Word: municheer
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MARCEL OPHULS RETROSPECTIVE Monday, Feb. 12, 8 p.m., Burr B, Matisse (1960), and Banana Peel (1964) with Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jeanne Moreau. Tues., Feb. 13, 8 p.m., Burr B., America Revisited (1971). Wed., Feb. 14, 8 p.m., Burr B, Munich, ou las Paix pour Cent Ans (1967). Thurs., Feb. 15, 8 p.m., Hilles Library Cinema Marcel Ophuls's best known film, Part I: The Collapse (1970). Fri., Feb. 16, 8 p.m., Hilles Library Cinema, Marcel Ophuls's best know film, Part II: The Choice. (1970). Admission to individual film programs $1. Series ticket $4 at Holyoke Center Ticket Office...
Ophuls Festival. Next week, Marcel Ophuls, who made The Sorrow and the Pity, will present and discuss each of the films he has made. The screenings will include the American premiere of Ophuls' first film, Matisse (1960), and the world premieres of Munich (1967), a prologue to The Sorrow and the Pity, and America Revisited (1971). Sponsored by West European Studies...
...last day, when Brandt held a one-hour meeting with Fellow Socialist Francois Mitterrand, Pompidou's arch rival in the current election campaign. After all, had not Pompidou seen fit to meet with Rainer Barzel, Brandt's political opponent, during his visit to the Munich Olympiad? Besides, as one Brandt aide volunteered: "We don't really believe that Mitterrand's coalition will beat the Gaullists, but in France anything can happen...
...national anthem, that song has been under fire since the War of 1812. At the Mexico City Olympics, black athletes greeted it with a Black Power salute. In Munich, the mode was elaborate indifference. Last week The Star-Spangled Banner was again the center of a brief, ludicrous controversy at Manhattan's Madison Square Garden. There, the director of the U.S. Olympic Invitational Track Meet announced that it would not be played at the event. Thereupon the Garden switchboard lit up like a scoreboard. After receiving "irate calls from all over the country," the meet officials...
...have seen that "Putzi" Hanfstaengl brought The Crimson face to face with the specter of Nazism. In 1936, the paper opposed participation in the Munich Games, and continued on an anti-Nazi track from then...