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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 30

Publication:
Tampa Bay Timesi
Location:
St. Petersburg, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Sunday, Oct. 14, 1934 2-C Sh Petersburg Time 3 i dUO 33rd Straight tt Tr tAt Oklahoma Crushes Texas 45-0 Fot 7 i Sports In Brief- Seminoles Come Back Strong In Final Half RALEIGH (P) Halfback Lee Corso ran 35 yards for one touchdown and set up anoth jr with punt return as Florida State defeated N.C State, 14-0, last night to hand the Wolfpack its third loss in four Thomas And McDonald Go For 6 IDs DALLAS, (P) Okla Louisviffc, 'Frisco Bid For Nats' Franchise (Compiled From Timei Wire Services) 3 Lorino Paces 7 i -7 starts this season. A crowd of 10,000 saw Florida State control the ball and keep NC. State's fleet backs bottled up. The Wolfpack managed to move past midfield only once in the first half to the FSU 49 -and offered only one serious scoring threat, late in the fourth quarter.

Corso, a 166-pound senior from Miami, was the running star of the Seminoles. He sparked a 68-yard touchdown drive in the third period which he capped by going around left end 35 yards for the TD. Early in the fourth quarter Corso gathered in a punt on his Statistics Fit. Slal Slat Flr nnnl Ruinlni Yaritata Faxing lardai Paaura Pra Initrerpttd fcr Fonta f'umhlffl Tail I'arda rrnallirtl 17 jt 4 l-U I lt-41! 1 I IS 45 What'll it be San Francisco or Louisville? Baseball observers in the nation's capital are going around in circles trying to figure whether the Washington Senators are going to be moved or whether President Calvin Griffith is merely polishing up a threat. Griffith insists he has written offers to move the Senators to either Louisville or San Francisco.

Friday will be a critical day. That's when Griffith will meet with club's board of directors on the pressjng question and needs only three votes to okay the move. Board members include H. Gabriel Murphy, treasurer, who has made it clear that he will fight any move to move the Senators, even if it means going to court. In Boston, there'll be a nervous reaction to the Griffith talk of going to San Francisco.

That's Joe Cronin's home town and he led the move to get the Red Sox a farm franchise in that city a year ago. Then the other day Cronin, general manager of the Red Sox, got Bucky Harris, lately deposed Detroit manager as an assistant. Cronin is married to a Griffith and he formerly managed Washington. Bostonians can and will roll their own on that line of thought. As for Louisville, that city hasn't been able to support an American Association team In proper style.

But the same was said of Milwaukee and Kansas City, a couple of minor league stops now operating under baseball's big tent. The Louisville franchise, Fhil O'Hara of Tampa contends, may wind up in the St. Petersburg Tampa area, all of which seems a long-way development from Washington moving out of the American League stronghold in the District of Columbia. Many think Griffith is bluffing. But in Boston, many likewise felt the same about Lou Ferini and his Braves.

People SEMINOLE SPEEDSTER TICKS UP 12 Florida State's Lee Corso gains 12 yards and a first down in the first quarter against North Carolina State. The Wolfpack's Dick Christy (in rear) comes up for the tackle while teammate John Collar (88) closes in. FSU's George Boyer (77) looks for a man to block. PilSorci homa's twin football phan toms Tommy McDonald and Clendon Thomas vied for the glory and won it almost equally yesterday as they scored three touch-downs apiece and ran Tex as ragged for a 45-0 victory that brought the magnifi-cent Sooners' winning streak to 33 straight. It tied the modern college rcc ord and came within three of the all-time mark while the nation's 1 team was lashing Texas with its second worst defeat in the 56-year history of this an cient inlersectional game.

McDonald, who was burned up last week when he failed to score against Kansas State, was never Statistics Oklahoma 1m f'lrct IJawna J4 14 Hinnlna Yarriara Ss 114 Paiainf lardaia 11.1 14 rasva I-IU tn Panara IntrrcfDird br 1 Punla SMI RumhlM 1 0l 4 I Tarda Prnailirtl 1 more magnificent. He ran for 140 yards, he returned a kickoff for 54, he caught two passes for 61, threw one pass for 27 and had one 47-yard run' nullified by a penalty. Thomas was almost as spectacular as he raced for 123 yards in 13 carries. A crowd of 75,504 watched the Big Red plow a fighting but fu tile Longhorn team under with one of the most awesome run ning games the Cotton Bowl ever saw. It was futile to Texas, so futile that one of the Longhorns Robert E.

