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What  was  Watergate? From www.boston.com
More complicated than some of the scandals that have followed in its wake,  Watergate involved a wide-ranging web of political espionage. It also took down a  president, changed the role of the news media in public debate, and challenged  many people's assumptions about the dignity of public office. The stage was set in  1968, when Richard M. Nixon -- who had lost the Republicans the presidency eight years earlier -- made a comeback and won the White House. (Globe Photo)
The Watergate, which gave the scandal its name, was a hotel and office complex in  Washington. In 1972, the Democratic National Committee had its headquarters  there. (The Watergate is still around, and is still a part of public life -- Monica  Lewinsky took refuge there at the height of the scandal about her affair with  President Clinton.) (Globe Photo)
Without Frank Wills, the scandal never would have happened. On June 17, 1972, Wills,  then 24, was a security guard at the Watergate. While doing his rounds, he found that a  door lock had been covered with electrical tape to keep it from locking. He called police,  who found five men burglarizing the offices of the Democratic National Committee.  The burglars had equipment for bugging the phones at the DNC. Wills quit his job because  he didn't get a raise for discovering the burglary. (Globe Photo)
Among those arrested was James W. McCord, security director for the Committee  To Re-Elect the President (CREEP). John Mitchell, head of the Nixon re-election  campaign (pictured) denied any ties between the campaign and the burglary. (Globe Photo)
The burglars were later revealed to be "plumbers" -- members of a clandestine unit of the  CRP, led by John Mitchell. One of the plumbers' previous jobs was a 1971 burglary at the  office of a psychiatrist who was treating Daniel Ellsberg (pictured). Ellsberg had leaked the  Pentagon Papers -- the Defense Department's secret history of the Vietnam War –  to The New York Times. They were published by the Times, The Boston Globe, and  The Washington Post. (Globe Photo)
One of those arrested in the burglary, Bernard Barker, was carrying an address book with an  entry for "HH" (Howard Hunt, pictured) at "WH" (White House). Hunt was a spy novelist  and White House consultant who had previously worked for the CIA, and was revealed as  one of the planners of the burglary. (Globe File Photo)
On Aug. 1, two Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward (right) and Carl Bernstein,  reported that a $25,000 cashier's check, apparently earmarked for the Nixon campaign,  wound up in the bank account of one of the accused burglars. Woodward and Bernstein  would follow the story for more than a year, eventually writing a book,  "All the President's Men," about what they discovered. (Globe Photo)
On Sept. 29, 1972, Woodward and Bernstein reported that John Dean (pictured), former  attorney general turned White House counsel, controlled a Republican slush fund used to  finance intelligence-gathering operations against the Democratic Party. (Globe Photo)
Ken Clawson, a former reporter who joined the White House communications staff under  Nixon, was named in an Oct. 10, 1972, story as the writer of an anonymous letter to a  New Hampshire newspaper that helped torpedo the career of Democratic vice-presidential  candidate Edmund Muskie. The letteralleged that Muskie had used the slur when describing  French-Canadians, a large part of his Maine constituency. The Post described this  "Canuck letter" as part of a "massive campaign of political spying and sabotage" on  Nixon's behalf. (Globe Photo)
On Nov. 7, 1972, Nixon was re-elected by a landslide over Sen. George W.  McGovern of South Dakota. (Globe Photo)
On Jan. 30, 1973, G. Gordon Liddy (pictured) and James W. McCord were convicted of  conspiracy, burglary, and wiretapping in the Watergate break-in. Liddy, a former FBI agent,  was not among those first arrested, but was convicted of planning the burglary. (Globe Photo)
In February 1973, the Senate established the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign  Activities to investigate the Watergate break-in and rumors of other operations. Sam Ervin,  a North Carolina Democrat who cultivated a folksy "country lawyer" persona, is chairman;  Howard Baker, a Republican from Tennessee, is his deputy. (Globe Photo)
On March 19, days before his sentencing in the original Watergate burglary, James W.  McCord sent a letter to Judge John Sirica, describing how other suspects had withheld  information and charging that payments were made by high White House officials to  persuade them to lie and plead guilty. Sirica made the letter public. (Globe Photo)
Presidential Counsel John Dean was fired at the end of April for cooperating with the  Watergate Committee. His testimony the following summer would be key to the  investigation, and his description of the cover-up as "a cancer on the presidency" would  become one of the best-remembered remarks from the scandal. (Globe Photo)
Also at the end of April, Nixon's top aides, Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman (left) and  domestic-affairs assistant John Ehrlichman (center), resigned over their roles in the  widening scandal. Also resigning was the attorney general, Richard Kleindienst. Elliot  Richardson of Massachusetts is named to replace Kleindienst. (Globe Photo)
On May 18, 1973, the Senate Select Committee (later known simply as the  "Watergate Committee") began its hearings, which were nationally televised. The same day  Richardson, about to take office as attorney general, appointed Archibald Cox as a special  prosecutor for Watergate. (Globe Photo)
Alexander Butterfield, a former presidential appointments secretary, testifed before the  Senate committee in July, confirming that Nixon had a system in place for taping all  conversations and phone calls in his office. The committee and Nixon began a battle over  the tapes. (Globe Photo)
Nixon, increasingly embattled in his refusal to hand over any tapes, began a series of events  known as the "Saturday Night Massacre" by ordering Richardson to fire Cox (pictured).  Richardson refused and resigned. Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus was also  ordered to fire Cox, refused and resigned. Robert Bork, then solicitor general (and later,  briefly, a Supreme Court nominee), finally fired Cox.  (Globe Photo)
Nixon finally released some of the tapes. In December 1973, investigators discovered an  18 1/2-minute gap in one of them. Chief of Staff Alexander Haig (pictured) said one theory  was that "some sinister force" erased the segment. (Globe Photo)
