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Page Eight SHOWBOAT f Rio MAR. 8 " A CHILD IS WAITING" Surt lancaster, JudV Gorlond 6 and 8;15 p.m. (OUI 017:49 and 10:04) (Drama) P!oymologiSl of 0 slote instiMion for retarded children is opposed in his stern methods by 0 soft·hearted music teocher. Their f riction centers around 0 12 year old boy in t his heort-tugging $lory of mentol retardation. An unusual story. (Aduhs ond young people) SAT. MAR. 9 -MATINEE- "THIEF OF BAGDAD" Sleeve Reeves I p.m. (Oul 01 2:49) SHORT; "Midnile Snack" (7 Min.) "Zombies" No.9 ( 13 Min.) -EVENING- " CIMARRON" Glen Ford, Moria Schell 7 p.m. (Ou t at 9:30) (Super·Western in color) A ma~sive story of a birth of a Siole - the great Oklahoma ter- ritory land rush and the figh t for Indian fights bV a young lowyer-newsmcln. (Adults and Young people) SUN.-MON. MAR. 10.11 "ESCAPE FROM EAST BERLIN" Don Murray, Christine Kaufmann 7 p.m. (Ovl at 8:49) : (Drama) Based o~ Ihe trve story of a yovng . East German who plans and execvtes Ihe etcope of 30 people through Ihe Red Cordon. b .cilingly filmed on·site with a superb Ger- man cast supporting the $Ion. Don't min! (Aduhs ond young people) SHORT: "Pun Gets the Boo," (7 Min.) "AFSM 603 S" (1 2 Min.) TUES.-WED. MAR. 12-13 " THE fAR COUNTRY" Jomes Stewart, Wolter Brennon, Corinne Colvert 7 p.m. (Oul 01 8:44) IOutdoor in color) AClion·pocked 011 the woy os cowman ships herd to Alasko, is un· lus,ly accused of a troil murder, steals bod: his own COllie, flees through Conadian wilds, etc ... This is lops! (Adults and yaung people) THURS. MAR. 14 " THE LION" Wm. Halden, Copucine, Trevor Howard 6 and 8:15 p.m. (Out at 7:43 and 9:58) FRI. MAR. 15 "RUSSIA AND ITS PEOPLE" 7:30 p.m. Travelogue filmed and norrated in person by Raphael Green on Russion people ot work, a t ploy, and on collective forms. A must for people who have wandered what everyday life is like in the Soviet Union. LLOYD J. BARABEE, BTl, shipped over for another four years, which will put him over the 20-year mark in service when completed. Barabee, who has been at NOTS since July, 1961, has duty at the Commis· stary Store. His wife and four children live at Stanton, Calif. THE ROC K ETEER , ROSE GARDEN DEDICATION-Girl Scout Bobbie Weidner, 15, admires plaque at the Girl Scout Rose Garden which was dedicated in ceremonies outside the Community Center on Feb. 28. Many Girl Scouts contributed funds to purchase the roses for the new garden which measures about 20' x 3S'. r CROSSWORD i-UZZLE ACROSS I-Mocculn 4-Common level 'l-Separate I2-The Belt la-Man'., nickname It.-Cowboy competition 15-Sea eagle 16~Day Jut Palt IS-To whip 20-Preftx: thrH Sl-Rearlos organa t!-Vegelabl. (pl.) !6-Ablau 27-AfternooJl party !a-To oblerve 81-Pertalntng t o the Bkhl sa-Desk compartment IS-Fruit drink as-Pedal digit as-Semi- preciou8 stone (p.t.) t9-To corre_ spond to .1-Glrl's name 44-Sutflx: to make tnto .fS-Killed 4-B-Chler race ot Europe Il-Nath'e metal $2~Citl!' In Oerinany S3-Nlght beCore 1ii4-To achieVe 55-Shabby (colloq.) 56·To soak 57-To place DOWN I-lUnd • -Site of TaJ Maba! I·To plot tosether '·RecompeDM '-AI'" i-To reel di.s- pleasure at 7-Exlet 8-Sma.1I openings 9-J-::gypUan !!kInk 10-To erect II-Playthings ii-Attempted I S-Injury 23-Lauo (var.) 24-0ral .25-Glrl'l!I name 26-Gave f ood to 28-Blrds 29-Lamprey SO-Bitter vt':tcb 82·Nocturnal lemur ,4-Imitates a7-Slmpler i9·Moved with measured ateps to-To depart 4I-Chllls 42-To Jevel to ground (var.) 43-To pOnder 46-0reat Lake 47-Harmonlzed 49-0ne, n o matter which 50-Seine Foe' UN III Aut'orllfd P.;ln 0111 ), Did Anybody Stay Home? GRADUATING CLASS-Cactus Squares held ceremonial rites at the Community Center last week to honor graduating class of 200 dancers who now know the finer points of "squaring·up." Local unit is one of area's largest square dilncing organizations. Friday, March 8, 1963 Girl Scouts Doings COOKIE SALE gets under way here as Brownie Lori