- Rossides, Eugene T.
Rossides, Eugene T. (Personal Name)
- Rossides, Gene
His U. S. customs ... 1977: t.p. (Eugene T. Rossides)
His Doing business in Greece, 1980: t.p. (Eugene T. Rossides) CIP data (b. 1927)
Kissinger & Cyprus, 2014 : title page (Gene Rossides) dust jacket (Gene Rossides served as Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury from 1969 to 1973, during the first term of the Nixon Administration. Rossides supervised the U.S. Customs Service, Secret Service, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms and the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center. He served as the U.S. representative to INTERPOL. From 1958 to 1961. He served in the Eisenhower Administration and is a founding director of the Eisenhower Institute. He graduated from Columbia College and Columbia Law School)
Prabook website viewed May 14, 2019: Eugene Telemachus Rossides page (Rossides, Eugene Telemachus was born on October 23, 1927 in New York City ; AB, Columbia University, 1949. Juris Doctor, Columbia University, 1952 ; Criminal Law Investigator, New York County District Attorney's Office, 1952. Assistant Attorney General, State of New York, 1956-1958 ; Treasury Department, 1958-1961 ; Assistant Secretary of the United States. Treasury Department, 1969-1973) https://prabook.com/web/eugene_telemachus.rossides/331785
Washington post WWW site, viewed May 28, 2020 (in obituary dated May 27, 2020: Gene Rossides, a Columbia University football star who engineered one of the sport's greatest upsets in the 1940s and later became a lawyer, campaign adviser and Treasury Department official, died May 16 at his home in Washington. He was 92. Eugene Telemachus Rossides was born Oct. 23, 1927, in Brooklyn. Mr. Rossides returned to private practice as a lawyer in 1973 and became a senior partner in the Washington office of the firm then known as Rogers & Wells. He wrote books and articles on international tariffs and trade. In 1974, Mr. Rossides was instrumental in founding the American Hellenic Institute and became an advocate for the diplomatic and commercial interests of Greece and Cyprus. Mr. Rossides was named to the Columbia Athletic Hall of Fame in 2008)