Sunnylands Family Day invites visitors of all ages to appreciate nature

Gavin Nguyen

RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (KESQ) – The Sunnylands Center & Gardens hosted a Family Day on Sunday, inviting valley families to take a moment to learn more about nature.

This month’s Family Day was centered around the center’s new exhibition, dubbed “Curating Canopy: Trees at Sunnylands.” That exhibition debuted in September and will run for the next two years.

Many families brought picnic blankets to lay out on the lawn as kids ran past and played with toys set up on the grass.

With trees at the focus, the hands-on and educational activities for families involved things like coloring in wood rounds cut from trees you can find planted at Sunnylands. Also, exhibitors showed off ways you can weave palm fronds into origami to create art, like this roadrunner.

“We have a lot of tree-related activities, whether it’s the smell, whether it’s the things that come off of them, and a lot of interpretations of what we can do with those things,” highlighted Rhoda Coscetti, the Community Program Specialist at Sunnylands.

Soapmaker It Refills also provided guests with epsom bath salts scented with essential oils that smelled like trees at the center, among other activities. Coscetti said the goal: have the community reinterpret what makes trees special and the way we think about them in our daily lives.

Coscetti explained, “I hope that we can find appreciation and beauty in the nature that surrounds us. And in that appreciation, taking care of those things and just bringing light to that.”

Sunnylands staff said these family day events happen every month or so from January to April. If you missed this one, keep an eye out for the next day of family fun!

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Gauchos women’s tennis comes up just short against #22 Stanford

Mike Klan

UC SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – The UC Santa Barbara women’s tennis team nearly defeated their second top 25 team of the season but, fell to No. 22 Stanford 4-3 on Saturday. UC Santa Barbara secured the doubles point with victories at the No. 2 and No. 3 positions, but was unable to hold the lead in singles play.

THE MATCHFINAL: UC Santa Barbara 3, #22 Stanford 4Records: UC Santa Barbara (4-4), #22 Stanford (4-3)

HOW IT HAPPENEDUC Santa Barbara secured the doubles point with victories on courts two and three. Shachf Liebermann and Ekua Youri opened with a 6-4 win over Sein Myoung and Morgan Shaffer at No. 3 doubles. The decisive point came from Shanelle Iaconi and Isabella Wong, who triumphed 7-6(7-5) against Alyssa Ahn and Tianmei Wang at No. 2 doubles. The Cardinal responded with a 6-4 win at No. 1 doubles by Monika Ekstrand and Caroline Driscoll over My-Anh Holmes and Lily Pradkin.

In singles, Stanford’s #17 Alyssa Ahn put the visitors on the board first with a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Wong at No. 2 singles.

#44 Monika Ekstrand then added another point for the Cardinal with a 6-4, 7-6(7-2) win against #100 Youri at No. 1 singles.

UC Santa Barbara’s Liebermann responded at No. 3 singles, defeating #113 Driscoll 7-5, 6-3.

Emma Tutoveanu evened the match for UC Santa Barbara with a come-from-behind 4-6, 6-1, 6-1 victory over Wang at No. 4 singles. However, the Cardinal clinched the match with consecutive wins at No. 6 and No. 5 singles. Shaffer edged Caroline Beard 1-6, 7-5, 6-1 at No. 6 singles, and Emma Sun sealed the overall victory for Stanford with a 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-3 win over Holmes at No. 5 singles.

