The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, December 18, 1937, Page 2, Image 2

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    Athletic Board Accepts Callison Resignation'
COACH CLOSES
8-1All TENURE
Action Follows Student
Criticism; Mentor
Remains Silent
rUGENE, Ore.. C. 18 (iP)
The resignation of Prince G. Celli
son as head football coach at the
University of Oregon, handed to
President C. V. Boyer yesterday,
was accepted by the university ath
letic board last night.
He stated no reason for his
action other than that it was "in
the interests of the University of
Oregon and Oregon football," and
refused an invitation from the
board to appear at its meeting to
discuss the matter.
He asked that his services be
be terminated at the end of the
fiscal year, January 30, 1938.
Callison came to toe university
coaching staff from Medford high
school, where he had turned out
four state championship teams in
five years as coach. He served as
freshman coach three years and
head coach six years.
He was center on the University
of Oregon Rose Bowl team of
1919.
Criticism of his coaching was
voiced on the campus this fall by
students who formed the CCCC
(Can Coach Callison club) after
.
, he close of conference play in
k hich the Webtoots, dominated by
sophomores, won two games and
lost six. Oregon won two and
lost one non-conference contests.
University officials at that time
denied that there had been a
serious demand for a change.
The board postponed discussion
of selection of a successor until
. its January meeting.
PORTLAND. Dec. 18 (iP)Eric
Waldorf, Jefferson high school
football coach, was mentioned by
friends today as a successor to
Prince G. Callison, who resigned
yesterday as University of Ore
gon mentor.
The university's year-to-year
contract system was seen as a
barrier to signing "any promising
mentor or any proven coach," by
observers. Waldorf indicated he
was not interested.
Waldorf has been a successful
Interscholastic coach.
i
TULELAKE DOCTOR
TO BE STATIONED
ON ISLAND OF GUAM
TULICLAKID -- Dr. and Mn.
Stanley McNulty, residents of
Tulelake for the past one and a
half years, will sail January 5
from San Francisco on the Chant
mont for Guam where Dr. Mc
Nulty will be stationed with the
government for the next three
years.
Dr. McNulty will be the only
civilian dentist on the Island and
'will devote his mornings to gov
ernment service and the re
mainder of the day to private
practice.
The small island located near
Japan will afford comfortable,
IP
IFamous American' I
HORIZONTAL
Nickname of
the pictured
former U. S.
A. President.
Nis last name.
12 Neither.
13 Larva.
14 Farewelli
IS Adorns.
17 Those who
have liens on
their property.
19 Transpose.
20 To lay a street
21 Musical note.
22 To chop.
24 Brooch.
25 Writing toot
26 To guide.
28 Street.
29 Vulgar fellows
30 Prevalent.
82 Measure of
area.
83 Candle.
86 Most
beneficent
38 Structural
unit.
BO Mulberry bark
41 Indians.
V-14
Answer to Previous Puzzle
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matimsnoal SAND
OMM.MUROURO
M040U0$151.MR
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WORMIAM MOMMMOBEI
44 3.1416. awarded the
45 Tea. Nobel
47 Winged horse. prize.
49 Golf 59 Eye tumor.
professional. 60 Destined.
50 Measures. VERTICAL
52 He served as
a "Rough 2 Freedom of
" in the U. access.
S. Cavalry. 3 Period.
53 Desirous. 4 To leak.
54 To bake meat.
56 He was the 5 To feel
Roosevelt displeasure..
to become U. 6 Alleged force.
S. President. 7 Lubricant.
58 He was 8 Monkey.
Farmers Claim Alley Honors
The Netted Gem bowling five, leaders of the City league, are
upholding the honors of the Klamath potato industry on the
Bowlers Garden alleys. Beading from left to right, standing: Bob
Cheyne, Charley Booth, Vernon Durrant. (kneeling) Jimmie Jack
son and Capt. Cecil Haley. They are all potato growers and each
holds the prized Netted Gem.
Gridders Go Gift Shopping
To Learn Broken-Field Art
WASHINGTON, Dec. IS
Backfield Coach Bill Reinhart
tackled a new idea today for his
George Washington university
footballers. He decided to send
them through a crowded field of
shoving Christmas shoppers.
