ࡱ> F"ih- WcCJFIFLEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01%?)%""%M7:-?[P`^ZPXVeq{ekmVX~ay%!%J))JhXh  }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzw!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzt ?( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (:P  iW&8Y) ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( J( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (23P@P@P@P@%(:TĞE2: `g^#G'(k[#ᖐ9ysF3Ͻ&12FSq[c[q{j @P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@jQ (B?*h]밬 8 >Q EO_,,vڢgQ }Za-I"LZPea ,ZGyCK@4&@e=! ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( JgY[> -ZFH!;c@Ekcwc@ 3bz|:i>`Q ( ˱;Sa@̳c5z6^@ Ɍ7FjP@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@F\ }ʞ\ aqjI(?*.5Zݖ=⋅a+w4\ Q~G$*.ҭʼn4j- r6\y3X[9FFt?u%#.D-bA@rZ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (86v(ɠzy57̀ژ`?j@XIylzT.nX '،^═]O(&c4ۑ$tiED2PmSv?݌ j- sƋlUYx?lFn(b5 ( ( ( ( (( Z( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( U1Q( ( ( ( ( ("mV?Z/uq9>fϥ0/I<  t[ц"ߘp(0}I?xʍv@ϧHb{?1O`,h&˄ހ/ ( ( ( ( ( ( }>`ME@0"Zi=U?<}hKHm1ycPy9`炧,hi`<% ) `Fz[E W92phJth+ZBo_bP@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@Ǚfp)(,G@-OQhLlcnw-CA7ͨˏMj 6zd Ov~MQYڙڟ֕Am$b县0/"hbEC ( ( ( ( J( ( wyry6љ=EE;5p!?J/ p=}F˖+s돽EQXi{f6U=E H ( ( ( ( ( ( (8gZ( ( ( ( ( (1pPD{S[%ġ!(Ն]*WRJ@Xmb ~<[dv8@R` $Sg0vtqF܂ԤAl؍HXdRP@P@P@P@P@P@P@΂HFR("͗G*͞UI&Ay6pݽq@wkjzZ,wӻ&xF( rCc!e<+}_tZ|GFS.U1XC@ {eEaEi0Cwoqn }PF9Z( ( ( ( ( ( (<Z( ح|h@VZsDk")w S EX4[.;ϰAstYw d+ 9QRZG֋ƖtAC]@P@P@P@P@  (h ܵH ZdGbҢL!rI7]OfH,8J2o% hm=R2'P:8\4C#8GCE!P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@Ps̖*R}0-,|Ɏ\ `kA( # P00)JaQ^I4|\i@] U<q@ z-F),x<Ԁ^32(BpCgX%BO?ƍ M8&.y>yۃqCP@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@1gD~܊`KbXW'- -sh Jv+ofW8Ar5ʤclKҘhOnqufP@P@P@P@6 ( (8@ױ‹$hJ #L Vv㍈$R@#]m WUqwP^aoNB [&BSn;P3@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@ehmvޘ|5(&,{y :.Y5[N g!PB:ԀʷQOPК;`߀UYὍA?0ɗOo9kv&o0(^P@P@P@P@P@P@WK8 mڌ>_TJ`;۩[LBX @2æ ؊55Fuʋ-N)հ=ic|/44Gp4mmy~G 4"^ePѷO. S)z>貧8hhR #~֤@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@ݦKӀ?ZoMZz QZO$*[1d;EΖ~rqR[>\ 4 곞P/h+]DY,$)]ȻJ%ӢQؑv€csހ ( ( ( (P@P@e&hUUDǠ/i&GHZ( D2I烚ݵXʐZsc4Fp3֐ @P@P@P@P@^ Q>NTl총ﶍPMn fH7 ЎTCFᇨ4}P@P@P@P@P@P@PwyV?TV)s!&Kt-"$4&@? (^oA*`Yn@SyB֐ND[iwD$iGpa(2WXw:OB oi+@P@P@P@P@P@P@\\Gm C(.9uK\ _06_엖xRL /"jL0.ro@fjcϾN~m=nH ZE.љ +EPqZhW.tP"JćJGm:u+L uu zHP@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P-_A} U൉ Q: X#.YHPҰ_pm^IBuI#}UۋkId>0)_!W dda0?! F!P@P@P@P@6 (h (.Lr^i,:A&W,OM$Mvc 2p⎀Xn[t`J1y,߸\PIH ( ( ( (%yəT^ ޘzv1,yI|g+3HbDV4{hll~B}B(@hL*azPP@P@P@P@P@P@P6x hd(Jb$Q 04h2qt`O 0(sQuG41Yo $vU7z"ma ȼn )[R7iׇvᘟ=ƞᰇ}ţ6;h.5wUʸV# ( ( ( ( ( JGu h֯ miBRf <@hk"6zR.-m (CkopAǙbسO,h!m`k=24S!Q$ud}1HdidD9Â$wpnα,:wRl˃-p*i1Vq&ʚKH ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (&m<ub~3ܣz Rw-~kiX!ݑ}Q8Qdcpv_m.%^r}rEB}=Wc+C{u;Z}ڤ@P@P@P@P@ P@ @P7?J?\M6u~FOҀkH9Pq@ FvpD@wb=q@ "a~#`S&7P@P@P@P@P=Vo#OR6ƀ2QKo*4Sq0,jh `~nqJK|!ʂ:aLEt?q؄:O$RdT rt0Òyc# }F?3Oy܌R7OK4crVJ15A4gR9]8^\ G(4_CI/RrCH ( ( ( ( JZ("x/+Q@-α'1L [[X 8H \E4e![{cŠQ@o_l++e Њ@Hu = @P; s . gi-f$`JڍO$\ϵ/ݰoMI#ųL Ϋ"{܌@W ^#hO+n€ ( ( ( (@ @P@VϜ@RHNC@xSJ1s@Gr~ @f-"l6= 4.캔7Yԣc{PH ( ( N6nR08iDCV)ͬ.~2(54#uS":FK` (JcQX|"v S贔 rg9bb+Z,а$vH̰O 帑1!?#K{.7uQڀ$ym6 Z٤@P@P@P@P@P@PN3\s`:+;=:5kVqXlMd:J?4X.HTmá4X.bXb]wH@ N6S\@_9^v=b.Jg=lqEE\qҘ O/+(O :$+rd;@P@P@P@P@P@ U&FMd["8D%"M*ۗv܍Üf0Gsڽ<>OCB4 s&8)cId6ڽ|ꇿ@T";~/8x,,H~v᭕Vg6-fǼH?zzQɢAbi&c@%W m `izF-,ϸL-ip~ݬBVP ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( 8 gXXZ^ȄTOQY>z ~@i] yoQvB.vD,iV:Y$wXh#J!?v 5+Si CxL(kX-ݲȧ= HHa@P@P@P@Ph Z( Q{a#4lF TG_E31QGcL 8{^5m}4 ij7F Rɧ\}0.iS(\|†@P@P@P@gj<1FwGe{hl(~eWR4-/m %bn@~N6-]/),'Ҁ3Xk[=kcu\o>_4Fr8haGGi gIKmIU ,Id0Ω~q@qq ᠗:mhE" ( ( ( ( ( iI*cos=ķC rH:mthԬ^)Y fs  ; >VH(#EaЌ奋\ofxmǁj .&K.3'V=GGE BR5}P@P@P@P@P@PF qǘNR5ٽYb9Rh4 ]CgSFSipZ)03.oAPrOZ؁4}J@Ihܟ91̿)0EZ<m^MBUbے>H-mIy4w9442L}@ u.}_Y `p(nӴDcϩK d9o!/l6YY紗u:ȁE @P@P@P@P@P@P@ր (+_%.4DM-HdѨ<&X~= ]V\{bt+[kGpjD 2][4 6j96 ¬v$oQϱ#v€ ( ( ( (@ @VŽX 3ȟ#v; (滴czB4SSPn e ;RF#r0*!d~1E\=gn}GcC[m;A`)o}zbh`c$`xFE(d`uP@P@P9(!E)ck/f6RF (.R6 g2?Wpź(OZ@I5"|[1m I4e:\m WH}ڢ8cހ=XC.oSB8@ۦ34n ( ( ( ( ( ([&UypY' ?ƐFlmaQ`8xd20>`6ӌI p0hcV+l6ۂr5tD|-p?6A̗:?|0;f7bhBŒؤȺ xŒO`,x~\5YIU^CrP@P@P@P@P@P.jy<8i6ͼw1\P=sI Mn~Sڝl\0HwJҤPs"G=I ].Y~[`K1袘H4byi dR kfrE=FPe\:/%6&{/;@pp.nu*M;@(Jz Q^x/e6#iEE0<B"wdJcrfפ@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@]Ei)h+dɹDQ+s'|3H)h'[&:v]S&G(\ 27MpfӚB{˨],,λ`H@\J4 FĀ . ȧr\1:k8m<وy{ ,"6#b9ܭjXmC[ P@ $JR OufHE1@t6mg|ew! j@P@P@P@P@P@EwU1_cm#tZ`]˒~o.^OWEhCYƐ .lDáCc#>xS F:ETla@xvMn?+:E_$Gl(MIM_?{.pE 5Q)ZS?4#@-P@P@P@P@P@ @ @bk_&j;A4]E ,aFhw׳ مO#֤3,6$IĨ:( @ @b6}(t4(s{ w94PrGr*`Imi*HMt8*Yi'ebxy(R(' "źYOq![IPt1ǽ0o\tQ@ \xgpP ( ( ( ( ( ( (4M$ &0-DZ\ͅ*4hl[|M$GZiӮɆX(<(,5nCq(,<]jDalN{-VfK*rѳIQp,-ϕ!zե =--$HY"ű# RP@P@P@Ph }DzV L p!#^1H (&I !. :"sS Adȡ$+ڥ >`24sEO+g֛ ( ( 1ITgp{PeYY3@ :ƱE ly_nJhZ } z)h?j45 xXz5VD?Ez S|NQaj]QH Kn=156:)!qJ²)Xg4<ʮ=h;T C@vSY}S[tP@P@P@P@P@P?aa٨@kFsa@0D,z@724A1D(RKA(bCZ%?0\v@"ӎrD-c}/P9n_GX>jC*`s枠WT|"&@qu@gDG`HmLwGxpOTmdŹ7{L 0򥺀̏޹ J@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@s_.mcb4 S`2ua܄ tVEYZ#,R)vҽFĖ TѠj;nC0nm]n?ᷙҋ. ]cFN@Lv5ALy%Z/$MJv=gm΋.Q)rm&])IG OqFؤ0 ( ( (@ @ LթU A$z`]' "p΀,HFKZTҰQh qzH az[OP@Pe}b ~G]SNPWqZ&')ԮѪ['\`9ST2G\PtνWR(ϽȂf/`}iH ִ n7i=$sC',y#H tn>ҚqE/F@f-nea,7s$v( 0?>x'`SW[MGG9 )j{';r7)@f"rrqj ( ( ( ( (9H"i$mM`ZA6,̐ QZ&dxO4S{lN¸亂O2R\q (ih1Qz˜2E8M?f d1I~ tija@s,lgv=04tarZF9@O 3jR;X7P"[#Pj!p@P@P@P@P@P@P_J=\P?S@ Ƞ d dJET`@ 'H  $VkPO;G0,K( 99f4n{W,AgҀ#>h(ܹ48j,gC,Kqۉ^6*nO@ b'% ]9 `:f25Hx!Tm^i&c8Jդ@P@P@P@P@P@P@OTN(CVgG"4c 2XѿbOA nQnwaPq (,7+{ ؤ:o2@F &/2 Sd M}=BRN|hkhD4qc$r]bKXE HAC36 ( ( ( ( J֤nafSѽlyr~lL^g=K@Nu x@ Iq$/Ps\setqȒ-BHd_ǰAM4GEW^Ԇs:ޏc֚ͷđ$2yl-,n1H2/f3$7 p zѤ0 ( ( ( ( (' @ߑBQ>ǥ:3uek<4PҠ ׿bUc{Pm5(.n^5H =ͳ6h>G E;G`f#,O C,7e)#(ʋpy#4X /4jByM0!:F4k?))H vDwq*i[9'k2;=#PcIP@P@P@P@P@P@P@a P|SePqq S֋ v5ԅH,[RL7Xd̑JeG4+fGP2ЭKdzQhB?*5 PMA|"PƟ}~*KYH E`*g {QGps=ij?LE>d:( ( ( e-PH\lǢ  C%}X04i8z?L 8'!$MM JF Psm)31MŃԲ8kmь &\ۤz };I (k0Pk0U!@@5?eXk]q(Q(P@@#@Gcmdp =1gi/HT0E'-34npLG̒)/EqȬpP&!Fwl>HƲ!ʰȠv!.3 kj0`PmVL\5?x tP@P@P@P@Pt Aյ7vQSڝĭ+63bj3sF0GX}(L-S9yAuh_8 ΑS-Z]"mc0[2W8  z=$ }\ "dCtQvb@A@zJ;L\N`jFݨLQ Kh S(ia&-~wtd4ƀ8nj~lcH Xb,\FU'(# N5ĶccS-u @( ( ( ( ( ( (9u& *=Z`oG"t  ,iܽ% OOJh(1J{S t+#.U+s5V'õ7O=,R% &b~{⋀.j%#vu.emP\sHdPK|>{`)$װ%\ =8b3$2? ٤@P@P@P(h+jLWO}sLi¼}h 0[y/5!`lw4_DJnZ1@TiE,,:t ڔok7+ʃH ?ٷ[Lye4AȤ[syR u[F gV)9Ԅ SJP,OyNf Bu PK!(̝&SL"}-Q QkXfnF6[FxԐ>ł책}P-i|-c{`TbGu7#Ҁ.&`@zv 24j5(4"?g1N,A/B@ҸXv?bLF3`lR+VVr@P@P@P@P@^g3=կB:04Yi*,_&|Id0  Q^gƍRDS) o4K{ "ƕrM%i-ތSp/#C{jq`d$'Ҙܤ,GNG@;ؼ9c8!6 @[ ;HMދ|7 ? n"u 47.. `'EQxTcs @W˦}s f]@x=)5 ( ( ( ( (#C3 ;~m? ( (9Lچ8wcޘu'ZMWsz!|O !k9pV24-yvVgQi۸\3Z m\@#h쪘].h@C9mfI:/˲9_3L Z@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@Ktˏ.SښphrU ]+;dw"jlF j2p?6MygbW3u'4_٥i2ߤ0 ( ( (P@uN|#86@="b$ʷw =wE๖i?x9 V`,@ZK%y@a2hFIi by恖4|9;p~vwL,\i2,w9°);YY%9¹E c&:l* Hf 6hGVCuk$}H?f~+)ľE`P}i$L {RRXO0\ ,i̝$i*DXj(P;? }X(QG 3 m Z`kwP BiA] @:;UIshX(̱@rjw+F~n1H o Aw,0.#K(ݜ3^[ :֤@P@P@P@P@fkv f;sLF,l ikb[K:qomCh'̵ﶍRhאַs¹ s[5 P2ŝ!G]CH -<Y/?z@e2x#R*ߎp5_[?:@jΗ0, ppg`HPy2`<hx_H۱/05mG P@P@P@P@?0}(ͤGZ( ( Y]"@8UR!z9YmWyPsdac[}j>kIdJѾoʀ3ﮒHVI@ea3L $vG?26Pz@.nmP74v ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ?*)ۈfPU׿)hiKxHZ.X$45lG'&{)c2W侍Z90&K9' jAO~ȭLP?"s@UT\Qf+;D6(b(Ǜ5=Վ0~Y{[? 0e 6_7M,U;k$<);X-/<Ӽ}(]ex) ( ( ( e-P~w0@ڐ2BAGaL߼VzyWER/+v~/\{qxT3&mGϩP #hG)B ]a1hEc  f `K) NG@5)A>WM u9R2 @fG;`GRA A3ݛf?Jwno~{H4K$g*"@:IspA$ `=oc7 !+ |Ig X+؇}(@Ybp<L۱; @.<Ry?ҚחYŹXMv3jMzSļRpQ'UUVYR!K'<>Xri5)P@P@P@P@P@e\V"ԛ}ՄvQBчCv€ ( ( (P@gjK{?͏J`_Yhgo1(Er;;In~v1\@3) 6ͦJى)i=ԐOK ?@4SL @Pv܏Iՠk/CIfaqmhG!dRC(9TَL/j`hRKF*((]+[j)4T\u J~$ǖ ˻dZ`jR2ks2L lfUG$Pnv/!4{M)Q[3K^4dK1 IsqkN\Zɨ(C3tO67w(4Fz~ 5(`rfW(a*3Q(Ez`jR μҖG[ɘs-aqlI 0.iops,H&j.@_I>mw ؈pT @P@P@WR3(%V4^2`h ('PV-L W|W}E 3{y8iMqfAPr[X3;}mpD2;`+ƚT)@|lHm2(0܈[A{gh>!xV2 aD\YG93@P@P@PP:,UT@-1%-Is)݅,m$JFM!ܱ@m@c6?w_›u8<58/OҐT:PNzH?04io<@v Q8쫺_U"t|",˜Q05{F~@{}i]]i/XMCdR*-uXe|呀:@Gs=B(ii= |cSHᶏT*@WV(;]w<h!jqؽ,1c$H CH C 6@P@P@P@P@P=R]0^Waum&r?֫s1[Nv~_OӊUdҰ}%c;h\tE X˵ 'fοaRu8cǿcB kXm4FS dP77w\WLM2TCPg% Zl֢t=Wy`6SLB6M4Ex~ŭ9$f @Pulp} U^XZBv6 ƼiڔW1)fĒ.2T} @P@P@F(D͹*)jP@g^UuHqi/JIsжy1Oh6pgfV8uLdE>Q?)p,dLCݞ{Bjv\F#14+]٤i=nRP@P@P@P@P@P@P@¯wmIdwCup"rƋK?iEV!`kIQi"Ӯ.]\cAdB=d2;_aiY~B0`$)m.;J[HucG ˴a:fpFV>Ɔ1- #{)| @gޡj{*GL@dGqo<a#R?Eb-MH ˕\`~bL :@PP=F] vM:7$ b-#)4Ta@= +ji1ԌCNe z3`U'-L)4wMkY08@-WkI#tU@>q cNHEZ%.˒2zH(Qj}ty8Q@ğcøu/Uy?SkIn\$ @P@P@P@P@P@5cg\4̀(k_@Ƙ/,>h$7 }hT}; piyH>Isg$(kHĺG@ƀ/ie$~ZjhdQnh7rs4g9f15R)i++MH ŹmOPiW.V4mv[A/F#P@fHWGpBt(/_HphF'B:2@ ( ( ("kwq ()j ͨMpO!,TtP07)^_"W^(ORO.wtMVYl̉ͦϝ3stvYM:Ze=N¹b'[<`fP Jw7I76rL`^@P@P@P@P@P@P@Ɏ/h[O?x+8:Gd6p3 2CۮG; @^ ibG>RbUDQ@U}B%L WG7Z@A}LaA-ZBFs@u(}6a5M E6^4_]j@>Mu%+omt9#Gzuna$!:aҐŠ ( ( (P@-Pvқt.L"ZѨ]T2$b#(=]wU3ϩ{(Ɠ`O3c&  ڀ+Hզ#5DauRq 2N(Ҏe6z8a}iH hq 05)P[ŵUKuz`A[ӛ4 ՠ ( ( ( ( ( ( (;]@s9VPzvhSs 4b!y-C 6 &) t+[ぅܙ}-%V6ī'sB.nFE%ȈFH ml Mk}h Vh &G_QhшcPq1F?%aY~Ea V"I|: .1MK{ 2yvq=MNoz`YX*8aǙZi8ȧԞCHa@P@P@P( (h IK"A8Xo.,Y8thfm2SZHu{VnB~T\c"Kf6$^Kd^ȣQ:3HfESqyVTvᑇ# S\6`TNh @gj~lpi4 3buu L *@i;r#>Zր4h o.exFǿ0ڷKQ$1B(P@H ޸H0$FVHyx jVp%{~R^(K'x6< n: |~~1u ^ƌGE~(w*G$ЏX4fء-MsPe 60e#H ( ( ( (I6kf rڞNUđ*xS)\IP/eNJw1uY.&LBXЂxucT2l[)1l,UtnHO>ok ;ZZ_D |R24^wv- 94ӹ`2% ]A #Ԕv T~ 67i< Hv2MIu*qcyF@mJv5iP@P@P@P@P@P@P@TP>0=4 }5@A]y؂#El][p%N})4C{;Ʈ mo-5p1@vm$WK|ܤc)ʮ0):Ga0 \fӀW6"ļLep|>nh؍;f'V%X#Jke09x(!P@P@P@  Z(11ȑRiO"⋅ C>g\ bӵ(T$p(WAɟ^]v/v'֍Rs)8ǵ .O,:+Mwct5R>aP7$6zoe[1!*Ӥ@A>$QBqKGrY?^ (9ˁ Rh/MåpaҘ wN0sMFVq6'PE0kDq3HWB@i~, ~GjV)ZIf`{@WGbEH h'NXDWf;sF9=K$I (`_@P@P@P@PV;9K8O!Sv,h@JYWh!4h:ͣ&G̣ Rx#dxWs07"!cmUbbLm˜4f0i ,'d6XTe[žSմ@( gjY.tdNmE"2!n9F(s-tH~m:3ruIW @M@P@nȱ\69@Ƞ wO.``y4gFc\6@P@P@MCmy (ŕ2 &%2&>4,KaΆ)C@ C3u=Cg%i6g;l6 ˟z@\ nH~#.fߩϔ~;֟P9l-PK${sF7湵NG@ MeVa̜{@H9oaiMp G5P@P@P@P@P@P@P@G: TP;|Ddp8`OJw[q%$$hQ1ZEz4[FdK#6"( \Ma[|v}:k5{H+ly򷡠dq6ɺy GZ4bؒ$ "7oz1!byIi=(aI VdXEpoiTIOmrKtVkgp-[XLU)DS23Pa@P@P@P( (!c ~7A,c̐l *@P@mlɜ7U>n?O`WI̮-sPȁHȤ wM2[;qL ZP+ʸy֋XCfPi vo[÷o.6@ Gn` @se`LXH4mǘ-Ï3.h>fǤG `MO~P@P@P@P@p7ǢdJ`\ԮB?FS#@5 SHVMp Q9vjT07iP@bƂ eA(DZvq|xUM 3[nLOS@Ҩutt)aij"!Z}可j\YrH :*Ƞ :( }faC@3ad93x yKw?vE(h{78+L @P@P@9pX ȼ>?Y=8@on-,ڑA/@ u ]BѳtwP<{SO[ $Ma8!ơyuAj?0.`&YN۩# ~'6Gan\]GiWGvG+\̘NG."ǡ!.\YY"OP@P@P@P@P@P@P@!@Z5pܤbyZKQx.}h0@#/T&|šFY`F\2 CT^zP>[̿q`t4I;mvé> :ڶyvU}I:ikݑ)Pi-V1>b`fcu3o.HTiZaWqߚHa@P@P@P( Z(,&<}9i WM=ir @Pmڛ;ŻN#oP?5 $4 TNM =&Hd 'Ұ 12!=@JJ-ڐnb)4P2R P6[NPg>[\,*_ +y ?)RQ@ @54G C-NzGmݹ#(kX-tZ(P@O$6ǁ<sێ;ef~PQUUi87Ґռd!$+B>tI%Ky~tgPW%ܖ*=Ukhl`v m*C)*04P@P@P@P@%d%mn?:`Mf?j[d5|F^YOܺ r hOM $Hi ;5#tʊlH`chVPnnd&ww PzhДLsE=֤t =Nd3GZ@5[B |rQC"ն YW h2ĭHB0 (^J[ Ǡai؟S[GQHa@P@P@PtP(h mcuvS(#tU (F*(LE 8 0dɂ@W'{SfͣZj"]# ȱgE/~H27i (,1΅%P{4C,ZV9Kف>Fbd֐f ?0-z( 3> b@+ &MΉk4j):(|>r2?Gt)c.4z`:]P=*w2oaw uL0XEJޘV5RJ(#RLvsFh֮SYiЗLczv 5,\ sKw-G~P󎿝iiR tؽTm? 3Za"0L k7# ' ( ( ( ( ( ( ( IYuB={S@9g[ɲD$zGuw٧H;TkNXl x 0m *&ސu9Ojs@{+:?04o'֯!<֐z8{{IT)Sgq#d1 K(kKo0%"Mڤ@P@P@PtP(h V7qDaie= (YG3B{P=H@ Ä1Ƚ)>ܬ&1t4[R fad<8p1 ְVyr~u^@P8&ZMlrS w trhmK϶LFؔ" 2h7BM= E|ڀ #/c|܎@٣%"/ν!cڀ4J@`D nrژ4ZM' n.9\ ЛE1̅=E QAa ( (g!Tu&1uygб)!cҮnAEY 4h 6Zl担cHL6}( !ɠڏdsM-F6A@|ߌ O2[}ɏ9#u(#r,onxTZC1Ri rlL ig5Ă[]ȉz~4~0̽afV5ci @P@WC) @[KZ;g1B1Tb2{GqG"~THUo0̱9ZM2)[.AcnO/\IEY쥺puF^:@Z kOqn[O)&(hgY7[ ;c׭f$pJ}ڤ@P@P@P@Q+K]e;q@ B 2SU~Rh-㹈**6vk,zjz[mٔF'GqfªAcpr^i^N{Gu]B,:jkZrLqQIjO1 3*ӰiY~tX aR Z@P@P@P@P@P@P@PwjhoP|hw)܎(q:|d16{CrƝ3E)%7(2x/SF3]_/Q&v2bFjKXuEQZ./T")qS *8x#ލ&Kq,ӉUhXb$Hx\e4B[CaJ#$3 n'4j{ώi*J*;H^Vsҋݤ0 ( ( (:ZZ(h+njC@} ro' ST1$lOCH@P@Sf{i#WSFڤä_oZ-͉]"@ 1nO^A:=ST( wڐY#!daou~svL0O'@ s-EðSݶol d@Z N( tؼ>')j(8#֘閯};N߀ =NR8~٠`a@T3TGV_dކڭṄސ+W{Ã@t( ( ==s@]k2瘭4׶=(v M Ī==i}HeҐMdM}q1HN)(s:cH TnE?b֘xFcf+Hb}0*I@8 dԠ-2ʨ>gc 9=X4@P-FϨ\K'=)e#O>a!mb@[/sE .P@e]TFÂ=or`ͭu^)n+A u~ ( ̺"jL)S@j`h\@P@P@P@5(d%yKCrm P@HYHT3Ƞ ڴ[&(Gi'rH tR>Pڀ)NhHBB&iы;Vq9zv BL8=$vS’ tF(XKjր+f-͚T֘:"7ր5b9K>D?aH<۳[o Ya#Hb@P@P@-0 @-P{ #;.@Pq@ ϣLYs%DlA}nhqapiXfDVkէ/@giKXEPd,ҀLLgQ4Ln͵ V,7դ@P@QԢ盲 `UAsdv?AH p(h ͏gp8'=MlMɑ*!iQE!:Qpbg+kvH:jRڜ8J4{Tȿ*gH [`06P@Pv M>1x!0{B9 `gցqG1~P@R #>\ʸ3mvNOq@--ryV,@P@z|vj(.a'B8 >&=@ l t( ( ( ( ((f#08qs=ŴHLde@=)iq@=O0)}]MQ6@WnH  p$pL Փ:qH KFJl W V8# + .׌ 'ҐKs&:@@]>ct(Ad l|H5z1P&\7qJ& ( ( ( ( ( t, @z5f%Ѷʗ}S E1O4['vʇBfI즷aGR"Yv㡣QhIr3@랆{j?-( =B_ʆ"rOaE6O&Y^I=?Z.Q*=(qBQTv4jBvC98A0ClߔFԩqynekPP"&ɶmuCfP@P@P@(h Ly4YdXcH &ӥk3/04-o!4mu=E ( Ȗ5xjK:`k i ( k>GOp5Ճ(*A07xo38kA& ^f>@p8@u!a^L @fᓸcڄ6 _ޘ6֐Z"@=@Q:쇪0} YɷV꣥ƛ}?7lRm+c :iʮXPiy i0=? oǘLr})6P@uE,2&./`.pd4cGjD2oԀР d,Q 2Mc;k%y ;n 8q/u4b ( ʝ~})P= c֍ؒ?ۤ@P@P@P@P@E@Z ( JÚMYp%@SLiN\V\n F,W#7iP@P#jK<qFZ@P@!C@01X r;e Q@gَ{_!OP[4 Gj,(Gq>+d$z{2/4×}α4hHbBgޘPAB8?Z@K@z*ٮ%SZ]~Ǘ0ꦘԆP@P@P@P@P@GXӤd[\Go%LFzeJ#`2-"ns)s.{vkPQxH@2x}v' knw>wScaϥGtaFOoo,O%S _(;/\\pr}3@bU1h.!@P@P@PtP@ @EvvJ@@id:ʮX4l,ck[u;^8œvʎn5ڈ nym6w. pnmpDFz N U74g(R=9"( (DcC)( $4e'i8 g4X.HUú'Zn$b:I=isL}̇. _0\`SJÖ{k~H3tމzIĉH ҂bp:"(hL>WӰ@6A`]mg']9FGyx Os=Gҁ io5p#0LOZj[Gk%OsH fs[YC;0L vn&kt3<>v3L?ldu 0Z@ED Ґ34m$v,R+E0hHb@P@P@:Fݗ 5u" ( ( ( 4wrf[`@kH ( ( ( ( u[>m4 AXh8/ dFt s&wɷ W1ۂy8/s@fymi"l)Xw!b)Xخx9$}2.Ծb)\ NjšdӸXnqP #AH `'l8K9VPdSL Ԁ( ( ( ( ( kte<0hF6nɐ=AM:N?O!H PIq<I6 L z2 ?C2"9H%`b,p}si/.p "OPXCiZ=CЏPW _Cͼ2@v{t 8adJ?6f.ȫ}Y<#ڇJc 0C@:ԉmȋpրZQN#4\,%A}fHtXIPOq5g f]E©8 ҎB.@ݐ?`kR Ι':c0?O@:E4 ( k-d?:`ly (z(%s"iѷ=r{m&Ig7{~4( ڀ ('WLc aL.wGƒЀ-e#s}M (ݓ%Ɋ.^^ͫ[A*@M7TӒ8o򎢐nբKH`X@P@P@ 7(#=cD!miR ( ( k v[МPl֚ڹW8 Oo\ ,ٸ ( ( ( ( k (ݝCY40$ap1XHDS@iG:ljvhʤ@MGQe8p$a4 f3G춪Lp1f1̮@n-m5w>Z6~3a?H֘QO1P@P@P@G@0-PHe# b(>b?z&*Fi/?Z9X24TAHP@8)&3MQL}[Y:E8 ( ( (+Z%Av4HIJaCa).R ( ( ( (2 },LnYqY@4: \fKK31*q@@'ְln,^[~/+p#ր3L,΂PrCP6Ϻ ޘ]\Zbv={Rm\ܨ/9%Yt[hUkʑ9l&y#FF; mH&jW`];re4e$}db71ڞlR ( ( ( ( [ 7le~\^ PZ.X\\]3F2;|?l}1OvmQa\sj2n#  YY&oESE0j7JD0'<ѠijGc$ڐkw .k[$ajf`?sALGGlsmA @P@P@ H ( ǫ]A.GcL ZMGQXhl֒,:J@[Yd4TRO@3@:2IspGlMH" #da3tI ͐1>Ԥ$nB 9ۤ@'JGsw7'-M05GQ"Ha Z [EHe(*Xw2*A^"a31 #zo'ټ= S{).mXa;RbFh-‘0^# @jaɺ_*q 4zѤ3Wjs.zfT( ( (7TZ6ٗ`(6=[BΤYzeڭJ84vP@P@P@J@|>Y@ ( ( ( ( (p_\T`(,}O E.Kk=c{zf"\xC+Ba |VN?)a^GuaBd֍YÑH ^f::4c$o&#$_HD L , TdOd杄US֬3N(zy/ ,z҆#12=PuLHeM#(OP ( ( Z`- Z(h r$FB \Jx|8+~T=mNz@P@d<3i4cDtR^}+րXD$ϵ6@P@P@VHn:kY&ՏJҠ()M%phŬmO#9ˏ΀La wƀ-@eL~ϯDe 24r䐿/H _&W8 ӃOրyvw-GrǢ`R'Uα|I @P@!@:J^?vJ 5b&dXd}P@P@P@diɾ$ۀ?L z@P@P@P@P@ ۼvc,2?4+䎴ڤ@Aci|0.iNI3`iT/r64`5Օ2AE X+ +N e", ~{`KZ}ԪH4ͰL99^7ƞ؇P]AehFqV*}УO}olq,ө`+lB_ ̿ F[I@C)(yt+ o>'$֛X@P@P@P@P@O-`E6/4LU*A=xĊ6ցb`dM ]Gm]&jǭ-@D V.vqc#ҘvV"@X 4'#:KӢ- ~T0E@P@P@P@L@ @PnX^nZ`i9A66,q6@ = H@fF=)4P@P@P@ -SЩWEpj$`.t3D i@A@P@ejPiH #4դ@fmwv.Y3@IJFE4`=B{+UXדՏ P@uw,5ˏ'e DAd[!d|Ϡ5۝ t8Vim$ EvR.5ZCh vwlZP@P@P@cYheX`ƶM"6mOp6d@-P@P@P@͎5!v0ˎr ( ( ( ( (:;*kɢ"9s'2I K loݏÚդn0hs4IG%TqLӿp.bX@acAQH+.s2퐏(&n,9-;bML\"E 7p~ZʹL}qMI#ݚ4jjT5L;j.SF u#2V0K=mޟ@k ( ( ( ( 2Lz@rBѫsgqڞ-ѿjP^^Gm0UZ>ѠϪmB{ҋ*I}rDžObƇaʿ;a@Ԁ( u򵻔pUAcHh`^@P@P@ZZ@P@jєܫu`iRi)8C@hMZh i P XRE @3f;w8Ѥ@P@P@P66gI6/qMxd(0 ֎g@2L`^߉dM;J1\82# @PFFz#)H пi֋!`\ 4@P@ @^8Dimy{5"aQxUIKۛclO0"[kCs{#&rQG-4PbF@iuCH3v(d\sKTH ( ( (+_Y-h+O}9z ֧2AE  ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (ٰ3>[(]:J `;PWVV׍wdwn9d=hu;`)_:y^krg~ՍUnRDpf* _ldQEt("S# P]Go1@(!-/v4h}S]ԛG-Jt}) Z( )c)5;).ˊh@( ( (# H3t)]e `i=:b1B >A@(ȂHd0 *FKO*rSViR6ю}(ߞ]#қBP@P@P@ Dz&)蠍9r1$~tI*\*@"@fkPܩP pK 8s@5[-غbPKIWP=Vq9cV( (9Kx(@qsb S Eǻ1iGO&Pȟ,t\}}Ɛİvs`[US̛c> H2H ]*i-wƾҘv;fS@P@P@P@Z+9uiIL=#z5 ( ( ( ( ( ( ( t VR(. =N8>|iNb핤`l y4@.P|0o€Y(~Y_$1SX#-ʤNpE0imB Q8>Q{+OqOp4P@P@GXEmP]>ahM:619la-RP@P@P@P@P@bWS@Gd<}8 7fC\Ц2m$ HҤ1(LG.!bri ( =\5[yΚZo+V'( ( ( (hiP@ H Μ5e' "?Z`h$O֚J$U "hWQ+c4j 8r  v\p'H 4٧B8 TP@P@P@<AL b‘E-8HDB}(Ώ)N=WH ~fhŴ MFF 2#Η}-鞀brI0>SAc :( (뵀aE(Fgj80-[D7T{dy=yZ`-#ozmm{fc60c,+9mmi%nv4 go:y @h ( ( ( (9mbX2Z7le(Ýpuy񇉃))( ( ( ( ( ( ( kQq@K/ e<{ȑR&M z2@]Av T'f GrԀ̑U ۺL[a8'4luEbs 0- ( B20h+J?g=ܿ j@P@P@P@P@PVr:3h ul`4[  L?14z  {S@@P@!0(ꭊh͋o@ZC ( ( (hiP ^ȺqPY !0+ @QP>&P7YQ@ ?Mf,Q T5P@P@P@ﮖ٤=z(4_K1!^I=_9 ښ,fItK{k0`1% @= ehɹݕFs{G8/Ҁ3/qlD4!2jLe]yɷ~ѷCoc ( +XGA@Qv11Y`-=agV̂.{m4gcQi![ϥ0O"7۸zR@Yʴ P[la@ڀ% ( ( ( ( (9ae*+q@]iK ^N_Xڍƭ23ڀ@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@z2\]y&.@J8{n*8vԺO.7wn{ vs$u[$+ T9Ѱng*GFq#RJF9-P@P@6ռ|4 ڤ@P@P@P@P@bL[VvFigFLi ĚFy |9K;10Ե3@ͺ@P@u6_nh-e'K%>:9P}E!@P@P@-(@ H (w1@I 91v zJ  r@Cyi,S@v-ǻGMk6\.q-m!p* ( ( (Ȱ9¨ɠ J/.mSޟ ARWW)kJAhou)8@P@54E>[9yHWր,ZS\&=i\  K遱H ($c.*}d dF7SPe[rֶ8ch=BYn(pq!cE{/*-,)B9ӵ[GC3u^O-`kZ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ($FF`v#پN*`[6 4PԙXTր3az KITCH  ( bcclYR{@åa C]  (Ld.R([éX瓷H ( ( (h34 `K m9eH#4H$E16 3R1P7?JXI>| 9?  ( (*6uf!{mFH"HG;šh!Trd #ҞfY/2胠p4 t (0! 4qg@P@@u+٤@P@SYQ\Fs(\Ϳx niBGaO`\E%!@1HhH YO|EV!;SjP@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@e=н]bE;[oVEXS0/ʑ;>6iʎLE>d>l /̞( (#14EQФ-dc?`iR ( ( ( (9RhLJ>7\Kp?ɦI RO9NF wBotx;]XoNh`[J#:% z4GN[vs,Ԇ\ (~E~5rLF{fꍕPMJ@P@P@PT(h0 ?|sL hk NsH $[8?N}:"'r5T$ =#8|3c?R T(А=E1R$ч)E! ( ( ( ( ( ih"L J@P@C HczPlۗp!ɖmz})J+H U A@ Q!Md(=ӏpiH ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( w[8hVE;#zz Էщ˂ߕi^/h-鷢WZ`\@P@(n_ ( ( ( (22Z摽 ҢZ#A Gj= 14Ң 'Θu-G%񡁣H ( (7[?Q@leU6 oߩP@P@PTZ@S@ @e[E)}uOB1H 7N!!ljmn)Q֐P@\DYHCF6#14mFdxD}H݃΋MmƞeWOZR7qЫeM @P@P@P@P@P@P]MӓPZ*#( (Jy*3Yu?ؘ擡>ž^!J}-i/! `hY-c qH  ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( B#",K$/  Z,*iY-m’7.Z]wx=pi'@P@dy-!Oښjt4Z( ( ( ( ԖЃ FGcPUyy+Ir̈{=O) آHcXUx?t?