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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 1

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The Capital Timesi
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Madison, Wisconsin
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1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TDM DOME EDITION Net Paid Circulation 41,368 The Urcect net eio eafly circulation WEATIIER Clearing and colder tonight. Sunday partly cloudy. Low tonight 5 above. High Sunday 22. Sun rose sets 5:03.

1 of any newspaper of Milwaukee. Wisconsin outside In case of emertency phonal Fire Dept. 5-7272 Police Dept. 6-3131 Associated Pres United Press Associated Press Wirephotos it NEA Feature Service ir Acme Telephoto VOL.1 69, NO. 40 Catered as second class matter at the postoffice in Madison.

Wisconsin, under the act of March 3, 1879. MADISON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 26, 1952 DIAL 5-1611 16 PAGES PRICE FIVE CENTS 4 Will Wed If Weather Is Willing Willy Woodchuck Woos And Wins Winsome Wife Kidnaped Girl Is Found Dead; Quiz Mother Kiolrng Cairo Mobs Bern Near Full 'Break With British lias Housed Many Business Firms Razing of Chapman Idg. Recalls Its Colorful Past Conflicting Stories of Death Cause Told by Portland Woman PORTLAND, Ore. UP) A 21- year-old mother, after leading po lice to a gas company waste sump where the body of her 3-year-old child was found, told conflicting stories today of how the child met death. The little girl, Sherrie Ellen Kader, was the object of a statewide search after her mother re- Score Killed, 100 Hurt In Reign of Arson and Hate in Capital By FRED J.

ZUSY CAIRO, Erypt -W Rioting Egyptian mobs ran wild through Cairo today, burning, looting, smashing and screaming anti-British, pro-Russian slogans. A score were reported killed and almost 100 hurt in the rioting. The new wave of arson and hate came as Egypt considered a complete break in her relations with Britain because of British refusal to withdraw from the vital Suez canal zone. The move reportedly was decided by the Egyptian cabinet because of bloody fighting Friday in Ismailia, where the British disarmed and jailed Egyptian police after a 6-hour battle. BRITISH WARSHIPS steamed full-speed from Malta to guard British troops and installations in 4he canal area and Britain threatened to clamp martial law over the whole area if the situation got out of hand.

Reinforced police were helpless against the mobs, despite their use of tear gas, shotguns and sticks. The violence stopped only after Egyptian troops moved into the city, firing over the heads of the crowds. Police sources said 16 Egyptians were killed and 80 wounded during todays rioting. Three or four Britons were reported killed when a screaming mob set gasoline torches to the exclusive British Turf Club in the heart of the city. hearsal for the benefit of newspaper reporters and photographers would be held later today.

News of the wedding is expected to bolster Sun Prairies claim as the world's groundhog capital, which was challenged Friday by citizens of Punxataw-ney. Pa. A Punxatawney newspaper, scoffing at Sun Prairies title claims, described the Dane county village as a remote two-cow village buried somewhere in the wilderness of the midwest. The -Punxatawney paper, noting that a hatchery was located in Sun Prairie, charged that it must be a nut hatchery according to the fantastic ideas the people have out there. (Photo by Edwin Stein).

The Chapman Building A wistful woodchuck who wooed and won his winsome wife-to-be will wed his sweetheart in Sacred Heart parish hall at Sun Prairie next Saturday night on Groundhog Day. The ceremony will be a' part of Sun Prairies annual celebration honoring natures famed weather forecaster. Miss Sleep AI1 Winter Willy Woodchucks application for the marriage license was filed today in the Dane county marriage license bureau at the courthouse by Stanley Fisher (rigfyt). Sun Prairie Ground Hog club official. County Clerk Keith Schwartz (left) is shown approving the license, issued to Willy and his bride-to-be, Miss Sleep All Winter.

Fisher said a wedding re By STERLING SORENSEN A Capitol square landmark as old as this century the Chandler B. Chapman two-story, red brick store building at N. Carroll and W. Mifflin sts. is being razed, and its passing wifi close another colorful chapter in the mercantile history of Madison.

