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...PURGES GOD jeered a headline in the Milan daily Il Giornale. But otherwise the reaction in Western Europe, a prime target of Gorbachev's comments, was both impressed and worried. A common opinion among political analysts there was that "the charm offensive of Gorbachev," as the Paris daily Le Matin called it, might succeed in putting Reagan on the defensive at their November meeting in Geneva. The Bonn daily General-Anzeiger noted the "knowledge of details" that Gorbachev had demonstrated in the interview and added delicately that Reagan "is not known for having on hand in ample measure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Escalating the Propaganda War | 9/16/1985 | See Source »

...DEFYING ALL LAWS OF GRAVITY exclaimed Madrid's financial daily Cinco Dias. Newspapers across France's wide political spectrum were equally excited. Read the front page of Paris' conservative Le Figaro: OVER 10 FRANCS, THE DOLLAR HAS GONE THROUGH THE CEILING. One edition of the Socialist tabloid Le Matin included a replica of a $1 bill. By buying a copy for the newsstand price of 4 francs, the newspaper proclaimed, readers could get a "dollar" at a 60% discount...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Dollar As King Currency | 2/25/1985 | See Source »

...chairman of the board of Renault, the nationally owned French automaker, was sleeping at the Carlyle Hotel in New York City two weeks ago when the ax fell. At 4 a.m. an aide called from Paris to read him a front- page article from the pro-Socialist daily Le Matin. The paper announced that Hanon, 53, would soon be replaced by Georges Besse, 57, chairman of the Pechiney state-owned aluminum conglomerate. Shocked and angry, Hanon caught the next Concorde back to Paris. Summoned to Premier Laurent Fabius' office early last week, Hanon was forced to resign. Two days later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Revolving Door & A new boss for ailing Renault | 2/4/1985 | See Source »

First came an extraordinary confidential letter from the top army commander to France's military leadership, leaked last week to Le Matin, a usually pro-government daily. Proposed cuts in defense spending by Francois Mitterrand's Socialist government, wrote General Jean Delaunay, would eliminate more than 30,000 troops from the 314,000-man army, leading to a force "weakened in its structure, aging in its equipment and wounded in its morale." Then came other leaked statements by the air force and navy chiefs of staff, revealing what they said were still secret government studies of making major...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Combat Rations | 12/20/1982 | See Source »

...press conference, Mitterrand declared that he had not only the will but the time to fulfill his promises: his term runs for seven years. But he cannot wait that long to meet the challenge of his office. As Le Matin put it last week: "Now that everyone is convinced Mitterrand intends to keep his campaign promises, the question is not whether he can produce the reforms but whether he can master them." -By Henry Mutter. Reported by William Blaylock and Sandra Burton/Paris...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: He Really Meant It | 10/5/1981 | See Source »

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