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Harvard coach Edo Marion will set one of his carefully nurtured fencing protogees used against him. Sophomore Mike Marion, son of the Crimson coach, can perform in either foil or sabre for the Big Red. Cornell coach Raoul Sudre is further blessed with sophomore Don Sieja, son of Princeton coach Mike Sieja, who is accomplished in foil and epee. Another outstanding sophomore. Steve Botwinick, will fence foil...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Varsity Fencers To Duel Cornell | 2/26/1966 | See Source »

Breathless also featured an alienated hero treated without sentimentality. But unlike Truffaut, Godard created an entire revolution in technique. Godard and his superb cameraman, Raoul Coutard, used a hand-held camera for the entire film, giving the director an unheard-of flexibility. Instead of planning the shooting meticulously as convention dictated, Godard created the film through the viewfinder and often used candid shots. Most of all, through both the camera-work and the editing, Godard insisted upon a constant impression of energy which was to infuse the enthusiasms of an entire generation of film-makers...

Author: By Daniel J. Singal, | Title: France's 'New Wave'; A Free, Bold Spirit | 2/16/1966 | See Source »

...have failed to mention two of the film's outstanding accomplishments: the luminous, plastic photography of Raoul Coutard. Godard's cameraman on his ten films, beginning with Breathless (1961); and the score, which owes its beauty to Beethoven's string quarters and its effectiveness to Godard's superb timing. I've also omitted the film's verbalism. Signs and the printed word play a key part in most Godard films, from the Bogart poster of Breathless to the flashing neon lights of Alphaville, and they crop up again and again in The Married Woman. But why they are used...

Author: By Martin S. Levine, | Title: The Married Woman | 10/28/1965 | See Source »

...Market tariff cuts. But the leaders of the great corporations believe that they can compete well against their foreign counterparts and like the prospect of selling more to Germans or Italians. In the business magazine Entreprise, 20 of France's most prominent executives-including Pechiney's Chairman Raoul de Vitry, Rhone-Poulenc's Chairman Wilfred Baumgartner and T.S.F.'s (electronics) Chairman Maurice Ponte-came out in support of the market. In a speech opening Marseille's international trade fair last week, Emile Roche, a leading banker and industrialist, said: "Our economy deserves to be told...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: De Gaulle & Business | 10/1/1965 | See Source »

...three professors of Mathematics are Raoul Bott, whose specialty is topology; Andrew M. Gleason, an expert in everything from algebra to analysis; and John T. Tate, algebra...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 14 Professors to Take Leaves During 1964-65 | 6/4/1965 | See Source »

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