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Clermont-Ferrand, a middle-size Auvergnat city not far from Vichy, gradually emerges as Ophuls' microcosm for Occupied France. The film never stops shifting from then to now, with dramatic scenes often commented upon retrospectively by generals and statesmen who took part. But the camera returns again and again to a cast of Clermont-Ferrand residents, presenting their painful, fragmented, cumulative remembrance of things past. Mendès-France was imprisoned in the city before escaping to join De Gaulle. He discusses the convulsions of Anglophobic, anti-Semitic and antidemocratic feeling that after the debacle helped Frenchmen blame everyone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Truth and Consequences | 3/27/1972 | See Source »

...ardent camper and skier). It was Reuss who breathed life into the 1899 federal law regulating waste disposal in navigable rivers, and turned it into a modern-day antipollution measure. Still, Reuss is more at home discussing the fine points of currency-exchange rates with European bankers and statesmen or reading a book. When Nixon agreed in talks with French President Georges Pompidou to devalue the dollar, Reuss quoted the remark made by Henry IV after that cynical monarch converted to Catholicism in order to gain the French throne: "Paris is well worth a Mass." To that Reuss added...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: The Patient Patrician | 2/21/1972 | See Source »

...fellow statesmen, De Gaulle found few more than passable. Adenauer wins his praise. So does Nixon - as a "steady personality" - in a passage obviously informed by hindsight. Eisenhower appears almost as timid and bumbling as Britain's Macmillan during the 1960 summit confrontation with Khrushchev; to hear De Gaulle tell it, only his own resolution prevent ed the Allies from acceding to Soviet demands on Berlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Roland's Last Blast | 2/14/1972 | See Source »

...clearly comfortable ir his new role. Ever since he wrote his Ph.D. thesis on Metternich, he has admired statesmen who combined a cul tivated life-style with the shrewd exercise of diplomacy. Kissinger is trying to revive some of the bygone elegance of public life; grimness is for the ideologues and zealots who haven't made the world such a troubled place to live...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Henry Kissinger Off Duty | 2/7/1972 | See Source »

Probably the most powerful reason for any of the four nations to vote yes is a negative one: the prospect of isolation and economic decline if they remain outside the Common Market. But despite the euphoric words spoken in Brussels last week, it is clear that several statesmen will have to do some persuasive marketing of arguments at home in the next few months if the Six are indeed to become...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COMMON MARKET: Road to Brussels | 1/31/1972 | See Source »

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