RESULTSDoublesMonika Ekstrand/Caroline Driscoll (STAN) def. My-Anh Holmes/Lily Pradkin (UCSB) 6-4Alyssa Ahn/Tianmei Wang (STAN) vs. Shanelle Iaconi/Isabella Wong (UCSB) 6-7(5) (unfinished)Shachf Liebermann/Ekua Youri (UCSB) def. Sein Myoung/Morgan Shaffer (STAN) 6-4

Singles

Singles #44 Monika Ekstrand (STAN) def. #100 Ekua Youri(UCSB) 6-4, 7-6(2) #17 Alyssa Ahn (STAN) def. Isabella Wong (UCSB) 6-4, 6-4 Shachf Liebermann (UCSB) def. #113 Caroline Driscoll (STAN) 7-5, 6-3 Emma Tutoveanu(UCSB) def. Tianmei Wang (STAN) 4-6, 6-1, 6-1 Emma Sun (STAN) def. My-Anh Holmes (UCSB) 6-4, 6-7(7), 6-3 Morgan Shaffer (STAN) def. Caroline Beard (UCSB) 1-6, 7-5, 6-1

UP NEXTUC Santa Barbara will play their second Big West match on Wednesday, Feb. 18, against UC Riverside. The Gauchos and Highlanders will play at 2 p.m. at Arnhold Tennis Center.

(Article courtesy UCSB Athletics; Video courtesy Scott Hennessee)

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Mustangs sweep doubleheader at Campbell for first wins of the season

Mike Klan

BLUE CREEK, North Carolina. (KEYT) – In their Cal Poly debut, Oregon State transfer Laif Palmer scattered four hits over five innings and struck out seven while Sean McGrath and Corden Pettey, both freshmen, allowed just one run over the final four frames as the Mustangs completed a sweep of their doubleheader at Campbell with a 4-3 victory in Saturday’s nightcap at Jim Perry Stadium.

Coupled with a 16-5 triumph in the opener, Cal Poly (2-1) clinched the three-game non-conference series, bouncing back from Friday’s season-opening 5-2 setback. Sunday’s scheduled finale was moved to Saturday night due to an approaching weather front.

“Having to play a doubleheader after losing the opener the day before shows some character and some resilience from our team,” said 24th-year Mustang head coach Larry Lee. “We turned what could have been a big negative into a positive.

“We still have a long way to go in all facets of the game to become the team that we need to become,” Lee added.

In the nightcap, Cal Poly scored single runs in the first and third innings. Dante Vachini opened the game with a double and eventually scored on a groundout by Alejandro Garza. The same two players figured prominently in the third-inning run as well, with Vachini singling and Garza knocking him home with a single of his own.

Campbell scored twice in the fifth to tie the game at 2-2, but Cal Poly wasted no time jumping back on top as Nate Castellon opened the sixth with a double and trotted home on Casey Murray Jr.’s run-scoring single to right field.

The Mustangs added what turned out to be a much-needed insurance run in the ninth on a double by Cam Hoiland and a sacrifice fly off the bat of Jake Downing. Campbell pulled to within a run in the bottom of the ninth on Andrew Keller’s pinch-hit single to right before Pettey induced Carlos Lugo to roll a grounder to shortstop for the game-ending force play at second base.

Palmer (1-0) struck out a pair of batters in both the first and fifth innings to wriggle out of jams as Campbell stranded eight runners on the basepaths. McGrath pitched one scoreless frame while Pettey earned a save by giving up just one run and one hit over three innings, striking out four.

“Palmer threw great, McGrath worked himself out of some trouble and then Petty came in and did a real good job as a first outing for a freshman,” said Lee. “Against a good team on the road and playing three games in the course of 24 hours, we accomplished some things.

“It’s early. We’re still trying to figure out a lot of different things, who fits in where, defensively and in the batting order, but it was a good first weekend to get some answers,” said Lee.

Vachini was the lone Mustang with multiple hits in the nightcap. Four of Cal Poly’s seven hits were doubles. Campbell’s six hits included two singles by designated hitter Jonah Oster.

Cal Poly 16, Campbell 5 (Opener)

Cal Poly produced three crooked numbers, jumping to a 5-0 lead in the first inning, snapping a 5-5 tie with three runs in the seventh and breaking the game wide open with an eight-run ninth-inning rally to win the opener.

A two-run single by Braxton Thomas and a three-run home run by Ryan Tayman staked the Mustangs to their early 5-0 lead in the opening frame.

