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...times, for all his series of painstakingly individual biographies, Halberstam seems to be in the process of inventing a sort of composite Kennedy man: Walt McNamara Rostow-Bundy. A man with "impeccable credentials" (the phrase occurs again and again) and the small withering smile that confirms them. A man less liberal than he might try to look. A superclerk, the "supreme mover of papers," possessed by "the belief that sheer intelligence and rationality could answer and solve anything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Hangover from Hubris | 11/27/1972 | See Source »

...with a classical tragedy, there was no turning back. By 1965, the proud, rational men had "completely lost control," and a bitter Lyndon Johnson was left to watch the Great Society come all unstuck, while only Dean Rusk remained "steadfast" and only Walt Rostow dared offer hopeful predictions "like Rasputin to a Tsar under siege...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Hangover from Hubris | 11/27/1972 | See Source »

Experiments. One mark of that century's rich outpouring of verse was the fact that Americans for the first time dominated poetry written in English. Pound served as a link between what Walt Whitman called "the American yawp" and the sophisticated experiments going on overseas. He was born in Hailey, Idaho. At 15-already 6 ft. tall, with a blazing shock of carrot hair-he entered the University of Pennsylvania to study "eight or nine" languages and flout the regular curriculum. He also met a medical student named William Carlos Williams, and they began poetic experiments together. After...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poetry: The Lost Leader | 11/13/1972 | See Source »

...dangerously concentrated the nation's power in the presidency, with Congress relegated to a kind of restive passivity. The fault lay not only with the three Presidents who prosecuted the war but with the executive elites with whom they surrounded themselves, hubristic warrior-intellectuals like McGeorge Bundy and Walt Rostow and Robert MacNamara. Under Lyndon Johnson, at least, there was an odd blending of machismo styles?the President's "coonskin-on-the-wall" Texas mystique with the cooler but no less assertive air of the intellectuals. This "cando" mentality, it may be, suffused the executive thinking, the very traditional American...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: The US. After Viet Nam | 11/6/1972 | See Source »

...second Crimson touchdown was a 29-yard fourth down aerial strike from Lynch to tight end Walt Herbert halfway through the third period, capping an 80 yard march. Lynch converted again, putting Harvard ahead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yardling Gridders Trounce Dartmouth | 10/28/1972 | See Source »

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