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Americans in Paris_ Life and Death Under Nazi Occupation - Charles Glass [233]

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260 ‘Your extended sojourn’ Carisella and Ryan, The Black Swallow of Death, Boston: Marlborough House, 1972, p. 250.

Chapter Twenty-six: Uniting Africa

p. 261 ‘The German authorities … the required raw materials’ Gaston Bedaux, La vie ardente de Charles Bedaux, Paris: privately published, 3 June 1959, p. 81.

p. 261 Dr Franz Medicus’s Department Janet Flanner, ‘Annals of Collaboration: Equivalism III’, The New Yorker, 13 October 1945, p. 34.

p. 262 ‘This peanut scheme’ Ibid., p. 32.

p. 262 ‘When I put myself’ Ibid., p. 34.

p. 263 ‘The bewildered man’ Robert Murphy, Diplomat among Warriors: Secret Decisions that Changed the World, New York: Doubleday and Company, 1964, p. 121.

p. 264 ‘I explained how seriously’ Ibid., p. 123.

p. 265 ‘Mr. Bedaux’s release’ Robert Murphy, Memorandum to the Secretary of State, ‘Subject: Interview with Mr. Charles E. Bedaux, Strictly Confidential’, 30 October 1942, Document Number 851T.00/52, US National Archives, College Park, Maryland.

p. 265 ‘had been definitely abandoned … According to this plan’ Ibid.

p. 266 ‘a leading member’ ‘The Dangerous Middle’, Time, 27 June 1955.

p. 266 ‘sleek Jacques Lemaigre-Dubreuil’ ‘Despair on the Even’, Time, 12 June 1944.

p. 266 A few days after this interview Janet Flanner, ‘Annals of Collaboration: Equivalism III’, The New Yorker, 13 October 1945, p. 35. Jim Christy, The Price of Power: A Biography of Charles Eugene Bedaux, New York: Doubleday and Company, 1984, p. 257.

p. 266 ‘Here opinions are divided’ Ibid., p. 257.

p. 267 ‘I am on the right side’ Federal Bureau of Investigation interview with Frederick Ledebur, Telemeter, 21 January 1944, US Department of Justice Communications Section, from FBI files supplied under Freedom of Information Act, unnumbered file, pp. 64692, 64693 and 64694. FOIPA No. 1088544-001.

p. 267 ‘The last word’ Bedaux, La vie ardente de Charles Bedaux, p. 85.

Chapter Twenty-seven: Americans Go to War

p. 268 ‘He treated me politely’ Drue Tartière with M. R.Werner, The House near Paris: An American Woman’s Story of Traffic in Patriots, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1946, pp. 121–2.

p. 268 Jean Fraysse, Drue’s friend … ‘I can understand’ Ibid., pp. 124–5.

p. 269 ‘Darlin’, it’s awfully nice’ Ibid., p. 127.

p. 269 ‘Have a crise’ Ibid., p. 145.

p. 270 Von Weber came into my room … ‘I was thoroughly scared’ Ibid., pp. 130–32.

p. 271 ‘I think it’s a disgrace’ Ibid., p. 133.

p. 271 ‘So, for two hours’ Robert Murphy, Diplomat among Warriors: Secret Decisions that Changed the World, New York: Doubleday and Company, 1964, p. 146.

p. 271 ‘seized the telegraph … After a resistence’ A. J. Liebling, The Road Back to Paris, London: Michael Joseph, 1944, pp. 197–8.

p. 271 Charles Bedaux was … the German officer Janet Flanner, ‘Annals of Collaboration: Equivalism III’, The New Yorker, 13 October 1945, p. 35.

p. 272 ‘By that time’ Murphy, Diplomat among Warriors, p. 154.

p. 272 ‘Only a few hours’ Ibid., p. 154. p. 273 ‘I am sending word … Dr. Lévy and Dr. Pigache’ Tartière, The

House near Paris, p. 134.

Chapter Twenty-eight: Murphy Forgets a Friend

p. 275 ‘knocked on my door … not knowing whether’ Keeler Faus, Diary, Sunday, 8 November 1942. (Faus’s meticulous daily diaries for the years 1940 to 1944 were made available to me by his wife, Mme Colette Faus, in Paris.)

p. 276 ‘The night before the Germans’ Margaret Collins Weitz, Sisters in the Resistance: How Women Fought to Free France, 1940–1945, New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1995, p. 198.

p. 276 ‘one goon had’ Adam Nossiter, The Algeria Hotel: France, Memory and the Second World War, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2001, p. 163.

p. 276 ‘a German stuck the point’ Keeler Faus, Diary, Wednesday, 11 November 1942.

p. 277 ‘not retard French’ Jim Christy, The Price of Power: A Biography of Charles Eugene Bedaux, New York: Doubleday and Company, 1984, p. 268.

p. 277 ‘I am carrying out’ John MacVane, ‘Department of Amplification’, letter to the editor, The New Yorker, 3 November 1945, pp. 80–81.

p. 278 ‘Carrying through the study’ Christy, The Price of Power, p. 270.

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