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2 Milford Swimming Areas Closed Due to High Bacteria Levels

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Two Milford beaches are closed to swimming due to elevated bacteria levels in the water.

Fort Trumbull Beach and Deerfield Beach both tested high based on samples taken on Wednesday, according to the city’s health department. The swimming areas are closed for the time being.

The water will be resampled Friday and the test results will be available Saturday. Residents and visitors can call the Milford Health Department at 203-783-3285 for information on the status of the beaches.

All over private and public beaches are open.


Vigil Calls for Immigrant Families to be Reunited

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An interfaith group gathered at the federal courthouse in Hartford Thursday to pray for the children who were separated from their parents at the southern border.

NBC News reports earlier this week the Trump Administration said it would meet today’s court-ordered deadline to reunite children with about 16-hundred parents deemed eligible.

But there are still hundreds of other families that still will be separated because the parents either have not been found or are not eligible because of various concerns.

Activists say they outraged over the entire ordeal.

“This doesn’t represent the beauty of America. This doesn’t represent the diversity, the fact that immigrants, waves of immigrants made this nation what it is today. And this is totally antithetical to what we want from our nation,” said Reza Mansoor, president of the Islamic Association of Greater Hartford.

As NBC Investigates was first to report - two separated children were brought to Connecticut.

Last week those families were reunited, but not before their legal team sued the federal government. 



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

CT National Guard Members Deployed to Kuwait and Afghanistan

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Dozens of Connecticut National Guard members said farewell to their families at a sendoff ceremony at the Hartford Armory Thursday.

“It’s difficult leaving, but it’s a privilege to go overseas and serve my country,” said Sgt. Zachary Peters, who is from Niantic.

The guardsmen are part of the 1109th Theater Aviation Sustainment Maintenance Group. The Groton-based group is headed to Kuwait and Afghanistan and will provide support to helicopter units flying in Southwest Asia.

They’re the latest of about 200 guardsmen to be deployed in the last ten months. It’s a call the 79 members said they’re ready and proud to accept.

“ When we get the call, we’re ready. Our motto is “Always ready and Always there,’” said Major. Mike Petersen. “These guys are trained and they’re ready to go and excited to show what they can do.”

The deployment is expected to last nine months, then these members will head back to Connecticut for a celebration of their return home.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Cohen Willing to Tell Mueller Trump Knew of Russia Meeting

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Michael Cohen, President Donald Trump's former personal attorney, asserts that Trump knew in advance about a meeting at Trump Tower in June 2016 between his son Donald Trump Jr. and a Russian lawyer, in contradiction to Trump Jr.'s congressional testimony in May 2017, a knowledgeable source told NBC News on Thursday night.

The source told NBC News that Cohen is willing to inform Robert Mueller, the special counsel investigating alleged Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign, about his version of the timeline surrounding the meeting. Cohen's assertion was first reported by CNN.

Lanny Davis, a lawyer for Cohen, said he had no comment but told NBC News: "I have to wonder why the Trump people would put that out. It was not from us."

But Trump's attorney, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani, pushed back against that and dismissed the report, saying that Cohen was "not credible."




Photo Credit: AP (File Photos)

Connecticut Crews to Help Battle Wildfires Out West

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Connecticut crews are headed to the western states to help battle wildfires.

A 20-person crew, including state Department of Energy and Environmental Protection staff, local residents and firefighters, and two firefighters from New Hampshire, will leave Friday for Denver, Colo., where they will receive a specific assignment.

The crew is trained and certified and part of a reciprocal aid program through the US Forest Service. Under this program, trained crews from across the country are available to respond to fire emergencies.

Firefighters have responded to over 3.9 million acres of fires so far this year, an area larger than the state of Connecticut. Currently, the Rocky Mountain Area Coordinator Center is managing several large fires burning 225,000 acres in their region.

