The one sided crossing minimization problem consists of placing the vertices of one part of a bipartite graph on prescribed
positions on a straight line and finding the positions of the vertices of the second part on a parallel line and drawing the
edges as straight lines such that the number of pairwise edge crossings is minimized. This problem represents the basic building
block used for drawing hierarchical graphs aesthetically or producing row-based VLSI layouts. Eades and Wormald [3] showed that the problem is NP-hard for dense graphs. Typical graphs of practical interest are usually very sparse. We prove
that the problem remains NP-hard even for forests of 4-stars.