PAGE 2 A
HERALD AND NEWS, Klamath Falls, Ore.
Sunday, October 23, 1960
OWSkrHIA.hTJU.IUf.Ul.rtLM. fl-Z
"J'm afraid sha'll be using the phone quite a while. She
hasn't even stretched out on the floor yet!"
Debate Reminds Reporter
Of Maxim-Charles Bout
As Usual, Both Sides Claim Victory;
Fifth Debate Possible, But Not Likely
NEW YORK (API The fourth Whether or not the fourth de-chargod the Eisenhower adminis-j
Nixon-Kennedy debate has gonejbate would stir public demand for tration with ignoring that part of
into history with both sides claim-an unplanned filth, Kenpedy re-'the world, in which he said
ing success in an unprecedented new ed his call on Nixon to meetiLaslros influence is growing
series that may altnougn tnc again ana ixon saia ne aoesn i enormously.
possibility is slim be extended to rule out anything. Kennedy hung up on the Cuban
another match
Vice President Richard M. Nix
on ana sen. Jotin r . Kennedy
disputed, challenged and rebuked
each other for the better part of
an hour Friday night before a
television and radio audience
spread across the nation.
They clashed sharply over U.S.
The vice president had said he question with a query of his own
wanted to expand Friday night's; He said Nixon had said last
debate to two hours instead of
trying to squeeze an added starter
into his campaign calendar. After
the program he objected again to
the debate format which limited
answers to 2'i minutes and pro
vided for owning and closing
policy toward Cuba. Nixon said statements. He wants 5 minutes
his Democratic rival had been to develop his responses
By SAUL PETT
NEW YORK (AP) About one
third way through the fourth
"great debate," our dog got up,
yawned, stretched and went out
side to count trees. ,
About half-way t h r o u g h, our
teen-age daughter broke the habit
of a lifetime by announcing on a
Friday night, mind you, 1 d ratn
er go upstairs and do homework.'
And she did,
: About two-t h 1 r d s the way
through, sleep overtook my wife,
who usually relishes presidential
amDaicns with the same appe-
tile Madame La Farge showed for
the French Revolution
-And in the closing minutes of
the debate. I found myself dream-
Ing of the good old days when
television used to-carry tne Fri
day night fights from the Garden.
As a matter of fact, the debate
reminded me of the Ezzard
Charlcs-Joey'Maxim bout-i-a lot of
holding, dancing, clinching anort
punching, but no knockdown.
Now our family is as civic
minded as the next one but frank
lv both candidates lost us. The re
views in our house consisted ot
one long yawn.
The trouble, as 'far as we can
tell, was that bothtlick Nixon and
Jack Kennedy were repeating
themselves and even the panel of
questioners seemed to be running
out of questions.
That one question about whom
the candidates had In mind for
secretary of state showed you
how desperate the panel was, As
any schoolboy can tell you, can
didates for president don't an
nounce their cabinets before elec
tion. If they did, the guys who
didn't get chosen would stop
working for them.
Both candidates, it seems to us,
were kicking the same dead horse
en Quemoy and Matsu, the same
vay they did last time out. The
enly new wrinkle this time was
that Nixon Invited Kennedy to ad
mit he was wrong. And Kennedy
Invited Nixon to admit that the
administration had tried to get
Chinese Nationalists to change
their minds about the islands.
. Neither man accepted the
other's invitation. And there we
were with a "Mexican standoff"
again.
. On Cuba, Africa, Asia, and the
question of American prestige
abroad, both men seemed to be
Working the same tired ground
Villi the same tools.
; Kennedy said the country has to
get moving again. Nixon said that
KiMi'.edy said the country Is
sun Hug still. Kennedy said he
linlr't say that. Nixon said the
that Kennedy Isn't helping Amer
ican influence abroad by criticiz
ing it.
po'j7 not standing still. He
Ti. We can't stand pat" (Ur
f wit note to printer: Please make
Kill you don't capitalize "p" In
Nixon told us again that he
knows Khrushchev. Kennedy told
us again that we have to show
more foresight in the underde
veloped areas. Nixon said again
Boycott
Draws Blast
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Chair
man J. William Fulbright of the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit
tee said Saturday he doubted that,
U.S. economic sanctions against
Cuba would topple the Castro re
gime, if that were their purpose.
