Word: saulniers
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...train from Chicago to San Francisco. Tom (David Frisch) is a Yippie turned corporate executive. Founder of The Advocate, a left-wing newspaper, he is headed to the West Coast in order to sell its current mainstream incarnation. Busily writing out proposals, he is joined rudely by Spence (George Saulnier), a self-proclaimed, 17-year-old "romantic drifter." What Time charts three hours of their relationship, and falls straight into the one-act trap of revealing every silly detail about the pair...
...instance, hitchhiked with Kerouac to Big Sur, stormed the president's office at Columbia and studied beat poetry with Ferlinghetti. Not even the competent acting of Saulnier and Frisch can instill plausibility into these characters...
...operation against the Rainbow Warrior. It was inconceivable, Le Monde claimed, that Vice Admiral Lacoste, the foreign espionage chief, would have acted without orders. Among those who might have authorized the attack or allowed it to happen, the paper said, were Lacoste's superiors: General Jean-Michel Saulnier, Mitterrand's personal chief of staff when the surveillance scheme was conceived; General Jeannou Lacaze, then overall armed forces Chief of Staff; and Hernu. By most accounts, Mitterrand was not informed of the spying mission until a week after the Rainbow Warrior had been sunk. By that time the New Zealand police...
Many economists harshly criticized the notion of disbanding the CEA. They maintain that among the Government's thousands of economists, the three members of the CEA are the only ones far enough removed from departmental infighting to advise the President objectively. Raymond Saulnier, chairman of the CEA under President Eisenhower, last week sent Reagan a telegram supporting the council. Says he: "I don't know what the Administration is trying to do. I can hardly believe it." But others were less concerned. Said Barry Bosworth, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, who once served...
...solved either problem. I am against wage and price controls, but we cannot let this situation go on forever. The economy has the people scared. If we do not begin to see evidence of a decrease in inflation soon, the Government will have to take drastic action." RAYMOND SAULNIER, former chairman of the CEA (1956-61). "I'm afraid that wage inflation has gone so far now that it requires much more direct intervention by Government. I'm not talking about freezes or mandatory controls. But I am talking about a much more direct, determined and explicit Government...