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Show v -- 4 a a e m w w m w v y w ee l"v a- -f vrywm 'T"v e e w 'V tTfv'r a rTr1? t No civil Judici-Commi- t- ary tee. The House J,u d i c i a r y Committee is a cinch. Chairman Emanual Celler of New York is a pal So isthe Re- publican Rep. McCulloch of bliss McGrory Ohio. Theres William C. Cramer, Republican erf Florida, but with the House rule, he cant do much, and John Lind five-minu- chit-cha- Katzenbach didnt miss any cues. He was a most reassuring manner with congressmen. He has not the alienating aura of power and glamor of his predecessor Robert Kennedy, nor Bobbys quivering contentiousness. He occasionally ventures a light remark, but its never too clever. .He has the large and soothing presence of a mastiff, who is responsive and not obtrus've. The senator would ask a Dr. Van Dellen Yes, gram sufficient t i t y. Primary Source Carbohydrates are the primary source of body fuel. It is readily available and used as needed to supply the energy required for various bodily functions, heat, and muscular energy-producin- rates, (sugar and starches) often are labeled as such because most of us con-- s um e large amounts in our daily diet. They are cheap, taste good Dr. Van Dellen and are oft- en used in confections. When food is ingested in excess of the body needs, whether taken in the form of carbohydrates, proteins or fats, the equivalent of excess calories is deposited as fat. Ideal: 2,200 Calories The ideal diet of the average woman contains 2,200 calories of which 58 grams are protein, 77 are fat and 170 are carbohydrates. The corresponding figures for men are 70, 77, and 170. Reduce the number of grams for any of these and the individual consumes fewer calories. The current reducing fad recommends a drastic reduction in carbohydrates. The reduction is in grams; we assume this is done to free the ominous calorie. Those familiar with nutrition know that each al - WASHINGTON The Reip Congress are publicans proving to be a constructive opposition. They are working o v erwhelming 32 to 68 odds against in the Senate, 140 to 294 in the House but attorney The general showed no dismay at all. In fact, there was no cause. For the senator, before he embarked on his footnotes and citations from American Jurisprudence, said ruefully, the bill would probably pass. It has 66 sponsors in the Senate. The southern senators, with Sen. Russell on the sick list, are leaderless. Selma drained off the last drops of sympathy from the rest of the country. Katzenbach tried to reassure Sen. Ervin. He said that it was not a cruel law which would punish people for doing something for H.H. writes: Is there any reason why a boy with an unattractive moustache cannot shave? the past 10 years that was never held a crime before. Gently, he reminded the sena-- , tor that the Constitution' already guaranteed every citizens voting rights. REPLY : No. He will shave sooner or later and starting now will not make the moustache grow faster or heavier. sense of purpose and even Mr. Reston a sense of humor. This is not an easy exercise. When a party has been overwhelmed at the polls, as the Republicans were in 1932 and in 1964, the task of reconstruction seems almost hopeless. Planned parenthood is a matter of timing! . . . Always have somebody ready to wear the clothes another member of the family has just outgrown! Douglass Welch at 25 mph Taxi, Madame? You Bet Just Follow Me A good day to ybu all, and a of my hat to Mrk. McMur-tr- y who lives across the street dp in our kooky ter lane, suddenly, and she often got lost and just stopped until someone would give her directions. to his daughters and use both her own car and a taxicab. And he couldnt ask her because they dont talk to each other. Using a taxicab as a guide and an interference was an inspiration. The way this inspiration came, why, Mrs. McMurty was confused on the freeway one day and she simply stopped her car, straddling two lanes and traffic backed up through three counties. Pretty soon a patrol car came along with lights flash- -' ing and siren going, and, of Its Her Mrs. Mc-Mur- ty is straight up and down and is apompensa-tor- y eater be- cause she feels loves nobody her; and she is and austere, she hollers out the living room window when her husband talks to the Widow in the ad- yard. joining But still there Is a lot that is very admirable about Mrs. It got so that the fellows up jn theTfntiopter who were adcasting traffic conditions Id recognize her car below therrhand would warn their There is going to listened: be