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Show t -7 1A ti" A1985 Sunday Herald liyi n;i ii HII..I II ;uiiilii TO inn iiiTiiTfrnill yr, . "" """T"!1"" Notional Window Traveling Y' Johnson s Voting Rights Bill Taking Its Lumps Troupe AHHf To Laurels - By JAY TODD Written for UPI By LYLE WILSON - KARACHI, Pakistan (UPI) Brigham Young University s "Curtain Time U.S.A." cast, re ceiving highly complimentary press reviews and box office success, whereever it goes, this past week added to 'its laurels enthusiastic praise of this nation's college youth. The 25 member cast, on a goodwill cultural exchange program with the U.S. State Department,, to. 14 Middle East countries, visited nearly 20 campuses in a higly publicized tour of east and west Pakistan. The group also staged a half-hotelevision show and per formed on Voice of America and Radio Pakistan several times. Their next, stop, after mis West Pakistan capital, was United Press International It is neither sinful nor un patriotic to hope that Senate Republican Leader Everett Dirksen has not been mouse' trapped by President Johnson in the area of foreign relations as. he was trapped in the area of voting rights. In the area of foreip relations, Dirksen is a powerful supporter of LBJ's policy in Viet Nam. In the area of civil rights, Dirksen was a sponsor and selfless champion of LBJ's voting rights bill. Mc-Kinl- bomb-bomb-bo- More graceful of speech than of figure, the senator has been moderately busy taking bows on his enlightened leadership of the Republican remnants in the U.S. Senate. Long and successful years in public life have accustomed Dirksen to bow ma- jestically in response to popular acclaim or grandly to genuflect when receiving an ennobling sword tap of public approval. These occasions for bows and genuflections have diminished. however, in the area of the Johnson voting rights bill which Dirksen so proudly sponsored. The Johnson bill has been tak- - ur t J? V ;"' '11. J , V fa It is . into the past. GLIMPSE INTO THE PAST-Ta- ken during the 1920's, this of Utah of gives a glimpse the campus University photograph It was a scene far different from what meets the eye today. There's No Going Back wmmm Wmm win wmmm Except By KATHRYN D. GROESBECK The average person finds it the to envision Impossible great stride in change and growth a few years can bring SnmA. nnllnna iiunBt how as views are transformed by time or as they completely vanish, they become more important to many. , This is true of once familiar college scenes at the Brigham Young University and the University of Utah. There is no return to them, no going back, to way to recapture the past Though the scenes are lost for ever, a persoirmay De tnaiuc-fmat the memory of them lingers. As youth slips by, people are Inclined to recall the past Often they wish they might re turn to bygone days, and to the haunts that once meant ul TIMES HAVE CHANGED Though most of the BYU buildings are located on what Is known by tome ai Temple Hill, in 1923 the only big structure on the upper campus was the Maeser Memorial Building, shown above. Off to the east and north of It was the athletic field. Remember ? New Tax Withholding Plan Taken Under Consideration Cuba May Be Pulled Into Warsaw Pact much to them. Back some go with that in mind to their alma maters, joit to recall with dear nostalgia the 1920's at the Brigham Young University and the University of Utah. Now fabulous million-dolla- r buildings have multiplied there beyond their wildest expecta tions. Extensive landscaping has been handled with abandon to bring additional beauty. And the thousands and thousands of students that attend those schools today make the scenes far different from what they were in the 1920's, when every body attending seemed to know almost everybody else, They who contemplate the past as they visit those areas, MIAMI (UPI) - An anti-Ca- s The payers, winding up tneir tax WASHINGTON (UPI) is considering year with the government ow them refunds. half a dozen income tax ing administration tro organization reported that using the Soviet bloc is "considering withholding rates in the future pulling Cuba into the Warsaw to help the nation's taxpayers Pact" to reassure premier Fi come out even when April 15 del Castro of military help in . rolls around. the event of any U.S. attack on A Department Treasury the island. . source said Friday that a new The Citizens Committee for a system may be recommended Free Cuba quoted Cuban under. to replace the present 14 per ground sources as saying