"I've called the practice for the
peak of the rush hour," he ex
plained, when Uncle Sam's thou
sands of government clerks are
getting off work. If it is suc
cessful, we probably will make it
a part of every year's training
schedule."
Reinhart, former baseball. bas
ketball and football coach at Ore
gon. said the idea hit him all of
a suddenjust like a 250-pound
guardwhen he was out bucking
the gift-getters line for his wife.
"Talk about side-stepping and
dodging." he cried. "The side
walks of the nation are full of all
modern assommodattone, the doc-11.1
I nears tes. te
. t es. tee.
Dr. and Mrs. McNulty were for-I Daily Piaetice
mer residents of Yreka where
they will stop briefly before sailing.
MOUNT ANGEL. Dee. 1
The Willamette Deareata defeated
Mount Angel, 36 to 25, last night
and avenged an earlier basketball
loss. The Deareats dropped in a
field goal at the start and were
never headed. They were in front,
16 to S. at the end of the half.
7
9
il 1
9 Weathercock.
10 Night before.
11 Ogled.
13 To correct
proof.
15 He was fond
of
16 Knock.
18 Any feeling.
23 To twist out
of shape.
25 To peel.
27 To eat
sparingly.
29 Taxicabs.
31 To draw
tightly
together.
34 To cleave.
35 Wise men.
37 Elf.
40 Sauey.
41 To consume.
42 Grass.
43 Electrical unit.
46 Small wild ox.
48 Entrance.
49 Time gone by.
51 Membranous
bag.
53 Brother.
55 Southeast
57 Provided.
i0
Americans lugging bundles. Clive'
some Of them a ball and you'd
rke something.
"We are going to hand each of
the boys a package and send him
down Santa Claus lane. They'll
run into more problems thatt a
football field of opponents.
He listed some of the problems
as;
Ladies with sharp elbows.
Fat men with walking canes.
A bridge club on the loose-1i
women running interference for
Madam President.
Small boys in flying wedges
bearing down on Santa.
Business men grudgingly lugging
back to the office .a negligee tor
the wife.
"The point of the game will be,"
Reinhart explained. "not to run
into any of these obstacles or let
them run into you."
1
,
BERKELEY, Calif., Dec. 18
(AP)--California's Golden Bears
were back in the practice swing
today, brushing up on funda
mentals for their New Year's
day Rose bowl football game
with Alabama.
Despite a one-month layoff
and the gruelling tussle with
final examinations, the Bears ap
peared in good shape.
"We'll just review fundamen
tals, run signals and let it go
at that. I'll probably cook up
a few new playa," said Coach
"Stub" Allison.
The head coach warned that
Alabama had won Its last three
games in the closing five min
utes of play and that Califor
nia's watchword therefore would
be "no letdown until the final
gun."
The warning brought recollec
tions that the first team played
the full 60 minutes only against
Washington and Stanford.
The Bears, Pacific coast con
ference champions, managed to
keep in good shape during the
final examination .period by re
porting almost daily for light
conditioning workouts.
The only casualty during the
layoff was All-American Right
Halfback Sam Chapman, who
suffered a severe hand lacera
tion when he poked the mitt
through a window pane last
week. The 12 stitches were to
be removed today.
One practice a day was sched
uled for next week. Two a day
was the original plan but Alli
son said he felt the players were
a bit ahead of themselves. No
touch scrimmages will be held,
he indicated, until the team as
sembles at Pasadena, December
27.
10..,01". ,,, , ,
as Exams End
EVANSTON, III., Dec. 18 (1P)---
The All-East football team, which
will meet an All-West team of
collegiate grid stars at San Fran
deco New Year's day, assembled
today at Dyche stadium for an
initial workout under co-Coaches
Bernie Bierman of Minnesota and
Andy Kerr of Colgate.
DANCE
Saturday Night
Merrill
Music By
Oregon Hill Billies
THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. OREGON
KLAMATH WINS
SEASON OPENER
Scoring Spree in Second
Half Defeats Yreka
Quint, 38-23
Klamath high school's Pelican
basketball players. acting as if
somebody had suddenly tossed a
package of lighted fire-crackers in
to their collective pants. whoosh
ed into a second-half scoring spree
on their own court last night and
defeated the Yreka :Miners, 38-23.
