Word: gordons
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Friday, disappointment centered on Harvard's foil and epee teams, which punted away their chances to finish in the money. On Saturday, Harvard's frustration story belonged to Gordon Rutledge, the Crimson's lone legitimate contender in sabre competition...
...GORDON C. STRACHAN, 30. A former junior member of the Nixon-Mitchell law firm in New York, Strachan was Haldeman's chief aide in the White House. He later became general counsel of the U.S. Information Agency as part of a White House effort to exert greater control over the federal bureaucracy...
June 17, 1972. On the night of the ill-starred Watergate breakin, John Mitchell and a group of Nixon campaign officials were attending political meetings in Beverly Hills. After news of the burglars' capture reached him, Mitchell told Mardian to ask G. Gordon Liddy, the counsel to Nixon's re-election finance committee and one of the originators of the political-espionage plan, to seek the help of Attorney General Richard Kleindienst in Washington to get the arrested men out of jail. (Kleindienst has testified that Liddy accosted him at Washington's Burning Tree golf club and sought such help...
Yesterday Marion listed Bennett and Crimson captain and epeeman Eugene White as Harvard's most probable finalists, but he added that sabre man Gordon Rutledge and epee combattant Eric Read could also be in contention...
Junior sabre man Gordon Rutledge, Harvard's mainstay in the weapon before dropping three straight Saturday, called Saturday's sabre performance one of the worst of his Harvard career. "Our showing against Yale brings back bad memories of the Columbia match my freshman year," Rutledge said yesterday. "We lost that one, 8-1, too." Columbia at the time was the strongest sabre team in the country with All-American Bruce Soriano leading the troops...