Lee, a guard took a poke at Dale Sherrod, Sooner reserve quarterback, as time was running out. They wrestled around without damage. Back in 1908 Oklahoma beat Texas 50-0 for the worst defeat of all time. Today's Oklahoma victory was the fifth straight over the Longhorns. It would have been higher but the Sooners committed nine fumbles and lost four, three of which halted drives.

One touchdown a 63- yard dash by Jay O'Neal, Soon er quarterback was wiped out when it was found that the ball had been whistled dead. Oklahoma rolled up a massive 369 yards on the ground to a pitiful 74 for Texas and passed for 133 compared to 114 for the Longhorns. It wasn't the smoothest Okla homa team seen here in the past four years but it was probably the most powerful and versatile. It brought its record to 109 straight games in which it has scored a collegiate mark. OKLAHOMA 6 13 13 13-45 0 0 0 00 TEXAS Upses SOUTH BEND, Ind.

Full back Mel Dillard scored twice and generally terrorized Notre Howie Lee, refusing to report to Cleveland Barons of American Hockey League, has been suspended from organized hockey. "He's suspended until he reports to us or until someone is willing to pay for his release and contract," said a club official. Ron Barton, onetime great hope of English boxing, has surrendered his British light heavyweight title without a fight. Barton says he has eye trouble, needs an operation. Others Intimate Barton has lost Interest in fighting after having made some money at it.

Nina Ponomreva, the Russian girl athlete who may have mistaken London shoplifting for a new Olympic event, is en route to her homeland. Harrison, Souchak Tied Baseball Auburn Past Kentucky 13-0 LEXINGTON, An- burn freed a dazzling change-of. pace runner in sophomore Tommy Lorino with a 63-yard first quarter jaunt, then held Kentucky 13 0 to win a Southeastern Conference football game last night. The brilliant young speedster swept two yards around right end in the final minutes for Auburn's other touchdown. Lorino's early dash set up a 10-yard scoring pass from quar- Statistics Aubura Kenlnrkf Ftrtl Ilvitni II Muthlnf Vardaaa fvl IIS Pain Tardai Paoea Paaea Interrente4 br I Puma Mil llll Kiimhlea I larria Penalired FSU plays Auburn at Auburn Nov.

24. Florida plays Auburn at Florida Field (Homecoming) Nov. 3. tcrback Howell Tuhbs to end Jimmy Phillips, an All-America candidate, five plays later in one of the real offensive outbursts of the game. Three other times Auburn punched its way goalward, but field goal tries by Tubbs from the Kentucky 20, 25 and 22 fell short.

In the late minutes a fumble recovery on the Kentucky 20 set up the second touchdown. Kentucky, trying in vain to generate a ground punch, found its two major bids stopped at the Auburn 20 and 24, surrendering each time on downs. A 7 0 0 6-13 KENTUCKY 0 0 0 0-0 Home Sparks Clemson Over Wake Forest WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. UPl -Sophomore halfback Charlie Home, an engineering major, engineered touchdown runs of four and eight yards and sub quarterback Horace Turbeville, another soph, kicked a 20-yard FSU plays Wake Forest nest week, Oct. 20, at Tallahassee (Homeeomlng).

field goal yesterday to give tin-beaten Clemson a 17-0 Atlantic Coast Conference football victory over Wake Forest. Clemson, continuing along the path it hopes will lead to an Orange Bowl berth Jan. 1 at Miami, now has won three games and played a tie with Florida. CLEMSON 0 10 0 717 WAKE FOREST 0 0 0 0-0 Iowa Defeats Badgers 13-7 IOWA CITY, Iowa Wi Hard hitting Iowa, aided by clever de ception, smashed down Wiscon sin 13-7 yesterday in a wild, bruising Big Ten football game that had a near record crowd of 53,273 limp at the finish. Iowa beat back a late chal lenge by the aggressive Badgers who had gone into the fourth period trailing 13 0 after Iowa's tout defense had turned back three Wisconsin threats.

