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...Algeria, but he could never bring himself to name outright the Secret Army Organization, the fanatical underground that is fighting to keep Algeria French. Said he at one point: "S.A.O.? I don't know them." Yet the S.A.O. was everywhere making its power evident. In Algeria, its chief, Raoul Salan-under sentence of death in absentia -emerged from hiding for a secret TV interview with a CBS newsman. Appearing on film with a newly grown mustache, his white hair dyed black, ex-General Salan boasted that all of Algeria's population was with him: "The Moslems have hidden...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: With or Without History | 11/17/1961 | See Source »

...sent a note of protest to Paris, France, however, pointed out that Spain was giving asylum to dozens of anti-Gaullist conspirators. Dashing Pierre Lagaillarde, 30, who led the 1960 Algiers "revolt of the barricades." was photographed lolling beside the pool at the exclusive Real Madrid Club. Ex-General Raoul Salan, head of the terrorist Secret Army Organization, used Spain as a safe retreat to receive visitors and plan rebellion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Jail Bait | 10/20/1961 | See Source »

Novelist Sidney Peterson, who has written everything from the religious life of a lunatic (unpublished) to a UPA script with the title THE INVISIBLE MOUSTACHE OF RAOUL DUFY, knows a tremendous amount about art. So does the fly. Part of the book's obvious charm comes from the fly's painterly descriptions of practically everything: "Her neck swelled Ingresly, as with an enlarged thyroid...

Author: By Alice P. Albright, | Title: A Fly in the Pigment | 9/30/1961 | See Source »

Message Repeated. For De Gaulle, the critical area is not Metropolitan France but Algeria, where the ultranationalist Secret Army Organization of ex-General Raoul Salan seemed to be sneering louder every day at De Gaulle's attempts to reach agreement with the F.L.N. From his hiding place near Algiers, Salan wrote a letter, which was published in Le Monde, denying that either he or the S.A.O. had been connected with the bomb attempt on De Gaulle's life. Two days later, Salan's men bombed the national television station's transmitter near Algiers just before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: We Interrupt This Program | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

With an estimated 15.000 hardcore members, S.A.O. since April has extended its authority from Algiers to the largely European cities of Oran. Bone and Constantine. Arms are smuggled in from Spain, and four tons of plastic explosive were stolen from an army-guarded munitions base near Algiers. Though Raoul Salan has overall command of S.A.O.. its tactical leader is reportedly ex-Colonel Yves Godard. who-like Salan-has been condemned to death in absentia for his part in the April rebellion. As chief of military and civil intelligence and security in Algiers from 1957 to 1960. Godard acquired...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Anything Is Possible | 8/18/1961 | See Source »

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