the cent withholding rate. continuing U.S. air attacks on Graduated withholding might North Viet Nam Communist at 12 per cent for lower begin "have caused panic among Cas bracket taxpayers and run up where man hasjwrought many tro lieutenants." to .16. .percent. for people, in changes "during the past 25 These sourcesr hot otherwise higher brackets, the official years and where demanding identified, estimated that inclu- said. haeta Viae tn enmp artpnt ra. sion, of ..Cuba in the . Warsaw "The aim Is two-folplaced gracious consideration Pact is the Soviet bloc's equiv To cut down on under with alent to NATO. Its signatories and wholesome leisure, feel which because of last holding, on one deep reverence for the past vow that an attack member would be considered an year's tax cut, has proven to and the old ways. be a problem for many taxpaySome things they would like attack on all. ers and forced them to take out once realize that but they back, Iowa ranks second among loans to pay their tfxes. familiar college scenes vanish To soften overwithhold-ing- , with growth, destined to be states of the Union in produc tion of soybeans. which results In some tax only memories. Let's Be Kind to Those Kabul, Afganistan. Calling the show "clean, de lightfully gay and heartwarming," the press lauded the col . fi The Lighter Side Internal Revenue Commis sioner bheldon s. Cohen dis closed earlier this week that the administration was considering revising the withholding system. The Treasury source said Friday that "we hope to get a bill this year." legiate variety entertainment and said, "the cheers could hardly have been louder." So successful has the tour been, that this week the cast received a memorable telegram from Secretary of State Dean Rusk, which said m part: - "Extend department's warm greeting to the BYU v cast for most successful tour, thus far accomplished, in spite of hardships encountered. Department sincerely gratified to members for contributions both on and off stage." Pakistani college students came from as far away as 300 miles to see the show and to talk 'to the Americans. Singer Dean Black of Aurora, Colo., recalled mat one commonly asked question concerned dormitory hours for girls. In Pakistan, the general dorm curfew is 7:30 p.m. for girls and 10 p.m. for boys. Dancer Kim Booke of Provo, Utah, was questioned about what sort of clothes American undergraduates usually wear. The reply was that they wear whaUthey chooseIn- - Pakistan the standard garb for college students is the black academic Fastidious Auto Junkmen By DICK WEST called the Auto Disftiantlers As-- . sociation (ADA) of Southern United Press International WASHINGTON (UPI) California. --Auto As a disciple of the theory of disposalism, which holds that getting rid of things is becom ing the worm's numoer, one economic problem, I am total- Junkmen have feelings, too, you know: In our zeal to. make America beautiful, we must be careful that we don't bruise them. Such was the message brought to the capital this week by Terry Fiskin and Herb two fastidious Junkyard operators from California. They feel that their industry has received a black eye in all the talk about eyesores stemming from efforts by President and Mrs. Johnson to promote a more aesthetic landscape. Fiskin and Lieberman made the point that not all Junkyards are unsightly, and that this country now has a new breed of junkmen who are sensitive about their image. In fact, even the term "junk men pains them. Tney prefer the more mellifluous title of "auto dismantlers." The organization they repre- sentronce' known as the Auto Wreckers Association, now is . Lieb-erma- In this country, where dating rare and being alone with a student of the opposite sex is grounds for expulsion, questions addressed to the BYU students often concern dating in Amer ica. Dancer Tanya Hale of Glen- dale, Calif., was asked by Pak-astani student, "Is it true that you can go with a boy anytime you wish?" She answered, "Yes, whenever my studies per. mit." Pakistani students were par ticularly surprised to learn of the. emphasis placed on and research papers in American universities, as explained by the BYU students, Here in Pakistan, because of text-readi- (UPI)-W- est Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt will meet with President Johnson at the White" House Wednesday. West German officials said Friday that Brandt, who will visit Washington with Christian Democratic party Deputy Chairman Fritz Erler, will ar rive Monday for talks with top administration officials, includ ing Secretary of State Dean Rusk. funds for supplying books, most learning is through lectures, and studies most generally follow a pattern of note limited d: SATISFACTION Unconditionally GUARANTEED YOUR MONEY REFUNDED (1) f you an not satisfied with th$ price of your goBtt (2) If your knsu and framts or nof firs qualify. (3J If you paid txfra for CruMP. -- A OECRBTl "HIDDEN FIT"-.