Nichol· son and Girl Scout Kristine Bachinski turn on their sales charm. And who can resist that? Not Dr. Wm. B. McLean, Technical Director. He and Capt. Blenman gladly made the first pur:ch~ses i~ the annual sale which started yesterday. ,Community News CONCERT TO FEATURE ALBERT WARREN A premiere performance of a new work by Albert Warren, music instructor in the Trona schools, will be a feature of the concerf which the Desert Community Orchestra will present Monday evening at8 p.m., at the James Monroe School Audi· torium in Ridgecrest. Tbeldon Myers will conduct. No admis· sion will be charged Cor this concert since the Desert Com· munity Orchestra is supported by service clubs, women's groups, interested individuals, and Navy Recreation funds. MEETING OF SIERRA·PANAMINT CHAPTER OF STWP A meeting of the Sierra·Panamint Chapter of tbe Society of Technical Writers and Publishers (STWP) will be held at the Kern County Building in Ridgecrest on March 18. The program, beginning at 7:30 p.m., will start with the election of officers for the newly established chapter. Featured speaker of the evening is Lynn Nowels, an artist in the NOTS Technical Information Department, who will dis· cuss problems and solutions in preparing technical animation sequences. HEBREW CLUB CELEBRATION The NOTS Hebrew Club is having a celebration in honor of the Jewish holiday of Purim, Feast of Esther, on Sat., Mar. 9. There will be a children's party at 11 :15 a.m. in the East Wing of the Chapel. The adult services and a dinner party with . entertainment will be at 6:30 p.m. MUSEUM HOURS . The Maturango Museum announced its new hours this week. The Museum will be open on Sat. and Sun. from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. For groups desiring a tour during the week please call ext. 77743, 71349 or 73681 for appointment. BAKE SALE BY CPO WIVES' CLUB - At the last meeting of the CPO Wives' Club held March 4 at the CPO Club, plans were made to hold a bake sale in front of the commissary store at the Plaza, China Lake, on FridilY, March 15, starting at 10 a.m. According to chairman Eva Grose there will be a variety of cakes, cookies, pies, bars, candy, and brownies. All mem· bers are asked tD bake up..-Iet's make this sale a "bangup." The next meeting of the CPO Wives' Club is set for March 18 at 8 p.m. DELTA KAPPA GAMMA REGIONAL CONFERENCE The Region 4 COllference of Delta Kappa qamma Women Teachers Honor Society will be held on Saturday at the Mur- ray School Auditorium. The conference will start at 9:30 a.m. under the direction of Wanda Shornate. Tbe conference will include six prominent women speakers, leadership workshops, and group discussions. IN NATIONAL ORANGE SHOW PARADE Patrolman Les Norman of the China Lake Security Force will be in the big San Bernardino County Sheriff's Rodeo pa. rade of the National Orange Show, Sunday afternoon, March 24, in San Bernardino. Les will ride in the parade horse division with hundreds of other participants. r F:om________-'-_ PLACE STAMP HERE TO,____________________ 59·MPH Winds Ri Base As Lion Like • In March Roars a Two Roofs Off, 40 TV Poles Are Toppled March roared into China Lake last Saturday, riding howling winds that ripped the roofs from two houses and left in its wake thousands of dollars damage. Vol. XVIII, No. 9 NAVAL ORDNANCE TEST STATION, CHINA LAKE, CALIFORNIA Fri., Mar. 8, 1963 Peak winds were reported at 12:25 p.m. by local weather sta- tion at 42 knots, according to Paul Miller, meteorologist at the lostrumentation Laboratory. ROOF RIPPED OFF THE RICHARD P. HARNETT HOME, 54·B Ringgold, lies in backyard after the big windstorm last Saturday. Two Public Works men stand on garage to view NOTS' Bill White Preps For New 'Stargazer' Hop China Lake astronomer William C. White is in New Mexico this week preparing for his second STARGAZER balloon flight scheduled in late March. Kitt' J ill . '1 t th White ear ned world-wide at~ mger, r:, w. ag~m pi 0 e tention by makin·g an 82,000.foot balloon durmg ItS flight. Iscension last Dec. in his STAR- GAZER gondola from Holloman, IS· W' S d N. M. lerra ay tu y Purpose of the project which I in under contract to Northw~st- Sponsored by Rep ern Umverslty was to determme • the feasibility of lifting men and H T Oth a telescope to an obesrvation agen, WO ers height above 90 per cent of the WASHINGTON, D. C. _ Con. earth's atmospbere. gressman Harlan Hagen to day Sponsored by the Office of joined two other Central Califor- Aerospace Research, the STAR· nia Congressmen in sponsoring GAZER gondola will carryon its legislation which would author· upcoming flight, a 12Y2·inch ize a study oC a proposed Sierra telescope that is designed to Way along the lower reaches of track celestial bodies automatic· the western slope of the Sierra oily. Nevada mountain range. Due to a system failure, White Congressman Harold T. (Bizz) operated the telescope manually Johnson of the second, mountain during the Dec. flight. Dr. J. county, district and B. F. Sisk Allen Hyneck, Chairman of the of Fresno also introduced bills Department of Astronomy at which would authorize $75,000 Northwestern University, said to survey the feasibility of estab· much of the data quantity was lishing the first scenic mountain reduced because of the electrical parkway in the West. failure during the first flight. The route would extend from Air Force Captain Joseph W. (Continued on Page 2) Gusts up to 59 miles·per.hour were reported by Bel Frisbee, whose weather instruments are located in the Capehart "B" area. DeeDee Hartnett, 16, a student of Burroughs High school and daughter of Richard P. Hartnett, 54·B Ringgold, said she and a girlfriend, Paulette Bauer, were wa t chi n g television Saturday about noon. "We heard a loud thumping noise and looked out in the back- yard. Our roof had blown off and was lying on top of the patio." Her parents were away at the time. Power Lines Cut She called the fire department immediately from a neighbor's home. Electrical power and tele· phone lines had been cut. The Hartnett neighbors at 54·A Ringgold, tbe A. H. Wackers, were shopping in Ridgecrest. "Our roof was resting upside down on top of the patio when we returned. The patio covering had been smashed, along with the television antenna," reported Mrs. Wacker. The Inspection Branch of the Maintenance Division of Public Works found the roof of a thi rd home had been partially blown away and anothel" had been dis~ placed more than a foot from its foundation. the damage. Harnett, Community Relations Assistant, and his wife, Madge, were on fishing trip at the time, but their daughter, DeeDee, and a girl friend were at home. The roofs damaged and torn away were secondary covers over original rooftops that had been constructed to provide drainage. (Continued on Page 2) Registration for Engineering Tests Set for March 29 Station employees who wish to take the advanced engineering tests for the Graduate Record Examinations under the National Program for Graduate School Se· lection are reminded the regis· tration deadline is March 29. The tests will be given here on April 'tt and application forms may be obtained from the Education Office, Room 1004, Mich Lab. Applicants who desire to seek admission to certain graduate and proCesional schools sbould take the examination. What in the NOTS World Is an Anechoic Chamber? See Next Week's Rocketeer 'Bluejacket' on TV SAILING ON TV WAVES-John P. Sailing Jr., who last weekend was feted in Bokersfield as China Lake's "Bluejacket of the Month,'" is pictured on television IS he was inter~ viewed by Burleigh Smith of KLYD·TV. Sailing and his wife also appeared on .nother live teleclSt on KERO·TV. "Bluejacket of the Month" program is sponsored in cooper~ ation with the Military Affairs Committee It Bakersfield. , OCR Text: Page Eight SHOWBOAT f Rio MAR. 8 " A CHILD IS WAITING" Surt