Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1966 Page: 3 of 28
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BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Wednesday, August 3. J9*6 3
RUSSETT
POTATOES
CHOICE
BANANAS
10c
otry that this implies.
As an example of the ex-
tremes to which the Mao cult
is carried, I was shown a hy-
draulic press which handles
steel ingots up to 300 tons and
told of the part Mao’s writings
had played in its design and
construction. It was only by.
studying the Communist boss’
precepts that the engineers had
arrived at the correct decisions.
I
A;
563
Maoism Is China's Required Religion
(Second im a Series) I was told This, and the
By FELIKS TOPOLSKI
PEKING (NEA) - The new
religion built around the person
of Mao Tse-tung, boss of Com-
munist China dwarfs anything
that Stalin ever dreamed up.
I doubt that Stalin inspired
j
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STRIKES
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from Taiwan.
To Top Brass
N HWY
P
ITURDAY
€
$goo
es hereis
"In the prisons ... Moo's writing is a must."
ALL BRANDS
CIGARETTES
CARTON 9 QQ
With Sit Purchase 4.77
racked up
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more in the
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single run in
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ow the gap
Petrex 9
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an
• i
• 4/
( V.
A.•
IE 19c
)
TOMATOES Rome Grown
one-tenth as many songs as
have been written about Chair-
man Mao Nor did the reading
of Stalin's works ever become
a national pastime in Russia,
as has happened with Mao's
literary output in China. (In a
dance-pantomime I saw here re-
cently the dancers waved Mao s
books aloft)
Make Clains
I doubt, too, that the Spar-
tak or Dynamo soccer teams
ever drew inspiration from com-
rade Stalin to go out and win.
Yet such claims are put forward
for Chairman Mao and China's
world champion table tennis
players were able to develop
the correct strategy and to
trounce their opponenets, or so
it is solemnly declared.
The pretty girls one sees read-
ing under the trees in Peking's
Temple of Heaven park—surely >
they are poring over love poems. China » most popular song as-
one surmises But no. they are serts, "I‘m growing fonder of
reading Mao. who writes poetry , reading Chairman Mao every
among other things. moment And so it would ap-
nda Warren.
Jamon Kelcy,
ine Baker,
orm
"uesday
Scotie Hol-
Mrs G L.
me St
nanda Kelly,
nd and baby.
S
Tie Beth, to
man Warren
1. Memorial
grandparents
C, R. Warren
al grandiath-
f Brounwood.
I J
$700
BREAD SX-
1
&
Tensions and crises over ideo- government of Chiang Kai-shek,
logical matters, which dramati- It is simple, even corny, but
cally affect, shuffle and elimi- Chinese audiences seem to love
nate personalities, appear con- it.
fined to top party brass and to (NEXT: A visit to the new
non-Communists who are hold- Shanghai.)
Pe
with
FaraPress®
Sizes 6-16, Reg.-Slims
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। fog down important posts ,
j The Chinese keep constant
check amongst themselves by
means of regular meetings, de-
liberating over their behavior,
to see that—besides major is-
sues—officials do not turn their
• jobs into sinecures or become
overly fond of the motorcars and
«ac. other perquisites of high office
cumulative wisdom' of the , Even the humblest of Chinese
- workers on the factor; floor, is encouraged toindulgein self-
• I had enabled them to build this criticism. A meeting of more
- giant machine-tool than 1000 farm laborers which
I On a visit to a people s com- 1 attended was given over to it.
> mune. I was entertained by four Makes Confessions
charming girls, all volunteers A plump, but strong young
from the city, whose task it was peasant woman pushed her.way
-to treat me to a dinner in their onto the platform.to tell of her
as- r cottage After an excellent meal, shortcomings While gathering
| I remarked jokingly. When I in the sugar cane harvest in
' return home I will send you the early days of the commune.
