cjou[ʸCWJf[R^E.r]ü%fak6*=w,->!Ɔejz~ VUM6]FYU,νI$?բ5QÕZəR< !jӌEN\ad<82?"j udx@Cȿïcqa 7uxPwc( &ӬⵄxY-pFG}>[,BfI"O/˽8:lpkDB(@R'S>Z mϧs\p.#9IC %X=B j3\MagH;GO\*DY\k}wpFiY {hO%t"w[vv /NQs?.>TCb]ӒVz+%TLU?.m-<;,F{fZ"Bl$:|FQxz7c$Ev_ [_Fg2jNv׃je=ao.BBՈ<l!S3le3q^ג/P0% 1Cvf[̮؜pL<<`:U%{> <ƒpŊ똀RMd9%vp1+aU5rf`1h 6`9A0J!WqQ܄H]]PGO(Ě8A$<'oh1 Sb9 L &^Y.\]qfB^lƜ^uB]n7`->‚wL iO^JHGN-UMCSXRm^7զvAkx_c!] K&B5m!jM$&SD)fx{U1y)#5Du5U =[)L{S=H"ldW[,F^~bSX=^,EΝbUIIo\x U6|O}St;ݹ9[H=.=Jo(z0;a:Kh\A`f7GPvD)9D<"njK)vܥ0ѳ0ZR`W1ߕץtXg#lf&(b覢i@T9ǜɵK=1);bsKm M0{?>‘ϻrL?u"Q$X<8vntިWޙ.N[1 F5=]Ȼi$!؄?yh9+ S4AI͎+ W -BJot vS*cs]YfAޡ`eCݠnwG5TVn+~C Xj͔+mD~[xp^7SZױ²=x poUpP|ImR0^]F6 ̪SfdK펌;zGZJ1fNRQ0ٙwP>U)iqc 笠v:VX/?ddd U6g]?eġ'3fljP.&몇 eKæ[;NJ] ՅLc͑a7[_N4?RG@/HBƭwF p}|&P8>՛¨Kl乖ӡR[PNÙ鱏}l t$*9Qg 攺YefVuNPO;bksBO'Vuּ'cwc',6! W7 AUi)[es|㵴$:~6鯭à:##球^6zuumްO< o"z1Hc6Tk:r0=y~'LZ&;p#S&?== ab #aճ`i2wh|e>F5LL*чӸQ8l@G-8:57W( TD5FՔlNJуm;3bMyl$>8ۥ0 5 ^-ՊCwDpQh K;am؂{gjk<,:|3Ո\PYD\+b^px(M S@QPQfůh8U'NhDH<%dnf TqKhYTҨac8L8%b~;ŰPoC y=`3ק}fC[UuPXY^ٻw/\WzrV;]…^LC5RQFq{( )pLե^_$54gz_]17Wt"wXmh˞*$xP!pEH~ 3'\]2%ɨO @rÿc;U>37mdDS(IdbFDH#bܑv8VΜ_&b4\xq3J1*x,) vLDԚ9V_t0j" ,c]~^OH8M` QZ&بLOxOLܼkmR[##omjb)9Y|)X4/s$ǖ'UZAgn 4.;|1a7 zג<~Q%$괘O)msډ9->QKBE F͊.]DʹͪE׳! 9ƨ,y HD8Cı@ ,&{Y$]j:0RI֟ #Ef:2E_bdJfCSkGZkn#b3kl$EY!j;ΓwLiT3YR6")B!OD:6b@d]&ny{4fW"U|fic{ yW_&ɨm8d+Ad^ŚPuLzk.rl, D6>A0z?IBlJ;Ĭ Zfǚnؙ< +v,ovaBgŅ*B*YBn[υtELP9 gPo<%r86~iD?K`g>SF#Cׅ `#(cS[9[o)u[Bd2ݒ`K&+GYd$S@  D h Ku1 zVYhǵe<;6݅ ]aZ+R@s#|mdyzՏj:K$vl_9|Cr/Z7; ' ܊T\3tsi]h5փ"7eפUSj~mBDj\*RaW [9q7>l9 i|kyB5`C9F +U!uhid0=;gȲuU.jܪ s}]iW&(_g6!yA<+j~AĠBBIVHM1u2J\ [~zpyddcYqhԧPPCֽYQ2"@cA*o);RFw(N*>֟Ebu SB z M;$a=;r {pLR`=6s0C\ aΓ+IYCFR GYIcs$,eWT%/, x;DzS҅{?J-TyHT|m@ ~gKi 1D@%sYfH3B4[m(A xBOGs\xgFӢp#ӃP[Q 0MX5wTM-o{֎aRRļ_緮)Ųuo+X8w=p^!D)VzqXtxiҥe:r2َ#BD2H+ju;E~3}`#\ը|3zdZu|У9~Ţ@|8vN S#ţq0RE|!b,ur zw;yp-[_yKn{۪m8Aq֖ Fk‹O\8hpWw4tTjdUQ6OjFi+!bfM#\cώD@O75hnd(,eFjMʏ5~TjTKԗ{r҉fL\y~pf$2n3ըPhxT#ce#U\FK"d9IW)Ti=tRW\BڽҥEH "'8| ܺ % ~K/D/ RuAhg,*\GȞj"=j0B:" FLu 1%ML:!W~S莨%`#_],dSBbi%O Rc0/kBt ΔR.cu40VDl;d!*, ;Ѭ !5]D(FA‹hQ[ nZ6AQ#,z06c6!$_VT8M'\6,!+mG.1d3 =H].<5Ȳ^qE%TU#iĄ><ǟQ2HPL ٬-flm9<ͪ]Ɖ2+'~|[Y FO#E4J.#kZlY5j z/$0sVmceDLQ7"顭| y5&*T>/H]łLU L*騆Y$ f[ es7.T_y;tLqTvֵbS*dVX›@];E"Zu$2fO(vTDj_uf6k+-| }l: E9/?^hJ2hC-sQݞKU 7v5".#ID訡qWX^|$:JdN^.<;2܋A:YT&:")%n@% _\at ./eT6ɒTXG*&r fG1Veo}[#-S d3IU k ']I.)8E%;B 2&Kr`} ̶n4Ӣ:!"NtnB#T sM5\p5 b =- q]完k $!gd7I̙bm8(a*7iXvr#>,,4se 4u A;܂b.vCij?D !Rtށ[r?OBꦃ;ZQ=蠃:ڍx$Z oVdTOl18ao:gEµS vq\$(Sj#zNbܑ)e 5 SZUMo#Toxa^׳ql\EYg񠯌dd׾6FpAxOM&$_ۃup& QˣNסz:v2gwkxF?z/ %gg=K>2c2U%}PQ\B9'V rZO4` J*5Q Ds}BEX0{]fE]<04,!u;\MdK2_ m:d=j:Ցq9D=fĖkJ&%KdtS\Hl^i՗հf>B;QCP;R Y܇CґD+æ]\9!\t:;"-F1eB.Vͬ9)X:R~;A9**?E% pUz-Uบ^˚01,by~VN,d> B>6bX5ad5.7*35#AsMF,rz#vzbфI.O9WCkQlx'pm^GqC-}4{-S/ И$mXm^T{%x)Dbd+AvJlf8/FVXw\H3n]CX[K ˄*qQAFF^snܠOLD6-'1Bט"_]cZE!&Ch'NVW~IBPvC+|T-Li*4C,> i~vd_GBuU)/ʓQ /LM7 +GGS>l,,FܜU>TUd־ )|k80xԱfQ[X j=c>\R%7 6=:wG,o"xg2yrQ_kdI/fI0N6P9k0u[4_U=yw;bN=(2ms[-5UEb]ݛɎaL>ʅ.؃8'!Zr_\Y Kȡ~-X".H^]ۧ R A .7Ͳh)p3vhu3^^ GE,#d1$ցM.vZU[Qrb,P1 2'Dr_k"YH tɘ]\reSŐI16ۢ΍8D/ ̗ bX0*LwUO-H(Y@a&ԭN%J'!JHiG/Dm],#Y Al^ƅ{TCU`>A+Msxu'5mtGv1S5)HY0D }" F|3#J.D@ZldmPx$ꂿV%Y (#V`ڡp0OLLĖ<X|^ JŚjg6.BI!{ڨ]مEԉ삪QUלQ^Oˠ8̼ye5YjbS R?)^k N:QpPX0>B!n= YKu|X$\T?hduS>n3kq8i}]H Qt:n^E`fthR+gl]?<%qhv*4(KG]6~ epq7B)0]PӚ^6II|n1V6`GkP$udJ:K?##z YD1k ?#L>"@ =( +Ǔ};s\^7qy"Hs ?Moz0ۗ|)Ai^wuJǝF:oWZ R sX~_?R¯ PhǍ_ov%yQⵎ0 x?. HEm 2L0솾gohAlӓS>TUį~уoo+}J&Q es0uXAX]Oa$< _m_"LrVTHqG67DBgy΃vrwڑbK5&71k"҆q_LzJ~- sT3F,M 6f,#圷9V!)vIF>`ޥE)C9#ޙLj"#tGEL\ 0A#?ߜBkU( +a x+ɵLD͐)SXPw qfਞIg>./+ ~%o/Z=vBX3eMB*Frǡb{Ю׿,Â{Um4YvcYzh{c 3Z56 cReYaԁBIFc7Q ;TDFSJx߫kԆ#&{0ůگɋW7a-R\ UU BNrĒnuDQ >EAL,H15X/BE(@. PP@CA*d==TtDFr|>8IN8{T[ǯ0A/$*ĩ{ؐ8X3^3fX,TMdz(;rXzǩ/}-.ϬA btD>2կnK H۩E1Ēc%F=-is*@`6FEg+Cj~Ѣ1+Nu'bYAB ZAXaVmC=x\Q+&#}ǒ[.$4-#̪kccUɻL'YU%&`Eq*@<&z1;c|O[W-*Xhd3J'6[DmW4̝-b޽:cW Ry4U,Gtr(kG1xC_בּ؄/rzљ1ͱj|QdNP̊D1w߰efJl6&V~;T>GV6ȽU!QKuz6GskG>R1lS~5xL6N)P;Pr(heJhuRƍk>xR]BA*3XwwYB$邽ћ(bx`,è&VvW EU8Eqۡ;!ձ@s~c_<*PɰZ*}F擋2:^,{Iі;ZH2p0*A~,F}FTE'1#Q( !961BI CK(,эi* L8\=;^؁1V[:HE Pr@].A(>futDW.@keD ͋F}Ppl gu2 °~uC%Ƕ Em@N2h,~pfl*FOA'recig`5 qyT4A5͈Fd2.*/vF:@\fP 2D`bE6.v,/R}9 ĕW^ܻ nӞbН܅-)kE/uw_Fᱏ]?@~ H`-$[eÊK5^2[xXX]`iWFOą>+^@)d&ת3Oy0~}$8;,Y_Ui'5ލSG4% zBp2b[L-bS@#Q[% o!7D1-(Hiȉ0hWej=jGFI \Cu1hwe"~wL~2DmB2@"}ɰW495f,ؘ,IR¢tE[-@'/\"rRD 8ӉDW8ЦgAfͥ(&R!~CdeS9J4$$0쀦jQS'" \}+{p]"Z K8<;u?hl"8Nc } EdhVbyӟ;ꖎ@,qF RMdōfF4faHgqq'}qI^_Y@nQ3CG\b[d`TQSO޹Fi~x}}kh\;qa\PT_&)u@"'mʆQtU%&(Ƌ#Z0Op*=N(PվM8e  3qif.KsY:;8>򑏈6FL¥۸P>oh;A#q#]5)>[H689:皘r[J8zJecs1sc^KB8.IEy;3Fb8Eaʌ+R%N}!n[L>L7~n;-$uܦs4&A@f#YBX", " /#ELjW^2\I5"jVZ~B85gݪzsA $24^YT,3GQ&N OfBdbYѕJWV<x/:pOOŊ":N$iޣb,b+~:G3m .=],<Yڽ{7/ԂVQ%wKF7Qi_i֙W"(h> YMiDwYo::K3D#LG`5!Jj>_\xO|W˪q_ˇMkB3! NTh $}N" Q"= 4/+4JbؙԲd^#ׇ R}Fߌd &j%b%vՂ϶%UQ =+FtGG?TPe׃-p܊𕄵 ~TmQ.RƦ!!ƛu0)+^DUtzk@ u($:_7^l]/:Q_42J&K~eO9#GVnvX[hV-_]iS6 1Q%&_C6rb:8Y9Dt 39*CWUiR:q;XDž ƕ\Rub<GEq:Ƚ% <ȉrjCZGiNVpE52&k.䊨h~*doX5DWjNdC.tMwh;#ġœ ¼QcBBUNɰ/JT"^>ˍ'oWHD m4f)f<%5D=qw ᢰ_ N#[# sy A,ABÌx+yW@+a5 yhQD2l<֍h(Aj<)OK)mUXT TjaJ5lX7z.HOGM3/Äe[xfDpF/j/l Q jK(s (ox'G2UF;̻3yE+Xԛ APi, bI`Ɇxζs&UiO1Wr8?D`T踬x %Nd*)Ĭi5 Pؐl(Aku=. GNCh Q)HDd¨gɻC&ڔ3/R8_-ZiB}'1)_4XZ=H NXE= 5fBpcmb  3"/yac+2wqڔ5$6M5F"'1ֈ#.dr, RhUH4l*ۙ-jh,~###W[oh~eto ~ & xG. ڬ>MD&X* u!`P$}1KtSz&qK!%/5I, 𥕂"SΌK0fCIJLQ;\z*D_-@G.t2pȏc4!Z-;Lb[W.44P"yh&$/Ø o|ғx-"3Qa }{G6c](9!*[byF\^*Q X=|Թ%NI#mov,Yf|"(1&fԆmV5ye2֞ak]! G=l`0Q`tz:XuHjWV5T8$lx@ޱ4O_QCrL^;%nLڰ.6x*1DGDM1Ω/fk$nu!(Sq](c:B H '+( Jʲ"0$2IRl(=z< &[hz .#[],sHҎȹcztWR O *eAM,)bwQ%nS-ӃI֕v$6IZLi e2MH6.ӭ.e0ձ [ J u7)X$ҳSksaeic=:AgLIv2jQOOG&5$e70A<z;y^L׾Ճo  BN9eA-;6_ fK- `>ۅY7QC%rMI2un)7w(32]م4\HZTְc\Y~d"ĺ(G2jzV 8YQI$h|L(ݬu*s$ cQάꙘ  @~ة7L %-@0u)"TDQ)!q! %b'װqco*ɨW̲Y&\l{!Qڙ**QBGL[rvٴBh&ܬM-T .uG ^0"Bc6w/$m&Tg&>h8V4\?x)xpeo;F511h?d^!%d``6۹/~\uF#`0F`@XP+򆽓kfa3 +0DMnf;-BK;T^{ ~MozMnrMv|nf|_a^ގDm#`0Fd;wмy='6n|>4üOr7[rmF#`0F`Vx=+$w`=>~ÜX@VR+ОSc{SO=du A?S-}H}́έ#`0F) |Jwtq:4 % 8ԅB둅f;O \Bx+C۴M0F#`0F#PpA?Q\El~/d[|@G?+B×<_r }_Ņ3im5F#`0F#`@^!yFp|NTwي콒d~K_",l;w^A{i_l#`0F#`0;I6}+7vW A]|$Ezl(g?{ XX " v\j d}D0F#`0F#`#x'9+@HA]|_3(:1D0O,">A;=[p^Pf#`0F#`0F`++C.y&,KqP8kwZO|S+:c}C n#`0F#`!c{"4x*H مV/@nv-%(_駟>e8=c`h.`0F#`0FE`lP>v'B:ɗp#'O>䣏>:6\*#`0F#`0F`g"0WH0zW^ye8tYxFt]U>HJ0\(b:(96>oD6)+#`0F#`i+dr^pl_e;_jkUPS -~B#`0F#`0F +'i UT 2hf8JT_2B "T K=C-;'%ϠE#`0F#`0B`PǾ7T#Fd>Z gkwWA\Cɭiftj+-q ߖK;T̫FgPۙ6 oJY6x`,yT39o&(b'ݑ5&e,H//>P^VlpzsdD`Mɋߗ!lUU 猔P~\gn+_ "c.T1L R kn Mꪫ>OG Qz{E/zMnrR⪌!P.`țBDNVn1oۘj~_1e#bGV2Y}Ll&aSRn9 E25A&Gܽ@IWL zYgp _|[oۻS8yL9ݝ{vwg-=)wmP8)L 5q^f___h;GU2 ` &}cs+ۈxy#Y3' ;~&$zPUԖtH.FS6I/M BVB~΃AĝmE#JytQw<@q$AizD ol&13ohP%X7dc+_JF*F&s\-0el[l_mJr&B ^rzkc5)*fJ4ءz0|xWWWq=?JJag>s `avdlM>E`i=8 Nw\-ǗM71? A_ H⼾GL_گMTW{GO!>J4cy<x{)EQS(udGD*Πg}fd̥Ef1latBR1V;}Cz'C! y8+ eQ M#H Os,|>ݡ8n.//,O#rߕ}07-VH/̌D/C׽uSU; Az#fz` MW/}Kd hVH;z pyx~󬵘iӌ6W ^7D*Rňq3U^2#??g/4~r1rFw37Pt\G.D|ʤpa4Vn#4RWy`W Fr5Е]vE3עFD;1紲/~&j2P+va yI۔}swD۽}=Ax|4/.Eu%{d+|#?gbI:"*+x}qַ`1&T7ec{OO <ۥvYWѤs" /r5G ؏ v 4S1,=X~Rѿ'?9 ?T"%|(??45O,Ci仉Y`z6VuT.!,}FlN׼53 L>"~6X$1\+<T0]ytpOf#ցg Pu<]VmMS> )of}_d YQ  ysATW%-fΪl#or_X3hK-7O4F@~EX2ə : c(r|cD}q>&f+&uʁwyd09 0&«5{#%|@1pB^җ%$ʋd +jV@hg6+(G' #Hsj"ՀV1`HYZÈL0@;A4Q2 Q^|ԧG<[9+]V!)FF5뒹P b<= z#n0UPsQGMPռ%K"Qqɝ̴|k>9{ѫ*> N}sK$r]O|VWW7ggdT9%8ůb}Sx5)EDli޴ڢչ|?Pr x5NI*O6`7dAcg4wtAs)6{%azmjz2Sd4NVd,scK5jǭM=Lw<&EiXy$ EazV-k.U[rxG&WK$P C=b]'~oCgdg]7]\20ѡp)BasQ녬NT-BasZp ̴1{ ?) c*9[:,8#B3m)| IrY|'2:sR{=1D)U\ y"3#6NygD#}:S;dqNL;BQRT oHaH!6o>ʥeBys?}r<ͣkn\6K5}ί {nX 4,DS5Q8 2ϓ &&h#Je'b?&hz(6s9Ҝr0b~OбaȲ'y$7ѯabY>[=oQE40gK>SVb9sQ| C)~,OլZEHά*,iBMNKA"cW}R]L,C4ɯ(fE"{$Um_G61A)@#"i7ߌbB &ֲY<꣩sfɮC"Rܿ^s9YKCHPyeGnU*+DhNķ^UmuY#Z>w]zgX.g9Ul)X$MxQxdQg԰E3f-Np1f цf-IiqWD^p>-ַtPs#)GBGHu+jI,;K^Fmml  "/ U[q̄u7#G\a.: X|5Lu^*0"tS]XZkBNȘ S$QX)4=;wdUc؅ͺKҘ#IڻP )ɋU_e (ė죉Pv\R ',_٘Mp,q+i!sB]5 <nQebu $bc-PP̺h P02F{,8ljT\8WU83LYq?с (!.50ߔd^ :uz}AAa3my, BSRQa&^ `&Ń# N] އiPPv%&䢤mYN -pEOgzcy{̅7JVˊqԊ`>Ä% Y=ԑCcz@0LuP4śU<8b#<53Z-`!J/FW<ݑGZ꨹U%PŲnmCA(*FFQ2vl$2 ۂܿEۍs0E.77 #Ѧ ]2v,XY:]wzVvEzgz(x,dx$@)3\@΋^koTы(ŦcUӏ*\bBR|J~5L d`l -`#RVL8l fG{LNsI&Ez?s= :k~[kwtSpGF.nң„6v}6wzBǯi>y :2o6K4״r{x[loaQ/:]%Q+fcӍ[W@mjXي㏔aCƒ(fVYSQ, _a!\5.aǺ g+c[PDvI"ױhDɂ,V2fsDF2ٳWA[Fi ,Գ \=tef̺.k.2Gum\֕ƛ6+ 7 81'[F$U3^-FSf #7ZntJOafsUB#[F~!]9ptgngND.!EpNJrL@g#r8LC+Ϣ[aZf4ji]k g*;9紺^$E;Nf*؏\]rPpHPk7IܺoTzs4(\`(.on#jcXWlE "#9UnEx 3H*zQTI-k,WNjτ!}5ԛM][&!-,>9昑[ksVh؄neG?٘@+'zc`5 4.6­.tYguep05A%px_NqQB8j^#W%wԢ"sE΢8.Y٘ǓaҖ"} S8lfȌUeUJ[n땴[v8o);rrŝF֢dC$ ]^U(D#3W<'֗}e<Yytk X[ {XrO][뢛^O uj1YYZPQ6 Ϣ؈[QC4-]_Ԭ2qʵ.B%_3  Ϡz4v )jD[7;BTD9䎝"c0ۿ[V[ľEO(X+x3!C#Hf*ۮ WF9/zDMw}`*t/VW\Bct\Ps /kPzhEM+]dz%F.] 1+ J VrP55FAqJ"W[=B*q9R3م_x1̶K{r뙑|<+Sp_Ec:˝ {#<"Fw;X.4?}cv[lwd"1?Ua;2/8tݢ~oK>H[dIox8c+ėT?Lj&gf)Cb*4A0w; ! i̲YFIrKnc"0u v3¼|ӞVgaSþv$brFSFQ֕#{j,1kĤv;7 M7*uG yݍHkXfbo· @v&1qM"//^W.!$SL+,d6] eVEJZ]luYFH[T=҆`+*3B=LsCGFե[i^0KXXz1 +h0>ؼ5!@󗑂Z8qƨěiB4:>cr.8h쑖1B@TqcGYJ1L8lc^ 9):>\2doa}Xj^R4g#%-F4}Yq:`#zWEOy.VB &/&;'7GiXDJX 4.H@_F< Ks O2Zt4zhBk-(&b U-)W9h ]M}$;EwxyqKsF*W IsP^i <l}Ґk H>daVɈ4w.P4rb"=ԒxX P[=7I)N}>:.bZtN#-P{%-׆|t4[BYh֓xʳo]z'*lTO_bL$EWW @xH+#(S楥܉El.SS2eL9ZfE/ c!aARhɩ 3_%#KRFC7UWHD2& iDƫ+d{^!eAB m׸L<S8Hk3Z%cW%njTHrcuSQFȑsŊFmB$St D&-gy/zb~RtqL kJaǍ{;a꟫0m; 1@̵բEM 4_LL =O1uy ޫ_. .|5Q4 WEw L"u7c=kz00ĴlK] eJf0bNX3y S~*v<3.Rս mrTqzq~MEHA ^͡zY9DEH/}ҳL tdK\켕i9#?s?!L}hIC3)9n`'[Q0grFT `gM['v,'A6$1_ .V*ƇuTnpf^gNiU_Pe* ِ!E(F}{_$aFKaZdbO%iF):A i}S/aaM)@*R])RQ!] 10 11c\F\(h>%eJ]y@k;#s4)m2W#]';蠃a/R ;3TU۟뽠ymc< P:%`FfX]@3=^daFj !tPIKx`V=͍ˆkJ(86c\T( (rT/uH>=B[e b)IݤiB~.g&Z fC]PB]Z]Sa;k+1Bx$6E3 ;H,6Wwc4Nѕ/C[>*3.z*414cЬ038@cWV5DA`Q]Fӓp܅U>&1SzT>_Z'%TZik:|bo=bku@1@PD 0FS)@D@(B@6J`@&mPwY}{ r/N { Zbp{JB[t@-NGHy3wlc*Q:Z d&12eUw権Eрf("ӋSkaOMՒ= b@Q\|hܯ"7Xv;R^|NhtߧN9jp uc(?"ZH 7< ^;;RI_KBg*|m Ϟ0+ԉs [J@ViŰ&}G ͬCx҂9?)f6힀a2~~̛kӺШ,"  WqѾxAhhQC8ZFP2ƨޜ:dPi0jKˇ0YXn6q*5=jȺFH'|l[]Ba2)0zD ֩1nWՄ뿶v0**}˩X0;eXv_׽7V.˺C>}߀&Gb= 6t--NjŽQRW84#M@gKx l"~a3<ʻz+oba"A̡›8i eu}k^6 WxPF|ɗ|1! /w`c$`@=aRK" Ap\gXwf*#-h7i ]+@;X_J.:ŰJ݋Ʊ<<$+4ZF¼b̻\*+$}~Y+Z9'a,L;ʖ!`8_b,3&v7+d|RA-m#I&zC~j/IDATڋ=ڏƙ6_AE]Ic vzɐQk7O_Mַ"AB4#}k9)Idr{\w@+2`sv(G 9*ňda-]zϽ7|aѐAA`0e#NI2"7x!B 9 9_"'ل'T2Pcs0`\ Df##c0k8vhe#2*H߱!6jA;꫾ZGX%LJkփӎ+r f"ʛeO}e77'9ZRka"??