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January 27 in History

Your birthday shares the stage with stories that shaped the world. Born on this day: Mairead Maguire, Edward Smith, and Nick Mason.

Apollo 1 Fire: Three Astronauts Die in Tragic Test
1967Event

Apollo 1 Fire: Three Astronauts Die in Tragic Test

Three astronauts were trapped inside a sealed spacecraft filled with pure oxygen when an electrical spark ignited a fire that engulfed the cabin in seconds. Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee died on January 27, 1967, during a routine launch pad test of the Apollo 1 command module at Cape Kennedy, Florida. They never left the ground. The fire lasted approximately 25 seconds, but the crew could not escape because the hatch was designed to open inward against the cabin pressure. The test, called a "plugs-out" rehearsal, was meant to simulate launch conditions with the spacecraft running on internal power while sitting atop an unfueled Saturn IB rocket. NASA classified the test as non-hazardous because the rocket carried no fuel. But the cabin was pressurized with 100 percent oxygen at 16.7 pounds per square inch—higher than atmospheric pressure—creating an environment where almost anything would burn. Velcro, nylon netting, coolant lines, and other flammable materials filled the cockpit. At 6:31 p.m. EST, telemetry recorded a voltage spike in the spacecraft''s wiring. Seconds later, Chaffee''s voice came over the radio: "Fire! We''ve got a fire in the cockpit!" White attempted to open the hatch, which required ratcheting six bolts in a process that took at least 90 seconds under ideal conditions. Pad workers rushed to help but were driven back by heat and smoke. By the time they reached the hatch five minutes later, all three astronauts had died from asphyxiation caused by toxic gases. The investigation that followed exposed systemic failures in NASA''s management culture. The spacecraft had over 100 unresolved engineering issues. Grissom himself had hung a lemon on the simulator weeks earlier. The tragedy forced a complete redesign: the hatch was changed to open outward in five seconds, flammable materials were replaced, and the cabin atmosphere was switched to a nitrogen-oxygen mix at launch. The delay cost NASA 20 months but produced a safer spacecraft. Apollo 7 flew successfully in October 1968, and Apollo 11 landed on the Moon 18 months after that.

Famous Birthdays

Edward Smith

Edward Smith

1850–1940

Nick Mason

Nick Mason

b. 1944

Ross Bagdasarian

Ross Bagdasarian

1919–1972

William Randolph Hearst

William Randolph Hearst

1863–1993

John Roberts

John Roberts

1955–2007

Margo Timmins

Margo Timmins

b. 1961

Samuel Gompers

Samuel Gompers

d. 1924

Historical Events

Three astronauts were trapped inside a sealed spacecraft filled with pure oxygen when an electrical spark ignited a fire that engulfed the cabin in seconds. Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee died on January 27, 1967, during a routine launch pad test of the Apollo 1 command module at Cape Kennedy, Florida. They never left the ground. The fire lasted approximately 25 seconds, but the crew could not escape because the hatch was designed to open inward against the cabin pressure.

The test, called a "plugs-out" rehearsal, was meant to simulate launch conditions with the spacecraft running on internal power while sitting atop an unfueled Saturn IB rocket. NASA classified the test as non-hazardous because the rocket carried no fuel. But the cabin was pressurized with 100 percent oxygen at 16.7 pounds per square inch—higher than atmospheric pressure—creating an environment where almost anything would burn. Velcro, nylon netting, coolant lines, and other flammable materials filled the cockpit.

At 6:31 p.m. EST, telemetry recorded a voltage spike in the spacecraft''s wiring. Seconds later, Chaffee''s voice came over the radio: "Fire! We''ve got a fire in the cockpit!" White attempted to open the hatch, which required ratcheting six bolts in a process that took at least 90 seconds under ideal conditions. Pad workers rushed to help but were driven back by heat and smoke. By the time they reached the hatch five minutes later, all three astronauts had died from asphyxiation caused by toxic gases.