The Arkansas Democrat said
the government ban on almost all
exports to the once-friendly Carib
bean island might be "merely an
other Irritation" that would drive
Cuba into a tighter embrace with
Communism.
Assistant Senate Democratic
Leader Mike Mansfield, Mont.,
agreed.' He said the export ban
would only "create a void of tho
sort which can be filled by an
other country" Russia, a Red
satellite, Canada or a Latin Amer
ican nation.
The trade boycott, Mansfield
complained, "does drive deeper
the wedge of reprisal and counter-
reprisal and does so on a unilat
eral basis, rather than in concert
with the Organization of American
States."
On Other Fronts
Tlie lawmakers made tho state
ments in interviews with United
Press International amid these de
velopments in . U.S.-Cuhan rela
tions: ,
Diplomatic sources said Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro probably
would use tho U.S. export ban as
an excuse tn establish diplomatic
relations with' Communist East
Germany.
The Navy announced it had
dispatched an undisclosed number
of additional Marines to the Guan-
tanamo naval base in Cuba. Cas
tro has challenged America's
right to the base.
Moscow Radio predicted that
15,000 anti-Castro invaders, armed
with the latest American weapons
and trained in the United States,
soon would land at several places
in Cuba.
Postmaster General Arthur E.
Summertlold said the Tost Office
Department had instructed all
postmasters to make sure no par
cels addressed to Cuba violated
the new U.S. trade boycott.
Smathers Applaud Ran
Fulbright and Mansfield com
mented on the economic sanctions
after Sen. George Smathers,
D-Flu., a Latin American affairs
expert, applauded the ban but
said the administration should
have ordered it months ago he
fore Castro could stockpile U.S.
machinery, tools and other item:
Mansfield said it would
irresponsible as never before in
proposing aid to Cuban elements
hostile to both Prime Minister
Fidel Castro and former dictator
Fulgencio Batista.
Kennedy said economic curbs
thrown against Cuba by the Ei
senhower administration and sup
ported by the GOP candidate
were inadequate to cope with
Communist penetration of the
island republic less than 100 miles
from the U.S. coast.
Kennedy said communism is
most vulnerable in eastern Eu
rope.
Nixon said the Soviets may be
cheating on the suspension of
nuclear tests.
These latter points were two of
the newer slants in the fourth de
bate. For the most part the can
didates rehashed views stated in
their previous meetings or on the
campaign stump. And for that
reason, voters who previously had
seen or heard them argue could
more quickly pick the man they
lavored beforehand as the winner,
Ex-Yankee
Faces Death
HAVANA, Cuba (UPD-Maj.
William Morgan, a soldier of for
tune who lost his American citi
zenship for joining the Cuban re
volt, was charged Saturday with
plotting against the Castro re
gime. He faced death by a firing
squad.
A presidential palace announce
ment said Morgan and another
rebel army officer, Maj. Jesus
Carroras, were arrested Friday
night and accused of counter-rcv-
olulionarv activities. A govern
ment spokesman said the two of
ficers "were at the service of for
eign interests."
Morgan was reported Involved
with anti-Castro forces in the in
terior. He was said to have hid
den arms and aided Castro foes
to escape.
Armed Forces Minister Raul
Castro, brother of Premier Fidel
Castro, has said "traitors will he
executed kneeling with their backs
lo the firing squad."
Three Have Died
Three Americans were execut
ed by Cuban firing squads earlier
this month for anti-Castro activi
ties. But unlike Morgan, the three
Anthony Zarba of Boston, Rob
ert Fuller of Miami, and Allen
Thompson of Queen City, Tex.
had never supported the revolu
tionary government.
Only a year ago. Morgan was
hailed throughout Cuba for infil
trating a counter revolutionary
movement allegedly formed in the
Dominican Republic by ousted Cu
ban Premier Fulgencio Batista.
Morgan impressed Castro so
much during the early days of
the revolutionary 2eith of July
movement that the Cuban premier
gave him command of the south
ern port city of Cienfuegos.
The soldier of fortune had
served in Japan with the U.S.
Army's 82nd Airborne Division
and was discharged in 1050.
Goes to Sen
Morgan was known as a rebel
lious "wild one" in his 'teens and
left his Toledo, Ohio, home at the
age of 15 and went to sea.
