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1644. A Whole Lot of Walnuts

Time limit: 1.0 second
Memory limit: 64 MB
Ten big walnuts is a whole lot of walnuts, that's for sure! Two walnuts is too little for anybody. How about six walnuts? Is it a small number of walnuts or a large one? The Parrot has already found an answer to this question: after eating a small amount of walnuts he wants to eat some more, while after eating a large amount of walnuts he feels satisfied. The Parrot enjoys eating and hates overeating; that's why he wants to know a minimal number of walnuts that is enough to get satisfied.
In order to calculate this number, he conducted a series of experiments. Each experiment went like that: the Parrot, being quite hungry, ate a number of walnuts and checked if this was enough to get himself satisfied. Of course, if some number of walnuts is enough, any larger number will do either; vice versa, if after eating a number of walnuts he is still hungry, no smaller number can get the parrot satisfied. You should help the Parrot to process the results of the experiments.

Input

The first line of the input contains an integer n — the number of experiments conducted by the parrot (0 ≤ n ≤ 100). The following n lines contain descriptions of these experiments. A description of an experiment consists of a number of walnuts eaten by the parrot (an integer from 3 to 9) and an outcome: “satisfied” in case this number was enough to get the parrot satisfied or “hungry” otherwise. It is known as a fact, that ten walnuts is always enough and two walnuts are always not enough.

Output

Output the minimal number of walnuts that is enough to get the parrot satisfied. If the results of the experiments are inconsistent, output “Inconsistent”.

Samples

inputoutput
4
4 hungry
7 satisfied
5 hungry
8 satisfied
7
2
6 hungry
5 satisfied
Inconsistent
Problem Author: Alexey Samsonov
Problem Source: USU Junior Contest, October 2008