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Born in Berlin, the son of a Luftwaffe colonel, he was drafted at 17 and sent to Denmark. Back in Hamburg after the war, he entered the Academy of Fine Arts. There his gift in graphics was quickly recognized, and he was invited to stay on and teach. In 1960, he became something of a cause célèbre when Hamburg police found his "qui s'explique" lithographs of lovemaking couples too explicit and closed the show. Undaunted, Wunderlich set off for Paris to work with the master lithographer Jacques Desjobert...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Beauty in the Bizarre | 4/27/1970 | See Source »

Both developments made the prospects for peace in the area remote. The foreign ministers of both Denmark and The Netherlands and United Nations Assembly President Angie Brooks were all in the Middle East, vainly exploring some basis for agreement between Arabs and Israelis. At week's end, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Joseph Sisco, the man who drew up the U.S. plan for peace between Egypt and Israel that both nations have so far rejected, arrived in Cairo. He is even less likely than the others to make any progress: Cairo is expected to lecture him on U.S. culpability...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Middle East: The Innocent Dead | 4/20/1970 | See Source »

...well...George Washington. Jiveass is a first degree con artist, a black stud who lives off white women and weaves a reality out of the lives he hands off to the world at large. The lies succeed in ripping off everyone but himself, and so he leaves America for Denmark hoping to find out if there is any way to survive without the lies, to see if there is "any mother fucker in this despiteful world who ever told himself the truth...

Author: By Lynn M. Darling, | Title: Books Mr. Jiveass Nigger | 4/18/1970 | See Source »

Norway and Denmark were the first to pull out. A few days later, the U.S. declared that it still considered Britain the "lawful sovereign" in Rhodesia, and followed suit. Washington's undisguised snub precipitated a wholesale departure. Italy, The Netherlands, France, Belgium, Austria and West Germany shut down; Switzerland wavered. Only South Africa and Portugal-both of which back Smith's regime-and Greece, which has an honorary consul there, were sure to remain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rhodesia: Shock of Nonrecognition | 3/23/1970 | See Source »

...Loosely modeled on a "Danish" myth of monsters and monster-slayers, Grandy's book offers no more and no less than the formulaic plot on which Padding productions usually hang their gags, lyrics, and kick-line. Crisis strikes the oversexed and overhung court of King Holroes the Horney of Denmark (Jack Olive) when the man-eating Grendel family, monsters from the nearby Black Lake, emerge to lay claim to Hotroes' frontheavy daughter, Princess Boobhilde (Line Caplan). With the kingdom paralyzed and helpless. Bennet the Serf (Dick Boling), a slave and would-be poet, goes out in search of the legendary...

Author: By David Blumenthal, | Title: The Pudding The Boy Who Cried Beowulf at the Hasty Pudding this month | 3/5/1970 | See Source »

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