[?W({6AzOHqQ>c/M)??%>)yjI悝wzw(a~H2uěbH oش(!!)#0mH^6>>--V|w7v̹H:+sA!Y71+v#*N6SB@01ۿ}A^oos^oP0OpI׼5ޮMK~~ XO"47-]C||˷| #w{>zV%#N#VApZHo{{C :Dxы^Dr 1Pȿ(Ihp[[1bahB/H)}qT7ȝc)!TdD7ȹQ KjG/B` %m~yDXMS6=ރT=bLB hп9yy&W#/||~* "sZ$ ]u } ||ǭM}sOnSd\HOOz˷|K*W۴Pa&ԋ,0~`oX+_1w??(G&{[p$݀5D6Gdy j<`MozS 0.3>PC#7Il&ehG~G~=B592*#J 9lKNޔU0 %t9bF\(["dœ:A1Fc%4t"DXc3*$_6<@ A#YɑMG D#{sRDyó=ډ S'cmߖ$iܶ}GQyzifJDP``X6Av=B*ؗcvpFk!(IM-D1V96CWd֏Z> uvb4$p~//&ඈU\,wZ Eg<2f42dϟxp 8SZiԳhEJɋe!8]hȏHg̲fs[E0E6<(l%B" t ߝ@kIo:%У'8˧0;c&(:M鋉 Јngb*$*,(ܦ)8t  | U ?/a[ Q2MAx3+,;/3 "3u;F=;?٤;Ҍ³ w Jݮ #d"2M(nEPx|^[K@ 7J u%KKIQxCB`A DK|)L|oz*bd9 ހ1j#1ۡN# sDe/~q"Ny/AhA0XRI*$p RѬ9D<V oi1ê zw 2! AI%0[YL}` 2.8ٔQ6EH L)|g~ YzDQ1XAA)BI.Aa)<1ò3Ǧ ͑S{6xŷR$%2v ${ ;ʯ|ww3  wZ FV(Ĥ}/!LSpoQث U3`3w4X0h(QN >> n`uDĦ~`*tIMacٟu4:Nh@,9] ap|0p'l2kÈJ2tb͐%4_L 5\"]YI>` "EP 1< 3"oƍXOdkY(# UbQC~+2M) HٓGq5/ aw}w1qKa9/,CCtfVwySxLX H&f*l(qPALA$2T0q|_+#aAәCX$RzX~?Xi`0F^v8 &:n;,P\@c: +`%~G"Y$lf܌FJPqX'>TTNF#,f܇9H>/wE*X@GxcĘD1PHa-LM2 B,ƱPqM&`0#6 Af'! !i1Y۾ےGh!1%> x p^qF &6p3O+$j‹UafQR 0 SH]0crZ"'L Qpr=n-O@ILu)X74?IrdZ8S":xC@P31 jәj@҃S0ÿZ<9,3aGǑ򄳨%pYǬpc9 .qm߆fYH Fv9GPNb^E-&%z*/QhXKW:mi: \ά&!x0K]3Iw Y X4*%W4o. (r]M%"(a7V24k]hqmk(<%0gȃ`qZ6BX.vQdSbcO$4k@"70~F 5vD =) ]L1}Fnd !F<(F_ql@%>U7AP6|!o#@PҰF1h MyLpxSx$(L!5q)5ɵB8o [#)d:w#. 1pmRdRڈAsjvv/4GZ`PbkV?S!0@R0 'bFgk!uCNLF?+CB ŽNF Ү*ߘ/,9M2߈q/τȹv`\K+ ήyIv)[02𗖝YF HJL1Wn|yi-E!Qyc~Y 0 CƋvSe/&>L|Z'^ !%A1=v0S/fxQLoI=cL + 'Y0KpUS90=̩r8eF&+}9CD-wt<>%A V DŽԈTJ# A;؊ T_,l#3/$/Jc*AC@BxvW}ɸB7sU¡#,`%HC\]\qwQs*F`s6rGɣH,u:ƺ ?,k.d#p,6Hg-hT+> yq$,yK-RH{'S\~8*DM7,[ t8`f0L4 DVp-VD(|` %yiIfӉ 7a۹٫F O;& =]XIF8 R9pp6a/&EhvfpIy.y3X8'(bEȖ-@Iҝ ҅l*ɢS?Se㺏гyfyXtjn;"qqjV8JoN,s+ )z;4v槵xWyH!IlB| 0wh3_4 23WHa; *M%O`dC Yel{!(ow/1,FfaV,XqܲvCqiR`Rsb Ohf!ۢʌİM T}i`1}Āc&(A;'m]OuQ"?|H 55#@"x*vOJJEK5Zp QWALhG4y yAfRm*ϴC*D\$؄*iS 8=`A>v _# >1zh4bȳK9M豰W-~B/AitwNKxڹ(w#9 SR~AJ**&CuAW|W䢞xXFQ]Pq4fの3ZәZ%]蛨eeE^I&-'1.hadۃ)'0w'Oof`)0G{[oLW>9/H;d> >x\t- mVEj]l-fz!(U UEݚd& yZ6^X=>K\)4AC< GWlT-((KE2*bL4UP4jaTbE3C)B)f51VH ƻTĽ>/:;MettrM>e0? ƺ_oG5:|1s4m>Oջ(ML(|$nB15"r`3\G`r6G?Ɵt*ٝ))e }hGҠcĬ j3'kN!G*H 0K IaOCb v`}zޯV7/yE~C*:jo+$~ GWj}!<'eADx5tHCg2@ۖ_Ba 9*H)ycm ;2'v^(6OueV~{4 _5K"ؾiBֱ9z!#|pc^z`'ʿ늛X< ߑ`X&z0 $l$^F~4?IӄJZW'7̵MFO/Y{:b YUCh3Mhi={TzT[bv\إ^Ytt"=4G~fs7;[KJ?lO1}⤜j4B|^Ӗ7('dlT(ZzuOތsAA>r!b Ĕ|n>]hIY8Llۢ&~{>!ߌe xdEA >Q#f'bm7}`ȇwPUΒCZ悈pΣ(iW4Ӛ"a܎`S)ctf\GZ ΋~̆3zx{(Z1˜$*29XKQMs0W 8i:JGEnzրp(ۅZZ!?xH=/ZBi{O386uY2iKͳTV'ݦ߄k+!jUc2-{ Gg;#ipdLo%~K=yI.jq])0i(0 IQU{gMѻ"vz6YAI7asxƿvnm"tPf޼8[T¿/ӎPh@v(u'>vŽ]3ψ5SY94iU@pi[ѓQL9xiIs$mc&(OᬇVy'䡰,mUڔg㕃3"߭qCsc58z[̈́TFTX|gQb3e<9 03M3NloqD 㫺 MPWFn\ajfKRq_#q3-т`,)]'A De026PDG a2gH^ѳF&͋k08jqDg+ݣCYPwƑk:c;~; `=X,$ !hd"ۢ6mB hȚ&B?$Yˠ#Fʾ#ag5z/BUmjmji]Ur0dފ=#X7}BbM΁Z orEs`[= ܯ=(Ɇp~b9&~XI=c|5gqεX!OdT'ހs6#b!E[A `*$y'r8Lűw¬ 9襷3a=_[Z3YW*G$]>k *M[`zC#9#d]=cw%25ւmR٦\|i0qVD]XSiwcGMj=?LT[j$jG 3Rm{c"Wa>#c\+nc L4N&%ȁ rdX8MefeO(Bʴ#åm晳1a1~"NOa` Щ%hn.vdX[39 b1ClʎhMa~TDh- Y)Ǧ_o4\ |P=6d3:}H3)“fٺ |k#r<ދs:[D`i?ܱM{1⊌wv^o/@L㺱kEmLny2\79oSc  sUZh^I⥄(׃&8g#R%pLzsH(0z[e?_9~z;j|կ&P| VSxجZ٥i盏ظH{lmD2_It|*lIDkȯcC 끡11{&3ox\4EҦ#Fzi.e s5-{(~Oqu֫{M,kԈ?2MC]4^ Ü4zŵTdѥ*ɮF*5]lkaxT֫f*O }FY)cy8Qeg]j=ٵ8ȞIdZH,Kg|Ixn(v#us7J~_ߓ[#թ٦eHLl '#CvRUv 9ZaM 7.QTL i jW>ҝG^bVlJ0'> d, cOWxZa'\5PXe;EÝh?-~ƀrTr} JF[i(iu4]9H۪GaWye'R3{~/": Hy%AĬ`ai"X|+^ ؃h-ٛQfr ?{0KԖBI ǴY?Ϗ>>n=-tQ"|e繎#H3]` xak'yiDS).8DߝsNW><È{HXO&7"K'H؞~ϋIh#fZ:(Eg&1 SEqֻ־"Bsl {"}I=!"o-RɂvpQL=B.Q&{z$Kn(&3؛"< $;`8+<ǙA0ok6H% `\JMdKcP폢"F}syvu ?pRO͇avNsRgjĘ#`;Y#C]|z iEZ-nv34&X!p.T0=u''s뎑AxVW] boT sɋ|LmKa@d:a3nx'8@p#U E&S0ىrL ]\=%=&v֬ jĨD_4!oy[tifmg//bȡ`qTu/bq~|@|՛#6.Q["]7&m 8!oxg2%Xvh87 ~ӛtFYP11(tf!l9)-f,u^!l4mViL I`wCK6i F\W[@cILOTb9eXp60t`3Ȯ.c &dD<Bl V5mܐPk;}"29xA,$tcĨ2mH(auY{wG~G +bv09g}~k˵Ւ2Nq #U)??6Xr|(;5n+Fރ7H9,3mmt{k)< (q?`iYt%#1Rg$O$kJJ&g6lmZD~k_v 6֤ g WnA♗Qe/蔁dP5|?B_2SvbWpIn < X[W3_m_WEHڄ ?w9;sߓ8_LH-2AXT,p/SoO^'<08cUnn')tsL(]"T ݋"P *R}FӾ8tso6o['7d 7@~IM7P W*HwIADFB0<>Cg=yl\|{r9pk k;Ekχ#kb1;='o=Ë',v23 :9?o^N;ӻ ]߀Κ] e@Zdz3XyǓ)y*ø8yJ;E!!n1gf9> ƥI|y8b K4 vgEqrMx \i ˮGBG뿢KjC֝$*1IEdxچgKR79w~w~HG[@|kh=FsH@6g`KFq>XL~'\0%JhΗ3j- dyM KEH MyK_7~ggoɬ_͛ȣ<@lnEqwCdn5jjy<Bc}R6&N$GyTXDk"/(ZL=R[YPܡ9wJ sҤ*f27 y`E۫V)0ڛr{TǶbNEq%DoTɞe׹TV܌1>[֫ VcNd݈'wa<*}uG$IbIo6^Qe,ZOS2$yp偒@~ 5o6o5ǮEv!% }L1bHF( SR;.yMAh_dz2C{gႾXǼq!t[xe1W6_6Tm̔$Ik sG?)l5.l[ т!ѯ=ٓHB2TS/761kc: K(3y%m$F r?6flީL8B|oVCX\٨jk[FWY˜"0h}ĉ0 ]hW5}3U`P4n}^J){0:/Ӯ!W]ڛj(Mv|YF6EIhQ<^^ ȞX\,9`hoS֕fD 팕Yg`e4b!H{IV|wƵF#@=y1;Yi|뤹0TW˦Ʀ0[` 0BY #^\^aghyQ$Yq4$:6JaF/MP}/n"$Ym -uOOe[QpuFr\kF& 饔|BM&_ˌCOȏgyS)Wz1]$0g$;lMo;A k,@>\wpZ޳{fgHi$M km/hʫe(#@Vˇ C6hhw6ǯ89uư]rO T\ ru&f|C8~X)ײN}/JnG2 tjzShW';es[!˅HnP\ 3=x65jKy[AE-"2Q\kZ&&&gy L̏m\ SI* RHւU7Ot32B,%c֕9s]Dh fFσe<'SRCҌ=@UTU޳l}_n=oآr*vy0KsV,a7Gxl _VhC:xq'㥓RiI ?4+[#-;Y?=3XM9󐍙ʫ*m,Ja DsM>k2b4ĥ+M-daf*W602FVvH ;YS"F{8ym uoZr%&-{/$":lLj.ZG#\@scYGe?'J]4Eu 6no/awQMaLۈlB#kڠw7/Bv j4ix;zFn01|xكVZ٦T(9Z9Q^ xc83 3T*3Jl`tw`ʽ'iiC2ڌjQ$dK1l9, ߑv3+Qjyna-.[o:sDakVn a_GJŞC3fBބʺ I4.hi?^$Hw{W/qGN-azkZ~; %5G br5_cMpi'ƶ0x1SRw|Ag7d3Z./oOa,WG6Ɉm*WS{%~Tu(H-wkJH}hdd/ЦHx"Ut9кaϛ92CxZ*8,k.lqNDYR1&nSypSqM!Oʙ˓R2,ZO,Ceꐔr;kM7ٳ%oՄmQ߬/c(RȁhZ;jj5T{q.walF9i}|} [6A=~cVjկ mD<翛J݌nFt\C# !6~ui?r ҵ njT9/9Bl}?M !ӊhHbD%/yˬBd)0tX=$]~5gC'klXjDhSHEP8Yu7C&Q ` K(cFI`W1-@NJ$Gd/|F`@^tV33ۄQiVj1W4B&r^Øs&c+a#?^օqp:ɘf[·E)r6ݍ?VT:_ f;Q in .jzgRގIo$0 )wwh!kpNMG"7˯M5RC,<' `0` T#<@nfgA.n[%9tNttur=@&B%NaRrR6 CT6/mWn/,%{`dnS%(Lď~!r襝ы>VHo]%]>ʵI454i_ob4eєoMYe bԡYvCxc"qWZO]s:l/{~Qcaj^ _ fO6gp Y1kX6=+#b mE#A9{H 0p*ScCP|yH1ɺ B|Lc>FƈѾϟ|\3 jFr 4hnYihI}n1OmFWRQOu9Riْ`.m8Ũ+V0|ɹK91gn澉 d = <[ _&>xe0fbZ38. {ӎy4MYT:n)^ݿdE gs g4BD !]ZƮ!Q+.t>v 5u #LϝؠHw5 *ZW>MA<4iKsxa$d=:JENys 9P8oW5`pÅ毫R>usbiG9p=Lq؏~6%09ElV(*@9 /]r։S_6Uii^jI@0sFM(|pݞtɮ^S8렆#A;(QI=kȆ0DtIl6-4I r=mj@G鱍Flu90heoX=z}%6ܡ͘_Q`\O0vyt yCO!čqNjH~XEnL]B>֠?1Oqe'Sr5[V^w^4ƇVyTL⊼lQ5wCfzH*D_E_^EQNV06y C>Bb [?`ZWMO&idLL_){fǘD^ӵ< 2 yn7w?YiV|li|)@ $%=<Ÿ%}n4bw=Hb/0Zm.R4'/,jRpyÀad)ol Me@[/N!aM\bOO--LG475y zH='v\{nL4-hPo|oN.LP,~'|B[ȗ>5%cOOc,_=<Ѧ>xӛO{}xeMUPooRA-D'~'ZhAjĒ؝PѠ*gfH  Aˠ>*Kxb5SѫCLFN< mT2/'@"  $Kd@}K~,F v`_'d$@G[9gTܤ+-xGM5Q>OmK&7Œd6_-0 ^g޽{G ߏ2T25O LAV'K+ P3>3fs"$XPPAPhQ^{%ovogX ??C?CEe?sg_U_+~ſNwh1ŘM菩tX[C洋 R)Vw$"Ky;;tc)6"nBDjC(+ P<#Dbc."zx&Tu 6_Wh z4Y'](~ڧ}ZAn aF2iNDz ?XVD1@gTd'CP!`Ld75T,A 2ogvi!]mm ^>4maV%ۆU 2HP/J-7ct_5(jI -IЙ7tTt#APG[ m|~&~kA=͋G?ԋ&" 7=d p~ / I ;-S _ALJR ˰*.=72hd 3ҍ!Yf E y~B' v'e,g<ӧ|ʧbl|)$5TEZt>8h_I='tDZ\6&fi ea;%EZ}K rF'w|ۥ7| UNH ! G|B:pT~!5^^&.@%9x@UF&%؈`0;UIt0 _AxжY6NNaԄ<Dh3unJ7<q,S:ħ_ZZP7F08Ml  \eTu0dG>f.5MJDۜM 1Zs4D@ w@8&\n{D _VZZ3o~)$M%%Vd8PR:@4RA;>f1qT!:τBlfIX v^ܫmwd1aE.1LЀ۾ # у 7j9['!6rlj &wA.k2j$~ȴ'C 3(BNB%@m_! G5\*9%zWCj8ist`@bBF "8ٲqi`LzrrCT(:-GLքBezƖ4a17`;hww;BA,o*T,EH"8FXx|zBhNvI ]'Z 9_,<5m&iK]V <5EB"S@^&cD|hʠ81#Y' R3*ѨB}1nkOԭRN eCSrlĈsL/6ìZ@+f܆3 jƑNEĉ2x>7>f!iV{h06bLεkV~.FuFEyHlF١nv1pA(1XALky-?ko}E`P`Q A+HE2 R)hiJ^ah$W_O3TJ##êƐyL0yFa6,99V@M!.Alp2lP!쾤$wU/s062ۗ-* E.)0 &^# n"hب/FꞘ-3W땔d+ڪ7'DF2!θE#ZC < RXL?>'iS`5ԛ eخ}QyQ3P#I'$2HQƍZlh'w~= PFaazܼ{8/D}̥_ eDeJG)?~ GA{ "0OoHԕ ^lTDȮic, K{Xt@g~-UE^NA R"e*vM)ԛ*Q_{1=J֋~ #/tcMO$ynHNٖ1KBiբwԧaT%Xq(tR`( X8?4W0;DPجFKK/MCtXb2_x) ku49w*uB<¯m>?K.SÐ;y7aC)`S|aI&b׈ĪPr.QƂmF,$7mά$&Ga4 lb1]Z}\bh&="۔+G2Z[+uIwl1T>ثAvDS]ġtÄ- q6qD`t<툼/k+r)5<>Ƃto4܌@jhrPֳLS< I] rj@dS$~E5><̓0mաx< &Gvl nɄёP`,H&*{H:3EGr 6¶)̽gOR-/zыX+>w5 ZiTmRKDhC FҺ  ݶZـ9KaVPqq? @ ]L\C:f9\ƝG$4Sf}p,_]'*Q:q *QQ,d/v􅴐KB}ֺ?[a0e%lS%j2+ Oa (u 0%ϰFlRz>*ax f BaI*GsƁ-S(!\__9K!J Q 昘22+:߃uI1u#ĈAmug 4VW m'dEŠ؈}3O @vYt@mu8䬁{HLI3|ś6#nk6xslm7ȕSf@bv4ޛeS` t;B E63Ī3:LGȝm:R ;7\Juϫ_Dj 3$^yk3Ҟv809 [hɥ3˻0%+UP`C&SW^[%ңgOMSϋy`WM`1SbV>p+[zF xDԄ<"ϓk ې $lhŸvفDO_Ez*hQ ~9Ro7VQah:n( .W \ C?+ P9qZxH~\Z1nc"c`%ٌ6tak3DZv!9RWu[Hm-Q,j`z16@ 7_k9f> |P3_TP{UijVnڍ! M+;q)tiU(Tv ӝ_K*;20 "B6h(. Y c@hy?.xb<}Θ f6::.7M7|c\4'XiR~fdH//vzK6^֋D>ghp4gx2 JֻUf 7 ٶ*zX@r`G-kkRlecpgEKWMV˶ŗZ ǒ3l{F²FgXVuߴ#BV˛V1:sR7Ukaٳ#]Ǵ䞓rqbZ;"/BM9Ze6g,0R6r,-ʤ/H Y(g%y-%fW6Îc`F{s>k#x*i|\q| UZWySYhEE~rDgL>azشȶlJ> 릁!9:,s-a!'9'?aY|5Xalv2ͦX4=}ӗk˯2=ڔtR I$2E[fY$,&72).IY!U;ZSX08=p(7~q4ޚ6H9gʵհo*&U[1W?7X xŎ+=ٲRl;)=4U.Q>(l sl&)B! {Wh_쮛 RB"*{OC2!:c9_w}\F;oth\cytf@[H6 oش yP*vڇjg6%'80iק 3&+rC.svr:qFӞeq?)7.WhuTAs'+pt{P!n*= 힟.=1z7ǡG{Fy8JbjͦqXME=]`Wug{pٛVe8&]"}2.jzjl/vv'!(f? (u1Y!jE/zQxk"q~:SLm#_9ȣ*v^Η\]yh|KCuk.x.2%/VXqI__ 4YBlck9Ex;C=!m^K}],pm(m.rdG'U73 q2i~PfGO k.vR>!? Z,Py}5#oNO4ce?;b^nϖ\4We"}QnXGSϘU*/| ?řd^N;SYK?k_Z [ƾ+_%;SN'0h"!Q$'OwVr rw|w sw ^EgLV(H 1[3kջw )pw 4XK&8?w )pw Jկ~5dOwxS`o xzgLV(VL 8ϤP>}y?W<%SN;Sc{||nw )pO/ y+#gq#)F8w \KOg2 ,SN;8Ib,۽؝w )pSIȐЬ21$0V3o(C>?=u)A݂?gZ/6w}<ݫ)pw XWߩtw )p@3 Z9jbGĭս3YAA|;<g= aSNM p؏r*̡`o cn3IENDB`$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl  t65b pS$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b S$$If!vh5b 5b #vb :Vl t65b $$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :VlD  t65i p[$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i [$$If!vh5i 5i 5i #vi :Vl t65i DyK www.claimscon.orgyK Lhttp://www.claimscon.org/yX;H,]ą'cDyK _http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41yK http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41DyK >http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdfyK http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdfyX;H,]ą'cDyK Thttp://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/health/23case.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=holocaust&st=cseyK http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/health/23case.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=holocaust&st=cseyX;H,]ą'c6+Dd h.#b  c $A? ?3"`?  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~Root Entry  Fsݸ Data ?WordDocument |ObjectPool Ppݸsݸ      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~_1306591437eDESTPpݸPsݸOle CompObj]ObjInfo  !"#% eDESTAcrobat DocumentAcroExch.Document.79q Oh+'0 ,8 T ` l x,A REVIEW: HOLOCAUST-RELATED COMPENSATIONCONTENTS(1Table-}uSummaryInformation( DocumentSummaryInformation8       !"