Word: lue
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...exploited, so much the better. . . I am simply leading up in all of this to the spectacle of Bo Widerberg, whose ultimately romantic style descends directly from the painting of Pierre Auguste Renoir, ruling-class lackey and who exists as a radical filmmaker, quite apart from Jean-Lue Godard...
...Jean-Lue Godard's A Woman is a Woman, the first film in the aniversary series, seems highly atypical of the New Wave at first sight. The use of color and cinemascope depart from the amateurish, low-budget style of Breathless, and the large number of interior shots violates the New Wave maxim of "on-the-street" shooting. But these departures only point out the most important tendency in the New Wave movement: the willingness to experiment with any style, any technique, or any location. Godard uses his camera with the same abandon that characterized Breathless, and in his hands...
...best thing about the magazine has been its departure from the traditional review-on-review format. In his first two issues, Silverstein has assembled an original play, and two long analyses of Jean-Lue Godard's recent films. Silverstein says that the future issues will contain more scripts and more reflective articles...
...Veale, Katherine GibbsJulian E. Meyer, Jr. Grace Wilson, St. Margaret'sMATTHEWS HALLSamuel Ansell Barbara Cohan, BeaverThomas Axon Ann Nichols, CambridgeDavid Barnes Joan Smith, Cambridge SchoolDonald Beardsley Connie Clark, WestportLucian R. Blackmer Jane Armistead, ErskineMalcolm Broadrick Jane Mansfield, NewtonGordon M. Browne, Jr. Edith Carlton, RadcliffeForrest Buckingham Ruth Stevens, BelmontGeorge Burditt Lue Lahiff, Western Springs, III.Arthur V. Campbell Dorothy Lewis, New York, N. Y.Hobart A. Capen Mary Morgan, Miss Rickard'sSamuel B. Carr Mary McCagg, BeaverElliott Carroll Betty Stevenson, GarlandLeon A. Danco, Jr. Ann LeFevre, Dean AcademyAlbert N. Danoff Sybol Fineberg, LasellE. Thayer Drake, III Mary Machezie, SmithJoseph Dunn Regina MacPherson, Westfield...
...Died. Lue Gim Gong, 70, Chinese-American fruit expert, credited with having originated two of the best-known varieties of grapefruit and oranges in the world; in Deland, Fla. Aged 12, he came to the U. S., was adopted by two wealthy Baptist women, was converted. He inherited from these women an orange grove in Florida, began his experiments. He worked in seclusion, held prayers in his private chapel. Others benefited by his researches and Gong died a poor man. Said Arthur Brisbane, Hearst editor: "The orange growers of the United States should build a monument to his memory...