The investigation that followed exposed systemic failures in NASA''s management culture. The spacecraft had over 100 unresolved engineering issues. Grissom himself had hung a lemon on the simulator weeks earlier. The tragedy forced a complete redesign: the hatch was changed to open outward in five seconds, flammable materials were replaced, and the cabin atmosphere was switched to a nitrogen-oxygen mix at launch. The delay cost NASA 20 months but produced a safer spacecraft. Apollo 7 flew successfully in October 1968, and Apollo 11 landed on the Moon 18 months after that.
1967

Three astronauts were trapped inside a sealed spacecraft filled with pure oxygen when an electrical spark ignited a fire that engulfed the cabin in seconds. Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee died on January 27, 1967, during a routine launch pad test of the Apollo 1 command module at Cape Kennedy, Florida. They never left the ground. The fire lasted approximately 25 seconds, but the crew could not escape because the hatch was designed to open inward against the cabin pressure. The test, called a "plugs-out" rehearsal, was meant to simulate launch conditions with the spacecraft running on internal power while sitting atop an unfueled Saturn IB rocket. NASA classified the test as non-hazardous because the rocket carried no fuel. But the cabin was pressurized with 100 percent oxygen at 16.7 pounds per square inch—higher than atmospheric pressure—creating an environment where almost anything would burn. Velcro, nylon netting, coolant lines, and other flammable materials filled the cockpit. At 6:31 p.m. EST, telemetry recorded a voltage spike in the spacecraft''s wiring. Seconds later, Chaffee''s voice came over the radio: "Fire! We''ve got a fire in the cockpit!" White attempted to open the hatch, which required ratcheting six bolts in a process that took at least 90 seconds under ideal conditions. Pad workers rushed to help but were driven back by heat and smoke. By the time they reached the hatch five minutes later, all three astronauts had died from asphyxiation caused by toxic gases. The investigation that followed exposed systemic failures in NASA''s management culture. The spacecraft had over 100 unresolved engineering issues. Grissom himself had hung a lemon on the simulator weeks earlier. The tragedy forced a complete redesign: the hatch was changed to open outward in five seconds, flammable materials were replaced, and the cabin atmosphere was switched to a nitrogen-oxygen mix at launch. The delay cost NASA 20 months but produced a safer spacecraft. Apollo 7 flew successfully in October 1968, and Apollo 11 landed on the Moon 18 months after that.

Representatives of the United States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the Viet Cong''s Provisional Revolutionary Government signed the Paris Peace Accords on January 27, 1973, formally ending American military involvement in Vietnam. The agreement came after five years of negotiations, 12 days of intense Christmas bombing, and the deaths of over 58,000 American soldiers and an estimated two to three million Vietnamese.

The accords had been largely settled in October 1972, when Henry Kissinger famously declared "peace is at hand." But South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu refused to accept terms that allowed 150,000 North Vietnamese troops to remain in the South. Nixon, who needed Thieu''s cooperation to claim the peace was honorable, pressured him with a combination of threats—warning he would sign without South Vietnam if necessary—and promises of devastating American retaliation if North Vietnam broke the ceasefire.

The final agreement called for a complete ceasefire, withdrawal of all U.S. military personnel within 60 days, release of all prisoners of war, and the establishment of a joint commission to oversee implementation. Article 15 committed the parties to peaceful reunification through negotiation. In practice, both Vietnamese sides began violating the ceasefire almost immediately. The last American combat troops left Vietnam on March 29, 1973, and 591 American POWs were returned in Operation Homecoming.

The peace that followed was a fiction. North Vietnam spent 1973 and 1974 rebuilding its forces and infiltrating the South. When the final offensive came in March 1975, the promised American retaliation never materialized—Nixon had resigned over Watergate, and Congress had passed the Case-Church Amendment prohibiting further military action in Southeast Asia. Saigon fell on April 30, 1975, just 27 months after the accords were signed. The agreement that won Kissinger a Nobel Prize had purchased only a "decent interval" between American withdrawal and South Vietnam''s collapse.
1973