In their first game of the season.
To have Sts011 the Pelicans In
action during the opening periods
you would never have thought
they would come out ahead. Early
In the first quarter they man
aged to tie the score at 2-all on
the strength of two foul conver
sions after Allen. Yreka forward,
had started off festivities by loop
ing in a field goal, but thereafter
until well into the third quarter
they were definitely on the short
end of the stick.
Yreka Leads
At the end of the opening ses
sion the score stood Yreka 7,
Klamath 4. At the midway point
the rellealle trailed by exactly
the same margin-15-12
Then came the deluge. The
Pelicans, who had made exactly
half their total of points in the
first half on foul shotsit was a
rough, tough and ragged game
from start to finishsuddenly
started hitting the net.
Forwards Deadly
Virgil Jarrett, who replaced
Waits at forward. tossed 'em in
about every time he got down to
that end of the court, and Sel
lout, his sidekick in the vanguard
of the Pelican forces, matched
him trick for trick.
Musselman managed to tip in a
couple in the course of periodic
scrambles under the backboard.
and Young occasionally manu
factured beautitul ringers from
away back.
Meanwhile the Miners were be
ing limited to a single measly
field goal, and when their dead
eye forward. Allen, went out of
the game on fouls, they Just about
folded up.
Couldn't Slow Down
By the' tilde the three-quarter
mark rolled around the score was
Klamath 26, Yreka, 17. There
after it was Just a breeze for the
Pelicans, but they had worked
themselves up to such a pitch by
then that they Just couldn't slow
down. They added another 12
points for good measure in the
Ifinal round, allowing the Miners
a took-in to the tittle of six count
ers. Wildcats Edge Bs
Jarrett was the evening's heav
iest bombardier with 11 points,
one more than the second-place
total recorded by Wimberley of
Yreka and three more than the
third-place eights shared by Sel
lout and Musselinan.
Klamath matched Yreka's loss
of Allen on fouls with the demise
of Crape via the same route.
In a preliminary piece the
Wildcats did the evening up
brown for Klamath by edging out
the Yreka secondaries, 111-16.
Cloyd of Yreka was the game's
biggest scorer with five points, fol
lowed by a galaxy of other play
ers, including Wildcats Schroeder,
Lowe and Wilson, with fours.
Pelican-Yreka lineups:
Yreka 28 Pos. hiainath 88
Allen 7 RF Waits 2
Wimberley 10 LP Bellotti 8
McCarter a C Musseiman 8
Alves 1 R G Crape 2
Shaffer I LG Young 7
Campbell S Jarrett 11
Pennington S Mayhew
Sandral S Green
Slingby
LA GRANDE, Ore., Dec. 13 (1P)
La Grande high school's basket
ball team defeated Hood River
high here last night, 37 to 34,
avenging a defeat at Hood River
last week. The lead changed six
times during the game which saw
the Apple Pickers ahead, 17-15,
at the half. Steele, Hood River
center, scored 16 points with Ros
tock, La Grande forward, leading
the Tiger attack with 14. Walla
Walla high playa here tonight.
VANCOUVER, B. C., Dec. 18 (IP)
Overcoming a 19-12 handicap at
half time, the Albany Junior col
lege basketball team of Portland,
Ore., came back in the second
half to defeat the University of
British Columbia, 46 to 30, in an
exhibition game last night.
TACOMA, Dec. 18 (p)--Paci t lc
Lutheran college basketeers.,took
and held an early lead to defeat
Albany college of Albany, Ore.,
46 to 28 here last night.
Sigurdson was high for PLC
with 12 point, Henry Pete of the
Pirates scoring 8.
I
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Root and Herb ttttt meats will positively re.
live di f Stomach. Heart, Lamm, Gall
Madder, Eczema, Ulcers, Plies, Neuralgia, Hid.
nevi. Catarrh, Ninon Trouble, Asthma, !Bronchi.
tin. Coughe, Nervou , Indiceation, Intestinal
and Dowel Trouble, Womack Meer., Rheum..
