Newspaper Page Text
Wednesday, April 20, 1966 Griffin Daily Newt
LATIN LOVER
MEXICO CITY (UPI) —The
newspaper Excelsior, comment
ing on President Johnson’s 24
hour visit las week, printed a
cartoon Tuesday showing him
ID ■A L 6 M
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BIXIC CRYSTALS HAS WHAT IT TAKES flHERCY!
Nobisco TENDER
2ft Honey
V ‘O •>* / •X Grahams CHUCK
SAYINGS^ \ ^1! S3 Tl 35c STEAKS
rf / = js 59c
/ i » Lb.
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Polish off your spring cleaning chores in a (S
flash with these shiny-bright buys in spruce-up I , TENDER
work-saver, supplies from specially ARCHER’S! designed Every to lighten one’s a ▲
your Rib Steaks
k 1 labor—and specially LOW PRICED lo light
up your budget with SAV3] NGS. Come in to
day and make a clean Aw eep of these BIG AT ARCHER’S
VALUES! 696
Lb.
BONELESS
’Smrit ' • :■ /; Chuck Roast LB. 59c BEEF BRISKET
7 'W,*'
■J. FRESH LEAN TENDER BONELESS
GROUND SHOULDER FOR STEW OR SOUP
TENDER BEEF BEEF ROAST Lb. 15c
CHUCK 49c Lb. 79c SKINLESS
ROAST Lb. WIENERS
37C TENDER BEEF ROUND BONE
IB. Shoulder Roast u>. 47c 3 “• 99 c
DUFFEY'S BOB WHITE MIXED - —^ SUNNYLAND BUDGET BRAND 49c
Sausage LB. 49C Sliced Bacon LB.
Shurfine Argo Sliced
*3
CATSUP FRUIT COCKTAIL PINEAPPLE FROZEN FOODS c
Shurfine Leaf
5 $100 4 303 Cans $100 45c Spinach 2 10 0z - Pkg - 33c
i 14 Oz. Btls. No. VA Cans
Shurfine Chopped Turnip
Braswell's Shurfine Sunshine Greens 2 10 0z - Pkg - 31c
ORANGE DRINK CANNED DRINKS GREEN BEANS Shurfine Lady Cream
\ Peas 4 $1®®
, 10 0z - pkg -
Qts. 12 Cans $1®® 2 303 Cans 35c Potatoes Birdseye French 2 Fried )tH t 33c
Produce Specials BISCUITS Shurfresh TISSUE Softlin MAYONNAISE Shurfine
1st Picking
Pole Fancy Yellow Beans Lb. it II 12 ««is $1®® Qts.
Squash Lb.
Fancy Libby's ARCHERS Prices Effective
STRAWBERRIES Thru April 23rd
39c Deep Brown Beans A \ V AFFILIATED WITH
Basket
Potatoes 3 25C 14 Oz. Cans FOOD STORE ~na
Lbs 1003 W. TAYLOR ST. POOD STORES
I
8
strumming a guitar under the
balcony of a senorita labeled
“Latin America." The cartoon
was captioned—in English—
“Latin Lover.”
P'Tw if
Bob Dylan: American Antihero
By PHILIP WERDELL
Moderator Magazine
NEW YORK — (NEA) —Folk
rock, the latest in pop music,
is Bobby Dylan.
But this is not just a new fad,
like a new dance. Dylan has ac
tually changed the whole nature
of pop music.
Today, the word is out to song
writers in the industry that they
had better listen to their Dylan.
For generations, pop music
has been built upon superstars
singing about superdreams and
superdepressions. If Dylan is the
new hero, it is because he is an
antihero.
A New Pop MusicPrimer for Parents
“I would not want to be Bach,
Hozart, Tolstoy, Joe Hill, Ger
trude Stem, or James Dean,”
sings Dylan. “They are all
dead.”
For years adults explained pop
music and its idols on the
grounds that their children could
find no real heroes in modem
society. Everything is relative,
every idea open to criticism,
every leader fallible — so youth
creates its heroes.
But what a strange hero, this
cat Dylan. He’s unabashed, non
conformist, unpretentious and
not particularly heroic. “The
great books have been written.