/Qߟ˜u.h:~=č:C ( (##sԞOSp?4SؾV4>.P@P@PB `-Z(2u$iA0-KZ9Xv 4XW T%W-ϥ f ( :)T r@4]/LbZ h<$ `i[[EkwP@P@P@P@P@P@a2o:d_ \E94Z>o/L ) @]U`CH O1H4^NI3(x J@P:@!K[vt3gf3})H ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( SMu ֘Ԁʹ{[c?zP3$ #mhJ( (xzC@h[S4P@P@P@P@P1“@Z{a~N@Koល(`iR ( (?Y |ހ(AwCwviҐŠ ( (iP ZXcvʊЊ]D @ v (.{;{'pCwy>@PGsB%YLF3J ( ( ( ( ( ( ڂ,&UT_t=`i8$(ɠ )[T~O@yHX.8đ/ݙ)l0ݽg'/c= , e`;A&t[X06@ tZ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (-P@P@P@P@P@P@P ^ͶSd?2V/`XtY=ҋb+}n`,=R ,c=EB?N=U݊sHG`p)]z ʕEs5iP@P@P@P@P78zՙt89lSSFMl]yh`^@P@P@w yx}(],w!/X~iP@P@-ZZ@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@ɗt.R(7ZH=$V1$HQ@E)+۝Dj ZE PF ( ( ( ( (!iP ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (3.Oٵ%QMiP@P@P@P@P@Pymt+7z8$ Q }P@P@P@P@P@E@-0 Z^(h ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( v;p f,@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@PP@P@P@i(h@-P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@CL ZZ@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@!#Z( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (!@ @ QH ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (٠F:Nk}{Ǹ$JFIFLEAD Technologies Inc. V1.01    "!#(3+#&0&,=-0569:9"+?C>8C3897 7$$77777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777777  }!1AQa"q2#BR$3br %&'()*456789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyzw!1AQaq"2B #3Rbr $4%&'()*56789:CDEFGHIJSTUVWXYZcdefghijstuvwxyz< ?( ( ( ( ( ( P@( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (LPҀ@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@ Ҁ Nj@:P@P@P@P@P@PҀ ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (@=@G#( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (TP@ L ( (b ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (dg49L"@P} ( ( ( ( ( (:P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@J(#ڀ ? Bh 8Pp7Z (@PҀ"c#PP@ @ @ Ҁ Z( ( ( ( ( JZ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( (j(PzPnHnӑJb p:PGp8ӚHb.=zRu#:h5;h=?6 M`)±SM4 9!sHa1@ @((h (@ @PҀP@ml i#%Z/`9C?k)piJH7pO;s׊vZ 1jgGs=xHGI:0e#!4ƒo歺0})c#v }N^P\i xu1=I-޼}hiP@2( Lia !@ u#(@ qiSSc v=E!{S0)M:>0=h!P!sB1B9_9!%H`1yNg98/lx\Hm`rzzu=\7`״VGFw`g<@#('c-%AqI 2\[- EݡO4 w)g=N)l6z}Z@&Fif4- <8 MPP0(}H,cѓ='-9ǯ3e(q<0~39sxxcC4Ya#þ8y&|CС5h-h-gC"&s=}XdD%SiG#2QPw?xaq@@ݮe'R􀹑H8' 0?ϷPASubi@y0Gj@!;t1I!L-F Pd v 7[Gn/YW1!+{ez`|WZrg xW834v DVh&Np9;3R9u}mb OLy)E45l$5+ a9?@xFq,`rpRq@g,=iN1SF7tRzu(qHah PL''4p ENrL^@pIyijݏ-;ǭ1DQ@:*{(nsqHgxh: q \Ϊӳ 1>N&?ʨG|GVs f-}p M'L{GY]ͧCwnC *ׯ00h0Mq@Ťw`c1/OԲ…i\k:lۘUr" .{`gu|3`RݥlB 3G㓖P9搊ZΞ-8#~GJ|ymq]ez FͺTs]mk'aV)<t~"HH qLq׿(xGsҀ ($}TLhqJXP{P3Eg9Bb8߈Ҵ3imRʮ@c w3zH"EB9G=Q0Q<|W=cӞO Et(29|aj'vmCGL'9jOz_k 8'o.tu*G8$ &8␅`bPҘ!"P iR☄G8~6~SIN.kVEW s{o5}bfwF6lU=ylt? |<5F̀70r0zH<-j`1@es G{}89h<:\F>4n$۸2xG5 `3ϥ&ќҐ u43 c @7:S{@"st 99 JPpG1h3 9neXK;@?\MwWUc裁s<.5m_Bw)Y`zc}>6#Tgt1)C\Yʱ]D3gCZhHԚ6l2N89_ Co{Y6H~f@G v mi-жzy͐w''>@@hh(hg1:-!;Lo~$4g ܃} ggzG0 Uy`#%q|4_ <0,l'+E"Gc'13 Z@F;09xbZ$"?T2DR׮j<2iyάN$c={謳Z4ܹᏮ{Nq ѼKκtQ a} Ƹ#@֐8>@ @ ӽPiw4 \@j%aLаc`)'?Îshl羼K+8YvG;@z0>4- Xp@8#8&\H6~F=(2#?uM2+(RYs?,zNzLl3EBkPA8$g7c'Hi0x: LB[̕h ~c'SX/{Ig3D!N) \}(h188i 30FnTP]Ŝu4 N^\1\Lmi<9}:c ,Ea_3]<%/Pq!psB6F@7s(彽(C(<'Ě7p2h^"'a;<vgyR(< g=,G&k뻡fifCnI#p4Zur=d(C4)'iڀIn:t)ncL t(;sHcs\b'oҀr3Pׂph5?.4a.'ĒNnөh򤁥F3Ȩpzc8C5@} },6ѕ.f\31oLv&#o hԆ7Ҙ}#R h7(GR88^zpGmww526#TquG;<zOZZ>{ru7Ȱp;uhg/+4@ @ @q@(9F1/C@A8AuPR0He/uʆ6 ᵀey#t%M1p/y8# ]m`+{h(!P8P8R)>PGj\0h_ʀB\PJҬmuo/\A9p]Ǝ!Rk8|yG9 7cb 7y$s!3!;wz\ty A#R0FzR9 G80nE ǵ#pS@鎔\R 1 ΀dx\_ SM _SI=4K$I eN2x?w?6r0 [?)Iw2y'c$ %|K |ۙaG#yI/al{Y[X6-3.8%'Z@ZӰ3Hv4v4  C : >FYnK9!#%;c㌕r:6E<RJ۷g# "C,ᰶ"8zNI''i3@5}gO~06pԓ;?@h=\8x_;[  P"yV2@P3xKw'eYvgԌnS-i_wֶ;c>U8{~gt.$ Χgg^8Mo/#4#4 u @8IrE7;9?Zia@68鎔 G=1@ Ԭ" Ns@8C1l{tn>Xo_Ԟùwm:k>%h׳Our|*9\$ͿxI[ aK$BU)=G^0A=UC2iqH縑"1rhi9UC+}#tT$pOj`yZէkHK1PT/'x=Fùw7];khF9ڣ#'Ah77%u.,;g]n~^m9 t<f# \p~0lRO868#ހd?*AȠ q@#?PuKU+BF z$'xK1/*)fv$I~4xHްWs +b9ld9(\}ۅ׍~ޭ3g/ylV管s49 q@+f zv0`hE7h=GҀ>cϵ;Pmh)Pb g'/ڇt> 0WiI$8}tq@HlHc1(A1#(,ºWy=)TlBn m9O9 b+[x(bP0@1p(ncѴߪO@w?瞔 IVX.Tgث=SKk|&08R%m}i` P8˓Ki`ZIgSC8z͵ȟ˃%e'$nsHdN}6 F*@~@?^ @&9hZ qv8BlP10F:zXH N9:P12$Z6qGηdR.%#  pi{ƗtʖpF9㞙>ƲmUyސ6sB(d*Q,'%Tٍ'##Gvڎ( i\Gn1H`@?y T֭/< O!@ǎ<VyDaX)$Dҿ0Ǧ8>qH{G<́OOn=lt{R:{f,OJ`?8@ y8L`q@P9Z:)ڀ+^\ZXMqy"GjYNTc ϞuuB5]2#.RDRn g*Z Ƞ8zt; tFUᾲfAVS[$yLS&5a ݦ%+ #cEc>$T@OAF=8$.GP#cǯsꙆ$cրzSStOȶwb2BoA~zGL7l|2pGg=jq)ǵ({(C@HzP1Bgq@qiy)<"Y|D$<z `!|5˿DL wx8O0rz?5 tE\@&2cc=~$`Anv~4ω K{8H%I(=#9cFu-v&x?irOg#q(,u5M;Hxq)ڃI9J GXPGthAKgyrcr2LN?4Oŕ[ψ@VE =3ҾxFR.!Sqc|Izp 3SNz?w@c l@*PG|P!bd0)@€h'}i:Gs>4-4FCe۽& (G$[`{ï  oAogH99#$E;[^E<:zC+!9p=T@Xc_ / ߈Q``#=ҝ-/" M^=`))9GM/LJu@ ;BB-{1x;Y}6 q*ڸ˱rz[ڀ>X9bpV  P=H C sSR:zSBׯL0GHts_Ke{t$- \8@݆q_tڭ}qP?`~8??4cEL-t aI#h[---"!% G %aZ7n_ٚ^59F mrއj4C#'|JcMjdz'!\g`-uhg c6e|$U9A 0>H: q"$W\zwR"㎟C=Cm^ 8@y(Ps@~R4=E ~Cs:Zۼ8$ `x'.oCnH'8a $W!/Mxn`"[x,qU&"nH9Ƞ ^%CFL oU}>g%WRA8P?ON=mFp:@sixM.y :KNFÕ?pcaŐ.cv xvVAԑy>Hcv3bӷHc 8'Lq@ 3ڀ8@ M`xy_c 7/ ,x>}=_z kw q z}|™.`G@ 65bMFU T&B(|{c8<T-\uI0T?^zqF; x^ i MF}T>:P%~(98L Kh$vy\B;p0x4 HRD\zs z l3־x]B77%(;Ǩ+`hLuhq>xP>lP @0y&pj(EiYظ`g4yC-bs) hm,Һo*X?t,@8hF dbQ;1F.3GH?hls|(1ޫ=8d ϩ9 >L ,r{=S@ڐ€jbhO#@ 'n;L=3@A}{oKuu*o/rz:k뺼DȳU^}01ɧ[<=ԀCl8pw OMdqqʚp2(wSzSP?Z.ځx8Ph\΁ }Jk;İȤo^q{Q?6F֓1[pFx$c۾G$ |7{G\qځ 8RFA'j:v=p~!㎔0ڀ !bqLxw|He st+c:8ml!2D2לBgvF nd)9=qH HP) u }yP9`F0<7.u-kiYHc{vvl/-&ky E<$9 8NHQ>iVϾ929GcH{1@ ݁ۚp1:SUx@NH okx{De!M'Hລڌ\Lc>Lv 4%e֮mHIHN$x0 ?N(:b#H;f3րցց^ l:zz)#IV _ ޸Clq\瞀s2A3#W/Leq$cqXXSP!x4P0=ci@ r@ܸjjE8yğ>٪}0#0r x_pǚ"yu)rUp'NïAɧ}kۡ]2A."'x+CHp1@#F:*p{/MEoXKq.K8XO Xv? |;uw|쳄#.iK=_' fqѰ>WB FwҒT9ހs@ h |Z`) A@->VӮ,nQ]%\a8=SK,o \,:n3v3iO_Oͥp ԛbF#789[jG91L@Ga( c= *`(W@ 7Pך{$;@pM>bn" I:u=~(xI)O(7_{ ˠiaX@i yOǜnv8C>7 <`Xbl2P Cg\~@TxPH=(FH<~CSm=6{92r1}8p< Yn[ӧ1UYs~˟m>j6~'WQIܫ;oI1`6o@<zޘA& @(('z;S!k:ZK YUn2X`R}2[խXo5H0rĖǯئ@zziM$qQ)8<4ߠC`~\a@,\`? * Fٵ@1U`79}(C,)%ObƐ 9Brƀ90 U/on8qGZfPI'+|g |E>=-P8Sc ;LԆ!8!@p"GOiGXfwzL`*Rq㞾sH/]ԋ$vr>8Zw? %:͸TAq/ӦqNwP&z㓐;R;:c98@ #~hq]ȱ &bpF-*l NA=c@$} b> w#'P"!%# )ybG]"Җwap039~OEYRXd3c Fm#M"̋o8_^ǚh˩i$\'tӵ'46ǻ̿PnF6w~$%ݟި+ϦEںzl^ q F}3@}[O]mſz.nϦ23^K);d +c<{d~txCY薓q=ā¬C ^ hvj`O,9pdMܹZbȞE^=FݠϦ~@~`{pcF A`tXs~?2-I )YR?J隅խ72 WN@'h l Wnv{~q׍3K)^K(ȓxш"ʌ/r{>? } 0A' 4#OzS>&m̉ rpxu=!/ $V/ΐ[PxNh >р1HTZ S/ALqz'k_ꐼ|b['!8>)lhgo%Iy+tw|إd7R Hצzj ~,hq![[ ivH2z o0w ev@ݴv#Ƕ3Җ`exO'v ?NzQv!N0&qY Rtϼ*I V~?.|1. 0EUhAay{@:NjrWT1daϰ1o&6x]pX\`c=1Fo0,qnn^SnbcԜqiIm 8oSՄ`hăոP>0[pCm$9zuX5}hkZΥ%[}n 9&.L`lR4HQ$.Fz^.7G,J+S'קV`#]9Iݳ28nנ`|]ԷHa-r7H[6t]>l`sV!LU%cqr3ߧK|Z@ӭUAm|dFF6__ sĐiiCo;HW,<+}z`䵀aoEucn. D/!<sD_:Zt%(XScKgVm^lX%N1ElubE{%d瘘IIvG?~]t2&A^)X =k7zbƤzߧM+ssNh|qJOtH#l|w ?Zy@ɸbB=xn= T(0_GZ]~x6>a;QӜSL-dso;TB;eB*2 w:k enGsӾM2n;>cLO*!zaק~"(i0r{~=;+<ݠbGNȣ@:oA⦖է"E׏SպwF@}sqw]^!yJ6}9x R+nl)jbvGwڱr[#d`=cǃn5FTdr A&H 6F;vP0 å;M>1yͪ7Q`b L:h6[kfL`GcqU ڼJ7 dQ6 m|YCWnbH"75ɅU#߅sF=44Qͷ Yrq Էr:Ɛ4CPf>Q@g?^M&E2=X{0\G+G3VVF ٻ~80o^< p?(;~'=0>lqG4bIpH800Axt09F1 &?Ldc#zc9q0r$># 7u%p1`S^ ֭H}x%+ rH# #aOKxOV{q\+d #M ѕ:Ƞp7g 1I,.A2gv=r:gol``>`l|s9x h'#gO7$8p=;}3Kf=2Iǿx@&u{-d2 szu?\4|9O igjV; M n(XW `}ҁۈHcXz)bnic@bѵ?mFr=SaRμd~@mާwmm O#לh+")0|(1`s0\Ko*߀1;`zxjFrm+}8*nߍ18拆7ZǨb?7c8x<`/| kDwǸ++N<`ؿ ;a+ Ǧ1Eaᯆ&"+c8팏BO3$6,IGeq=9*|1&/4\ FY\d4>bKoJo޶ rS@upZ)X#w=47)aQN2:Q{RB`)1@qX{izQwa '=h _ t~Rg'M? |3P5P*0:担ciP~ۑl߯?^,*SAPG[Tm/I?ΚlV$O Bn>_sEXC] K A+صki3mlBEC6p:<34%6XL*I@8 ד.KK$}:ݙÆ%ҋXY=Nu-BvдVVmrſv9%vF>~Ks=SaqJV@Ɨf1~xvztqEbk}#N*mme!0!v<}8b)`(Su!ZC@0FxK;iNA# ~T+mۭ;(9\{vmOcsPI9x,gg_\Qp,J aNaD1 @)\,) ʂ`8ǥq~seFhN]X;z鷐}׎@hJ@V P04AP!xC)h1h10('ӵ0@ڀ0=:Rq@sŞv;yc(SAn"Mś'8{Ԁ;PҀ 0:@8N9-h0:O|Px'~ 4;ri@Jo@ M"9ӥ)8@'?ր+ZAxͺèq0ΚDiE]6IHdly!1CarH'(2) (2W b `wP174@88Ah@zȤ1}ޔЀb@ր%@<4R?0/=#=E.p(V$@ q@Oa@& ؠ@8<1P6 HRi!:d1 H^O#E ` 7J<׽ l&3tR*i/\P& 1~@'$ e ǰwg4pz?qǭ;^  :@:)l* 9NFbG#X.9zs@!pph@4 0ňF98n8}逊pĜ~uO 6HP̬:PHdM$P[0|umfn7mp@9=:gVc< Y<1sz:f#ЭDP6P^}.O:`FI&^R:b3 )$/Bh1PUzq1O $8hj($1QP~NsOP<{P!H,À3Ҁ8+5ȟe% 6=31Ķ o:feY\axg'LsH,t:ƪEe}?Z1.ervۜ Lls֞twDQK鎽3ǽoxwqA=ԲIL6P1N #oJ]mrrXRtNm:GwX>'ÞV)zZH#26qsNvGUOAnh9aw;T9lP3ޖq5cZEPրhq Ha@0 c4`Pb z@|_^#|E^T[t:slhi정1²܏捄pxSOh1kb(#ySY/OO5Y0q_(SSbn|F*A*$ "EhkgǗںhƞ-Pe\,2~>s|Pi|5Xe]9:i⺶kbT;CoD9+Kc[]~[J4\ H0hA-|Cf>L1nFRAbU`E\  Xcsoa]m] 0- ۞ۃC#$S@t9sḓxcЎ~/ TJDc.wm`2>\u tk^+ kX㔫0$ ZW%AoNF1q>t4 𔖇&OI:n ?N{c/dI9._JDИ$#,H_tX +3oGo1o#s>q vf2~T:ͷڏA^:Zwh%|1sڕ\P@1@ Ҁ(gqb8% iLڀ9l&!w V =~Uuğ7=zg&A@wGx>Y6,bΞ G@:8>l=Y,4dIt򄐝s~S@ľ %KPϳd[NrGcs#=is0:-nyF^v?:h,y&imŸm PR-ޘ<:1Nl`H1T݂GM{kef}HYKIR`p:cOOx Sڟx4(Aq OGǧc}9KF4V$G1(^Gl>ޕ@P@P@P@EVQo]6"Emsx⁋P1ӊ- Oj(h ((Z*v^8?E4#'NIٓ9 C(ҐOc⦬۾ixONq`j=3T4HbE?3O^鼠'0q;p1`svoojv$ WWW %2:tz `쭾]4*RnϮ{R!|08-f<តj~ԑL0i_qӯ= wk`[;vGZniRтrv7P@%hv4t b=hZ( JdueH(~𥿉uYk}򘃷#$8q~iпy=\a9h ׬|{e *8zR/p2,CAzǡ眜`;(>b;o\ Ϯ1+ΠzQqO>1[ Aޞ73ֆj@MOݭAip#pOdz}=?wp qcӿ֎d+agY%)uSX ӡ.Oɧ[;[w% S̯6Ȃ :rWhyB-Ġdy˚`W@% 60GcG!u;Tk^w (yq 4+ )0R,v`d45|%¶2iB,띣@:`Y żmS!Zǖ\e[ $S 88=`Lhᤂ1%ԛx=sn;֕Ô]֘ NPnh@hw'bYI7y= 2npCZnCU<* ň_ç'5WAvnxoW.nuٯFHQp{avd5W]'gopHa< C5d!k ,OJ㓻gぎ\wgqivZ5ZYF#{eLHci^)֛Syr+F?x1#`!Ղ6c$p<YUeaFNqǰ)n}H1G0]m(Y(]ۘ>K@ ܣ.GLn\P_8(!A$zPp<t`s(z@P23@ LC]3C Ú3-ǔ 䜖f>sOea$B)j 7VNž\Z뢹տ| n *@ =~xdiie 8fd;IɠG+/h6*F!#y;تNk_ V֮5%Ԥ}|p}A~yRO[i%0HdN(u^""ܫ`H88xLM8_(9$P.wP:@ISdBрtn@$c$gҀbC h1#U𾛭^w}/@sq5bQK{8~2~0 tt}OC uօ q1;7s?\,f.YpNvP:t<8pv,,?nsqJk tk-f%49 ~M0,Eag+#€3~p,h;R4c{Xx]Cc8Q4!e/ly(?J.b͇tm>.mt!A3ǧa҆$juJC(\) FqM ~:@(v3!8掀zP 2P/J(k mJ]“@~:; :~aR("@L(X?_J`Iבh ဠRJZ3(07t `g4rM c⁏##g )aW8"$P!}(}Q܊tc 1@ hyr[?J*;4 @~C@ex a@wҀxqcLَy P@P@ q lIa4 ~T/@ Q8Rabi-\9P _ lPzc@큚Ji O(COƀC'Ҙx@ :`iݜhqր=ڀݸ?\pG>0hi hL. q A841 ; ޘ?.9!su!i 1hIL|٠ C Oj2q@znI<3Ҟ+&@R A폭/?Z&)aLBr~-  H9G0\g P(t@!h b p .bGv ` @ n:)vP1Jcؠ@8v83` 㡢4s:fix8 C =(Td(!)(HȢ.x}hO-410>1 2 !h(z)\Rg<0RȦ;R'S)I{R4gPL@X@_r9^qך9ϵ 09$P P1'c@+q@pJ`'PĎCH  aqL@HbciS8 CM0hp1q@8!@4pS€0zvSǿֆDOcdt41Hp(@qLB7QB#JhvQE R`?ǵ}!u 1FJh@^9!; brb/ Hs@jQ) hOJ` ^W(Ӂj Ӛ)#ht3SCs@ -AOa >a ǚAԓҀzP@ 2NsǦ)z "" ɓ@ ځ R}:P1F:@P@1@)cZB3@P0 Rq(bh4((PF/i1G0#ssL,RKvdBs7Ӟ飒)xWdlabJ@(mz0(8)p16+ќ⋎sH+(;PPҀ"hm`yu$u4/>+iQNZsfQ* Ӫ i?[1G%R3)8ry>CPFKF؏j`?H: `!P@( (9xÐ=kp2r{ OǜK\@b;u+93p?jaxws5ktI#(~G9H,z,2<1 "FS"bb 1@P@(P@P@ @jLcހ% ( ( ( ( ( yi|=ڀnns(3 g'ЀxdL9Ɇ2$|U^z}qLd; S1T#fnKwΉGYe3Sz(=iRAV #! @P@P@P@P@P|MWD]]8#1p08Xfe@w@IA}w\wPvHd0QպH>h-/) qg1OpZ扪ϡj6LQ¶0SG21-pN]CNBf\z; ~ Z ( ( ( ( bךb!O~(,€zvaRP@&@(PdgP@;P@P@?|Mõ} A}OC`,KinXP 8sո1@xCÑoB9yV[Z/ JA*Fx/5>h?}l; y!c][6*+rCTӎ !X:P $ϵ01CH ( ( ( 6Ow+i*zc$@'G_2OIA%I9'<>x>xklO^"n`\猒^ =J^! ״.)99gd=< OeOCgdc}1ۜm$9@zH ( P@P@P@PW1?lN1@lss@ bM"un''-P@  '`1!@ ѳ)\v q@Ť@P@t3Z-F&VexUO>xԵ+Rq+| cjc;k*Y`8N9cy@'@|;:ŮeKqL x2N `r2NG$g3xzG}ŸZ7w$y b ( ( ( (8!:funwI <P:4@LgŽ?ϑ/ $kNep83# sƚL亮/ ڏd cr11A'd`_0cC 7N{qH<Gͻ9rggU؏@p1h ( ( (I<(<}ckK@K2[*i9F}sX\(qÆ'h#'~Oˁ@ϡ-a5EHDPNHm̱\F?8㑃[^k-d:mۏ#w) f=FA5 jP@P@P@P@@ 1<s/ň-@ ăϥ B?HE0}h#0-  ( (0iUC7yY0c8=;z.4nEѣmlkf4+H׎ѯ@Z( ( ( ( 4]lʗa6f_׮0;( \>F*ܜg߿ +~}!"+sze!Ϲ?{bRCuk 1,ʥd}hmkZ{c#F~U 2x`d1X>sxbkkHCna!ʜA2:gxKŷ(qfYD0bxݹrЎP@P@P@P@P@ PPh:v(P@P@PҀ (P@s9x{AfI].nr2@#gќ9 ǹg*s~u4G4ۆU7gĞR0,H ~S.LK@2=A<h,| l`*A8>y'֤@JJ"h7:SȊix6;:)gW%Yrn9`u0rh>)eox %%#~`֐Z( ( ;PgPHQ@?xQ|Uu-US+ R]>@ 1c%?ilC  ~r (s-WW,ר\,x @m )q~^4~0/S[ߵ'v޸#lT8d`xEi[9fkwط 0 Nݱtq^Eve?61 ܼ!.42h(_5c7%`nJ[cH ( ( (qB P@D#Hg%Oh$ ('g -!lS0(4f q@9)ZCZqosDrHU8#B;E+sԭބ2#h;3cl j|=P[''o7ύ3t=z>oZwE!` ^:$\Zi0` *bzq攤~bW'߯J5 #lj6א@𪐥]9=nzGA!𥗉(r?߁9Zmls iz\7+s vgf$`$rqw///-E:sʒwMInsn9A=#ZW+6z|CČ)lv4s@P@ A@9HF* pz {^9rĄ8خ1V0i79C7:iY<<ђ@1N=yA%s|!K=6jz0*P3Q 94+iiD({>G8AS`H=Jo$e}SC #88GHu.ueU ~#*kEKQV,:c$zqLG-/EފpM4b&OyŦFm0;`o6PwAM*r@=l#5& 8bd~4\C-.ORiu!N(883{[ FJǯxޱúצP]WI{6aiz-Gpf2N '#iNzQX r:ygu,X#mg 4{M{Kk`G#Nx< qN? h:-ϟ bK68\ g'_Êw߆k5ˤh~q3`uzoEwƿ0;3041ڹ=AACӥypXj.fyA Rsx㏛@ 0y6UT<R{w~je MvOcvs 󯋷4{M~V/ۻ4VH|TY=Aی50'G[BU -gɲL|z.9ޕ@ NE19ܸ#$F[=ژ^=1H!@ 1@8=p*sF/AHg|GC:m#$8#dw˃O`H6YFҴ{Q gw0zT}UVԏ-p˸q?wiՃs;R LGReƩ(6s]W@+0O='|kcz&Z'Nrl[s{ῈHN\:EɌw#`-@ێx\HhryȠB C@R=1L@@$P1s(3c4v>5|/ucG4֫W%P]z N5iWӢ:!"B3r}x$+ɩbU ,Xy9EgDFh !VA!ObRH@zVe0DB(8=qHEy<'< Ft| PnʖǧR@9-d6ȿ+m9pr 1KHhq{$0=-sw}s~^;4`zPCҀ)HcOx(Hb:iSqH`rjӜZ\!3 =hp:{G'4 4(3(:b sE0hhdbA -!mB=+KnN:PwON$P~^HA㎣ḪZ xp_]sY ۞O^8R~`)'si5<9}{7dc8wZGu[#K >Z-yiq^y$a vAnOUsUf9#H01@QS6 b<2+Ǒp\@ 0yaw>w.TN{`y!@:oEUyS84tm$qS$Ha@q~;(.>U,i^O u~xȦ BeyKu`  wӲ |ΌŷL| ߯`\q:R`tT(xoK?l+ w >oA^9= VB֠-ث"9zv|3:-GO˹t#֐-P@P@P$""1Ԛ\{/ BA#s299 K vM+usz+{ c TZA[> 1B(LTg_ Zlruq5P.y=)- / 4(cD 0&$/C'88Kj+@ۂL\sHgvWpGs="PҀ ( (zT1,[SW[69gC<0x!٤1hsLBRP@exD_展ܫ8 h[=^YKkt֗Q` C\`|٠guđNtkLq@Y19<;c9=_HB@P@Cر;3.B)?(<ՠGj@P $O^qS^x{@3#Is6$%C`N8&-Θc֐h@-!Ҽ(1h@\NF@Ƞ ~3[4;C>Ƙlx ,o*0zc5-=7fa]tq (ˁzQ@Q#@-1LC EO1!ԆP3RIy47 km9(p=H'qa0K? h\3xϙ42qb} `K="T5E-b<$xa4Xc(@Lh;@gI-U9u<0< cp8<:J[PI>q@ @ zPZ(7gx@8 u" @F8484I@JA:iS@`xŰw1?)0s@ 8apE[x^{yd JYُ Z{?x\cD|8tQ#=2M;~il_Fʹ1Xs{BECD@vCNqʟ L)lsJ ^I\7QދmĀQ@ܠsHfc#)Tژi7© ]zp<{w=x <6{W+4@:8~4  Ɗ@6J' 8 tƃ1 nzP)cx;=F-'M1%e8#k˩5 $˓ww?{8u <5]EKlq`g==Gx"V=9!qLBgq$4Nx0##1 wҘ XċOaF6xY!r33~t-Qw!Ĺ Xgw`g9$;EUUێ9 ÌC.%W%WLwޝf7 $Ukmwӽ[X0ݶs'h|aQmMrۄom9Ea1('PݐO=?NiZߊ-KG"HCr1;g q4q vib6`q P;\G(&*L{ 3^3E_/ )up1 ЂO_  pׯrH8/'7 8BG= u<AXmǏ+sl,*2mFܞws X+ih3Es垝5@zDMj6;+(d#9, 36#0(aiH'#Ԁj嘓==iZaW>~B9[?5(FFU >oO$ȮXC?{ CmCm,H#lrss?ZO&e=xt43a gs_4jb52 ~\z^zsF|`w 9= /מ,ZW9Lݏ_nh !t۫x:Hf u$z~ѨY>({hWCDyw̫v~# HEh5iɅR"rNC1ԁ˸Pкt,a8s .O[vOquxY6Xi?^(װYw>/Y$@*A+zzsӯjE_uOm *ae{8;<ՙ*Q۷ sg# xyiqc8nE! `S@zQRh@B \[p1Fe,-Tyb}}qE/O x';ɢ46<'P׵csaf#;YN[ӌѨhq%d6 FOICx5qmŝ]+OP7d㏗^I1Y OEFR@*N8͟ӳ4Z֔|vHʓҰ٭p6܏r3EAŝt{[唕ŸL޼fm ghAd >k$HˉC 3 .}=AHZs@9 (4ッ@ $g~\٠ 0wt@TLbēEF@Ga@ƈJH ( (`- P@F(]k$iO29aT#UR"BsIqu4dqӜ'8{WTRqq~[kgCsNǯcR Hb}^ B >4pđON?ϧ@Gƣs7Rͧ4 AA| ms(20`8{]ć<`eUpqӞN?/Ü K ێ }o9Y1'<C 6M50By^y'/t;{PO≮vס-cޠ5>ƃk +c $۴w$vi)PpA!ԆP%&u*!)Ci&T-#\p0K.xٮlngs#q~^hiDĎI~#׷zm1yO~9M6y':{i,qB{ |4ٷIsm%v1hZӬWi-_g1x chxEQ끏W&'˝1 sG81s8@.#6zp0OQ@嵽m]K T2wS9?^s@h`͢'ˆ*q`cz~l!<. zsoh ?D[s[1h ( ( ( N(PҀ@ @P@P@%G,QOcI!# OT[kCc#it tNzך|V<%gL{'}O'haaЙ[LNs's0h޻sN}s?{sG3 gF$X$䓓O|Gs0 hē9qӊ9ZѤ9m:לztf:M#1#s)\g'ïiew7 csNb.&7q p21;Qai,X:~AߏG3 X/69Xg"^4{@[vq oq,>cQԵGko(Q@OH ( 9ϵ&y Q2d@!$NI*98NVȋ'''?J."I $ˊ.D0A=@p0r#Pz=]C qE8J.ds~8~"%fK?{ )8=@ cq@ bs T(4b"!ģ }ssLB:~wҀ999hP9$qLqPG Rӥ=qq@ C ( cQP  ߂(b2:} q@ 6z@u(hcJCT.!8$SFXD9f㡡 A g~8@NP9ch9$(sT4S>@0 ǟlRA=3}!F4 h @包1Mj!i V0=)1 mH/ Cӥ1[p)01ǵ z;rh@t}(@ >\c$zPI 4n!~=(@S@c!H1z A @ @h4 s:SfL68 Q8ET Ht-CJ\0 LsLA08F)@0hc4cPS@9{Z(109_ iq]jIm~}ndr$U; 39៉֠WPYLw}3-bǎ|aqilPE0,9OaԀG= Ė|89݂: r>Q#|Mu-y!| dc<~3 9?J.!B\!9@9bӸ8 1@ @ h+j` G\ i''.IAh) ZLs`pĻV{f><O|}}3ldɔtg͖퓖*H܇ /?ZVy5'kmbwOEyk$|`{1pHxXd*Fh ځ 1ځ*\V C:hq@!;Pb@(  S^!֩{Xߙ# Xnp2z:sAE[ˏ:, ss'2dߏN4 ]:L}X߳/8?#܈M_nneC go$: #C|uW4D3FG cxL&r.z=s!\Ꮋkz~&t!p2˧LwT|2nlh7 9> }ռen~PFq\xĆcec9wyt>ixs2?"e2n'=ɠ9]KḴG"3:M~cgOp˓Ig܁=}8&|u].d@ġQK)PS w#4 G56]A$ޘlk ( ( Nr9Ҁ ( (Ƨ/R\G>i @9Fp8ɧu=N#Iq‘r9HI4/݈Q8!@:ӷS@t9'PoƱb҅b 6AV*\ vM=G:V7b\'R {ҿrlGiiJ$*3t:t^iR (@P@P@oFXBA;N8jPdAH϶?ȮYASph|)~(] fE2:d懸t=SV8܏=4yq}gF࿹nrAsBȼKEҒ3#yLH}vNnZFCI&aV 93xA :-.NJitYa}ipt;2H-u8{aNğ \H^Oy>ޥ`:_1]K$?OӜQ^.?ءфr=p8NϠϮ|K|pCilNWwx<1дxE UxҤ h ( ( ( J(ǧ{@ z}P@P@P@Z(>Z?XaԜ 4^xgMi%v>a8;:Sh+ڈ9''+9U>a\ǨM >Νi4jxñ$Iv<<.iv6(:Qp{!Pdgl} Â8$^G~lN]GID@r 7`]=7ٍFܢ60F}fjl@l @B?P)Ґ<8^OG>:ƞ 8@# N:q@wLBys[ @?@^ 5Ğ7#P*,b=n1A\׿.:{P bZI6>Z*mSтmlfGyj:QvdyۯSN|3NtlAĻPT^qBrP.T #8 օJhzP 5zJUޤzLpx@aLJCRѴb qy ,_Qp:Xⶈ%I*(0 AQ$lr(izykmBp{3c۷S@ggr6d~(i,r.e<8{:S5 49WlXXۋKXV|B =拀t0#F`~q矯=h/X>{Yl!( ) ,mtLp$0!66yWOrp~kemekC0p;td=pG0@ H<.F3LN(ڀuǥ0H 0 LR3LS y?ZBPg@3d?.P@zby! y ӊ\t P3@Ҁ` 8]'OA$jyx!^3@w" .1^h֘+9I3PhԆ!;y4i8Fƀ(R)r(r ( CPu9L@8'=(@$(`:qL.{@#.Xu(I= t  n69H q@89:cSW;I wmtR ֞:%CȠ(@! L@5 P/@ր0^i(@G  9@l @10LBlPu!sҘnzh@Z@P4 ڀS JP0=)$`P`0 W~f-ژ 1IZ4 Nc o€@ŤN:!#΀ހ'.1M( E!@( ( ( ( ( ( ( AP @x=)R8108 {1H ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( ( O4o~g@@Eb =9#?OJ1PpFh(Jwb*p Aah1@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P@P€ ( ( ( L ( ( ( ( ( (3hs( (=:Z6JuP@P@P@P@( ( ( ( (P@N4}:'PP88Z( RgۚM`RqҐlLr(pqE7ʋ \RGN(@ @hh33@ (2t-;gZLqހ P3@y-jip= vĐ) m`8gFm@ mژ ˒T~tz{f ( ( ( ( (@P@P@GjZ(23\ Ҁ ((ޝ(h';4ߕ8>lwJu!b3L@ހ8h@h7|XgRȦ`q@~lq@ 8ߐ!@ H{SS}iր(`lQ`84=zR9T) )@`Pvh `tPz`P€P<1c ^qҐNN1L ɠs@CLsҀs1`@^(9z ):~rb #̣6Cʀ3@P@ nMH (LH C (@@uݠ #!ԌCҟPҁ!E!L^1 ސuAށzZ(JcBbZb!K Ta= F~]QրC>eqԀkBڄ& h{SaM$?r_i*40Tz`I! t @C})ZNALhR(=h;^?RИV> ڄ.ȏAUHBZS@n05b͚դu+PNG  IHDR)"sRGBPLTE000 888(((...@@@XXXPPPHHHEEE^^^```hhhpppxxxgggf6IDATx C&Z\2&2z5?! =_Ba Á<&^9h/@`x?W™ȿA2 ޻C1i(}>LW 5{B%z=$$-whrݫP;~h{{{D;6ȦS:eޝKSz%SbQic@>*ު &{4>2o$]?dD1ߤ.mxd Av]m_`~lJFgu)/UEeݜ7W] HK ȲMtg c3.(4kv.,YHXoTV :@g^t +iUve Y|*IIȅz+{W#$w5DOS%0K#̛xüIxD׈k/fȦӨ uka$ )Ṕ_l>vhW:뤿*.!}#W20ڔP-)귯^le:eVC1"ZlH)j:~]zVٵ. Sel^N~2n׍OOUT}L˅ѵ"΍K%ebt-Tqe.?CgȲq^3 H K𩿎0" ~@;.bリ aD =,\0 =7II 5\ |T4'$9&(H)HR j]|,b=#~pס쌕#_R HBIIZl'@ Id +!.&b\[T$yB5%@݁qUYʋ;J^ 3 CiregC#D5b@Vzq^ɫđ^A eHXLIjy߾j7UvDwH{ـdN+miq\ᱼ SU6 [W$$$$  HH@$$dKHil ٫pUH@N$ yK/JEdXnԪ*ƶ]q|Y"mo5o֦o#Aqe Ѐ 6H^ ֭jOU]l;HGgePܮTXeHг ^6=x׮ݵdA72AZ;euSK+rT@$ ywoל7M)oBȊ۱_BxsGI-$] Ǜ?VQ0 9ޜ(8~pjyF:k1-c9Qf-HyjW\ͼAfrP+ԩ$ XNcԥ Ȩ H@$  H@T#@i0HiH; H@$  H@$  H@$ KiIϠ3SaGi hFJK@$  Ȁ H@$CXf3Iv~[$ f^/t$dz"<6?9$(M^z};4'IpZ2Y9 ׋R/?,Tϖ$ yON'|m7d/{*~% yGWဌc7}d'd6uE ȈAn_'JW߯^$ -3nzL#qg\bwk{ GqFWݗ_ͤ;3~fI@iY1vٟVd\ E<}QGȟ4xYIu(V0+ֽ@5ax\z'P d ;3g$7Ez{t 2.ն&[|(zIO^ %WڒGw}sۥҒU?VJf%k{zM{}nLzie$RnnKgI] g'hwoj ~ 7.gJǍyNvR ȇy]DۭwY}lVBL=/ 0~Ӌn,  Yc?ȯAUE{ L"~4'ez8 گ Rm'1?ID*H /G2딟q/J֏_~w%T0 k_'5Cj_L~ͺ\qc~VCћ`lkrI8et؟