lancaster, JudV Gorlond 6 and 8;15 p.m. (OUI 017:49 and 10:04) (Drama) P!oymologiSl of 0 slote instiMion for retarded children is opposed in his stern methods by 0 soft·hearted music teocher. Their f riction centers around 0 12 year old boy in t his heort-tugging $lory of mentol retardation. An unusual story. (Aduhs ond young people) SAT. MAR. 9 -MATINEE- "THIEF OF BAGDAD" Sleeve Reeves I p.m. (Oul 01 2:49) SHORT; "Midnile Snack" (7 Min.) "Zombies" No.9 ( 13 Min.) -EVENING- " CIMARRON" Glen Ford, Moria Schell 7 p.m. (Ou t at 9:30) (Super·Western in color) A ma~sive story of a birth of a Siole - the great Oklahoma ter- ritory land rush and the figh t for Indian fights bV a young lowyer-newsmcln. (Adults and Young people) SUN.-MON. MAR. 10.11 "ESCAPE FROM EAST BERLIN" Don Murray, Christine Kaufmann 7 p.m. (Ovl at 8:49) : (Drama) Based o~ Ihe trve story of a yovng . East German who plans and execvtes Ihe etcope of 30 people through Ihe Red Cordon. b .cilingly filmed on·site with a superb Ger- man cast supporting the $Ion. Don't min! (Aduhs ond young people) SHORT: "Pun Gets the Boo," (7 Min.) "AFSM 603 S" (1 2 Min.) TUES.-WED. MAR. 12-13 " THE fAR COUNTRY" Jomes Stewart, Wolter Brennon, Corinne Colvert 7 p.m. (Oul 01 8:44) IOutdoor in color) AClion·pocked 011 the woy os cowman ships herd to Alasko, is un· lus,ly accused of a troil murder, steals bod: his own COllie, flees through Conadian wilds, etc ... This is lops! (Adults and yaung people) THURS. MAR. 14 " THE LION" Wm. Halden, Copucine, Trevor Howard 6 and 8:15 p.m. (Out at 7:43 and 9:58) FRI. MAR. 15 "RUSSIA AND ITS PEOPLE" 7:30 p.m. Travelogue filmed and norrated in person by Raphael Green on Russion people ot work, a t ploy, and on collective forms. A must for people who have wandered what everyday life is like in the Soviet Union. LLOYD J. BARABEE, BTl, shipped over for another four years, which will put him over the 20-year mark in service when completed. Barabee, who has been at NOTS since July, 1961, has duty at the Commis· stary Store. His wife and four children live at Stanton, Calif. THE ROC K ETEER , ROSE GARDEN DEDICATION-Girl Scout Bobbie Weidner, 15, admires plaque at the Girl Scout Rose Garden which was dedicated in ceremonies outside the Community Center on Feb. 28. Many Girl Scouts contributed funds to purchase the roses for the new garden which measures about 20' x 3S'. r CROSSWORD i-UZZLE ACROSS I-Mocculn 4-Common level 'l-Separate I2-The Belt la-Man'., nickname It.-Cowboy competition 15-Sea eagle 16~Day Jut Palt IS-To whip 20-Preftx: thrH Sl-Rearlos organa t!-Vegelabl. (pl.) !6-Ablau 27-AfternooJl party !a-To oblerve 81-Pertalntng t o the Bkhl sa-Desk compartment IS-Fruit drink as-Pedal digit as-Semi- preciou8 stone (p.t.) t9-To corre_ spond to .1-Glrl's name 44-Sutflx: to make tnto .fS-Killed 4-B-Chler race ot Europe Il-Nath'e metal $2~Citl!' In Oerinany S3-Nlght beCore 1ii4-To achieVe 55-Shabby (colloq.) 56·To soak 57-To place DOWN I-lUnd • -Site of TaJ Maba! I·To plot tosether '·RecompeDM '-AI'" i-To reel di.s- pleasure at 7-Exlet 8-Sma.1I openings 9-J-::gypUan !!kInk 10-To erect II-Playthings ii-Attempted I S-Injury 23-Lauo (var.) 24-0ral .25-Glrl'l!I name 26-Gave f ood to 28-Blrds 29-Lamprey SO-Bitter vt':tcb 82·Nocturnal lemur ,4-Imitates a7-Slmpler i9·Moved with measured ateps to-To depart 4I-Chllls 42-To Jevel to ground (var.) 43-To pOnder 46-0reat Lake 47-Harmonlzed 49-0ne, n o matter which 50-Seine Foe' UN III Aut'orllfd P.;ln 0111 ), Did Anybody Stay Home? GRADUATING CLASS-Cactus Squares held ceremonial rites at the Community Center last week to honor graduating class of 200 dancers who now know the finer points of "squaring·up." Local unit is one of area's largest square dilncing organizations. Friday, March 8, 1963 Girl Scouts Doings COOKIE SALE gets under way here as Brownie Lori Nichol· son and Girl Scout Kristine Bachinski turn on their sales charm. And who can resist that? Not