Word: edouarde
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...that differential that made Montreal track coach Daniel St.-Hilaire order the Best Runner, a "speed-optimization system" designed by Pierre-Edouard Sainsily, a biomechanical engineer in Bordeaux. The $58,000 device consists of video cameras, sensors and other data-collecting gadgetry that are positioned on a track and wired to a workstation mounted trackside. St.-Hilaire uses it to record the speed, acceleration, starting power and strength of athletes such as Nicolas Macrozonaris, 23, Canada's top male sprinter, who has run a 10.03-sec. 100 m. Ranked No. 19 in the world in 2003, Macrozonaris will probably need...
...killers, outside troops cannot help. Also, the U.S. and its allies need to explain in Arabic to the Iraqis what the coalition forces are doing in their country: bringing peace. Distrust of the U.S. military is growing, not abating. This is a public relations failure that must be corrected. Edouard Prisse Amsterdam...
...Edouard Vuillard and Paul Gauguin are an odd couple: one famous for his depictions of drawn-curtain bourgeois interiors, the other for bare-breasted Polynesian reveries. But the link between them is direct. In 1889, Vuillard joined a band of fellow art students who called themselves Les Nabis - "prophets" in Hebrew and Arabic. Their credo was "the simplification of form and the exaltation of color," and their guru was Gauguin. Now, the two artists are sharing the same roof, in a superb pair of exhibits at the Grand Palais that round off a blockbuster fall art season in Paris...
MOZART SOCIETY ORCHESTRA. The Harvard Mozart Society Orchestra presents a concert featuring Gabriel Faure’s “Pelleas & Melisande,” Edouard Lalo’s Cello Concerto in d minor featuring Stephanie J. Lai, ’06, the 2002 Freshman Concerto Competition Winner, and Sergei Prokofiev’s Excerpts from the ballet “Romeo and Juliet.” Saturday, March 15, at 8 p.m. Tickets $8 regular, $6 students (2 per ID), $6 seniors, available at the door, the Harvard Box Office or by phone...
...exhibit places Bellows in the context of a long tradition of European artists’ portrayals of the ravages of war, including paintings by Edouard Manet, Honoré Daumier and Marie-Anne Collot. One Bellows lithograph in the series, “Massacre of the Dinant,” directly references works by Francisco de Goya, which are also on display in the exhibit...