Word: denims
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...know they're genuine because of the authentic rectangular red Levilable on the left side of the right hand back pocket.) The "lean, hiphugging masculine fit" comes in blue ($4.75), white $(4.50) and stretch ($7.95). Less glamorous, but certainly adequate, are CORCORAN'S Wranglin' jeans ($3) in 10 oz. denim, sanforized for that "trim western...
Never to Cleveland. Barefoot's Elizabeth Ashley is somewhat more expectable. She is a 24-year-old girl from Baton Rouge who has used up a few million ergs making good on the stage. She has checked hats. Off-stage she wears denim slacks, a turtleneck jersey, desert boots, and about three tablespoons of mascara. At work, she consciously seems to be imitating Audrey Hepburn (just as Sandy Dennis, disconcertingly enough, seems to be copying Marlon Brando), but inside this derivative shell a considerable talent seems to be winning in its effort to come...
...hinting at perfections scarcely imagined unless the wearer were rendered shiftless. But as fashion gives way to fat, milady often assumes shapes and sizes that require all-too-little imagination. There is an answer for that, too: the tent shift, a sloping expanse of hopsacking, stretch fabric, burlap or denim that keeps her bulkiest problems right under the Big Top where they belong...
Golden winds up with the tale of a peddler whose first name is still a household word. He was a Bavarian immigrant named Levi Strauss. He sailed to San Francisco in 1852 with a batch of denim canvas. Strauss hoped to sell the fabric for tenting, but noticed that the men needed pants that would hold up in the rugged gold-mining hills of California. The canvas started his inimitable blue jeans, called Levi's, walking all over the world...
...presence. Just past the village of El Cano, eight miles from the capital, Morfett came to a high hedge and a wire fence stretching for about two miles. Then, at a break in the hedge, "there were the Russians." They numbered in the hundreds, Morfett said, and wore coarse denim trousers and cheap checked shirts. "They looked in their early 203, and were beefy men . . . strong. They were probably a construction unit...