Dr. Wm. B. McLean, Technical Director. He and Capt. Blenman gladly made the first pur:ch~ses i~ the annual sale which started yesterday. ,Community News CONCERT TO FEATURE ALBERT WARREN A premiere performance of a new work by Albert Warren, music instructor in the Trona schools, will be a feature of the concerf which the Desert Community Orchestra will present Monday evening at8 p.m., at the James Monroe School Audi· torium in Ridgecrest. Tbeldon Myers will conduct. No admis· sion will be charged Cor this concert since the Desert Com· munity Orchestra is supported by service clubs, women's groups, interested individuals, and Navy Recreation funds. MEETING OF SIERRA·PANAMINT CHAPTER OF STWP A meeting of the Sierra·Panamint Chapter of tbe Society of Technical Writers and Publishers (STWP) will be held at the Kern County Building in Ridgecrest on March 18. The program, beginning at 7:30 p.m., will start with the election of officers for the newly established chapter. Featured speaker of the evening is Lynn Nowels, an artist in the NOTS Technical Information Department, who will dis· cuss problems and solutions in preparing technical animation sequences. HEBREW CLUB CELEBRATION The NOTS Hebrew Club is having a celebration in honor of the Jewish holiday of Purim, Feast of Esther, on Sat., Mar. 9. There will be a children's party at 11 :15 a.m. in the East Wing of the Chapel. The adult services and a dinner party with . entertainment will be at 6:30 p.m. MUSEUM HOURS . The Maturango Museum announced its new hours this week. The Museum will be open on Sat. and Sun. from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. For groups desiring a tour during the week please call ext. 77743, 71349 or 73681 for appointment. BAKE SALE BY CPO WIVES' CLUB - At the last meeting of the CPO Wives' Club held March 4 at the CPO Club, plans were made to hold a bake sale in front of the commissary store at the Plaza, China Lake, on FridilY, March 15, starting at 10 a.m. According to chairman Eva Grose there will be a variety of cakes, cookies, pies, bars, candy, and brownies. All mem· bers are asked tD bake up..-Iet's make this sale a "bangup." The next meeting of the CPO Wives' Club is set for March 18 at 8 p.m. DELTA KAPPA GAMMA REGIONAL CONFERENCE The Region 4 COllference of Delta Kappa qamma Women Teachers Honor Society will be held on Saturday at the Mur- ray School Auditorium. The conference will start at 9:30 a.m. under the direction of Wanda Shornate. Tbe conference will include six prominent women speakers, leadership workshops, and group discussions. IN NATIONAL ORANGE SHOW PARADE Patrolman Les Norman of the China Lake Security Force will be in the big San Bernardino County Sheriff's Rodeo pa. rade of the National Orange Show, Sunday afternoon, March 24, in San Bernardino. Les will ride in the parade horse division with hundreds of other participants. r F:om________-'-_ PLACE STAMP HERE TO,____________________ 59·MPH Winds Ri Base As Lion Like • In March Roars a Two Roofs Off, 40 TV Poles Are Toppled March roared into China Lake last Saturday, riding howling winds that ripped the roofs from two houses and left in its wake thousands of dollars damage. Vol. XVIII, No. 9 NAVAL ORDNANCE TEST STATION, CHINA LAKE, CALIFORNIA Fri., Mar. 8, 1963 Peak winds were reported at 12:25 p.m. by local weather sta- tion at 42 knots, according to Paul Miller, meteorologist at the lostrumentation Laboratory. ROOF RIPPED OFF THE RICHARD P. HARNETT HOME, 54·B Ringgold, lies in backyard after the big windstorm last Saturday. Two Public Works men stand on garage to view NOTS' Bill White Preps For New 'Stargazer' Hop China Lake astronomer William C. White is in New Mexico this week preparing for his second STARGAZER balloon flight scheduled in late March. Kitt' J ill . '1 t th White ear ned world-wide at~ mger, r:, w. ag~m pi 0 e tention by makin·g an 82,000.foot balloon durmg ItS flight. Iscension last Dec. in his