After Campbell scored in four of its first five at-bats to tie the game at 5-5, the Cal Poly bats woke up again in the seventh, scoring three times on RBI singles off the bats of Thomas and Garza and a sacrifice fly by Hoiland.

The Mustangs sent 13 batters to the plate in the ninth, the eight-run explosion fueled by a two-run single by Dylan Kordic, a two-run double by Castellon and RBI singles from Garza and Downing. A wild pitch and an infield error accounted for the other two runs in the frame.

Josh Morano (1-0) earned the win in relief, securing eight outs and allowing a run and three hits. Nick Bonn tossed the final 2 1/3 innings for his first Mustang save, striking out five. Mustang starter Josh Volmerding went four innings, giving up four runs (three earned) and five hits.

David Rossow (0-1), the fourth of six Campbell pitchers used in the game, suffered the loss, allowing five runs in 2 2/3 frames.

Cal Poly’s 14 hits included three singles by Garza and two hits each for Thomas, Downing and Murray. First baseman Joey Morton had a double and two singles to lead Campbell’s eight-hit offensive attack.

(Article courtesy of Cal Poly Athletics)

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The sweet sound of jazz and 70 years of love fill the air at Colorado assisted living facility

By Kennedy Cook

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    ENGLEWOOD, Colorado (KCNC) — At Brookdale Meridian Englewood, residents gathered to celebrate Valentine’s Day with music, dancing, and heartfelt moments. Among them were Syl and Margaret Walorski, a Colorado couple whose love story has spanned decades.

“We’ve been married 70 years,” Syl said proudly.

Though they now call Brookdale Meridian Englewood home, their romance began generations ago under very different circumstances.

Syl was drafted into the military and sent to Arkansas for basic training. On weekends, soldiers would gather at the local USO club for dances; a welcome break from the demands of service. It was there, on a lively dance floor, that he first met Margaret.

“I was drafted. They sent me to Arkansas, and that’s where I had my basic training,” Syl recalled. “On weekends, they had dances at the USO club (…) and that’s where I met Margaret.”

Their romance began with music and movement, even if it wasn’t always easy.

“Yeah, we danced,” Margaret laughed. “But it’s hard to dance to that music and carry oxygen!”

Decades later, they’re still swaying together, just in time for Valentine’s Day.

“We are here today celebrating Valentine’s Day, the day of love,” one organizer said. “We’re having a Valentine’s Day dance.”

The celebration featured a special performance by the James Barela Swing Quartet as the room was adorned with festive decorations, and sweet treats added to the cheerful atmosphere.

“It’s most important to make these people feel like they’re young again,” an event organizer shared. “Dancing to their music and getting to hold their loved ones that they’ve been with; that’s what it’s all about.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Family says ICE agents faked car trouble to lure man out of home

By Conor Wight

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    MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — On the same day that federal officials announced the end of Operation Metro Surge in Minnesota, a nightmare began for a family in the Minneapolis suburb of Columbia Heights.

Early Thursday afternoon, a security camera captured Jesus Flores leaving his home to help people on the street suffering from apparent car trouble.

Moments later, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents swarmed his driveway.

“[They] tricked him into coming outside,” said Flores’ son, Miguel.

Miguel and his mother, Dionicia, are heartbroken. Dionicia said that her husband is a lifeline for their six children; two of them have autism and require special care.

She said that the family provider was whisked away to El Paso, Texas — likely in violation of a federal judge’s order — within 48 hours of his detainment.

Flores is a mechanic, Miguel explained, who often takes odd jobs for people who know how to get hold of him. Flores’ family believes that the two people caught on a neighbor’s security camera checking underneath their hood in front of the Flores household are ICE agents themselves, luring Flores outside in order to detain him.

The video shows that as he begins examining the vehicle, two other cars fly in and come to a screeching halt, blocking the street on both sides. Flores appears to try to run back inside before multiple agents apprehend him. As they leave, the original car and the people feigning mechanical difficulties leave with them.