4B|-U4>V/Î,l I^5Md0$Rӗny?}N9Ky%d-n ȫ]Ӥ'ݝ˷`~v{Ik5\v0opumcǩh>,X;X&/(yxE+EyG;ʡ>@@@@$$$$$!$q RCMv dTKH@$e نdL نd\KH@$e ې̿Y ȒmHzF $ IH!H!HH@FR}@n"  H@Ry˟>u|ʞUlQWOMe@5%l k!xC`dDGWeO?5 汵ې":E{Z}Y|(I'Tɢ6a7VQg dqWe-4^x@>$Hs[N*eW)Aj$۲7d= Ґi.!f{ڟmoLeO:76@޷!7 eX+ױcfDlH)ܹl/[ؽ i֤h'xQ'lJ~@SDةiHe2&dT 9 H@d1,نY ȒU6V*$)ۆ$dTKH@$e نdL Eu(w.T=$e"GIl@@fdmH@@fdmH@@@_@֜o11#[f k$`or>fuzI$/i`O>w̒ kyջ7Lvt14Ko"ڭyJ+$OdXov=O F)ۘ;Y"24yl\4?o~n;k><=/>ɰ;o*sn?X@fi=@4&[;0 R7Qw?X~3\QǤ;f 7,}|=/"=2$ z4"qݛ-H zgƬ~oWߣ dԈ2a '1o=@#Lڭ4o}1[rou5ϯv6e3 ;SMAn׎8>j_C_2o 8[1 R=:~d+jet6}mU%R݇`1 rV+roP_C(@L Kju]Ix0;ـZي@Jy<d }m:{#yy{4g2TZ߮WPnHq&ۛ#wg; v ĝAs4 $Il@R(|ed| w[8?~v:d| z ⻖c]J8A3ɟŰ-@ rqlM~=w|=/] 7˗ΨK5_^wqcrJ1 H 39A5n E{Zowɝdd% Փ R{Ghy @Z_N@ R%Re [B:TUcrd ;mK36uU.ݩ㣵Vў7v:pNb7Go2lSy+jƙH@$  H@$  H@$  H@$  H@$  ȶQ$ ZIH@>p+:t[e@HHBII $$!$@@HHBII ?@HE`_w'7 dV<+ݦSi"z=y1kXgu/,|٩E=]aV2쵞[^Y2vJ,)d& A[eRwDad/6b&@ĵH  $$!$$@Ȓ^́>~j~KL]סØd_߇ib&ogT>vʼ1+z1ݝm2c\B^e6cǘqC/@RWmPUUܮZުX3{\A*h/cai5{XA1:$N46]' A1HsZSR9@[e1z-mk֠*n ̡Xsr`(k,>KD̻U[y0LJvjZOـi" $$!$$gy[qyS~ - 3Гyh@;B {q 0hZfuy|dữ_귔-*\[hoוF/TM*A:h8d)H5* 7ty~ikY- qCjZbdh'őI\HBII $$m>s. *[T>yqd /1B`rd/Zݽ!dBIqQ&5s=xszxOj 鬆T%z7W"F.5[a@M>o*K:dYM)H}/ %їeק;@J2n G&Q RQfYu~]Z H'Hw ս9_EF6֏aA6JV*%OI+y '-#\4 㔵(U=)UCٞ o\)s. $@@HHBI :Nc22  G"f^WNiWCgҋHPv6dun#mX )a !RH@>HQWqe䣁 @ګl{S($ !72A$dGD@@HHBII .IrIENDB`( (/ 0`DArialac&(0(z[ 0 "D[SOalac&(0(z[ 0  DTimes New Roman(0(z[ 0 0DWingdingsRoman(0(z[ 0 @DArial Blackman(0(z[ 0 "PDўSOal Blackman(0(z[ 0 `DVerdanaackman(0(z[ 0 "pDSymbolackman(0(z[ 0 @ .  @n?" dd@  @@`` =4        !"#$%&'()*+,-./01234789:;?R$"ih- WcCR$Nk}{Ǹ$Bb$05b͚դu+ 0AA@83ʚ;ʚ;g4BdBd@z[ 0ppp@ <4ddddl 0& 80___PPT10 ppإ^ 0Sňb/gW@x 0 Fundamentals of Packaging Technology60b*B*%B $(F WHnQYec ,$@ A $ Lesson 1 2 b*,* $ A History of Packaging 6  @(  What is Packaging? 1. A definition of packaging Packaging is best described as a coordinated system of preparing goods for transport, distribution, storage, retailing, and use of the goods 2. The many things a package might be asked to do - Packaging is a complex, dynamic, scientific, artistic, and controversial business function - Fundamental function of packaging: contain protects/preserves transports informs/sells. :Z3 What is Packaging?  What is Packaging?3. How packaging changes to meet society s needs - Packaging is not a recent phenomenon. - Packaging is an activity closely associated with the evolution of society and, can be traced back to human beginnings. - The nature, degree, and amount of packaging at any stage of a society s growth reflect the needs, cultural patterns, material availability and technology of that society. - A study of packaging s changing roles and forms over the centuries is a study of the growth of civilization. - Social changes are inevitably reflected in the way we package, deliver and consume goods.$MP1$   What is Packaging?Until the 1950s, motor oil was delivered in bulk to service stations, which in turn measured it into 1-quart glass jars; premeasured oil in metal cans; - Now, milk delivery from glass bottles to a variety of plain and aseptic paper cartons, plastic bottles and flexible bags; - Tomorrow, how oil or milk will be delivered? - environmentally acceptable packaging (minimal waste) - choices of petrochemicals, wood pulp, and metal governed - the way we buy and consume oil or milk - milk delivered in refillable aluminum cans?P${   Primitive Packaging 1.The origins of packaging - We don t know what the first package was, but we can certainly speculate. - Primitive humans: nomadic hunter/gatherers, lived off the land. Social groupings restricted to family units. - They would have been subject to the geographical migrations of animals and the seasonal availability of plant food. - Such an extreme nomadic existence does not encourage property accumulation beyond what can be carried on one s back.$Z  Primitive Packaging - Primitive people needed containment and carrying devices, and out of this need came the first  package . - a wrap of leaves; - an animal skin; - the shell of a nut or gourd; - a naturally hollow piece of wood; - the fire-bearer and the  packaging of fire.    Primitive Packaging 2.How packaging changed as social structures changed - 5000 B.C., domesticated plants and animals. - a reasonable food supply in a given vicinity; - evolutionary stage: supported larger social groups, gave birth to small tribal villages; - storage and transport containers needed for milk, honey, seed grains, nuts, and dried meat; - villages with access to different resources traded with their neighbors, requiring transport containers; - About 250 B.C., the Greek city-state period, law that affected packaging enacted$P5   Primitive Packaging 3. Early packaging materials - fabricated sacks, baskets, and bags, made from materials of plant or animal origin; wood boxes replaced hollow logs; a clay bowl, the fire-dried clay pots ( the pottery and ceramic trade). 4. The discovery of glass - By 2500 B.C., a hard inert substance in the fire s remains; glass beads and figures made in Mesopotamia (today s Iraq). - About 1500 B.C., the earliest hollow glass objects appeared in Mesopotamia and Egypt.PP  Primitive Packaging q- Glass containers, the ancient packaging materials, core-formed ancient Egyptian glass containers (Figure 1.2).  rpq  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&1. How packaging changed as social structures changed - Many societal changes leading to the corresponding changes in packaging: mostly the quality and quantity of existing packaging practices. 2. The invention of the glass blowpipe, wood barrels - The Romans in about 50 B.C., the glass blowpipe - The blowpipe s invention brought glass out of noble households and temples; - The first wooden barrel appeared possibly in the Alpine regions of Europe one of the most common packaging forms for many centuries.:Z55 6(:  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&3. The Dark Ages - The Dark Ages: with the Roman Empire s collapse in about 450 A.D., Europe reduced to minor city-states many established arts and crafts forgotten or stagnant, the 600 years following the fall of Rome being so devoid of significant change that historians refer to them as the Dark Ages. 4.The discovery of paper - In China, Ts ai Lun is credited with making the first true paper from the inner bark of mulberry trees. The name  paper given to the Chinese invention made of matted plant fibers. : P%6[  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&5. Ancient printing - In 768, the oldest existing printed objects (Japanese Buddhist charms); in 868, the oldest existing book (the Diamond Sutra) printed, found in Turkistan. 6. The Renaissance - In about 1100, the European awoken, neglected crafts revitalized, the arts revived and trade increased, by the 1500s, the art of printing born. - Fundamental social structures not changed significantly: - lived off the land - typically as serfs PPs  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&- ate what they raised, found or caught - consumer needs: nonexistent - manufacturing was strictly a custom business - packages: personally crafted, valuable utensils, and rarely disposable in the manner of a modern package - since there being no retail trade, concepts of marketing, advertising, price structures and distribution being irrelevant - population levels being not large enough to support mass productionP The Industrial Revolution 1.The I.R. definition - The I.R. started in England in about 1700 and spread rapidly through Europe and North America. - The Industrial Revolution: the change that transforms a people with peasant occupations and local markets into an industrial society with world-wide connections. - This new type of society makes great use of machinery and manufactures goods on a large scale for general consumption." The Industrial Revolution 2.Characteristics of the Industrial Revolution Rural agricultural workers migrated into cities, where employed in factories. Inexpensive mass-produced goods available to a large segment of the population; the consumer society born. Factory workers needed commodities and food, previously produced largely at home. Many new shops and stores opened to sell to the newly evolving working class. By necessity, some industries located in nonagricultural areas, requiring that all food be transported into the growing urban settings.0/PP. The Industrial Revolution f3.The dramatic changes in how we lived - The changes increased the demand for barrels, boxes, kegs, baskets, and bags to transport the new consumer commodities and to bring great quantities of food into the cities. - The fledgling packaging industry itself had to mechanize. - Necessary to devise ways of preserving food beyond its natural biological life.(g&@f& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &&1. How the Industrial Revolution affected packaging The evolution of selling and informing as vital packaging roles - Bulk packaging was the rule, with the barrel being the workhorse of the packaging industry. - Flour, apples, biscuits, molasses, gunpowder, whiskey, nails and whale oil transported in barrels. - Packaging served primarily to contain and protect. - Individual packaging being of little importance until the Industrial Revolution spurred the growth of cities. 2.The first packaged retail products - Medicines, cosmetics, teas, liquors and other expensive products;  a paper of pins .:\P3%X[& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &&3.The origin of the term  brands and how it was transferred to unit packages, early brands, early labeling - The first brand names were inevitably those of the maker. Yardley s (1770), Schweppes(1792), Perrier (1863), Smith Brothers (1866) and Colgate (1873). - The evolving printing and decorating arts applied to  upscale packages, many early decorations based on works of art or national symbols or images. - Early labels: pictures of pastoral life, barnyards, fruit, the gold medals. $Zk& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &&64.Quaker Oats--a new idea in branding - A packaging milestone in 1877, the Quaker personage, the  persona , a description of the package or product as if it were a person. - Between 1890 and about 1920, decoration followed the art nouveau style, this being followed by a period of art deco graphics and designs. 5. The new packaging material-plastics - The first plastic(based on cellulose), made in 1856. :Z%'9$p & The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &&t6. Changes in the way we traveled and shopped, changes in the retail store - The small community general store was no longer enough. - National railroads made coast-to-coast transport a reality. - The automobile freed consumers - first five-and-ten store - Refrigeration was becoming commonplace. 7. The package s motivational and informational roles The package had to inform the purchaser. The package had to sell the product.fPJ6.&# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ #1.Changes in demographics - Demographics, the study of population structure and trends, universally realized to be an important factor in designing products and packages. 2.Fast food and other institutional markets - Fast-food appeared and created a demand for disposable single-service packaging. - Two factors to influence packaging: public health care and a rapidly growing trend toward eating out rather than at home. - The HRI (hospital, restaurant, and institutional) market. - Petroleum-derived plastics added to the package designer s selection of packaging materials.:DP,nC# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ #3.The  baby boom and packaging - In the late 1960s, the coming-of-age baby boomers was reflected in a major youth orientation in packaging and products. 4.Legislated changes - In the 1970s and early 1980s, many aspects in packaging legislated: - Child-resistance closures mandated for some products; - Tamper-evident closures; - Labeling laws required listing of ingredients; - International agreements signed to phase out the use of CFCs; - Standards for the acceptance of new packaging materials raised.DP|G# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ #5. The advent of microwave ovens, the vanishing domestic housewife - Devising products and packaging specifically for the microwave. - A new health awareness, changes in consuming habits and nutritional labeling. - Opportunities for entire new food lines. -Yogurt became the  in food. - The rapid change in the last decades of the 20th century._ZB^ Modern PackagingChanging Needs and New Roles. - All historical changes have had an impact on the way products are bought, consumed and packaged; - The packaging professionals must always turn their attention to the needs, markets, and conditions of tomorrow; - Most of goods, not essential to survival, constitute  the good life ; - In the second half of the 20th century, the proliferation of goods was so high that packaging was forced into an entirely new role: providing the major purchase motivation rather than presenting the goods itself. - the only method of differentiating was the package itself; $RP5Q Modern PackagingR1.The trend toward more intensive marketing - marketers aimed at lifestyles, emotional values, subliminal images, features, and advantages beyond the basic product itself; - the package has become the product, and occasionally packaging has become entertainment. 2. Globalization - Providing increased tonnages of high-quality food to massive city complexes at affordable prices challenges packagers; - A new concern is the removal of the debris generated by a consumer society and the impact that these consumption rates have on the planet s ecology;*P*) Modern PackagingdPackaging and the Modern Industrial Society 1.Why packaging is important to our food supply - Food is organic in nature (an animal or plant source); - One characteristic of such organic matter is that it has a limited natural biological life. 2.Freedom from geographical and seasonal food production - Most food is geographically and seasonally specific. "e+:  Modern PackagingI- In a world without packaging, we would need to live at the point of harvest to enjoy these products, and our enjoyment of them would be restricted to the natural biological life span of each. - It is by proper storage, packaging and transport techniques that we are able to deliver fresh potatoes and Apples derived from them, throughout the year and throughout the country. - We are no longer restricted in our choice of where to live. we are free of the natural cycles of feast and famine that are typical of societies dependent on natural regional food-producing cycles.JPJI! Modern Packaging3. Advantages of central processing and prepackaged food - Central processing allows value recovery from what would normally be wasted. - By-products of the processed-food industry form the basis of other sub-industries 4.Packaging and mass manufacture of durable goods - The economical manufacture of durable goods also depends on sound packaging; - A product s cost is directly related to production volume; - Distribution packaging is a key part of the system; - Some industries could not exist without an international market. irradiation equipment and the safe packaging .EPED" Modern PackagingWorld Packaging - Humankind s global progress is such that virtually every stage in the development of society and packaging is present somewhere in the world today. 1. Packaging in developed countries - To agonize over choice of package type, hire expensive marketing groups to develop images to entice the targeted buyer and spend lavishly on graphics.  hXg# Modern Packaging2. Packaging in less-developed countries - At the extreme, consumers will bring their own packages or will consume food on the spot, just as they did 2,000 years ago; - Packagers from the more-developed countries sometimes have difficulty working with less- developed nations; . a. they fail to understand that their respective packaging priorities are completely different. b.developing nations trying to sell goods to North American markets cannot understand their preoccupation with package and graphics. PC$| }$  Modern Packaging3. The United Nations and packaging. - The less-developed countries do not have adequate land to raise enough food. - Food goes beyond its natural biological life, spoils, is lost, is infested with insects or eaten by rodents, gets wet in the rain, leaks away or goes uneaten for numerous reasons, all of which sound packaging principles can prevent. - In a poor economy that can afford no waste, no industries recover secondary value from food by-products. - Packaging is perceived to be a weapon against world hunger. P %!. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .1. The sources of waste material - A discussion of packaging today means eventually turning to environmental issues. - A perception: if only the packaging industry would stop doing something or, conversely, start doing something, all our landfill and pollution problems would go away. - Ample evidence suggests that good packaging reduces waste. - The consumer sees packaging as that part of shopping trip that gets thrown away. Hence, packaging is garbage. $Z &". Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .2.The percentage of waste that is packaging - The University of Tennessee provides the following breakdown of total landfill waste Residential waste: 37.4% Industrial waste: 29.3% Commercial waste: 27.3% Other sources: 6.0%,Z+CC'#. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .} Material Packaging Nonpackaging Paper 12.7% 19.6% Wood 4.6% ----- Metal 2.0% 5.7% Glass 5.7% 0.8% Plastic 4.1% 5.5% Other misc. 0.1% 12.1% Food waste ----- 8.1% Yard waste ----- 19.0% Totals 29.2% 70.8% Table 1.1 Materials mix by weight in residential solid waste :P}P;B". C($. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .4. Consumer perceptions of packaging - North American consumers have a basic distrust of manufacturers; to them, manufacture is a dirty business. 5.Jurisdictions - Most waste-management issues: local jurisdictions; every state or province can pass its own packaging regulations or mandates. - In the Unites States, the states are mostly acting on their own; CONEG and SSWMC are notable exceptions. ZP!n)%. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .6. Possible laws and mandates Recycling mandates/laws Material reduction mandates/laws Restrictions on selected materials/package types Material bans or restrictions (for example, heavy metals or PVC) Bans on materials accepted as landfill (such as not accepting as corrugated fiberboard) Green labeling requirements/prohibitions Purchasing preference mandates Tax incentives/penalties . Deposit laws/advance disposal fees $P*&. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .7. The four Rs hierarchy and what it means - Reduce: use the minimum amount of material consistent with fulfilling its basic function. - Reuse: containers or packaging components should be reused. - Recycle: packaging should be collected and the materials recycled for further use. - Recover: to possibly recover other value from the waste before consigning packaging to a landfill.|P*[<S\$ +'. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .Table 1.2 Percent of municipal solid waste incinerated in selected countries Country Incinerated Waste Switzerland 74% Japan 66% Sweden 50% France 35% United States 15%BL),(. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .8. Recycling realities - The public myths: 1. Placing material in a blue box constitutes recycling. Recycling does not occur until someone uses the material collected. a) PCR materials in immediate contact with food need to be extensively investigated. b) In the instance of pharmaceutical packaging, such use is simply not allowed. c) Another impediment is a guarantee of consistent and reliable supply of the recovered material.$Z-). Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .2. Recycled material should be economical. In many instances, recycled material is more costly, and its use needs to be supported in some way. a) The cost of landfilling MSW is still less than recycling in most areas. b) Revenues generated from the sale of recyclable materials do not always recover collecting and recycling costs. c) The process of recycling cannot ignore market economics. P .*. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .d) Environmentalists maintain that recycling is an issue of the environment, not of economics. Money expended to recycle a material represents an investment in fuel, water and other resources. When the resource investment to recover a material exceeds the value of the material recovered, then the harm to the environment is greater, not less. e) The process of collecting and regenerating a packaging material for further use is a complex one for most materials.Z/+. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .F- significant investment in sophisticated equipment. - While glass is apparently readily identifiable, individual glass compositions as well as different colors make it difficult to get uncontaminated feedstock. - Paper fiber quality deteriorates with every recycling, and so paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. - Plastic materials pose a number of serious recycling problems. The plastic industry developed a code for identifying the six most commonly used packaging plastics; it includes an  other selection as a seventh code (Figure 1.3). $Z$#0,. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .1-. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- .3. One or another of the many materials used for packaging is more environmentally friendly. There is no magic material. Laminate constructions are, in fact, environmentally friendly.2. The Modern Packaging Industry&f1.  Converters and users  the broad industry divisions, converter and user subdivisions -  Converters : to take various raw materials and convert them into useful packaging materials or physical packages (cans, bottles, wraps). To this point, packaging becomes a materials application science. The company forming the physical package will also print or decorate the package. - Package  users , the firms that package products, are also regarded as part of the packaging industry, divided into a number of categories and each of these can be further subdivided. .4ZT33/ The Modern Packaging Industry&- The  supplier , manufacturers of machines for the user sector and the suppliers of ancillary services, such as marketing, consumer testing and graphic design, are also important sectors of the packaging industry. 2. Professional packaging associations IoPP: Institute of Packaging Professionals PAC: Packaging Association of Canada PMMI: Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute FPA: Flexible Packaging Association WPO: World Packaging OrganizationZ.%!-"$40 The Modern Packaging Industry&3. Other organizations having a major impact on packaging activities ISO: International Organization for Standards ASTM: American Society for Testing and Materials TAPPI: Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry ISTA : International Safe Transit Association  ZD)-F)51 The Modern Packaging Industry&}  ` fffff` ?̙ffE` ff333` C3ff3` &u3` ffff` **@fff̙fl` +3[Xd` 333f` 5D`|f>?" dd@*?lPd@ `F `A@`<``( n?" dd@   @@``PP   @ ` `.p>> @ 6(  6T ```  "```"  BZc G p"P`` F 0C B  C Pc BCE6FGIQSTUV.WX@` B C "`` D0C hB  s *DԔ"  0c  "{4 c  LUSQdkYkHrh7h_     0c  " c  8USQdkYkHre,g7h_ ,{N~ ,{ N~ ,{V~ ,{N~    6`c  #" `` ` c  X*    6Tc  #" ``  c  Z*    6c  #" `` ` c  \* H  0޽h ? fffff___PPT10i. +D=' = @B +  Radial   t l P  (  :T H X   "H X "  <c p"X  F 0C   B8c >"H0 F 0C B  C  BCE6FGIQSTUV.WX@` B C "h  D0C B  s *Dp"p,$ 0  0  "py   LUSQdkYkHrh7h_    0  "x    NUSQdkYkHroRh7h_    6  #" `` `   X*    6(  #" `c    Z*    6#  #" `` `   \* H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10. 0  0(  x  c $py  x  c $Hx   H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.#<  <(   ~  s *И/  ~  s *D    H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.#$  $$(  $r $ S /{4   r $ S   H $ 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.@P9g  ((  (r ( S @{4   h ( 0,7o  t Packaging functions range from technical ones to marketing oriented ones (Figure 1.1). Technical Functions Marketing Functions contain measure communicate promote protect dispense display sell preserve store inform motivate Figure 1.1 Packaging encompasses functions ranging from the purely technical to those that are marketing in nature Technical packaging professionals need science and engineering skills, while marketing professionals need artistic and motivational understanding. x 2X-t-X:uH ( 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.}$  ,$(  ,r , S  {4   r , S     H , 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.<$  0$(  0r 0 S  {4   r 0 S Y  H 0 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`k$  4$(  4r 4 S ] {4   r 4 S `    H 4 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.P`<4$  8$(  8r 8 S 9 {4   r 8 S `բ    H 8 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10./M$  <$(  <r < S 4 {4   r < S    H < 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.pa$  @$(  @r @ S c{4   r @ S d  H @ 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10. E  NFD(  Dr D S lT{4   x D c $ m&   D # tu A 5-1"`Fd    D Bh9 t  p8Figure 1.2 Forming a hollow glass vessel around a core 97H D 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.1Ȩ$  0L$(  Lr L S  {4   r L S P  H L 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.$  @P$(  Pr P S <{4   r P S t  H P 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.p$  PT$(  Tr T S t;{4   r T S   H T 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.t$  `X$(  Xr X S 4CS{4  S r X S @HS S H X 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.BN$  p\$(  \r \ S S{4  S r \ S ȩS S H \ 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.P?h$  `$(  `r ` S hDS{4  S r ` S ܺS S H ` 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.S$  d$(  dr d S 2S{4  S r d S  3S S H d 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.Ph$  h$(  hr h S  oS{4  S r h S S S H h 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.@ $  l$(  lr l S NZ{4  Z r l S 4jZ Z H l 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.W$  p$(  pr p S Z{4  Z r p S GZ Z H p 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.$  t$(  tr t S ~Z{4  Z r t S ZY Z H t 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`#$  x$(  xr x S OW{4  W r x S 4 W W H x 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.H8$  |$(  |r | S x#W{4  W r | S FW W H | 0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.p$  $(  r  S uW{4  W r  S pMW W H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.0J$  $(  r  S 4rW{4  W r  S PZ Z H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.E!$   $(  r  S `W{4  W r  S ' = @B D>' = @BA?%,( < +O%,( < +D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*<%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*<D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*<D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*<D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*<y%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*<yD' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*<yD' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*<yD"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*y%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*yD' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*yD' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*yD"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*.%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*.D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*.D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*.D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*.W%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*.WD' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*.WD' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*.WD"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*W%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*WD' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*WD' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*WD"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*3%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*3D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*3D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*3D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*3:%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*3:D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*3:D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*3:D"' =%(D' =%(Dr' =AB,BB@B0B%(D' =1:Bvisible*o3>+B#style.visibility<*:}%(D' =-g6B fade*<3<*:}D' =+4 8?\CB#ppt_xBCB#ppt_xB*Y3>B ppt_x<*:}D' =+4 8?dCB#ppt_y+.05BCB#ppt_yB*Y3>B ppt_y<*:}+8+0+x +$  $(  r  S x{4  x r  S x x H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.$  $(  r  S px{4  x r  S lx x H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`$  $(  r  S {4  x r  S ط  H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.PH$  $(  r  S {4  x r  S ت  H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.$  $(  r  S L+x{4  x r  S   H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`$  $(  r  S x{4  x r  S    H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`$   $(  r  S .{4  x r  S @z  H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.`$  0$(  r  S J{4  x r  S H  H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.p  <4@(  r  S \|{4  x   # r=m^A 02"`sJ  R  <  Figure 1.3 A code identifies the main packaging plastic families. PETE is usually abbreviated PET and V is usually abbreviated PVC. Less commonly used plastics and mixed-plastics constructions are classified as  other H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.07$  p$(  r  S {4   r  S   H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.9$  $(  r  S {4  x r  S   H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.{F$  $(  r  S x{4  x r  S (>  H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.PJ^$  $(  r  S 8(x{4  x r  S   H  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.ȧv  (  r  S Իx{4  x   VA *g}T T_  , F  <zF Figure 1.4 The packaging industry can be divided into those that use packaging for their products and those that supply to these users(g!BH  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.rP4@x 6b$P|,X4` < h Y>[j]_acfFhrjForqsuw? {5( (/ 0`DArialacD+0z[ 0D[SOalacD+0z[ 0 DTimes New Roman0z[ 00DWingdingsRomanial8װ Fundamentals of Packaging Technology Unit one Lesson 1  What is Packaging?  What is Packaging? What is Packaging? What is Packaging? Primitive Packaging  Primitive Packaging  Primitive Packaging  Primitive Packaging  Primitive Packaging  From Rome To The Renaissance  From Rome To The Renaissance  From Rome To The Renaissance  From Rome To The Renaissance  The Industrial Revolution  The Industrial Revolution  The Industrial Revolution ' The Evolution of New Packaging Roles ' The Evolution of New Packaging Roles ' The Evolution of New Packaging Roles ' The Evolution of New Packaging Roles $ Packaging In The Late 20th Century$ Packaging In The Late 20th Century$ Packaging In The Late 20th Century Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging Modern Packaging/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry  õʾĸģ õƬ3_(vTOADTOAD-. 2 N.ac(+8 08z[ 00 DTimes New Roman8 08z[ 000DWingdingsRoman8 08z[ 00@DArial Blackman8 08z[ 00"PDўSOal Blackman8 08z[ 00`DVerdanaackman8 08z[ 00"pDSymbolackman8 08z[ 00@ .  @n?" dd@  @@`` =4        !"#$%&'()*+,-./01234789:;?R$"ih- WcCR$Nk}{Ǹ$Bb$05b͚դu+ 0AA@83ʚ;ʚ;g4KdKdPz[ 0ppp@ <4dddd| 0+ 80___PPT10 pp^ 0Sňb/gW@x 0 Fundamentals of Packaging Technology60b*B*%B )F WHnQYec ,$@ A $ Lesson 1 2 b*,*^ A History of Packaging ,{1 SňSU\S T Z#Z B$ 6  What is Packaging? 1. A definition of packaging Packaging is best described as a coordinated system of preparing goods for transport, distribution, storage, retailing, and use of the goods 2. The many things a package might be asked to do - Packaging is a complex, dynamic, scientific, artistic, and controversial business function - Fundamental function of packaging: contain protects/preserves transports informs/sells. :Z3 What is Packaging?  What is Packaging?3. How packaging changes to meet society s needs - Packaging is not a recent phenomenon. - Packaging is an activity closely associated with the evolution of society and, can be traced back to human beginnings. - The nature, degree, and amount of packaging at any stage of a society s growth reflect the needs, cultural patterns, material availability and technology of that society. - A study of packaging s changing roles and forms over the centuries is a study of the growth of civilization. - Social changes are inevitably reflected in the way we package, deliver and consume goods.