Mint, Arthritis, Dissinena, Headache, High Of
Na,,, Mood Premium. Liver and Madder Trouble,
Blood and Urinary Di Rills. Pernal.
Complaints.
Head Office at San Penne Ince, Established dines
t906--Consultation FreeHerbo Sold Reasonabli
CHAN & KONG CHINESE HERB CO.
131 South A0venth 111., 11h00010 Palls. Oregon.
Hournt Prom 10 A. U. to A P. 1116
undarat 10 A. N. to I P. M.
Strikes
and
Spares
From the
Bowlers Garden
Two more all-apare games were
rolled during the week with Reg
Ashurat and liert Station collect
ing. It was Stadin's second such
game of the pennon.
Mel Muskoff returned from
Bakersfield last week. and is
again bowling regularly. Ills
many friends aro glad, to have
him back.
-The high score ot the season
for women sits rolled Friday
night NV hol Velda Haley clicked
oft a 235 score. The previous
high mark of 229 was boil by
Leslie Mat heson. Billie Haight
still holds the alley record with
268.
All Bowlers making the Bend
trip are requested to bo at tho
alleys Sunday morning at
o'clock.
Leslie Matheson plans to make
the trip by airplane.
Clyde Bottortt's Sport Shop
team is still gunning tor Denny's
Merchants league leader. It has
never quite been able to overtake
the team composed of B. (Moyne.
It. Cheyne, Sweasy, Lashua anti
B. Martin, but at present is but
one point behind.
Basketball'
HIGH SCHOOL
Amity 25. Dallas 36.
Star of the Sea (Amor la)-13.
St. Alary's (Beaverton) 25.
Salem 16, Grant (Portland) 35.
, Bend 38, Oregon City 27.
Klamath Palls 38, Yreka 23.
COLLEGE
Washington State 47. Central
Washington 24.
Pacific College 33, 3tultnonuth
College 30.
Oregon 66. Union Oil 32.
Albany Junior College of Port
land 46. British Columbia 30.
Southern California 50, Louis
iana State 26.
Pacific Lutheran 46, Albany
College 28.
Willamette 36. Mt. Angel 25.
Webfoots Swamp
4 Portland Quintet
EUGENE, Dec. 18 (Al')
Starting easily but putting on
the pressure as the game pro
greased, the University of Ore
gon basketball team snowed
Union oil of Portland under a
66-32 score in a practice game
last night.
The Webfoots led, 32 to 18,
at the half and called in their
reserves midway of the second
period with a 30-point edge.
Johansen, guard. wag high
scorer with 16 points.
NEW ORLEANS BOY
SEES THROUGH EYE
GIVEN BY OLD MAN
NEW ORLEANS, Dee. 18 (DP)
Frank Chabina looked through
his gift eye for the first. time late
Friday at Charity hospital and saw
two fingers which a doctor held
up.
It signalized successthus far
for the rare operation which
following old John Wesley Amex'
act of brotherly love December 8
In giving an eye to the boy.
A young surgeon, who thrice
before 'successfully transplanted
discs of cornea, restoring sight,
lifted bandages off Chabina's left
eye that had not been healing as
rapidly as expected.
The 19-year-old farm youth
from Albany, La., lay motionless,
almost fearfully. Then the doctor
calmly asked:
"See anything, Frank?"
Frank appeared amazed, then
whispered joyously:
"Why, you've got two fingers
up there!"
"And how?" asked the doctor.
"And now it's your whole
hand," the boy cried.
Before the operation, Frank
could only distinguish between
night and day from the eye which
was seared by lime dust two yearn
ago.
During his treatment at the
hospital, he atruck up an ac
quaintance with 68-ear-old Amos,
whose failing left eye bad a sound
cornea.
The old man wan grateful for
the youth's friendship and when
he beard of Franke need, he
called doctor,' and told them to
take his eye if it would help the
boy.
Although the cornea from the
old inane eye has knit Roundly
with the boy's, the doctor maid he
could not predict final outcome of
the operation at present.
BETTER TREATMENTS FOR HUMAN AILMENTS
nommimmEIMMImompi.