Representatives of the United States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam, and the Viet Cong''s Provisional Revolutionary Government signed the Paris Peace Accords on January 27, 1973, formally ending American military involvement in Vietnam. The agreement came after five years of negotiations, 12 days of intense Christmas bombing, and the deaths of over 58,000 American soldiers and an estimated two to three million Vietnamese. The accords had been largely settled in October 1972, when Henry Kissinger famously declared "peace is at hand." But South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu refused to accept terms that allowed 150,000 North Vietnamese troops to remain in the South. Nixon, who needed Thieu''s cooperation to claim the peace was honorable, pressured him with a combination of threats—warning he would sign without South Vietnam if necessary—and promises of devastating American retaliation if North Vietnam broke the ceasefire. The final agreement called for a complete ceasefire, withdrawal of all U.S. military personnel within 60 days, release of all prisoners of war, and the establishment of a joint commission to oversee implementation. Article 15 committed the parties to peaceful reunification through negotiation. In practice, both Vietnamese sides began violating the ceasefire almost immediately. The last American combat troops left Vietnam on March 29, 1973, and 591 American POWs were returned in Operation Homecoming. The peace that followed was a fiction. North Vietnam spent 1973 and 1974 rebuilding its forces and infiltrating the South. When the final offensive came in March 1975, the promised American retaliation never materialized—Nixon had resigned over Watergate, and Congress had passed the Case-Church Amendment prohibiting further military action in Southeast Asia. Saigon fell on April 30, 1975, just 27 months after the accords were signed. The agreement that won Kissinger a Nobel Prize had purchased only a "decent interval" between American withdrawal and South Vietnam''s collapse.

He was the Prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, one of the first Muslims, and the fourth caliph — and he was murdered in a mosque in Kufa while at morning prayer, struck with a poisoned sword by a Kharijite assassin. He died two days after the attack. His death created the Shia-Sunni split that has defined Islamic history ever since. He is buried in Najaf, Iraq. His shrine is one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam.
661

He was the Prophet Muhammad's cousin and son-in-law, one of the first Muslims, and the fourth caliph — and he was murdered in a mosque in Kufa while at morning prayer, struck with a poisoned sword by a Kharijite assassin. He died two days after the attack. His death created the Shia-Sunni split that has defined Islamic history ever since. He is buried in Najaf, Iraq. His shrine is one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam.

98

Trajan succeeded his adoptive father Nerva as Roman Emperor, beginning a nineteen-year reign that would expand the empire to its greatest territorial extent through conquests in Dacia, Arabia, and Mesopotamia. His massive public works program produced Trajan's Forum, Trajan's Column, and the largest marketplace in the ancient world. The Roman Senate honored him with the title Optimus Princeps, the best ruler, a distinction no subsequent emperor ever received.

Eight men were brought into Westminster Hall on January 27, 1606, to stand trial for the most audacious assassination attempt in English history: a plot to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament, killing King James I, the entire royal family, and virtually every leading figure in English government. The Gunpowder Plot, had it succeeded, would have been the deadliest terrorist attack the world had yet seen.

The conspiracy had been organized by Robert Catesby, a charismatic Catholic gentleman radicalized by decades of persecution under Protestant rule. Catesby recruited a cell of Catholic conspirators including Thomas Wintour, Thomas Percy, and most famously Guy Fawkes, a Catholic soldier with military experience in the Spanish Netherlands. Their plan was straightforward: rent a cellar beneath the House of Lords, fill it with gunpowder, and detonate it when the king and Parliament were assembled above. Fawkes, the explosives expert, was placed in charge of the 36 barrels—approximately 2,500 pounds of gunpowder.

The plot unraveled on October 26, 1605, when an anonymous letter warned Catholic Lord Monteagle to avoid the opening of Parliament. The letter was forwarded to Robert Cecil, the Secretary of State, who may have known about the conspiracy for weeks. Fawkes was discovered in the cellar on November 5, arrested, and tortured on the rack until he revealed his co-conspirators. Catesby and several others were killed resisting arrest at Holbeach House in Staffordshire. The surviving plotters were brought to trial.