Wisconsin, making its confer ence debut, finally scored mid way In the final period on a 23-yard flat pass play, Don Carlson to Eugene Melvin, and cot the successful conversion from Glenn Bestor. WISCONSIN 0 0 0 7-7 IOWA 0 6 7 0-13 AP Wtrephoto) yr ye quarterbacking in leading Turdue to a 23-14 upset football victory The Boilermakers, 7-point underdogs, surprised the Irish for the third time in the last five years with a devastating ground attack mixed with enough Daw son aerials to keep Notre Dame guessing and the capacity crowd of 58,000 yelling. It was Purdue's second deel sion in three starts this season and the second loss for Coach Terry Brennan's forces in three games. The Big Ten team scored in every quarter, rolling up a 14-0 margin before the Irish tallied late in the second to trail 14-7 at halftime. Notre Dame tied it in the first thee minutes of the third only to have the Boilermakers charge back into the lead to stay.

All of the scoring came on long thrusts. The first time Purdue got the ball, it drove 80 yards in Statistics Purdue Notre Dime Flrt Tlnirns 37 IS Kmhint Vardare JKI l'! Pnm lardate 47 1" Pause 0-14 III i'ae Intercepted hf 3 PunU 6-0 1-sl Fumliles l.mt 0 1 Yardi I'enallied 43 i 11 plays with Dillard, a powerful 187-pound junior from Chicago, smashing over from the two. Dawson booted the first of his 4 extra points, lie completed three out of three passes for 29 yards in the sequence. Notre Dame muffed a fourth- down-and-one-yard-togo chance early in the second and Purdue uok charge on the Irish 49. Dil lard romped 24 yards in four carries, drilling off tackle to score from the seven.

The thrust, aid ed by a 12-yard spring by Erich Barnes, who was later injured, carried 49 yards in eight plays. Paul Hornting's passes to full- hack Chuck Lima and the quarterbacks 16-yard keep-it gain. gave the Irish its first touch down. Hornung's 6-yard pass to sophomore end Dick Rover of Cincinnati, capped a 70-yard march in nine plays in which Ilornung's three tosses to Lima accounted for 42 yards. Ilornung's runback on the opening kickoff in the third for 59 yards set up Notre Dame's scoring drive of 41 yards in five plavs.

Sophomore Frank Rey nolds went the final 11 with a pilchout. PURDUE 7 7 77 28 NOTRE DAME 9 7 7 014 I Leoos Irish Dame's sophomoric defense with slashing runs yesterday to combine with Len Dawson's excellent Open Lead Puth Harrison, St. Louia. 71-71-69211 Souchak, Crossingrr, N.V., 70 69-722! 1 Don January, Lampasas, 69-69-74212 Kd Oliver, Itmmit, 73-68-72212 Bill lasper, Uiula iata, 6S 72- 73 in Hour Korrt, Yonkera. 7J-M-72 IXm FairfwM, Cawy, 111..

Billy Maxwell. Odessa. 72 f8 73 Mike Ketchick, Mahopac N.Y., 71-69 74-214 frank Stranahan, Toledo, Ohio, 71-70 74-215 Cory Middlecolf, Dallas, 70-73- 73- 21S Marvin Rud) Ward, San Mateo. Calif 72- 71-73 21 Kd'iie Draper, Seattle, 72 71- 73- 2 IS Kd filraol, St. T.oilin.