I
Action at Merrill
Amateur boxing Rt ls.rrII, featuring montly Klamath and
C,CC camp talent, has reportedly been standing south-end fans oil
thoir earn. Here's an action shot from the last program. !snapped
by "Doc" Cook, flanhlight expert. It appears tho lad on Dm right
hits just minium! a right uppercut, and it tho guy on the lett over
connects with that haymaker. oh. illy!
Lumber and Box
Wins First Half
Bowling Honors
The Iniustrial league finished
Its first half schedule Friday
night on the Bowlers' Garden al
leys with the Klamath Lutnber
and Box team declared winner.
The Lumbermen, with a two
out of three game win over Kes
terson's. sound up with a total
of 21 points, beating out the Lost
River Dairy squad by five.
The Dairymen wound up with a
clean aweep of their three games
against the New City Laundry
quintet.
Landers of Lost River rolled
games of 166. 190 and 191, for a
three-game total of 537 !minion.
edging out V. Bell of Klantatit
mber and Box by one pin for
high honors. Bell, however. reg
istered high single game with a
207 score in his second start.
Irving Weston of Kesterson hit
for an even ZOO score, being tho
only other player to hit the cov
eted mark.
Due to the Christmas and New
Year's hilidays the teams will be
idle for he next two weeks and
start their second half schedule
January 6.
The league will be increased
to six squads, With teams front
Bilippington and the NowsHerald
potential candidates.
MANNERISM LEADS
To ARREST FOR
COOS BAY ROBBER
MARSHFIELD. Ore., Dec. 18
(UP)Because he was observed
walking with his arm around his
wife's neck like a 13-year-old girl
reported her attacker had done
with her earlier this week, Cecil
H. Pigeon, 18, was arrested here
Friday charged with the assault.
Police had arrested Pigeon
Wednesday on suspicion, released
him, thon rearrested him again
and he signed a confession. lie
said robbery was his only motive.
He did not attempt rape, he said,
but claimed he could have done so
because he had the girl in his
Dower. lie said he had been on
'relief and in need of money.
The girl, her head bandaged
from a wound he inflicted with a
short stick, told officers that the
youth was her attacker. lie has
aerved a term In the atate reform
atory. k A charge, probably assault
with a dangerous weapon, will be
filed against him soon.
The arrest relieved tension on
Coos Bay where American Legion
members have been serving as
vigilantes to prevent further at
tacks. Pigeon told officers he tried to
rob a young girl in the Bunker
Hill, Marshfield suburb, Monday
but elle screamed and fled. He
has not admitted chasing girl. in
North Bend last week, and offic
era of that city and state police
atilt were meeking tho semi-nude
man who chased girls on two oc
casions there last week.
Ball FRANCISCO, Dec. 1.8 (P)
Young Corbett, 32-year-old form
er welterweight champion, punch
ed out a 10-round decision over
Dick Foster, youthful Berkeley
middleweight, last night.
a.E.
I
More Protection
- Leen Expense
Oat full Offentge at lowent east.
FARMERS AUTOMOBILE
6"r-INSURA NOE Sub."'
of California
D. E. Pearce
niNtriet Manager
sno Mo. Itb Plume 1140N
Punch less Risko
Loses to Lewis
CLEVELAND. pee. 111 AP)
Johnny Itisko still has the stout
heart he carried into the ring
10 years ago. But his punch is
11111101It gone.
I. Ivo thousand Clevelanders
were) Sayttik that today. Tho)
saw the 35-yearold stay 10
rounds last night hut lose R do.
cision to is top-flight negro 12
yearn him junior, John Henry
Lewis, light heavyweight cham
pion. Risk. who weighed 198!4
pounds to Lewis' 193, amid:
"Certainly I'll continue my
comeback. I couldn't seem to
gOt going tho wny 1 like to fight.
But 1 still think 1 can heat a
lot of the present day helm-weights."
Australian Upsets
World Net Champ
SYDNEY, Australia, Dec. 18
(AP)--Jack Bromwich sprang A
surprise today by upsetting Don
ald Budge, A to n r is a n tennis
champion, 62, 6-3, 8-10, 6-4. to
give Australia a 4-1 victory over
the Invading Americana in an
exhibition series.