#$%&'()*+,./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghiklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~%PDF-1.3 % 1 0 obj << /Type/Pages /Count 1 /Kids[4 0 R] >> endobj 2 0 obj << /Type/Catalog /Pages 1 0 R >> endobj 3 0 obj << /Title (http://www.claimscon.org/forms/brookdale_chart.pdf) /Creator (Win2PDF http://www.daneprairie.com) /CreationDate (D:20090615171141) /Producer (PDFlib 3.03 \(Win32\)) >> endobj 4 0 obj << /Type/Page /Parent 1 0 R /Resources 7 0 R /MediaBox[0 0 612 792] /Contents[5 0 R] >> endobj 5 0 obj << /Filter/FlateDecode /Length 138008 >> stream x\K5)-(jv~n߰0!_D:LBH?߾퟿,Sg!C=C{~_z?ͦ߁G:\5>~t jx ~[/~[(-WDeD- o VU(,@U_}՝X҉Rz}R%oU}ErDÂo(gkLOҢ %XJZM^QmCGcWc=JkSٿvk"U7g[OQͪ߉Ɂl?G\ܛjcg{;-TN'xVs4j?!'^=xr_su!5k'G6N_)}^m^}s;JCx1\ki^ӧ9[V>Ct1JRG[wuKuls=cV7DwlnmU-i W"IRk k溅vo *nk NSv P1DC.Ӏxa?u<,yD:>)`3[>L\{rRADG T=;?zQ% T1uc|/ʋ,? ƽֲDOm!J-p% cWA+ka2F:g-iݢrHsrcEZ% ~7xeSr1oejp>DeU `cW_|rB/'F0pY3~Pe~:5+SiF5J ;;9ӚCJX`{,I3Tr4R$r=qC'8|=o_"d zv#Nzu$~˜RرF՜t$UI:$%%:,K::)$ u'H~,Oв^5+G^WZˈq7V%K<=TҞ}R.`#tqGDx>V}IȿWkZ[9I;御U*EK$W=? )15>ps _D]SZēx-gƗnmWOx=c/t(bJO>{ZS~?]{Cy }~/U5_}"4Yd(><, ֥=K7[ѷL5)!J%D1%%zԌ3'ކY#jڵu? XҀt5ܹ ﭲ{XBWZq5rPWoqkw;S4ܳzPȵ?xMy>>g,ԑ -oR<1չ]*.ۑV}z1HIi5'7)_`ڰaBx[ȹ~?rwjLoZ@]'I1S=d#F{(kk=$F͔$ΘO÷nՁ_`/UJ@l99_` gP;,?F B {zyk)|~SWQJ-tG Q=#zǵ=ڔpOO߶\g`Jf3x2iqC$2^? |b*oվ#dߕ+N-;8"h3-2_f&^-_bѽV 2#m 4\:}lTfpz%}h 8D ՟2ZĒﮥq4ؼw7q{Fa|%8 +ďc(,\JPWװm.s,dVs h7B6Õ~\뾪x|_[zTQ4 .Z։rPj'j:9CDChq& S<*DVWp?wl+5y޽ۢqF.bZ\߼{< ~ea'٬YvalwCl<1`glתJUN /٫ U-[N8s55HfCNt!ۣ\Г}>}m'O0R0:bTCD' B@#ч? k9{ICCMvJObjI=k>rWpU}H!0-d=5corUOa?A䮬 CQrwׅ|-'- ] UR2j/Ace6,*ޗXs_ؗ=l?쵱Mz+3-M=G%U^lU WSqAeXOR$~*}ez:WS{lZd?o9Q䠥7l5Q*s߂ [Hu*b:y4+eUY?#=\KC^wxN)e_4r~vut?Y]ڶR*)? bCIʪ!Tnl}y+6/Le!廼PfH~LPgqw8~GpN%w^Y OE{ʃJilZRP)ާ 7I%so $)\NwƯO絭\ݤb R6 jU@{[s5Ȓ87z3NRRZVQfKvj\?=3ͽzWecn=6"-N[|\-pu y򸺕/1[ѦKE/~k,hGnyru3Ol S򀫻SJ{YP)jOfv{|&'pxN`OU=SڋXGUZuz`1زC[͙4oא7ڧY&G67Ĵ=VzHڛs3[Rnԥ S ە67@4@*A`) Dn.x8$j} M [u62~h ڒ[GxnSg tM߽]Kդ|twƉV|jVR{)fڙ%Y8pWسj3?0O(dǑߘ82CLZ@>^x*y_?K&>͐k\c@ifs8jOVPi-Z |Bk{C S3e6\ʉp"0|4K ΂={hCbrOMq/a+x)`n=7j2ou&p6@p^Pc!! G,NBVK/xX3'+C`_&-$1:}N6pNNP~Yk_ޒ>w+2}GO=juؑhlXgƸgV5d3-{kh@\KK1(_9[V4c/U[YH943N·K͹5j9;U[G%B-'GDQ#`J)Q( VG.ާ<]O{nM:b}#`9 =Z(z{:*8 -d7d yRP6=l+(=-c(ƹRҨM7=*G;=XQBwRYzԓ%/I#L,~h=kT{,EH u\1zgm~{?"NJZVn "fiaūLc<i_ jtǶ}gSaYV3-JON!g{mϴ9b@spljljXæw@[OB%bד؟\ZPSD.ǰ s'G-?Y+)W ~dIJKґkeOu3ڙߎ?P>D>po13f"n<|Wya_gz߮:xVt]88zVV/NyՈXU3Wf 溾 *hgZ 9-OwȖU gESVn_Cg逴J*KHF'#j{ikݲKdQTv<:h6MtӤoLN)'v΄ߗcV*qFvgAC6x8E W{WaBM|޸{j'?_g0s+hIʼai7rE; }ڹ2~'5oϡyy^.u`>#I/p2_`Տfϴ8'6iO/K5a)N{koyw78> ?|<ۧ0{'e'T~tt8KtӞ72N(%Dʹ-q ׾fx'MJovz=d iF@4[fgx_92j#=lD@w_a6w xI~N:uAPQ@ضQ2K E)/8z uR>RsWwvan|PV?׮\7sOد|ZivLysX.Ybe7D ^" D=OXuF9y 9O!2mn {ե&WyfIZ ɤ'C<~83=_7}T 1 p`|ea'TV7w?e;Q?Tz 8#s̨+H)/.H91v h.N~LaeWYy,$v# 3?[|n=G9Z)ȳnSTڱc&8z@'cUʙԏ}9fDvcl_<=diT8#{e=QlI=,o 3+-Zׄb&io>fRwx76Lya&'GהK]9ÃG +"OnfRILR$znFʸ3qHR`5ե$_ ~O7bKz 4#oǙԗmQoW?O0|{@8-@u6-5eV{$gs^~a19+^ۚ k8rTV{PTh\k9W%h[D)IΪ6M>͖SiBt QNRyHϟ/TϾf 򵥆EsLvfQN3f:0oN>6ںi9W h*XBngUޠ9Sh޵i;ߔQOO83긭4)yѪ5|[zW^!;g钵{W=kru|$c;m5rg/[% F#"f(gӊ\.bqFhQ ]nT8aГu\ld =̀6kDڃ+fNӎFcHj?@[˺z܁41 dC{+")U2JA)@4[msFVYz֓zv%|n,q((DEĊZӿ &3ʙęm!;n7w#܀sG[Fp@zjM7|%lx8fГ m )+o_ʭ <5W}|пAdHʠ7:agD-;A OO|m/KA= Ji(Uȥ/ٖ4nDy3)JWq[O2j*aZ'QJao%"쳥zs͇238+=|r aO8hi4}qW떧{/6.׌cd RX$ޓC|D~La/QkERD*{tK[Gbm+fMa/B~ -Zi;?i8q>[QL@Xˇ٫ȟH|ktFҭM?3|yƩ7J#jʝq$U JaTo YM5! Qrg2{6%lϗWG?l_{ܲ?߹yƶ5x] u> VpZeyaꈨI~C'K) ɳs d`<`Km{J[Q]?q)FE^cmk/Y+SqZ;^UgHP^9ϋcY'+MtaxV qyg|.E-׃esle8]NQJix yZlkՈJ/P'c]GݶBZќ R$/cml݄;;=p.ls0ï+g\~.EoR;φ^WxOߘA1fy?zWPň-eJ|vi݉myn6b>4Beu*B[tLEX!jJ-\.!#8bY4?E,Jyf6Ev<9t?EC\8}~tIB7Lj`g{Sn |=|(1̛15 4[q0jN=8 YJ^՘ v +ߝm4ZM~>#bS*=$򠮹@ QwSʋy/?#ϧuYGL~CG{R} Gg?!{`ȶs撱ԗ"CWOqh_瘳#](BFO;1Ш=O>gh'>M'Jq1<cymy1j5bMF-y1:sz'| ٪cЃs^obKeO@oNmhgy1jǨu|Z3&A^2pR25+O>l E@{x5x̺q-%R?JɘQCC}F8 Ol5Vɫ){F7*R9ZU#&nwE$g~TqA>ClDebT Ȳ.E)OQҗll+W7{zwƕǤ]\S}&nҷ'[mTTšc.:&ZPWP}Bu^8(|sK>Y>ba[H]q)ghib V1B\~֑V(r @ѵX*!w߅ʭJ+T ~0y8xGj{ӗ'z wVw.tܣmY BxYީϥȾ0=bW_Aw'F:cPOiY#KEƠէE@t ^mM_ ӝ /Lh^ cIzoþ0]ޞO_nOA Y,` ث4 w>(YIHN_r)%aV8H}/LKq))GG31txf.=7M'A(s`tZָ){4U "7mƪVwu>wߒ3Y^aggygoqgo՛ol.V2^hKq{45rq(z /.'ڈ=5YSD  A9Wm-GQN- D~Gcwelt+ra"J=5|*p2R+cj'iсW Mq\i??bD ;[l\nu Q'm` R'o %p$},~:Ȋ?.VzIXdJn 2# }<g@C˱gӫgTB-q1x$EۃАVLc/qA6m}lgg{ٸiWd^M~ 5;ʷ^186ܺJ8-!ZbfYA1;(,-(s<8z5~EW%{HwZĿ8FPH; cyܟ ǎ@㎄m>"8MAwob0bд=&cЄ=04|d,ci,׬g /~J#ڏl&?ٻ4 Cw:UPԄ&)v{PԜ;0ͽ?u-,x]kƗ&ANCX%߸sIH%r'I.*W]ywE2ƄOS?QբZj9~OsS9f򁠎O#$yA]KhylB61YGmq.yqʋ`eiex0T-X tlUVn޵qwvUw9uI\k^b{:Xh%-BB2o}"~R~R? j筫ScL ZjB Z"o(mӐ||3ƵhajBcRC0prqpq̀Pd Ab%NjZjT=h Sw#{pH𿘫O)486R/ 6bjJS$FR,~- x~Czld"wo)ʁTÆy\+=$uTNie{ZkM?H5n2sl(=oڅQjW4{޺x*Tlj]5={OsR_wTN BOS+N;g+}rG5UK!qY؊w~QiK|$<Y7-(KOmE~cޠ\f&qޑ;{9!9a}g%Q][=hמ^_zAz^zaR[L/}D uTּ^%}~h{{k&ܽ;x5{syAw˞z~ ]ḺP]V3}syDĖoMy"s1ƓƋ泍16>tc~䬓slP&۷jۢABJGѽ ܣ12#Ǒ =4UGSsk~-2Ѿ/ O'ԺU !қO)tV\ܽ$/ڠO)Wbh pT+b/wDŽ=kA3l]GaLkϓ7= +{i.ymׅ!ַ%_6ZhS\q&w, ӂƷ=cgO(Ƀ$I/}(cUYO,cksؠoq? 6VAQFީmM0p\9~̕WMo%*\艤wڷrW8T2=~'Sc =2C^Oy[)ߤP;+:)CnjH3ywZ١ l\[b! sU2Q4ε QK)5Yt#B[뵓xcC/&iwԌ|!>>)(w(z?W]o9nugh-uRNX 9°Iv!evK,+#P*w(' >(^y_K>F$4O&G^?,1ʻ1sMt1.gEV.Kzf^߭@vz q0~iX}Rys_7 =yb6Iج^D#4۝\Rkr#$E͒;tQ>8%)^JRa%:AmπA&%}`S=V@fe:=Ɍu|Q87MGhX5SRۥ7C(fO]@-#Y}6Cj3zF>гI}zIɜitzDGY'ⓟhצ]]}!<_G+K1oU4iFFcשkSi?$qѷbNJKo'jd}}{&i ٪}pj=;zcE%lY5{jh}!=ı=4>>ΪO# UwW^cWTzkMʥww?FqR*TubF]46BP_ᰞU7wG \ZwבX?1fuؓ(v=Ek],iIâ Xڈz =B\穇Ӈ+3Q),C*hڸ8E~pQw|g;fޯwP0STagx4,@ z˱g)tBkj'd]xQ .ŒPo-׹ڌKeY.]AK.d ]Y#xPz4^ߵ h"詏82mS N6MKvзx/P%/?6S+lFU|pLJ.w?B{~21o=U%Rc{ryl6e%KcO7:Uw1OUQThtá_bG9,ܶsF6REȺ#T˳b-A;`EMKsgƮ07PO -;sA1=-$0u9y/{QDZIKatȝ-ch/5{尳:8Ko`X]Fs/PI- yZƌB:7|#5򲙾ur5JTs.aLmjnYxn+\g^zKB"F.9 {` fR A((q7><˘Jb-ģB3wp6kpfFJJ΢RNrfڏ풸cAnxk*vFB~lKsv rE8-Aoszh0oZNPe;6p՟98OH|:޲ڜC-}o![m\8))dSF [JR-d8~ЇȝGv'=g#fTl+ߗ(֊}9ۖc*.5ƺVtC%Vs 9* SiAK)1Ba] >~'oŅfJcH>$:An3̇surukЙ='Uػy%0=NCL;`ߋtd9N* u϶! oF%fY'tfrgqOZ) yP$;3QN:ҙ53\FK>{Nښ~cc9Y%Ϡ|bќU|u3|w$t3?3;p= =r3Ϡ3ZhS'/̽+ϠϞgPGoQv 3@K}8QZN&[3c7y\}S=7Z_3#'f<J;?t_#qsz<1={-gK3(CP/#}\ǴUWQ<vYy WvuQs}}nLwaiTM"7gx&D*!b}tX>-tj PѰlw&n+%wS>5jFi/lǫxO0 >Gy-廹DEӨ* *}#F -,8t:էLg&aYt--a-#[ϏߥL {c?V2wZWvsXQj4U'ƶ>-]t׾guRV4.5G^>l 86e}1\+u㜂$Hqg+d›dYO'fE ~ "c>C?jֆ~[qp~eV=Qǎqrn;Xu)(m>vua73 YYZmM:LR[N=x@3]XS(J_Ͷdd^޲&^e!Ee~<]@G{ gsQvž-wc4Oo]Hߞ;:7}>}TK;g};|~P)7c9[V(û(rs+wWWjF&|&WIjPoيT/EYoQO3v)$.%m%r|^1rJ).>,<{QV*XG/Pc=G=VbTųɋaV|TW|AiEȦ^^ԝVzA.e-Ϧuɻ^+ l│? 7 CM˾fj7Qj nbKKJ/H4C\?^z]ghYK;,-!{mIyu/_ɱo[REk|^K'z+ z>l[uɷ૴^Y7 ax_,u9t&ZoU~L wu R\W1}( 'F۷gK;޺ދgZDҗqjQZĺ,͌UװVf+yG YPҗ~)QQ6fhёP(dM/@{ե9ctދyrdڧؚw3ׄ0 Y'gOޫuJӕOj!+bl{>l$8zp`ClyhK.25N 3i\QUޙL[WK>koj/+|‡'eB^]'¶VXK+kcW^}hL aW\"9z,V$d˥'X-\VIZJXl{T>^ݘ*eTt3D$nD͔lٰzp݌1ۤt3zHQ#S*A"G)-Q#g R5mkrñ/yZf.g:$}-ma HpzKL=QԨcc_:JF]%&35#֌&FͦZR27PO2 L_LFUOn6@*&taK_@f7zЪeEF<'K/xz3C#WPާs;>rjhݽD߲#.m oג4qIη|:"g؇m~bt*NţBe3'@Qb7n6RS9D^PYuʒ3(i;BbyQ;[ L[Μ:Q-YT [>Z(n3#<*gOE<]kGZx2ry}r6[U۴׫^_ު2حVz&hеڢ| %,Oc:7K(4̦8W-|5onobCjjŸyWOWzRߨi!rWj1bLλHSvšbU0vPRklGm_SzyqjdZG_9[ݟj ZhAM#{UXo)_anaF܍qY]H;IUR!q` Y!tN5,[Ho>Z[:)5gRDn֕YIzUS m0WPXîRf>%]%@Ai(%2zOK.,Nbuob _iUh7Z?]91[M/4IyymjaecI&nkWzN>Oj D ;8s if.~oͳ~r;! q f [՜`6HI5D!v4ʘU2\RW/};ĹB}a0uIc"WL]S}^1Ϫ@5}W#%|d6J\W_9#:>c&Op8חGk;WM])Oc/Vev0Rvu9w0AQl;Ds@a@K5-a?f_r,sE"t*} *O"ԭ\1"@y1 Yxӗ`ʲuwƽ]3<K S_Űm<{?}/ic;43~Hc8~2\Xk+*5=Gx9Zv4 ht y)h xRb/1{n4Sb4r<;8c;kl0 s0_-t5}>0+ͼ۷nf{~)Ee7eHa3A5>GWm><,ZiˤY1bz O;O1*E' ̮ܗҴa}8 =g>F*Օ5Uɦ־Y #܇8da@3Nl)|}*('?؏f2]ڻCޣg8~g! ߳u]y1gs`̍U*c^Y ڌP=r];~F6^h\C d-dmU\bRRԞuIyG/>9Oj3K9gIڸ؜s%FC9DtfRs0K3(H,%̇ϼg1+ۆ55q[^ֱmF;AMo~UMܺ/iBg]~-[S'\'M< ;Z'3RG71}m0uȫ*I>V4Px0ZzB{4HeňUKD#^jܤԓBEͰ́TU>-}uU) gb&ȷ1rkVxi8HU?;K;KD+21 yPm/ӾHrI9O:Ky>6 "G)*Ș+jO;gy,wW-퓗qĚB̔S^R}&=;/Ay {\ּe}&hlT.J%M)Jʗ 3̫ s.G&cƓqV%3e9#,,Bpl(! 3-r ˂Cؗ9 aR )R`ZjC6'p ?qarj>Y=`7Guȿf+kи#ùMi+892QQL+7aΐMy@ i)=ܶ{8DŽh{O\g18x|PNjgomGDEC7m"5α'٩|6N|9VFJ}`k a~2}X}urͼۃ{XumϱNO-+s$>PRTH?޺}`eo".嗖#}Y$"?9TVL3BK{׼̱͛?H#6֏X5xgX~ez9dSoJMQ(zWP5~A[Ѷ]IרJfѮ3hL8bž?)aUB_K=a#r-Cgeуsg 2goq= ҍݞQ?5gˋ7}@|Ȫ O i\ ;3h y$g̠RR؞7C~883JgThQ-[_^P*Mڲk_ъm9Sר}غ<I֨}ƍvD1.$y'ޙGtTge j4ȸ]3F!Q;_Z>TZhȢ)U4Y:z޿=_h.< uПwuh|,gɲSA+#|''7y܂4h,cqFͨ?[T:۹tc3^ >nNJؾ,dR򰳔6dWsp}mxc)%㓇W' A.#!KfmXIXJ2ΐw¡z}yoG)%n_֨Z䮻_o+zP,}R[FFŽ>đ`42>yYR.3"!)a@w'ٕw1K2n#K/NP8>Gס,Zl.u{WOq.<]ޥGӭ,x'xFid&'ow6[>l_a?. &ӂR3}Nehy~%}:~,quG ]wv |kge=򪮣-wA^jwqPjIPSx(/S#k9T)YIe=g꺡]>_Uބ"d K[|+&dnW"6S7dgFw5xr]o D\FB6ԥq~1/%O{0^WuL8W!q)3=ʄD5}}A]ѐ"Q5F%}`g2}>jlE#}5;1= yѸ7d|ypg$vEY5l;LٚyCskh}nv{ '9N\!9u ',=21' Y|Us/ǂr֗2j]IbgtV~j`8:2s|SF<;w+1e1fX4C;ZGT5.#p9 ˄WugKUʉ9|"}*vڌ)q7I[+Gw󙕒1;\#\r%uY3ӟpLqAIϠq]ϳh.P,!+5\@3{^'U?=+*RD{[l5{Yeؿ:,*\ gIL/: }=;.6jvl$~1zdUMU:̀gSz_q:Os=.=^bϵ'@)" ͽk1*#笗q9D=^ | y۽;QfѠFv#~4[jQ-Nf{q,jajHimf{gS;h'qH"Ou]6KDY%)aw40tOhmi:_ͧ\7MȻTl7YOokiwR0$#O'ls-_ZiTE[ު? ikEͭV^m-ʌc,`"{dAǗJz#*R=}I-c,M>Z zX=+xVI{ƝshE8 { R+e^Jk'[;B+j;̶eQڎj:9!"_H^8WWk8N&(Ixj*ߴq3hb84&?kS5:EN/]U|RV侴j~XU%>O6X.鬁;"ɘt34ns5ǽU$CThZmƑq-sZ,Zm&mDv vR4#1٪$輗CZXޏ@%fTk2UC?AApe_ZGSV;1㭘̏CEs7짷j,9jf<%$x X`i.G- [ <2"gرk<" <(/RƐG!s\G}yv :t#6M,xdGT ?#>]T:/xd#a((Nn7G|R(ydĩmT[D#NH<8#g#cHN~<2#<5Ch˧)6MY:X)fҺezMVuUӺOWOr~{8Gӱ#VS{>vi}cUP_%_yE&#"4U yOegsխ7E^.NeT2߼[V5k.?` dN-7k"3~~kVT"a@VT3+?ϫ K[vmQ\Q\v{Fh@:mLS1 @WGɾeh3l yMЧ φz*[*|^=-2ʪUj'b:Ƣl?5uWdʖWzN](bj޸5*aMj.JːwJ"xȲ=U1q )qNq cs҃kJFW5y PIwk5UT z_UTwwX\6j ϛ?<EεZfYHx\빮|߻$cu(0c 'W{ IrFϪz8aW=NY',` z2!ckOE|aOiXN#[o%ЂRjFA!"O-޻xrn-( {-<˵qՌx h%C>8\jiU(EuTӜ߁Aˍ:2c.ڱ]凚B;w>JꕮYFw?X~^GalG-zCWϏŒ.ͩPe tC!ط)rh~ B,wW߅V_>Em?CFYUAF^y +'V~=Q\Wl3Aʸdqy{eCXqT n%wA~ Ŵ,|]?e\h:UBFpiTӫ" z9E: g=&W/z-VcBEfB7 ?-*60K t`ܽ!I]%)zD؍ŘP n;ϞwOpZ"ɶT4޲!Ih|;;7p 2zA7~脟 c??|J ?&Fyn!8hg.1*8FNӊk|@$F+f0~~uII#'[8E$ rm'Umo'i3P<&nϠlQ?%܎|{@^@Z8-ᡯ-hϞwC6[O} CB߽WEBoGMH`-j#[=[S]VzDAg&fM 1sӅ4bp=Ry盗? .H4myxiQ r)~P_>+pVLn6W!jȤO,~,`Gx'`y IRFLx2ֲ۫PWR Ť&!jTXP>(ajWcJ>A94D%~k4;\B!p3jW<~@ iBy1/gUE&4B0ə3%bM:~olv> oWyaoQMw/|N:b*Vҭ[n}L%sS۠\Tk]y]MWW\h&565)62*-RTt2py*Un`\5ڹnsp”ZUK{}4ZѷV[Vu~z-Q٥a-zL"QN"xVe,-ۏ~PkKy҃bSK39hhrE!Ǔ,,K2Y8 n)LKLVO%4tScƒ" BGDaosz= ^vXCڒAQ=A2j|~:#FMT$fű[.ڭמEhHM5Ӌ؀LZҏ l?yggDhhÿ&ܹ+5~|?tGPhSSk}'`⟲ZlϮ\ckuWT W ?vzZS-z\CU5L-&UԜǎR)DPvq+N<%WpKJ:%d|+Ziy7u֓c)QID ZKa \ Ǫ |TR;r,Wœ$X zK _,u_HSZ/z%\&J -KKJ>JQbEo8_ӍӦ-6rÀ[B&VdZ\b_ 7ze>ex},lظ"+0ߵ09@rZ7r,$v݂фʷ |vVr @\"keaຕA^]u-'u_r՜IbP}S҅F!5glGpDuϰKȮ1_[*K)|O7"P/oTEw*K{?BZ؉A==%w)e^y0t2Ʋ?$~:J9=]++(+>%%S^umIE{ Ȫ^ ǧ2!7K:)A>`ltS|MK*&BˎGt(/KM&l 9~:oN{Zsj6k*&DBc#v˞-(" ugÞHۗ~7ZynuKs!PW4s u:61KpODJ\ѝ=gqOwb>⠧ۯcّD'V~B{ (H׾_oG;^RJQBqwaNw߱tujL82+BõM_6i]fdwr,ʫInӍ 22FRNV"401WirpDCL3~㚁LGbdFmyvKSRCQWJb!sF6rm3㒮"VKvmJ['J]Р=]V2y_#sWjU!