The trial was a formality—the verdict was predetermined. All eight defendants were found guilty of high treason and sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered, the most gruesome punishment in English law. The government used the plot to justify intensified persecution of English Catholics, imposing new penal laws that barred them from voting, holding office, or practicing law. The anniversary of the plot''s failure, November 5, became Guy Fawkes Night—a national celebration of Protestant survival that is still observed with bonfires and fireworks over four centuries later.
1606

Eight men were brought into Westminster Hall on January 27, 1606, to stand trial for the most audacious assassination attempt in English history: a plot to blow up the House of Lords during the State Opening of Parliament, killing King James I, the entire royal family, and virtually every leading figure in English government. The Gunpowder Plot, had it succeeded, would have been the deadliest terrorist attack the world had yet seen. The conspiracy had been organized by Robert Catesby, a charismatic Catholic gentleman radicalized by decades of persecution under Protestant rule. Catesby recruited a cell of Catholic conspirators including Thomas Wintour, Thomas Percy, and most famously Guy Fawkes, a Catholic soldier with military experience in the Spanish Netherlands. Their plan was straightforward: rent a cellar beneath the House of Lords, fill it with gunpowder, and detonate it when the king and Parliament were assembled above. Fawkes, the explosives expert, was placed in charge of the 36 barrels—approximately 2,500 pounds of gunpowder. The plot unraveled on October 26, 1605, when an anonymous letter warned Catholic Lord Monteagle to avoid the opening of Parliament. The letter was forwarded to Robert Cecil, the Secretary of State, who may have known about the conspiracy for weeks. Fawkes was discovered in the cellar on November 5, arrested, and tortured on the rack until he revealed his co-conspirators. Catesby and several others were killed resisting arrest at Holbeach House in Staffordshire. The surviving plotters were brought to trial. The trial was a formality—the verdict was predetermined. All eight defendants were found guilty of high treason and sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered, the most gruesome punishment in English law. The government used the plot to justify intensified persecution of English Catholics, imposing new penal laws that barred them from voting, holding office, or practicing law. The anniversary of the plot''s failure, November 5, became Guy Fawkes Night—a national celebration of Protestant survival that is still observed with bonfires and fireworks over four centuries later.

Congress authorized the creation of a vast territory west of the Mississippi River reserved exclusively for Indigenous peoples on January 27, 1825, setting in motion one of the most devastating forced relocations in American history. The legislation established what would become Indian Territory—present-day Oklahoma—as the designated homeland for Native American nations displaced from the eastern United States.

The policy grew from a belief, widely held among white Americans, that Indigenous peoples could not coexist with an expanding settler nation. President James Monroe endorsed the concept in his final annual message to Congress in 1824, arguing that removal would "promote the interest and happiness" of Native Americans by placing them beyond the reach of white settlement. The idea had powerful support from Southern states eager to seize Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole lands for cotton cultivation.

The 1825 legislation was a first step. The Indian Removal Act of 1830, signed by President Andrew Jackson, gave the policy its full legal framework and presidential enforcement. Over the following decade, approximately 60,000 members of the Five Civilized Tribes were forced to march hundreds of miles to Indian Territory. The Cherokee removal of 1838-1839, known as the Trail of Tears, was the most devastating: an estimated 4,000 of the 15,000 Cherokee who began the journey died of exposure, disease, and starvation along the way. The Choctaw, who were removed first, lost roughly a quarter of their population during their march.

The promise that Indian Territory would remain permanently in Indigenous hands lasted barely a generation. White settlers began encroaching in the 1850s, the territory was divided during the Civil War, and in 1889 the government opened the Unassigned Lands to settlement in the first Oklahoma Land Rush. By 1907, Indian Territory ceased to exist entirely when Oklahoma became a state. The congressional act of 1825 thus initiated a cycle of promise and betrayal that defined federal Indian policy for the next century.
1825

