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Old 03-25-2011, 09:11 AM   #1
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{Traditional intelligence tools like wiretaps and secret intercepts didn't help U.S. officials predict the revolutions that have swept across the Middle East and North Africa. Now, officials are searching for systematic ways to use open sources ? and there could be some answers in Google.|Robert Mueller began his 10-year term as director in September 2001, days before the terrorist attacks that would change the bureau's direction. As Mueller prepares to step aside, lawmakers and agents have their own ideas about his successor.|With the earthquake, the tsunami and the nuclear crisis, much has been made of Japanese resilience. But some say that it can go too far, and that keeping emotions bottled up doesn't help. One counselor says very few people have wanted to talk about what they're going through.|A newly excavated site in central Texas contains evidence that the first human settlers in the Lone Star state arrived more than 15,000 years ago ? that's more than 2,000 years earlier than scientists originally had thought.|In 1965, when Jon Brock's behavior began to change, his family took him to a psychiatric hospital, where he was treated for schizophrenia. The doctors said it was likely he would never leave. Today, he has a family ? and a career of helping mental health patients with their recovery.|A network of sensors designed to pick up traces of nuclear bomb tests is being used to track radiation from the stricken nuclear power plant in Japan. Experts hope the data will be able to tell them information that won't otherwise be available until the reactors become less radioactive.|Teens growing up in dangerous neighborhoods are more likely to become targets of violence. Members of the CeaseFire program in Chicago aim to reduce shootings and killings by patrolling the streets to intervene on potentially violent situations.|The Libyan leader faces unilateral U.S. sanctions plus sanctions imposed by the U.N. and the European Union.The measures are stricter than anything imposed on any other state. The goal is to choke off his money supply and loosen his hold on power.|"One of great things about modern economies is they have tremendous redundancy, resilience, robustness in the face of damage," an economist says.|Japanese nuclear safety officials said Friday that they suspect that the reactor core at one unit of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant may have breached, raising the possibility of more severe contamination to the environment.|The United States welcomed a partial handover for the Libyan air campaign to NATO. The allies apparently balked at assuming full control and the U.S. military was left in charge of the brunt of combat.|A leading radiation researcher in Japan says it will be tough to study health effects from the Fukushima accident in the population at large. The doses are likely to be small and very difficult to estimate.|A private funeral service was held Thursday at a cemetery famous for being the final resting place of Hollywood celebrities, including her good friend Michael Jackson. The actress died Wednesday of congestive heart failure.|Not only can you apply online to be the next voice of the Aflac duck, but you can also try to get into one of the casting calls (shouldn't that be "quacking calls?") that will be held next week in six cities.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|"One of great things about modern economies is they have tremendous redundancy, resilience, robustness in the face of damage," an economist says.|The Libyan leader faces unilateral U.S. sanctions plus sanctions imposed by the U.N. and the European Union.The measures are stricter than anything imposed on any other state. The goal is to choke off his money supply and loosen his hold on power.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|Rolling blackouts in the Tokyo area are crippling businesses as diverse as automakers and fishmongers. The blackouts could continue for months, even years, as Japan struggles to bridge the gap between different power grids operating in its eastern and western regions.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The people of Iceland are voting on whether to make good on a failed bank's debts. Help our Icelandic intern decide how to vote.|Japanese automakers are trying to get going again, but the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami have disrupted their supply chains.|Linguist Geoff Nunberg says everyone's using the phrase "we're broke" these days to justify cuts in government programs and services. But what does "we're broke" actually mean? The answer, says Nunberg, is trickier than you might think.|As college basketball dives into the Sweet 16, March Madness has never been so crazy ? or so rich. Despite a surge in players leaving for the NBA, the tournament is setting ratings and money records.