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While in the CIA, Hunt cranked out at least one, and sometimes three books a year, drawing on his knowledge of agency operations. Each time he was obliged to submit the manuscript to his superiors for approval. "I made a conscientious effort to fudge details, blurring locations and identities so they couldn't be recognized," Hunt told TIME Correspondent David Beckwith. But occasionally his superiors would censor a scene or a theme, he recalled, "and I'd learn that some episode I thought I'd made up from whole cloth had described an actual operation-one that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Nation: E. Howard Hunt, Master Storyteller | 6/11/1973 | See Source »

...Crimson is well aware that my office agrees that the projected increases in the representation of minority group members and women within the University are disappointingly small. However, in the final analysis, this office can submit to the HEW and to the community at large, only those plans, goals, projections and timetables submitted to it by the various deans, department heads and administrative units within the University. The fact is that anyone with a modicum of understanding of the University structure knows that Harvard operates on a system of "every tub on its own bottom...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AFFIRMATIVE ACTION | 5/30/1973 | See Source »

...couple of Israeli grapefruit that he said had been confiscated by Libyan workers at a pipeline terminal run by Oasis, the largest foreign producer. He accused Oasis of allowing Israeli spies to operate in Libya disguised as oil workers. Gaddafi gave the companies less than a week to submit plans for allowing a 100% takeover of their pumping operations. He added, vaguely but ominously: "No doubt the day will come when oil will be used as a weapon by the Arabs in self-defense...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OIL: Libya's 100-Percenter | 5/28/1973 | See Source »

...based executives of the threatened companies maintained sphinxlike silence about the demand, but other oilmen in Tripoli believe that the firms did submit vaguely worded takeover proposals before the deadline. Nervous Americans, faced with the peculiar task of proposing terms for their own buyout, complained privately that they did not know exactly what Gaddafi meant by "100% control." At minimum, Gaddafi might settle for part ownership of their assets and the appointment of Libyan nationals as chief executives. At the extreme, he will push for complete nationalization...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: OIL: Libya's 100-Percenter | 5/28/1973 | See Source »

Rand, who has used his new technique on only five patients so far, stresses that it is applicable only to tumors fed by a capillary system that is easy to isolate. Given that qualification, the procedure seems to be effective. A 70-year-old woman, unwilling to submit to conventional surgery for a brain tumor, underwent magnetic surgery in March. Rand cannot find the tumor with X rays any longer, and although he will not say that the growth has disappeared, there is good reason to believe that it has at least shrunk. The patient's eye, which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Starving the Tumor | 5/28/1973 | See Source »

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