\jl=Ԩaߒc9i<1KD [-[ZxsOAQ :БvQ\EB~e w )V*6}d]RC)>I8ވ!mQ"~m(*X ECEU.RL^-&2%*PrS1 {=9[azǚ}} 7ղ˛̋m)E\ Dt,Mr)f Ɓ,앴>Ryl+>d _$]g :Us2їj{Zn[3{^x8e%鼶B:IS\/{v y|EdݔG?BShu\Pz FUxн#jV>x@nHc:F&uTrn^Zj :UMAyCl {u8/wȁ8!0u,5v yvo@}`9ky>抏RM?j v|9y&W:YQ lSQJ؊NalEjl[[;Oʰ̳Jg\urr>q3az/L_|'/q2[t6!Uun)ekN(ZWg;U!K"K:{CŎ;7)1/tWRk;Gk|I\f߄#21Fa8e"Fw{{Ga)GuGw{G>b3Cs'xp :L4[ޭ'z!SWY]LҼ6tC>B}C|ϝ-IZX5ǡlh"\s*  hMܥEi9ǫBH0~>̈́S5N7RxCmpUS T޿S8AyyQ"t x]D&Q$t"oj)/7G;G"kaςKW9_Gɵϳ:>2`{*?ZtyY`<#M:5[(S7׳87^VgF%Vxjr=Jb׳WmG )xU\*i>M8et[ٷۭK/Ӱ}kjչ?q4A0=S~G6f0i[90vضϒ>? x1ت*Ͷ~ ɱoq*f |4zNWnj;1|Ƿdi}_'˸}UTf+iRBE7KW ^MN^~ێ&7 3ŽpWE6;NSW>gS!mk 7U#-NP`Y:jRӼ@AK^W|bgX*GA[cTQ9{  hş7;ɓ_<=Y]@-fC ѭm{JbQ)5:_=P_"&m63%ZS*^eKWϳW*|h݆3߸\W8YYbP̓Mw$W^-̤&|Pw%1gTTS[v/)mMJtYUлO>o9tg+y2AnI0 zBJ%w0-BbF4i.cWDaLjsCDd=v{u7IiQQr/pg^͗}#,#XaMPjUz1cx<7чq=!)].O&-%ߌN/"LρɃ0s6#?شh&v cGX;>= I<4R>:3Z6kNQ%܋Mz@!…/Lih  #) v%OsϹRǜXr^MUȉy:{܉7oEߪ#Н{oV3tʘPx-M+=4~W7ǖ8~}j7zcQ#}[Fh( Y˸Iφ`|x5Ӭ% %c9|3چWm+kb5-.eӾu7ʷ^Q]^Гf]) \ŝޮSjJ|hL.Nl| tsbILڈ#YjX;u ii'?a? 1 F}D+ 4nͺ΍|ڸ+s]iL˺НCdKW󊸳GanHw41Sq*Ǒ+9TR(lN`GWZSGK]i)%/Z]Հ쏵>ShӞMK5\=-m_?qgU:PׯMf׮t,%Sb(zAFѨY U|eO{҉G<s[thFb8<)Hk2 NyxZw{\gzAf+6)'ߗ]VI`;v1 Kbv+5`^1n 5_z4WF{!ҥV[i1t%яݺ ҢYYi#0oII5ہΏ;m*BT!K*_%I|j*egLnθCϞ7j1}[SQh=Ww\sEDӧ5:*vFmu=s>&vYu⿁{Fm'~XmQsڞ5wu%'}RpE\'9j{&mNe6ug79VԲ0]_ 9 (=r[)}PQ tI#3pB)8{(j@^~T$*ᑙ+mf$̨󬓉3oz,eݰm1;<o\Z#ѻ?ǶF2MMl"(GmNkD'A<[ԘQmZ79Uk@}@̽TG<"Ї4gW ը0c8j=LVE㌲XcAKz~N#OR (0[aR1%r fSUo-Rf(0[vë!p}kQ؁C,娴o,Gt-9zlo5I:QaT:z5@eQ0krQŁ(V]Ȥ9Ic G٣xlolQa0Bv >[w%uXwCLl klkqՐ#,YMQ|} qv]λ(:˵u6#}{;3|V<ԤԍٙqrLq9C퟊TT!^=" g!˾R/e3p+1X< 0\; Fw>3):F|hf,ݹV<<{u۷:h;k*[{eDʞK-rs -qvOQoZLJh˧@d~E|܋=/H)$e!UZϧe4e,jOqcucٖ5\ ;?XnFfG~a|_W9@;RU >)w^|h~ޡu]vv ><4}c[qsY1Zؠc7=ƭaqL :cvQc6hAǘdmhee sow ^񑥠ǧ4f,c@?c*L{8$4;lPbqig;a桚ϳ||[;>{[, 7`9Tnc;J&>H.1~i? V+k[m4 >>q|vBH>h`!eL}F (5a3/\+ºTzҜ?tt᫕w:/~3P}P/f[Emus~Ց[U9b#[*F"C# FwpQzŏҼ4^R%a+d؍O篭a-t1wrGms=omo9*~uD}_3}[{v2ߠg~]-|~ H~?jU1wդ+UnűGFQXPZ59[vA>W/zo%}yʩkJ 7U#-4v\=XԴK -m7.nyjx mXvAgft2ֿQ0ͻ+BqqgQX!u0}uσz%Qv.SoP~d﷪7QF-iS2oпq9YL}*R(U>I]8T-WԮ#qg1"/g15C+*ZbkRemg1uwyʮ!U[f1ݝw+UtREwb&DdʎLjH]^4YGmQ"!UvS7 UzTX#V::u}unbEoWRe/g1TQ QŇ. TY7:)UV.TU9˘ ?vԜI^"Re\Q!U "*8=Ϊ%WuYgVxY}yt,} }T듚(ҧ*{BgT%F%QO[{?+5߮YAs7=q OwG5${۷6#O_t$tWz8"ҡL xD5 v3gvwFЇ`*x\wb^ b,|?+8%QjGՐuQO>HGE){|u:/k봏rE4U xHΠ7[TiO=HSX]jQU6:-ޢ` 3= >x:R )աB|{q/eޮYu>3PTs+g _oޥZ],ZTʂd|^ns)Lylb&)EeFuG5{ƛNv]kgz3^hGJ2U(ޮ"׵? dʇRȋWYy`znC:jv/G+^he~Q/KDj|f@1WσFGDbҵS N(3#BU<Sҥ-:M+wB1J)RP6ԓ^[f'GJT葫DH+Gua oL鮳v8\}ZT!Esc'4A#B7E=hW jLiiͷcx¦J۶!"IGU7!ٗsi8<bMIU\u p<~4h@x&\Yc{VAwOɻ;Ί/e;-_՞h|t|>LW瞵8n<Q{ؿTEh# \re E QB!9@Q]׏f+/8ݼ -}iŸ$ϷO3Hh-_s&\MV*޲ۀqqhZ<&n] \_G_*svvK3X{Nz^ 5C/6凁{6昮;!L!]zM%r Wx\㙧ƺNuuJ/آؙяv-jfbiχܺ74E?FUOFҔ?в'OFu}vf]Ue,,Nxa׫Zj[sa E?wH#gնRnpJ>k9s-/1G õۚĊ&Nfy:#[=AoacaՔY^Bl0?Xͫ}s6G( DZ݉;P e_)T>W3Q@ `NH)O_#4N&fӡB!':B=Ǟ'VwFthzg={Uxu"XUV~Vo^0?U(渋sc9uQӂz.']~)~( _ZTUV|Sqm]zp=\OQOyk ]_ gv5?yT-Ha3R"mE#_1^Xִ<2sWպ%A;2dv@m ᧘:ROo=cnTuJu-:-ʊ u-g`ѿi D,Xm(lQ2Q,wZ[s"Tܱ-:ߖ有:m WوE;NxP3y9ӊͱθ準:<[b W #&-=O!Y#T+Dޛ͵D鼜]i5OEU,#ubH7r-7AӧOA|}|1^+!~]M5TK6PZ un {6kdYՠyjF]eP7T,xλZ י;:,H;CAzYTT ҳ@q\fAQg r+źE\|pUPqGϱAcj A.> V^ᵭ&v5JG1Z>5c=G5K_&6մG-S`_=S0*BG n(GJge_P#[Dhg:K;c%u55vnH)&<w[y*t`FR͞J[S5U" }[-%ajd(4w DO] =LqB:y4#ő_:bWuzXw>ldcciVdgw؇s=t~8ɤWu4ϖWj}pU L[vQpLvqJywꪽC,}p;q㭽 R?A۩E- r:Cp+qyŏT{WsBk ?:"=ga{"5IctV'f`ⲖCװs e=3я-?v!RxbMǭyy̔B:ˑ!JwaVˡ? 6MoTʖ)r٬7,rʶSl}T)w}1X `/6N]QUURN*f"5s.yn3ݽhx#p 3y,9|p<ÜZ.fʢb2T2K$εEj[9:'Kl`DZ>bq1;F6[ӏE=߂o"yg)( \\EKńk^h.A\+l< ͲeSGk02=ǽ<1ulVx޸Є xT?;!]Qhyoyũeѣ]XsHEq<Ȯж7) ~C٧A*۱_) EY4kO\hrʱGM=M Z\ZbȚM'-O1:ʼn{o)\)I͒VZI?Ց m>,.HTejA0^gKatAiHTl2p$S銗lZȘ^=; ݤij:*NSnxfi41)6t44뇶V!nv2Ƴ-.e8la&ᳶTjųɂƹ&|ͷlwmoBf(ciZs y'm!3t'Yƭ#s`UAͶTݓڳ/O?4at?5z$2EEgPKjپ)_z/% Wm1 Ms@U^|r>2@Z55Mև\=GҦJmZ,R8.N[]6ﺾ >Pe~K=6 UO׺.0xE.RĠ]Ct[9CƽCRwNy]3!oK**uFǔx6}g!OاבkUs 0[|+dt:6ua#-Id1B\IgN=>҆`-]i% 4by0if(RSA-ݽ3r !<_ :u6b^uw ;ͮc*pu0O5h &wVgA<]ו $t!y}b[ͫ,&|MmLDU m|h\r~2waQYҮɭK܊S.=]kP/HλF]t:MxttE!0(<&Wݸ|=rܦF5n|~~ўmnsQH)+ߴėhޥ$ܤ~^.VVޠ鈷"g0[NB諜š?^;T nEb N!$]gΑhyA^XI6*IwE;85{kPo{+.?Ivߴt$UFn! xZO_ ၩyydo s֝*л/Rs6?_5OZ;%r Dtgwa.kW.0wxa\Y_i_{6/71H3=l_nґ^eseޜPa_;ϽU\pI$Ó`5aU* OKZJl?^n8 V\7m4pe =?W>^29;\A"a>(L5 FV׵8kssF=mSS_Zf kSqS򉧛 Thg< gt9xt6aﮰ_{[xb4yt1DɱNPC/$6Ta{KO_}u]I8SxPD=Bg*Zx0S6';(DyVY^_ȭH`3x[>ܱCa2v~F,,&~ΘiÝl/=lw ff_xx04::9!ڶ|슦At,E)'=lHfI~{~.ѻ;{m;)E!7 *H9Q9RN-ZJN\eO샎wQ<)U{ziJ,1(_QsS9 )g1j#74 <\|Ƴ r /dkZyJf Mz)x/\IY^%ey'A)@mR-\7t?Zы}uNnA;__mÎ=4zRdc O=4eOk<t'H@Mތ'ZrʶpoȑRU]`XNimv6:IADBa-x5s;`3~Dt{ˋv![#D?WalGm/œ (yd>La/oa3nnSOTogKI cgv[r%rbn7y&lm=^|/MeYoś(ͺ [wO<"5 /yXl&XzB2rlC{ӌ{fF{e^<+R6 fy+nf=z7k% QA]?^m͐qKVj%8$Pi)ppg3fDqi|hbI?0vDQ숉ݫ^#m:1bɓ;%~sF@ P\:B?Ukމ]Yi@jѠlאMϷLj+:zX@d ;ӧ2hwKc![ƛ!dӑ\2Tw'q["ȑkŃA0t q(#c7DVWb׼V9$38VQ+T1슫mVId^eZ"眳}BcRE2nxxʸ< ]73b2S(u6Ϯ,`9ԩ6(v$w$ Mr^=#^CTL;<G9!==v(J/rA4;DW\UntG tXY auX{zխ`=JLƻIޚ flcCpZ?gǬtu3]kyy:1_=T^س)-=S|* }w]E[ 7fˮ] !;Bv/-i80Ր4cjI!vwN{_KtKHyJn+5uu,d?fi}AKvŒe2s ·"<+Ϊ;j;z\[!o%"Žvߍ#|[_kwD[NϳW|+{J/WC [hEMUZ _>]NzNw͙(itk7@;<ﵧW=Z͞T; 3 NzN0Y=;⎠j\Nʹ%t{N+WE2){5χSHof!S*HϩT9}t{Nw)r (]e LKfj?~kkbV:8V:HrUÞ-tjC &NR+=*Z@Viv!n -jozNA3]A_܅IuNu#yY꾮tnV,%=WDT}2:/E.> :гw*t&<#q[ʵ9Owm.V,B'w_׹Y.ۧ.-tޝeKw"q<=v&Wjи7J5+dz4"}&!U8b(@7x3LI!=,3l/-3{Oe&F&y_hx'xv+~BW ۑicA57fAqu*bML~`'<=uRGZAF0c+by bE U6`,ހm-}[[i]*<+)5J'"d+WGމJ- Z(Ob+8{^{%mAYB+ER')U R+UNbJ*Tal JD`YRD3ǽz*߿ZKHZ"REW9%JTqzzс|3(U g2 RRx/Rd%UbR&%J=5JZBD$& pTa JX[с->JC8JL%H`(Ut0ʛUk^"蜗JP%*И/ӧ=sgqYϚ*{6YۛQxj<}:6ǧͫ\ǑlCSy/u6$odg;~t-,{60MIpzzIIo3 -ϽI~HI0qD?>xn ) ӣ4Y䁣(~s+zWɌIr" :x}9% rM$sU8t - x;nr qf>Q ӕ*qs'k9iBZilТ7S `]7ECvU7 &wQnfƎ%֌Yo۲=[Ϟ)/=@KUofd>Ď1"@W,03J*MŒb>l,5y怘s>e|{FNjq ^֞[tRɳ! rQcvy_^:p ]ؿXEEK(eHCB1:p{Db_N|9# 2[ 99 _&OŤ K6iCS0KDϸN-뭐y OdGݩ:ewVY(W\y' ʞT-驘9 k 8֯Zr={Syq22pB=Q٠SwYWeFF vC2S}2]Rǹwc!э(w$wb=ߵ2xf6>PO=qW7?vI/!geA5N=d8RYc^=rӈ+ksRޝ@LlMl*1%$ڈ~OӉ+ү&t?ډS/ ^?ʨ=W)E2ˡdX%u\*.8^,xC,8Xh %A:Xzp9XǼJoU;G iڿpoXuRMh~_gĀ>/=OYvC՗=!;x Q˫i=31WnH DC{#c'֛n8FTrCE bP- "r7,rE|h1;w33-Mj,a]Aޣ|ZOjգ2h#Y~R.rp9b& dP2zf1sDl>ߚ7N#|Qƌh ;2v"rv8PT;XKߟ?yO,m2cQSҍrz4eACmyp0>vFT+sI.lS˙msȑ5ae&gZ7%d%4Q%7q'c^l9qIQ y0eUb+-eN 3/9tLLyp3QI]7((sgrmv$Pqu pNMrqq$ j ~|92AsۅJRNiyTtU1ݸLbńs )5| (E:Qͫ֜Ͽ;\h<9-J^û)jwu&-@js8\F3Cxeҋ0eXpeRӑKuAgulkr@^cK 'L:7o ''.~5G1w2BpnxчEai'P ma_kݵHԴY>XX_LAb W}/G}هwAU[(x>zGNdDŁ~bb=]iu<&}Z$Ɯm>3KWWXjikl )/D,*z3[|OӓG=X:i>.-f=z[e;~Ÿ@-}3UqgJ3|8k3jgS bW*R5lht=zoӕwERv]9BRo+x*sKP$%)t;C{qRVq ({q敬B%ɒo.{D,F?Gƈ7ZjV}Լ슬 Wx̑KB\R}egn _]7߁>R|sΛw:Ʈ"5)HM1 c沏7}e7ug7]'>qAkb_Դ =s}D↮3Lo\vf|bK7Ҽ Mx۠(ys8ºr4 W+o.ɑԿHo_>/8a 综dh(&Kc ?Z5=z;J]L.kB}섞)aM;#2r!}/1_ f oF馁*/{,o*g1 :N;;.Z28plYkI S~'9P( 9򛰻Q4`_c0:zX$aW) ' 擠J)UEߖl1N+#xIQUك#`JW<4pRwUȈjC6/xZӶm:Jn% ?^⾈4Yg5ړ|pxi; S/F7j sj]7[/7/u2@jh'm dJJx{Չ tbYzS$'DW)B۪f,#0Spb_O=dQ [dXoi{K;f㡇,20L ǻW#e^IUG@ax y#wh/5۵^6^ mśk k Ul+pِkZ\Wp͎Rr sꯄJmE"HnpRᚵkd݀B\Rp5+Diq5E5G \#pseMR}͓\o]aܒK5(^2fot)6?5;4 m'^d1~ ¿K K  p|)'pƞfBC'ܹJQ˜BNoU4**),L 3K'V*Jv~}^*o51+#oTE823=%ۆ'%{酻Y|KZ&P,xacp7 Z"=զ9WKt rb(GR~&$@D*P|{1R-6֠~KƯ*76x{BN/X&k}VȭuF8  5b﨏*5 ;0rޚ<1y]uhks/}2g=h>)Uצ]EytK Q5=5'<NTQ,*"J_#]WƟ3cA$C#YАإ9.3K$g93I[7<uR- .,֍\5>H\S'ZvԜAq),r7q6d3jHx'#oZ яS;lѷ_ )VEE*`ӆve›}w`E\\Ι_Akf~N1ȫm؄hl#^!`h&%YjGJ`*c(jbj_%K=.>}J6;I+'6C We󃞧Yyˇ"y c+GVx+555g:<55Gg/ΔFJN^ kMڗ+1 i>Я7N?]Zk ZB+=]~y 7f]QU 5Jc卺HU\c]/e4ZSa~>C'u!o>u-7t XjYCR uMi%syv)=AŁҨpH I _igCb juSeK9 :ڟmyvƓ4%\\\n|.PIz`.0"]djyJdΈv=,EFi!Nqn:[q*fU3JNZ6i bīʃ ׯ71ߴ̻)c*=.yu`v[:ƾ:ݘwxK?diKnRg G'O1JoBO-5ހqB1[}CVw_t_:'%ҼBRt)X\f~& a?A eaZ@N=ZNS ~*:dx nB_8XM(Q#QB ~/3"Y%y#$^U_sg2ǟį&;t`|I~cX;p-Z2yǬBœq)LCNLMa2*Hd4>1 5y+UJMRGW;m`ρQӳJt8M$*٤qd _w6%`|c k GU~Jg*Y_(Bg94'O`QpF~yni:`{c~TD oRo'cصFT8m1"‰hIbA6?.L7*YjTM{5%Zsl"co$ysZc 0 4W&u}qie'K bvSNkTT"(F9I 1UΑfV<=烗I/N y38Q.;hz5;9QnS^{8q"׸8Nɜx8MZ#TȴvԊ9${!C<8 Ұ/0LEq7L PIwњe*f~*mU Mm!*ݿ֢a8m}\]$3 tICj c B{QʼҬTtT+f70:DՀS]MG^œ8Mt!U]➯xx C +"}qc݁'KS W7JW+:i?&\wq}\nfن;:/]T E';4T;yzucD|)8_[W$r!bOmBz#K!^ܳ4k2~;KAMsd.[o,gs0v3CWa¾4;"O .p[4q/}RcbҨDL'P7 r`( :t!ηIJ's p :χtgFRJ+ 7mFn:&]Y4ЋV?O8k2bځX:ҳi1ѐ08b+y7fX>&!Lkv'/ 3ȔD8\̚K?)3_kVߖW/s~qqY=m#ŌٟyL{~ WouFlѪfO+L\i(W$er@+W4Cux7JAU$4\_%GƙkZcp,pW0`gNH6/p5`:e.pik\Ro!ͣyq3krMI_jDm5lC&TA!}ZbŅD!m5I,{͊gښ'. f@rZ,\SȯX#idרeMqהc^gWG咻44j`|uVr K` e9Q^8]/xЂ1O1*&fgδg[9ð=}Ӈb~!D= Dy#,{WN0&`T>,xbl믌z9R -Yn' 3(Ө7Q7zR->kwV=4ZZvX=;̎z_|5@,c c3H2tOJ͌TkΗO:8ޚQLΨ|+ -$3*19C+"QMAwx3 3k{x:e'9p (%Sz0_ .)8j$XiaJORc N{F{#Vݘ)α^FW=}LBڌ%{ _^WNOԤUϺ&$n \Z a>2<1 bf/i,8֬O`>_!Lˑ +Z:]i>R37JosMl62a5e5[~^xq .MxFЬ^5EKI)SPؓ\8Ƭ9.%5Tk9(&2Q'dq)k+#㙞ErMbPǭ|;5.|X1?#4o5sB>\XuuE<2הkTJֻo55yԟ I6Q++/mekDjQhNWib<fE&73'nz]?@)jaI__EkJi݆ߥ.;vkdW5Ϸ:cu]XUɇqmCeI &u9<|veHiUFCך} ks(2u\CΤK1<9hE3-.I\'o$!)V!N6@ Mʀ ^ KIpCp|3;Wp% vFӲI~:gȐӴk`K3#'cSrduv#g%WV/z},\q\YzT .T[㩯IYc,ɕ‘}c3Ǩ挢2N,㵲gg,\DF뵲c +,[U)\YZTzɕKXpT.re!5WL^xK"c'(ZEA^3摊,OmrΣ;ɡcy8M4[{R-8F6gph=si>VdA2BUMir2U)6y$Z)qfNs <"~4a ~8MZ#52Ě%ًm/7~qďU}']x zQ*HG*hEE)Yc,iUڌ~"24xORX~ښ[LGtNjggONC 5WQ`hE i*U<=i4 ?"6_g}8 W;UNSkߝLK8Fph4-3I*i.PQZ41EfC )8V CY(a)/i:t jz1(˥/^XNԆr <<S.}q?\D䉘 mSz0Cm 9S G?nm)Ttw!}ia| l] }`m#W~-~<bFjq|)զH~)IVٽIקvO+ZfAifa*瘫RV{ފyK͖L7zlh?/|HK$b^A7ޭMVVT,i+-Ai4%[4Z ٭~͵i*-ǵVۜ @WfzS^>o$ysZi1C\+RˋӸ~EELNSy}jԊy<['RY8 L(d0At<±Tٲ|E+[s 'cy~8-pq4@Т%չӪWrMq~k-؋C6xۋpjN8ӚIi*i1F+gjL~y8sդwJK7ȜFz &>inż3A E:g}8 ,'p9r~u#aPJǛ}8 և wtrZ uxׇT)AT&FwWT0٠`Xsg"ASTcoEBח .Պ_ޜv´& YdWĐ+u1q4%_Rԥ:q|aَr뿌S',$^LTNh0;,eH)GE/ucm]«ϴp+|y#qno`hyZtqozDbӮnNN ^z TdWEԆ9z M&GWć-Lfr? 署t%W?k,7b5W[ZaZASnɕoCW'ci,>1|=cg֍+cy~VV̕v,?z̕s9=ŕ+۴V8 !d=H$a͕; C˕#WVﯕٳdE{,q++p?~p(E2orqkfja^}X^Vr][BmNc|YOr^ Jrjז(:94HGX|U1ڂjMpŏ<Ξ4?18hEx 0Ջ$G7=*CdsH~mč9M/4Ϟvf}8M\`x qZs ͐oئ3eMōӈK;(9q4aڊI.-As<-Uu0t$K/.r7}C/|54r=:_<[n/ҲCGwV' -.Mw>v97 'ߪWஇ2F'Zcit%-;h 1ZNM<@2UEA<̦ĺ]t[r|dL7q{۷ 2c1S0s3zg"`̊x@[&!^|//|/UJqG CÕgcqJV2/4#gef`2obV2?J+ o@?,e6pd+_1 !lk꟱Z_9V^pBxǐ{`Z_03T ަ\??`"=q\YZgຕ^֠1OC̼#\D*Tf[<܋'}7yX֔zn `5o["UJ# 3pVaeBMz.!:/9_^:~"J pD*C<B}S$4q#H[}#YŮ|7|k YK 5?~{艵%lM\CAu$q Ldž0y ӳTۂkU{V5Aƴ?/$QH|8Rd(&?=a[nHK|{a+rP\={%|%P,zOvN@,Hx\zJmIhv^1̹5 uK_+Mjm>C`d@wJ ,.>JU d+%ĥ!]PCH\)CD9BB5C@teLF$Hˏ%RЯqNATdf( (Nŋ!+i$ q% P?Rt?j#ՃgEga2RpOR0-(~-_jXIALp,,,0(cdryj /n*>ݤB J,* JMpB j3^%[gfMdnu90h0+ GEg`IddY34ݚE=,'H@mdQHEd\ *3p݊1lD^-Y q3W \P(ɯ$5%Go]rtY ܞ'V |gM{M϶{B|^b[|K>lHD>lJD>T)(ކ O* 34ck$w5y wt32L9j'))23~8 צqB[LՇKn$6?$|H|:]7|HQ`r}yZY$摂m>l7,≙-|p;^ Hal N`L <{tt4ԓ/hOk $neQ#eMsV#DEp|p]h$3L!\vANm#2 kWͣZ%_kMjm]" yi põx9krq.:AYΔv[rRrRR$?s $K[劯{I%Sq#\ýƍї+3$KoyƗGa#4ƍ9}ƇU_[Stjm%Y_CiY~F޸"j!Yz[< Ct߈u&%d-q#$Y8RJd{dH6FZ`qki<vi[-JKsMJLz4WD/{^yQE)kr=/ԪfJpH\di5zdo$;7fB9.Ufmojjd=תi)Y`,^j܂B񟞒ELyy%Yz aK-,\p!Yz=k̎+-!Kb s7άXj%KW/ʋBV[@97i*;h)rDm֐, 7]:BG!4Id魚ڽQ[t:BSu,Y\Zkb=$KG%QET|;%l)$Koqcy,Sto o{N/AOi%K Ӓ!'NzfM67lU7Pk RBSQO9 )Y3#Q _s Y:szmiK%J!T0-֚twߑ8rPˇ';@C?