Men prominent in government, commerce, industry and the retail trades have been identified with the landsite as owners and tenants since Gov. James Duane Doty platted the site over 125 years ago. Occupied for the past 10 years Was Mem bp of C. It. Crane The Gallup Poll; Mac Ike Lead Survey for Most Mrs.

Harold C. Bradley Dies At Berkeley on Friday Six Injured In Bus Crash On Icy Road Madison Truck Driver Is Involved in 1 a River Falls Mishap BLACK RIVER FALLS, Wis. Six persons were injured today when a Greyhound bus and a truck collided on an icy road 6 miles south of here. The Jackson county sheriffs department corrected a previous announcement which stated two persons had been killed. Two of the injured were unconscious when taken from the wrecked bus, giving rise to the report that deaths had occurred.

THE BUS was enroute to Minneapolis from Chicago on Highway 12. The crash occurred at 7:50 a.m. The injured included: Eleanor Jensen, Chicago, bruises. X-rays are being taken to determine other injuries. Ernest Anderson, the truck driver, 605 University Madison, serious head injuries.

Roy A. Nelson, Minneapolis, fractured shoulder and minor bruises. Robert Brownlee, Kitchener, Canada, minor bruises and lacerations. Frank Gardner, St. Paul, back injuries not considered serious.

X-rays are being taken. Nelson was on his way home to Minneapolis from Camp Atterbury, where he was discharged from the army Friday. ATTENDANTS AT THE Krohn clinic here said Anderson was the only one of the injured whose condition was critical. The others were due to be released tonight or Sunday. The truck, belonging to Allied Van Lines, was south when it met the bus, which was traveling north to Black River Falls.

There were no known witnesses to the accident but authorities said the vehicles apparently slid into each other while passing on a curve. The truck car struck near the rear of bus, badly damaging the cab and crushing the back end of the bus. Roy Miller, of Black River Falls, the first person to arrive on the scene, said he found the two bus drivers standing outside the bus apparently unhurt. Local Woman Is Stabbed Five Times By Man A 31-year-old Madison woman was stabbed five times today with a butcher knife and beaten by a man whom she identified to police. The woman, Mrs.

William Taylor, 2036 Dane is in Madison General hospital. She was stabbed and slashed on the head under the left eye, in the left arm, and twice in the left leg. She also suffered body bruises and a possible frac tured jaw. She and two witnesses identified the assailant. Clarence Brown and his son, Robert Brown, both of 2016 Third told Detective Capt.

Harry L. Mil-sted that the stabbing took place in the 1900 block of Fisher st. after they had picked up Mrs. Taylor to give her a ride to work. They said the assailant, in a car, forced the Browns to stop.

Then the assailant ordered Robert Brown to drive the assailants car. The man then got in the front seat of the Browns car with Mrs. Taylor. After riding only a short distance, the assailant ordered Clarence Brown to stop the car, jerked Mrs. Taylor out of the machine and began beating and stabbing her, according to the report given to police.

While the Browns rushed to aid Mrs. Taylor, the assailant ran to his car and drove away, eluding police officers who arrived a short time later. Bleeding Man Is Saved by Withers Eddie Withers, university football star, saved a student from possibly bleeding to death by applying a tourniquet to the students arm which was cut in a fall at the Monroe Park trailer camp. Police said the student, Robert Gehring, 26, trailer 117, fell near his trailer, was knocked unconscious and suffered a severely cut arm. Withers passing through the camp noticed Gehring lying unconscious and bleeding.

Withers applied a tourniquet and a police ambulance took Gehring to the student infirmary. Carrier Boy Asks Aid In Finding Route Book Roger Engroff, 2121 Sommers a Capital Times carrier boy, lost his Route book. No. 522, near Atwood ave. and Division st.

Friday. Anyone finding it is asked to call Roger at 4-6159. By GEORGE GALLUP American Institute of Public Opinion) PRINCETON, N. J. Two generals, Douglas MacArthur and Dwight D.

Eisenhower, run virtually neck-and-neck as the man most admired by the American public today, with Gen. MacArthur slightly ahead. Pres. Truman finishes next in this admiration derby, followed by Winston Churchill, Sen. Robert A.

