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This was only the first half of an overall national gun policy. The second half of the overall plan was shelved by the Republican Administration, led by then Special Assistant to the Secretary of the Treasury G. Gordon Liddy, who told an N.R.A. session in 1971 that the Administration opposed registration and licensing of guns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forum, Oct. 27, 1975 | 10/27/1975 | See Source »

...There was really a heavy demand for tickets this year," said Gordon Page, head of the Harvard ticket office. "Because the game was at Dartmouth last year, a lot of people didn't get to go. So this year everybody wants to." This explains why students got such lousy seats, (if that's any consolation to those of you in Section 37 under the colonnade...

Author: By Andrew P. Quigley, | Title: Harvard-Dartmouth: No Love Lost | 10/25/1975 | See Source »

...Gordon, professor of Chemistry and the commission's chairman, said last week that the complaints concerned several investigative articles published in The Crimson last year. One of them--involving Stephen S. Rosenfeld '75, who was required to withdraw from the College for forging Phi Beta Kappa and graduate school recommendations-became nationally known, making the front page of The New York Times...

Author: By James I. Kaplan, | Title: Plugging Up the Leaks | 10/18/1975 | See Source »

...Watergate breakin, gave his version of the plot. According to him, former White House Counsel Charles Colson suggested that Anderson might be discredited if he appeared on his live radio program under the influence of a drug that would cause him to ramble incoherently. With another Watergate conspirator, G. Gordon Liddy, Hunt set up a lunch with a physician who worked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PLOTS: Not Poison, Just Some Drugs | 10/6/1975 | See Source »

Agency Defenders. Eventually, Gordon transferred the venom and toxin from Fort Detrick to the CIA storeroom in Washington, which held other toxic substances that were considered exempt from the presidential order because they were not intended for use as general weapons of war (see box). Helms called the episode "an aberration -something that happened once, to my knowledge." That assessment doubtless would be shared by many of the agency's defenders, who believe the CIA is being unfairly hounded, partly for political reasons. But committee members thought otherwise. Said Church: "We have found out that ambiguity seems to plague...

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

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