74-70 Jay Hohert, Sanfoirf, Ha 70-75 71-21 Paul Harney, Bolton, 71-70 7ft -216 John McMullin, Alameda, 74 75-217 Bud Holsrher, Apple Valley, 72 72-71-217 Larry Monies, Daly City. 7.1 72 72 217 Krme Vossler, Midland, 73 -70-74 '17 Kirk Maver, St. Pe(erihur, 71 76 -711 217 Tommy Bolt, Houston, Tex, 74-72-72 Gforse Bayer, Grossinxer, N.Y., 70- 73-7-2111 F.d aslannetlo, San Francisco, 70-77-71-218 amafeur FARWEST Oregon Slate 21, California 13 UCLA 28, Washington Slate 0 Washington 20, Oregon 7 Arizona Slate (Tempe) 41, Idaho 0 Stanford 4(1, San Jose State 20 Omaha 9, Idaho State 0 Air Force Academy 48, Western (Colo) State 13 Wyoming 20, New Mexico 13 Utah State 27, Montana 13 Colorado 47, Colorado A and 7 SOUTHWEST Arizona State (Flagstaff) 27, Tulsa 11, Oklahoma A and 14 (Tie) Baylor II, Arkansas 7 Oklahoma 45, Texas 0 Arkansas State 21, Louisiana Tech 13 CANADIAN FOOTBALL Edmonlon 37, Saskatchewan 17 LATE SCORES Eastern Oregon 23, Willamette (Ore.) 0 Montana Mines 0, Eastern Montana 0 (lie) Springfield (Mo.) State 25, Cape Girardeau (Mo) State 0 Centre 27, Southwestern (Tinn) 13 Hanover 36, Talor 20 Indiana Central 28, Manchester 14 Anderson 7, Franklin 8 George Washington 20, Eos-Ion University 20 (tie) Southern Illinois 33, Eastern Illinois 0 Millikln 30, Augustana (Rock Island, 111.) 26 Wnffnrd 18, Furman fi Fast Carolina 2H. Carolina 19 Findlny 55. Wilmington 6 Texas AIM 14, Houston 14 (tid Air Academy 14, Western Stale 13 30 and raced 60 yards before he was hauled down by halfback Dick Christy on State's 10.

Three plays laler quarterhark Vic Prinzi of Waverly, N.Y.. passed to end Bob Nellums of Pensacola, for the touchdown. John Sheppard converted both extra points. N.C. Stale finally got its offense moving late in the final quarter and rolled from its 30 to FSU's 12.

From there reserve quarterback Billy Franklin threw a touchdown pass to end Jon Collar but a 15-yard holding pen alty nullified it. Florida State took over on its eight and moved out of dancer. Florida State had two scoring opportunities late in the first quarter but couldn't capitalize. The first came when tackle Bill Mussleman recovered Dick Hunter's fumble on the Wolfpack 22. On third down, however, a Prin- zi pass was intercepted by halfback Dick Christy on the N.C.

State one. Hunter punted out to half back Stan Dobosz and he returned 12 yards to the Wolfpack 37. The Seminoles moved to the eight and were thrown back to the 11. On fourth down a Corso pass into the end zone was in tcrcepted by Hunter who ran it out to the 4. In the second quarter FSU kept hammering away but couldn't score.

The Seminoles moved to the Wolfpack 16 but Corso fum bled and it was recovered by Wolfpack fullback Wally Prince. FLORIDA STATE 77-14 N.C. STATE 0 0 0 60 Michigan Routs Army 48 To ANN ARBOR, Mich. (Michigan's fighting mad Wolverines, their bruising single wing strik ing with lightning precision, crumbled Army 48-14 yesterday. Only two Cadet touchdowns in the closing minutes saved the Army from the same humiliation it suffered in 1940 when Penn whipped the Cadets 48-0, their worst loss in their football history.

While their burly linemen re pelled every Army threat until the waning moments and pressed the Cadels into one fumble after Statistics Army Mlrhi(an rlnl llnwnt 14 Ruhlni Vardata 2i ftii Vardace 134 Pawa 7.11 Paea Interested ky a a Punt 4.21 liimhlet I.ftt a 1 larila Tenalned 7s 75 another, the Wolverines buried the Black Knights of the Hudson under a seven touchdown bar rage. Seven players had a hand In the touchdown assault as the Wolverines dipped into their vast reserve power through most ol the one-sided contest. BY EXPERTS LACQUER ENAMEL Saturday's Football Results Whether she participates In her discus specialty at Melbourne depends her physical condition. Meanwhile, her fine for copping five chapeaux stands. John Landy, great Australian miler, is on the verge of "giving up" because of inflamed bones in his heels.

He has just seven days' to "come good," as one observer put it, before the Aussie track team is selected. Wiiljam Lawrence Strib-ling, father and manager of late heavyweight boxer Young Stribling, dead in Miami of heart attack, age 70, He suffered stroke two weeks ago, survived severe one in 1945. "Pa" Stribling was native of Thomasville, was for many years an acrobat. thern Italy in a year or two. Tebbetts leaves on a month-long European tour today with Mrs.

