Word: clydes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...rattle of machine-gun bursts were among the strange and terrifying sounds that occasionally drowned out the soft clatter of typewriter keys in our New York editorial offices last week. Had someone run amuck? No, the uproar came from the tumultuous sound track of the movie Bonnie and Clyde, which Cinema Writer Stefan Kanfer was using as ''Music to Write a TIME Cover Story By." As the tape recorder next to his typewriter spun out its violent cues, Kanfer worked on, at times pulling on a rubber exerciser, occasionally gnawing on a sandwich, and frequently pawing through piles...
...Single frames were chosen, blown up into black-and-white prints, and then transferred to silkscreens; he treated the final image with colored inks and paints, including splotches of bloodlike watercolor. Altogether, he made nine montages before the editors made their final choice. Though such characters as Bonnie and Clyde are not familiar images in Rauschenberg's art, his technique on TIME'S cover is. It will be immediately identified as a "Rauschenberg" by those who know his work from museums and art galleries around the world...
...Clyde Griffin, teacher of History at Vassar, said "I'm sorry. In my personal opinion, though, the majority of the faculty and alumnae are glad...
...movie Bonnie and Clyde has set off a vogue for berets in crochet knits, wool felts and velours. Wherever the young congregate, there is a sudden outcropping of chin-strapped "safari" hats; Manhattan Socialite Linda Hackett rolls up one side of the brim and makes it an "Aussie," rolls up both sides and has a "cowboy...
From shipyards along the lower Tyne and Glasgow's narrow Clyde came forth the proud ships that once ruled the waves. Until World War II, Great Britain built nearly half of the world's vessels. But for at least a decade the British shipbuilding industry has been badly ailing: last year it launched 1,000,000 tons of merchant ships, less than in 1947, while the Japanese alone produced six times that amount, carving out 47% of the total world production...