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This poet, the future martyr Jean-Baptist Hippolyte Marie-Henri Muscari, is visited by the local priest and frankly admits he did not commit any of the crimes. He has done it to gain notcriety, a condition quite unknown in his dismal career. "You do not know how bitter it is to be ignored," he tells the priest...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: The Busy Martyr | 7/5/1963 | See Source »

...light reading, De Gaulle occasionally shows a penchant for the torrid. The pro-Gaullist weekly Le Nouveau Candide raised Parisian eyebrows some time ago by reporting that De Gaulle had read Les Pianos Mecaniques by Henri-Francois Rey. A French bestseller highly praised by the critics, Pianos is a sort of Dolce Vita set on Spain's Costa Brava whose main characters-a schizophrenic journalist, a neglected teen-age boy and girl, a half-wit charwoman-move through their pointless lives battling boredom with promiscuity. Sample passage: "She led him to the bed, still keeping their lips locked. Vincent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Warrior's Rest | 6/14/1963 | See Source »

...years have passed, the Class of 1913 has adjusted to the changing world. They seem to have remembered a lecture given by Henri Bergson in the Spring of 1913. Bergson found stability in change itself. Life seen as movement, as a perpetual creation, could "only reassure man of his immortality...

Author: By David M. Gordon, | Title: Class of '13: Facing Change | 6/11/1963 | See Source »

...tomb at Medina. Says Ben Laden: "To me there are only two things in life-work and Islam." ∙Simca, France's third largest automaker (after Renault and Citroën), this week gets a new president: outspoken Georges Héreil, 53. He replaces fiery Henri Pigozzi, who founded Simca in 1934 and ruled it with an iron hand until Chrysler bought control of it this year. The former president of state-owned Sud Aviation, Héreil became a national hero for bringing out the successful Caravelle, but resigned last year after the government sharply trimmed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Business: Personal File: Jun. 7, 1963 | 6/7/1963 | See Source »

Into this list of hopefuls, the intellectual, left-wing L'Express last week introduced a weirdly different suggestion. It claimed that De Gaulle's own choice as his successor is none other than Henri d'Orleans, 54, Comte de Paris, descendant of King Henri IV, and Pretender to the throne of France. L'Express pointed to the warm personal friendship between the count and De Gaulle, recalled that le grand Charles's earliest political sympathies were monarchist, and noted that the Count's Gaullist leanings had made him a target of a bombing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Apres De Gaulle | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

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