trouble at 145th Street any minute now And there always was. And Mrs. McMurtyXinvariably got away unscathed.'As far as the body repair shops: in town were concerned, sheNvas Miss Business Opportunity She dont take nothing from nobody, and I recognize her as the stuff which made I mean, in another earlier day she would have been Indians from the shooting ramparts or locking up sinners like you and me for the weekend in the stocks. She can freeze another woman at 20 paces with a single cold glance and her voice sometimes has an edge like a scythe, and she can use it in much the same way, too. She drives her automobile at a good steady 25 miles an hour whether she is on a country road or a freeway, and she sits there grim and straight-backe- d as if she were wheeling a juggernaut through the haunts and over the bodies of Old Days When the freeways opened so we could get into town 10 minutes slower than by the old highway, she put traffic control back to wagon train days. She would change lanes whenever she liked, without signaling, and 95 cars in three lanes behind her would snuggle against one another in a shattering crescendo of yielding sheet metal. She invariably made for right-hanexits from the cen course, ambulances were already carrying people away two, three miles back. 1964. But this year that is all changed now. She doesnt lose, her way on the freeway any more. She has devised a system. She hires a taxicab to drive ahead of her and show her the way on and off the ramps and what lane to stay in. At first the taxicab companies thought she was kidding, but they know her well now. She picks up a cab at a prede- Now Look Here lar. ' this young policeman got and said: What seems to So 1? termined spot near a freeway entrance, follows it in her own car at 25 miles an hour to the predetermined exit, and charges the cab to her husband and tips the driver handsomely, Never less than a dol- - Oh So Jolly For weeks Mr. McMurty, who is a retired banker and can be jolly about everything except money, couldnt understand how his wife could drive w t frrrr the trouble here? South NORTH A 8763 87 Q109 South's bid of four hearts was a calculated risk ; however, it is true that with a few fitting cards in KQ82 EAST WEST K10542 AAQJ A 2 J 10 873 542 AJ974 4 103 SOUTH partners KQ9653 , 4AKJ6 65 The bidding: reasoned from Declarer Wests passive defense that the latter did not have a good opening lead. Observe, for example, that, if West held both the ace and king of spades, it would have been natural for him to lead that suit. West was re- luctant lead one of his aces fearing that he might establish an honor in declarers hand and he accordingly made the neutral opening of the eight of diamonds. The nine was played from dummy and held the first trick. The eight of hearts was led, to nonds. A series of negative inferSouth the ences convinced leclarer at four hearts that omewhat unnatural line of lay was indicated, Calculated Risk Sank 6 SOUTH n $25 Rat! Wests takeout double was he proper procedure with 16 igh card points and divided trength. North did not have nough to take action imme-liatelhowever, when his y; East' was more or less followed with the four, and South after brief consideration-played the trey. West was obliged to put up the ace. He subsequently won tricks with the ace of spades and the ace oixlubs ; however, the declarer was able, to claim 10 tricks. TRADE-I- - t marked, therefore, with one of the top spade honors? If he had the ace of hearts In addition, it was reasonable to assume that he would have taken some further action after his partner had competed so vigorously. Failure to do so convinced the declarer that East was very deficient in high card strength, and, therefore, the normal play in hearts would not. succeed. STATE AM 61 - KETCHUM'S RECOND. TW AVAILABLE CARR. $0050 Qgilh gi Qsd 4th So. x EL at 7th 56 AND HIGH DEGREE OF QUALITY GUARANTEED TO LAST FOR MANY YEARS RECONDITIONED v ERMS AT THIS FANTASTIC LOW PRICE . . TYPEWRITER SPECIALIZING -T- WE GIVE INSTANT CREDIT1 ON YOUR OLD -- DOWN NOTHING ALLOWANCE Quit and price ranges brand-negas water Shop Ketchum's where greater selections mean greater savings. month TYPEWRITER (fcntai ty. Seldom in the history of the nation have the executive and the Congress managed to find a working arrangement in which the president had adequate power and the Legislature had adequate control, and this is certainly not the case now. brand, ... topheaters. N W15" fair to say, as the Democrats constantly do, that they are merely carrying on in that country the policy