Taft, and former Pres. Herbert Hoover. The most admired man survey is conducted annually by the American Institute of Public Opinion. Interviewers throughout the country personally questioned a cross-section of adults asking: What man that you have heard or read about, living today in any part of the world, do you admire the MOST?" Here are the 10' who received the most votes in the latest survey; 1 Douglas MacArthur 2 Dwight D. Eisenhower 3 Harry S.

Truman 4 Winston Churchill 5 Robert A. Taft 6 Herbert Hoover 7 Pope Pius 8 Estes Kefauver 9 Albert Einstein 10 Earl Warren Carl Laughnan, Wife, Daughter Hurt In Crash Rose Corcoran, 16, Also Injured; Milwaukee Man Is Killed Four Madison residents were injured and a Milwaukee man killed when two cars skidded into a head-on collision near Waukesha Friday night. The injured: CARL W. LAUGHNAN, 56, of 2112 Hollister chest injuries. LORETTA LAUGHNAN, 47, his wife, fractured leg, chest injuries.

CLAIRE LAUGHNAN, 16, their ported her kidnapped last Wednesday. But Friday night, after 7 hours quest ion-ing, the mother, Mrs. Jada Z. Kader, sud den-Sherrie Kader ly screamed, I didnt do it. I didnt do it.

Ill lead you to her. SHE THEN SAID that Sherrie had been killed when Vickie, her 4-year-old sister, struck her with a concrete slab, police sfcid. They said Mrs. Kader explained she dumped the body in sump and made up the kidnap story because she became frightened. Later she changed her story again.

Detective Bob McKeown said Mrs. Kader now says she thinks her Chinese stepfather, Eugene Sing, with whom the family lived, killed the child. But she appeared to be extremely hazy about how the child actually died, McKeoi said. She said it was Sing who dumped the body into the nearby gas companys sump, McKeown He quoted her as saying: She made up the kidnap story after Sing had threatened her and her other daughter with hatchet men, if she told the truth about Sherries death. SHE GOT VICKIE to believe that a gray-haired man had kid naped Sherrie by taking Vickie outside and showing her a man getting into a She said she told Vickie that the man was taking Sherrie away.

"Vickie had told police she pulled away from the kidnaper before he snatched Sherrie. Detective Capt. William Browne said Sing denied all of Mrs. Kaders charges. Browne said questioning would continue today.

The girls father, Arthur Vernon Dollarhide, 34, a tire repairman, walked into the San Francisco police station Friday when he learned he was being sought for questioning in connection with the disappearance. He was en route to Portland when the body was found. Board Urges Union Accept Carrier Offer WASHINGTON (JP) A presidential board recommended today that the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen accept a railroad offer of a pay raise of 23V cents an hour for road service and 38 cents for yard work. On the immediate pay issue and other questions in dispute, the ree ommendations from the special emergency panel followed an offer made by the carriers over a year ago. The board refused to go along with a union demand for an extra 9 cents an hour for yard men when a 40-hour week replaces the present 48-hour work week.

The board said the additional boost should only be 4 cents. WORKING RULES CHANGES proposed by the railroads also would be accepted under the boards recommendations, with but little modification. The dispute between the rail lines and the firemen and engine-men is two years old. The boards recommendations are based on a settlement made last year with the trainmens union. The firemen have already received a 12V cent boost for yard men and 5 cents for road service employes from the army, which seized the railroads in November, 1950, and is still" technically in control.

These amounts would be deductible from the new raises recommended by the board. The board took occasion to remark that a union boycott of its hearings made its work considerably more difficult than it otherwise would have been. MEMBERS OF THE BOARD were Carroll R. Daugherty of Illinois, chairman George Cheney of California, and Andrew Jack- Continued on page 2, col. 7) mnwnueaHriza The modem girl con cook just os well as her mother, but her husband probably can't stand indigestion as well os her father.

By WILLIAM T. EVJUE MEMO TO II a Casserly, sports department: Lawrence Whittet of Edgerton wants to know why Billy Sullivan, the great old time White Sox catcher, has not been elected to the athletic hall of fame in the Milwaukee arena. Lawrence says that he was one of the greatest catchers of his era and he was raised on a farm down near Fort Atkinson. Mr. Whittet also maintains that Sullivan was the inventor of the catchers chest protector which is worn today by all catchers in baseball.