The great sayings have been
said,” says Dylan. And, there
fore, it’s quite logical that the
great people are dead. With this
philosophy, Dylan lives in the
hearts of American youth.
You could see it coming with
James Dean. What was going to
happen to the ‘rebel without a
cause” when he himself realized
that there was no cause? He
would say with Dylan “I define
nothing. Not beauty, not patrio
tism, I take each thing as it is,
without prior rules about what it
should be.”
He just tells it as it is whether
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“standing there watching the
parade” or “on the pavement
thinking ’bout the government."
To preface his songs, Dylan
says, “I am about to sketch you
a picture of what goes on around
here sometimes. Though I don’t
understand it too well myself,
what’s really happening.”
Dylan has taken the flimsy il
lusions of pop music and “brou
ght it all back home.”
The average mother who real
ly takes the time to listen to Dy
lan will certainly say something
to the effect of “What is the
world coming to?” or "I hope
my little Johnny will have lear-
ned enough at home to disregard
this trash.” A natural reaction,
but maybe it isn’t all that bad.
Dylan does not preach nihilism.
His "mssage,” and he hates that
word, is not pessimistic. He only
says, “I have given up any at
tempt at perfection.”
“Now,” he asks, "what’s so
bad about that?”
Dylan doesn’t “define” beauty,
but he does not say that it does
not exist. Far from it. He Is
laughing at himself but sincere
when he says, “I’m a poet and
I know it.” One newspaper ar
ticle found that many Harvard
students feel that Dylan was the
only poet who truly speaks to
their generation. His songs read
like the free verse of the “beat
poets.” The images are not ob
scure, and the rhythmic rock
music gives a simple form to
the chaotic stream of impres
sion and words.
Maybe Dylan is not a literary
great, but he is literary, and he
does take his “art” seriously.
Cultural snobs will not be satis
fied, but that’s democrarcy.
The same holds true of patrio
tism. Dylan hardly writes mo
dern editions of th e “Star-Span
gled Banner,” but, on the other
hand, you have to read the daily
newspaper to keep up with
what he says in his songs.
This is a quiet new form of
patriotism — Informed demo
cracy.
-r>
Possibly it is too early to know
If pop music Is really changing
Bob Dylan and folk rock might
go out as fast as they came in.
Dylan himself hints that this '
might be human nature. In h 1 s
tune, “Maggie’s Farm,” Dylan
concedes, “I try my best to be
just like I am, but everyone
wants me to be like them.”
There are plenty of people try
ing to be like Dylan. Like every
pop star, he has a countless
number of imitators — The By
rds, Hie Turtles, Sonny and
Cher, Donavan, even, at times,
the Beatles.
It Is probable that none of
them will make Dylan be like
them, but it is the first warning
sign that his antihero philoso
phy may not have very many
,
buyers. Folk rock, with its new
autiromantlc and antlapathetio
message, might become a vic
tim of its own. popularity.
(NEXT: The Boys from Liver
pool.)
Food Shopping
Guide
The guide to the
nation’s food shopping buys for
this weekend was prepared by
the TJ.6. Department of Interior
and Agriculture for United
Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) —
Spring is bursting out all over,
Meats, fruits, fish, and vegeta
bles are all here—almost all in
good supply—and some at good
seasonal prices. Can’t beat that
for a good note for weekend
shopping.
Specifically in meats, in most
areas ground beef, roast cuts,
and steaks are in good supply
at moderate prices.
Bacon is down in some areas,
watch prices in your section. ■
Hams, and pork roasts again
are in good supply. Broiler
fryers are still in the mainstays
in budget-priced meats. For
assurance of wholesomeness,
look for the mark of federal
inspection indicating that the
meat and poultry you buy is
“U.S. inspected and passed."
Eggs also are going down.
Vegetables in good supply
include artichokes, green beans,
celery, cucumbers, lettuce,
onions, potatoes, radishes,
squash, sweet potatoes, and
tomatoes.
Bananas again lead the fruits
plentiful list. Grapefruit, oran
ges and strawberries are the
other fruit plentiful.
Nationally, canned red sal
mon, fish sticks and portions,
and scallops are the fish
plentifuls. )