Word: jeane
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Animal Butchery. Jean Genet, France's existential sensualist, joined forces with Director Tony Richardson and Actress Jeanne Moreau, a festival favorite, to produce Mademoiselle, a story of Sodom in the suburbs. It should have been a festival favorite too; instead it got soundly, roundly booed, possibly because Moreau overworks her villainy. The film is rife with animal butchery and exotic sexuality. Sniffed one critic: "Maybe we didn't know that licking the nose of a gentleman in the moonlight constituted eroticism . . . but did we really have to know...
...feel better. "We're skating now," he said, "and nobody beats this club when it's skating." There was still that one last victory to go, though, and it turned out to be tough. Playing at Detroit, the Canadiens jumped into a 2-0 lead when Jean Beliveau tapped in a rebound and Leon Rochefort slipped a 15-footer past crippled Goalie Crozier. Disgusted Detroit fans littered the ice with rubber balls and garbage-and the Red Wings got the message. Checking brutally, they fought back: Norm Ullman scored late in the second period, and Floyd Smith tapped...
...science building, Calder's sculpture has both primitive power and modern grace. Its presence is courtesy of Eugene McDermott, a director of Texas Instruments Inc., who was a college classmate of Calder. But the selection came only after a number of sculptors-including David Smith, Richard Lippold and Jean Arp -were considered. Scholars at M.I.T. tested the Calder design in a wind tunnel, then they buried beneath it a time capsule that included a Betty Crocker cookbook, a Sears, Roebuck catalogue, 1964 coins, M.I.T. memorabilia, and a copy of TIME...
...Victors, Jean-Paul Sartre's drama of young French resistence workers interrogated by the Nazis, will be directed by Thomas J. Babe Jr. '63 for late November...
...current issue is, however, a distinct improvement over the previous two largely because it includes a published interview with associate professor of Government James Q. Wilson, a scathing review of James McGregor Burns' Presidential Government by Barney Frank, and some eloquent, enlightening observations about Charles De Gaulle by Jean Lacouture...