$MP1   What is Packaging?Until the 1950s, motor oil was delivered in bulk to service stations, which in turn measured it into 1-quart glass jars; premeasured oil in metal cans; - Now, milk delivery from glass bottles to a variety of plain and aseptic paper cartons, plastic bottles and flexible bags; - Tomorrow, how oil or milk will be delivered? - environmentally acceptable packaging (minimal waste) - choices of petrochemicals, wood pulp, and metal governed - the way we buy and consume oil or milk - milk delivered in refillable aluminum cans?P{   Primitive Packaging 1.The origins of packaging - We don t know what the first package was, but we can certainly speculate. - Primitive humans: nomadic hunter/gatherers, lived off the land. Social groupings restricted to family units. - They would have been subject to the geographical migrations of animals and the seasonal availability of plant food. - Such an extreme nomadic existence does not encourage property accumulation beyond what can be carried on one s back.$Z  Primitive Packaging - Primitive people needed containment and carrying devices, and out of this need came the first  package . - a wrap of leaves; - an animal skin; - the shell of a nut or gourd; - a naturally hollow piece of wood; - the fire-bearer and the  packaging of fire.    Primitive Packaging 2.How packaging changed as social structures changed - 5000 B.C., domesticated plants and animals. - a reasonable food supply in a given vicinity; - evolutionary stage: supported larger social groups, gave birth to small tribal villages; - storage and transport containers needed for milk, honey, seed grains, nuts, and dried meat; - villages with access to different resources traded with their neighbors, requiring transport containers; - About 250 B.C., the Greek city-state period, law that affected packaging enacted$P5   Primitive Packaging 3. Early packaging materials - fabricated sacks, baskets, and bags, made from materials of plant or animal origin; wood boxes replaced hollow logs; a clay bowl, the fire-dried clay pots ( the pottery and ceramic trade). 4. The discovery of glass - By 2500 B.C., a hard inert substance in the fire s remains; glass beads and figures made in Mesopotamia (today s Iraq). - About 1500 B.C., the earliest hollow glass objects appeared in Mesopotamia and Egypt.PP  Primitive Packaging q- Glass containers, the ancient packaging materials, core-formed ancient Egyptian glass containers (Figure 1.2).  rp  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&1. How packaging changed as social structures changed - Many societal changes leading to the corresponding changes in packaging: mostly the quality and quantity of existing packaging practices. 2. The invention of the glass blowpipe, wood barrels - The Romans in about 50 B.C., the glass blowpipe - The blowpipe s invention brought glass out of noble households and temples; - The first wooden barrel appeared  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz{|}~Root EntrydO)NKOPicturesCurrent UserF,SummaryInformation(,PowerPoint Document(LvDocumentSummaryInformation8!D 0z[ 0@DArial Blackman0z[ 0"PDўSOal Blackman0z[ 0`DVerdanaackman0z[ 0"pDSymbolackman0z[ 0@ .  @n?" dd@  @@`` =4        !"#$%&'()*+,-./01234789:;?R$"ih- WcCR$Nk}{Ǹ$Bb$05b͚դu+ 0AA@83ʚ;ʚ;g4KdKd z[ 0ppp@ <4ddddL 0+ 80___PPT10 pp ^ 0Sňb/gW@x 0 Fundamentals of Packaging Technology60b*B*%B )F WHnQYec ,$@ A $ Lesson 1 2 b*,*$ A History of Packaging 6  @(  What is Packaging? 1. A definition of packaging Packaging is best described as a coordinated system of preparing goods for transport, distribution, storage, retailing, and use of the goods 2. The many things a package might be asked to do - Packaging is a complex, dynamic, scientific, artistic, and controversial business function - Fundamental function of packaging: contain protects/preserves transports informs/sells. :Z3 What is Packaging?  What is Packaging?3. How packaging changes to meet society s needs - Packaging is not a recent phenomenon. - Packaging is an activity closely associated with the evolution of society and, can be traced back to human beginnings. - The nature, degree, and amount of packaging at any stage of a society s growth reflect the needs, cultural patterns, material availability and technology of that society. - A study of packaging s changing roles and forms over the centuries is a study of the growth of civilization. - Social changes are inevitably reflected in the way we package, deliver and consume goods.$MP1   What is Packaging?Until the 1950s, motor oil was delivered in bulk to service stations, which in turn measured it into 1-quart glass jars; premeasured oil in metal cans; - Now, milk delivery from glass bottles to a variety of plain and aseptic paper cartons, plastic bottles and flexible bags; - Tomorrow, how oil or milk will be delivered? - environmentally acceptable packaging (minimal waste) - choices of petrochemicals, wood pulp, and metal governed - the way we buy and consume oil or milk - milk delivered in refillable aluminum cans?P{   Primitive Packaging 1.The origins of packaging - We don t know what the first package was, but we can certainly speculate. - Primitive humans: nomadic hunter/gatherers, lived off the land. Social groupings restricted to family units. - They would have been subject to the geographical migrations of animals and the seasonal availability of plant food. - Such an extreme nomadic existence does not encourage property accumulation beyond what can be carried on one s back.$Z  Primitive Packaging - Primitive people needed containment and carrying devices, and out of this need came the first  package . - a wrap of leaves; - an animal skin; - the shell of a nut or gourd; - a naturally hollow piece of wood; - the fire-bearer and the  packaging of fire.    Primitive Packaging 2.How packaging changed as social structures changed - 5000 B.C., domesticated plants and animals. - a reasonable food supply in a given vicinity; - evolutionary stage: supported larger social groups, gave birth to small tribal villages; - storage and transport containers needed for milk, honey, seed grains, nuts, and dried meat; - villages with access to different resources traded with their neighbors, requiring transport containers; - About 250 B.C., the Greek city-state period, law that affected packaging enacted$P5   Primitive Packaging 3. Early packaging materials - fabricated sacks, baskets, and bags, made from materials of plant or animal origin; wood boxes replaced hollow logs; a clay bowl, the fire-dried clay pots ( the pottery and ceramic trade). 4. The discovery of glass - By 2500 B.C., a hard inert substance in the fire s remains; glass beads and figures made in Mesopotamia (today s Iraq). - About 1500 B.C., the earliest hollow glass objects appeared in Mesopotamia and Egypt.PP  Primitive Packaging q- Glass containers, the ancient packaging materials, core-formed ancient Egyptian glass containers (Figure 1.2).  rp  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&1. How packaging changed as social structures changed - Many societal changes leading to the corresponding changes in packaging: mostly the quality and quantity of existing packaging practices. 2. The invention of the glass blowpipe, wood barrels - The Romans in about 50 B.C., the glass blowpipe - The blowpipe s invention brought glass out of noble households and temples; - The first wooden barrel appeared possibly in the Alpine regions of Europe one of the most common packaging forms for many centuries.:Z55 ,(;  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&3. The Dark Ages - The Dark Ages: with the Roman Empire s collapse in about 450 A.D., Europe reduced to minor city-states many established arts and crafts forgotten or stagnant, the 600 years following the fall of Rome being so devoid of significant change that historians refer to them as the Dark Ages. 4.The discovery of paper - In China, Ts ai Lun is credited with making the first true paper from the inner bark of mulberry trees. The name  paper given to the Chinese invention made of matted plant fibers. : P%,[  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&5. Ancient printing - In 768, the oldest existing printed objects (Japanese Buddhist charms); in 868, the oldest existing book (the Diamond Sutra) printed, found in Turkistan. 6. The Renaissance - In about 1100, the European awoken, neglected crafts revitalized, the arts revived and trade increased, by the 1500s, the art of printing born. - Fundamental social structures not changed significantly: - lived off the land - typically as serfs PPs  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&- ate what they raised, found or caught - consumer needs: nonexistent - manufacturing was strictly a custom business - packages: personally crafted, valuable utensils, and rarely disposable in the manner of a modern package - since there being no retail trade, concepts of marketing, advertising, price structures and distribution being irrelevant - population levels being not large enough to support mass productionP The Industrial Revolution 1.The I.R. definition - The I.R. started in England in about 1700 and spread rapidly through Europe and North America. - The Industrial Revolution: the change that transforms a people with peasant occupations and local markets into an industrial society with world-wide connections. - This new type of society makes great use of machinery and manufactures goods on a large scale for general consumption." The Industrial Revolution 2.Characteristics of the Industrial Revolution Rural agricultural workers migrated into cities, where employed in factories. Inexpensive mass-produced goods available to a large segment of the population; the consumer society born. Factory workers needed commodities and food, previously produced largely at home. Many new shops and stores opened to sell to the newly evolving working class. By necessity, some industries located in nonagricultural areas, requiring that all food be transported into the growing urban settings.0/PP. The Industrial Revolution f3.The dramatic changes in how we lived - The changes increased the demand for barrels, boxes, kegs, baskets, and bags to transport the new consumer commodities and to bring great quantities of food into the cities. - The fledgling packaging industry itself had to mechanize. - Necessary to devise ways of preserving food beyond its natural biological life.(g&@& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &1. How the Industrial Revolution affected packaging The evolution of selling and informing as vital packaging roles - Bulk packaging was the rule, with the barrel being the workhorse of the packaging industry. - Flour, apples, biscuits, molasses, gunpowder, whiskey, nails and whale oil transported in barrels. - Packaging served primarily to contain and protect. - Individual packaging being of little importance until the Industrial Revolution spurred the growth of cities. 2.The first packaged retail products - Medicines, cosmetics, teas, liquors and other expensive products;  a paper of pins .:\P3%X& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &3.The origin of the term  brands and how it was transferred to unit packages, early brands, early labeling - The first brand names were inevitably those of the maker. Yardley s (1770), Schweppes(1792), Perrier (1863), Smith Brothers (1866) and Colgate (1873). - The evolving printing and decorating arts applied to  upscale packages, many early decorations based on works of art or national symbols or images. - Early labels: pictures of pastoral life, barnyards, fruit, the gold medals. $Zk& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &64.Quaker Oats--a new idea in branding - A packaging milestone in 1877, the Quaker personage, the  persona , a description of the package or product as if it were a person. - Between 1890 and about 1920, decoration followed the art nouveau style, this being followed by a period of art deco graphics and designs. 5. The new packaging material-plastics - The first plastic(based on cellulose), made in 1856. :Z%'9p & The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &t6. Changes in the way we traveled and shopped, changes in the retail store - The small community general store was no longer enough. - National railroads made coast-to-coast transport a reality. - The automobile freed consumers - first five-and-ten store - Refrigeration was becoming commonplace. 7. The package s motivational and informational roles The package had to inform the purchaser. The package had to sell the product.fPJ6.&# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 1.Changes in demographics - Demographics, the study of population structure and trends, universally realized to be an important factor in designing products and packages. 2.Fast food and other institutional markets - Fast-food appeared and created a demand for disposable single-service packaging. - Two factors to influence packaging: public health care and a rapidly growing trend toward eating out rather than at home. - The HRI (hospital, restaurant, and institutional) market. - Petroleum-derived plastics added to the package designer s selection of packaging materials.:DP,n# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 3.The  baby boom and packaging - In the late 1960s, the coming-of-age baby boomers was reflected in a major youth orientation in packaging and products. 4.Legislated changes - In the 1970s and early 1980s, many aspects in packaging legislated: - Child-resistance closures mandated for some products; - Tamper-evident closures; - Labeling laws required listing of ingredients; - International agreements signed to phase out the use of CFCs; - Standards for the acceptance of new packaging materials raised.DP|G# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 5. The advent of microwave ovens, the vanishing domestic housewife - Devising products and packaging specifically for the microwave. - A new health awareness, changes in consuming habits and nutritional labeling. - Opportunities for entire new food lines. -Yogurt became the  in food. - The rapid change in the last decades of the 20th century._ZB Modern PackagingChanging Needs and New Roles. - All historical changes have had an impact on the way products are bought, consumed and packaged; - The packaging professionals must always turn their attention to the needs, markets, and conditions of tomorrow; - Most of goods, not essential to survival, constitute  the good life ; - In the second half of the 20th century, the proliferation of goods was so high that packaging was forced into an entirely new role: providing the major purchase motivation rather than presenting the goods itself. - the only method of differentiating was the package itself; $RP5 Modern PackagingR1.The trend toward more intensive marketing - marketers aimed at lifestyles, emotional values, subliminal images, features, and advantages beyond the basic product itself; - the package has become the product, and occasionally packaging has become entertainment. 2. Globalization - Providing increased tonnages of high-quality food to massive city complexes at affordable prices challenges packagers; - A new concern is the removal of the debris generated by a consumer society and the impact that these consumption rates have on the planet s ecology;*P* Modern PackagingdPackaging and the Modern Industrial Society 1.Why packaging is important to our food supply - Food is organic in nature (an animal or plant source); - One characteristic of such organic matter is that it has a limited natural biological life. 2.Freedom from geographical and seasonal food production - Most food is geographically and seasonally specific. "e+:  Modern PackagingI- In a world without packaging, we would need to live at the point of harvest to enjoy these products, and our enjoyment of them would be restricted to the natural biological life span of each. - It is by proper storage, packaging and transport techniques that we are able to deliver fresh potatoes and Apples derived from them, throughout the year and throughout the country. - We are no longer restricted in our choice of where to live. we are free of the natural cycles of feast and famine that are typical of societies dependent on natural regional food-producing cycles.JPJ! Modern Packaging3. Advantages of central processing and prepackaged food - Central processing allows value recovery from what would normally be wasted. - By-products of the processed-food industry form the basis of other sub-industries 4.Packaging and mass manufacture of durable goods - The economical manufacture of durable goods also depends on sound packaging; - A product s cost is directly related to production volume; - Distribution packaging is a key part of the system; - Some industries could not exist without an international market. irradiation equipment and the safe packaging .EPE" Modern PackagingWorld Packaging - Humankind s global progress is such that virtually every stage in the development of society and packaging is present somewhere in the world today. 