Word: coxes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...shells over the three-mile course. This breaks down to 227 single skullers, 61 pairs and doubles, 115 fours and 180 eight-oared shells. 452 oarswomen will be participating. STARTING TIMES 11 a.m. Veteran Singles 11:30 Double Skulls 11:50 Light Eights 12:05 p.m. Elite Fours with Cox 12:15 Novice Singles 12:45 Intermediate Fours with Cox 1 Women's Singles 1:20 Junior Eights 1:30 Intermediate Light Singles 1:50 Pairs without Cox 2:10 Intermedia Singles 2:30 Intermedia Eights 2:55 Elite Light Singles 3:05 Light Fours with Cox 3:30 Women...
...spurious proceeding," he added, would have amounted to "unprofessional conduct" on his part. Jaworski strongly urged that his top deputy, Henry S. (Hank) Ruth Jr., be named his successor. Ruth, a quiet but effective attorney from Pennsylvania, had also served as deputy to the first special prosecutor, Archibald Cox, and had helped hold the staff together after Nixon ordered Cox fired last Oct. 20. Jaworski said he will aid his successor in preparing a final report to the Congress; if Congress so requests, the report will include a detailed account of Nixon's Watergate involvement...
...stand as long as two weeks. Next will come corroboration from various former Nixon men and, for the finale, the tapes. It is one of the strongest cases, as well as the most important, Neal has ever handled. Ironically, he did his best to avoid the assignment. When Archibald Cox became Watergate special prosecutor, the Harvard professor was worried about his own lack of trial experience. Remembering Neal from their time together under Attorney General Robert Kennedy, Cox telephoned Neal hi Nashville...
...When Cox called in May 1973, Neal's private law practice was beginning to prosper. The son of a farm family of modest means, Neal had a comfortable life. His small farm boasted a tennis court, and he had enough leisure to use it and to spend time with his wife and two children. He told Cox...
...Cox persisted, and Neal finally agreed to come to Washington for two weeks just to help get the office started. He stayed nearly five months, after deciding that Dean was the key to the case and that it was critical to get his guilty plea and his cooperation. On Oct. 19 Neal went to court to hear Dean plead, then announced his own resignation. His assistants, Richard Ben-Veniste, 31, and Jill Wine Volner, 31, performed admirably in the many and complex preliminary hearings in John Sirica's courtroom. Still, as a prosecution staffer observed, "for the biggest trial...