Word: raymonde
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Canard, which has been twitting French governments for years by printing juicy details of scandals involving political figures, promptly pinned the break-in on Minister of the Interior Raymond Marcellin whose office is responsible for all authorized wiretapping in the country. Marcellin's Ministry professed ignorance of the incident. But few Frenchmen were totally convinced. For one thing, a Senate investigating committee reported last month that the telephones of 1,500 to 5,000 people in France were tapped every day on a permanent or spot basis-most without a court order and thus illegally. For another, Le Canard...
...largely of frozen gases-mainly water vapor, methane, carbon dioxide and ammonia, and perhaps some hydrocarbons-and dust particles. That, at least, is the commonly accepted "dirty snowball" theory, originally proposed by Harvard's Whipple in 1950. But there are those who take exception to Whipple. British Astronomer Raymond A. Lyttleton prefers his own "gravel-bank" theory, which holds that the cometary nucleus is really a loose mass of dust particles with little or no ice. By training their instruments on Kohoutek, astronomers may at last be able to settle that argument...
...argued that this time Europe has no choice but unity-what French Political Analyst Raymond Aron calls "the shock treatment." But Aron adds: "The problem with such treatment is that it either cures or kills, and one is not really sure until you try it." The signs this time are somewhat auspicious. When a French Foreign Minister begins mouthing "European" phrases, one can judge the impact of recent events on the time-honored French policy of lonely grandeur...
...Raymond J. McGrath, public affairs director of WJTV in Jackson, Miss., has filed objections to the plant with the Atomic Energy Commission(AEC), on the grounds that MP&L has not fully considered possible ways of making the plant safer...
...keeping with the Thanksgiving season, the networks have begun killing their ratings turkeys. The New Perry Mason Show (CBS), with the bland Monte Markham in the old Raymond Burr role, has been sentenced to oblivion. At least two other shows face a doubtful future: Tenafly (NBC), with James McEachin as a black middle-class suburbanite who shuttles from kids and crab grass to detective assignments; and Faraday and Company (NBC), wherein Dan Dailey engagingly plays a private eye just home after 28 years in a Latin American jail on a trumped-up charge...