|U.S. companies trimmed their orders for long-lasting manufactured goods by 0.9 percent in February, while a key category that signals business investment fell for a second month. Manufacturing activity has been expanding since the recession officially ended in June 2009.|Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, evidence that layoffs are slowing and employers may be stepping up hiring. Claims dropped 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 382,000, the fourth drop in the past five weeks.|Nintendo is releasing its new 3DS handheld device in the U.S. this weekend. It's the first 3D game system that doesn't require special glasses. Harold Goldberg, who covers video games for G4TV.com and Boys' Life magazine, talks to Steve Inskeep about the video game industry, and whether its been affected by the disasters in Japan.|Insurance company Aflac is taking applications from people who want to be the new voice of its signature duck. The company fired comedian Gilbert Gottfried after he posted insensitive remarks on Twitter about the disaster in Japan, a place where Aflac makes much of its money.|This week marks 100 years since a fire at the Triangle Waist Company factory in New York City killed 146 people, most of them poor young women. The event is often cited as the catalyst for modern workplace safety rules, and a major boost to the nascent union movement. A century later, the debate over the nation's labor laws continues to rage.|Two planes landed at Washington's Reagan National Airport on Tuesday night without control tower clearance. They were in communication with a regional air traffic control facility in Virginia.|A newly excavated site in central Texas contains evidence that the first human settlers in the Lone Star state arrived more than 15,000 years ago ? that's more than 2,000 years earlier than scientists originally had thought.|A network of sensors designed to pick up traces of nuclear bomb tests is being used to track radiation from the stricken nuclear power plant in Japan. Experts hope the data will be able to tell them information that won't otherwise be available until the reactors become less radioactive.|Japanese nuclear safety officials said Friday that they suspect that the reactor core at one unit of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant may have breached, raising the possibility of more severe contamination to the environment.|A leading radiation researcher in Japan says it will be tough to study health effects from the Fukushima accident in the population at large. The doses are likely to be small and very difficult to estimate.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|The government is asking people not to eat spinach, parsley and other produce grown near the damaged nuclear power plant because some is tainted with radiation. This is putting some farmers, many of whom have to demolish whole crops, in a bind.|Rolling blackouts in the Tokyo area are crippling businesses as diverse as automakers and fishmongers. The blackouts could continue for months, even years, as Japan struggles to bridge the gap between different power grids operating in its eastern and western regions.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|Officials in Japan have been fielding a lot of questions about radiation in drinking water. Tokyo's local government discovered slightly elevated levels of radioactive iodine in the city's water. Parents were advised not to give tap water to babies, who are especially vulnerable to this form of radiation. The advisory created a run on bottled water.|No country is more familiar with nuclear peril than Japan. One might think then that people in Japan would be traumatized by the calamity at the nuclear power complex in Fukushima. But the reality is more nuanced than that ? even the most horrible events fade from cultural memory.|In the second installment of Tell Me More's conversation on the future of nuclear power in the United States, guest host Farai Chideya explores safer energy alternatives. The debate on the safety of nuclear energy has been reignited by the continuing radiation threat at the Fukushima power plant in Japan. About twenty percent of the country's electricity is generated by nuclear facilities. Chideya speaks with Jigar Shah, CEO of Carbon War Room, a non-profit group championing clean energy technology. She also hears from leading environmental justice activist Robert Bullard, about how new power plants might disproportionately affect minority communities.|Workers in Japan want to look inside three troubled reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. But intense radiation inside the buildings means that it is too dangerous for them to enter. One solution? Robots. They're good at going places where people just don't want to go. And they could be at the site in a matter of days.|Reaction to Japan's nuclear crisis has differed sharply across Europe. In Italy, fear of losing upcoming local elections has forced the conservative government to slow its push to re-introduce nuclear power. Rome is calling for a one-year moratorium on nuclear power. Anti-nuclear activists say it's just a ploy to buy time.