Adrian Quint earlier gave Aus
tralia certain ViriOry in the se
ries by defeating Ilene Mak,
California star, in straight PIMP,
6-0, 6-4, 6-4.
HIGH SCHOOL CLUB
To HOLD BENEFIT
FOOD, GIFT SALE
MF,111t11,1, The Dome Eco
nomics club of the high school Is
sponsoring a tea end bazaar, Mon
day, December 20, from 2 until
4 In the home economics room of
the high school.
Cooked food with a holiday
flavor and needlework will be of.
fermi for sale and mothers of the
girls and friends are cordially
invited to attend.
Louise rotheringliani IR preal.
dent of the club and Alariorit
Ilartierode Is acting as general
chairmen. An exhibit of work ac
complished In the home econom
ics department during the first
semester will be on displitY with
a continuous program of munk
and recitations promised. Fonda
from the sale will be lined for the
home economic,' department.
December 18, 1937
YOKED BIER
SCORES KAYO
Buddy Finishes Hogan In
Third, Eyes Braddock,
Louis Bouts
I
NEW 1'011 K. Dee. ft (IV)
Buddy. titt, younger, 111,1Mor and
'nitro howled of
fortila liners. Is mapping it box ins
plot With revenge Rs its chief kc.
ntot re.
Asked, after lulls Ihreroun4
knockout of Kaolin lioutin at fitlifil
KOH SWIM'S) OMANI Inn( night.
whole ho mild Win to moot
he 2 lilltottutt litter didn t hesitate
It moment.
"rind," ho P MIL wnnt to
fight Jim linoldock. becauen he
took the lit lo away from fly
brother Nine. Thom I Want Jon
Loolo, hecattee ho lute the title,"
MOO, who plods around the
riog with all tho mooed of a plow
horst didn't need any speed. Is
look overything tho Wuterbury.
Conn., heavyweight hell to offer,
toyed of it on t turtioeitell defense
of gloves end shoulders, and wait
ed for his spot.
That came during a harmless
third-round sparring solution. A
long Moping right eaddenly canto
whidil Iii g up from some hero neer
the flour to drop a at Willed
oil the scat Of hie trunks. Viten
ho roan, hi, stumbled beck end eat
on this ring rope before rooting
forward into two more knock
downs end intoiceasion by Before'
Jimmy Crowlay.
Cubs Enter
Final Offer
for Pitcher
rillcAnn, Doe. IS (AP)
Owner IC Vrigloy of the Cid
cnso C11191. who piny' a stool
4IIIII of chess, hid thin flIPIPIIIE
for tho itrookbli Dotisers today:
-les your move."
With Brooklyn's ace right
Minded pitcher, tstn Lingle !MM.
go, an the his "kink." Ohioage's
Cubs. the New yerk Giants and
the Dedgors have been tryins to
out-think each other In a base
ball chess metch that hes been
shooting smoke since th minor
longue meetings et Milwaukee.
tVrigley eilw has decided that
he's made his boat offer ler the
tenipernmonint Dodger star end
Pays the next atop strictly Is up
te the flatimsh tcem's front of
fice. "Brooklyn Mill wants belt our
ball chili and cash for Mimeo."
meld Wrigley, "end while we
know ho'li ho a great help to
our club we don't think he's
thet good, In other words, we
won't wreck one department to
strengthen enother end we will
not part with Outflobler Prank
Domurce, who le the men the
Dodgers Wont."
The (Mints, according to Pres
Ident Horace Stoneham, ONO
have mode their final offer. ON
tinlittnd to he $75,000, plum
Pitcher lint Behittnneher, rairlier
one Id it 'tango and Outfielder
flank Lieber.
FEET
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when properly cared far.
DRUGLESS. EIIIIIOPRAO.
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Our foot treatments plus
scientifically made and
fitted German Orthopedic
Foot Cushions will solve
your foot problems.
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giving 111R1(111111111 Heat and Itifficiencyl It la If you buy from
us. Try, a tank of our oil today and notice the difference.
HEILBROWIER & REA
"FUEL THAT SATISFIESPLUS SERVICE"
Office and Yard, 821 Spring Sf. Phone 239W
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