Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1967 Page: 3 of 14
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Wednesday, Sept 13, 1967 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN-----9
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First Family Joins Kids at Country Fair
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val style red and white striped "Nightcaps," a group of college hat She tried out ail the rides
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Nixon Claims U.S.
Influence Is Failing
SOVIET STRUGGLE
Culture Growing Underground
< FIT THE ENTIRE
FAMILY WITH
The classie corduroy with
heaps of he-man styling
for dress or casual wear.
EXPERT
WATCH
tives were notified Tuesday An-
other was wounded Killed were
Hospital Corpsman 3C Phil-
RISING STAR CHEERLEADERS—Ruing Star High
School cheerleaders this year are, left to right,
Peggy Burns, Debbie Medley, Brenda Bailey, and
kneeling. Linda Hubbard.
JEWELERS
410 Center
painting, sculpture and other
visual art forms. So has censor-
ship of foreign cultural material
that keeps painters especially,
plus other Soviet cultural types,
cut off from Western trends
Stage plays have been a ma-
jor subject of cultural struggle
in the last lew years. Stalin
banned many plays but some
have recently been coming back
to say realistic things about So-
viet bureaucracy and other for-
merly taboo subjects.
in
a
WIE
ATRE
M unchmunch cake for lunch. Dinner. took
under BAKERIES in the YELLOW PAGES. Where
your fingers do the walking.
Compare at
29.95
looney. 39,
on grounds
The couple
ging in age
§
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and was followed by kids like blared music from a stage. with
the Pied Piper.
. Stephen Koster noted com- last year The authorities un-
boser, spent most of his life in leashed on them a savage at-
7
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Thu is FRITZ: A brushed leather oxford that goes to the football stadium,
n cify errands or for country drives. You feel as good as you look. 11.00
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any where. 11.00
KaH4,ee.
lip D Johnson. 20. and Marine
I ance (pl Sam Trinidad Curil,
19. Army Sgt. B. C. Franklin
wounded
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Rippies®
-- -A BRAND CASUALS
provement. But the fact that
they were found guilty of anti- been a tendency toward belit-
Soviet" writings showed how Hing the heroic tradition of So-
limited the improvement had ' iet literature, its life asserting
been since Stalin’s time vigor, which has been manifest-
Theirs was only the best- ed in some.works," a union res-
publicized case About the same ° ution said
time they were arrested. The individual writer is in a
Ukrainian regional writers were vulnerable position A talented
arrested and some 20 are be- young poet spent months in an
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harried in
or the ■ .
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st the -< r
tack that resembled Stalin's
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WASHINGTON ( API - Every
one had fun at the White House
Country Fair
The President brought his
dog, smiled and shook hands.
.—
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DBPARTAIENT stoats
By HENRY BRADSHER The rest—and there is a rest, 1937 purge methods of condemn-
Moscow i APi — "It is" despite the party's efforts-var-
savsPraida voice of the Soviet ies from merely neutral to art
Communist parts. necessary that is in open opposition to the
to help artists to be still more Soviet regime
deeply aware of their Before the Bolshevik Rev-
responsibility for the creation of olution 50 years ago in Novem-
highly ideological works of gen- ber, it was art that voiced
une art discontent, especially novels
vests and red straw hats students from Maryland ap- and games of skil.
They doled out prizes of re- pealed to the teen-age dance Robb her fiance of three
The -member Marine Band Lynda Johnson turned out in a days, was surrounded byreport-
. . . _____. , ers and photographers when he
carametcolored cowgirl cou- appeared in semiformal day-
competition from across the lotte oitfit in midcalf mini time military uniform as a
•However, this must be done and poetry. Today it is too. As
lawn where the nine member length. with matching cowgirl White House social aide.
tactfully, carefully and skill- a result, a struggle is constantly
fully •• going on between the heirs ot a
The Communist party bureau- tsarist censorship system dating
crats who run the Soviet Union to 1803 and the heirs of intellec-
see no contradiction between tual opposition to the to-
"highly ideological" and "gen- talitarian tsarist state.
uin art " in this country only The struggle seesaws.. Some-
those novels, poems, paintings, times the libe ra is find it easier
musical compositions and other to express themselves truthfully
forms of art which are deemed about conditions, sometimes the
to carry a message of glorious Stalinist, conservatives keep
communism get the Kremlin's awkward things unsaid inprint
seal of approval "genuine." and new art forms unseen and
unheard publicly.
The fact that the liberals are
1 heard at all now means that the
Soviet Union has come a long
way from the depths of Stalin s
cultural controls.
There was nothing tactful,
careful or skillful about treat-
ment of artists in the 1930s and
40s.
