Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 22, 1960, edition 1 / Page 2
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1 s ! 9 ! 4 FARR TWO TR1 OAILT TAB MIL TUESDAY, MARCH 11. 1960 Editor's Corner Be Sure To Cast In Today's Spring I h xpca ial meaning !m Vvill Minn d( UllllilK' .Is Nun iin lllloltgh till' tl'M ol (111' ft I j 1 ( I) i lis II st t 1 1 1 11- Mil, i I Ol 1 1 if I campus iii the fall u.ililii d t Hi UN .IN Mill MUM U.t H'lt I A nill .11 I i I ! oM the I. Your Vote Elections candid. tie .in it appeals on i lie lt'!'' in ol loving .iiouiid with w lit t - in oi (undid, .is let thc-t' t t it t-s are qualified ;md p:cunt '.'.Mod (.-()!(. lo tlu' NludciU hub. It i- ul All v. .IV.' king 1 't .In. In indeed unloi I tin. ilc 1 1 i . 1 1 no (---position has l l'N Ml' .ateec to lind c 1 1 - ci in 1 1 si I ; .1 i ; io noic tin. on it tt t niii i lit IS. It Is .1 Ut I (IIV ( I .U f pi C. Ill III g lo till' n I U It ' 1 1 1 ( hou c. dilti ii in i o'i; i( d phi i gi.Hc idcolo4it.1l dil lei i in t s. W'c h.ixc dcliniie thoiiis I01 ,iM oi(t. ('Ill Voles will lie at . 1 1 1 1 1 4 w 1 1 ! 1 lih' 1 ih 1 ;.,( We- cSpi'it to sec c j ) c ihei; i p.'ii. 11 . . tile JhI1n tod. in. lint. li-!!oviii4 .1 (leu'.v t n i ,i 1 1 ! i v 1 1 1 1 1 Hlii. wt nil! 111. 1 vi' no .j! loi- - ttlCllts CM l pi in till ( .W ol l.lirs vhtac 1 single candidate is seeking ilu- o!li t . I lie billowing, ollitcs I. ill into th.it latc oiN l ditoi-n-Cliii I ol liic Y.ukcv ,i.k. Vi ti tan ol iiu- Mu Inn lod. .i1! CI. s ollitcs. Ilc.id ( luci k-.iilt 1 i'u legislative scats. In the .im m il ci 1.1 1 Ii t 1 w it. since this iN th urge ou to nc ci t hclcss give i!.om- people .1 Mile ol t 011I ide'iK c. We ate icitain tiic I ;n t i'pi this i a mailt! .1' lot a i h. in the 1.1 " ol olhci the Student rot!. 'iee President ol t;ic S'u dent. Tici'mcr ol the' Student liodv. 1 !"; Nj )11 m l)iC oil ice 1' '('SKI ( 'I (:i Ol n I I h l)ai! 1 .11 I leel. l'lesidcnt ol the (' u -Una Athletic Association. 1'iesidcnt ol the Wo. iatii 11 ;:nd ! loii ii is . clear ( hoiee to be Women's Alhlciic ( inn i! seals, the m 1 ! , Viro. a b w In all ol these- races, we believe there' .1! ieast two qualified anil sinccic candid ll'NC l Hill l'l s. uc 11141' the student lo, to Io:ioa tlu nl.d pttKeduie ol t lu k i 1 14, ihe 11 ie.e ol I o I II.' 1 mining. Me. YO I I e don t care now ou vote. a i e 1 . 1 llsl YO I I , YO I K. YO IT. AO I I From The Editor To The Many, Many Thanks To Staff, Y'al lo All Memheisol Hie Dailv Tar Heel Stall Dining the pat several weeks I have won dered whiih would he the most appiopiiitc i!. lot in.' to wiile th's letter. I thought at liiNt that next Sund. . being m lit dav . s 1 tlilor. would he the one. However aliet lonsideiable thought, theic Was 110 I04i1.il ihoice oilier than l Union la. lor to me. Flcition IVt signilicd ho h the beginning and the end ol ine .in an I dii.i. 1 1 1 i l-oth the good and had. -4l.nl and s. d tapped into one neat package. On Apiil 7. ."! u,m Il) 't-0 p.lpei's hihot position. And todiy. Nine! M o. a new I tliloi uill lc elei ted hv l!ie .... ,l..,,i K.wlv V i. mil total ol mm (lavs i mu 1 1 1 " ; . 1 . ' cllapsed siiuc that Sptin4 tlav a eai .i4. One ol the ihonI tlillitiih iIiihun h-r 1 k iN to thank to he ol the' people' who have heeil su'odi It in a h . d thiu'4 lo li hei aiiNe ol talia and emotions involve'd. Ne'veithe I will, this week, wiiie' al.out a hundred him. lios- ess. lel- I u 1 1 1 1 and atlministi ati. u as manv ol 1 ( ampits Ii lead lose- to ice din ing this 1 h. ! liis lo siuden's. lilcmhe'i s as We ll w ho hav e hei 11 1 lei 14c .el iotl. I wanted ou to he ihe lirst to receive mv thauksl ci tlu Kivr'i" paper. I wanted vou And I wan: d 1 t 1 lo uicive this piaui' oiioiuiv. viut 1 wan: u sou to he- liist hiiau-e- ou have heen the tin-si impoiii.il. the' tlosest. the hardest to I have never told ou what it is like to sit in this joh. e.oilv the louhest and highest piessiue position .'