Lawrence, who played ball with Billy Sullivan in an early day, says that Sullivan was always a gentleman and a model of good behavior, that he never tasted a drop of hard liquor. He also tells of another tribute to Sullivan. In the early days of Billys career, there was only one umpire in a baseball game. The umpire stood behind the catcher when there was no one on bases. However, the minute a runner got on first base, the umpire would take a position behind the pitcher in order to be in a better position to render decisions on the bases.

Umpires in those days had so much respect and confidence in Billy Sullivans integrity and honesty that when a player put down a bunt along the third baseline that the umpire behind the pitchers box couldnt judge, he would ask Sullivan as to whether or not the ball had gone fair or foul and then announce his decision. A LETTER from the American Research Foundation, Princeton, N.J., addressed to William T. Evjue, Castle Place, has reached this desk. TOM MORRISSY of Eikhom, an old line Wisconsin Progressive who is wintering at Dania, is still up to his old tricks. He writes: I save my copies of The Capital Times and carefully place them in cars with Wisconsin license plates parked here or at Hollywood.

I take special delight in putting one in every Wisconsin Cadillac I see. I dojt to educate them but my wife says that I am a I do it to spoil their Florida vacation. FRANK EDWARDS, the news commentator sponsored by the American Federation of Labor over American Broadcasting Co. stations, relays the information to this scribe by long distance phone that Edwards has been named as the third best news commentator in the, nation in the poll of radio editors and critics conducted by the Motion Picture Daily and Fame. Ed Murrow who has been on the air for 14 years was first and Lowell Thomas, second.

THE FIGHT against secrecy in government in Washington is making some progress. Drew Pearson, the columnist, and Alexander S. Jones, president of the American Society of Newspaper Editors, have come out in favor of public inspection of federal income tax. returns. Sens.

Morse of Oregon and Humphrey of Minnesota have taken the same position. And now comes word that two senators have introduced a bill to block secret settlements with delinquent taxpayers. Sens. John K. Williams of Delaware and Richard Nixon of California want the bureau to report all compromise settlements to congress.

The bill should be passed. THE STATE PRESS; The Eau Claire Leader comes out editorially in favor of a universal military program. The Racine Journal-Times announces Phil La Follette and Atty. Gen. Thomson as speak ers at Racine.

Thomson spoke to the Racine Taxpayers association Thursday night and La Follette will speak to the Racine Real Estate board at a banquet tonight. The Janesville Gazette carried a picture last week which should be of interest to labor. It showed Sen. Taft flanked on one side by Thomas Coleman, a member of the Taft general staff, and on the other by Harvey Higley, chairman of the Wisconsin Republican Voluntary organization and chairman of the Wisconsin Taft for President club. Taft is one of the authors of the Taft-Hartley law.

Coleman is the president of the Madison Kipp Co. which has fought all attempts of organized labor to unionize the plant. Higley is president of the Ansul Chemical Marinette, which also is a non-union plant. A COMMENTARY on That Terrible Fourth Year by the Atlanta Journal points out that three years in four, life in our United States is wonderful. We say and do about as we please, and what we please has some degree of sense.

so in the fourth year, the election year. Rules of mathematics, of manners (Continued on page 2, col. 7) iijin jj by the Burdick and Murray Co. department store and service and sales shops, the Chapman building was built in 1900 at a cost of $19,000, according to the records in the office of the city assessor. And, indicative of the tremendous rise in Capitol square prop erty, these same records show last year it was assessed at over quarter-million dollars.

THE CHAPMAN building has a 65-foot front on N. Carroll and extends back 154 feet on W. Mifflin st. It is being torn down to (Continued on page 2, col. 6) Family yJ xf A if 4 (a a V'.

a i Mrs. Harold Bradley Midwest Dems Urge Truman, Barkley Slate Resolution Is Expected To Be Adopted At Kansas City Rally KANSAS CITY, Ras. Midwestern Democrats called today for a Truman-Barkley ticket for the November presidential election. A resolution approved by a subcommittee for presentation to the midwestern Democratic conference called upon Mr. Truman to be our standardbearer in 1952 and urged that he accept renomination at the national convention in Chicago in July.