'Dirty Socks' Odor Sickens Travelers on Flight From NYC

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A flight from NYC to Florida had to be diverted to South Carolina because some passengers aboard complained of burning throats and chest pains after a potential hazmat situation from an unknown substance that passengers say smelled like "dirty socks."

Two-hundred-twenty passengers were on board Spirit Airlines Flight 779 from LaGuardia to Fort Lauderdale when it was diverted to Myrtle Beach after the airline said an "odor developed in a section of the aircraft."

“Reports are we have several occupants on a plane exposed to an unknown substance,” Myrtle Beach Fire Rescue can be heard saying over a radio on Broadcastify. “They have deplaned and are currently on the ramp. We have isolated and are attempting to get in contact with the airport fire.”

Officials were linking the medical complaints to that unknown substance that some passengers say smelled like “dirty socks.” There were concerns of a possible chemical on the aircraft that was making people sick, but nothing out of the ordinary was found. 


“After specific monitoring and hazmat crews entering into the fuselage no substances were found,” Myrtle Beach Fire Department Lt. Christian Sliker said. “The plane is all clear.”

Despite no substances being discovered, fire officials say seven to 10 passengers were transported to an area hospital. Their condition was not immediately known. 

Spirit Airlines said the source was being investigated and although the diversion was an inconvenience, the safety of their guests is "paramount."

“A supplemental aircraft is en route to Myrtle Beach to pick up our guests,” Spirit Airlines said in a statement.

Photos shared to social media show hundreds of passengers on the tarmac at Myrtle Beach as they wait for another plane to finish the journey to Florida.

FlightAware reports the flight took off from South Carolina around 3:30 Friday morning and landed safely in Fort Lauderdale around 5 a.m, about five hours after its original scheduled landing.




Photo Credit: Darren Sewdass

Missing Virginia Man Found Soaking Wet on NYC Runway: Source

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Authorities are investigating how a missing man from Virginia ended up in what's supposed to be a secure area of Kennedy Airport, soaking wet on a runway after he allegedly swam across Jamaica Bay, law enforcement sources tell News 4 New York. 

Mark Mogensen, who's in his early 20s, was reported missing from a mental health facility in Sterling, Virginia, that he'd entered voluntarily on July 14.

On the morning of July 16, Port Authority police officers spotted Mogensen, wearing a shirt and shorts, completely soaked, on a runway at JFK Airport, the sources said. 

When the officers asked Mogensen how he'd gotten there, he said he swam across Jamaica Bay and climbed a perimeter fence. That fence, part of a multi-million dollar security plan, is supposed to be secured with alarms, radar and cameras.

Police ran his name through a national FBI database and learned he was reported missing in Virginia. It's not clear how he got to JFK from Virginia. 

Mogensen was arrested on a charge of criminal trespassing in the third degree. 

The Port Authority said in a statement it's investigating the trespassing incident and reviewing the perimeter security measures. The multi-million dollar perimeter fence has come under scrutiny after recent breaches. 

"We have already identified some enhancements to our physical security measures and based on the findings of this investigation," the Port Authority said. "We will evaluate, and potentially implement, additional layers of protection at JFK Airport and our other facilities." 



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Massive Fire Breaks Out in Lebanon

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A man injured his hand during a large fire that destroyed a cottage in Lebanon Thursday night. 

Officials from the Lebanon deputy fire marshal’s office said a man and a woman were home at their summer cottage at 116 Deepwood Drive when fire broke out around 11 p.m. and they were able to get out on their own. 

The man suffered a burn to his hand and the woman was uninjured. 

Crews had to shuttle water in by tankers because there are no hydrants in the area and mutual aid was brought in. 

The Lebanon and state fire marshal’s office are investigating the cause of the fire and where it began. State police are also assisting in the investigating. 

Firefighters left scene at 3:45 a.m.





Photo Credit: Stringr.com

1 Connecticut Swimming Area Remains Closed

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Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Broadbrook Road in Enfield Closed After Crash

One Dead, One in Critical Condition After Watertown Crash

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One person is dead and another is in critical condition after a two-car crash in Watertown Friday morning and police are warning of road closures that are expected to last for hours. 