.nv student can hold. I haven't done' this heeause' liohodv. not cell r ditot to d in his I111.1I h. ve auv ill' .si' ' I vou who work with me on the sta. w li tin 11 1 11 le i si ai n I w have done ii v 1 iu el ! . Ilu re lot 11 is like What About This? 1. Tht nation i t wr. 2. Tht nation is losing the war, bacily. 3. Th nation most exert a vastly greater effort. 4. Thert is still time . . . brother. 1 oniplcteiv GTijc Baity Ear )td Tb oirttUl stuiient publication of tht' I'uhlaatlor Soard of the University of North Carolina where it U published djilv fre rs, Letters I)c;a- Sh: In aa ci!ia:-ia! !.i; Th; vju uski'-l tacir.ty !i..'aib.is ;n s . i.ni a oa th.- ,i i- irsday Lo i':;- re .isin to serve fx.ci to X n.cs a: tah'i,;. Ia my opinio;:, mer.c.i' of a laca!:y do o.ve to s!u'.it, ; n cxpres.sion of their ;:c Min na (ii s.rious moral ic Tj-.i ; i.-.-r.o seems' to me io qaalily a.-, s ii'li an issue. 1 !e 1 tha: the roi'usal ' T ."( rl servin.4 e -iaii!:-h;ni n!s to s-.-i've X'.'rees at tahles-is onv ei i'lar.y stand ho.v reastuable po:plc m:;;ht fail to perc ive and rea:t again. t ihe rank injus-tices which charac terize cr prtsem race relations. From thU disturbing perception it is bat a short si 'p to the realiza t.ea that the exis.ing inequities impo.'e a sickness on the social superiors and inferiors alike. hile th critevion of social mo ra i.y raav r,e . oan clear. dantlv ihe means by which we can im pkme..t it e .ncu.rtntly wi.h the cnensa are woe- pab'ie iiK'i..a!ies that tri 1 ndure ia the Halted S ii di.nii.ics sheek my se'-e v liv ani 1 believe that Xe have every rihl to protect a tlvin bv e erv le- d me e th.i;- ilip; sa'. O.lu r ; 's n; ias th . 1 xlu 1 a : a v Ii . v e ia 'eh 'i. cU'.n's if titey i! is the host way to ! Lia'n ja-: trea ment . A university h.m:es the wlv. le ...:ers:iv whoi Iv ai.vi join a f.el ih: unless v u , I am n t under- 1 4ood stall, a heen. wotkiiu the I ilitoi knows, and or words. tuept Monda. ar4 elimination periods and lummer tf-rms. Entered a necorul ctast matter in tho post office in Chapel Hill. N. C. under the act of March 8. 1870 Subscription, ratra: H 00 Der ie mester. $7 00 per fear. The Daily Tar Heel is printed h the New Inc.. t'arrhoro. N C I Id it or ' J'.. 1 v i 11 sine t ti.it v on will st ind w hal it means to have le'.d'v ood stall ; vou have ioi the pap.ei. Onlv 1 v en he' is ai a b I can led mmi. howcvei, that when 1 he ( inie t'lil'" '-'st Mai I iiihetitcd the smallest :alt the jia)vi has ever had. It was literally the' skeleton ol a skelleou new. We hail ahont lour 01 live people who woAed on 1e4ul.11 hasis. I here was onlv o;ie stall memher wh knew how to lay out a pa'4e. nd in (outlast to thai, I (.111 point to von. Ihe picseiit 41 oitpworkiii4 ha the piper is the largest in the histoiv ol the paper. .V 111 mv as t win 1 v or iwcntv-live nonius on Miiiic soil ol st hedule. I here are now nine ol vou who are competent to do lauiut. I liei e .11 e manv '4I.11 1114 I have had as ; ' 1 siope was limited, !nm' w i" 1 k 1 ii'svcs will!) 1 l .ilitor. Mv intelli'c; ual mv technical knowledge DAVIS !V YOVNT. Associate Kditor Assistant F.ditor Pklitorial Asst. I'usiness Manager Advertising Manager Manauin ICditors J Sports Kditor I'll AN K (KOWTIIKR HON SIIUMATr M l.OU IIKDDKN TIM DLTtN'MTT not the hv'st and peihaps 1 have tailed to meet manv ol the problems in j hiul-on manner. You have known all this. Yet. never once h;". mum loyally lo either the paper or me slackened. Vou have worked in the same oil id' with ine-aiid seen me make mistakes and do some prcttv