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...reader doubts the wisdom of France's aperçu let him examine these stark entries. Albert Speer, author of the bestseller Inside the Third Reich, has unique credentials for speculation on the nature of evil and culpability. The architect was literally the Master Builder of the Third Reich and Hitler's Minister of Armaments and War Production. It was in his ministerial capacity that Speer employed some 5 million slave laborers; it was for that role that he was sentenced at the Nuremberg trials to long imprisonment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Master Builder | 2/23/1976 | See Source »

...Reich lasted twelve years, the incarceration 20. That is merely first in a file of ironies. Forbidden to write a formal memoir, Speer scribbles on toilet paper, then smuggles out his work with the help of a Dutch guard who had once served as a forced laborer in a German factory. Speer's Russian captors-who alternate with more lenient Westerners-are as harsh and arbitrary as Reich Marshals. When he steals a cauliflower from the prison vegetable garden, Speer is caught and sentenced to a week of solitary confinement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Master Builder | 2/23/1976 | See Source »

...travels, Salisbury seeks others signs. Over and over, he explains that he is an optimist, and his optimism colors his perceptions of the people he meets, the people he tries to find his American spirit in. Charles Reich, author of The Greening of America, is someone he admires very much. "I told Reich that I was an optimist. He was delighted. His friends are optimists, too. He said this was a time when the consciousness people of the 1960s were out doing their own thing." There are nuances here, and ironies, that Salisbury is overlooking. Not that he has stacked...

Author: By James Cleick, | Title: A Xerox America | 2/13/1976 | See Source »

...LOOK BOOK. Edited by Leo Rosten. 397 pages. Abrams. $29.95. From its first issue in 1937, which carried a cover picture of Reich Marshal Hermann Göring, to its final number in 1971, depicting the preWatergate Nixon White House, Look chronicled and celebrated a generation of American life. Novelist-Humorist Leo Rosten, who was once chief editorial adviser to Look, has pored through back issues to compile this souvenir album. Articles by Norman Mailer, Harry Truman, Eugene O'Neill and others do not stand the test of age. But the powerful pictures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Gift Books | 12/22/1975 | See Source »

...Buttfuck spokesman, who plans to join Charles Reich in California after he gets his degree this February, said last week that the group began a few years ago as a "severe, organized counterreaction" to academic pressure. At first the Buttfucks limited their activities to a sort of "nameless, roving aggression," along the lines of stealing parking meters, destroying bathrooms, that sort of thing. Two years ago they elected a parking meter named Pancho Valdez to a post in student government. (For months afterwards, "Free Pancho Valdez" graffiti could be seen all over the Yale campus.) But their major foray into...

Author: By James Gleick, | Title: God and Bladderball At Yale | 11/21/1975 | See Source »

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