Word: boucher
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Dates: during 1980-1980
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After Le Monde cast doubts on the legality of these moves, Justice Minister Alain Peyrefitte ordered charges brought against Editor Fauvet and Chief Editorial Writer Philippe Boucher under an obscure 1958 law that protects the legal system from "acts, words or writings" that may undermine the authority or independence of the judiciary. The penalty if convicted: up to six months in jail. Two of France's principal judicial associations promptly took the journalists' side. One magistrate noted that he felt "better defended by a free press." A number of French publications, including Hersant's usually approving France...
Sixty-eight-year-old Francis Boucher has also lived in Cambridge all here life. So did here mother. And her grandmother. "I'm very satisfied with Cambridge. The people are friendly, courteous and helpful, and I don't need a car to go anywhere I want," she says...