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...disparate guests as Foreign Affairs Editor Hamilton Fish Armstrong and Audrey Hepburn, Marlene Dietrich and the Duchess of Windsor. He dotes on introducing the famed to the famed in glowing detail, as if they inhabited far-distant planets. One occasion when Gunther skipped such identification was in presenting Paul Auriol to the Duke of Windsor, who murmured: "Don't I know something about your father?" The glacial reply: "Possibly. He's President of France." (The duke was repaid at the same party when the Adman-Philanthropist Albert Lasker lengthily congratulated him in the innocent belief that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Insider | 4/14/1958 | See Source »

...story of Pierre Clostermann. France's leading fighter pilot in World War II, a national hero and a Deputy in the National Assembly, Clostermann was a social lion when he first moved to Morocco five years ago to establish a structural-steel concern. Urged on by President Auriol himself, Clostermann befriended Sultan Sidi Mohammed ben Youssef, and advocated a "dialogue" between Moroccans and French. He fought those who engineered Ben Youssef's deposition and replacement with the pitiful French stooge Sultan Sidi Mohammed ben Moulay Arafa. Soon Clostermann was cut out of French business in the colony, found...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MOROCCO: The Dangerous Middle | 6/27/1955 | See Source »

Grounded for a month: Aviatrix Jacqueline Auriol, 37, daughter-in-law of France's ex-President Auriol and recent setter of the women's unofficial speed record (TIME, June 13). The grounds for her grounding were tersely set forth by a nettled official of Brétigny Air Center, where Jacqueline, a madcap in a cockpit, seared her new mark (708 m.p.h.): "You have flown too low, too fast. You have taken too many risks. You will be punished and suspended...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jun. 20, 1955 | 6/20/1955 | See Source »

During the brisk, busy week in Washington, the President greeted France's ex-President and Madame Vincent Auriol in his best French, spoke to the National Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters, shook hands with 900 disabled veterans, breakfasted with 18 Republican women politicians. He also: EURJ Told Republicans at a $25-a-plate dinner, "I am so proud of being a member of the Republican Party ... We are not trying to go back to the horsecars; we are not trying to fly to Mars." ^f Golfed with two Augusta Masters Tournament winners, Gary Middlecoff and Byron Nelson. When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Brocade & Old Lace | 6/6/1955 | See Source »

...later, Deputy Jean Legendre, member of the faction that broke with De Gaulle, implied, without offering proof, that Mendès and his top advisers had been responsible for leaking secret government information to the Communists before he became Premier. Legendre recalled that in August last year ex-President Auriol had summoned the Defense Committee, saying: "There is a traitor among us." Pointing at Mendès' Interior Minister, Francois Mitterrand, Legendre shouted: "Three weeks later you resigned from the Cabinet." Pale with anger, Mendès leapt to his feet, crying: "What are you insinuating...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: I Will Not Submit to Usury | 12/13/1954 | See Source »

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