I my son, who is tall. slim, hand- she used to stop work ti chew
1 some and your age." These on the sweetish-tasting cane,
‘ qualities, they hastened to as- thereby robbing the commune
sure me. did not matter, “as of its full quota, she confessed,
long as your son has high Now. thanks to reading Chair-
ideals ■’ man Mao, she had seen the “er-
Some Heretics ror of her ways Her story sound-
These year round slacks are the choice
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Sizes 28-38.
i
KING Discount Center
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HAMBURGER MEAT........Lb. 25c
FRYERS, Fresh Dressed.......Lb. 29c
Baby Beef, Seven Steak.........Lb. 59c
Hunt's Fruit Cocktail, 303 can, 4 for $1.00
PORK SAUSAGE, Whole Hog .... Lb. 49c
pear In Factories certain hours
are set aside for the reading
of Mao, usually aloud In
prisons, where the accent is on
rehabilitation rather than pun-
ishment. Mao's writings have
become a must. (In the Peking
prison I visited one or two of the
inmates had evidently been nap-
ping, but they hurriedly grab-
bed their copies of Mao when
I was shown into their cell).
Is invisible
What makes the Mao cult so
astounding is that its principal
deity remains invisible to the
millions of his followers. His
rare appearances have given
rise to rumors that Mao, who
is 72, is ailing, but I was assured
here that he was in good health
I was even told that he had
swum the Yangtze not long ago.
Meanwhile, though rarely
seen in the flesh, Mao's moon
face with its receding hairline
and mole on its chin, stares
down from countless posters and
billboards like Buddha in a 20th
century incarnation.
Born in Hunan province of
peasant parents, Mao was, as
it happens, a devout Buddhist
in this early youth who quoted
Confucius to his father to settle
family arguments.
Today, Mao's maxims are
quoted as widely as those of
Confucius Indeed, China ap-
pears to be in the throes of a
religious crusade. with all the
fervor, the fanaticism and big-
*\2
"vptcorinaMqegsb’e ...de-
OSPITAL
Tuesday
Mrs Mozelle
rd St; Mrs.
1501 Ave C;
» E Lee St;
er en Nor-
Barksdale Rt.
aretta Kelly,
m-aer
TE Iniorma-
n released by
it or relative ,
5 HJSPIAE
ednesday
1: Ozella Ann
rot St Mr.
xth St
Vrs Clara E
The new religion, of course, ed completely absurd in the tell-
has its heretics and its noncon- mg- but it seemed a true act
formists and I saw some of of faith.
them in the Peking prison which Politics are not the only
is located at the end of Self- thing in turmoil in Communist
Renewal Street. Actually, the China. Under the powerful im-
political offenders were a small pact of Mao's personality, an
minority of the 1,800 prisoners, upheaval is also taking place in
the majority of whom were im- the arts, under the beading
prisoned for such crimes as cultural revolution ” The par-
theft ty says individualism is out. But
But the slogans on the walls individuality is O K Creative
are a constant reminder of the artists must serve "the cause,"
efforts being made to recondi- not their ego.
tion minds "Understand the re- Case in Point
volutionary situation, then try A case in point is the classi-
harder to remold yourself ideo- cal Chinese opera Gone are the
logically,” reads one such Mandarin costumes and imperi-
slogan. “Go in the correct di- al fairy tales. The opera now
rection, then you will have a tackles revolutionary themes,
bright future." exhorts another. This is also true of the ballet
The prison itself is what we “The White-Haired Maiden."
would call an open one. The in- playing in Peking, is a rather
mates wear no distinctive uni- unhappy mixture of Chinese
forms, there are no bars on the classical theater and Russian
windows, and the only armed ballet, but it is enormously
1 guards are the sentry at the popular. It tells the story of a
gate and another in a tower. young girl who is so harried by
Some of the political prisoners the landlords that her hair turns
are in for life. I was told that white. She then flees to the for-
these life prisoners were agents est. where she is rescued by a
of Chiang Kai-shek, who were Red prince charming, who
caught infiltrating the mainland brandishes a pistol. Together
77 /
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 251, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 3, 1966, newspaper, August 3, 1966; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1490136/m1/3/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.