He was married to an Ameri
can woman and had a daughter
and son before the Cuban rcvolu-
"Any other debate should last
for two hours with a catch-all
period at the finish," Nixon said.
Kennedy had asserted a fifth
debate, if not more, would be
necessary to keep the record
straight.
The candidates settled nothing
between themselves. Kennedy
hurried from the American
Broadcasting Co. studio, where
the combined network program
originated, to make an appear
ance at Madison Square Garden
and then take off for St. Louis,
where he launches a Midwest
tour. He and the vice president
snook hands.
Nixon told Kennedy he had re
ceived the senator's wire, pre
sumably one proposing a fifth
debate, and would answer it. Her
bert G. Klein, the vice president's
press secretary, said there would
by further discussion of schedul
ing problems and program struc
ture. He refused to go beyond
saying another contest was "in
the realm of possibility."
Neither contestant personally
claimed victory in No. 4. Each
said it wasn't his practice to do
so.
But Robert Kennedy, the sena
tor's brother and campaign man
ager, said he felt the Democratic
candidate's performance was his
best so far and the candidate
himself was very pleased.
Mem termed it "a clear-cut
victory for the vice president."
In Washington, Sen. Henry M.
lackson of Washington, the Demo-!
cratic national chairman said,
"This reinforces our belief that
Senator Kennedy will win most,
u not all, states In this election."
Sen. Thruston B. Morton of
Kentucky, the GOP chairman,
said Nixon's showing would "car
ry forward the upsurge of sen
timent for the Republican party."
Morion said Kennedy "demon
strated once again that he lacks
mature judgment in foreign af
fairs." . "v . - -
Foreign policy was the subject
of the debate, and the antagonists
DORRIS THEATRE
D.rrla. cm.
It Started With A Kin'
nub
l..hhl. Reynolds
lll.nn Ford
Clnamasr.p. A Color
Sun. Mo , Orl. Mrd 14lh
Bom OlMrr. Oprnt at 1 P.M.
tiun broke out. His wife. Theresa.
be a divorced him shortly after Mor-
costly blow tt the t inted Mates gan joined Castro in the Eseam-
were forced out ol the utiantana
mo Base. He said it would cost
$50 million to $100 million to build
similar military facilities at Roo
sevelt Roads in Puerto Rico,
smaller U.S. base.
Mansfield said the export em
bargo was full of loopholes. Ho
said it would not prevent other
nations, or even American busi-
month that if the United States
had provided the kind of economic
aid five years ago it now pro
vides, Castro may never have
taken over, adding: "Why didn't
we?"
On defense of Quemoy and
Matsu, which prompted restate
ments of the candidates views
Kennedy challenged Nixon "to
deny that the administration has
sent at least several missions to
persuade Chiang Kai-shek to with
draw from these islands." Time
ran out on the panelists' questions
and answers at that point, and
Nixon passed it over in his closing;
summary.
The vice president, concluding
the program, claimed more prog
ress under the Eisenhower ad
ministration than under Demo
cratic presidents.
Responding to Kennedy criti
cisms. Nixon said, "We aren't
going to move America forward
and we are not going to be able
to lead the world to win the
struggle for freedom if we have
a permanent inferiority complex
about American achievements."
Kennedy declared the State De
partment has been unwilling to
divulge the results of surveys
which show "a sharp drop" in
U.S. prestige abroad. Nixon said
the report related particularly to
the period immediately after the
Soviets launched their first Sput
nik and said he would not object
to making it public.
After the program, a Kennedy
spokesman said Nixon's com
ments should induce the State De
partment to bring out the report.
1 K
1 Ifesf .3-
T.M. . tU. Nt Oft
1MOkTNtA,lM,
lo-Zl
Scribe Has 'Discovery'
By DICK WEST IWomen'J National Press Club
tailed Press International luncheon. But Drury didn't ap.
WASHINGTON (LTD While pear to be intimidated,
browsing through the dictionary First he was asked if he resent
the other day, I stumbled across (he act that a ol of hjs
a term which for me was an im- acters and sub-plots were u,
portan! medical discovery. :tate(j when the book was adapted
"We're standing by, just In easel"
New Way To Find Quakes
Announced By Scientists
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-A
team of government scientists dis
closed today a completely new
way to detect earthquakes, torna
does and other natural phenom
ena at great distances.