Police responded to the intersection of Route 262 and Frost Bridge Road just after 5 a.m. after a 2012 Nissan Frontier pickup and a 2006 Nissan Altima collided, according to police. 

The drivers and passengers from both vehicles were transported to area hospitals and a passenger in the Altima was pronounced dead shortly after being transported to the hospital, police said. 

Police said the driver of the Altima is listed in serious condition. 

The injuries the people in the Nissan sustained are not believed to be life-threatening. 

Police have not released the names of the people involved. 

There are partial road closures and traffic on Route 262 is being detoured.

Police are urging drivers to seek alternate routes. The roadway is expected to remain closed for the next several hours. 

The Naugatuck Valley Collision Investigation Team is investigating.



Photo Credit: NBCConnecticut.com

Trump Invited to Moscow for Second Meeting, Putin Says

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Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that he has invited President Donald Trump to Moscow for a second face-to-face meeting, NBC News reported.

During an economic summit in South Africa, Putin also said he was “ready to come to Washington.”

“We are ready to invite President Trump to Moscow. He has, by the way, such an invitation, I told him about it,” Putin said.

Putin said that during the pair’s last meeting in Helsinki, Finland, the leaders discussed things that “concern very many countries around the world and, including, all of Europe.”

Trump’s national security adviser John Bolton said earlier this week that a D.C.-based meeting between Trump and Putin would be put off until 2019 because of special counsel Robert Mueller’s "witch hunt."



Photo Credit: Getty Images

Silver Alert Issued for Missing 1 Year-Old Waterbury Boy

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Police have issued a Silver Alert for a 1-year-old Waterbury boy.

The alert says Wilmer Sosa has been missing since today.

He has brown eyes and brown hair and weighs 31 pounds.

No information was immediately available on what he was wearing when he was last seen. The alert also says no photo was available.

No additional information was immediately available. 

Anyone with information is asked to call the Waterbury Police Department at 203-574-6911.



Photo Credit: NBC Connecticut

Fire Breaks Out at Wicked Slice in Coventry

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Mutual aid was called in after fire broke out at Wicked Slice, a pizza restaurant in Coventry.

Firefighters responded to the restaurant at 3466 Main St. around 6 a.m. and the fire chief said that the damage appears to be heaviest at the back of the building, where the kitchen is.

No one was in the building when the fire started and officials are investigating what started the blaze.

The power has been cut to the building and around half a dozen nearby businesses have been affected.

The general manager of the pizza shop said officials told him the fire started in the back of the restaurant, near the kitchen.

They also told the general manager that the pizza ovens did not appear to be on, but the fire was most concentrated by the fryers. 

A Tweet from Tolland County 911 says Main Street, or Route 31, will be closed for an extended period of time in the area of Wrights Mill Road.

Mutual aid was called in from Willimantic, Wilmington, Tolland and Manchester.



Photo Credit: Kerrianne Tellier

Investigators of West Haven Hot Car Death Says Brothers Went to Car Alone

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The 4-year-old West Haven boy who died after a hot car incident in West Haven and his 2-year-old brother went to the car alone, according to police. They also said the 2-year-old has been released from the hospital.

Police were dispatched to the family’s Treat Street home around 3 p.m. on July 19 after receiving a 911 call and said they found 4-year-old Dusan Jenkins and his 2-year-old brother, Davion Jenkins, suffering medical issues.

The boys were rushed to the hospital, where Dusan Jenkins was pronounced dead.

As police investigate, they have been reviewing closed-circuit recordings from a camera located at the building where the family lives.

On Friday they said part of the recordings show the brothers leave the apartment house alone and approach the family’s car, according to police.

The recordings also show the boys’ father removing them from the same vehicle and bringing them back to the apartment house.