|Human beings are two-thirds water ? and one could think of us forming a river as we move through life. Contemplating these striking photos from St. Petersburg, it's not so hard to believe.|Early indications suggest most of the radiation released comes from iodine-131 ? and that decays quickly, with a half-life of just eight days. That means that over the course of two or three months, virtually all of the radiation should be gone.|The pale pink flowers are coming into bloom just weeks after an earthquake and tsunami devastated the country. Japanese art expert James Ulak talks with NPR's Linda Wertheimer about how the cherry blossoms have long symbolized the ephemeral nature of life.|Kate Winslet stars in the new HBO miniseries, Mildred Pierce, a remake of the classic Joan Crawford film about an ambitious woman capable of anything ? even murder. Director Todd Haynes discusses his version of the film on Morning Edition.|Wilson was one of four founders of The Circle Repertory Company in New York, an incubator of important off-Broadway works. He was nominated for Tony Awards for Angels Fall, Talley's Folly and Fifth of July.He won the Pulitzer for drama in 1980 for Talley's Folly,|A private funeral service was held Thursday at a cemetery famous for being the final resting place of Hollywood celebrities, including her good friend Michael Jackson. The actress died Wednesday of congestive heart failure.|The new installment in a film franchise based on the widely loved kids' books, Rodrick Rules may pass muster with Wimpy Kid fans who don't have much moviegoing under their belts ? but to film-literate parents, it'll seem rote and uninspired.|Tony Gatlif's drama of Roma persecution in Vichy France thrums with the sights and sounds of Gypsy culture ? but standard war-movie tropes blunt the impact of its story.|The grande dame of French cinema teams for the second time with director Francois Ozon ? and for the seventh with co-star Gerard Depardieu ? in a proto-feminist comedy without much import, but with plenty of charm.|The artist-filmmaker looks at the modern Middle East conflict through the eyes of three generations of Palestinian women. Critic Mark Jenkins says the movie strives for evenhandedness, but empty stylistic flourishes and an unfocused narrative lessen its impact.|On March 25, 1911, 146 garment workers ? mostly young, immigrant women ? lost their lives in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in New York City. On the 100th anniversary of the tragedy, people around the country are remembering the victims, and the labor legacy they inspired.|The guys behind South Park teamed with a co-creator of the smutty puppet musical Avenue Q to write a musical about Mormon missionaries in Uganda. Will theater ever be quite the same?|Labor leaders in Maine are outraged over a decision by Republican Gov. Paul LePage and his new administration to remove a 35-foot mural from the Maine Department of Labor. The mural depicts scenes from Maine's labor history, including a strike at a shoe factory and a paper mill as well as Rosie the Riveter. A spokeswoman for the governor says all departments in state government need to make all people feel welcome ? and the mural does not do that.|To live a long life, we've been told, eat well, exercise and manage stress. Now, an eight-decade study indicates that advice is only part of the equation. Howard Friedman and Leslie Martin explain how social connections, personality and marriage affect our lives in The Longevity Project.|The King's Speech will be re-released on April 1 as a PG-13 film with a critical scene re-edited. It's a sad statement on Hollywood's treatment of profanity and young audiences.|Robin Hessman's Sundance-favorite documentary introduces five Moscow schoolmates who came of age in the late 1980s ? and sketches out the sometimes surprising realities of life in post-Soviet Russia.|For centuries in India, yoga has been a practice rooted in the Hindu faith. Today, it is a massively popular fitness tradition in the United States, part of a wellness lifestyle for some 15 million Americans. And some Hindus are not happy with the way yoga is treated in the US. The Hindu American Foundation claims the tradition has strayed too far from its Hindu roots and has launched a campaign called 'Take Back Yoga.' In Tell Me More's weekly "Faith Matters" conversation, guest host Farai Chideya puts the question, "who owns yoga?" to Sheetal Shah of the Hindu American Foundation, and Virginia Cowen, a yoga instructor and body trainer.|
