Word: quotidien
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...National Assembly. As a result, Giscard, 51, emerged as both the master of present-day French politics and the architect of the nation's future-at least until his presidential term expires in 1981. Aptly summing up the situation, Paris' left-of-center newspaper Le Quotidien de Paris headlined GISCARD'S SECOND SPRING...
There has been a substantial rise in the popularity of President Giscard d'Estaing, whom many had written off as an ineffectual leader, incapable of uniting the center-right against the left. Another poll ?this one by the newspaper Le Quotidien de Paris?showed that Giscard would win 52% of the vote to 48% for Mitterrand in a presidential election. The same poll indicated that Mitterrand would clobber Chirac...
...road, never had a chance to reach the nuclear site a mile from the battlefield, and their cause ended up as another casualty in the confusion. "What does beating up flics have to do with nuclear energy?" asked one disgusted demonstrator huddling in the chill rain. Scolded the newspaper Quotidien de Paris: "The notion of defense of the environment implies nonviolence...
Madrid might be muted. The ambassadors of Switzerland, Britain and West Germany, who had originally been withdrawn, were all back on the job in Madrid. The French leftist daily Quotidien de Paris reflected the serious second thoughts about Europe's earlier outburst. In a front-page article, it noted: "The reprobation against Franco's excesses gives a good conscience to other nations at a time when political torture [exists] in 70 countries. Tass denounced 'Franco repressions,' but how do the Russians deal with their political opposition...