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John has $n$ light bulbs and a switchboard with $n$ switches, each bulb can be either on or off, and pressing the $i$-th switch changes the state of bulb $i$ from on to off, and vice versa. He is using them to play a game he has made up. In each move, John selects a (possibly empty) set of switches and presses them, thus inverting the states of the corresponding bulbs. After exactly $m$ moves, John would like to have the first $v$ bulbs on and the rest off, otherwise he loses the game. There is only one restriction: he is not allowed to press the same set of switches in two different moves. This is quite an easy game, as there are lots of ways of winning. This has encouraged him to keep playing different winning games, and now he is intent on trying them all. Help him count how many ways of winning there are. Two games are considered the same if, after a reordering of the moves in one of them, at every step the same set of switches is pressed in both of them. For example, if $n = 4, m = 3$ and $v = 2$, one possible winning game is obtained by pressing switches $1, 2$ and $4$ in the first move, $1$ and $3$ in the second one, and $1, 3$ and $4$ in the last one. This is considered equivalent to, say, first pressing $1$ and $3$, then $1, 2, 4$ and then $1, 3, 4$. \InputFile Has at most $500$ lines, one for each test case. Each line contains three integers $n~(1 \le n \le 1000), m~(1 \le m \le 1000)$ and $v~(0 \le v \le n)$. The last line will hold the values $0~0~0$ and must not be processed. \OutputFile Print one line for each test case containing the number of ways John can play the game, modulo the prime $10567201$.
Time limit 1 second
Memory limit 128 MiB
Input example #1
3 3 1
6 4 0
6 4 3
0 0 0
Output example #1
7
10416
9920
Source 2009 ACM Southwestern Europe Regional Contest (SWERC), Problem C