ŏ9[9֤~ CjJ?#u{xK?KFDuh8+磵*NX58_=qzoԓ~4kc@υTʑ{Ϊyը煋G?N1,B-B*YhǥO ]2}g!>-r(k߯$KH +x3J͉ r^xK*QS'K+X>l΂[/%K%þ}S,m '+RRBmZb-u' _h~V;†/\ASZ\]'hUyBnSE>h<9|"g(,F~߇F)ٳ5l_5V(]f+GG͵9+YׄvʶZ'3;KNα7_xK3|3F(xƥZ, k[! C6֍=tIXj5VRc>Rt(0$@:Xcy!ka*ac)~w0Rh|?a^0>iG--]ʑ+sXEja”E$\ qd%.U }I5+6= 1FnW${\#iy|MJ0B.%>Z){"|[ u߀C7JhacZ51V{)8vQc5y7y`l@fc}؀6 %oT Y4{؀dBrQ#1a2{؀؀̾ߧ=l@fX}R˜~s(zJa3]Zg[Z6 aBBN5b1ޒ[l.J≶-f&Xж r滘z2T'}=ݿ% G% 59~Y\V'.RB&fS;'Z^LCB2hꈑx\Z z7ɭ-ރP+0T+$$;Oܬ1;nU3]煋dv!l%nk$ܐ<~q3|cVݘu>P^rbSOv~ "/U 8N}qr>3\#)\cyHE:k2;gL?miOL*m)/s]'RBoGu)0Wi~;5Jz.1 f'13>AUo+H 8]Ǐ39kWFQ )[]>$iDFAhusd7QS3UUɘ:u̇ˋ#kVq77 a-=L Pa_|† ._Y鷴JXجvoYvs†0wUmVy,lV Uf{t4AιJX,cafffYejf%W U U †^ ֖]Zg*aaJX.V \@X屰Y屰1HX6ƻT6ͼKKsM=6 6>6ͼaaC(6SiXD ?},l >666Baa\R9hfް7,l},l yfƥGXxF4^xgWw_NynZO 8OXwj .v#{ܾ?$ z×K.;5yHW|uJD{Z>J_G7WsvdU4+/7vm獺Ľ-Szr؉c,+)F-e< "nvR:7gb˖Cxgt eͻ_?'ȧo7J=E 8vBk'L+}FÝpkKûͣ&B{ήZy]i?U턻!4CyX{"l ۛEjŵm)QWfWbò Eq=oϝP˝p|G}a_~Z6 ˍ:];3wOP`",pP<:GʝpMs';Z1|/kZz7O7Ҋ!p߽kb'SNk݄y~5ǍGZ,#(ѿw:j8kr#-Ԫf:3 "l1{2[m3vܑn9uKg-m,lk4i굖y''+8xr.ޒe?nS2v5ooX}~v+נ)Vbq7ǚR(|mۗ<ڊU:N.ߑ{iO*oxob Q¿ߙ6ڝǷ_hO?&8QM8eD37[7߬9g| :lXѿe;G5g59~YWO9 )3}vwYB%Ubw?.Lw߭'0e{pkOqqͳ{RN߮FM)˙JkLHN ߰ߖ8VAeg;as /əNKN ^mdOp۪>BPIkfuVsq $}H[OAT%dVT=Jy]\;oV}xjH|}̕_5 ~x#/p=ƛcdS)F_8i@uy_cݥƶ -Lx3r¾-H7D]]?J0$kHJ]5[cYIq+#=BnS|/+z0.'3H<΢/8NGzFgdV?ιZURlYJDߐ+6>Jjǰk:/xCj6/dKI{Ei|G fh*|oMAG>,tR{Ztj-ݩb(j"%[xW:bTNbУ*5yDT숑-QTee쩏׀{6x,=N-wbd-:"kfت(;\m&eI9yy%LN^z|yyv7x"sNGJ&Sb%ʩ?%Ce֐N-GZ##9U=?/\!10bH/\ݨsdB&y%ng!.um7w^ o~~:rzkM%5îe9sITMN~~\kZĜRW>*Yg=,DsVuT}ox99Kv؋N(F[}&t8gεFB薌o 8g Qx\)b}sR T2R>IAYu&3ԖrgWiV48goq2.e.3RgApgy'-+!,[4#voR%WMH3tu8Nk N85s`.蜓_'vڹa/sSX'svF9g[;_@7Ýq%w8`/#~M넣D/!'ξGS cn\V|@:mj o*5jraY]a'p;"MgHb'"1-jW&{B;ξh2fk%-^KPFESz+"sQT"w#oNI/t%!gT/lz;-8J;o|hVY2վ%:VV3{rʝf;B>|!_=p Ci+u+=U?wre< 2zf㮒q Uqgɨ(w<w|UEN(%BiVIbp]0K @<r%K1R{*zM\L؉rw>Ǵ=HTwW)=ߓ[%jd=:V,yUeD0HHB.%=÷ eauK aD-M_|,;+副[ 2<)}&n|b캫g=f Lh[D~)bx0*3ъ?vRI Yڱ-GИy>Qw C &ҏ'n [tk8 [h"&ޫZ$E8Z'oz>|_ph%_7XEw +c,1:MڜQO4^獤w-3g{UTF-Kwg(J'~"fƳoփ(RIe(mЂ+EpC+OޒOg&僗I9BN^]mLa*'䴼wmHkusT}Ӝm!nV"_FQV2rʧRAQd<>|HzsZyg#8M!]CcG N+ϊ(>V N+Sq%1pZ+8́ȯ=V N 9pZ _$jlsy# I9J)K>6=|s311E5qGubri@Y^JA l?FQT+vdf0/VǕ~U煵/>ij+sI ±ҎB#GѶ'NDŧ,|y$#܌);͸Yͥ mN{$XB_1@S,-e}pŢ(Vrq‰u7^S^H.#y]ZB)~LNkѓgKj ,#JfQV 7bI@ؿUYx*޻U60}Թ*{AeTZ&;Y.5)W?un0瑱ޕ>8KwC.&RC׎8ו]JJIf>R#7Д@g߻C%x!!,·u*{ U6uFmws ~>䋉lU#W֩RWR0N ƕ+ Q?&YG8䜺CFV %f)#xЏgsFr"(2s{c(L%9rI5(?/|Hz v^`ף]fm`QC㌃͉rg/[ZNΣkD7ou% KR:m`ޓӌVҜ-@ܟ^>o$NS0)2^i݊y=h$) r'qJ}cT9GZLS/7ޜV_&=\tg>w"9ό}^}S8gGr~N;#Mz#[Y.ҏT݊To^-UYx1ZNQoHɬZZt塺kXr# _նBZg}JG^6*6w8:i 8r,ïͯr<"d+i9獤 p+"jbj&~P" ;@GXaKy҇Nipv_NP]gAYE/S700Y ~IL~ș'UUsm8Jg=f-Dx&?hG@>) d+~L >׶$|yIGf@jfё`{L{/ݞXK cN$Vy 74i|ΟO*3P/@y"_b}/HnQzSYrSyT9yV(G9ᵇhM5j![qĨdCϔS\*%8b\S/m{65Y_˾iuT*'uW׵5∑h㑟G 1DS-qI{0ͮ1ؐT3 . [#FU2 uFm11?nR9:ab:b'1Q*+ Z,[3d0Qx flE(W91K- 0X{̰hccCSq_U3Xr\9h3yP^>o$=_?)kc9qƁD9U3{dGS,d-ōN]`Fq]S#P\يfRS.K>8KN|DҋgQ00[ljlϊOh^J=~p f/N~a*rZӌB,vsU?/|HzEҧGm!1W@_:]L,  ;=; KG}08_*q_SK%n;shB8uC.Zc)]"K( 9C۩}8vh\8=`av'+eQIg\3d qZjY= Sx4+xCpNr$&Zja> CVE+b0 G56gX^]Y==]Uݞuq{;ʮ3w2k;5q\gBB- }OxWL[IÍa231ԣs 4fqs`>$rAgGuٕHHb0Ǜ0~̇`%k5ZFR&NʞhA!(ui3Uk• ue 6>fxH7K=kyI\,(/YP{w3GcٚG5p8|!X΍̊`Ab:\}aMW/eHhu@Sn3O=16\S1 \3 x:+iul { GK2í?'عMpFF+?'f=Bڰ'AZ KHBy|7ݹcsϰg\F|^]=?/\ZFspȐa*Qlat]&saNrw͜,a~2٣,Q "fn"# kR{fbvysh;0o`}f1}8JRm>vG=F"'A=2̝5k,p 2{b]_5,HC~U?$Na\ڱ9:0H0F~-b> 5yaBh \s:KjbiB4e2׈^)hp!Y \Q)/~6Z鱰xIYT9| xC{vcfܨ>zSVbb,^Pt. #$B fŋ*-sKX+S_]?^5#u!+vGrdÂGiMw$UnOBAn+D]IF T_چG<ᦴ5 ӵ;LeAm5:a 7*Qa5}98o- f,38'D<؞[,g+ط 9'8`kDG#m: ޒ \W }'x68o-sn 5islE%:bE\ɄG$+WR1L%?)eVﲯ8@6_xڃXF(`ZEy,8-j4Uz./n !{o20w})h׏jSzh21-ܫ ta_R[xHJӀsSeS.?gB˷Ut+|wA/BCnbQ?lu / jਖ&G.'_cGhw E`X{a+a"qĐqkiUhkx㋞[˵*-WŹj4K[xYxzq\CT-l/! :-iGcf+ɣuؕOlإkF# RRqeG⅂/ERyϖy>Gkzdgp#+Ѐ*Wo`HY^Ӣ\i%=z^]h6+fse¸Uo^"!pp/oykrͧhe 1#L,˕hqU%:'7^I͸Hjnvh2M<*aK7Y.夌fl14jq}~XO~)亝4o|j𓸡zsC W[I*?2?$\h#e^n`S\Z,yl[T.G]UK]zRԲ-3Bn_x ~ӓ2m;`7UBTBjl;lg%C͚16=[|SW[ъ0Lj%xX[RBScfXl\AkXky-2beYBҵХѬHQ[p 2^@^Y6J.O4udE\;׃;K%]0Lх`?fSz]>V)_4@s&p}#6 ">7X۟ER6U#4Lu2~#ǣ {YA?U(-崅b捖M8Ybxxn@w{ljlBNaߛ/f?\&,PYV 4]A:M8↢Z6m=}$݁j DU=Z\10f>9pdHZޑnW(}q ?~A^[ji@gLI$GpcigGU8z8%]~xuȽ$5`F])eM-CF,$kܧ;ol2E-wê2,j=jX#7-3$\/>\A4seYqri.bT'ZDiJ8^UOo]UB@eu=ڐ"C nTuCZJ:ljorIqrw],έ^>R?'(TzZ{r**g-JGeÓZSlyMwlg_XUt64U|s^ya 9/0>/0|(| 9/ya'N9/ya }D}^y^7Qʋ(QD)o(Q=QMs=D;2xIz)QĬ|"8IA!QF_%LDiq c}E?^ &4~tR`#MhPUi +CvjV+&hGHcT 7뚭ӟYքnChB.CMG2ؽX_7:R5A(?lg}] ÕHGyz7l{c u'*-רl&0xiY% uڥD+5OzF*>p+: w5W1*L*a*Q:jgȳ3ZUA5:'˜ҵ[VZd0m.b۴W i`g4T%ow5ݫWCXiNëJ//Qd*y ^f0rYn.#/:Z0:2fS i^+&"p̽Yy_TyKѭ#VxTS+X !(ʩMydV9j:py;[]AYb)j{TkUUr(zNu9}1ԕjF5tbŃ2KW zolKrXKQxrW` 0v'nAT2\0I!v7xp$Pf>-~x`u 5 02pLL,v3oRLqEsU'w7;Mv[#t7ܿ|Kno7- /럻-)I?_"O^#u OAOE=ލGh!j=ݲ݋=vAerȽ[0J=^S{kgWwlqt/<<Fk1ܖDcهC>o:RăF;$  בbs_db#='# nް8SKe,4Z׻{Knja4357YAךM1(w`ký22|u/0xh|wleDlw/1T1ݯ3B .hE]? cN`f{ ct< XNKyr2 b^ 9>!3SU=sgÕ=0;EPQMo=q|뇳'w/)/ DQ;r9ˣB1Kf[Ȏm3s y6I4[>m=,9T .'w@2ŁLؒp}mrd0tݳRwU,6/x~B.)d{EwrHy.4VɹG'5k,[ Es~TZU/#ڔ8l{kxn_TT7&x~Cq\_\ߺiWf> Cw[q{[B-l!:nhźg%Nuswإk*_c}IC W<鐊BȜȫlqf[H5}XP,B m)|}Rp']tw7&2.20"r~3(IW/RIxht}Ҁ.xB2+鮕H*+2z3ht] 4eut"5kx?ܕY^_ܺDO2,bLiɶㄔ!=c->x;;1:"]0f:Ȳ C^]! @j坚v\+WFw_-^K K伦6Qxl2wތG5{ 7ޚ= ?شji2ƛcX&@J Nq )9VcYrls'9lcdȁӭoS׼#?4}wҹҮ^Wg 5Z/I$Nx_oqґ=;y_}w~+{=yEnr=]#h]/ܞK|ċZ"5OJw%Il :X8߅[o ζ1M2 hPs;nzc*"bn=r9t*9ӣyNODqn<"NNn20&}1HRE[L&WpZ.uS75Y;˫_g Lj%Y6i.juK{vSMC "o!P`h|/̥+1kO\18N/{Vⷃo^(Nỏ;xyҶED5^S}t{K|闏WD\Azy;^}Dh||yߖWz]t83܏0#Gwm]MK^Z۫wzk'!4 Rvohh'5ez\5uW8%;x;CNl)Nyg[!*QgCi~_>0 V!C*970ovvqPQ⭘ !CX]ZS$!%ح7RUۮ[}vV9X+ 8"%LzU@КGթi_~1%HI&@YZ?c'G9J`>j Ӛ!vE Uͩ "sN%3n춦5#67FV/O-xxrb.1v{ރq7ujJQ.gXq`*%o(}[VX N]0Ơ|FXqiczlw!M M_v#.3Aep&uC DȸVz^"fS9edl~i* a `tY1/B[*[h \4ZxD^P-dtFkt{7d=UDg2]p!-OZc{X7jB/Upqu8Vs[J|)Ҟcd,fiՈ))z]5[8q>h]dS bH SZ92VEDXz"6/J\yäኪg%Q~Gl"# S5w#4ܜè&m:}> Co9պ9Sp8$ɓKE_×1> ?Z.y"+LaY\׼rE?gizNh똣%zZtI*970͈VrFz.Ӻ$\`Nxχ?%i3nĤfAM'hΑ?Ò/Od72 #}&tȾDNkaCyQ<>g]M8]a%W>ւE~<$gYGV$|~?ėQY'}R%KgcVD6^7BZiW:ʝmE3"s\3{hѮ~~ x?^c4~vNڌwuE=Fk[ۚY7=h5g|?Qv p?k+8Q3JPEYA!<*͸'V['hAK^| =SU1M)]$y8,fg.Bs ?ެPBMNk< U HP]xS0]e[\EfňLB餗B&U!jaZuBOG QiUpX@ /G+ϕ޴.NTs0swNYc~g53*({ݞ]ޤ3]g*'(\>Ŝh=)2R<;qg32g Z ~=5Ԩ󷵉8[I~hg揜#gq7eԮ m^A܉I܉Z%^0 mĚ2R&-<QP1XsPF%pû%o7|߸%_jv3ջ^nn&b0x7c"KXYpۆ2ލ_~بg@!}x7g>?nn7knof~ۻ'oQ>e/n -)@ofmR`^nFyjO_@4}Xz_+zL/o7r4γOfP&CdƉ1x1@3Gd90hɖؿ|ȫ1|pG[Ǘ(|oc8L]]\iu*zBCˠ-`RV9|-*Y\SE ϜR>-[}-m!M;I͇98p6|'^cօ^Vpڲ>YE@Os gTY [i<m5y5zMX#b'R 3v]Se 25ZYpAwiZquK֑\ieڟ-vۡ3dRk`7ŝ,KJKXyU1iQvڶr-Wb[B-ϖPs^m bIY`Z==.a&ژ;r>W bo-z:*) ܭI)YXOퟖ[Ux!1 +R"SWAY&||B58\YYX]B<\aGZNk=h?sqv煞tfAIxHX6r{xR.Hτ%D~*p=])[%J-3cmۊcx1/^L̫;}U4Z6ԾЦluT?A,}nFl}JslG$&^}Vm\Lp<~8~9̜GlrL`q>=Ի>wjS~+v`\9NU}'+ͬs]ͱ}\{3hd˖wVA/ŤZڏFxu=_h죝;Ƚv?;w{/v3w;ʝqȝf.4{Npﮝ%K7MǪѨI+M;ʝ?]?;VR hNp"5?z5?s'Nps;ͪqF nǍ̫N [E=}uo{ Npoi"]WE ho :A /_1'7NW9pʙY/1)dovdw5K-e1-#ѓk(g/˻[\]Ӛʪk> lkblo<=;۸qSK^}#>{Z*g`G=nfM.wui0byT]z׼QmO>Q;6r\{n/TH50Uzw=_9K/ =K?oaE|%`/=iy3!Z&=oS'i+nշ:w5شփFο7Y@w)IH.]x v#EYt߳ƩEu{7]|!KYtvt.=}uI!9,+aa칱Gxs\6{>|]O)ڳ2o<{0!ڔp̒h0Eme=nM̔xƾgE71۹#&~w>?"gc%DaZ:]O 랕Ѽ;q՚Za ZTIxg<㪌^yg'C~hZ1;U0kEY@^SucYj|+{y[S#'X9(xcrڮ1c&T ]*lq q%V\U8m\Y4_2.N.3 \ʭ7z,%k?ZErx}rF z}S U#ص|hނ,Hٞ jgLE1(!yn9"h |_=GujW<U wy **]ǔ]vy?"V~+FJ[SGM?Z5gA]/Za?>Zzk7n;v1jlQ㽢Ʋ1(h{-KqỦZ|F%3'~xՑ(=r&y2wof*}vzXjq1ţЧ:c{w݉$d)+^حDuc9 ?تud0PXMGYTWd:ؙ5|UrW'ZdWoTIuat#qL&8Zso,q*t[*]s3u̼;$'~HRKT<M4W>5Ub0,OROSxTT^y&hd8 vW>nU[UO`8樅DXڄTD`fijuJ\?>h+r3_Q(FKZXJyYda]y}j綶xWz-oYX޲s7,i b]{v'k;MOU8pkKJϲaaNY~zbvzdk~eQXN?H?[?+%KVT̓RQy5׺Yu*RW?[̼z-kwŕP>XU f>άXWʖ3#cY;W*׭\(ړ% wDڎ 5_eY6xUK .=gFrC`VR'h{[v_ƛc%=xYn_+bWlrTbI'O] kT.6%yj\ه5ufEK >a=o] ]Vh[V.kkŮ쵼o%,U4wl~sN,ȍg@P@Q?LƸ9ju[Z1;2zG*UEod5xO uFXD:Ωx7^a:-ѫ՘}[U@ߊD"|+q?ԇ;÷5񽦽~FbAf(%J{ޚ%f5|[5!kC~N r=}Y~n>OϚ<ۇ1Gְg6-fŌW֦9^wt(3coZig_c)9VZp!掍p~F\9X0XTKpFkkCtQ,ʣ[`ZtҤ7㿽X?Ur؏ Ts؏ꅭowZ#kVT̼V*{^x @tU v->ľla`%Ăk'9ePxyc]jm/eW]I[ƫ'Gf^>l D1pDbŋ:eؗa~(ȳ;M\T㢺- Q}"3b8W̺*|8x1x diY.)$T2dV …yy^rnQ;3 WY:pˆxχĨUϷ qjwP^"ݑ˵iSǹ e{R`N$h|%wyUm>zcl-{ g4O]h1 ^mՄbJZMW!Q,Oa@Ҋ}WUx~sJkg[|Xu[ރ: ?h AՐ}9|> }Z~往27d鰻.kj yB]П*" c-/TV]1ULBrw6{#йNfJ-E--G9@>}y{vY@-V.NdiRUl:R-c4q t3H{ܜy߁y ė|fә&hW%%OWBǸm{=>Uy)5yf}2$N_y9<-Ȉ_KQKּ>Iy2읣E4UIym,zἶVBHq]c'}];ވ]gόo F]y'Al} H b@Ɲعy<6,b|_ w}ϣWx+{=yE0^o|qy}h|޵j{q?58.pϤ"(f+;*>wv+ȷyCNU`<|G9Wyڜ[jyD3۴jNGe[?i/M hԾr<-X0P'|)߈ <)i~ۜbgDs{))X=_N>,bh }\%:EoOW\ߢ$)飷'~F 48Za+k6*̙M39mnkpYI5˷~!o7Be ZCtKss<891IKdM<= +1Y.GWQbkx{27~Hq2cװ^żKuKu*&jYGU{ Ń%'Ϲ"Z콳|B@OWes\ŨSq8gMQ^dAH8*.3~l9]gN׫=ϧq4'{94ՒώGlucc&1H62KWQ*<̌; - .0]H. t_gHf)zՇh|c)"jAq'V.pĘxXG9Uh D^-;)m{M^3&#g 1a)K܈B7:eYQA[Wz{^Fm%{uUx1{SdŷkyC/(Aety^/ƕT>oifF`&t IjUzUۊ[IVےת(fά6>[+of}٢U-+QkiWva i],) Liu`͞lD{#6bО% gWAM9L^|׆WS\/xƬ7Nԉusg^q}+'Wu~guf։m繄l!7J*+)<ѺċjNrku]IOZp["tO@n\]s2W+fm 2աYsy*ڬcWx̣(DFy6܇C>CdPnV:j[>P-8x75#Q-}T5en}'Nz-~ِI%~m ACE}+ \n͏5aͯluU05FNԗHoNoꔎB7VRUKOJ8<`f׌K2Tn*o~zؓU?4M WqxCk@>B 71(=WoIlX~T0(sCE/{Vi㾪{Q/bǑ^qW⻮Ci㎌m١o=skF z]}Wn7oAvZuuVoQVþ5bYi4|-tr`%5HckMܡ:` ha2o!+:}^iE~%Ҟ0vO /4@ץo?^%Oe Vٸleنç X]3UJfǚ"k-ǔE+F omC#hUSe]#]vik6VrɌs2"?cdflObY<:@ڷ*h&[ƚCxpU9[\+.+SxҎg_?ʞn/9U_9_fg݌ =?EzpA#%lbfAn Z,! f`k?Y#m̗<c:bLIW:{LYtxxD{NLMz .rt1B(!,H\i`@1;";О6:+$3k6Z}Q}2fMy {,Oq`6Kkc1WWmBjf"4BuסR1sOYj#jDqcp}*Fx[Ϩ_-FcǞK9\M;ܟ`&7+=O`?:xD|FsU*uDQ2t^Ey{hes hՎ+y*g_D -H'U#>4Y1,Me63ji9R'jSۤnt<_E1}3>8d:u2XFkByU_ ?4gٝ1D䵭9v^\T㢺m֚lB*@MyN9y+ksԺy:M;-RѦZrnQoF?$h5b)Oh .i2QbyF{8 t;E|R&E#0ZIW'"}(cFUAb#^VJt < iQLS0CY_ lzԓn¾g%~4k9vmTx~dԥدQ&ܮS5|3}|p2=䗈Tmq'x+f-WN,Zūhr+="c~-?ɍU{?/YGlՌ6 dBzTY?o~8*eԲe(0S%/>zQH*PZ OEq+^?/UQt)3ZXx[K-E9:hTE2Y|Y^9lu*hOZ`qnRZ|bא?( 'Swc8F~ y̟԰[bYXSV{G_+][AK˓D^Ģ^lQ?ڌ\X^_ףU;0uZtgF3PU wj7vhn6Џ6ECͱ1RIՎ~Kfޯ} )Տ79>eMԢZtW&NמnrK<2#PFtgr̍1-Pf᪴~5? ~D559[걏9I~(qIĢږ/\,|$mҢT ,|xm[9!dbgՊ]%F,1h8=rm-4o ޟ~$t?=>Ez=5!aJO9,M+aWV¾ߴOZ 4UY ,y+bJd%ΈӐ-+a'F1-ƛsEV~i%0.0施z~pO+!f9PO JI+!0B!I+a_G:Bg%Y,}KZ ۾J+a]BWPWkvħvbI]Jط-ւ/x+֑0_cniVBQY'RVBP:a_7?|[ ;ݺ}1FZ ;kbn nY-(6R{??1Nv&589}ד(}Y {VS)35"ณN;x]5^N~35;9 ZZΛ}}ڧCT<>WVsrGAj|T}֬ܡ{[כTg0aUaUsrmdZ=rrTr+u}]i`IrG žqaՙpc[DCaRUk& >1݌VV)G_VFϧ/ӥؗNWBȲW&doGGOWH=AUsǒ.;w>3ê >^Kԑza>`̰yU}D3304u&6ҕaCʰõc*EE *y}8"2 LI~U^sk5'3:Og%{Wkȅč<${y>3ۃ$k?}l~&\sQ{+fju8QN9jJ@nj>TMwm}<&{aŖISrtG?w/!뮇VI[r4aԉ,9tx͵{cv\pm1љ]>Z|CŽOU1$\K6. K^x Q="l=+*nŕhz^xJuUULNq2RŞg;e+}*c},e:?