Congress authorized the creation of a vast territory west of the Mississippi River reserved exclusively for Indigenous peoples on January 27, 1825, setting in motion one of the most devastating forced relocations in American history. The legislation established what would become Indian Territory—present-day Oklahoma—as the designated homeland for Native American nations displaced from the eastern United States. The policy grew from a belief, widely held among white Americans, that Indigenous peoples could not coexist with an expanding settler nation. President James Monroe endorsed the concept in his final annual message to Congress in 1824, arguing that removal would "promote the interest and happiness" of Native Americans by placing them beyond the reach of white settlement. The idea had powerful support from Southern states eager to seize Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole lands for cotton cultivation. The 1825 legislation was a first step. The Indian Removal Act of 1830, signed by President Andrew Jackson, gave the policy its full legal framework and presidential enforcement. Over the following decade, approximately 60,000 members of the Five Civilized Tribes were forced to march hundreds of miles to Indian Territory. The Cherokee removal of 1838-1839, known as the Trail of Tears, was the most devastating: an estimated 4,000 of the 15,000 Cherokee who began the journey died of exposure, disease, and starvation along the way. The Choctaw, who were removed first, lost roughly a quarter of their population during their march. The promise that Indian Territory would remain permanently in Indigenous hands lasted barely a generation. White settlers began encroaching in the 1850s, the territory was divided during the Civil War, and in 1889 the government opened the Unassigned Lands to settlement in the first Oklahoma Land Rush. By 1907, Indian Territory ceased to exist entirely when Oklahoma became a state. The congressional act of 1825 thus initiated a cycle of promise and betrayal that defined federal Indian policy for the next century.

Heinrich Himmler, the architect of the Holocaust, ordered the SS to halt all gassing operations at concentration camps on January 27, 1945. The directive was not an act of mercy but of self-preservation. With Soviet forces advancing rapidly through Poland and Allied armies pushing into Germany from the west, Himmler calculated that he might negotiate a separate peace with the Western Allies—and dead witnesses in extermination camps would complicate that fantasy.

By January 1945, the Nazi extermination machine had already murdered approximately six million Jews, along with hundreds of thousands of Roma, disabled persons, political prisoners, and others. The gas chambers at Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest and most efficient killing center, had been dismantled in November 1944 as Soviet troops approached, and the camp''s crematoria were dynamited in a futile effort to destroy evidence. But the killing had continued by other means: forced death marches, starvation, exposure, and shooting.

Himmler''s order coincided almost exactly with the Soviet liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 1945. When Red Army soldiers entered the camp, they found approximately 7,000 emaciated survivors, hundreds of thousands of men''s suits, 837,000 women''s garments, and 7.7 tons of human hair. The full horror of what had occurred was documented by Soviet photographers and film crews, though the world would not fully comprehend the scale of the genocide for months.

Himmler''s gamble on negotiation failed completely. His secret peace overtures to the Allies through Swedish intermediary Count Folke Bernadotte were rejected. When Hitler learned of the contact in April 1945, he stripped Himmler of all offices and ordered his arrest. Himmler attempted to flee in disguise after Germany''s surrender but was captured by British forces on May 23, 1945, and bit down on a cyanide capsule before he could be interrogated. The date of Auschwitz''s liberation, January 27, was designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day by the United Nations in 2005.
1945

Heinrich Himmler, the architect of the Holocaust, ordered the SS to halt all gassing operations at concentration camps on January 27, 1945. The directive was not an act of mercy but of self-preservation. With Soviet forces advancing rapidly through Poland and Allied armies pushing into Germany from the west, Himmler calculated that he might negotiate a separate peace with the Western Allies—and dead witnesses in extermination camps would complicate that fantasy. By January 1945, the Nazi extermination machine had already murdered approximately six million Jews, along with hundreds of thousands of Roma, disabled persons, political prisoners, and others. The gas chambers at Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest and most efficient killing center, had been dismantled in November 1944 as Soviet troops approached, and the camp''s crematoria were dynamited in a futile effort to destroy evidence. But the killing had continued by other means: forced death marches, starvation, exposure, and shooting. Himmler''s order coincided almost exactly with the Soviet liberation of Auschwitz on January 27, 1945. When Red Army soldiers entered the camp, they found approximately 7,000 emaciated survivors, hundreds of thousands of men''s suits, 837,000 women''s garments, and 7.7 tons of human hair. The full horror of what had occurred was documented by Soviet photographers and film crews, though the world would not fully comprehend the scale of the genocide for months. Himmler''s gamble on negotiation failed completely. His secret peace overtures to the Allies through Swedish intermediary Count Folke Bernadotte were rejected. When Hitler learned of the contact in April 1945, he stripped Himmler of all offices and ordered his arrest. Himmler attempted to flee in disguise after Germany''s surrender but was captured by British forces on May 23, 1945, and bit down on a cyanide capsule before he could be interrogated. The date of Auschwitz''s liberation, January 27, was designated International Holocaust Remembrance Day by the United Nations in 2005.

