Ferdinand Lop

He married Sonia Seligman on 18 January 1923 in Paris.
During the French Fourth Republic, Lop stood on an electoral platform which consisted of: * the elimination of poverty after 10 pm; * the construction of a bridge 300 m wide, to shelter vagrants; * the extension of the roadstead of Brest to Montmartre and of the Boulevard Saint-Michel to the sea (in both directions) – a policy reprised from an earlier satirical candidate, Paul Duconnaud; * the installation of a slide in the Place de la Sorbonne, for students of the University of Paris [notorious for instigating political unrest]; * the nationalization of brothels, to give prostitutes the benefits of public servant status; * the reduction of pregnancy from nine to seven months; * the installation of moving pavements, to make life easier for wanderers; * providing a pension to the widow of the unknown soldier; * the relocation of Paris to the countryside, for fresh air; * the removal of the last coach from Paris métro trains.
He authored numerous booklets, often with evocative titles, such as ''Thoughts and aphorisms'' (1951), ''Pétain and history: What I would have said in my inaugural speech at the Académie française if I had been elected'' (1957), ''History of the Latin Quarter'' (1960–1963), ''Where is France going?'' (1961) and ''Antimaxims'' (1973).
He died and was buried at Saint-Sébastien-de-Morsent. Provided by Wikipedia