1. Packaging in developed countries - To agonize over choice of package type, hire expensive marketing groups to develop images to entice the targeted buyer and spend lavishly on graphics.  hX# Modern Packaging2. Packaging in less-developed countries - At the extreme, consumers will bring their own packages or will consume food on the spot, just as they did 2,000 years ago; - Packagers from the more-developed countries sometimes have difficulty working with less- developed nations; . a. they fail to understand that their respective packaging priorities are completely different. b.developing nations trying to sell goods to North American markets cannot understand their preoccupation with package and graphics. PC| ~$  Modern Packaging3. The United Nations and packaging. - The less-developed countries do not have adequate land to raise enough food. - Food goes beyond its natural biological life, spoils, is lost, is infested with insects or eaten by rodents, gets wet in the rain, leaks away or goes uneaten for numerous reasons, all of which sound packaging principles can prevent. - In a poor economy that can afford no waste, no industries recover secondary value from food by-products. - Packaging is perceived to be a weapon against world hunger. P %!. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1. The sources of waste material - A discussion of packaging today means eventually turning to environmental issues. - A perception: if only the packaging industry would stop doing something or, conversely, start doing something, all our landfill and pollution problems would go away. - Ample evidence suggests that good packaging reduces waste. - The consumer sees packaging as that part of shopping trip that gets thrown away. Hence, packaging is garbage. $Z &". Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2.The percentage of waste that is packaging - The University of Tennessee provides the following breakdown of total landfill waste Residential waste: 37.4% Industrial waste: 29.3% Commercial waste: 27.3% Other sources: 6.0%,Z+CC'#. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- } Material Packaging Nonpackaging Paper 12.7% 19.6% Wood 4.6% ----- Metal 2.0% 5.7% Glass 5.7% 0.8% Plastic 4.1% 5.5% Other misc. 0.1% 12.1% Food waste ----- 8.1% Yard waste ----- 19.0% Totals 29.2% 70.8% Table 1.1 Materials mix by weight in residential solid waste :P}P;B". C($. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 4. Consumer perceptions of packaging - North American consumers have a basic distrust of manufacturers; to them, manufacture is a dirty business. 5.Jurisdictions - Most waste-man      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxz{|}~agement issues: local jurisdictions; every state or province can pass its own packaging regulations or mandates. - In the Unites States, the states are mostly acting on their own; CONEG and SSWMC are notable exceptions. ZP!n)%. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 6. Possible laws and mandates Recycling mandates/laws Material reduction mandates/laws Restrictions on selected materials/package types Material bans or restrictions (for example, heavy metals or PVC) Bans on materials accepted as landfill (such as not accepting as corrugated fiberboard) Green labeling requirements/prohibitions Purchasing preference mandates Tax incentives/penalties . Deposit laws/advance disposal fees $P*&. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 7. The four Rs hierarchy and what it means - Reduce: use the minimum amount of material consistent with fulfilling its basic function. - Reuse: containers or packaging components should be reused. - Recycle: packaging should be collected and the materials recycled for further use. - Recover: to possibly recover other value from the waste before consigning packaging to a landfill.|P*[<S\ +'. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- Table 1.2 Percent of municipal solid waste incinerated in selected countries Country Incinerated Waste Switzerland 74% Japan 66% Sweden 50% France 35% United States 15%BL),(. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 8. Recycling realities - The public myths: 1. Placing material in a blue box constitutes recycling. Recycling does not occur until someone uses the material collected. a) PCR materials in immediate contact with food need to be extensively investigated. b) In the instance of pharmaceutical packaging, such use is simply not allowed. c) Another impediment is a guarantee of consistent and reliable supply of the recovered material.$Z-). Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2. Recycled material should be economical. In many instances, recycled material is more costly, and its use needs to be supported in some way. a) The cost of landfilling MSW is still less than recycling in most areas. b) Revenues generated from the sale of recyclable materials do not always recover collecting and recycling costs. c) The process of recycling cannot ignore market economics. P .*. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- d) Environmentalists maintain that recycling is an issue of the environment, not of economics. Money expended to recycle a material represents an investment in fuel, water and other resources. When the resource investment to recover a material exceeds the value of the material recovered, then the harm to the environment is greater, not less. e) The process of collecting and regenerating a packaging material for further use is a complex one for most materials.Z/+. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- F- significant investment in sophisticated equipment. - While glass is apparently readily identifiable, individual glass compositions as well as different colors make it difficult to get uncontaminated feedstock. - Paper fiber quality deteriorates with every recycling, and so paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. - Plastic materials pose a number of serious recycling problems. The plastic industry developed a code for identifying the six most commonly used packaging plastics; it includes an  other selection as a seventh code (Figure 1.3). $Z$0,. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1-. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 3. One or another of the many materials used for packaging is more environmentally friendly. There is no magic material. Laminate constructions are, in fact, environmentally friendly.2. The Modern Packaging Industry&f1.  Converters and users  the broad industry divisions, converter and user subdivisions -  Converters : to take various raw materials and convert them into useful packaging materials or physical packages (cans, bottles, wraps). To this point, packaging becomes a materials application science. The company forming the physical package will also print or decorate the package. - Package  users , the firms that package products, are also regarded as part of the packaging industry, divided into a number of categories and each of these can be further subdivided. .4ZT3/ The Modern Packaging Industry&- The  supplier , manufacturers of machines for the user sector and the suppliers of ancillary services, such as marketing, consumer testing and graphic design, are also important sectors of the packaging industry. 2. Professional packaging associations IoPP: Institute of Packaging Professionals PAC: Packaging Association of Canada PMMI: Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute FPA: Flexible Packaging Association WPO: World Packaging OrganizationZ.%!-"40 The Modern Packaging Industry&3. Other organizations having a major impact on packaging activities ISO: International Organization for Standards ASTM: American Society for Testing and Materials TAPPI: Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry ISTA : International Safe Transit Association  ZD)-F)51 The Modern Packaging Industry&o  o(  r  S ( {4     VA *g}T T_cc,    6 W : Figure 1.4 The packaging industry can be divided into those that use packaging for their products and those that supply to these usersH  0޽h ? fffff80___PPT10.r|5!1? t|%5k( (/ 0`DArialac(+8 08z[ 00"D[SOal  "#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEGOh+'0 hp    $088װ Fundamentals of Packaging TechnologyTOADRadialTOADl5ADMicrosoft PowerPointnda@j~@5R@lKO Gg  VN  y-- @ !y--'f--N%%$$%%' ( * , . U W X Z\]^^^^^^]\ZXWU.,*('%%$$$--'-- @ !}--f-- $!!--'ff--,$"%(+.1357788--'--%55--'-.  2 % ."System--. 2 % װ .--.  2 %H .-@Arial-. =2 0 $Fundamentals of Packaging Technology.--. 2 N..-՜.+,0       Ļʾ FACULTY OF DESIGNaLv3A <ArialTimes New Roman Wingdings Arial BlackVerdanaSymbolRad possibly in the Alpine regions of Europe one of the most common packaging forms for many centuries.:Z55 ,(;  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&3. The Dark Ages - The Dark Ages: with the Roman Empire s collapse in about 450 A.D., Europe reduced to minor city-states many established arts and crafts forgotten or stagnant, the 600 years following the fall of Rome being so devoid of significant change that historians refer to them as the Dark Ages. 4.The discovery of paper - In China, Ts ai Lun is credited with making the first true paper from the inner bark of mulberry trees. The name  paper given to the Chinese invention made of matted plant fibers. : P%,[  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&5. Ancient printing - In 768, the oldest existing printed objects (Japanese Buddhist charms); in 868, the oldest existing book (the Diamond Sutra) printed, found in Turkistan. 6. The Renaissance - In about 1100, the European awoken, neglected crafts revitalized, the arts revived and trade increased, by the 1500s, the art of printing born. - Fundamental social structures not changed significantly: - lived off the land - typically as serfs PPs  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&- ate what they raised, found or caught - consumer needs: nonexistent - manufacturing was strictly a custom business - packages: personally crafted, valuable utensils, and rarely disposable in the manner of a modern package - since there being no retail trade, concepts of marketing, advertising, price structures and distribution being irrelevant - population levels being not large enough to support mass productionP The Industrial Revolution 1.The I.R. definition - The I.R. started in England in about 1700 and spread rapidly through Europe and North America. - The Industrial Revolution: the change that transforms a people with peasant occupations and local markets into an industrial society with world-wide connections. - This new type of society makes great use of machinery and manufactures goods on a large scale for general consumption." The Industrial Revolution 2.Characteristics of the Industrial Revolution Rural agricultural workers migrated into cities, where employed in factories. Inexpensive mass-produced goods available to a large segment of the population; the consumer society born. Factory workers needed commodities and food, previously produced largely at home. Many new shops and stores opened to sell to the newly evolving working class. By necessity, some industries located in nonagricultural areas, requiring that all food be transported into the growing urban settings.0/PP. The Industrial Revolution f3.The dramatic changes in how we lived - The changes increased the demand for barrels, boxes, kegs, baskets, and bags to transport the new consumer commodities and to bring great quantities of food into the cities. - The fledgling packaging industry itself had to mechanize. - Necessary to devise ways of preserving food beyond its natural biological life.(g&@& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &1. How the Industrial Revolution affected packaging The evolution of selling and informing as vital packaging roles - Bulk packaging was the rule, with the barrel being the workhorse of the packaging industry. - Flour, apples, biscuits, molasses, gunpowder, whiskey, nails and whale oil transported in barrels. - Packaging served primarily to contain and protect. - Individual packaging being of little importance until the Industrial Revolution spurred the growth of cities. 2.The first packaged retail products - Medicines, cosmetics, teas, liquors and other expensive products;  a paper of pins .:\P3%X& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &3.The origin of the term  brands and how it was transferred to unit packages, early brands, early labeling - The first brand names were inevitably those of the maker. Yardley s (1770), Schweppes(1792), Perrier (1863), Smith Brothers (1866) and Colgate (1873). - The evolving printing and decorating arts applied to  upscale packages, many early decorations based on works of art or national symbols or images. - Early labels: pictures of pastoral life, barnyards, fruit, the gold medals. $Zk& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &64.Quaker Oats--a new idea in branding - A packaging milestone in 1877, the Quaker personage, the  persona , a description of the package or product as if it were a person. - Between 1890 and about 1920, decoration followed the art nouveau style, this being followed by a period of art deco graphics and designs. 5. The new packaging material-plastics - The first plastic(based on cellulose), made in 1856. :Z%'9p & The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &t6. Changes in the way we traveled and shopped, changes in the retail store - The small community general store was no longer enough. - National railroads made coast-to-coast transport a reality. - The automobile freed consumers - first five-and-ten store - Refrigeration was becoming commonplace. 7. The package s motivational and informational roles The package had to inform the purchaser. The package had to sell the product.fPJ6.&# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 1.Changes in demographics - Demographics, the study of population structure and trends, universally realized to be an important factor in designing products and packages. 2.Fast food and other institutional markets - Fast-food appeared and created a demand for disposable single-service packaging. - Two factors to influence packaging: public health care and a rapidly growing trend toward eating out rather than at home. - The HRI (hospital, restaurant, and institutional) market. - Petroleum-derived plastics added to the package designer s selection of packaging materials.:DP,n# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 3.The  baby boom and packaging - In the late 1960s, the coming-of-age baby boomers was reflected in a major youth orientation in packaging and products. 4.Legislated changes - In the 1970s and early 1980s, many aspects in packaging legislated: - Child-resistance closures mandated for some products; - Tamper-evident closures; - Labeling laws required listing of ingredients; - International agreements signed to phase out the use of CFCs; - Standards for the acceptance of new packaging materials raised.DP|G# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 5. The advent of microwave ovens, the vanishing domestic housewife - Devising products and packaging specifically for the microwave. - A new health awareness, changes in consuming habits and nutritional labeling. - Opportunities for entire new food lines. -Yogurt became the  in food. - The rapid change in the last decades of the 20th century._ZB Modern PackagingChanging Needs and New Roles. - All historical changes have had an impact on the way products are bought, consumed and packaged; - The packaging professionals must always turn their attention to the needs, markets, and conditions of tomorrow; - Most of goods, not essential to survival, constitute  the good life ; - In the second half of the 20th century, the proliferation of goods was so high that packaging was forced into an entirely new role: providing the major purchase motivation rather than presenting the goods itself. - the only method of differentiating was the package itself; $RP5 Modern PackagingR1.The trend toward more intensive marketing - marketers aimed at lifestyles, emotional values, subliminal images, features, and advantages beyond the basic product itself; - the package has become the product, and occasionally packaging has become entertainment. 