Tebbetts. Toronto Maple Leafs, International League, acquired two players from St. Louis Cardinals shortstop Joe Stephenson and Ernie Palmierl, pitcher. Previously outfielder Russ Rac and Paul Griffith went to Leafs to complete deal for pitcher Frank Barnes. Won? Davis Cup team, showed 'em at Milan where he beat Nicola Pictrangeli 8-6, 6-3, 2-6, 7-5 and took the Italian tennis title.

Merr Wood, veteran Australian sculler, will represent his country in the Olympic Games off his win over Murray Riley at Wedouree yesterday. It will be the fourth Olympics for the 30-year-old Sydney fireman. Dedicate, 9-5 favorite, the $129,830 Gold Cup Handicap at Hawthorne, putting down a stretch bid by Summer Tan. Third was Find to give eastern entries a sweep of the race. Le Prelendant, owned by Sir Winston Churchill, defeated Queen Eliabeth's High Veldt in the mile and one half Cumberland Lodge Stakes at Kemp-ton Park, England.

Margin was half a kngth. Neil McKeJinie, Britain's 17-year-old freestyle Olympic swimmer, a pair of native records in tuneup for the big games set for Melbourne. Mc-Kechnie set 51.8 mark for 100 and 09.2 for 220 yards. Heavily favored Leallah in Alcibiades Stames at Keene-land, her fourth stakes victory of the season. Charles Humez, European middleweight champion, 12 round KO of Italy's Franco Fes-tucci in Milan.

Crystal River Whips Beers CROSS CITY, Special) -Crystal River scored a touchdown in the final quarter last night to win a well-deserved battle from the Cross City Bears, 12-7, in a West Coast Conference game played at Dixie High School Stadium. In the last three minutes of the fourth quarter, the Crystal River Pirates' quarter back Ronnie Brauer completed a 25-yard pass to Cress Lyon, who ran Ifl-yards to score and chalk up Crystal River's second ennsocutive win. The Rears one TD came in the second quarter on a splendid (0- yard run by halfback Bill Ste-vetiMtn. cross city 0 7 0 0-7 For Western SAN FRANCISCO, lP! Veter an Dutch Harrison and former Duke University football player Mike Souchak swept into the lead at the end of the third round of the $22,500 Western Open Golf Tournament yesterday with 54-hole scores of 211. They were a stroke ahead of young Don January, the midway leader from Lampasas.

and Ed Oliver, winner of the Western in 1941. Harrison shut a three under- par 69 to take the lead until Souchak came in with a par 72. Both are five under par for the 54 holes. Today's final 18 holes finds youngsters and veterans alike in position to haul down the $5,000 first prize. At 213, just two strokes off the pace, came Bill Casper, Doug Ford, Billy Maxwell and Don Fairfield.

Illinois State Normal 22. Central (III) 13 Wheaton 41, Lake Forest 12 Illinois Slale Normal 22, Eastern Michigan 7 Albion (Mich) 53. Olivet 0 College of Emporia 28. Mcpherson 0 William Jewell 28, Tarkio 0 Mt. Union 19, Otterbein 7 SOUTHEAST FSU H.

N.C. State 0 Auburn 13, Kentucky 0 SOUTH Boiling AFB 21, Fort Jackson 0 Georgia Tech 39, I.SU 7 Florida 7, Rice 0 Tennessee 42, Chaltnnnnga 20 St. Augustine 19, St. Paul's Poly 0 Virginia Tech 34, William Mary 7 Georgia 26, North Carolina 12 Clemson 17, Wake Forest 0 Duke 14, SMU 6 Lenoir Rhyne 61, Guilford 7 Mississippi 16, Vanderbilt 0 Tuskegee 43, Knoxville 18 Lehigh 27, Virginia Military 10 Randolph-Macon 20, Bridge-water 6 Howard (Ala) 20, Millsaps 20 (Tie) South Carolina 27, Virginia 13 Maryland Slate 21, North Carolina Slate 6 Tulane 21, Navy 6 Mississippi State 18, Trlnliy (Tes) 8 Georgetown (Ky) 20, Earl-hnm 19 Norlh Carolina College 33, Virginia Slate 13 Morgan State 41, Howard (DC I 0 Johns Hopkins It. Hampden Svdney 13 Davidson 4S, Washington and Lee Terns Christian 23.