sillv things, lor a year, vou have lived with me. Through this ear, vou have been lar kinder, lar more patient and lar moie nude: standing with me than 1 could ever be with ou. And il ou don't think this means something, vou're dead w 10114. Is.c4aidkss ol how niuih I want lo be u lieved ol the pies-nre ol this job. I lind it very dilliciilt 10 sav goodbye to yon. W'hatcv ei has come Iroin the pajer ih it is 4.1...I. auvihin; thai has been con-it in ' i e this vear, is direiilv a icsult ol your hard IIAKHY ZASI.OV woik. Anv 1 1 edit w e lave gotten is n;is. The I'.dh News Kditors I.AItHV SMITH iiaiivi: HAIiniS Kl.I.IOTT COOPIUl DI1K DAMKI.S HHNnY MAYIJil adminLstrat ta ct a slu- fjnci a nip not to I olio .v the ..or...- as a : (".r.et:;v;.s ol tn. lr iv.vn con science on moral qucsti('as. Such . s.a eaients by state o! ficials r:ii.--. (iae.-t;e s th ,t well beyond the (;ae.-ti,)ii ci' v. he.i p.:si;icn a ari.o.) in the emnn;ni'y sh..:i: 1 assume uhen ii cor.sinr. 4s tot.d in public. It is one tliir.4 whea r;; .s -oiler cJi.-c: imina'.irr.: that is an an achronism iii car social order which iy a con'.r.aiaru e of paaent prnie.-t may yet h-. wiped away. It .lore, t u.i'' wT.en those el nii.ve to help. aceorih,u is a .h.) I to their own liht.-. in solving such proo' ems in peace. til ways are ro stra!. ad i!iroui;!i fear. The I'ni versi'.y ol' North Carolina would no; be a lit place lor students or faculty if such tear should ro.v. Very truly yours, William N. Parker Associate Pi (ii'i-5 ; aa- To the Editor Daily Tar Heel University of North Carolina Your conl h.uing concern with the iroblem of integration is ic st rvin4. it s em to me. both ci applause and thcaghti'iil. coenmere. thoireh. 1. !e: taaate iy. yoa may 1:11 i't w.tii contrived i!er.ee aa.i apparent iiuii.lc. .T.ce. Mach o' us l;,;.s a compelling moral stase in ihe iniml.rg pe.ltern cf desegre gaiiun in our community and in the ccuntry as a whole. Moreover, w he. her as individuals we choei-e tti play an active or a pas.-ive role, tiie outcome ie. 'vitably will be part of our doing. Today, per haps mare than ever he-fore it is nu.hrr easy nor desirable to stan 1 asie'.e. This U not to pretend that all cf .he answers en this complex i.ssue "are ia" nor is it to are headlong action for. its o.vn sak . It is simply to recognize 'as you have dune 1 the gravity ol the problem ar.d to emphrsize its iai meuiacy. As w . all knnw. impjr tant p..lie'K.s regarding raeial iiu . ..:g tire being foiged here and now. 'Sartly such urgent nutters ! -ntand bo h private study and pub lic debate. The very least we can do as citizens is to express and critically examine our views and at prophioas times and with sober care to ceaeert the ae.ion which they imply. Personally, I find it hard to srv he-.v pee pie ci good will can quar rel wi.h racial fairness as an im perative 'th .ugh iv t the only 1 s-:). cial geai. In lact. Ihey cai.r.ol a: d do not. If human eagro'.y means anyth'ng. then rquali'y real raj ccmplcte. uauers.ood and shared by all members ol society is the o;aer g, ialiy ooseUiV. Haw. on the basis el deep prejudice, do we fashion a society which does net disci i-n-i a e in t . nns of race'.' By what hi; e. at vvh.il c..3.s. aid hovv fast .ie ve ap; roach he coal 0: non-di.-c. h.iin ui.-.t? We can't le sure. Bet cert:.!.! it is na. .e must gin to take some steps, small ones pr. ba'oly at ihe outset, which in rn should cumulate in the right aire die n an d mak subsequent ac i; ns easier. In Chapel Hill, where the situation is not sa aeire and the tolerance git'ator 'I wv.'.l.i ho;)ei than elsewhere, ihe task id' reiir rssiv.g racial wrongs may prove .surprisingly and grtvii'vui-dy swift. In w lie.. ever action we may take or a.lvoeate it should help to keep our yes focussed on the ul timate ideal of equality. In this light tin- grievance cf e.egroes who are ma.'