It’s incidents like this that have left some skeptical about the true extent to which people can let their guard down. Homan said that a “footprint” of federal officers will remain as operations transition back to the typical field office structure and to provide security for ICE agents in the field. He also emphasized that immigration enforcement will continue even as he said thousands of agents would begin leaving the metro.

Flores had spent recent weeks hunkering down at home, trying to avoid being swept up. His family said that he is undocumented and was deported once before about 16 years ago, leaving them with little hope that he will return home to Minnesota this time.

“My dad’s a hard-working individual,” Miguel said. “He came here to give us a better life. He has done that.”

WCCO reached out to ICE to request information about Flores and the apparent ruse that led to his detainment. As of Sunday afternoon, the agency has not responded.

Also on Thursday, Edward Lopez Mendez said that ICE pulled him over in Savage, Minnesota. In a video he captured from the driver seat, a federal officer tells him “maybe the operation stops, immigration does not stop.”

“They said they were looking for criminals. We’re not criminals,” Mendez told WCCO.

According to Mendez, he and a friend were leaving a property in Savage when ICE stopped them. Mendez, currently waiting for the next steps in an asylum-seeking process that he began in 2019, said that the ICE agents told him they were looking for someone at a specific address. Mendez said that the address did not match the house. After looking him up in their system, the agents let him go.

Mendez said he doesn’t believe the surge has really ended.

“[Homan’s announcement] doesn’t mean anything,” Mendez said.

A GoFundMe account has been set up to help support the Flores family.

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Monks return to Fort Worth after 15‑week “Walk for Peace”

By Briseida Holguin

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    FORT WORTH, Texas (KTVT) — A group of Buddhist monks who walked from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C., spreading a message of peace, returned home Saturday morning.

Thousands of people welcomed them back as they arrived at the Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center in Fort Worth.

The “Walk for Peace” was led by Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, who said completing the 15‑week journey was emotional.

“In front of the gate, I was touched, and, emotions by so many people coming out,” said Pannakara.

The message behind the walk was simple: peace and mindfulness.

“It is something that people really needed at this time… The more we react, the more we suffer, so our message is to ask people slow down, slow down, look back within. Feel each and every heartbeat. See each and every breath going in and out. That is when peace begins,” said Pannakara.

The group of 19 began the trek in October.

“Every day we start at 4 a.m., we wake up and do our thing, chanting and meditation, and then, about six something, we start to walk. There are days that we walk 20 miles, there’s days that we walk 25, there’s days that we walk 32 miles,” said Pannakara.

Along the route, two monks were injured. One was struck by a car near Houston.

“He got his leg amputated, and so he cannot walk anymore, but he’s waiting to put the artificial leg in. He did join us in Washington DC,” said Pannakara.

The message continues beyond the walk.

Thousands followed the journey online, and Pannakara said the work is not finished. He believes anyone can take part in creating peace.

“Today is going to be my peaceful day. Tell the universe that. Tell the universe that today is going to be my peaceful day, so no one in is world can mess it up,” said Pannakara.

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Postal worker goes above and beyond to return a lost wallet

By Barry Pintar

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    PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — It’s something most people have experienced at one time or another: losing your wallet.

With so much in our wallets, IDs, credit cards, and even cash, going through the hassle of replacing all of that can be a massive headache.

Just a few days ago, in Coraopolis, a wallet was lost while the piles of snow still covered the ground, meaning the wallet truly could’ve been anywhere.

Thanks to the effort and spirit of one U.S. Postal Service worker going above and beyond, this lost wallet found its way home.

At 25, Bruce Armah is a new postal worker, and when he found a wallet buried in the snow on a frigid winter morning, he tucked it away until he could look for an ID card or anything with an identifying address.

After he finished his workday, on his own time, he got into his car and began driving to the address.

“It was my father’s good deeds,” Armah said. “If you find someone’s property, and you return it. He lost his wallet, and someone returned it to him, so I was just returning the favor. I was happy to return the wallet.”

