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Michigan Republican Donald Riegle was elected to Congress at 28, boyishly glamorous and unabashedly candid about his ambitions to fetch up in the White House. Now, at 34, he is a disenchanted public servant who likes to link himself with those "beautiful kids" whose "day is coming." O Congress is Congressman Riegle's yearlong diary (beginning in April of last year), kept while Congress was in session and printed, he says, to "prompt a few young people to enter politics." Yet Riegle's account of his frustrations in one of America's most intractable institutions seems...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Partly Young, Partly Angry | 7/24/1972 | See Source »

...small roles I much admire the cool and calculating young Octavius of Philip Kerr, and the oily Decius of John Tillinger. Some of the rest need work, including Bryan Utman as the boy-servant Lucius (a role that Shakespeare had to invent instead of taking over from Plutarch, and was so beautifully done on this stage six years ago by Alan Howard). Utman is not helped at all by the ugly and fussy song composed for him by John Morris...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: Handsome 'Julius Caesar' Opens 18th Season | 7/3/1972 | See Source »

...ancient Washington gag is that an unsuccessful weapon is about to be renamed "the civil servant" because "it won't work and you can't fire it." That derisive opinion of federal employees may now have to be changed. For the past year a Government task force has been conducting the first survey ever made of output per man-hour by Uncle Sam's hirelings. Last week Labor Secretary James Hodgson announced that the results were "a pleasant surprise": the bureaucrats in Foggy Bottom and environs have been getting bigger productivity increases out of their workers than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PRODUCTIVITY: Progress in Washington | 6/5/1972 | See Source »

Magog is a contemporary wizard -a civil servant whose vast power derives from the ritual manipulation of a bureaucracy that is every bit as arcane as any occult Druidic circle. With engaging arrogance he can honestly boast that "England waits at my out tray." As a highly informed fabulist, Sinclair romps through the same corridors of power that C.P. Snow shuffles through as an unimaginative realist. Myth, politics and culture are nimbly glossed as the author tells of Magog's rise to wealth and prestige. In 1948 Magog, as a specialist in foreign affairs, pays for his sack time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: An Odd Couple | 6/5/1972 | See Source »

...body lay in state in the Capitol rotunda-the first civil servant ever to be so honored. The next day, in Washington's National Presbyterian Church, not far from the house where Hoover was born, Richard Nixon did him the additional honor of delivering the funeral eulogy. The two men had had a mutual admiration ever since the days when Nixon, a freshman Congressman from California, had begun his pursuit of Alger Hiss and "the Communist conspiracy." Hoover, said Nixon, "was one of the giants, a man who helped keep steel in America's backbone and the flame...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: The Long Reign of J. Edgar Hoover | 5/15/1972 | See Source »

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