כqy9+@-v]ު32֛O U>e4^}1Ћk1}h&zVSƺ=NT2&~(qI杚Tǣr]2q)c1mi>e S~)cz>)cuGBުuz;eL|J ;e}1NjpE9߽_m߈kJUkמ~\y.S_IW1::keNg5O,^sK>w\]m?8HӋkY( (μ5W)-?qu>hݖ\]r2U{u3bmɓ4V@|OOLɵ\Q^svN(KW|w/=cZz鶶~)]/UX<5R^otaQYVI]y2;>W=4ÛKDTVqm&\폷jj䭢8 Z m#*,x85h-) rA$Κ[:tMy"xDx/jWh/˭m o7wbIKIhό&~Cg3DShw*ݕ5h;5Mєuo:Mܮ+[{MMM{a3ݩu^3>E4zWњF;uz7o!N0+ _3橍M=g 7bFW|Ε^Վ=?UBt;g٦L6xKkgD{T֨,і׷s{*vK{9D UǴE4|E;aeĝMP;-w4&ϟ"D;CG?$^m>)3sFPu*gHxuwZ>O܈/?jQ7r\hy;eX#otsN1MOr33ߌ?NhMYUm?˛3Vöw{%[tHIƚWjWI_xepZږ ߛ~xf`mF+v  -uO[*ٜo]F)Ƣ-)٦n58s*q4sayTo#|, 6-\)E ?;ΥWek.R(ķ&t[1 +ү5zK {ܿRe UU6aIϛU!DDs^UFRdμ3|k n哫o+ ٖ #O/yA}^}w|oe?>ƊyU[%®Jh5|\#P!/bBAQfy{eb<2mDl3Wٳ.|*#\q!n:fI/J =h ~h&Je氎5?nӵۜS(:Xo[t| zDD&?h#(}iNuѴ*}pؒu+$|պh/hoAfbQh y+tEtcљO 퀻jEyOϋH9I)-2޺ɍ~<]֛Z*L^A~Hh+buXYV^PȊٚF"m.ߚlδDG^2+쬠J,nOCcW&B{ϻI@{"-ZgV3zΊv,A;1g+Z]ڧ\MglgRTi@,=~~ԺOrjy&ݑyw'EƒWwn{<|8z2BC,gf\CX}]x kU3nW%9\TF֪uUגx>=P[ǝU֌Ih%ӜJ0WNd͙W~[5na5\B,?,oC#}#J0.Ui2;T%C-J0ypms1c- YQ˳"VqoZOkgP4D`~(L9WWXיc,]O+w1eXq5fD̂VTFDKB+#=Zq H+:mkvD<·V՝œX7t1 ~*:j)>^{Zi-^]Gz]^V+jDƊkqt_*O]d?n U:j>^`k*L+%=AUbS+%r]#AÚ6כW_L>}4V^VXw"ye}OV~4г|>͓4buX1fQp#sjVRx*^kaՙ)Uս*oOBPϖ:ۤ/_xtz_<-H-|3uVi'82'j1Nn#[&ơs=ǫ\ZY5O]-@4[O }JpTJUጫ-p}k1Vdxp71_pgW~c];joD[j*cot=-3igqD=Z*nF@S{_O2q_R#*/g%Dҿt8MM!Q9eӔ}SO:t}{jH*}`ѧ*uHy4ZVkf0cҿ~سP1s|*򼙹H! h#+Cm?KkWiuL6>tWr<_ݵ5&yu$ʘS+GOwo7/>:9aK_3vE{ęXk^nynE $YU'+O#ʽ%W =' o_";?UW,Z2݉;W_:@5?V3Q/Cz}~}~1q( ' ('p#?` ( Gք<?J\w%n~Jbj5wqG*(Y~ dxSě w6؄%)OBzw#hM#9HFZC˘A+`rX9xrP#EF:ACJ?cžaiGaܲG^? 6*\XꍌhVB6 lqTᅈW:[cm?WĻ^[?]A#&Ui~_l s_LB33_|R51 (BAbq#_j xHy??v~~%N+aV [K }7j3 !r\i%­=Ǔ0J RY7Aࠝ솴8m\c7"gN.n7yYV#%Lk1|7uD-좮Xytݸ-N34~h~"2L>30#jR.7hEkc̅1GWK,a[X P[ᄫj A'h_J5ZB5W?Z- ю"$Cݒ$ XS w%dӤ xiXmʢ {XIT|fiZ*lDٴ^>Mhyꠁ 3 ;ojjSZ*0pX%~p4ẍ́f蹷?zcu]g-5wpM(@ʲ_M Bs £l \PJ-d{{2s]'~hXwN`"C2L&GLq Qص9sW08= Hݸ`|~ mdxju!&L磯j*yà 8q!j8>G/cZOmu:u"f[?R̹Fz;z?RÜ&]g>r\6;_cx 3γcA{Kwp uc^I>@KJyQPKvXOyG_+nCOrhhv|CP(slBx~.C='K ;o]me[R2@?8tVQeקltLz|Ӧ@{uCDd)z{QE~RqjnZ׏}=&t}t6՜8"% qAuFxܽžre[gALdrro0ކb\gFFF>,",֌!eZRo97ߎ,y8,5QR܂_(Kf?R(W?nX[v鼖9QBV4}L݊^YarM޼M{lA+n 0֯CS7zwsK.ס-\{:_?ǒ_A@N@mVqUVg `RSۥjW-*HT͙%zQTB͢ %7D1*MkϭR6^d`XǣPλJHdT Y0V3Fxs_Pe>}S?VL}Ov\"+F^ݪ{d^qQ)MXo[?o_ݸ])M ?㰓8͵Ue)ysB-/.!S۶5u`Ol{ `C,3.WЁBNJŖ=xhv}=Pއ~@f!U.nQK͂" KqϽ)jR?BW~-H()w ZqH19I$C~> sH)Rk¢u|=xǐj坾gG/s>U>L*/?|ʣ]U ;fKQKzj%:l#7&R$PLe~80˕|b*_^i鷻uIJ ?<Ћu " y.HZq)<3ޥʒ!eX֕KJh= bXT.D09[PaQWyM~Bиpg;~5?,u뇺O.`Ww2\WχT?M]oX|q}+ou$c{x?18,{lg# O-edF7=8I!CAL׮iW^[cY:VVH~<F˻Lws+  [NM3y)JK_K?~>)K=;jmU_h 8׾ػao3U`&{SR !*?[_aM@Nj}DO8}WCU.|>8 7w[_G?Zwh,v>xc3ҽZ~xJ7uKA P3I x՞y;FtyE{K 45>㳲ŭvm;T5/j4h1 +yYNEu*HF7fۿKS>jR,/1fK ;/7@K ><шwS*8iXD*Y,u'wKXc')V-rmqN×7)VSwķ_!)uhSZ:r):K 0,9VA>t_/0Cj5c="H,ΦVї.8|isVʔ9kʔē2EHZLrZ\Ox/=:1Qv}D+y^c;,!Vš)){BŭM6rEkL+ w/y޸;K:u5?=qw\9= ґ8r]wϫ[.+g#v Kvd oZ%=ow!"n«1scfM9Xocyg@8 Ֆ *"G۝4hx^-g 3xkS+=>Bj3T iL9@mqUn;jgGzBD;8_kc7}".?qmEmU8%ġ :F B۠CŚPXKWBz49jLQ9N \U<畻`KGjD~k{[y>#%]^+H2ۊѽTK֚U[ϗbI+x~8* dvq]A%df'N<]a̤x[^#6K_ړ}씞$Eq@ W;2 zcA1"\XP*ꯤggJ)ݯ#g#=c:Xzbj@z jjɫÂїQhdzz@W  Q{Qֿ{7'u5=}ݡCxL0-oSu:}\sR0V'SqғEJ* }5e ց/ 7', >Ք4QQpe%b2s>aW6Ojމt>ԗ)7N--D,̷.߲]m|ң+hχ>՘F(VmMjٜ_cџ \_*i sr8Qgg@).)vcˏw 6}T70} l=@gx@W1zzcb%_·Ρѯ}wt-KA -~rk?opOk/,)lU,* \k ΤB%؅KKݷڗOH R^~Pi~=<P31_r)CnXT> dY32Jj4 [=G~ޟkO}H9v>\/sBV\^5J139  Fu p"%2g/+&:  .e֕ GUt'CT@9QJBDPL*F7E.S#OϹ~:9u$@&Y8ܫ%7c&ۈmOE udwՔ_nSm$%g{ lt\ė7gDwt%FC.)74#䢨ڝ^Y߸e^9(GUw".97tkByg=MAQ _WyY: (AJqδL:SzslOBv)ҏXpSG܇m/WYHyq3)Fu{?|g :mǞy_ܿ}oԄ }< [Ű4r-Ѿpk/Ԫ!em,lye{ gbpU5륷KE|Vvv֮0->9ҷZK5Iقom;m0۷m`#=ˏJtsL ʏ¡y%;JkUR‘.4߿ED9Ko+oKe2"[;=E6b~o-,zVkoq+e!2Z1 }xa| +j/xC!!w{e#0xs|Yp=}j+)_ylI/~9kr|;{`ೇ09=h9<؈'enޯ׼/;x9V}g.I~};݊9DsnF5ZB q@ =7"?R. j>42.' z?,]uF|r_~44kdXʖc-R#K#_㓾_;6,|'Y)K`z;+L@KڑμsFąT!UX<*SRg.(_陰lg: ; b*Bd"'{{wsjH3ػE A%%,Us*T ~cZ2"J'3ḇd mC8Zv S I#ʒu"Fh"^Ie`wvվD*,|*r0o/k% ۹*EsVHL0KGFGD2Gϝ303{>|yc(d==83dΝ(ӥ~42H < Y:=iM:-u)QXM°9%;H% x#qߏfXϔ|#gnFBƙ[̠͠0%c4cJ#3J{<ȃ?,/M ~x|2S&ȣ8sG$dteb1h;sHDcЛ #mCR.}R$i{􌻗5BCf<}0BzL̺=ȋ>*_+g#O㤞 N0]yg$?.T#m8s22'3K\"K-f4-߿fQ%%Ay $U%U| ^ A˘giYo?rO1 CG$?xl/=ҐB(hsЁ{4x@d~#k}Pܭ5> 9[E%^.(4!nirͲוj1A}R"귏Gڹ:zjMA2*gdlh>5=N>қ!n#BO?HK]akcixp4B%[}zJ,:.Î.X'esد"df $EcƧ}fFҖc-hԞa"$(zқ5rZzRHu_v%=Nc P^ڷԃ1!*Eϙ!}غi\iշgkuA;I@#s) *jzƗ{@ϩ4"sKg}ʵhns$I?NS&M,iXB5Z{{D|-L=#s5'J'vk%3e\|+ǵo`=ǭ%= w~%3~N"BTEb#}ʼ~*ߊ~צg?zWZt\`؇Q#(Z*IA)$ZD}@_<3Ϙ?)"/'1y^HZ+/<攟]**{%JMiJ/S/u㔗50lPC~ %vjaq_bOS4ѳhH?T jy^1a3qUg)8Yҗq|CE2 TYh|JfҔ,{zOG_Fߗ >_Kogzү:)%NQq v8N6[wr='=:n֝Bvi.|3[]IT4ka nw ==1O1 vЂu>V"C Y b›] SBKwI5{G?; g<2qqE] u_3&~i[4{5jy߷Ilfߙ^?j_E`Iv Ӧ}97OZ\YyI90n!ɵ\Z-̠Dy~vϮ?<j_{سi) #+m!ڹڵ|6 PHnZALChC1-PJ? ye^[~Tr;q^Bs%BW/]zFua7&ĿXo3ʖ:v[Rײ-wFّ|V({3>V~_G8V{}uX%Nz?Xϔ|ɴYY$1 5/Q:6iby |[w!K^HN`˃ڊCr-uZyefhpڲ໖{z=wBL?V'5=DA?wTi蜼3=*~oy?fӎ߻dc1Uh-1(ut՞ֲ}h9l)n3ZJ4O_򜼧>ȴ \, E i3)eٸl6=Fj;w 6m`= MCZֲՈtNVRv=%{P~K{^MyH+fՌjc=m?,9y3,MMZj3'suuϸJY~!ΟvxPR?bi(7>t|nٌNjݳ -*Ek鳲e=oZ Ddb9x[8-@E1R32."2pUzr(!]q[LYBׁZ[za?D]8P 6:;gRyZOB.w;Oߺ#~a佣;#lLuhhť!< iV7j xnD&}~hYcS}UW|'1wBA=Hf(ާt[L.یjOtkvY$ގb@ݥY-,n-{wF)N})-̀m5/im C6}bIu 8OE~P~Ρ-ϡqC9C3Z75YSiO t-2zıgc.س1ddz1;=gkLy s.3$E\%Z۟sQcE Aw**=FzQ㡑Uf]j(܌:(OuN1ӻk6F5wҐZIBɚcW OXۨZ "|'af<)mejCM q7r|vy6×x!s[g\xPtKܴ.u -(Yp7OR'3&QސBnӲZyw,렒,&YTF[OLIv;^Dto+PE;#ipѸpR`.q*M(1-6!Ëivb)|?tيٲq-LH=\ڕaSYn%I%VJi߅f$ß(wj u̞au{#T( rݙޗ.0,?W,}+ź[ޗQ[zʾZ^/x=?4n0y&?uяޥ$z26kaF??zҙ>|QmH?zh8zՕ͂_"65{rtEoIh(thEJKI]:/[F`)q%0mQnF+cA ~[Lwf7Jk"ګ,gIfPeJh2~h:SVX~#jÞk/n:-);S1em[um˪9/tY;:Y(iҠ, ~:ֻ-Z'%F+wIϿx3e@ "y][8.Pu<;}F\f$-t"`{l,Zw,ċp[|/S:5}?ce~ǥ(hw~. 'ZRޣV^ٰS@Z?qV+dއGX %{`yK:l>{@Ro}Z?qV^${VK \Ii|unhjZֲZwepoM ܚG%K L ݳ1nzgf<-!b&s&m61dm\;L6Ԍ.`szy);NJ3iY{䙤cE"㥼װbEY2fg1!xzcT&NeQԟ>BcOξ(,_4P-,k:nv9Ndi1/M^s/_fbj`*?Je[3ж[Ǵ\ A3~ʨKPX遮\Kc$WFEn/DɃה ,I~YsL9CpzѳHveXS`3 譎c:<1[5 l'XOoyl-FL}mu_HSs֣Xᄏ.D NNnEWpdwXZE;X|zi /iu_}uWhyw9B#7}œﶇշgh]I`P,Zc3(❏LjE)G[cK~{Ugqntѓ}6ZiqqS%oŌO~V~Z'ZKif?]rS2׌Y͙>V*]*FF1h-Uq~h=##bJk4x3VWn+5(#Vڸ#b(u97bT̪~Y]))aKVx{cN/blQͥiرxkƞ;j͞k,/0>ZE&<4|,ze~S8XۏUߘ/L_XݦWuͲ4Y}WwH^ڏwSb\<9uXޏҋ"}1O0?~X}ף/[c$%KY+ CiFcX^DۏXޏ~6Ue.)cVUcߢ|;ѻ}zU߀j{?V}n?GcBJH#Ո~:v^^1>Uf|s @h<(8ZD+iS>|,ƇQa!W-Xλ| U={qBIŗg|$n ~W(ڊ)sZb~i|:{v.OYk J͛hzmk(4/2N&-نZF@Β(̻:3S6FXvyJZ-썦!j-;j0HҒ5,*4'[}x_:[D, KG$N3<1l"Qh`{_ъ7h4Z/:簷EzG|}_PQh6U ^hˌU@hy`i\JI hxncD[(ƭD99ie.N9ӷ*o?1wY0Obp(ix#=!fԫhe QG0i->^|rkt1ůs~W"yR"aO\w_)dl(? DGd)ћy?褝5YcfDbgH$vMu>DjG'C"NˆRŷLڜ[w-v_ٛ0܍>y淈Fuy|fqǂ4yjp 5Y^Nw]s]`vRw֠-mZgP/ʾaծX&tIc'o|12_o gdl;RW`ȜxOɢf7Oi L+N7mYپٴg*ZĬ/+%#!e/ 7ydÓ9()#Q}w^7jz[|gz}TF[,h׬k 0Qsc߷{5Կ?ILE[J҂49bn#ҨX|[ܘݥym7f=LQ+fP U*k]$oM ô,XORӼ'f4#hC6ˎxW2t|/(Xۣ+՚ǯSr |= ( (ϷqvM-#_D{yw"i}0>bc>; >(]ֳ4mT|㤅(Wf>Gև9[^ώݿU^q&V݉\ūK>{7Hqujo2@nuC7=_kp=-22o Ya!(M?4$kKU:]gyfqYkr"FZ@ӱ^Gg&}f'eZM[hk5<賔w*iH5MSf(fb5{XeQ)+dһ9695 z^Jjo,ikS3\b>zD=XHȺrL#rCj:nl\g8l D~U?;+}1hOq7Ҏ5{8GZNXjz9e(8`!;oCgGW+{߳O f$8;oD]K[A%>cmb^KJרǒsˌ* xΨs`ϕkӊ;jڙ"^"לh?^JI-1 VcvaIaj+G7)m%Gj(=0v(zS[9` iը>[ gЋR{[nee1^ǹb SV8 V yjE)`f(3s 'e{Pxr.#[ցeԌS~NN| '|YUf K-}簕;xYI!m[di{ ޷/6KkDc O0ri @:⽿>9Om<5ɳHz@AR][cWk7Co̚ ~AY xt_x}>Z~%'}aU;*8])5!z{v )cXq_mMb.e" w ۗSo]33cZ)/ϙ)M8OMA{#ƳL>[Mv|x_Ŭ)V :G iV͐,5{9XUxcH(oRkތ]:;QsMes|7 Yyu ꣷwfcțۨGJTdx.MN>PVj`RS, >س^؟8O F|.\yw|u$7fF8d,ޯFĐ, 3M5$㜉^A;mG'#oTᗆh뤏SlCOzD>xO#mo^ق3h O͈Xft+QӼʕk, 6{gRBԼ+50T\^f.KDe}wBC=#ܪ6s81W4_t3d%=Q zɅwZm mۇG(~{{YD1kdG:uxN͎'%'3zDT ÷'C7'*n3sxO>2}((xȋmJ+PE:;#ipѸ0 #|cV# 5Y1H hd;xw 2~T3sGQnkk!lUʽ;H͂g=jy+櫐xFy1x{yk^BK+Uoi%~zsQ/G,ʠcARЩ,$]?z5<>Eme_k:e_?)ʓXJ "KIZ3l?;jOJ6ߋ=RqoFkKRِn)'ܤ酔d *l$1oAOJeR5-Y!%iʖQcGM9'%ސ;II GR'%Ru&-Or6|;SӠ5\].lIIH~?\4,\-%R2#tXJ#dFv9˷C)7wyGan)ړYJ*x>)IZKl??%c+OJ-R@HÇ}ɞA5y:DsCQj SڭH'2 XMZ d{'_1[muiH;*^ 1;Fu7Mn^א[T "ZnZS"!62&ju7Qe[X̸p/"#F}|;rnMy{G2xdSm@Ҏ'6ۚGbmbb:2:Rprt}+g.vB?_ʅ:U:QjvyVvѼ1{yGy9l>{FXej}PyGѠ-g.EOS{{ASXqliPMYat1γg쇷035<(~FЭ_Z4eS{~g}풽Iy P4rZf՞ϻt90޻Bu&hs|a?$J`?PAcϸ(:g2E?gaB{=cď!v n;9h=iYa8ƶ_1F[O\Y_oŽ*ӏB"nrpUY:cy`![~p)~2hc.}˾ݱ~pW3-Fi{f.;%_2G N;-u>@cɜ.#ҾԚDq{ZP*Mri1:^I&J{D=godz4xysȹ Ͻ+lǻUTuݠQ߲La_[iWjs]qaw<v/x}Lm55aR;oZ Οθ]{H%ݞr>Ngo9EglLfo*Č3RR1uPi(JDyhՋ1VL42 6jA>E{%G9[j$Mݹc&Ngj^^jk:Oy=4i{lk|鱪I5s}\!⛟sRW_bOj\PwN]ppxsiÓ؍@AJK@vO2}?!9w|ٗK9wV}"9=3eS!2.]8xm~U>YfY9o#0GjlFKI03Ro-# 6(3] S<bYp?嚰zkq~ 4NjUi'1zP+)U\Øx;:J9FKdG2?q(Cj'`흊2װN?.x-efC6v e[ӥz\Sy%oMZ;oѦ{E߫rv5"~Fk='Z?+7J-OQkWt뇖o'=IaHDZ8|b/ƨԓ4|xh[=W9G]WgʖCf޹٩]45v֑z `}yKCN7Dj;;1;YxAԛNy"uF댈kcwMQ]zƆ.]?kE4fYzvB_d@m׋A#L>e8D>|* +#֩X u%uDKj=F{wEuQ<1 o8'q2C_ ӉC/3%:Qz~Oc~F;]F-voƊ7F|I}Κ|g+ިGXKW%vkʭg3]Ŷ 7ͱvs]govߊ=PIjGCamz=Ny1Rt^UEjh؏wMcdF sn۱W;:ێZF1(h>%Q1&Kfh7,fSnYH'LF6mΜ8R=fMzG٠ms, 3 364"i>,C܅[@3ZJZHvS6U; j;TJH[8PZHZَ?Wh%%3?E;I-Չx'fn9¼c?u%W&l\e6443~1: $Ҟ^dl>DRxvd|o*kA1&13 =<Mʩ7%Rrj"I~c¶ +,aF#H(0D31ey4=%r}3Vefm+i^|][[m=E[KrnxHQ<O_DMq7"Dci|9C[0[V33\Ck3C\lIsS.6HIWdJm˿6$KcoMݶ=EnwV-lY&jCv(ZQs}.)D)Q$MjOئ\lZ+ $u Yt^} Xcĉ'<~?6ƈt*#f:>͵xk]|S~r;?ҚQhk3Ծst2GJ!Op6tMZĠis7$WZ׬[mŔ ^7炳 =zV懲4EռgXvTgm92Kv [끽#V F>s0[:rCwD?\4.[Ls(sGtbezbHSN=wifC\{Q^S j&}x1 y3 XwbF ~wzxAN{IL(gVw3Js4M6<:L@-QFLW=mԦ3YY3$w bFǮ,6ޝ.G?kn/3Yb1; Ջ2;h遐EͺA55EE)ɐV(<;oΎwǺYʔ6&w-VfA)y%">z\I(UWo[)W:W޲ѓOw+Nj8mCC% DAś' Q | Y|1EM%9չoi{[?Zpj֮GݹCDÐd±dȡ߹Qm˘ҥ!]jķ[_g|sO\~71QZwE[ť<@W5i.ag9"kjE*#SwD@ZE4~o՗5幊9dKrM"߬oRGZҨ%5z4-_z~&[}zFKlt͞h9dO)t{.Shk3y;вDQhʫzZsM}ުbCe5҆Y:Uwܷ[\TVV ߷f_oToמV}fق;D+ԡV_[bԗXū 7ߪoLO;j1;Wymƾ435qo^- ߷t+PGM9z b?$DKׯ)ZJ+Bv~q~%ɇ^qַ.Q|'LlDs?g@q7eJ1zԪO8es6D;_%b>g ŷ8MtVrZHOS8<@ю'm OXøp<--$Nz:4}UO(ͯKg|Z;Zm(W#OTQuOjgwyTO+1z~,>}gr)8STxp͛H-T{O:ž=kݥm^}=jh?Z-`:M^7&ocQVŊWZ0>5{\oQC`e'5oP𫐌֐*M43zU% Vݗ^AvfiGqWaèU=8 sy]3[v{rn*ѓuZ邱MFϺ}GϢ{r♾Bb} ̻ҀU3l@^G W,屳Q=%bc[!fv2c\ 2UjwMԉYBO)^m ;}^#5mؐu-K@:54d.ٙy*k"DQ3<|HC7F|:?>33cZfƸ,ܨmm ~} +{vg􈀏qY偈b*QQtR6*;Ǒ7mXtlVn}{83]'s'1;Ɣiet* 2"3LYxYTK~;VW Cz.{Cװw:_u ku0J<ٕfG1!fƧWŹD{2(ּ],✝u8Z狈RYҜ^>*KY=5k}~hyc߷{5?W\4~h\bf9 Gj pLw)X^2w?<\=ZuGZށ{:'G=~XwSˎxVNE ~}떁9}*j}OCw3kW nhw@QڼF1*Be+|_ZMDMuʶ}Irm.żnaL+Fi ޴%,x0eπz浯 O2Bp<ʂJsė1Fc݈ K%[>gώ9?A Yjw~egTڋ<[A!G3;c]U5bGk+sK~]B?.Wb1*C ,F!BqF~i! hB6 U~pDW= ??G>T".LGpk T xW*yǘA/UHJäQϗC0^JZ P+!?d 2*#LH[=O-vT-gO:ZygR}3|6#nJSԮHS4FiYz5KXֳziͷ;!$IG 1{6jK`OZFcHʣ@Z<B=@X/HKC.>r}(G?9MIlh">M qѡv$ wpT%(⟎r<[pGet[nU67Eu| YtPy #}MV*0]WM\44a[1UQ`GE?rmRmD?x5v'eA`<8;$.Z($іX:M - >ì!*pG r:[p1V0C>R5ˋ. ,k& 88aMjt3 p~C]3)Q5C@R?Ge8sJ ;)Uř(2cřsA9ga0BFGg"89qI:Ta(o$?;O)aRWʱ"}lފoZrr&G-O6sGny'ʓj嶜z5KnX \ܥ>ReP#48MOKnQn)p!b(`F=-Y ^ɩInv;)3/x *AJԫv܀=FT !EmDyOG=E?t%+?zWҴ_ytxizCO7 v@ G>t*HUŲ^J0!@]l 18Q"؇7p+"9(b\$(R"CjQK!P eJZ0K{?5 )Pam@%@=:@DG'\C:*-d< T i@5!PEB!mQP-Db?}Gr '{ʿ|u<#58Ik:zu!