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...information official, South Africa last week imposed one of the most draconian censorship policies in the non-Communist world. Only six months after it had decreed a harsh emergency rule in an effort to quell rising racial unrest, the government of State President P.W. Botha now sought to shroud the country's apartheid-torn society in a veil of secrecy and intimidation. Though the move was aimed principally at curtailing the domestic and foreign press, its overall intent was to cut off South Africa, its people and its fate from the eyes and concern of the outside world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Africa Moving to Muzzle the Messenger | 12/22/1986 | See Source »

...fated shows shared one disabling presumption: musicals must be "about" something beyond melody and romance. Rags tried to survey the immigrant experience, Honky Tonk Nights blended music hall with racial conflict, Raggedy Ann was a dying girl's Freudian nightmare, and Into the Light asked whether the Shroud of Turin is Jesus Christ's burial cloth. All suffocated under the weight of their ambition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Beauty Marks Smile Music | 12/8/1986 | See Source »

...White Shroud] is the most graphic ever, except for one early poem called `Please, Master,' which was supergraphic. This is pretty clear, I think. Just the right moment in Moral Majority history to come out with something really graphic...

Author: By Robert F. Cunha jr., | Title: Politics, Pederasty and Consciousness | 11/20/1986 | See Source »

Ginsberg ends White Shroud with a poem called "Things I Don't Know." "I just realized that there are a lot of things I don't know, that a lot of people don't know, but at least I don't know...

Author: By Robert F. Cunha jr., | Title: Politics, Pederasty and Consciousness | 11/20/1986 | See Source »

...bring [White Shroud] to a triumphant, or untriumphant, ending. It's kind of an anticlimax. But I don't mind. Somebody's got to take on the anticlimax, or else everybody will be doomed to be afraid of the anticlimax....Sometimes I can't come. That's pretty anticlimactic...

Author: By Robert F. Cunha jr., | Title: Politics, Pederasty and Consciousness | 11/20/1986 | See Source »

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