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...Basically, we're very shy people," said Japanese Artist Yoko Ono after she and John Lennon stirred a furor by posing for the nude photos on the cover of a Beatle-produced album, The Two Virgins. Now the shy couple have announced they are expecting a baby in the spring. Said John, who is being sued for divorce by wife Cynthia: "Babies make the world happier and that's our scene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Nov. 8, 1968 | 11/8/1968 | See Source »

...absence of Joel Kramer, Scott Jacobs, and Leo Lennon weakened the CRIMSON forces, according to Lennon and Jacobs, but Mike Barrett and Bill Bryson took up the slack. Both Barrett and Bryson ran for touchdowns, and the speedy Bryson was superlative in the defensive secondary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimeds Wallop Daily Penn, 23-2 | 11/4/1968 | See Source »

...defense was even more impressive, CRIMSON President Joel "Night Train" Kramer, despite the nails in his feet and calves, picked off two Dartmouth aerials, while Scott Jacobs intercepted three. The Crimson's giant front four of Jim "Lamar" Kitch, Pete "Leo" Lennon, Mike "Rosey" Sylvester, and Rick "Showman" Edmonds put crushing pressure on the visitors' quarterback, pushing aside all would-be blockers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kramer Sparks 23-2 Win Against Dartmouth Editors | 10/28/1968 | See Source »

Trouble was piling up in London for Beatle John Lennon and his Japanese girlfriend Yoko Ono. First was their new record album, The Two Virgins, featuring on the cover a rear-view photo of John and Yoko in the nude. Read the proposed ad: "It's just two of God's children singing and looking much as they were when they were born, only a little older." British music magazines refused album ads showing the cover. Then the couple was nabbed and charged with possession of marijuana, which Lennon once described as a "harmless giggle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Oct. 25, 1968 | 10/25/1968 | See Source »

...subject of that accolade? Allen Ginsberg? Bob Dylan? John Lennon? No; a German raveler of spiritual mysteries named Hermann Hesse, who died in 1962 at 85. His champion was Thomas Mann, and he was reflecting the impact of Hesse's 1919 novel, Demian, on German youth. Today Hesse is no longer so ardently esteemed in his native country, but in the past decade in the U.S. he has steadily risen to the status of a literary cult figure. College students rank him in the pantheon of literary gurus with Dostoevsky, Tolkien and Golding. In hippie hovels, those...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Outsider | 10/18/1968 | See Source »

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