&> )V'PAGAOnI͒'P>{~j2Q0=wa MAHk\#`\/FBKI'Igc[mVYcgAkD)gHPϯh=&d: 3F qZivoR#kw6ErE,V;m(:%##LNgK ~ !S~ʏ-OFEqK](P< (gP:Pm&%ADmFwEꣽ)p:^dHCiz{+RoA2,AEkjgh>H0r-ܬh9n1aٽ)"IbEjZ("|_UICQsFtHmELU YS$ƽɔNJ`1 :/EiD9"p~v%)9`K Hpz()|xԸ.bݧwGyHbx娕`lF<(한:ފs8K'lN3"}ӼYGF7neƍe=:DXݩ7{XϲfBQ[f2nO럔M|Ssېi%n e0j7+r98"D¤ zgIa@~"XJ5qSjH>b42\Ai7mXTֺVD(ӅZh¡heC-;]rsFbg99cGCdWҥ&)..ڒլ"7S'68f|#8 xSˏ(+ͿzJڶWq;Wguβx%\,wAX-$IVWL Ccl2[Wxa")[z4XQvq g1ߗd)X#6W:Xh¼*f}Bèr9)b)"cռz3-+?y U><9H98` w]<&6uOCm!ԲdʼnS/,|4۴ϸN14xT#:xy1Sq:qʫ"3'9[~;J12oٖ~2~/.dP(7ck~"Qrl |63J|nd׌b) eᏞQGSp*yyQqj}4i\y;]HYTe}ѳDN4,mE Z.~zy *@~`nN8EK6qih\iAQz1su7+̫ţpc^*f;7k͵(u\[;z7ߠmΜE Oň96.PTKC+(3X IH~rl˔K_Vs-5w?]Vᰧx=yD0~3k=4i%j[އ*k+x!zq\=waϞ9NΞG9{\C3yW6xygݹs{2!b5-cSt)*O?MFt繲Nqs3}=,f.wF~gQGŜ˳g.m&dzgޚg^ZӃbv : )@Iٳ|كZ1{}Smy<~g.BL̞9i3&bswxv;gK2vzΠaAzgPSM V;2nɻα}':yfڑAɂT :eM(Y?EgqJTf8 :Qh3Xg!߲dPAL3(3X@ NN!nwgÎcϠȰN υ3 Xg/av0L G]'ǞŤ\7Ϡzȋ;y+m"4z>Nnn:Obt=%A>S8+ Jfw'j9e0 ؽy| ,A֮3z6 Jᇹ0#i :yJ߫F?p WaKyfXEہ( {@~M%! gYG~WJXRtԒ|pۊ*4`RN&h 7Ni[EQwH>ʣ˰~k)%+ERkRc#ϕ,EBPt❖RO2ִGnQ?I>rgXJv. *警t Q%$>+-ÿO eE6BJv۷+W RCvWLe>~a[3QK)჎'xo=|{Z;ЩIeH.0| ҺJbyf'A] ![[9@v}\ 6 5$9/s_R34b{n.5jaG iO18?!4xF%*H1 $gF^~Qmj7B~I`Pbx1~"u 7>º@4Sp~0IDͧl01?cܣ7G,_ⰄV\Y^SLf=OCK*7vo#Km%CԭHY&)ķ{ȤMk62wyܚڂkV Y췐uhwv]zѾ|G\C^w`k(]#(޷#[݌Л,_ m/)N0R/ף,pIVC! j\s՗+=l9@ n -|W/;I^͍X{bQM0^לuyLw{ҡ\[2eV䰫x ăRGwbwh,yJkJ7<뻒Q߫ADOue=S}s2q۠uѥTA[+E;C<Y8E181K.-ݖ}/FNwyg)애g#+ߜB/^Y wĶ~s9'm +[?X(qt8xwV2>)ɘhLsNz(-7vS krYdlcV4$nֈ"FzA8hG'%Y>:LBo u(.Z.⁝&og]$6~9%ZD?}I [lχی%ҞK&ڸ]ALrxJbg͚vvl;I!2Çg$K1q#$V~-J X7!ts1 JД%5- iG?Je{>{hm h򁲅'zּx MȭM7e~qH., )gvwO"^1q̦6̍)-* nE6DςԤrJUDHټwY#y7{gJU}G|W xDGiwRFx^JpP<2-IY`jhmZ-jc kmStnQiPqPk~ߔ#ٯ[ܰV \=~cERrƜIYf7gDz89txl޿?''ǼE!xswAqYH푠gbg8(_q}51d9Prg4:<\ULм ncJ߀,>1@O&3u&;9VQ`S–`/X(h_y>ޞsÝ(ϒG_5Ρsg8EEҌys2Wb-z}o {س+iN~uzIӋt\e޳Q3h߻yw.:}l|*?o_ձ,AOjzc i4uZZ՚NkusDD YNﴙX-ONO<6<ݡ0`д%u[OoCrtk2؞4SpюMh2ILY鍥#LE]?Q\K!iSVzc{l_vzcd?d@^M79ϊ4$Hf 7F%?8pK z#{%j)?gߒ53U1qL=?J(>T5zYcLVXͮ9@^9Y+hVX鏦I٣4$ЭP'CMC``;-yoѧQԙ_#{v""/V6djJ;H_CË,(*8piJb;7V}x=. Q 9-#~K3J `k9dݶxB 젖;iIdɥ=wثI>;-%/a%,oٍ֪qd|xh##M@|LCy.T!c*|vM|/O7=*gtv90FiPIVTO`]"g0Í0<-[5[=F;@9UҩmPVGgOs٧I#|1V2Fغc=þ/Gş4OcLET!;SiWz ;ZCjOIkJ:DeTlVzĒ3~hS:@:=Krj_)e,TGu7wM=a>En$~O7”^Tdԭw^kF>#^Yluq7Oiкo=Z51u{]y)1Q{c_?+lyd) &~-=a+zTn^17FE:OI}EaMJ}?Fi}~]b‰fNY=5@n<5#y)iLْ$%clan0ftu))YGR@ɗߙTWR =)%$U0k6џZДŨ;E; QTDGRC9cۇ.)JJaI źRMbb<VwSaE?O|ѣI /G*ݑ;kOdQ`ų06rPޯ))!,)a79u>ӑG|On̓)iqSQ֑KB,}{>LrF –:2a ң3,Le!ƷfV盹!u.ߪIFf:s{eaE>HG<(@+CZfZkxi'Sy,r\Mט ׉Zcϒnyx/7FiDc>IvqR\QFޡѹkQrYO[>;[e!w96ya]sO+;qűV4|N~)eY#> 57Sʼn:E<ZG'M ̖j ;NwæJՎvBv'wCR##aFi=/4- a[-jՒcg<>![ϯXǼ5yK[(ouKQGէy;nR,5ާ]GIY3 ]) 9Df A[gm;㑽 ^i h|ؿᕘz[ޒZN[Edޒ'$!_ pD?f4H#QЪ֊Wbq9c\y;˃|JʃY1fyWՌ4>DfB;Ѫ[}[5WsW:N/tOI;ײSJ4k5jtDճ4{^eJ/{i?m[$}+x-Y?n JhՋp5V--MFM~i:]GNc̦,8ɖarC~ֻ3Ge'1z#Z1˻-mOY*ZYӞx]mQ VF_;Ь̏XÏ,ЉUV\ݧx3?ZӔ{'kB ܛ{7xČhg.[_"sbAI,&Q+%'tBKR}GP+z?~hQZm?sި]kqk߯"+1ff6Ώt:}6sIi'm+Yڔ:wfT4oh+(JђCŝ!> J;w+HSLt办ɷ(6mB.VsGIoP+IUÊ2!t*U|=bo~4xێjԩx?8ߏZbE %|x&a7cLkS9='XsQ[ sBAj?J\íCmUPǔ7G].A/Oc6|0o1)TBC9ߋV@YKtMfT[ xwB~w pMHa֯F | n`I/l5e@ҏg[%2]x7' 0 9> |, 9W]{Sx'2Ab?[S-G[n'#jYIe3~u.{ĺmF9޺սB-rۙQcmD%緮7^dl~,LEZDuGomْue'*s޴:?G $޲CTUn{vg|v}3crG+ƥd'U+(;^>^쾗{JD]>쾓ȴqH4j2b` aM9lK=Ovt) +{ >tn4h]׬I+krV8F}YjwbvqVۧwg 3ak1Qmϫ4{޻{|VZxK--(i3l`eՠ1 DewbI6e k@))Ζt,ȶK&Oh?F,Kgl cKs5i|h ~o2f6`7[*|_Q=PT4B |r%ŝxoq.pOZD~ ߘp wa%"69~m@{$QYi#ÊgnƋZwZﲩX;zeZسVZ=D:k|%c=~<EZ/-Is")YgĒ/Y dި^[e,j0t$mz#)ڴ[2>ERM/kQKyĉ*7E4EzY_~\#J2spVR*!ʑ^eI?|O2K.iV=K/mGsA.LMRfS>7hr^ϫz~gF:z{GeCaF9Ue=7?gQx0WsӇQ4~1Ucѹq=KT8޿j%*z=M¤x@^Um4~aoTTuv 9^[N{v6B]v䜅ʛgZO596K?d缘y MO_.r\rؽlUo0CљNp=OF;z#=Zh$+lۑ׆sJG^3@>.ho,[d;]`X{HڳK lǃB\ShWY3?tW߷V} Ҷ3^IZ*hz֔+1gOZ I42l)b>e>:&lD-*ʚsU'afS^q-RqY3ָe Nc]x~lɔjU4Ѻ$kr/ y,E%(Rzlx UFg~-Ǚ_Y4@S|%]XH>)q482FM7Z^qY-h]]e֕um1׺yK9.q.ޏN^B4ҳG cβY+Jl]3>jU7Veʪ8$]q V}qβ,YӶXjFٽiUqzּZK4oґ.*>M.^Yǯ鬦-M6 ")YYzu*OJz/7W_KN8{ݖ4}*zdK)*Œbޥ슖briU u|QH7’N9+ӊ%]h-GN̙3L:*x|)x1g^q/Pް+ a1v&E@u'm%ǮzsbKDz|r4BҀ/1SK F=}j(\1y6HO\V_^%h6zSVE 1G :)ﳓJv˞Rv׭N^b݄P߀hNv^nOWqHI߱}}u?عFIW)6B6>-~6c{ql??}+iFfVR|+b߲9hl YN3sg9*ch8i<mЦ1McQ<5<A$9w8-ojCxu%iPjngp3kX5;uKWϸ/^}J{Re9tsw4׺||]yc-aN5{R|z] Mw~Rȴ|dمKs)ڂO*t?|-kov% ļn<[xޚU1_WX$wS-'=+ OƙUK2{Q:(H.3rr%ܬK;w~p=ws#z=*6jpZ߽Y?Տ9ScUhOy _gԷ,DC%-tC 1>6"MUZOqYZB}`VR|4_Q QOWE27YBו7߷W,6:jɛ1{1|wbi;j]+'{STR|>עX ˿^ ɣZHZi6展8E=gNf<{3T}1͝i+}b>P5+1Tzq _]f!? 4j<7@ lBK|1^i=3rVuq0[+488Qfog8OLJ:I{3j_ ;˩:>yޒ˪u=BU\_oY.Y?=DP !?#NI$8fT>x꾱McCћJTf6b{̧Ul[\C^\׷hl>xF *k<˥:l|> YOe_UpPFOD& qƃ>#'aZ%XgO2hPk=0Q:y!8OFt*>0 -ْq&ZSS:kJ%ZS;~S֭%+ʬ cn1#)w5.::_ùKOYh5wǷݚSFI>a;ph?XmNL]v[$5fmt2NfSv^mPۥQ)t{s^3rhJb2_><>*ͯx;:ҭicc:"X=%Jᇲȇ㳯};!HNi)ۉU c| ٗ2Sش 컷kO&IRirr*|NBwIUG*sGi~in!A:sa[6Q΋l*#Cr-T>LOp=& Cm.q lcҖY 㸔Caޭґo-:;{ӊ>4k GamSѾ@}[e9+N??|Yo)ZEqC?,ۈNk`k沼'~32|Je t]ȺQ9eWVW*7[Z5ǤM\'c^. 7REy%|e&U/G<ڤz=g5e@D-˙Uy_>+V\\%[hM7Cgu~hy-FhUZ֔D.FhՏVy[Ṧ XUVX͂&^m%˙٢fe|T?rIf2#er|e!6{!ؤD|.=2kNYa* 9,t9WYMFEK,ĦV_Js3S%DfFYϊ9vc}sd5ܳD%9d:FQvo͵=+ϬmsBl2jyUN2k>Fds(Ş9e!6x4|9ȕsC_r9oɸxOෲS_6B~n/X\gl*+iD~hYv,Pĥpwrc)(Wr|<y2-fc1)}}bsS҄)hr?nzc?WTF06eTSqhcƑ(S9}hvgVVvmd;Q ;Ǒu՘J?cgQZb˔#it \q#_N+rH&01yr Wq8Q^)9Ys%:ԴQ"S(o_&e 42--4_>ɜnR_qy5ydUnd{| ƸaW~3olp< iop< g.sƻ.eeʾEYgF?R_"}NIppֿki~4pzD^=x̬sI&7҇:i.+i^c{>(|lo+73~:|3Be{vǟݑ-əľ9#K{/l ~ߕ|hki~4sԦJ dLiƻ| waeblʷdB &hФr;1-+g9FlSBӞ~%_Kfx^B^9 1XsTBzl7~/K(f1=W8Y3[BLCxPoc}HB f+\֒P%-_^˚+#{w |B&M0^Ƞю)&zDeUSM`s&{#u zb4nEٝulxna'c&DQ7AJcR[jχ>^ң+qH'dW<(t*C0;ޚW$W zpqpo׏,٦Ρ_iӻ>0[+yȘwEKMW8ֶjٯp-ʟzȜY*OOTا}XyEݎBߛV4M/wEKW4/rE#m;;t)a(MGɽVoTII3=o}ss~+eooϩ!+ڱ[XCk k_#99{flЊ&Nh[sEcB\3Wl" O[k۪}io'dkuO,suRx&!G.smYͥs fO*r#۰۞YgX5Vg>XS)Cl.ŝO*Eu9[)1O}o'ǥ)nl{)ZlbX{+f ?m?{:+^#9Jsu2WJdv>Z:p?"|Iʲ$qf0N|ܲ ̚g5f(GQ>vrDOF^1(64@jJ~ Eq,+jeMKIP9W OJoMΎ|r9&hli=;!GwUi[75W9uiKF 3$ze|Rl^G.q׬pЋ7AĪW=7%ɬ(^KeMaRҋ\,<څݱ|9#gC~˙xիaFnrFy""*3F+c0>[c_x]H2<3GWA$@GW2>k.t"l]*>񬈔J7_X`waD1ҼxLaϜ,1b3*F*_('s4ӵݛpGZ|:-L!q qVI˳_;:WNUR9βMʰGlg1,T,1'9Ő"WI*)}IUJsēX%UrXOUrV yY%|ҥU;J%izzʞMCٍ~%u0 z0 !RSr ٰo[?e3QKs~J0ݒ,Fh@M~}s񩕱bS*L}9rdQI_zY ۧ<BZ9XwTi?Ì 1қ=CBRʱv``Y|*1Q #$ތ 7XХu~C>Bk&zOvOb*?Q^O5*ff3D<y&dZV܀āi3.o@;(rNN T?.0}Ȕe4L C!+@J?")0``-LEt5V4zSڎ 7?_ͩœY`7y>8k]cz2S퍕t[Qi l=͜`;@pDQ\1eY܋k\*`}k@нfQt,+^`_ d`b]G ?\'\a`Sܢ́kz6?QqG'WNAEPT`%8 m/#(2EjXKendstream endobj 6 0 obj 138008 endobj 7 0 obj << /ProcSet[/PDF] >> endobj xref 0 8 0000000000 65535 f 0000000015 00000 n 0000000070 00000 n 0000000118 00000 n 0000000312 00000 n 0000000415 00000 n 0000138496 00000 n 0000138518 00000 n trailer << /Size 8 /Info 3 0 R /Root 2 0 R >> startxref 138554 %%EOF "*W5A8#ZqPo \*w@=T*W5A8#ZqPo T1esX"*xA,v|,d$dn ܱHH 1$h2{̂Q0fUbYYOJS*322ψl?gmnۿm˿oO__nwO/__?؞p;ӏ?ŏvk|K? DVԥ/5'Qop-ʹO_A2$_h"ݔ:`~rC4Cߨ,_49 z;ΜGq@::7̹6sUOF{" xQP|PG^}-ߠ ' ?_ 94Oϔh7/ ϣjZ:3h ]j=jid& .LH=Hd~+'Ii~U=󨚓V?fk~*&ڊO8G gu p59\ōFO6(?QɑNrK]~_>}emoO;؝yޮ=̟ΌThj<*yg\GMVu(>mjidמAC/3 !h ĝq=2LGé҅N\z jO|CT^7O$GKAW?=3U/}2Lo[si'mGɚ6fr˽l G5jU-FT/,R23˱-:VӍλ/5JK w<.L{K|qx2;v4 x{(1#޶ϣtN8397a|=̶I=7Gޭת,|k-.)R=!͓LϮ˷dHL`rU\ty4ߴ#irh$(wUT9(%WojJz{4INT'ޣ 0VTouA]jz fXd6/SGyU"oVՓ^P>rb>Llf[}ZO7lO?BuݻX{,cJ6왽?nZ?Sփ~Va5[RA<`X=;ߠy=i(sOJmx,[)pj~08ōO;GŝVm|;j=$CUVŧj*=+->X; NvV=tŽ8-ơ]QǗǧp\c9z%)agjPə6!Q3gz^||mÎ;3v%xTPVWK~~<*M(Uj,]emrFAv>2|QעTZe9*?FQ-+[2Lfa\گaJ6n:?uxT2e&fTǣJ;yQC9*?#QT[Hq_?uwMg85GeV̜ɤ4&F''V-\'P͜ZOwtpJwh}&AͫF݋[ G5J9*l 'R}XXzo5|`'x-|$nL\[{7){;&rߋ_eJo ^08Gӯ)-m͸ }]xV&GhxۙͿѻlIkçfT -%_ΔҖxt`AK3yenT:v[ɉoE+ƽr˵Vhye냇jVڼ5u͗KqR^=z=`}NK|CK776c{> }߸^NwV4n'8|LKTq\rĺ3g6qmHM~krTx0Q_Lh$#cضge6˓9{`fߧ\'{2؞xk5 T(Y(ƽݭDŸdi-Ϟ~x)G%3L>d'\_Qڏ:5GQ|^㬘{%1DovҀL(Or|ܫ O8]MDc&R+v߻:)h['ELJDT/Svj\5WTp죇ŇW>g& ɱ\9^ў|Two7<:9zFpUuwP z:VtjTq*o0g79`|[<~gWzKVc'v6Nv!kz5q9dL_یgf*3? gFA8;Gk2+2kX]W.xx=Z&pM£d3'ª*SZ`~a?gaN^z.~f&/&[-Q{rT u&, &K}NQۖwVhɮ/QkՊިX^rъl@9=@(yzgk2Njmp{b݂5[q7G%dh, I5(Hflo&ېU @_'1,dhߛŇC\3?|c {7Qc>gs9S{$$GĀRzyG ww+)tdr(|)?dqO_2'Z{122oz?KKeXI/+ky5}9n> JQo-Zy&tM~"m@O__UORk}XvC_X/~ֽ?{w? 8gtyu Ϭ?鯜ZAs 8IuoX͖w¿柝pe}ա?亂}Y卢TptQqXO4;j?>5 < Ņe;߹I3eD7R;o;>aˆO\כ&%]y/R_WvoTOٹ៷$S'F& ԺQ*I&GeQg0G%Mʕ9*_t $w}/ս;ufg2\47n^REzJ=%pq;7.xŻW|_[:_[ߪս[{}=Q:q7ş~}so_Օ_[r7:ս;~_uvo@9Iy>, 7g˷AP]SeuvPZT@wOvUrBiQUoUqAzC9 EU}W>qz|י0J ΗNlQr GQr GQrr GQrraOQ@)>rPMPr(%G%GQ@/AQrЈOj9 (@B 9 $((@|(@B 9 $((o|Z2e~|鵿8GBQ pi"(%GKӒYQzVOc%G&jz8G=(xQ Y=(xuo rN6 x};GIr?A_O9 ħxQ A!GQOzB($( 9 '(@|9 ($( 9 'rr*A%A!GQHP G A%A!GQHP G A%A!GrQHP G ArrkQ ArQHP GB G ArQHP G Ar%ArOP:$>#0D/؞y2Ac: TI r$AA^zW9 oǑ`IBE ||rO?9 9@(sʬ^f}rԕht$G auY /iE(m ,IP Gݿ1%irkJ@Xo4V&- Gix5g1G( $(' Gd* g稧 ؟l'9*QCƬt.|v|zy{p5 EO[׷pSQ(rT1L$ )hm/-I@6;( iyVp;᣽K˥t^2S#GU7Q&N&V!>rf?*RU&S!>[9 V9 iQz^fأU嶭0GpiSlC32wQ+GUsa`knɢo~9t#_9J+V9 G]XIG @ץQ\9"߼<\ⵙJe49k2=Z|̠tмu#2s߰YHpIʤuSײr Q4G˥̥/ 9r~|Ǡ<^Q@>z G GQr8_/795t:(J:)QF9陒zǻ G GG9Y#G'h*(9*ڭ3?5x< G GQr G GQr G GQr GQr GQr GQr GQr%GQr G GQr G GQr G GQr G GQr GQr GQr GQr GQr%GQr G GQr G GQr[E]摣20GSwR?uIQொQ1;Q($ՑkOI~gjSJcUQ+jrTЖsf>W-4 RW΋R_ s^ߩ9j_q 3rԾv:"*eFNX{>\d2êNW$G ; 2MD4~090;k?yla^@F{V{@0IQ-dyYoT"?;ٻ@=5(SWo%gSfY-*Gpc^q*jѭt5FIWWJf+9 n_{~Q+7G]#k=IYBj$ߡ1n9ꅇ#sk |m}F0G]\szp~9jOHIM:{xk< `Ifr(SI9ɭJpT˶ANU2h.8+mHYU\=߼Qkl/ o? ^"9G{%9jd?#G9d~J#]649t^[Ti_'Gk&GU>/G5 Ʃt%%/]Qo1\:ֽYwc=Q<6-ͪT߼1YogfE~|miOU q/V]ިG]êx sTo`]CX_45R~XV9l.z+V7wIʟJ:wYCj`}dW|_V'{ь9&rTcqƹ9ߘiڧo䥙|>ݷO3sUb`m[U99*3M稽xkF_z9:;'sԞ?Wg>G G2VyJi\(?CXɓ_$ZRq+ snenogij>'G%|Ts KaIg5$X۫^ݤ/xMԕs9?_j=af}Txuq% G]#kYxIFGSZ$䨙5\C~^ZX^[O:((9J>|ƣ8r 5Arx Jz۶ΟKT07!@@@ >NormalCJ_HaJmH sH tH Z@Z s- Heading 1$<@&5CJ KH OJQJ\^JaJ \@\ s- Heading 2$<@& 56CJOJQJ\]^JaJV@V s- Heading 3$<@&5CJOJQJ\^JaJJ@J s- Heading 4$<@&5CJ\aJN@N s- Heading 5 <@&56CJ\]aJH@H s- Heading 6 <@&5CJ\aJ:@: s- Heading 7 <@&@@@ s- Heading 8 <@&6]N @N s- Heading 9 <@&CJOJQJ^JaJDA@D Default Paragraph FontRi@R  Table Normal4 l4a (k(No List>@> > Footnote TextCJaJ@&@@ >Footnote ReferenceH*4 @4 >Footer  !.)@!. > Page Number6U@16 # Hyperlink >*B*phHBH :n Balloon TextCJOJQJ^JaJ4@R4 qcHeader  !D+@bD E Endnote TextCJ_H aJtH >*q> EEndnote ReferenceH*TOT Footnote Text CharOJQJ_HmH sH tH FV@F "9FollowedHyperlink >*B* phNON "9 Normal (Web)7dd[$\$ B*ph333B'B +[Comment ReferenceCJaJ<< +[ Comment TextCJaJ@j@ +[Comment Subject5\j@j vx+ Table Grid7:V0.O. Md%style21CJaJF^@F R Normal (Web) dd[$\$_H !2 ;Ae+a u"&,-J3KfMORUXXY<`hiknnBp(uy{^5vu[#I`  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;N\ > hVB !V#t#;$%&-|/12\4F557779::j>C@@/AACEFFG"NPQR~TXbceehh$_`$_ #`|2|k||67AhijFG!#$EF   xy##f$g$|2}2$3%3&3<3=3iAjAiMkMcOdOTUYYmm-u.uxxzz?@ʔ˔{|vw|}ªêyƌa@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@0@ 0@0@ 0@0 0Da@0 0+,#567AhijFG!