-A R BALLY CLIP-PRO- OF HEEL ONI PRICE GLASSES INCLUDES. 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Aigus EASY CREDIT rim ST SK -- HUO OF A CLINOINO COLLAR MCUJMMICIMTIKmiXMMMnON 5 MODRII ". ' THE OOFT MM ONE LOW PRICE OFFICES ii to fit LA Kryptok Bifocals Only Gear or Tinted Lenses . : OHOB WITH were pockets of possible election discrimination in other states which were not touched by the Johnson bill because no literacy test was involved. Among these states were Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas, Kentucky, Florida and Maryland. .) Sen. Harry F. Byrd and others contend that the bill was carefully drafted to hook certain Southern states and to . memorization. OEAUTIFULLY DETAILED BJ (D-Va- n, TO VISIT JOHNSON WASHINGTON closer examination the bill not honor, the Johnson promise to Negroes uttered on March 15 before a joint sessfcn of Congress.-Lsaid: . : Strike Restrictions redown bill will strike "The strictions in voting in all elections, federal, state and local." That is a misstatement of fact because the bill is potentially effective in such manner in only six states: Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina and "Virginia, plus 34 counties in North Carolina. These states and counties require a literacy test for registration and the Johnson-Dirk-se- n bill target is the literacy test on which it will score a direct and destructive hit. The rights bill would be triggered to act in the area whenever fewer than 50 per cent of potential voters failed to vote. ' But there have been constantly louder protests that there On does in sympathy with their campaign to make dismantling yards socially acceptable. I question, however, whether the measures they advocate, such as building screens around the heaps of scrapped cars, are adequate to overcome the gen exempt, for example, LBJ's Texas. The Republicans are eral public's prejudicial scrambling now in Congress to Beauty, after all, is 'more of improve the bill Dirksen so a state of mind than anything eagerly supported. The adminelse. What the dismantlers istration appears reconciled to should do is associate them- some degree of improvement. selves with the great cultural Invites Attention AD of this invites attention to explosion that is taking place in this country. Dirksen's leadership of Senate This can be done very easily Republican support of the Johnby taking advantage of the so- - son administration's policies in called "pop art" that is Viet Nam. The end result of support of vital currently in vogue. Sculptors this and painters, as you may be and foggy foreip policy is to aware, are turning away from discourage debate which might traditional materials and have enlighten public understanding. started creating works of art Dirksen would have best served s, out of such things as himself, his party and his councoffee cans, wagon try if he had taken a longer wheels and old tennis shoes. and colder look at the rote bill Auto, dismantlers, of course, as it emerged from the Justice have a rich source of potential Department.' He might now better serve art supplies readily available. All they need to do is start self, party and country if he exercising their creative in- compelled the administration to stincts. illuminate in Senate debate the the , For openers, I would suggest dark areas of the possible, that Fiskin and Lieberman probable and the expectable in sponsor a contest to see which Southeast Asia. dismantler can compose the Opposition for the sake of opmost graceful arrangement of position is small minded, mean. wrecked cars hauled off the Collaboration for the sake of Hollywood Freeway on any giv- collaboration is no better. Inen Tuesday. deed, it may be worse because Once the public begins think- it is likely to anesthetize all ing of an auto junkyard as a hands and especially to soothe studio or an art museum, the to sleep a nation of wishful thinkers. problem will be solved. ly robe. is ing its lumps and its sponsors with it. There are, notably, complaints of false pretenses. OPTICAL, GIFT and KNIT SHOP Open 'till 9 p. m. 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