Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 87.djvu/1284

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[87 STAT. 1252]
PUBLIC LAW 93-000—MMMM. DD, 1973
[87 STAT. 1252]

1252

PROCLAMATION 4247-SEPT. 29, 1973

[87 STAT.

together to demonstrate the significant results that can be realized when Americans translate their concerns into affirmative action. I further urge neighborhood and community cleanups, beautification programs, resource recovery and education programs, anti-litter campaigns, energy and wildlife conservation efforts and other worthwhile activities. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this nineteenth day of September, in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred seventy-three, and of the Independence of the United States of America the one hundred ninety-eighth.

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PROCLAMATION 4247

Country Music Month, October 1973 September 29, 1973

jgy ^f^^ President of the United States of America

A Proclamation We do not truly know America until, in Whitman's phrase, we "hear America singing"—singing not only the songs of concert stage and nightclub, choir loft and schoolroom, but also the earthy, emotion-packed melodies and lyrics that have come to be called "country." At one time, that particularly rich and honest strain in the American musical tradition was largely confined to the geographic areas its name implies: the countryside and Western ranges of America's heartland. But half a century ago, in 1923, Fiddlin' John Carson broke through with the first widely popular country music recording, and since then records and the broadcast airwaves have been winning new audiences for country and Western music all over America and around the world— so that now the term describes not just a locale but a state of mind and style of taste, as much beloved downtown as on the farm. Today, no matter where men and women happen to live, country music may be one of the truest voices speaking to and for them. All of us can better understand our Nation's head and heart by listening to "hear America singing" in that voice.