Alabama Kansas City Athletics sold outfielder Al PilarcUt and pitcher Art Cercarelll to Baltimore to complete a six-player deal started last Aug. 17. Pilar-cik hit Ceccarelli had an 0-1 mark for A's before going to the minors where he was 2-6 with Columbus and 0-3 with Birmingham. Manager Birdie Tebbetts said he'd like to take his team on a barnstorming tour of Sou Who Sven Davidson, Sweden, extended to five sets but making it over Eddie Moylan, Trenton, N. 6-4, 2-6, 7-5, 3-6, 6-0, in tennis semifinals, Pan American tourney, Mexico City.

Wiffie Smith over Barbara Romack 4 and 3 and Mrs. James Ferrie, Gardena, over Polly Riley 2 and 1, to gain finals of Trans-Mississippi Women's Amateur Golf Tournament at Pebble Beach, Calif. Calumet Farm's Bardslown, given hard ride by Willie liar-tack, in the Quaker City Handicap at Garden State Park, half-length over Blessbull. Wise Money third. Oregon's Bill Dellinger, new American record in 5.000-meter run at Berkeley, invitational track and field meet.

Time: 14 minutes. 25.5 seconds, one second better than old mark pet by Fred Wilk, New York, 13.10. B. A. Dario's Venomous, surprise victory in John Alden Handicap, Suffolk Downs by full length over Pine Echo.

Soviet track and field star, Galina Zybina, the shotput event at London in which she bettered her own world record of 16.78 meters (about 55 feet). Giuseppe Merlo, miffed because he was left off the Italian Houston Tics Texas Aggies HOUSTON', Wi An aroused University of Houston football team, led by halfback Harold Lewis, thrilled a Homecoming Crowd of 67,00) last night by battling ninth-ranked Texas Ai.M to a 14-14 tie, stopping an Aggie threat on the one-yard line in the final minute of play. Buddy Boek, 175 pound senior end, preserved the tie for Houston by breaking through to smear quarterback Roddy Osborne lor a six yard, fourth down loss with just S3 seconds remaining after the Aggies bad driven 90-yards to the Cougar one-yard line. (Continued from 1-C) Augustana (SD) 13, Iowa State Tchrs 6 Southern Tchrs (SD) 12, Black Hills (SD) 0 Bethel (Kan) 23, Bethany (Kan) 7 Pittsburgh (Kan) 27, Ft. Hays Slate 6 North Park 14, Concordia (111) fi St.

Thomas (Minn) 18, Concordia (Minn) 13 Bradley 2fi, Northern Illinois 7 Northeastern (Okla) 20, East Central (Okla) 0 Southwestern (Okla) 19, Central State (Okla) 7 Western Reserve 20, Buffalo Iniv, 13 Beloit 3, Depauw 0 Whitewater 34, Stout 7 Platteville 7, Oshkosh State 2 Capital 33, Krnyon 0 Central State (Ohio) 13, Kentucky State 13 (Tie) Ohio Wesleyan 33, Akron 27 Kent Stale 32. Ohio Iniv. 13 Ashland 40, Ohio Northern 13 U'ooster 19, Denison 7 Knox 33, Monmouth 7 Central Michigan 44, Western Illinois 20 Carthage 47, Chicago Illinl 0 Southwestern (Kan) 13, Emporia Stale Missouri Mines 33, Klrksville (Mo) Kansas Wesleyan 53, Ottawa (Kan) 0 Boston College 26, Marquette 19 Xavier (Ohio) 34, Cincinnati 14 Missouri North Dakota Slate 0 Hillsdale Alma 3 H(iie Z'i. Adrian 7 Wayne (Mich) 19. Kalamazoo 7 Kansas Iowa Stale 14 Hansen Slate 10, Nebraska 7 BBDSAILS AHJTO iJIMDBDY WCDE.EESS Ph.

7-1348 If It Is Done By It Must Be Done Right 330 13th Are. South THE FIIJEST WORK IN THE CITY AUTO WHi; KS SIULLU IXY E0DY FEIIDER WORK A SPECIALTY Mil as) SEAT COVERS TAILOR MADE! UP TO 12 i I Up MONTHS CREDIT PAYMENT PLAN.

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