While Davion Jenkins has been released from the hospital, police have not provided any additional information on his condition.

Police continue to investigate. Anyone with information or who witnessed the incident is asked to call Detective Suraci at 203 937-3927.





Photo Credit: Stringr.com

MoviePass Momentarily Ran Out of Cash, Filing Reveals

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The parent company of movie subscription service MoviePass received a loan worth more than $6 million after a “service interruption” Thursday prevented it from making required payments, according to a Securities and Exchange Commission filing.

According to the filing, $5 million of the loan received by Helios and Matheson will be used to help MoviePass make payments to its “merchant and fulfillment processors.”

If it fails to do so, the processors would stop processing payments. That appears to have been what happened on Thursday for the company's more than three million subscribers.

The filing notes: "Such a service interruption occurred on July 26, 2018."

Moviegoers at the time complained on social media that they were unable to check-in. MoviePass had said Thursday on Twitter it was "experiencing technical issues with our card-based check-in process" and "diligently working to resolve the issue."


NBC has contacted MoviePass and Helios and Matheson for comment.

“Such service interruptions could have a material adverse effect on MoviePass' ability to retain its subscribers,” the SEC filing says. “This would have an adverse effect on the Company’s financial position and results of operations.”

The loan comes after Helios said in a July 10 SEC filing that it could lose at least $45 million this month, NBC News reported. The company said then it had more than $13 million available in cash.

MoviePass CEO Mitch Lowe told NBC News earlier this month that customers shouldn’t be concerned about the company’s future.

MoviePass allows users to see one movie per day for a $9.95 monthly fee.

In a statement last summer, AMC called the MoviePass business model “shaky and unsustainable.” In June AMC unveiled a rival subscription program



Photo Credit: Daniel Boczarski/Getty Images for MoviePass
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Pregnant Woman Taken to Hospital After Report of Gunfire in New Haven

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A pregnant woman and her friend were taken to the hospital after reporting that a car pulled up to a New Haven parking lot and someone in the car fired gunshots. 

Police responded to the 200 block of Chatham Street at 2:06 a.m. Friday after gunfire was reported and they found a pregnant 28-year old New Haven woman and her friend, a 26-year-old from West Haven who sustained minor injuries. 

One was from broken glass and the other was from a piece of a fragmented bullet casing, police said. Neither had been shot and a third woman was uninjured. 

The victims told police they were hanging out in the parking lot, saw a group of young men nearby and a black car with dark tinted windows rolled up and they believe someone in the car fired gunshots. 

Two vehicles in the lot were struck. 

The pregnant woman was taken to Yale-New Haven Hospital, where medical staff determined she was not been impacted by a projectile, but she should stay the night for observation due to her pregnancy, police said. 

Detectives are reviewing video.



Vehicle on Fire Along Interstate 95 in Bridgeport

Why the Food Recalls Might Not Stop With Goldfish and Ritz

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Bill Marler arrived at his Seattle home one night this week and began searching through the cupboard for something to eat. Toward the back, the food poisoning attorney spotted a bag of Goldfish, then remembered news reports about a new recall. Sure enough, he owned one of the more than 3 million packages that had been recalled on Monday. 

The back-to-back recalls of household staples Goldfish and Ritz crackers, along with earlier recalls of the Kellogg's cereal Honey Smacks and other cases, have prompted social media users to question which snacks are safe to eat. The short answer: we don't know yet, though no one has fallen ill from consuming recently recalled snack products linked to one supplier of whey protein.

Pepperidge Farm issued its voluntary recall for four types of its Goldfish crackers after the whey powder manufacturer Associated Milk Producers Inc. (AMPI) announced a recall of its own due to the “possible presence” of salmonella. Another company, Mondelez, recalled several of its Ritz cracker products over the weekend for the same reason.

Last week, Flowers Foods recalled its Swiss Rolls sold under various brand names. The company mentioned the whey powder ingredient in a news release. A Hungry Man frozen dinner also used AMPI's recalled powder. 