The new technique has uncov
ered also the existence of a mys
terious movement in the earth's
air mass at intervals of five to
seven seconds.
Sound waves that cannot be
heard are the basis for the find
ings. They are far too slow to be
audible. They are -called
sound.
First reports on the research
were given to the Acoustical So-
a million and you would be taking
a long time to do it.
Instruments that measure these
minute and very slow changes in a newspaper if he wanted to. . It
aimospneric pressure are tne
means by which the researchers
The term which caught my eye
was "scribendi cacoethes. de
fined bv Webster as "the itch for
writing."
For years, I have been suffer
ing from "scribendi cacoetnes
without realizing it. I thought the
itch I have was caused by poison
ivy.
I must have caught the disease
as a child when my mother gave
me some words to play with and
I started rubbing them together
to see if they would make sparks.
She probably didn't know that
words can be infective.
Most newspapermen, I suppose,
are afflicted by "scribendi ca
coethes" to some degree, but few
of us do anything to relieve it.
We just fidget a lot. One notable
exception, however, is Allen
Drury, an erstwhile New YorK
Times correspondent.
When Drury got the itch, he
scratched, and what he scratched
turned out to be pure gold. In
fact, he scratched into the moth
er lode of literature in the form
of a novel called "Advise and
Consent."
This book has made so much
money that Drury could now buy
made tneir discoveries. The in
struments are called microbaro
graphs. With these instruments the re
searchers learned that the air is
full of infrasound.
The big earthquake in the Yel
lowstone recion . of Montana on
infra-iAuiT. 18. 1!)59 was renkloren nn
Bureau of Standards seismome
ters in Washington, D.C. It was a
City Briefs
Kwauna Toasfmistress Club will
hold a regular meeting at the
Willard Hotel 7:30 p.m. Monday,
October 24. Toastmistress will be
Margaret Davics. A new course
of orientation will be started.
Anyone interested welcome.
Royal Neighbors of America
will hold a regular meeting on
Wednesday, , October 26, at the
IOOK Hall. fl'here will be inilia
tion of new members. All officers
and members are urged to be
present. (
stuck to the theme. Order of Eastern Star. Aloha
I hey stuod behind podiums Chanter No. 81. will sponsor a no
angled toward each other and; hostess luncheon for Virginia
tiose cnougn tor tnem to shake Wright, associate grand conduc
hands, if they'd chosen. Each an
pcarcd more relaxed than in anv
ot tneir previous encounters,
Nixon wore makeup, and there
were no complaints about his ap
pearance as there were after the
first debate. Kennedy wore none.
They rapped each other crisnlv.
but their exchanges were not as
caustic as in their last engage
ment.
On Cuba. Nixon said Kennedy's
proposal would thrust the United
States into another country's
101 mil atlairs and thus
Lai in-American nations.
I think that Senator Kennedy's
policies and recommendations for
the handling of the Castro regime
tress, of the Grand Chapter of
Oregon on Tuesday, October 25,
at 1 p.m. in the Spruce Room of
the Willard Hotel. All members
are invited to attend.
Happy Hour Club will meet
Tuesday, October 25, at the home
of Mrs. H. E. Johnson, 401 Jef
ferson, at 1:30 p.m. for a des
sert luncheon.
movement which caused the
riptv nf America hv Dr. Richard Ground In risp Iherp a cmall!think
K. Cook and Dr. J. M. Young,! fraction of an inch in five or six
physicists of the National Bureau! seconds and then fall for another
five or six seconds to produce
wave crests II seconds apart.
This upward heave of the Wash-
of Standards. They also talked to
reporters.
If you enunciated a single!
sound, such as the letter O. intoin6ton terrain caused the ground
to press upward against the air
in the Washington vicinity. The
pressure change was recorded by
seconds you would be producing1116 rnicrobarographs as some-
an infrasound someth ne ke that, 'nlnS 's " ne Pa" m a
a tape recorder and men slowed
down the tape so the playback
would be drawn out to about 20
has been best sellered, book
clubbed and digested, and this
week it arrived here in play form
for a pre-Broadway tryout. The
movie version will be next.
Having always been attracted
by the sweet smell of success, I
went to hear Drury speak at a
Women's National Press Club
luncheon. He was part of a panel
discussion on "The Perils Of Put
ting Politics On Stage and Be
tween .Book Covers."