We also urge that the beloved statesman, Alben W. Barkley, be renominated to the office of vice-president of the United States, the resolution said. A RESOLUTIONS committee report also pledged the midwestern Democrats wholehearted support of Pres. Trumans stand that any public officials who have violated their trust be justly punished. We back the president in his determination to protect the good name of honest and loyal government workers and to maintain confidence in public service, the resolution said.

We call to the attention of the people of the United States that honesty and decency is not a partisan issue. The resolution on Truman and Barkley seemed headed for speedy approval by the conference. Some of the Democrats here have made it clear that Pres. Truman will not seek another term. Some of the Democrats privately have opposed another nomination for Barkley because of his age.

THE VICE-PRESIDENT, presiding at a panel session, told reporters that he is fully recovered from a stomach upset which caused him to call a physician for assistance as he became nauseated following a speech at Jefferson City, Friday night. Although the Democrats appear (Continued on page 2, col. 7). THE ENTRY of the Egyptian troops apparently brought the mobs to their senses and the crowchwas dispersed after nightfall. But many a building still was blazing.

Shop windows were shattered. U. S. Consul Lamar Mulliner said the Americans were removed under the police escort to suburban Heliopolis and no American casualties were reported. Mulliner said Robert L.

Schmitt, American manager of the Metro Cinema theater, barely escaped through the back door when the crowd set it ablaze. He took refuge in the S. embassy. The pro-government newspaper, A1 Misri, said an emergency cabinet meeting sitting late into the night decided to break relations with Britain. There was no confirming announcement from the government, but an official from Premier Mus-tapha El Nahas Pashas office told a mob, howling for revenge, it would hear of a historic decision today or Sunday.

THIS WAVE OF anti-British hatred swelled for a week and broke open after the battle at Ismailia Friday, when British troops used tanks and big guns to crush police detachment and forcibly disarm it after 6 hours of bitter fighting. Four Britons were killed and nine wounded. The Egyptians said they lost 46 dead and 73 wounded. The British, after mopping up, reported today 41 police were killed and 63 wounded. They said they captured 1,163 rifles and still hold 800 to 1,000 auxiliary policemen who, they charge, have joined guerrilla attackers.

A1 Misri said effectiveness of the cabinet decision was delayed until Sunday to allow time for stud jin next moves consequent upon that momentous decision. NO U. N. ACTION YET PARIS UP) An Egyptian spokesman said today no step will be made in the United Nations on the Egyptian-British dispute until the Egyptian cabinet announces its decision in Cairo Sunday. Dr.

Mahmoud Azmi told a hews conference that not even an in- (Continued on page 2, col. Ice Blamed For Injuries To 3 Persons Two Madison and one Black Earth resident were injured Friday in accidents blamed on icy sidewalks and highway conditions. Mrs. Joseph Havel, 52, of 230 N. Brooks fractured her right hip in a fall in the 200 block of E.

Main st. She was taken to Methodist hospital by police ambulance. Jack B. Kibbe, 28, of 54 Craig suffered knee bruises and face cuts, and Mrs. Donna Schultz, 17, Black Earth, suffered a cut right hand, in a traffic accident near Middleton.

Kibbe and Mrs. Schultz were Injured when the cars they were driving collided on Highway 12-13. Kibbe and Mrs. Schultz were taken to their hemes by county police. Madison police said that the walk on which Mrs.

Havel fell was icy, but well sanded. They said a steel grating may have been responsible for her fall. Berliner 102 Dies BERLIN, Wis. (JF) Mrs. Susan Adelaide Murkley, 102, who saw Berlins young men march off to the Civil war, died Friday.

Mrs. Murkley, a native of New York state who came here with her parents by stage coach In 1865, was asked her opinion of the world on her 100th birthday. Its in a hell of a mess, she said in sprightly fashion. Willy Woodchuck LAST YEAR Gen. MacArthur and Gen.

Eisenhower were also the top two, with Eisenhower in the lead. Truman and Churchill were next. Sen. Taft rose from sixth place last year to fifth tbis year. Albert Einstein, famous physicist who propounded the theory of relativity, and Sen.

