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  1. Emil "Bus" Mosbacher Jr. (April 1, 1922 – August 13, 1997) was a two-time America's Cup-winning yachtsman, the founding chairman of Operation Sail, and Chief of Protocol of the United States during the administration of President Richard Nixon.

  2. Aug 14, 1997 · Emil (Bus) Mosbacher Jr., who skippered two winning teams in the America's Cup races and shepherded visiting diplomats through official Washington as the State Department's chief of protocol in...

  3. MOSBACHER, Emil, Jr. ("Bus") ( b. 1 April 1922 in Mount Vernon, New York; d. 13 August 1997 in Greenwich, Connecticut), yachtsman who was a winner of One Design championships and the winning skipper in two America's Cup competitions; he was also a businessman and Chief of Protocol for President Richard M. Nixon.

  4. Mar 11, 2024 · Gilbert Rogin. TABLE OF CONTENTS. ORIGINAL LAYOUT. The first, and quite often the last, impression one has on meeting Emil (Bus) Mosbacher Jr. (left), the skipper of the America's Cup defender...

  5. Aug 13, 1997 · It was no surprise to those who had raced with him when Bus Mosbacher joined the U.S. State Department as President Nixon’s Head of Protocol. Mosbacher was known to them as a master of decorum, a conspicuously modest man who never raised his voice even in rare moments of havoc. Some say Mosbacher was incapable of shouting.

  6. Emil "Bus" Mosbacher. USA. 1922 - 1997. Bus Mosbacher started sailing at the age of five and by the time he was nine, had his own boat, a Star-Class sloop. In 1935 and 1936, he won the midget championship in his Star, and in 1939 captured the junior championship and was runner-up in the Star Nationals.

  7. Aug 15, 1997 · Emil (Bus) Mosbacher Jr., who skippered two winning teams in the America’s Cup races and shepherded visiting diplomats through Washington as the State Department’s chief of protocol in the...

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