AMPI spokeswoman Sarah Schmidt noted that "all products shipped into the marketplace tested negative for Salmonella as part of AMPI’s routine testing program.”

But because "additional product tested positive for Salmonella under AMPI’s routine test and hold procedures," the recall was a precautionary move. 

"At AMPI, we are dedicated to producing dairy products that meet the highest quality and safety standards," Schmidt said. "We will continue to work cooperatively with the FDA." 

In a high-profile recall not linked to AMPI, Kellogg's flagged Honey Smacks last month due to the possible presence of salmonella. Seventy-three people became ill after eating the cereal, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Whey powder isn't an ingredient in Honey Smacks, Kellogg's said in an email to NBC. 

Marler, who represents some of the people who fell ill from salmonella after consuming Honey Smacks, said companies that alert customers before anyone gets sick have adopted the best approach to managing the issue.

With Ritz, Goldfish, Swiss Rolls and Hungry Man — products the FDA has linked to AMPI — there haven’t been any reported illnesses. Other manufacturers who use AMPI's whey powder might begin issuing recalls in the coming days, Marler predicted, based on how past recalls have played out. 

"I would expect it to be potentially dozens of products," Marler said. "This kind of recall is the system working properly. It's common and actually a good thing."

Here's how the system operates: ingredient and product testing is not regulated or required by the government. Companies often test their products according to their own food safety plans, said Martin Bucknavage, a senior food safety associate at Penn State’s college of agricultural sciences.

When an ingredient supplier identifies possible contamination, it contacts the manufacturers it works with. The supplier also files a report with the FDA explaining the recall using the agency's reportable food registry portal.  

In AMPI's case, the powder they provide for dairy and baked products is also a common ingredient used to coat cereals and other snacks, said Randy Worobo, a professor in Cornell’s department of food science. 

AMPI declined to release its complete list of whey powder customers,  confirming only that four manufacturers it works with have issued voluntary recalls as of Wednesday. It said it doesn't release proprietary customer lists.

An FDA spokesman said the agency had the list but wouldn't provide it. NBC has filed a Freedom of Information Act request to determine which companies receive whey powder from AMPI. 

Salmonella is a bacteria that causes 1.2 million illnesses and 450 deaths in the U.S. each year, according to the CDC. Food is the cause of 1 million of those illnesses and 380 deaths. 

In 2007 and 2008, Peanut Corporation of America discovered salmonella contamination in its ingredients that were used in other manufacturers’ products but didn’t immediately issue a recall, according to The New York Times. Nine people were killed and more than 700 were reported ill as a result.

Companies that issue voluntary recalls before anyone gets sick will likely be viewed by customers in a positive light, said Tom Meyvis, an NYU marketing professor who studies consumer behavior.

“There’s an advantage to [the recall being connected] to one supplier,” Meyvis said.

Marler, the food poisoning attorney in Seattle, said that between recalls for romaine lettuce and Del Monte vegetables and illnesses linked to McDonald’s salads, the number of food-related ailments this year is alarming.

The FDA disputes that characterization. Commissioner Scott Gottlieb said in a statement that there haven't been an increase in the number or scope of recalls.

"Our tools for detecting them are much better, and our policies for how and when we alert the public lean in the direction of more and earlier communication," Gottlieb said. 

The FDA recommends that people discard or return recalled products to the stores where they're purchased. 



Photo Credit: Pepperidge Farm/Getty Images/AMPI

Interactive: How Chinese Tariffs Target Trump Country

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The Trump administration backed away from tariff disputes with Europe this week, but it remains entangled in a trade war with China that is hitting the American heartland and upsetting Republican lawmakers as midterm elections approach.

