The Administration: Durable Crocodile

The cast read like one of Frank Sullivan's Christmas paeans in The New Yorker. Many of the 80 guests' costumes—each supposed to represent some stage of the guest of honor's life —looked as if they had been assembled for an underground movie. Host Robert Kennedy greeted arrivals in an ankle-length ambassadorial cutaway. Actress Melina Mercouri, in black velvet pants, did her best to impersonate "a little boy"—and was never less convincing. Charles Addams disguised himself as a locomotive engineer. For reasons best known to herself, Eunice Kennedy Shriver was decked out as a bunny. West Virginia Democrat John D. Rockefeller IV came holding hands with Sharon Percy, daughter of Illinois' new Republican Senator-elect.

The party, held at Bobby's Hickory Hill estate outside Washington last week, was a felicitous tribute to Elder Statesman W. (for William) Averell Harriman, whose 75th birthday it was. In an era mesmerized by youth, Harriman—himself youthfully lean and in extraordinary physical fettle—is formidable proof of his own favorite formula for longevity: "Make a wise choice of your ancestors and maintain your enthusiasm." Indeed, Harriman today is engaged in possibly the most challenging assignment of his public career: that of finding peace in Viet Nam.

Search for Signals. Yale-educated heir to a railroad fortune and a lifelong Democrat, "Ave" Harriman headed the World War II mission that arranged lend-lease to Russia, helped draft the U.S. program for postwar aid to Europe. Though he lost out to Adlai Stevenson for the Democratic presidential nominations of 1952 and 1956—a disappointment that still pains him—he achieved a measure of political success by winning a four-year term as Governor of New York. Later he became one of the older faces in the New Frontier. As John Kennedy's Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs, he negotiated the 1962 Laos accord and the 1963 nuclear test ban treaty. For his quick, snapping assault on complex problems, Harriman is nicknamed "the Crocodile."

After Kennedy's assassination, Harriman's entree to the White House narrowed, and in February 1965 he was actually demoted from Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs to his present post as ambassador-at-large. Rank has borne little relation to responsibility. Harriman's new challenge began taking shape during the U.S. bombing pause in Viet Nam last Christmas, when the President dispatched him on a round-the-world mission to marshal support for peace negotiations. In August, L.B.J. formally charged Ave with coordinating U.S. peace efforts, which, in essence, means sleuthing down every possible lead that might represent the long-awaited signal from Ho Chi Minh.

Faith in Flexibility. In this capacity, Harriman last month carried out a grueling 26,000-mile trip to explain the goals of the Manila Conference. Never was his storied endurance so evident. In the course of one punishing 22-hour day, he breakfasted in New Delhi, lunched in Rawalpindi, took tea in Teheran, dined aloft over Greece, and sank into bed in Rome.

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ROBB LEVIN, resident of Fairfax, Virginia, on the $15,000 lawsuit settlement made against Tareq and Michaele Salahi, the White House gate crashers, who are also involved in at least 15 other civil suits

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