One of the perils, I should
would be appearing at a
for the stage.
Mtit $Uf&0n -KMC FVaaiWCf
million.
From this the researchers cal
culated that the rise and fall of
produced by a big earthquake
1,500 miles away.
Tn Antna tl.ie mn Uniilrt hr
changing the air pressure around "?e Washington terrain had been
the speaker by about one part inir y. " ' -"
Tornadoes in Texas, Oklahoma
and Kansas last May 5 apparently
caused pressure changes which
traveled through the air to Wash
ington, arriving as pressure
waves with periods of 12 to 50
seconds. They were weaker than
the earthquake waves.
Drum and Bugle Corps men
have been asked to a special
alienate, meetinc at the Lecion Hall Tues
day, October 25, at 8 p.m. The
Veterans Day Parade, November
11, will be discussed. The parade
will start at Twelfth and Main
streets and
house with
nies.
finish at the court-flag-raising
ccremo-
Gary Burt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Renaming
Road Asked
TILLAMOOK (AP)-The Oregon
Coast Association wants to re
name the Coast Highway and get
a bond issue to improve the route
The association announced at
the annual directors' meeting
Thursday that a bond measure
will be prepared for submission
to the next legislature.
The new name the association
wants for US 101 is Pacific Coast
International Scenic Drive.
The money from the bond issue
would be used mostly for improve
ments in Tillamook County, but
there also would be a threemilo
stretch to be improved in Curry
County between Gold Beach and
Brookings.
The group also asked that the
slate Highway Commission be ex
panded Irom Ihree to five mem
bers; that ferry service be im
proved at Astoria and that the
state fish and game commissions
merge. The group opposed ballot
V. L. Burt, B44 Riverside, was 'measure No. 15 to control bill
promoted to lance corporal Oclo-! boards and opposed the proposal
Corporal Burt is with the
her 1
Third Marine Division In Okin
awa. He entered the Marines in
September, 1059, after graduating
from Kl'HS.
lo make the Sea Linns Caves
state park.
our difficulty throughout Latin
America." Kennedy said. Hi-
bray Mountains of Central Cuba
in lKi7. The adventurer then mar
ried a Cuban woman.
In a 500-word statement issued
a while he was hiding out in the
Cuban mountains, Morgan said he
joined the Cuban revolt "because iv
i believe free men should take up j NOT rOP rlSninCJ
arms nnn siann togctner ann tigni 1 ar,.ni.r. t.i'i
and destroy the croups mid, what he was doing when he stole
are probably the most dangerous
ly irresponsible recommendations
that he has made during the
course of this campaign," Nixon
said.
Nixon also said they would in
vite Soviet Premier Khrushchev
"lo come inlo Latin America, and
to engage us in what would be a
civil war and possibly even worse
than that."
Kennedy said the United States
lacked the prestige and influence
f il countries soutli ol Marn BlK.hln(ham who has
the border, and elsewhere, to join ,... visilinB .... .,. .... and
ill nn economic quarantine of ..... ......:..... 0....J SAI.KM APl.n n.-nnn nv,n
t-t a r, t . , IlllllV Dill nlllKiUtiu, Huuiii n
tuba. Only joint action, he said.i ... ,L ...... .... ... j has tnniird Hip naiinn in -nrt nn
u - 1 ruamaui raits, nas ii-iui.iei. . -
would make economic sanctions . ... .... 1.. u. chemical analvsis nf fenH i-nniml
cllctl1"- li 1 . ..... ...J . nrodiicts for the fiflll slraiclil
Casi o Is only the beginning of,,,.,,, she wi ,cave soon orycar. the Department of Agricul-
New York City where she w ill lu "day.
spend a two-month vacation, re-l J- D- Patterson, chief chemist
turning home for the Christmas!0' the department, said James
holidays. Her brother. Robert, and;Lallncr of lh department received
Jack ilciderer. also of Route 3.ilhe recognition from the National!
who accompanied her south wiirssoclallon ol American Feed
If he kiK wjictuin to Klamath Falls Sunday. i""'"' ""' m nHMimgiun,
i'. 1 ., icceiiuv.