Trump has imposed tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese imports in a conflict over Washington’s accusation that China is stealing technology as it tries to erode U.S. industrial leadership. As Trump threatens new tariffs — earlier this month the U.S. announced a list of another $200 billion in goods that it will tax — China has struck back with its own tariffs on $34 billion worth of soybeans, pork and other American products. It is threatening tariffs on another $16 billion. To ease the pain, the Trump administration announced this week that it would spend $12 billion to help farmers but they remain worried and Republican representatives continue to ask for help.


The EU has agreed to buy more soybeans. Mary Lovely, a Syracuse University economist who studies trade, told The Associated Press that while China last year imported $12.3 billion in soybeans, the EU took just $1.6 billion.

Ron Moore, a farmer from Roseville, Illinois, and the chairman of the American Soybean Association, told CNBC this month that the tariffs were "devastating" to soybean farmers. China is the second largest market for U.S. agricultural exports, with soybeans topping the list. They account for more than $12 billion of the $20 billion worth of agricultural products China took from the U.S.

China consumes more soybeans than any other county, to use making cooking oil and animal feed. The country is responsible for nearly two-thirds of global soybean imports, according to a University of Tennessee report released in May. 

The United States was the leading supplier of soybeans to China until it was surpassed by Brazil in 2013 and the tariffs could mean further gains for Brazil.

The University of Tennessee report predicted that the imposition of a 25 percent tariff would result in a drop of at least $4.5 billion worth of U.S. exports.

Bloomberg News noted at the beginning of the month that soybean futures have been falling with the trade dispute. Most–active soybean futures on the Chicago Board of Trade dropped 14 percent in June, the largest loss in four years.

In May, Bloomberg reported that China had apparently stopped buying soybeans from the U.S.

The map embedded with this article was drawn with data compiled by the Brookings Institution. It illustrates which parts of the United States are being hurt by the Chinese tariffs and shows by county the percentage of jobs in industries affected by the tariffs. The industries range from soybean and other farming to flour milling to vehicle manufacturing.

Red represents counties that went for Trump in the 2016 presidential election; blue the counties that voted for Hillary Clinton.

*The full list of industries affected: Soybean Farming, Dry Pea and Bean Farming, Wheat Farming, Corn Farming, Rice Farming, All Other Grain Farming, Potato Farming, Other Vegetable (except Potato) and Melon Farming, Orange Groves, Citrus (except Orange) Groves, Apple Orchards, Grape Vineyards, Strawberry Farming, Berry (except Strawberry) Farming, Tree Nut Farming, Other Noncitrus Fruit Farming, Mushroom Production, Tobacco Farming, Cotton Farming, Hay Farming, Peanut Farming, All Other Miscellaneous Crop Farming, Poultry and Egg Production, Finfish Farming and Fish Hatcheries, Shellfish Farming, Forest Nurseries and Gathering of Forest Products, Finfish Fishing, Shellfish Fishing, Other Chemical and Fertilizer Mineral Mining, Other Animal Food Manufacturing, Flour Milling, Rice Milling, Soybean and Other Oilseed Processing, Breakfast Cereal Manufacturing, Sugar Manufacturing, Frozen Fruit, Juice, and Vegetable Manufacturing, Fruit and Vegetable Canning, Dried and Dehydrated Food Manufacturing, Fluid Milk Manufacturing, Creamery Butter Manufacturing, Cheese Manufacturing, Dry, Condensed, and Evaporated Dairy Product Manufacturing, Animal (except Poultry) Slaughtering, Poultry Processing, Seafood Product Preparation and Packaging, Spice and Extract Manufacturing, All Other Miscellaneous Food Manufacturing, Wineries, Distilleries, Tobacco Manufacturing, All Other Miscellaneous Textile Product Mills, Ethyl Alcohol Manufacturing, Construction Machinery Manufacturing, Automobile Manufacturing, Light Truck and Utility Vehicle Manufacturing, Heavy Duty Truck Manufacturing, Motor Home Manufacturing, Motor Vehicle Steering and Suspension Components (except Spring) Manufacturing, and All Other Miscellaneous Manufacturing.


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