DENISON (AP) - By nearly Some of the best writers and
a 2-to-1 margin. voters Tuesday most original theatrical people
turned down a proposed ward died in concentration camps,
system of government i Deni- Some were castigatedfor works
son which was voted out in 1907 that had won acclaim in the
Denison, in the North Texas West ■ ... .
county of Grayson, has a mayor- 1 art J the trouble was Stalin s
council type 'government. ' own unsophisticated ideas of
wcumB At. m. culture coupled with his ability
.-1 t0 jmpo~s5 hLs backwoods stand-
lieved still laboring in camps arctie labor camp because he
near Sinyavsky and Daniel did not have a regular job and
Moscow youths have been therefore could be labeled a
arrested for trying to dem-' "social parasite under a se-
onstrate against what they vere law The bluntly realistic
called unconstitutional restric- writer on social problems has
tions on free speech little chance of getting pub-
The basic question is, what is lished.
truth in Soviet art' Some of the most potent new
is it the big picture of pro- writing is by disillusioned young
gress that the Communist partv poets who circulate their work
wants art to show, complete in typewritten copies There is a
with heroic figures? Or is it the well-organized Soviet cultural
little picture of how the Soviet underground for things that the
system has affected the in- censors keep out of the public
dividual who is less than heroic, domain
who is perhaps troubled and Painters participate in this
something less than prosperous- underground Stalin liked sim-
IV
' •dm"PF- mostly it was
Texas program of medical aid anything which deviated from
for the poor making the state the attempt to mold culture into
eligible for federal grants to fi a for the regime. The
nance its operation, congression- proved style was -Socialist rea-
al sources said Tuesday. ism," which meant presenting a
ABILENE (AP) — Two Abi- happy picture of boy loves
lene servicemen were killed in lathe, gir loves tractor, and
action in the Vietnam War rela- everyone loves working for the
glory of communism
There is still nothing tactful
The Soviet ters' inion, the recognizable objects, preferably
ing a man before hi- trial Kremlin mi inery for keeping heroic Communist ones. and so
The fail that they got a trial authors u ...er '. com- cenerall did Khruehchav Thei
at all. before being shipped off plained about l ill' ruth at
to labor camps, was some im- its congress last ay.
- "One of the serious flaws has
eals
$TOBM
The First Lady rode sidesad-
dle on a palomino carousel
horse. soared 42 feet high on a
ferns wheel and handed out au-
tographs
Lynda Bird Johnson and her
fiance. Manne Capt. Charles S.
Robb, kissed atop the ferns
wheel.
Vice President Hubert H
Humphrey drove a 1922 Ford
around the White House south
driveway.
! In just two hours, about 600
youngsters aged 6 to IS—chil-
dren and grandchildren of top
Washington officials — gobbled
up several hundred hot dogs.
950 boxes of popcorn, 820 frozen
custards, 700 pink and purple
cones of cotton candy , 600 jelly
, apples and ■; gallons of soft
drinks
They rode in six antique cars
and a miniature plane around
the driveways and rode eight
' ponies around the petunia and
geranium-lined fountain
The White House South Lawn
took on the atmosphere of a car-
nival midway, with striped
tents, fortune tellers, games of
skill, bingo, sack races and
dance contests White House
staff, wives of officials and hus-
bands pressed into service to
cater to the crowd wore carni-
and ■- -
get aloog '
- ade th :
barrlage to
boney She
cond time
but over to
Two button style with
flaps on all three pock-
ets. Deerskin ton or Ivy
green. Regulars and longs
36 44.
Sizes 8%2 to 12 9.00
12%2 to 6 10.00
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NEW YORK AP> — Richard been so mistrusted in its pur-
M Nixon says the influence of poses or so frustrated in its er-
the United States in the world is forts
failing because other nations no The is widening between
longer believe what President what our spokesmen say and
Johnson s spokesmen say what others believe -
"Increasingly, he says, we Nixon, former vice president
find signs of a paradox of Amer- and an unannounced candidate
ican power. Never has a nation for the 1968 Republican presi-
possessed. . power as the dential nomination, made the
Vnited States now commands, declarations in a speech Tues-1
and never has a nation sought to day night at a dinner meeting of
use its power to nobler pur- the National Industrial Confer-
poses—but seldom lias a nation ence Board.
In part, Nixon discussed,
_ *1 impressions he gathered during
Hearings Set on trips this year to more than 30
n i rs i i countries in Europe Asia. Afri-
Border Problems ca and Latin America
... ... m 1 He said that Washington. in-
.AVSTIN (AP — Bil Crook, ‘stead of “sanctimonious ser-
director of Volunteers in Sery- monizing" about the morality of:
ice to .America (VISTA) will be U.S. foreign policy, should
in Brownsville Friday for hear- stress that all that Is done is
mgs of a special commission on done in the primary national in-
border problems terest
, Crook is former director of mo.-
the Southwest office of Econom- . " p- . . ...
insoopomtunity, which an hamhatortearesammetoneannvce
nounesd.S Mexico Border’ Worid War 1 and
mission on Economic and Social World War I and Korean. Be:
Development of the Border Area cause our vital national interest
was appointed by President is at stake, he said
Johnson to conduct hearings on Nixon never mentioned John-
border problems from Browns son by name
idle to California Lnlike Gov George Romney
Edward De la Rosa of Vista’s of Michigan, who has said he
Washington, D < office will ac- was "brainwashed" during a
■ company Crook He is chairman visit to Vietnam. Nixon said he
of a special advisory committee had no cotpiaint about the
to OEO Director Sargent Shriv- briefings he received during his
er on Mexican American affairs. nine visits there
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today in the way some deviant
artists ayebndea
Andr"sSpvsky and Yuli
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abroad stories at satirized the
situation her6Kpund this out
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Young Gents' Tony. A baste sfip-on
This is POODLE: she kind of shoe that goes any.
New lightw eight ” '
comfort in fresh kit- . . . .....
tie trim styling Soft where— barbecues or little league
soles, steel shank
support and Bres- games.
thin Brushed Pig-
skin* add hours of
walking comfort
10.00
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 286, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 13, 1967, newspaper, September 13, 1967; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1490403/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.