.' to stand while we whiles sit at lunch counters becomes vividly apparent: so also does the indignity which negroes sailer by reason oi th-'ir exclusio.r from our schools. Anj the injury. :s I have said, is shared though ir. a dif ferent way by the segregated whites. To picket peacefully ag iast such evils is a valid means cf legistering social objection ;.r.d surely it should net be outlawed. On tlu other hand, calm counsel may srek to discourage one or anchor means of protest because hi a given in.slanee it appears in cliective and pes. ibiy ev en per verse in its consiKjui vices. I hops this is all that our state authori ties have meant by their recent warnings. It is. of course, perfect ly legitimate to raise doubts con-ee-niim the ov erall efficacy of a par ieular tool ia a specific set ting. To- issue a general injunc tion against entering the social aiee.a or otherwise confronting one of the most pressing problems of our time, however, would be to compound the existing evil cf ra cial inequality with a more seri ous loss of intellectual and civil freedom. My own feeling is that college students should make the most of their "ivory tower", staying large ly within its limits, savoring for four brief years the rare oppor tunity ct unlettered, open-mindea inquiry and quiet deliberation. But desert the tower they some times must to stavij as responsible citizens on the overriding issues ol their day. This Ls not merely a privilege. It is a duty. James H. Blackman Associate Professor University i.f North Carolina OO respond to his beliefs some thing most "Carolina Gentlemen e.rd Ladies" cannot claim. The erticle referred to was just era of ra:i:y which nuke "belief hit ' ig" a .'rienj to the editorial pr ... .-. 0 e's beliefs and what he stards Ia wg h:.ve heard, lables him an iadiviiu?.l. How is there rcspec. for someone who backs down from what he believes be cau:e cf be rag called a. name? Yet we are expected to do so by such articles. It is a faulty argu ment which fights an issue by slande: ing its supporters. Why can't we, in expecting others to icspcct as in what we believe, re turn tli favor? We might vvrrag a little : cod from the arguments or are we interested in spch stutf? Wilfred Turner TO 1112 EDITOR CF THE DAILY TARHEEL: pe. idea! ee.va d whk h we rau.-t st iv al ei: peinful y. L'ke.Vjise, it is dil.iai!' The Fafft'eus Feature Editor Photo Editors N i-lit Iltlilta- MANY ALICE MOWI E TTM CHAItLIF. r.I.l'MIlNT HAL BON CI NNTNCIIAM The New Editor To All Stu tents: Ihe new 1 'di.01 ol Ihe Daily Tar II. e! will- t '.e ul!iie (;ii Monday, Match tiS, s' (hvs liom lodav. 1 1 is lii t paper w.ll he the loliow ing dav . Mai 1 Ii '(;. I he picvcti I diior will he respin ih e lei .dl pape.s iliioiigh Maiih next Sun day. Hie E i cr mm Stars ol Capitol Records Appea.ins at WOOLLEN GYM M rf.! 1 Editor: In the March 17 DTH. Dick Ma son and David Wilson wrote of Naanan C. Smith. ' Haw this char-ac'-er has the audacity to think his actions are doing any good is beyond us." Here the. point is nei her that his ac.Lv.s are right rr v. roig ncr that his actitns are rieirg good or bal The point is that he is making his actieus cor- In his somewhat hysterical "Open Letter to Gov. Luther Hod ges" of March 16, Mr. Frank Canvther seems strongly to im ply that ia er.gagirg in sit-down demonstrations at lunch counters, Negroes are attempting to secure their legal rights. "I believe." he tells the Governor, "that, in this case, jou . . . demonstrate your inability to commit yourself . . . to the la v of this land as you know it to be . . ." The sit-down activities '"wer. utilized by a peo ple who hav e been denied the let