#$EF   xy##f$g$%%&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&'' ''''!'"'''/'0'1' ( ((6(s(t(y(((((((((((((((((((((((((()))F+G+X/Y/|2}2$3%3&3<3=355s;t;<<iAjAKHLHiMkMcOdOTTUUYY]]@`A`bbEdFdTgVgllmmrr-u.uxxzz`a?@ʔ˔{|vw89Ýĝ 9`"#KLIJ?@զ֦|}ªêJK $%Dopq+,"#CD)+ )+CDjk-.QRJK )*def{|  56^_`xy01&()EFAck l E F ' ( }~STVeg  MN##,'.';(<(****++`-a-00u1v1G2H23399::<<>>5B6B_B`B!C"CCCDDrEsE6GSGTGHHrIsIeJfJQQ[S\STTyVzV;X>5B6B_B`B!C"CCCDDrEsE6GSGTGHHrIsIeJfJQQ[S\STTyVzV;XIJPUTW[`gjnmsRw.}s`OJ  U#.04Q67&;ADJLPcYX`cfJjoxɔ`  "$%'()*+-./124568:<g,...//!///s00000001|:dWta9Kò$jf "+2BPccl}/`    !#&,0379;=_"$Y!!5]o f G$"%v%hXXXX_|~:@    @ Z(  `B  0DԔH  #  `B  0DԔH  #  T  C  V  # "` B S  ?H0(  &&6(7( `9Ettn t  t.m#TZt _Hlt2329136492Ia@3Iawc$excyc5uzcJ{cܵt|c }c$t~c)cucJc\ cľxc cucZEcl=ctc^c|qc6EcovcMcxc!ucLxcYc[cDxcpcLqc4,Zcnc$/Ec0ocvccccxcdMcMcEcLVcDac scwc ccscAcTc[Eccsclsc\sc\sc`vcL`vc$vcvcqcqcEtcDtcD4c4c)pc|)pcDccMuclcMucli¯c,iïcdsįcTtůctƯcFǯcFȯcxɯc|xʯcM˯cM̯ctsͯc4sίctϯctЯc4tѯcttүctӯc ԯc#sկcTOt֯cOtׯcTxدcxٯc|rگcE cqccxcncwccxccMQc'Zc ocoEc,Wcd(cuMc԰sclDc Dc| ct!c,"ctrZ#czZ$czI%c}Z&c5t'c(cd)cZ*cts+cD,ctx-c$w.cD&/cs0c1c t2cct?cD@c$AcsBcԢCc4uDcdsEc?B@ACDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`acbdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~      !"$#%)&'(*+,-/.0123645789:;<=>?@ABCDEFHGIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxzy{|}~))  & &p&p&i*i*BB&B&BHJHJQLQLLLNNNs>sttyyM{M{'}'}~~ׇׇ!!11IIqqa  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?AB@CDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`acbdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~      !"$#%'()&*+,-/.0123564789:;<=>?@ABCDEFHGIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxzy{|}~ 9K*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttagsState=p*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags PlaceType=r*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags PlaceName8X*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttagsdate9*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttagsplaceB*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttagscountry-region8*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttagsCity>9*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags PersonName?\*urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags stockticker 1101112199020062008200920102011212223330316DayMonthYearrrp\\X XXrpK9X XX\XX999X rpXKrp9KKX Krprp\prrrpX X9X \KKKKKKKKrpKKrp@Abcj l D F     $ #u-{-----..//\1c1ACCCY Y[[yy{{||~όЌaN N@Abcj l D F & #''8B^BBBhttp://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdfvy_http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41Ahttp://www.claimscon.org/q&Kara.Kovacev@claimscon.orgKara Kovacevb  FMicrosoft Word Document MSWordDocWord.Document.89q6U,~i|W@b!]Nbc]iX!^>FcJ`^0:J(^a:v9ZOdffIsvn/7koV_ry ^`o(.   ^ `hH.  L ^ `LhH. xx^x`hH. HH^H`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH.  h^` o(hH. 8^`o(hH. ^`o(hH. p ^p`o(hH) @  ^@ `o(hH() x^`o(hH() H^`o(hH() ^`o(hH() ^`o(hH()^`CJOJQJo(^`CJOJQJo(opp^p`CJOJ QJ o(@ @ ^@ `CJOJ QJ o(^`CJOJ QJ o(^`CJOJ QJ o(^`CJOJ QJ o(^`CJOJ QJ o(PP^P`CJOJ QJ o(0^`0CJo(() xx^x`hH. HLH^H`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. X X ^X `hH. (#L(#^(#`LhH.h^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHhpp^p`OJQJo(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hH77^7`^Jo(. ^`hH.  L ^ `LhH.   ^ `hH. ww^w`hH. GLG^G`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH.h^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hH ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( pp^p`OJ QJ o( @ @ ^@ `OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( PP^P`OJ QJ o(  ^ `CJo(.   ^ `hH. xLx^x`LhH. HH^H`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. X LX ^X `LhH.@ 0@ ^@ `0CJo(()   ^ `hH. xLx^x`LhH. HH^H`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. X LX ^X `LhH. ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( pp^p`OJ QJ o( @ @ ^@ `OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( PP^P`OJ QJ o(808^8`0CJOJ PJQJ ^Jo(n^`OJQJ^Jo(hHopp^p`OJ QJ o(hH@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHo^`OJ QJ o(hH^`OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoPP^P`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hH ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( pp^p`OJ QJ o( @ @ ^@ `OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( PP^P`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( pp^p`OJ QJ o( @ @ ^@ `OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( ^`OJ QJ o( PP^P`OJ QJ o( hh^h`o(hH. P^`Po(hH.. ^`o(hH... xp^`xo(hH....  ^`o(hH .....  X ^ `Xo(hH ......  x^ `o(hH.......  8^`8o(hH........  `^``o(hH......... hh^h`o(hH. P^`Po(hH.. ^`o(hH... xp^`xo(hH....  ^`o(hH .....  X ^ `Xo(hH ......  x^ `o(hH.......  8^`8o(hH........  `^``o(hH......... h^`o(hH. 8^`o(hH. ^`o(hH. p ^p`o(hH) @  ^@ `o(hH() x^`o(hH() H^`o(hH() ^`o(hH() ^`o(hH()h^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hH0^`0CJo(() xx^x`hH. HLH^H`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. X X ^X `hH. (#L(#^(#`LhH. h^`o(hH. 8^`o(hH. ^`o(hH. p ^p`o(hH) @  ^@ `o(hH() x^`o(hH() H^`o(hH() ^`o(hH() ^`o(hH()^`CJo(()   ^ `hH.  L ^ `LhH. xx^x`hH. HH^H`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH.^`OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHopp^p`OJ QJ o(hH@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHo^`OJ QJ o(hH^`OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoPP^P`OJ QJ o(hHp0p^p`0CJo(.   ^ `hH.  L ^ `LhH. xx^x`hH. HH^H`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH. ^`OJQJo("  ^`OJQJo("  pp^p`OJQJo("  @ @ ^@ `OJQJo("  ^`OJQJo("  ^`OJQJo("  ^`OJQJo("  ^`OJQJo("  PP^P`OJQJo(" p0p^p`0CJo(.   ^ `hH.  L ^ `LhH. xx^x`hH. HH^H`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH.hhh^h`OJQJo(hHh88^8`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh  ^ `OJQJo(hHh  ^ `OJQJ^Jo(hHohxx^x`OJ QJ o(hHhHH^H`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHp0p^p`0o(()   ^ `hH.  L ^ `LhH. xx^x`hH. HH^H`hH. L^`LhH. ^`hH. ^`hH. L^`LhH.^`OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHopp^p`OJ QJ o(hH@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHo^`OJ QJ o(hH^`OJQJo(hH^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoPP^P`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohpp^p`OJ QJ o(hHh@ @ ^@ `OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHoh^`OJ QJ o(hHh^`OJQJo(hHh^`OJQJ^Jo(hHohPP^P`OJ QJ o(hH yVJ(^aa_( 1\b!]X!^6UTz &2`["J`^0#*_ryx7ko0"WZOdc]Q&TxN${/Isvn`NSu RBE$K Qi|W [        lf                          *`t                 DkRrV l L pGLX͐Jo<        8n4q        6`w2$oJ^ezRDshg(u`\Xa                          > ּzqܱԼhD ex,l`6\Nƴ~v`- s6Zp&xȦ`P         n        *                 zR        DƬm\Z`<"Ģ>>N\P                 h                          _i ^l'_!)qBM/p^l.?\PYq\Pwr q0\P^l4CAi5hsaA \Py (}n+cL[DN(.gk3hd9K,tb|Nsa^le-!)qv^l2JZ&z >r7^l2\P\P\=l}^\Pvno00|x{V)4$f 3hd"Z +cW#fJNM{$DN)'\X*ZEGv&*saX +BMd+^lK,Ks4tV,O}p, Q[2-\P3y-3hdj.sa(.]0\PUf 1!)qT1 4\.2^l3^lh#%4T1I4+cKs4X +pG53hd5O9^l 9u$luYh:!)qO;G<\P4)<u$l\= >L[~ ?U @u$l}/#A^lzB^lJB^l hDO}p,LDVVEZE\PEmIE!)qnGy &-HaeFH\PDH^l/MJ3hdyBi /Du5 */V^@_8g" |E^xB\;hFurQDI]Ico~>Js> jS p Ur 1z Z X + ) uD t  QY a am zq 1-B#ek7R2ewd<ji]TDx)8lJ52Ri./\>\HtQS"9';(j'5PVbVls*.D/32v$kA"vx-gj,| a O !S2!x!""qC"8F"q"t"##B#K#|#$/$T*%+%,>%uT%Md%&H&l'(%'v9'I''(:((=()B)`)*[*N+v+vx+!,7,\,-6-m?-X|-8 .').68.w}.'/7/r/n0z0h}0g1`<17=1[1o1{1 2 22%2N22A2ug2i2s3'323Q3yY3]3n3 4/4.58B51I5_5x5J6d6f6L7N 77k7q7i<9?9M9::(:86:8:g?:U:Q ;"<#<V<*_<< =A=^2=8=S=1V=>:>f>?"? >?Q@K@'L@3R@1A9AYANgAqAF BBBlB9BqBCC]CcClCDBD\D3|D$E[JnhJDKrgKsKuKxKyKKj_L~L2MCMXMfM32NA4N;NcNsNOO~1ObO='P;PYmPQN`R`]`l`8a>akaGbGQb~bR cVcqcd6d??dGdW.eueeff4'f!ef!go!g)gDglghK%hKh+iip id$i0i9>i*?iG jwjbAjBjVl1l lR3l=l`ClGlsGmyPmnmn:n%oV'o0opio.p7qEqd{q<rr*r:rorrBs/lsAt8t \t\tpit"rtnytNuu+u/u@uwQvgv:wow~w !xG0]K_wy}2/mnr0!Lnv CWl$>CR8_;=^ \wfx[p|/>*KJ*+CwFiWYqE\wR,=M[Qh WX+[\v28pM w;[#-=Ij,"bBdmmo~? Q\TX;VIknf*q Nqok}`*Uegq25?[!`?{]*Zu#eG:U4pUf~yQ"- 9 .S/U]'(#d5gJ8qs(/dps* &1hs5CkWyO6opR^nB 4G|%+A-_* ULcyh>@=U^vb+6y@evEb\ #b9lsZ.qCydx9I^3k*2?9f;Iqny 7Kq =Q)oI?RIeY0Ru%*-zr0&>cw,` CZHT}s~l7 Pbnds-9!q p!PZLk(0xQWl7Ks2SDDwqOc $R5V)Y~tK, gLjy7<=K5TRR&xz>?Ci)kl8}O#,0a:9;kIlFv\!. +?UfHl8Q&/r<x&:=W (>HL[@jStUu%:CGGQ7$BL&aJSz'Rb-'z,A1WMi%&&&&&&&&&&&&&&'' ''''!'"'''/'0' ((6(s(t(y(((((((((((((((((((((((((())7K#*y{~Ќ/OPaa">">gOOO@YB`@UnknownMiriamDanielSP madeleinetHillaryKkarenh Administator G: Times New Roman5Symbol3& : Arial9GaramondABook Antiqua7&  Verdana7Georgia5& zaTahoma?5 z Courier New;Wingdings"1hOK׆OK׆`f+P+P!84dK#K#2qHX ?)o(A REVIEW: HOLOCAUST-RELATED COMPENSATIONariebHillaryK                           CompObj$jRoot Entry  F0oL Data ?WordDocument |ObjectPool Ppݸsݸ      !"#$%&'()*+,./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghiklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~  !"#&%'CONTENTS(1Table-}uSummaryInformation( DocumentSummaryInformation8 DariebNormal HillaryK2Microsoft Word 10.0@@h@6ʸ@6ʸ+P՜.+,D՜.+,d  hp  Claims ConferenceK# )A REVIEW: HOLOCAUST-RELATED COMPENSATION TitleH H _PID_HLINKS_AdHocReviewCycleID_EmailSubject _AuthorEmail_AuthorEmailDisplayName_PreviousAdHocReviewCycleID_ReviewingToolsShownOnceA-@ Thttp://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/23/health/23case.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=holocaust&st=cse>http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~health/materials/lifeevents.pdfvy_http://crr.bc.edu/images/storeis/Working_Papers/wp_2007-6.pdf?phpMyAdmin=43ac483c4de9t51d9eb41Ahttp://www.claimscon.org/5'q&Prague final papers$Hillary.Kessler-Godin@claimscon.org  FMicrosoft Word Document MSWordDocWord.Document.89qHillary Kessler-Godin!{ӜB