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{Traditional intelligence tools like wiretaps and secret intercepts didn't help U.S. officials predict the revolutions that have swept across the Middle East and North Africa. Now, officials are searching for systematic ways to use open sources ? and there could be some answers in Google.|Robert Mueller began his 10-year term as director in September 2001, days before the terrorist attacks that would change the bureau's direction. As Mueller prepares to step aside, lawmakers and agents have their own ideas about his successor.|With the earthquake, the tsunami and the nuclear crisis, much has been made of Japanese resilience. But some say that it can go too far, and that keeping emotions bottled up doesn't help. One counselor says very few people have wanted to talk about what they're going through.|A newly excavated site in central Texas contains evidence that the first human settlers in the Lone Star state arrived more than 15,000 years ago ? that's more than 2,000 years earlier than scientists originally had thought.|In 1965, when Jon Brock's behavior began to change, his family took him to a psychiatric hospital, where he was treated for schizophrenia. The doctors said it was likely he would never leave. Today, he has a family ? and a career of helping mental health patients with their recovery.|A network of sensors designed to pick up traces of nuclear bomb tests is being used to track radiation from the stricken nuclear power plant in Japan. Experts hope the data will be able to tell them information that won't otherwise be available until the reactors become less radioactive.|Teens growing up in dangerous neighborhoods are more likely to become targets of violence. Members of the CeaseFire program in Chicago aim to reduce shootings and killings by patrolling the streets to intervene on potentially violent situations.|The Libyan leader faces unilateral U.S. sanctions plus sanctions imposed by the U.N. and the European Union.The measures are stricter than anything imposed on any other state. The goal is to choke off his money supply and loosen his hold on power.|"One of great things about modern economies is they have tremendous redundancy, resilience, robustness in the face of damage," an economist says.|Japanese nuclear safety officials said Friday that they suspect that the reactor core at one unit of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant may have breached, raising the possibility of more severe contamination to the environment.|The United States welcomed a partial handover for the Libyan air campaign to NATO. The allies apparently balked at assuming full control and the U.S. military was left in charge of the brunt of combat.|A leading radiation researcher in Japan says it will be tough to study health effects from the Fukushima accident in the population at large. The doses are likely to be small and very difficult to estimate.|A private funeral service was held Thursday at a cemetery famous for being the final resting place of Hollywood celebrities, including her good friend Michael Jackson. The actress died Wednesday of congestive heart failure.|Not only can you apply online to be the next voice of the Aflac duck, but you can also try to get into one of the casting calls (shouldn't that be "quacking calls?") that will be held next week in six cities.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|"One of great things about modern economies is they have tremendous redundancy, resilience, robustness in the face of damage," an economist says.|The Libyan leader faces unilateral U.S. sanctions plus sanctions imposed by the U.N. and the European Union.The measures are stricter than anything imposed on any other state. The goal is to choke off his money supply and loosen his hold on power.|Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold news conferences four times a year to explain the Fed's interest rate decisions and its views on the economy. Currently, the Fed releases a brief statement after its regular meetings, but no officials are available to answer questions.|Rolling blackouts in the Tokyo area are crippling businesses as diverse as automakers and fishmongers. The blackouts could continue for months, even years, as Japan struggles to bridge the gap between different power grids operating in its eastern and western regions.|A report from the inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said companies that operate U.S. nuclear power plants are not telling the government about some equipment defects that could create safety risks.|The people of Iceland are voting on whether to make good on a failed bank's debts. Help our Icelandic intern decide how to vote.|Japanese automakers are trying to get going again, but the devastating March 11 earthquake and tsunami have disrupted their supply chains.|Linguist Geoff Nunberg says everyone's using the phrase "we're broke" these days to justify cuts in government programs and services. But what does "we're broke" actually mean? The answer, says Nunberg, is trickier than you might think.|As college basketball dives into the Sweet 16, March Madness has never been so crazy ? or so rich. Despite a surge in players leaving for the NBA, the tournament is setting ratings and money records.