ter of the law. who have been de nied their righ s as American cit izens . . . ." Again, in reference to the Governor's statement that interested parties in the lunch counter controversy must adhere to law ar.d order: "Whose law and order, governor? If you mean the established law and order cf this country, I should not have to re mind yea that the U. S. Supreme Cfjrt is constitutionally designated ae.d the final arbiter of the law. And this state is certainly not ad hering to those laws." I, in turn, should not havo to remind Mr. Crowther that there is a Constitutional distinction be tween State action which deprives citizens of the equal protection of the laws, and private discrimina tory action, and that whereas pub licly spcvisorcd segregation has been ruled an instance of the for mer, and hence contrary to the law of the land, the latter has not. The passages quoted above, while necessarily, in a literal sense, tak en from context, do not. I think, misrepresent Mr. Crovvther's argu ment, and certainly he nowhere indicates that he is aware of this distinction. A private establish ment, even in being open to the public, is not, by the Constitution as heretofore interpreted, forbid den to discriminate racially. Mr. Crowther may think that it should be fc forbidden, and it may be so forbidden hi 1370. but it is not so forbidden now. With ether aspects of Mr. Crovvther's argument, I am net here concerted. Were it shern of its vvild-en-cd denunciations of "au thcritarian seduction" and "a Southern aristocracy which -reeks with ante-bellum prejudice." and the sanctimonious arid impudent tears for North Carolina's "guilty" Governor, it might merit serious discussion. But it would secern prudent to substitute lacts for emotions when citing matters of law, ar.d to make clear where the law ends ar.d opinion begins. Not everything of which Mr. Crow ther disapproves is illegal. Michael D. Clark h p;ng mat l.oel ul 1 meet linn hall a eHlicrent. namely a lieher, deeper, e in?n irtant personality r nd it is pre- AAax Frisch's Homo Faber7: Journey Info Destruction Frank Crowther Max Frisch first came to my attention during the sum mer ol ii)-,S when I was on leave ol ahsenee : t the Brus-els World's Fair. I read a favorable review ol his hook. I'M ()'F S-TII.I.F.R, in an American paper which was being sold at the lair. The novel was described as being a Eu ropean best-seller, "the lirst novel since World War II th :t has tried to exploit the rich, mixed inheritance handed down by Kafka, Koestler and Mann." At that time, in Fu rrpe, the students were, talking of (avnius. as always, and Romain (iarvs I II!. ROOFS OF IIF.W'FX. Ihe several who had read Irisch, however, were ecstatic with praise: almost all of them had their own interpretation of I'M NOT S ! IITFR. Of course, I made a note to obtain the book ;vs soon as I returned to the V. S.. but somehow forgot or nev er got around to it. Now. having read his new novel, HOMO FAIiF.R, and hav ing started, at last. I'M NO I Mfiil.Ll-.K. I can understand anyone s L -c ination and plexit with his waiting. 1 have nor been able to complete the latter novel at this waiting, but what 1 have read in it is intoxicating. The attempt itself is gigantic, probing man's denial of his iden tiiv an clloit to achieve identity indirectly, seeking the pcilcxtion ol absolute authority, hoping foolishly for one short glance into the. realm of absolutct ealiiv, i.e., a me taphysical acceptance without judgement, vis a vis Ood. lint, as is inevitably the ca-e. the esc ; pe into another existence, as a caterpiller 1 1 an -'. 