Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

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[[Image:Rose Mary Woods - time.jpg|thumbnail|right|Woods, on the cover of [[Time Magazine]] (December 10, 1973)]]
[[Image:Rose Mary Woods - time.jpg|thumbnail|right|Woods, on the cover of [[Time Magazine]] (December 10, 1973)]]


'''Rose Mary Woods''' ([[December 26]], [[1917]] - [[January 22]], [[2005]]) was [[Richard Nixon]]'s secretary from 1951, through the [[Watergate scandal]], and until the end of his political career. Woods admitted in 1974 grand-jury testimony to having inadvertently erased no more than 5 minutes of the [[18 1/2 minute gap]] gap in the Nixon audio tapes that were central to the scandal. Later investigators identified five to nine separate erasures. The contents of the gap remain a mystery.
'''Rose Mary Woods''' ([[December 26]], [[1917]] - [[January 22]], [[2005]]) was [[Richard Nixon]]'s secretary from 1951, through the [[Watergate scandal]], and until the end of his political career. Woods admitted in 1974 grand-jury testimony to having inadvertently erased no more than 5 minutes of the [[18 1/2 minute gap]] in the Nixon audio tapes that were central to the scandal. Later investigators identified five to nine separate erasures. The contents of the gap remain a mystery.





Revision as of 05:17, 24 January 2005

File:Rose Mary Woods - time.jpg
Woods, on the cover of Time Magazine (December 10, 1973)

Rose Mary Woods (December 26, 1917 - January 22, 2005) was Richard Nixon's secretary from 1951, through the Watergate scandal, and until the end of his political career. Woods admitted in 1974 grand-jury testimony to having inadvertently erased no more than 5 minutes of the 18 1/2 minute gap in the Nixon audio tapes that were central to the scandal. Later investigators identified five to nine separate erasures. The contents of the gap remain a mystery.