|U.S. companies trimmed their orders for long-lasting manufactured goods by 0.9 percent in February, while a key category that signals business investment fell for a second month. Manufacturing activity has been expanding since the recession officially ended in June 2009.|Fewer Americans applied for unemployment benefits last week, evidence that layoffs are slowing and employers may be stepping up hiring. Claims dropped 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 382,000, the fourth drop in the past five weeks.|Nintendo is releasing its new 3DS handheld device in the U.S. this weekend. It's the first 3D game system that doesn't require special glasses. Harold Goldberg, who covers video games for G4TV.com and Boys' Life magazine, talks to Steve Inskeep about the video game industry, and whether its been affected by the disasters in Japan.|Insurance company Aflac is taking applications from people who want to be the new voice of its signature duck. The company fired comedian Gilbert Gottfried after he posted insensitive remarks on Twitter about the disaster in Japan, a place where Aflac makes much of its money.|This week marks 100 years since a fire at the Triangle Waist Company factory in New York City killed 146 people, most of them poor young women. The event is often cited as the catalyst for modern workplace safety rules, and a major boost to the nascent union movement. A century later, the debate over the nation's labor laws continues to rage.|Two planes landed at Washington's Reagan National Airport on Tuesday night without control tower clearance. They were in communication with a regional air traffic control facility in Virginia.|A newly excavated site in central Texas contains evidence that the first human settlers in the Lone Star state arrived more than 15,000 years ago ? that's more than 2,000 years earlier than scientists originally had thought.|A network of sensors designed to pick up traces of nuclear bomb tests is being used to track radiation from the stricken nuclear power plant in Japan. Experts hope the data will be able to tell them information that won't otherwise be available until the reactors become less radioactive.|Japanese nuclear safety officials said Friday that they suspect that the reactor core at one unit of the troubled Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant may have breached, raising the possibility of more severe contamination to the environment.|A leading radiation researcher in Japan says it will be tough to study health effects from the Fukushima accident in the population at large. The doses are likely to be small and very difficult to estimate.|The shadowy, grainy images bring home in a visceral way the challenges that workers at the Fukushima Dai-ichi plant face, including the very basic obstacle of working in the dark.|The government is asking people not to eat spinach, parsley and other produce grown near the damaged nuclear power plant because some is tainted with radiation. This is putting some farmers, many of whom have to demolish whole crops, in a bind.|Rolling blackouts in the Tokyo area are crippling businesses as diverse as automakers and fishmongers. The blackouts could continue for months, even years, as Japan struggles to bridge the gap between different power grids operating in its eastern and western regions.|At a Tokyo train station, members of the Yomiuri Giants baseball team met with fans as part of an effort to raise money for the tsunami-ravaged Sendai region. It was a brief moment of levity and escape in a country stricken by earthquakes and a nuclear disaster.|Officials in Japan have been fielding a lot of questions about radiation in drinking water. Tokyo's local government discovered slightly elevated levels of radioactive iodine in the city's water. Parents were advised not to give tap water to babies, who are especially vulnerable to this form of radiation. The advisory created a run on bottled water.|No country is more familiar with nuclear peril than Japan. One might think then that people in Japan would be traumatized by the calamity at the nuclear power complex in Fukushima. But the reality is more nuanced than that ? even the most horrible events fade from cultural memory.|In the second installment of Tell Me More's conversation on the future of nuclear power in the United States, guest host Farai Chideya explores safer energy alternatives. The debate on the safety of nuclear energy has been reignited by the continuing radiation threat at the Fukushima power plant in Japan. About twenty percent of the country's electricity is generated by nuclear facilities. Chideya speaks with Jigar Shah, CEO of Carbon War Room, a non-profit group championing clean energy technology. She also hears from leading environmental justice activist Robert Bullard, about how new power plants might disproportionately affect minority communities.|Workers in Japan want to look inside three troubled reactors at the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant. But intense radiation inside the buildings means that it is too dangerous for them to enter. One solution? Robots. They're good at going places where people just don't want to go. And they could be at the site in a matter of days.