However, the story doesn’t end with Armah pulling up to the house and returning the wallet. Once he arrived, he learned the owner of the wallet had moved away – and not just a few blocks away.

The owner of the wallet lives in McDonald, and so Armah drives there, because that’s what his father would’ve done.

Armah then finds the new address and knocks on the door. That’s when Matt Bryan came to the door, knowing his wife was sick over losing her wallet somewhere earlier that day.

“There was $100 cash in there, credit cards, ID, healthcare cards,” Matt recalled. “He wanted nothing in return; he just said it was the right thing to do.”

In all, Armah drove from Coraopolis to Clinton, to McDonald, and to Ambridge, 52 miles in total, on his own time, in his own car, making his father proud as well as his fellow postal workers.

“They’ve got 8,000, 9,000 deliveries, and they’re walking 13 miles per day, then they get put on overtime, which is another two hours, and another five miles every day, so at the end of the day, they’re pretty spent,” said Thomas Redlinger, a safety specialist at USPS. “With the weather, I know we’re getting a bad rap right now, but with the weather, I think we’re doing a tremendous job.”

Armah is a quiet mail carrier who did this all on his own and told no one about it.

Matt Bryan, however, told a postal worker friend, who told another, and another, until it ended up becoming a legend.

“I was complimenting him to some of his coworkers who mentioned it up the chain, which gets us to this point,” Bryan said. “I can’t thank him enough; it’s great to see that young people are doing the right thing.”

“He asked me why I returned the wallet, and I was like, it’s my father’s good deed,” Armah added.

In spite of the snow, in spite of the sub-zero temperatures, Armah went above and beyond to do a good deed he learned from his father.

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Parents of Parkland school shooting victims turn their grief into action

By Jim DeFede

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    PARKLAND, Florida (WFOR) — In the eight years since Alyssa Alhadeff and Alex Schachter were murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, their parents have worked tirelessly to turn their grief into action and to try to keep the tragedy that left 17 people dead from happening again.

Lori Alhadeff took her pain and ran for the Broward School Board, where she has spent years working to make schools safer not only in Florida but across the country. She has pushed for the passage of Alyssa’s Law, which requires a silent alarm system in classrooms that teachers can activate to alert police and fire rescue if there is anything from an active shooter to a medical emergency.

So far, 10 states have passed Alyssa’s Law. Lori Alhadeff was in Washington, D.C. last week, where Alyssa’s Act was introduced, which would create standards for such systems across the country.

“We have passed Alyssa’s law in 10 states, which is panic buttons in schools directly linked to law enforcement, so they can get there faster. Time equals life,” she told CBS News Miami. “And then with Alyssa’s Act at the federal level, we will create standards around panic buttons and digital mapping and have a data Center because we want to try to reduce violence and prevent the next school shooting. Unfortunately, we know that school shootings are continuing to happen. So, this work is so vitally important to get Alyssa’s Act signed into law by President Trump as soon as possible.”

Max Schachter has spent years creating a national school safety dashboard so that parents can know if there have been dangerous or violent incidents at their local schools. He served on a statewide commission after the shooting to investigate school safety.

“And throughout our investigation, we found that schools weren’t reporting incidents, specifically Marjory Stoneman Douglas was shoving everything under the rug,” he explained. “And so they were reporting zeros across the board. And then when I went to look at my other three kids’ schools, all the data was in a massive Excel spreadsheet, which just made it impossible for me to evaluate, compare, and understand. So Safe Schools for Alex, the charity that my wife and I started after the tragedy, we created the first of its kind school safety dashboard because when I sent Alex to school we had no idea that our children were going to school with a violent individual, an individual that had accumulated over 70 disciplinary referrals and law enforcement was at his house over 40 times. And so, parents have a right to know what’s happening in their school. So, we created this user-friendly dashboard for parents to use and to empower them with the knowledge so that they can become advocates and they can make sure that the schools are doing everything they can to reduce violence on campus, so this never happens again.”

