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・ Bernard Fox (actor)
・ Bernard Fox (figure skater)
・ Bernard Fox (Irish republican)
・ Bernard Francis Law
・ Bernard Francis Saul
・ Bernard Frank
・ Bernard Depierre
・ Bernard Derome
・ Bernard Derosier
・ Bernard Derrida
・ Bernard Derriman
・ Bernard Desclot
・ Bernard Descôteaux
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・ Bernard Desjean, Baron de Pointis
Bernard Destremau
・ Bernard Devauchelle
・ Bernard Devlin
・ Bernard Devlin (director)
・ Bernard DeVoto
・ Bernard Dhéran
・ Bernard Diamond
・ Bernard Diamond (VC)
・ Bernard Diederich
・ Bernard Dietz
・ Bernard Dillon
・ Bernard Diomède
・ Bernard Docker
・ Bernard Doherty
・ Bernard Dombrowski


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Bernard Destremau : ウィキペディア英語版
Bernard Destremau

Bernard Destremau ((:bɛʁnaʁ dɛstr.mɔ); 11 February 1917 – 6 June 2002) was a French tennis player, diplomat and politician.
==Biography==
Destremau was born in Paris into a military family, the third son of a WW I general. A precocious French junior champion in the mid-1930s, Destremau later won several major tournaments including the 1941 and the 1942 French Championships, which was at the time was not counted as a major due to being restricted to players either from countries under German occupation or countries allied with Germany. He also won the 1938 French Championships doubles (with Yvon Petra, beating Don Budge-Gene Mako in four sets), was a semi-finalist in 1937 in singles (losing to Henner Henkel), and won several national titles including the 1951 and 1953 French National singles championships. Destremau was also a quarterfinalist in singles at Roland Garros in 1936 and 1938. He stayed an amateur and devoted his tennis mostly to the Davis Cup, the King of Sweden Cup and team matches. As a veteran he won the Wimbledon over-45 doubles event with Bill Talbert, in 1965.
During World War II he escaped from occupied France to Spain and North Africa. After joining the Free French forces as a tank officer, he fought in France and Germany, was shot in the back near Toulon and wounded on two other occasions by hand-grenade shrapnel. He received the Legion of Honour on the battlefield from the hands of Marshal de Lattre. After the war, still playing tennis for France, he became a diplomat and was posted to Egypt, South Africa and Belgium. Venturing into politics he was elected député for Versailles in 1967 and held the seat until 1978, became Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs in 1974, and retired in 1981 after a last post as ambassador to Argentina.
A prolific writer of books on history and politics, he became a member of the French Academie des Sciences Morales et Politiques in 1996.

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