417

Heresy wasn't just a theological debate—it was personal. Pope Innocent I was drawing a hard line against Pelagius, a British monk who'd argued humans could achieve salvation through willpower alone, without divine grace. And that was dangerous talk in a church that believed only God could redeem humanity. Excommunication was the nuclear option: total spiritual exile. Pelagius and his follower Caelestius would be cut off from sacraments, community, salvation itself. Repent or be gone.

945

Two teenage brothers, raised in the imperial purple, suddenly found themselves shaved and stuffed into monasteries. Constantine VII — just 19 and already ruthless — had watched his cousins' mismanagement of the Byzantine Empire for years. And now? He was done. With brutal efficiency, he stripped them of power, cut their hair, and locked them away in separate monasteries. The imperial court watched in stunned silence. Power in Byzantium wasn't inherited — it was seized.

1302

The city that birthed his poetry would never again see him walk its streets. Dante — fiery political operator and soon-to-be literary genius — was banished from Florence after backing the wrong faction in a brutal municipal power struggle. Stripped of his political position and threatened with execution if he returned, he'd spend the rest of his life wandering Italian city-states. But exile would forge his masterpiece: "The Divine Comedy" would reimagine literature, born from a wounded heart and a brilliant, vengeful imagination.

1343

The Pope just invented spiritual currency—and boy, was it lucrative. Clement VI declared that heaven had an actual banking system, where sins could be purchased away and salvation traded like medieval stocks. His papal bull Unigenitus essentially created a heavenly credit line, exclusively managed by the church's top brass. Wealthy sinners could now literally buy forgiveness, while the poor watched their eternal fate hang on papal ledgers. And the kicker? Every fifty years, a spiritual reset button called the jubilee year would let everyone start fresh—for the right price.

1343

A papal document that basically said: "We're in charge. Period." Clement VI dropped the Unigenitus bull like a theological mic drop, giving the Catholic Church a get-out-of-sin-free card that could be purchased with cold, hard cash. Indulgences were medieval spiritual money laundering — pay the church, reduce your time in purgatory. And people bought it. Literally. Martin Luther would later call this spiritual extortion, sparking the Reformation with a thunderous "Nope" to papal power.

1695

He was 27 and furious about the empire's decline. Mustafa II inherited a crumbling Ottoman world — European armies were pushing back, and the once-unstoppable sultanic machine was sputtering. But he wasn't going down quietly. He personally led military campaigns against Austria, a rare move for a sultan, desperate to reclaim lost territories. And though he'd eventually be forced to abdicate, those eight years were a last roar of imperial defiance against mounting European pressures.

1726

Twelve musicians. Candlelight flickering against stone walls. Bach's fingers dancing across the organ, weaving sacred mathematics into sound. The cantata—"Everything Only According to God's Will"—wasn't just music, but a theological argument made audible. And Leipzig's congregants didn't just listen; they surrendered. Bach transformed worship into pure mathematical prayer, each note a precise theological statement. Breathtaking complexity hidden inside apparent simplicity.

1776

Thirty-five tons of cannon. Dragged 300 miles through snow and frozen rivers on wooden sleds. Henry Knox—a 25-year-old Boston bookseller with zero military training—had promised George Washington the impossible: artillery captured from Fort Ticonderoga that would break the British siege. And he did it. Oxen, makeshift boats, and pure stubborn determination carried massive guns across the Berkshire Mountains that winter. Washington watched in disbelief as Knox rolled into Cambridge, transforming the ragtag Continental Army's chances in a single, audacious journey.

Fun Facts

Zodiac Sign

Aquarius

Jan 20 -- Feb 18

Air sign. Independent, original, and humanitarian.

Birthstone

Garnet

Deep red

Symbolizes protection, strength, and safe travels.

Next Birthday

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Quote of the Day

“Neither a lofty degree of intelligence nor imagination nor both together go to the making of genius. Love, love, love, that is the soul of genius.”

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

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