2. Globalization - Providing increased tonnages of high-quality food to massive city complexes at affordable prices challenges packagers; - A new concern is the removal of the debris generated by a consumer society and the impact that these consumption rates have on the planet s ecology;*P* Modern PackagingdPackaging and the Modern Industrial Society 1.Why packaging is important to our food supply - Food is organic in nature (an animal or plant source); - One characteristic of such organic matter is that it has a limited natural biological life. 2.Freedom from geographical and seasonal food production - Most food is geographically and seasonally specific. "e+:  Modern PackagingI- In a world without packaging, we would need to live at the point of harvest to enjoy these products, and our enjoyment of them would be restricted to the natural biological life span of each. - It is by proper storage, packaging and transport techniques that we are able to deliver fresh potatoes and Apples derived from them, throughout the year and throughout the country. - We are no longer restricted in our choice of where to live. we are free of the natural cycles of feast and famine that are typical of societies dependent on natural regional food-producing cycles.JPJ! Modern Packaging3. Advantages of central processing and prepackaged food - Central processing allows value recovery from what would normally be wasted. - By-products of the processed-food industry form the basis of other sub-industries 4.Packaging and mass manufacture of durable goods - The economical manufacture of durable goods also depends on sound packaging; - A product s cost is directly related to production volume; - Distribution packaging is a key part of the system; - Some industries could not exist without an international market. irradiation equipment and the safe packaging .EPE" Modern PackagingWorld Packaging - Humankind s global progress is such that virtually every stage in the development of society and packaging is present somewhere in the world today. 1. Packaging in developed countries - To agonize over choice of package type, hire expensive marketing groups to develop images to entice the targeted buyer and spend lavishly on graphics.  hX# Modern Packaging2. Packaging in less-developed countries - At the extreme, consumers will bring their own packages or will consume food on the spot, just as they did 2,000 years ago; - Packagers from the more-developed countries sometimes have difficulty working with less- developed nations; . a. they fail to understand that their respective packaging priorities are completely different. b.developing nations trying to sell goods to North American markets cannot understand their preoccupation with package and graphics. PC| ~$  Modern Packaging3. The United Nations and packaging. - The less-developed countries do not have adequate land to raise enough food. - Food goes beyond its natural biological life, spoils, is lost, is infested with insects or eaten by rodents, gets wet in the rain, leaks away or goes uneaten for numerous reasons, all of which sound packaging principles can prevent. - In a poor economy that can afford no waste, no industries recover secondary value from food by-products. - Packaging is perceived to be a weapon against world hunger. P %!. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1. The sources of waste material - A discussion of packaging today means eventually turning to environmental issues. - A perception: if only the packaging industry would stop doing something or, conversely, start doing something, all our landfill and pollution problems would go away. - Ample evidence suggests that good packaging reduces waste. - The consumer sees packaging as that part of shopping trip that gets thrown away. Hence, packaging is garbage. $Z &". Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2.The percentage of waste that is packaging - The University of Tennessee provides the following breakdown of total landfill waste Residential waste: 37.4% Industrial waste: 29.3% Commercial waste: 27.3% Other sources: 6.0%,Z+CC'#. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- } Material Packaging Nonpackaging Paper 12.7% 19.6% Wood 4.6% ----- Metal 2.0% 5.7% Glass 5.7% 0.8% Plastic 4.1% 5.5% Other misc. 0.1% 12.1% Food waste ----- 8.1% Yard waste ----- 19.0% Totals 29.2% 70.8% Table 1.1 Materials mix by weight in residential solid waste :P}P;B". C($. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 4. Consumer perceptions of packaging - North American consumers have a basic distrust of manufacturers; to them, manufacture is a dirty business. 5.Jurisdictions - Most waste-management issues: local jurisdictions; every state or province can pass its own packaging regulations or mandates. - In the Unites States, the states are mostly acting on their own; CONEG and SSWMC are notable exceptions. ZP!n)%. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 6. Possible laws and mandates Recycling mandates/laws Material reduction mandates/laws Restrictions on selected materials/package types Material bans or restrictions (for example, heavy metals or PVC) Bans on materials accepted as landfill (such as not accepting as corrugated fiberboard) Green labeling requirements/prohibitions Purchasing preference mandates Tax incentives/penalties . Deposit laws/advance disposal fees $P*&. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 7. The four Rs hierarchy and what it means - Reduce: use the minimum amount of material consistent with fulfilling its basic function. - Reuse: containers or packaging components should be reused. - Recycle: packaging should be collected and the materials recycled for further use. - Recover: to possibly recover other value from the waste before consigning packaging to a landfill.|P*[<S\ +'. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- Table 1.2 Percent of municipal solid waste incinerated in selected countries Country Incinerated Waste Switzerland 74% Japan 66% Sweden 50% France 35% United States 15%BL),(. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 8. Recycling realities - The public myths: 1. Placing material in a blue box constitutes recycling. Recycling does not occur until someone uses the material collected. a) PCR materials in immediate contact with food need to be extensively investigated. b) In the instance of pharmaceutical packaging, such use is simply not allowed. c) Another impediment is a guarantee of consistent and reliable supply of the recovered material.$Z-). Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2. Recycled material should be economical. In many instances, recycled material is more costly, and its use needs to be supported in some way. a) The cost of landfilling MSW is still less than recycling in most areas. b) Revenues generated from the sale of recyclable materials do not always recover collecting and recycling costs. c) The process of recycling cannot ignore market economics. P .*. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- d) Environmentalists maintain that recycling is an issue of the environment, not of economics. Money expended to recycle a material represents an investment in fuel, water and other resources. When the resource investment to recover a material exceeds the value of the material recovered, then the harm to the environment is greater, not less. e) The process of collecting and regenerating a packaging material for further use is a complex one for most materials.Z/+. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- F- significant investment in sophisticated equipment. - While glass is apparently readily identifiable, individual glass compositions as well as different colors make it difficult to get uncontaminated feedstock. - Paper fiber quality deteriorates with every recycling, and so paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. - Plastic materials pose a number of serious recycling problems. The plastic industry developed a code for identifying the six most commonly used packaging plastics; it includes an  other selection as a seventh code (Figure 1.3). $Z$0,. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1-. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 3. One or another of the many materials used for packaging is more environmentally friendly. There is no magic material. Laminate constructions are, in fact, environmentally friendly.2. The Modern Packaging Industry&f1.  Converters and users  the broad industry divisions, converter and user subdivisions -  Converters : to take various raw materials and convert them into useful packaging materials or physical packages (cans, bottles, wraps). To this point, packaging becomes a materials application science. The company forming the physical package will also print or decorate the package. - Package  users , the firms that package products, are also regarded as part of the packaging industry, divided into a number of categories and each of these can be further subdivided. .4ZT3/ The Modern Packaging Industry&- The  supplier , manufacturers of machines for the user sector and the suppliers of ancillary services, such as marketing, consumer testing and graphic design, are also important sectors of the packaging industry. 2. Professional packaging associations IoPP: Institute of Packaging Professionals PAC: Packaging Association of Canada PMMI: Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute FPA: Flexible Packaging Association WPO: World Packaging OrganizationZ.%!-"40 The Modern Packaging Industry&3. Other organizations having a major impact on packaging activities ISO: International Organization for Standards ASTM: American Society for Testing and Materials TAPPI: Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry ISTA : International Safe Transit Association  ZD)-F)51 The Modern Packaging Industry&<  <(   ~  s *Еn/ n ~  s *   n H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.#rB%? %5( (/ 0`DArialac(+8 08z[ 00D[SOalac(+8 08z[ 00 DTimes New Roman8 08z[ 000DWingdingsRoman8 08z[ 00@DArial Blackman8 08z[ 00"PDўSOal Blackman8 08z[ 00`DVerdanaackman8 08z[ 00"pDSymbolackman8 08z[ 00@ .  @n?" dd@  @@`` ?5        !"#$%&'()*+,-./01234789:;=?R$"ih- WcCR$Nk}{Ǹ$Bb$05b͚դu+ 0AA@83ʚ;ʚ;g4BdBdPz[ 0ppp@ <4dddd| 0+ 80___PPT10 pp^ 0Sňb/gW@x 0 Fundamentals of Packaging Technology60b*B*%B )F WHnQYec ,$@ A $62Unit one& `B$Dperspective on packaging ,{NUSCQ ƉSň4#B(C(   Lesson 1 2 b*,*^ A History of Packaging ,{1 SňSU\S T Z#Z B$ 6  What is Packaging? 1. A definition of packaging Packaging is best described as a coordinated system of preparing goods for transport, distribution, storage, retailing, and use of the goods 2. The many things a package might be asked to do - Packaging is a complex, dynamic, scientific, artistic, and controversial business function - Fundamental function of packaging: contain protects/preserves transports informs/sells. :Z3 What is Packaging?  What is Packaging?3. How packaging changes to meet society s needs - Packaging is not a recent phenomenon. - Packaging is an activity closely associated with the evolution of society and, can be traced back to human beginnings. - The nature, degree, and amount of packaging at any stage of a society s growth reflect the needs, cultural patterns, material availability and technology of that society. - A study of packaging s changing roles and forms over the centuries is a study of the growth of civilization. - Social changes are inevitably reflected in the way we package, deliver and consume goods.$MP1   What is Packaging?Until the 1950s, motor oil was delivered in bulk to service stations, which in turn measured it into 1-quart glass jars; premeasured oil in metal cans; - Now, milk delivery from glass bottles to a variety of plain and aseptic paper cartons, plastic bottles and flexible bags; - Tomorrow, how oil or milk will be delivered? - environmentally acceptable packaging (minimal waste) - choices of petrochemicals, wood pulp, and metal governed - the way we buy and consume oil or milk - milk delivered in refillable aluminum cans?P{   Primitive Packaging 1.The origins of packaging - We don t know what the first package was, but we can certainly speculate. - Primitive humans: nomadic hunter/gatherers, lived off the land. Social groupings restricted to family units. - They would have been subject to the geographical migrations of animals and the seasonal availability of plant food. - Such an extreme nomadic existence does not encourage property accumulation beyond what can be carried on one s back.$Z  Primitive Packaging - Primitive people needed containment and carrying devices, and out of this need came the first  package . - a wrap of leaves; - an animal skin; - the shell of a nut or gourd; - a naturally hollow piece of wood; - the fire-bearer and the  packaging of fire.    Primitive Packaging 2.How packaging changed as social structures changed - 5000 B.C., domesticated plants and animals. - a reasonable food supply in a given vicinity; - evolutionary stage: supported larger social groups, gave birth to small tribal villages; - storage and transport containers needed for milk, honey, seed grains, nuts, and dried meat; - villages with access to different resources traded with their neighbors, requiring transport containers; - About 250 B.C., the Greek city-state period, law that affected packaging enacted$P5   Primitive Packaging 3. Early packaging materials - fabricated sacks, baskets, and bags, made from materials of plant or animal origin; wood boxes replaced hollow logs; a clay bowl, the fire-dried clay pots ( the pottery and ceramic trade). 4. The discovery of glass - By 2500 B.C., a hard inert substance in the fire s remains; glass beads and figures made in Mesopotamia (today s Iraq). - About 1500 B.C., the earliest hollow glass objects appeared in Mesopotamia and Egypt.PP  Primitive Packaging q- Glass containers, the ancient packaging materials, core-formed ancient Egyptian glass containers (Figure 1.2).  rp  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&1. How packaging changed as social structures changed - Many societal changes leading to the corresponding changes in packaging: mostly the quality and quantity of existing packaging practices. 2. The invention of the glass blowpipe, wood barrels - The Romans in about 50 B.C., the glass blowpipe - The blowpipe s invention brought glass out of noble households and temples; - The first wooden barrel appeared possibly in the Alpine regions of Europe one of the most common packaging forms for many centuries.:Z55 ,(;  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&3. The Dark Ages - The Dark Ages: with the Roman Empire s collapse in about 450 A.D., Europe reduced to minor city-states many established arts and crafts forgotten or stagnant, the 600 years following the fall of Rome being so devoid of significant change that historians refer to them as the Dark Ages. 4.The discovery of paper - In China, Ts ai Lun is credited with making the first true paper from the inner bark of mulberry trees. The name  paper given to the Chinese invention made of matted plant fibers. : P%,[  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&5. Ancient printing - In 768, the oldest existing printed objects (Japanese Buddhist charms); in 868, the oldest existing book (the Diamond Sutra) printed, found in Turkistan. 