Kefauver, are newcomers to the top 10 this year. The institutes man-of-the-year surveys havbeen conducted since 1946. The publics top choice in both 1946 and 1947 was Gen. MacArthur. In 1948 and 1949 Pres.

Truman led the list while Gen. Eisenhower, as indicated, walked off with the honors for 1950. THE FACT THAT two generals finish so high on the list of the most admired is of particular interest at the present moment, when there is considerable discussion over whether military leaders should run for high political office. In todays study, the choice of "most admired man among persons who have had college training were as follows: Eisenhower, MacArthur, Churchill, Hoover and Taft. A somewhat similar survey was recently conducted by the institute on famous women who run high in the esteem of American women.

A list of women well known throughout the world was shown to each woman voter and she was asked: Which of these famous women comes closest to your ideal of what you, yourself, would like to be? The five who got the most votes were Sister Kenny, Eleanor Roosevelt, Kate Smith, Queen Elizabeth and Princess Elizabeth of England. Where to Find It Comics Page 4 Radio Programs Page 11 Show Time Page 5 Society Page 6 Sports Pages 9, 10. 11 Markets Page 12 Mrs. Josephine Crane Bradley, wife of. C.

Bradley, former prominent member of the University of Wisconsin medical school faculty, died Friday night in Berkeley, where the family had moved several years ago. Mrs. Bradley was the daughter of the late Charles R. Crane, retired manufacturer and former minister to China. She was born in attended the University of Wisconsin.

The Bradley family formerly lived for many years at 2914 Oxford rd. in Shorewood Hills. She is survived by her husband and seven sons, Charles, Harold, Joseph, Richard, William David, and Stephen. John F. Moran, 46, Dies At Hospital John F.

Moran, 46, of 1811 W. Lawn died today at a local hospital. He was associated with his brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Don Newcombe, in the Na-koma Trading Post.

Survivors include his wife, Viv ian; a daughter, Mary Lou; and three sisters, Mrs. George Barrett, Seattle, Mrs. Newcombe and. Mrs. Floyd Geller, Madison; and a brother, Edward, Madison.

The body is at the Frautschi funeral home. Report 2nd Woman In Bank Robbery FBI agents today were investigating reports that a second woman may have been involved in the escape of the Mutt and Jeff bandits who stole $9,800 at the Edmund bank Monday. A Madison truck driver told investigators he saw a woman and a child parked in an auto the day of the holdup near where the bandits escape car was found abandoned. Earlier this week, agents said a red-haired woman and a child were seen parked along a side road near Cobb in the same vicinity. The women were reported to be driving cars of diffirent colors and different makes.

Russ Promise Wa r. Aid to Red Ch inese MOSCOW (.11 1 The Communist partys official organ Pravda says Russia would fight beside Red China if ever felt she was being attacked by the Japanese or any forces allied with the Japanese." Pravda was commenting on Japanese Premier Shigeru Yoshidas recent disclosure that Japan was prepared, when possible, to con elude a treaty with the Chinese Nationalist regime of Chiang Kai-Shek, now in refuge on Formosa. The Chinese Reds have pledged themselves to wipe out Chiangs island center of resistance. That is why diplomats here regarded the Pravda statements with concern. daughter, cuts on face, bruises.

ROSE CORCORAN, 16, of 920 Erin chest injuries, possible fractured leg. Dale Smith, 27, Milwaukee, was killed outright when his car collided with one driven by Laugh-nan. Mr. and Mrs. Laughnan The Laughnans and Miss Corcoran were returning to Madison from Milwaukee, where they had spent the day.

The four were taken by ambu lance to Waukesha Memorial hospital, where it was reported that Laughnan, a Madison business man, was most seriously injured of the four. None is in critical condition, the hospital reported. Miss Corcoran, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Richard B.

Corcoran, and Miss Laughnan are friends. Both girls are Edgewood high school pupils. Roy Rogers Famous Horse Is Up for Sale WHARTON, Tex. (IP) Roy Rogers horse Trigger, whose speed and palomino beauty have thrilled millions of movie-going small fry, may retire from the silver screen. Oilman-Rancher J.

B. Ferguson said he and Rogers will meet today to discuss a $200,000 offer for the Actors famous horse, now 19 years old and known to have a younger successor standing by in Rogers stable. 4..

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