|Reaction to Japan's nuclear crisis has differed sharply across Europe. In Italy, fear of losing upcoming local elections has forced the conservative government to slow its push to re-introduce nuclear power. Rome is calling for a one-year moratorium on nuclear power. Anti-nuclear activists say it's just a ploy to buy time.|Human beings are two-thirds water ? and one could think of us forming a river as we move through life. Contemplating these striking photos from St. Petersburg, it's not so hard to believe.|Early indications suggest most of the radiation released comes from iodine-131 ? and that decays quickly, with a half-life of just eight days. That means that over the course of two or three months, virtually all of the radiation should be gone.|The pale pink flowers are coming into bloom just weeks after an earthquake and tsunami devastated the country. Japanese art expert James Ulak talks with NPR's Linda Wertheimer about how the cherry blossoms have long symbolized the ephemeral nature of life.|Kate Winslet stars in the new HBO miniseries, Mildred Pierce, a remake of the classic Joan Crawford film about an ambitious woman capable of anything ? even murder. Director Todd Haynes discusses his version of the film on Morning Edition.|Wilson was one of four founders of The Circle Repertory Company in New York, an incubator of important off-Broadway works. He was nominated for Tony Awards for Angels Fall, Talley's Folly and Fifth of July.He won the Pulitzer for drama in 1980 for Talley's Folly,|A private funeral service was held Thursday at a cemetery famous for being the final resting place of Hollywood celebrities, including her good friend Michael Jackson. The actress died Wednesday of congestive heart failure.|The new installment in a film franchise based on the widely loved kids' books, Rodrick Rules may pass muster with Wimpy Kid fans who don't have much moviegoing under their belts ? but to film-literate parents, it'll seem rote and uninspired.|Tony Gatlif's drama of Roma persecution in Vichy France thrums with the sights and sounds of Gypsy culture ? but standard war-movie tropes blunt the impact of its story.|The grande dame of French cinema teams for the second time with director Francois Ozon ? and for the seventh with co-star Gerard Depardieu ? in a proto-feminist comedy without much import, but with plenty of charm.|The artist-filmmaker looks at the modern Middle East conflict through the eyes of three generations of Palestinian women. Critic Mark Jenkins says the movie strives for evenhandedness, but empty stylistic flourishes and an unfocused narrative lessen its impact.|On March 25, 1911, 146 garment workers ? mostly young, immigrant women ? lost their lives in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in New York City. On the 100th anniversary of the tragedy, people around the country are remembering the victims, and the labor legacy they inspired.|The guys behind South Park teamed with a co-creator of the smutty puppet musical Avenue Q to write a musical about Mormon missionaries in Uganda. Will theater ever be quite the same?|Labor leaders in Maine are outraged over a decision by Republican Gov. Paul LePage and his new administration to remove a 35-foot mural from the Maine Department of Labor. The mural depicts scenes from Maine's labor history, including a strike at a shoe factory and a paper mill as well as Rosie the Riveter. A spokeswoman for the governor says all departments in state government need to make all people feel welcome ? and the mural does not do that.|To live a long life, we've been told, eat well, exercise and manage stress. Now, an eight-decade study indicates that advice is only part of the equation. Howard Friedman and Leslie Martin explain how social connections, personality and marriage affect our lives in The Longevity Project.|The King's Speech will be re-released on April 1 as a PG-13 film with a critical scene re-edited. It's a sad statement on Hollywood's treatment of profanity and young audiences.|Robin Hessman's Sundance-favorite documentary introduces five Moscow schoolmates who came of age in the late 1980s ? and sketches out the sometimes surprising realities of life in post-Soviet Russia.|For centuries in India, yoga has been a practice rooted in the Hindu faith. Today, it is a massively popular fitness tradition in the United States, part of a wellness lifestyle for some 15 million Americans. And some Hindus are not happy with the way yoga is treated in the US. The Hindu American Foundation claims the tradition has strayed too far from its Hindu roots and has launched a campaign called 'Take Back Yoga.' In Tell Me More's weekly "Faith Matters" conversation, guest host Farai Chideya puts the question, "who owns yoga?" to Sheetal Shah of the Hindu American Foundation, and Virginia Cowen, a yoga instructor and body trainer.|
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