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...pangs plague any bureaucratic infant. It boasts the fastest-growing budget of any federal agency: LEAA appropriations have jumped from $63 million in fiscal 1969 to $699 million in the current fiscal year. The agency also limped along for ten months without a chief administrator. Jerris Leonard, a Mitchell protégé who was less than a smashing success as the Justice Department's civil rights chief, finally moved over to run LEAA last April. Still, the one channel through which the Administration could have made a substantial contribution to combatting crime has been clogged by bungling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: Backfire on Crime | 10/18/1971 | See Source »

Died. Sean Lemass, 71, Prime Minister of the Irish Republic from 1959 to 1966; in Dublin. The protégé of Eamon de Valera, Lemass graduated to Parliament from the crucible of the Black and Tan conflict. At 16 he holed up with Irish Republican Army soldiers in Dublin's General Post Office during the Easter Rebellion of 1916. Fifteen rebels were shot and thousands deported after British shells ended the uprising, but Lemass was released. According to Dublin legend, "the cops gave him a kick in the arse and told him to go home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, May 24, 1971 | 5/24/1971 | See Source »

...element to drop the politics of confrontation and try to work within the system. With a well-organized campaign, the radicals did just that. By the scant margin of 56 votes, Berkeley last week elected its first black mayor: Warren Widener, 33, a suave former city council member and protégé of radical Black Congressman Ronald Dellums. The insurgents also gained three of four available seats on the city council, bringing it to an even 4-4 split between leftists and moderates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: Welcome to the System | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

...elected to an enlarged Politburo were Viktor Grishin, 57, Moscow party chief; Dinmukhamed Kunayev, 59, Kazakhstan party chief; Vladimir Shcherbitsky, 53, chairman of the council of ministers of the Ukraine, and Fedor Kulakov, 53, a party secretary and specialist in agriculture. All are Brezhnev protégés. By packing the Politburo, just as Stalin did in 1952, Brezhnev henceforth will be able to dominate it more easily. The collective leadership, which last year had begun to show signs of strain, appeared to be yielding ground to Brezhnev's drive toward undisputed preeminence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOVIET UNION: And Then There Was One | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

LLOYD BENTSEN JR., 49, Democrat, Texas, is a wealthy banker, a protégé of Lyndon Johnson and John Connally, but not as conservative as he is often portrayed. He will support Mexican-American causes despite Chicano hostility to his powerful citrus-growing family. He commends Nixon's foreign policy, but wants no more Cambodias. By and large, Bentsen flunks the President domestically...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE HOUSE: WHO'S NEW IN THE CONGRESS | 2/1/1971 | See Source »

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