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They knew my father, respected him and his work, and realized how special Margaux was.
WSJ: Will Lyons on Wine: A Golden Inheritance
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So Greve, for example, would be a little like Margaux, as it has a softer, rounder character.
WSJ: Will Lyons on Wine: Consorting With Chianti
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Seven members of Hemingway's family have died by taking their own lives, including Ernest and Mariel Hemingway's older sister Margaux, she said.
CNN: Hemingway family mental illness explored in new film
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It includes archival footage from when her sister Margaux Hemingway, who took her own life in 1996, had been making a personal family documentary.
CNN: Hemingway family mental illness explored in new film
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Say a Chateau Margaux 1996 to go with the lamb?
CNN: STORY HIGHLIGHTS
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The key to understanding Saint-Julien is to try and think of the style of wine as somewhere between the perfume and elegance of Margaux and the power and density of Pauillac.
WSJ: Will Lyons on Wine: Journeying Into the Heart of Bordeaux
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He hopes that his 400-hectare spread--50 kilometers and several income levels from the Napa border--will be the center of a new wine appellation, like Carneros in Napa or Margaux in France.
FORBES: Magazine Article
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"The prime minister called it silky, " it reveals of Baroness Thatcher's enjoyment in 1989 of the Chateau Margaux 1961 - which was subsequently bumped up from an A rating to an A1.
BBC: UK government's tasting notes reveal wine diplomacy
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Labour's Tom Watson has previously used a series of parliamentary questions and Freedom of Information requests to discover that the cellar featured high-profile wines from the likes of Chateau Latour, Chateau Lafite, Chateau Margaux and Chateau Mouton Rothschild.
BBC: Government wine cellar escapes cost-cutting axe
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The night I arrived, we dined with four delightful expat friends at a nice hotel restaurant, where I learned, among other things, that in 1992 a construction crew working for Ross Perot illegally blew up a coral reef so that he could moor his yacht, the Chateau Margaux, at his doorstep.
NEWYORKER: You��re Welcome