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Woman dead, husband still missing after falling through ice on Cape Cod while walking dog

By Riley Rourke, Matt Schooley

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    EASTHAM, Massachusetts (WBZ) — A search has been suspended on Cape Cod for a man who is still missing after falling through the ice while walking his dog with his wife on Saturday. The man’s wife was found dead and two police officers were hospitalized after they also fell into the frigid water in Eastham, Massachusetts.

Eastham Police received a call just after 9 a.m. on Saturday about a wet dog in distress at First Encounter Beach. An officer arrived and found a woman screaming for help in Bee’s River after falling through the ice.

The officer attempted to help the woman, but fell in during the rescue and was completely submerged. Another officer arrived and attempted to help the first officer, who had fallen in, but the ice broke, sending him plunging into the water up to his waist.

Both officers were able to get themselves back onto the shore, according to police. They were taken to Cape Cod Hospital to be evaluated for any injuries. There is no update on their condition.

A dive team began searching for the missing woman. During the search, they learned that the woman was on a walk with her husband and their dog at the time.

“Based on items located in their vehicle and a check of their residence, it was determined that it was possible that the husband may have fallen through the ice prior to the officer’s arrival,” Eastham Police said in a press release.

They found the woman’s body under the ice just after 11 a.m. on Saturday.

First responders searched through Saturday afternoon but did not find the man. On Sunday around 7 a.m., Eastham police and firefighters returned to Bee’s River and flew a drone for about two hours.

Crews also walked the area where ever the shoreline was accessible. After two hours, they were still unable to find the missing man.

“Additional search efforts will be conducted when changes to the ice conditions occur, allowing access for public safety personnel,” Eastham police said.

The name of the couple involved in the incident is not being released at this time.

David Norris lives in the area. He said because of the strong currents and salt water, he never walks on the ice.

“It’s just dangerous,” he said. “I have two dogs. I won’t bring them out here until summertime when it’s just sand, they can go on the beach. I would never let them go on the salt. There’s no boundaries to it. It’s just weak, you fall right in.”

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Couple fights to reunite with lost twin infants after miscarriage in Mexico

By Kaicey Baylor

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    ABINGDON, Maryland (WJZ) — An Abingdon, Maryland, couple is raising money to bring home their twin infants who died in Mexico. The family hopes an online fundraiser will help raise the $12,000 needed for funeral and transportation expenses.

Paris Singleton-Ajaero said she suffered a miscarriage while on a gospel cruise with her mother.

At the time, she said she was 21 weeks pregnant and had no prior pregnancy issues. Singleton-Ajaero said she and her mother boarded the cruise on February 1.

“Things were fine the full day,” she said.

The next night, she felt discomfort and learned she was in the process of delivering her baby boy.

“We quickly realized the feet were already out,” said Singleton-Ajaero.

She said medical staff on the cruise told her the baby wouldn’t make it. Then, they rushed her to a hospital in Cancun.

Before she could deliver her second child, a baby girl, her husband, John Ajaero, said they had to pay a “good faith payment” of $5,000. He remained stateside, making calls to their insurance company to ensure his wife had proper care.

“It was times where you couldn’t cry because you’re in survival mode,” Ajaero said.

Singleton-Ajaero hoped doctors would be able to save their baby girl. The Abingdon parents said their twin babies died a day apart.

“[It] just seemed like everything was working against us,” said Singleton-Ajaero.

“It’s really jarring to deal with all of this, and this is her first pregnancy, our first try at being parents,” Ajaero said.

Although Singleton-Ajaero and her mother are back in the U.S., the twins are still in Mexico. She said her husband still hasn’t been able to see the babies.

“It’s hard to feel like we’re at peace because we don’t have them home,” Singleton-Ajaero said. “My husband and I, we don’t know how to plan a funeral. It’s not something we ever even talked [about] for ourselves yet.”

As they plan a funeral, they’re thinking of other ways to remember their twin babies. They’re remaining hopeful that one day they will be parents.

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