started by the Republicans under President Dwight D. ' Elsenhower. They havs changed the whole character of the war in the past three years, yet the Republicans have supported the President more consistently than some of the leaders of his own par- on Unpaid Salanc . . . ELECTRIC Viet Nam. It is not quite COMPARE! BUY! SUMMERHAYS MUSIC CO. 3719 The Democrats are highly vulnerable to political attack for their record In that peninsula. They underestimated the power of the North Vietnamese, and helped destroy what ' little political unity existed under the Diem regime in South Metropolitan Opera down $25 lntrit Simple More Consistent Support All styles, sizes GRAND PIANOS Official of the Piano federal power which many administration leaders think goes beyond constitutional bounds. The controversy over policy in Viet Nam also illustrates the constructive attitude of the1 Republicans in Congress. m GAS WATER HEATERS Top Spade Honors East v 1&G5 , ten. hand v anti-Neg- king-quee- there should be a reasonable play for game. 9 ? presidential Souths handling of the heart suit does not conform to the and requires percentages some explanation. The normal procedure with this particular combination of cards is to n lead twice toward the in the closed hand in the hope that East has the ace. Observe that, for Souths play to succeed, he had to find East with both the jack and partner freely rebid two hears, North was reluctant to sell out cheaply and he completed over two spades by making a shaded raise to three hearts. m o - The Republican leader in the House, Gerald R. Ford of Michigan along with Rep. John Lindsay of New York, Rep. William M. McCulloch of Ohio and other Republicans is leading a campaign to strengthen the voting rights Consulting Constantly bill and extend its provisions In" both the domestic and to many thousands of deprived Negroes not covered by the foreign fields, the President has not used his extraordinary administrations proposals. a There is no evidence that power without respect for the the Republican Party stands Republican opposition. He has to gain, at least in the short consulted with them constantly before settling on his budrun, by a vast increase in Neget or announcing his domestgro voting. ic legislative program. On the contrary, all He has used his appointivs tions are that the new Negro power fairly by bringing Revoters will side overwhelmingpublicans into key positions ly with the Democratic Party, and could even help win back and- avoiding a partisan or for the Democrats in the 1968 Ideological cabinet In fact, election the he has relied on Sen. Dirksen Southern States won by the almost as if the Illinois senator were the majority instead Republicans last year. of the opposition leader. To Remove Charge Thus, unlike the early days Yet the Republican leaders of the New Deal, when Frankin this Congress are quite lin Delano Roosevelt sought to consciously trying to remove the charge leveled against the drive the Congress rattier than win its confidence, Mr. Johnparty in the Goldwater campaign: That It sought to win son has been as restrained in . by appealing to the the use of his vast power as elements in both the North the Republicans have been and South. Far from siding with those generous in the exercise of who think the present voting their limited power. This has been easier, howrights bill weakens the rights for the President than ever, of the states to set voting for the Republicans. They standards, the Republicans might easily have drifted into leaders are either supporting bitterness and irresponsibility after November, and this they the, administrations bill arguing for an extension of have not done. By C. H. Goren vulnerable. v1 No Likely Benefit NEW KNABE WELCOME L.D.S. CONFERENCE VISITORS NEVER BEFORE and Dont Mrp. McMurty said: takethat tone of voice with me, young man! I dont know how to get off this freeway, and I am lost, and I am going to sit her A until somebody guides me to Vy destination. And although ghe had broken 68 laws, the officer looked at the set of her face and decided he wanted no part of he messing with her. Ati said: All right, lady, we will pull in front of you, and yfcu follow us carefully. And she. said: Not if you go faster than 25.! And he said: Okeh, So the patrol car lady, 25, proceeded her for two miles with the siren going and took her down the And people got home late that night. Case in Dramatic Point Yet the Republicans, though they have been out of power for 24 of tiie last 32 years, are not acting like a bitter or obstructionist minority. They" are