STAR- GAZER gondola from Holloman, IS· W' S d N. M. lerra ay tu y Purpose of the project which I in under contract to Northw~st- Sponsored by Rep ern Umverslty was to determme • the feasibility of lifting men and H T Oth a telescope to an obesrvation agen, WO ers height above 90 per cent of the WASHINGTON, D. C. _ Con. earth's atmospbere. gressman Harlan Hagen to day Sponsored by the Office of joined two other Central Califor- Aerospace Research, the STAR· nia Congressmen in sponsoring GAZER gondola will carryon its legislation which would author· upcoming flight, a 12Y2·inch ize a study oC a proposed Sierra telescope that is designed to Way along the lower reaches of track celestial bodies automatic· the western slope of the Sierra oily. Nevada mountain range. Due to a system failure, White Congressman Harold T. (Bizz) operated the telescope manually Johnson of the second, mountain during the Dec. flight. Dr. J. county, district and B. F. Sisk Allen Hyneck, Chairman of the of Fresno also introduced bills Department of Astronomy at which would authorize $75,000 Northwestern University, said to survey the feasibility of estab· much of the data quantity was lishing the first scenic mountain reduced because of the electrical parkway in the West. failure during the first flight. The route would extend from Air Force Captain Joseph W. (Continued on Page 2) Gusts up to 59 miles·per.hour were reported by Bel Frisbee, whose weather instruments are located in the Capehart "B" area. DeeDee Hartnett, 16, a student of Burroughs High school and daughter of Richard P. Hartnett, 54·B Ringgold, said she and a girlfriend, Paulette Bauer, were wa t chi n g television Saturday about noon. "We heard a loud thumping noise and looked out in the back- yard. Our roof had blown off and was lying on top of the patio." Her parents were away at the time. Power Lines Cut She called the fire department immediately from a neighbor's home. Electrical power and tele· phone lines had been cut. The Hartnett neighbors at 54·A Ringgold, tbe A. H. Wackers, were shopping in Ridgecrest. "Our roof was resting upside down on top of the patio when we returned. The patio covering had been smashed, along with the television antenna," reported Mrs. Wacker. The Inspection Branch of the Maintenance Division of Public Works found the roof of a thi rd home had been partially blown away and anothel" had been dis~ placed more than a foot from its foundation. the damage. Harnett, Community Relations Assistant, and his wife, Madge, were on fishing trip at the time, but their daughter, DeeDee, and a girl friend were at home. The roofs damaged and torn away were secondary covers over original rooftops that had been constructed to provide drainage. (Continued on Page 2) Registration for Engineering Tests Set for March 29 Station employees who wish to take the advanced engineering tests for the Graduate Record Examinations under the National Program for Graduate School Se· lection are reminded the regis· tration deadline is March 29. The tests will be given here on April 'tt and application forms may be obtained from the Education Office, Room 1004, Mich Lab. Applicants who desire to seek admission to certain graduate and proCesional schools sbould take the examination. What in the NOTS World Is an Anechoic Chamber? See Next Week's Rocketeer 'Bluejacket' on TV SAILING ON TV WAVES-John P. Sailing Jr., who last weekend was feted in Bokersfield as China Lake's "Bluejacket of the Month,'" is pictured on television IS he was inter~ viewed by Burleigh Smith of KLYD·TV. Sailing and his wife also appeared on .nother live teleclSt on KERO·TV. "Bluejacket of the Month" program is sponsored in cooper~ ation with the Military Affairs Committee It Bakersfield. , China Lake Museum,Rocketeer Newspaper,Rocketeer 1960s,Rocketeer 1963,Rktr3.8.1963.pdf,Rktr3.8.1963.pdf Page 1, Rktr3.8.1963.pdf Page 1

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