1 mig into the butterfly, brings -with it death and tragc.lv. I: is the necessary and impossible absolute 1 isk. Ihe ) :.; ;onist at one point is nir.de to say. . I am lorcvei way) will make m more valuable, i a.' ( isely litis. -in py-ibabn i? v, which prevents Oocl from set ting me on the paih to a red existence, that is to say from making it possible for me ie experience existence My con ditio sin (jun ;.-.' i-, that he shall rev.oke me, his creature. HOMO ! Ai l.R. his new novel (New York: Abelard- is essentially concerned with many of the nd what book that probes nietaphvsical- i a different plane, through mother set of ditions. r. a technologist-engineer, is flvin to Car acas lor I'N i . A) to assemble some turbines when, in a .moment ol cli iness at a stopover in Houston, Texas, he decides not to 1.0 on with the particular flight he was tak ing. "I siinph didn't feel like flying anv .farther." Iut why? Then, the trap-door opens and he begins the long descent to inevitable destruction. "There you are!" says the hostess, and he meekly returns to the plane, walking "like a man be-. ' ing led out of jail into the court room . . . .'v "And, as we discover, he is. 1 he ironic runs h: roc from this moment on. The plane goes down. He decides "at the very last moment" to visit in Ouatcmala an old friend ol his outh, who just happened to be the brother of .1 I1T0 . -pas-enger on the ill-fated air liner. We lead ol the gruesome suicide of this friend who just happened to have married the sweetheart of Faber's youth in Zurich. The spurious decision to travel to Europe bv boat (he alwavs went by plane) to get away from his : mistress, causes him to meet the daughter he 'didn't know he had, Sabeth, and eventually take her for his mistress (or be taken?). Was the lunar eclipse merely an astronomical phenomenon, was it coincidence that he decided to take a vacation, wtes their discussion on the grave mound pure ac cident, and 1 lie snub-nosed viper, and her fall? all of these events piling up, methodically, as Faber records them in the journal which is our novel. And what of Faber himseH, a man who calmly records.' thrvt he distrusted emotions as "fatigue phenomenon." who denied them in his youth onlv to have them burst the dam which he had constructed to contain them? Homo Faber.' Hanna. Sabeth's mother had named him, "Man The Mak-e (or, better, Man lite Doer ). 1 lie uncommitted man,' Schiunan. S;;.'!".'. s;une problems Iv is not?). b,rt f indispensablc rot Waiter ! ..:, d thr; word mean to him?). cr utunvolved. 'guiltless (what could superior to nature. Yet the calculated journey of the novel leads to the overwhelming knowledge when it is too late! that he has been responsible, that responsibility cannot be escaped or denied, that no one else can assume one's burden of guilt, even though it may have been accident; ! (but was it). As the end apj) ok lies, Walter Faber asks himself what he had done wtong, where was it that lie made the mistake, how could he have possibly known? "How thin the one of life really is." he notes, ah trrrtly. The final illumination and fulfillment comes too late, when our Homo l iber has dearoved everything, and the linal words of the novel portend the last of our destruction, .shattering not onlv Walter Faber, but the reader r- well. .0 in. er- i b 1X1 O o c N'LlAl IN THE MV G2AMMA ft SMNS AE 77 S3 f.'A , I ( OJcKlDAREYOU ) TfsOTLE ASAIN...SHE KEPS Ky OVT x DOING7 y MtDlNGMV BLANKET! s-!J V DECOYS! y i ? N -r1- - I jTt if 3 -2 A 1 - il I -v. - - - i r "V7 X 1 pr ... TT X -- ra J A V fHg RCTUflLLY4-x f VSSUU,lP!!?Nt' f 1 WA5 V ' MA? A Tau wifH ZFBRA I 6ZPt2, 1 ( TA if l.yiM3 ATTABOY 7 ASC2S ACOuPuA WS5wfMgy j T9 I ANAVS AAIASTER V OO- y d I SifTlNS Jr js . V Pn pr WHO HAS RE-ENLtSTEO 1 I V CROUCHP, (T-IT V J fl4.906irjMS n U VACT. H tommy wnm:
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 22, 1960, edition 1
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