supporting President Johnsons foreign and domestic programs when they think he is right, and they are trying to put forward constructive alternatives when they think hes wrong. The voting rights bill Is a dramatic illustration of the point. The Republican leader in the Senate, Everett McKinley Dirksen, not only worked with Nicholas Attorney General Katzenbach in drafting the bill, but is now helping guide it through the Judiciary Committee against the opposition of the Southern Democrats. jGoren Analyzes Todays Bridge Hand Both deals. w Its leaders are scattered, its numbers reduced in the Congress, its power undermined in the states, its organization disrupted and its party work- -' ers demoralized. Drive Out & Save on Pianos single-handed- ly d o All Changed Mc-Murt- y. infidels. No Dismay At All lete because he loses his quick source of energy. a Locking Up discrimination. Many times in the course of the afternoon, the attorney general told the senator that indeed the state or its representatives would have to come all the way from the south to the federal city to purge itself. Time after time he refused to buy the senators inviting theory that sometimes when the voting rate fell below 50 per cent it was due to apathy rather than injustice on the part of the registrars. contractions. When the supply of carbohydrates is curtailed, the body must resort to stored fats and proteins for energy. This is a slower process because it means that other foodstuffs must be converted into carbohydrates. In addition, a certain number of calories are required to make the conversion. As a result, the deposits of fat must go to work and weight is lost so long as the individual does not step up his normal intake of fats and proteins. This is unlikely because too much fat is nauseating and protein imfwyaomfwaomfw type of diet is not for the ath- have they maintained America great. The senator thought it was dreadful that under the voting rights bill a state would have to come to Washington and prove it was innocent of voter of protein or crabohyd-rat- e g has an value of four calories and a gram of fat produces nine. n said the attorney-gener- simply. Thinks It Dreadful Save a Little Body Fuel qua-- three-pa- rt do? Trying Out Drastic Diet? Ca involved, question based on a horrible hypothesis, ending up with a lurid picture of states rights abridged, and southern states humiliated. "Is that what the bill would It is incorrect to label any food as particularly fattening. Most edibles increase weight when taken in New York Times Service t, most ardent civil rights fighter to get mad at Sen. Ervin. Hes not rancorous or mean and never makes unkind remarks. Hes a middle-age- d man with wavy white hair and full eyebrows that fly up and down like Venetian blinds as his mind darts busily through the Constitution. Sometimes in his deep southern accent, he makes, a triumphant point, so obscure that only he gets it, and his eyebrows fly up and down and the witness, if he knows his onions, laughs politely. Didnt Miss Cues long, y - Mr. Katzenbach never got at Sen. Ervin, never showed the slightest impatience. He just smoked several packages of cigarettes. Its very difficult for the I'm listening to the reruns of bedtime stories Dad used to tell ME. m Truly Loyal Opposition Great GOP mad j The Neighbors vv e James Reston time to call a halt, Katzenbach was still going strong. Chairman Eastland did not come to the afternoon session, Sen. McClellan was busy hunting down greedy bankers. So Sen. Ervin was free to rummage through his seven law books, make obscure constitutional quote the Bible, Woodrow Wilson and Austin V. Butts to his hearts content He also quoted himself. Never Got Mad say of New York may want to rewrite the bill, but he hasnt got the time either. On the Senate side, there the four southerners: Chairman James Eastland of Mississippi, John McClellan of Arkansas, Olin Johnston of And then South Carolina. there is Sam J. Ervin of North Carolina, who is the champion Constitution-clutche- r of them all. Still Going Strong Nicholas Katzenbach, the was benew attorney-generfore the Senate judiciary for a whole day, and when minority leader Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois finally decided it was v The Salt Lake Tribune, Friday, March 26, By Lichty No Anger for the Southern Senator WASHINGTON vr y a ! Grin and Bear It Mary McGrory on Civil Rights rights fighter earns his letter until he has been before the I Senate w I328-494- 1I IN ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS. (-- Uu W. |