6. The Renaissance - In about 1100, the European awoken, neglected crafts revitalized, the arts revived and trade increased, by the 1500s, the art of printing born. - Fundamental social structures not changed significantly: - lived off the land - typically as serfs PPs  From Rome To The Renaissance  &&- ate what they raised, found or caught - consumer needs: nonexistent - manufacturing was strictly a custom business - packages: personally crafted, valuable utensils, and rarely disposable in the manner of a modern package - since there being no retail trade, concepts of marketing, advertising, price structures and distribution being irrelevant - population levels being not large enough to support mass productionP The Industrial Revolution 1.The I.R. definition - The I.R. started in England in about 1700 and spread rapidly through Europe and North America. - The Industrial Revolution: the change that transforms a people with peasant occupations and local markets into an industrial society with world-wide connections. - This new type of society makes great use of machinery and manufactures goods on a large scale for general consumption." The Industrial Revolution 2.Characteristics of the Industrial Revolution Rural agricultural workers migrated into cities, where employed in factories. Inexpensive mass-produced goods available to a large segment of the population; the consumer society born. Factory workers needed commodities and food, previously produced largely at home. Many new shops and stores opened to sell to the newly evolving working class. By necessity, some industries located in nonagricultural areas, requiring that all food be transported into the growing urban settings.0/PP. The Industrial Revolution f3.The dramatic changes in how we lived - The changes increased the demand for barrels, boxes, kegs, baskets, and bags to transport the new consumer commodities and to bring great quantities of food into the cities. - The fledgling packaging industry itself had to mechanize. - Necessary to devise ways of preserving food beyond its natural biological life.(g&@& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &1. How the Industrial Revolution affected packaging The evolution of selling and informing as vital packaging roles - Bulk packaging was the rule, with the barrel being the workhorse of the packaging industry. - Flour, apples, biscuits, molasses, gunpowder, whiskey, nails and whale oil transported in barrels. - Packaging served primarily to contain and protect. - Individual packaging being of little importance until the Industrial Revolution spurred the growth of cities. 2.The first packaged retail products - Medicines, cosmetics, teas, liquors and other expensive products;  a paper of pins .:\P3%X& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &3.The origin of the term  brands and how it was transferred to unit packages, early brands, early labeling - The first brand names were inevitably those of the maker. Yardley s (1770), Schweppes(1792), Perrier (1863), Smith Brothers (1866) and Colgate (1873). - The evolving printing and decorating arts applied to  upscale packages, many early decorations based on works of art or national symbols or images. - Early labels: pictures of pastoral life, barnyards, fruit, the gold medals. $Zk& The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &64.Quaker Oats--a new idea in branding - A packaging milestone in 1877, the Quaker personage, the  persona , a description of the package or product as if it were a person. - Between 1890 and about 1920, decoration followed the art nouveau style, this being followed by a period of art deco graphics and designs. 5. The new packaging material-plastics - The first plastic(based on cellulose), made in 1856. :Z%'9p & The Evolution of New Packaging Roles *' $ &t6. Changes in the way we traveled and shopped, changes in the retail store - The small community general store was no longer enough. - National railroads made coast-to-coast transport a reality. - The automobile freed consumers - first five-and-ten store - Refrigeration was becoming commonplace. 7. The package s motivational and informational roles The package had to inform the purchaser. The package had to sell the product.fPJ6.&# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 1.Changes in demographics - Demographics, the study of population structure and trends, universally realized to be an important factor in designing products and packages. 2.Fast food and other institutional markets - Fast-food appeared and created a demand for disposable single-service packaging. - Two factors to influence packaging: public health care and a rapidly growing trend toward eating out rather than at home. - The HRI (hospital, restaurant, and institutional) market. - Petroleum-derived plastics added to the package designer s selection of packaging materials.:DP,n# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 3.The  baby boom and packaging - In the late 1960s, the coming-of-age baby boomers was reflected in a major youth orientation in packaging and products. 4.Legislated changes - In the 1970s and early 1980s, many aspects in packaging legislated: - Child-resistance closures mandated for some products; - Tamper-evident closures; - Labeling laws required listing of ingredients; - International agreements signed to phase out the use of CFCs; - Standards for the acceptance of new packaging materials raised.DP|G# Packaging In The Late 20th Century$$ 5. The advent of microwave ovens, the vanishing domestic housewife - Devising products and packaging specifically for the microwave. - A new health awareness, changes in consuming habits and nutritional labeling. - Opportunities for entire new food lines. -Yogurt became the  in food. - The rapid change in the last decades of the 20th century._ZB Modern PackagingChanging Needs and New Roles. - All historical changes have had an impact on the way products are bought, consumed and packaged; - The packaging professionals must always turn their attention to the needs, markets, and conditions of tomorrow; - Most of goods, not essential to survival, constitute  the good life ; - In the second half of the 20th century, the proliferation of goods was so high that packaging was forced into an entirely new role: providing the major purchase motivation rather than presenting the goods itself. - the only method of differentiating was the package itself; $RP5 Modern PackagingR1.The trend toward more intensive marketing - marketers aimed at lifestyles, emotional values, subliminal images, features, and advantages beyond the basic product itself; - the package has become the product, and occasionally packaging has become entertainment. 2. Globalization - Providing increased tonnages of high-quality food to massive city complexes at affordable prices challenges packagers; - A new concern is the removal of the debris generated by a consumer society and the impact that these consumption rates have on the planet s ecology;*P* Modern PackagingdPackaging and the Modern Industrial Society 1.Why packaging is important to our food supply - Food is organic in nature (an animal or plant source); - One characteristic of such organic matter is that it has a limited natural biological life. 2.Freedom from geographical and seasonal food production - Most food is geographically and seasonally specific. "e+:  Modern PackagingI- In a world without packaging, we would need to live at the point of harvest to enjoy these products, and our enjoyment of them would be restricted to the natural biological life span of each. - It is by proper storage, packaging and transport techniques that we are able to deliver fresh potatoes and Apples derived from them, throughout the year and throughout the country. - We are no longer restricted in our choice of where to live. we are free of the natural cycles of feast and famine that are typical of societies dependent on natural regional food-producing cycles.JPJ! Modern Packaging3. Advantages of central processing and prepackaged food - Central processing allows value recovery from what would normally be wasted. - By-products of the processed-food industry form the basis of other sub-industries 4.Packaging and mass manufacture of durable goods - The economical manufacture of durable goods also depends on sound packaging; - A product s cost is directly related to production volume; - Distribution packaging is a key part of the system; - Some industries could not exist without an international market. irradiation equipment and the safe packaging .EPE" Modern PackagingWorld Packaging - Humankind s global progress is such that virtually every stage in the development of society and packaging is present somewhere in the world today. 1. Packaging in developed countries - To agonize over choice of package type, hire expensive marketing groups to develop images to entice the targeted buyer and spend lavishly on graphics.  hX# Modern Packaging2. Packaging in less-developed countries - At the extreme, consumers will bring their own packages or will consume food on the spot, just as they did 2,000 years ago; - Packagers from the more-developed countries sometimes have difficulty working with less- developed nations; . a. they fail to understand that their respective packaging priorities are completely different. b.developing nations trying to sell goods to North American markets cannot understand their preoccupation with package and graphics. PC| ~$  Modern Packaging3. The United Nations and packaging. - The less-developed countries do not have adequate land to raise enough food. - Food goes beyond its natural biological life, spoils, is lost, is infested with insects or eaten by rodents, gets wet in the rain, leaks away or goes uneaten for numerous reasons, all of which sound packaging principles can prevent. - In a poor economy that can afford no waste, no industries recover secondary value from food by-products. - Packaging is perceived to be a weapon against world hunger. P %!. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1. The sources of waste material - A discussion of packaging today means eventually turning to environmental issues. - A perception: if only the packaging industry would stop doing something or, conversely, start doing something, all our landfill and pollution problems would go away. - Ample evidence suggests that good packaging reduces waste. - The consumer sees packaging as that part of shopping trip that gets thrown away. Hence, packaging is garbage. $Z &". Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2.The percentage of waste that is packaging - The University of Tennessee provides the following breakdown of total landfill waste Residential waste: 37.4% Industrial waste: 29.3% Commercial waste: 27.3% Other sources: 6.0%,Z+CC'#. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- } Material Packaging Nonpackaging Paper 12.7% 19.6% Wood 4.6% ----- Metal 2.0% 5.7% Glass 5.7% 0.8% Plastic 4.1% 5.5% Other misc. 0.1% 12.1% Food waste ----- 8.1% Yard waste ----- 19.0% Totals 29.2% 70.8% Table 1.1 Materials mix by weight in residential solid waste :P}P;B". C($. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 4. Consumer perceptions of packaging - North American consumers have a basic distrust of manufacturers; to them, manufacture is a dirty business. 5.Jurisdictions - Most waste-management issues: local jurisdictions; every state or province can pass its own packaging regulations or mandates. - In the Unites States, the states are mostly acting on their own; CONEG and SSWMC are notable exceptions. ZP!n)%. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 6. Possible laws and mandates Recycling mandates/laws Material reduction mandates/laws Restrictions on selected materials/package types Material bans or restrictions (for example, heavy metals or PVC) Bans on materials accepted as landfill (such as not accepting as corrugated fiberboard) Green labeling requirements/prohibitions Purchasing preference mandates Tax incentives/penalties . Deposit laws/advance disposal fees $P*&. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 7. The four Rs hierarchy and what it means - Reduce: use the minimum amount of material consistent with fulfilling its basic function. - Reuse: containers or packaging components should be reused. - Recycle: packaging should be collected and the materials recycled for further use. - Recover: to possibly recover other value from the waste before consigning packaging to a landfill.|P*[<S\ +'. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- Table 1.2 Percent of municipal solid waste incinerated in selected countries Country Incinerated Waste Switzerland 74% Japan 66% Sweden 50% France 35% United States 15%BL),(. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 8. Recycling realities - The public myths: 1. Placing material in a blue box constitutes recycling. Recycling does not occur until someone uses the material collected. a) PCR materials in immediate contact with food need to be extensively investigated. b) In the instance of pharmaceutical packaging, such use is simply not allowed. c) Another impediment is a guarantee of consistent and reliable supply of the recovered material.$Z-). Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 2. Recycled material should be economical. In many instances, recycled material is more costly, and its use needs to be supported in some way. a) The cost of landfilling MSW is still less than recycling in most areas. b) Revenues generated from the sale of recyclable materials do not always recover collecting and recycling costs. c) The process of recycling cannot ignore market economics. P .*. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- d) Environmentalists maintain that recycling is an issue of the environment, not of economics. Money expended to recycle a material represents an investment in fuel, water and other resources. When the resource investment to recover a material exceeds the value of the material recovered, then the harm to the environment is greater, not less. e) The process of collecting and regenerating a packaging material for further use is a complex one for most materials.Z/+. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- F- significant investment in sophisticated equipment. - While glass is apparently readily identifiable, individual glass compositions as well as different colors make it difficult to get uncontaminated feedstock. - Paper fiber quality deteriorates with every recycling, and so paper cannot be recycled indefinitely. - Plastic materials pose a number of serious recycling problems. The plastic industry developed a code for identifying the six most commonly used packaging plastics; it includes an  other selection as a seventh code (Figure 1.3). $Z$0,. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 1-. Waste Management and Environmental Issues"/- 3. One or another of the many materials used for packaging is more environmentally friendly. There is no magic material. Laminate constructions are, in fact, environmentally friendly.2. The Modern Packaging Industry&f1.  Converters and users  the broad industry divisions, converter and user subdivisions -  Converters : to take various raw materials and convert them into useful packaging materials or physical packages (cans, bottles, wraps). To this point, packaging becomes a materials application science. The company forming the physical package will also print or decorate the package. - Package  users , the firms that package products, are also regarded as part of the packaging industry, divided into a number of categories and each of these can be further subdivided. .4ZT3/ The Modern Packaging Industry&- The  supplier , manufacturers of machines for the user sector and the suppliers of ancillary services, such as marketing, consumer testing and graphic design, are also important sectors of the packaging industry. 2. Professional packaging associations IoPP: Institute of Packaging Professionals PAC: Packaging Association of Canada PMMI: Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute FPA: Flexible Packaging Association WPO: World Packaging OrganizationZ.%!-"40 The Modern Packaging Industry&3. Other organizations having a major impact on packaging activities ISO: International Organization for Standards ASTM: American Society for Testing and Materials TAPPI: Technical Association of the Pulp and Paper Industry ISTA : International Safe Transit Association  ZD)-F)51 The Modern Packaging Industry&< <(  ~  s * py   ~  s * x    H  0޽h ? 3380___PPT10.#r56s2? v6! Root EntrydO)`cuPicturesCurrent UserF2SummaryInformation(,      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^_`abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxz{|}~  "#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEG Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues/ Waste Management and Environmental Issues The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry The Modern Packaging Industry  õʾĸģ õƬ3_(vtianertianer-. 2 N.