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...summits have changed greatly since the leaders of six industrial democracies gathered at the Chateau de Rambouillet outside Paris in 1975 (Canada was added the next year). They began as general and relatively informal private chats but quickly, and probably inevitably, took on most of the trappings of full-scale international conferences: months of preparatory meetings among planners known as sherpas (after the guides who take climbers to the summits of the Himalayas), set-speech expositions of national policies, large delegations attending each head of government...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: No French Connection | 5/13/1985 | See Source »

...wide variety of luxuries, and despite the new exchange rates, Parisian prices too remain pretty luxurious. As one survivor puts it, "Paris has gone from the ridiculous to the merely exorbitant." For oenophiles who have graduated from Mouton Cadet (price: $3), the Bordeaux to search for is Chateau Petrus, which sells out as soon as it is available, at $120 to $150 a bottle. And while many French wines are no cheaper in France than they are in the U.S., one of the top shippers in Bordeaux, the Maison Dubos, reports a steadily increasing number of American customers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Traveling Dollar | 4/22/1985 | See Source »

...spring rains and exceptionally sunny weather during harvest, particularly in the crucial month of September. Says Steven Spurrier, a Paris wine merchant: "In 1982 the growers almost couldn't believe their eyes." Alas, prices for the exceptional wines are also spectacular. The cost of a premier grand cru like Chateau Lafite-Rothschild '82 is nearly $58 a bottle (compared with $45 for the 1981 vintage), and even humbler chateaux like Prieure-Lichine are selling for $15 a bottle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Wine: Stampede for 1982 Bordeaux | 4/15/1985 | See Source »

...night about halfway there, some four miles north of the city. Compared with the victory on the beachhead, the failure to reach Caen that first day seemed a minor shortcoming. Montgomery even invited Churchill on June 10 to visit his forward headquarters in a lake-studded Norman chateau, and Churchill admired "the prosperity of the countryside ... full of lovely red and white cows basking or parading in the sunshine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: D-Day: Every Man Was a Hero A Military Gamble that Shaped History | 5/28/1984 | See Source »

...banal Paris street, the Rue Bourbon-le-Chateau. Yet the scene is far from ordinary. The orthogonals and links between objects give it a tense, mathematical substructure with all manner of arcane rhymes: the triad, for instance, of the red ball on the ground, the globe over the door and the pompon on the boy's cap. The cast of characters is mixed. The man in white might be a baker, or perhaps Christ carrying the lignum crucis; the two boys are Tweedledum and Tweedledee, the twins from Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Poisoned Innocence, Surface Calm | 4/16/1984 | See Source »

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