Oregon Chemist
Tops Nation
A DEADLY ME pA Z
... ihe gave him V
her love one minute- Sf f j
and threatened ni'Ak
ALFRBD HTCHCOCK'S
NORTH BY NORTHWEST'
nVISTAVISION METR0C010R
Tackle Box
MELODIES & MEMORIES
BY
np.vmpn nvpi-.ro. Imm cltinninp ' fn-,.ne II...I ,..,,. In ...Ln .I, ni,.ln.in fi.l.i,,., .....I. I.. I..... i , ... I :,.....!. ft....! nt 1'!.i.tn T , . -
' ... ..,.r.. .n, ,,,(,, ..nil, iu ,,,p.v uir tifcuio-" , tuvp.it- uu. mini Ul . .im vim. ,., ii .. mum .
goods lo Cuba. of people away." (Klory E. Wagen.iar, some thief thor.-tn Church, 1175 Crescent mff l?J hmS TJtt
is going to revolutionize fishing Avenue, will sponsor a doughnut' " " "
by using a needle instead of a sale Thursday. October 27, at the
hook. Ichurch. Coffee and doughnuts will JS'ffX.tt?
Dr. Wagrnaar said the box con- he served during the day in the; Pubiiihj daily it.cppi su nd Sunday
laincd a complete set of anes'he- church basement. For advance
Southern
(Bimnysi
1
lnoy d.llghtful nttrtainmtnt
with thai Stan ol Radio,
Stag, and Night Clubs.
r- 1
NOW APPEARING AT THE lej
LUCCA CAFE
US South 6li
fh.na TU 4 3J74
A
E.a)V4itaaJte.i& -riiiWiajn
I
IB M C M ftCTU
I ,"VV J They loved, they hated, they j
IsriJv j dreamed, they schemed - -
1. , j And then their passions
:B crowded. ..f S
j , TECHNICOLOR
st"TT entertainment,.
! l,.,...r j and the J
1 m ti ' . - .
sinlogist's
$400.
instruments valued a!
orders
4-8707.
phone TU 4-6t8 or Tin
Adair Base Rating
CORVAI.1.1S (AP The 2oth
Air Division inspection, which
lasted 10 days, resulted in a rat
ing this week of outstanding for
Adair Air Koree Station near Cor-vallis.
Ortoon Puhi, thing Company
Wain at F.planad.
Phona ruxtdo a-IMI
W. B. SWreTLAND. Puft'l.h.r
Cnt.rtd ai Mcond class mattar at
'post oftica at Klamath Falls. Or.gon.
A Halloween costume partv will on utiu.i x. iw. und.r act 01 con.
be held at the KC Hall at 7;30 r.r'!,1,','.:.,'
p.m. Monday. October 24. f 0 r " additional ma.img oiicn.
members of the Degree of Honor 1
and their families. There will be
ttarfi-J
SEE PAGE 3
in Todoy's
Fomily Weekly
Then Go To
DICK REEDER'S
entertainment and refreshments.
A Meeting of Methodist Men
is planned lor 7 p m. Monday,
October 24, at the church. A 75
cent chili supper will precede the
meeting Subject will be "Metho
dist Men's Hour." Wives of mem-
SUBSCRIPTION RATE)
Carri.r
1 V(w.h
. Months
I V.ar
Van m tdvanca
I Worth
. Month!
I r.ar
Carr.r and Daai.rs
Aa.hday 4 Sunday, copy
I 1'!
!'(.
El 09
I n
1 100
IOC
UNITED HESS INTERNATIONAL
ASSOCIATED POt 55
AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATION
SuhtcriMr. rMt rM.lvlna a.liv.rv at
hers will be guests. Members are "'' na.aio ana Nas. p.a. mi
DANA ANDREWS I RHONDA FLEMING
- n (riii .-..... , m . - n on - www, , m, ,,. ,, tiHU
EFREM Zl M BALIST jr I JOHN KERR
HlWc .ft -UrtiiiKp1tn..
ANNE FRANCIS I KEENAK VYHN
-alAtti ft. -1C Narln..MW. -tl Ko. s-own lotnot . M.
andTBHV nnununci datdv lciiv
iiwi iwnniiubirnioi rtiu.1
KHtiarwrrai.Vi. .atrr.a
asked to attend.
Tuiot aim tutor. I p.m.
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