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Some lawyers want to change all that. Citing the right to privacy and the ban on unreasonable searches, Washington Attorney Nathan Lewin argues that planted informers are "live bugs" and as such should be used only after a judge issues a warrant. Earlier this year the California Supreme Court accepted the argument that using undercover law-enforcement agents to check out what was said in classrooms might violate the First Amendment right of free speech...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: The Trouble with Snitches | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

...poisons were saved, Colby replied: "I think that it was done by people who were so completely enmeshed in the subject and the difficulty of production [100 Ibs. of shellfish produces 1 gm. of toxin] that they simply couldn't bear to see the stuff destroyed." But Nathan Gordon, the stooped and bushy-browed ex-CIA chemist who was in charge of the toxin and cobra venom in 1970, maintained that he had never received an order to destroy them. That order apparently should have been relayed to him from Helms by Sidney Gottlieb, a chemist, who was then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTELLIGENCE: Of Dart Guns and Poisons | 9/29/1975 | See Source »

Gone are the days of the large general fund drives like the $82.5 million effort that former President Nathan M. Pusey '28 launched in the late 1950s...

Author: By James Cramer, | Title: New Angles In Harvard Fund-Raising | 9/27/1975 | See Source »

...site for the house of the College dean: President Emeritus Nathan M. Pusey '28 reportedly felt strongly the dean should live near the Square. He directed studies into various sites, including the Fly Club lot, which was closely examined but then passed over for another lot on DeWolfe and Grant Streets. Eventually, however, the whole project was scrapped...

Author: By Charles E. Shepard, | Title: A Free Garden for the Fly | 9/15/1975 | See Source »

...Hall's job. Hall is a professional manager, hired to streamline Harvard's administrative operations so they can be run in the most efficient and effective manner possible. Harvard has never before had a real professional to run its administrative outfit. L. Gard Wiggins, vice president for President Emeritus Nathan M. Pusey '28, handled almost all the affairs now divided among the four vice presidents serving President Bok. When it issued its report in 1971, the University Committee on Governance that originally recommended that Pusey's successor should appoint separate vice presidents, each with specific functions, warned of potential problems...

Author: By H. JEFFREY Leonard, | Title: Sizing Up Steve Hall | 9/15/1975 | See Source »

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