Kind disagreement.Although he is junior to me in years, I yield to no one in my admiration for the superior wisdom of Charles Peters in every field of human endeavor--with several notable exceptions. One is his strange fixation fixation: see psychoanalysis. on reviving re·vive v. re·vived, re·viv·ing, re·vives v.tr. 1. To bring back to life or consciousness; resuscitate. 2. To impart new health, vigor, or spirit to. 3. the military draft, despite the obvious pleasure that such a move would bring to the gang of adventurers now populating the White House and the Pentagon Pentagon Huge five-sided building (1941–43) in Arlington, Va., that is the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense. Designed by George Edwin Bergstrom, it was, on its completion, the world's largest office building, covering 34 acres (14 hectares) and offering . Another strange fixation is his belief in overworking young professionals despite the obvious losses in productivity and even human lives (remember Libby Zion Libby Zion Graduate education A young ♀ who died after admission to the ER of a NYC hospital in 1984; her death was attributed to inadequate care provided by overworked and undersupervised medical house officers. See 405 Regulations. ?) caused by such behavior. I must admit that, in my work life, I frequently put in 60-hour workweeks. But I never forced my subordinates to do the same--probably because I remembered a remark attributed to that noblest of men, Gen. George C. Marshall. When an apple-polishing young officer told Marshall that he'd worked long into the night to complete an assigned project, Marshall replied, "Any officer who cannot complete an assignment within normal working hours should have that failure noted in his fitness report." William M. Burke San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden , Calif. Charles Peters replies: I am grateful for the kind words on our disagreement. I believe that if the sons and daughters of the influential served in the military, their parents would not support military adventurers in Washington. On overworking young professionals, I have always opposed the medical slave drive. As for the rest, my views have become more benign. I hope Mr. Burke read my note on Marjorie Williams Marjorie Williams (January 13, 1958 – January 16, 2005) was born in Princeton, New Jersey to a scientist-turned-homemaker mother and a father who was an editor at Viking Press. in our March issue. |
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