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Rarely has the giant internal ramp of Manhattan's circular Guggenheim Museum, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, been put to better use. A visitor attending the Guggenheim's fifth International Exhibition can proceed downward through its five spirals, passing 100 works by 80 sculptors from 20 countries arranged by generation-and thereby receive a gradual baptism into the myriad ways that sculpture has evolved in the past 20 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: Responding to the Moment | 10/27/1967 | See Source »

...others: Joe Torre and Willie Mays) to bounce a ball off the beer sign in left centerfield, 440 ft. from home plate. In Cincinnati, he hit two home runs over Crosley Field's 45-ft.-high Scoreboard - one of which carried all the way onto an exit ramp of the Mill Creek Expressway...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Baseball: Wynn of the Losers | 7/7/1967 | See Source »

...fact that you have toppled from the stage) and group entrances and exists are slowed, thereby slowing the pace. Rhoden Streeter as Puck declares, for example, that he is about to circle the globe in forty minutes. Then we watch him chug off the stage, gracefully, and up the ramp...

Author: By Charles F. Sabel, | Title: A Midsummer Night's Dream | 5/5/1967 | See Source »

...midweek the President flew to Nashville, Tenn., to join Lady Bird at the end of her threeday, 1,500-mile tour of Appalachia's schools. "I stood it for two days," he said, after bounding down the ramp of Air Force One and bussing Lady Bird, "but I couldn't last out the third one." To mark Andrew Jackson's 200th birthday, the Johnsons breakfasted at the Hermitage, later visited the home of James Polk, a President whose name often gets lost in the jumble between Jackson and Lincoln but who turned the U.S. into a conti...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: Fighting the Other War | 3/24/1967 | See Source »

...green jump suits who slither and weave, snakelike, about Eve. As the scenery changes to a large rectangle covered with eyes and a huge lipsticked mouth, Eve succumbs to the tempters and is spirited away. Alone and frenzied, Adam circles the stage and, running full speed up a ramp, dives spectacularly headfirst through the mouth. The music becomes increasingly cacophonous and, as bolts of neon lightning flare overhead, there is a blinding flash and Adam dies. Eve clumsily drags him upstage and kneels, cradling his twisted, stumped body in one final, agonizing embrace...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance: Petit Paradise | 3/3/1967 | See Source »

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