Word: nicks
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Nicholas D. Rudenstine, 23, majored in history at Princeton and is now employed as a financial analyst for Smith Barney in New York. Nick says he plans to stay at Smith Barney for at least another year, after which he may try to get some management experience. And he might eventually apply to business schools...
Asked if he would consider attending Harvard, Nick answers, "Sure, why not? It would be stranger for me to say, 'No, I'd never consider going to Harvard Business School.' I certainly wouldn't rule...
...Nick says his father frequently talks about his work with members of his family. "Recently we've discussed a lot of things about issues he knows he's going to be facing at Harvard," Nick says. For instance, he says, he and his father have chatted about academic debates such as that sparked when Stanford eliminated its Western Civilization requirements...
Neil Rudenstine's children say they are "really excited" about their father's career move. "I think it's great," Nick says. "I think he definitely made the right decision, I don't know about for Harvard, but definitely for himself...
...NICK NACK DOSSIER. The FBI gave Angleton a file full of tips from a Soviet military intelligence officer code-named "Nick Nack," who outlined Soviet penetrations around the world. Angleton, convinced that the agent was part of a Soviet plot to plant a mole, stuffed the report in a safe and ignored its contents. When Angleton's successor, George Kalaris, followed up the information, all of the 20 leads it contained resulted in arrests and convictions of important Soviet agents. "In each instance," says Mangold, "spies continued to operate for seven to 10 years because of Angleton's neglect...