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...think them up. The problem is not thinking them up. I am compiling a volume of masterpieces that TIME has not run, entitled The Greatest Story Never Told. The villains are the editors, the heroes us. In the meantime, I plead guilty to the following: in Casablanca, the Moor the merrier; at the Berlin Wall, the best things in life are flee; Adenauer is der Alter Ego; and Khrushchev was the Vulgar Boatman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher: Dec. 16, 1966 | 12/16/1966 | See Source »

...television and record sales in Arab countries, and its NBC subsidiary runs Saudi Arabia's state-owned TV network. Ford, with a thin sales lead over Chevrolet in the area, has a $60 million stake in assembly plants at Casablanca and Alexandria, and facilities to sell and service the 60,000 Ford cars and trucks already on Arab roads and desert tracks. Its Philco subsidiary, also blacklisted, is a major supplier of television sets, refrigerators and air conditioners to Arab countries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Middle East: Boomerang Boycott | 12/2/1966 | See Source »

...last Asian capital on the President's itinerary. Behind lay the summit conference in Manila and Johnson's his toric visit to South Viet Nam, the first trip ever made by a U.S. President to a foreign battlefield save for Franklin Roosevelt's call at Casablanca...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Presidency: Protecting the Flank | 11/4/1966 | See Source »

When he graduated from Princeton in 1941, he was thinking of "making a desperate attempt to get into the theatre as an actor." Instead, the Navy cast him as an intelligence man, and he ended up in Casablanca in a 12-man bureau devoted to investigating the likes of a bank teller who hung a photograph of Marshal Petain in his cage. He took advantage of the lack of crises to travel around North Africa, particularly Morocco, for which he developed an enduring love. (Today his office, which is his castle, is known behind his back as "little Morocco," because...

Author: By Timothy Crouse, | Title: Robert H. Chapman | 11/3/1966 | See Source »

Moroccan Intervention. At last, Hassan himself decided to intervene, and he chose an ingenious way to do it. Last week Dlimi, his secret-police aide, boarded a Royal Air Maroc Caravelle in Casablanca and flew-suitably disguised and with a fake passport-to Paris. The next afternoon, just as the trial of the six defendants was drawing to a close, Dlimi calmly showed up at the court and surrendered to French authorities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Surprise Witness | 10/28/1966 | See Source »

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