Rosemary Woods, Nixon's secretary, took the blame for the gap, demonstrating  in this photo how she could have accidentally erased the segment of the tape. (Globe Photo)
Nixon, who had been named an "unindicted co-conspirator" when charges were filed  against seven of his aides, had also been the subject of impeachment hearings by the  House Judiciary Committee, which began considering the matter in February 1974. (Globe Photo)
By April 30, 1974, the Senate committee still hadn't gotten all the tapes it had asked for.  Instead of handing them over, Nixon released 1,200 pages of edited transcripts. The  transcripts were notable for the frequent use of the delicate "expletive deleted" to replace  saltier language. (Rolling Stone ran a quiz suggesting a range of profanities that might  have filled a few Important gaps.) That summer, the Supreme Court affirmed a lower  court order that Nixon turn over all the tapes.  (Globe Photo)
Late in July, the House Judiciary Committee passed the first of three articles of I mpeachment against Nixon. On August 5, under increasing pressure, he released  transcripts of three conversation he had with Haldeman six days after the Watergate  break-in. The June 23 tape became known as "the smoking gun" because it revealed that  Nixon ordered the FBI to abandon its investigation of the break-in. Under increasing  threat of impeachment, Nixon resigned three days later. (Globe Photo)
Vice President Gerald Ford assumed the presidency to fill out Nixon's term.  One of his early acts in office was to issue a full pardon for Nixon for all charges  related to the Watergate case. (Globe Photo)
One of the lasting impacts of Watergate was a change in the relationship between  government and the media. Reporters Woodward and Bernstein -- and their editor,  Ben Bradlee, and publisher Katharine Graham (pictured) -- are credited with moving past  the Nixon administration's attempts at a cover-up to bring the web of misdeeds to light.  Other journalists joined the chase, and more than 50 journalists appeared on Nixon's  "enemies list.“ (Globe Photo)
Watergate made its way into popular culture with the publication of Woodward and B ernstein's book, "All the President's Men," and the movie based on it, starring Dustin  Hoffman and Robert Redford as the two reporters. Phrases like "expletive deleted" and  "credibility gap" entered the language during the height of the story, and subsequent  scandals – Monicagate, Irangate -- had "-gate" appended to their names.  (Globe Photo)
The presidents who came after Nixon found greater restrictions on their activities, including  a ban on "slush funds" and a law requiring them to report financial statements. They also  faced more public cynicism and deeper questioning of the facts behind their actions.  Ultimately, many believe that the system of checks and balances worked, and that the  result was astronger democracy. (Globe Photo)

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What Was Watergate

  • 1. What was Watergate? From www.boston.com
  • 2. More complicated than some of the scandals that have followed in its wake, Watergate involved a wide-ranging web of political espionage. It also took down a president, changed the role of the news media in public debate, and challenged many people's assumptions about the dignity of public office. The stage was set in 1968, when Richard M. Nixon -- who had lost the Republicans the presidency eight years earlier -- made a comeback and won the White House. (Globe Photo)
  • 3. The Watergate, which gave the scandal its name, was a hotel and office complex in Washington. In 1972, the Democratic National Committee had its headquarters there. (The Watergate is still around, and is still a part of public life -- Monica Lewinsky took refuge there at the height of the scandal about her affair with President Clinton.) (Globe Photo)
  • 4. Without Frank Wills, the scandal never would have happened. On June 17, 1972, Wills, then 24, was a security guard at the Watergate. While doing his rounds, he found that a door lock had been covered with electrical tape to keep it from locking. He called police, who found five men burglarizing the offices of the Democratic National Committee. The burglars had equipment for bugging the phones at the DNC. Wills quit his job because he didn't get a raise for discovering the burglary. (Globe Photo)
  • 5. Among those arrested was James W. McCord, security director for the Committee To Re-Elect the President (CREEP). John Mitchell, head of the Nixon re-election campaign (pictured) denied any ties between the campaign and the burglary. (Globe Photo)
  • 6. The burglars were later revealed to be "plumbers" -- members of a clandestine unit of the CRP, led by John Mitchell. One of the plumbers' previous jobs was a 1971 burglary at the office of a psychiatrist who was treating Daniel Ellsberg (pictured). Ellsberg had leaked the Pentagon Papers -- the Defense Department's secret history of the Vietnam War – to The New York Times. They were published by the Times, The Boston Globe, and The Washington Post. (Globe Photo)
  • 7. One of those arrested in the burglary, Bernard Barker, was carrying an address book with an entry for "HH" (Howard Hunt, pictured) at "WH" (White House). Hunt was a spy novelist and White House consultant who had previously worked for the CIA, and was revealed as one of the planners of the burglary. (Globe File Photo)
  • 8. On Aug. 1, two Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward (right) and Carl Bernstein, reported that a $25,000 cashier's check, apparently earmarked for the Nixon campaign, wound up in the bank account of one of the accused burglars. Woodward and Bernstein would follow the story for more than a year, eventually writing a book, "All the President's Men," about what they discovered. (Globe Photo)
  • 9. On Sept. 29, 1972, Woodward and Bernstein reported that John Dean (pictured), former attorney general turned White House counsel, controlled a Republican slush fund used to finance intelligence-gathering operations against the Democratic Party. (Globe Photo)
  • 10. Ken Clawson, a former reporter who joined the White House communications staff under Nixon, was named in an Oct. 10, 1972, story as the writer of an anonymous letter to a New Hampshire newspaper that helped torpedo the career of Democratic vice-presidential candidate Edmund Muskie. The letteralleged that Muskie had used the slur when describing French-Canadians, a large part of his Maine constituency. The Post described this "Canuck letter" as part of a "massive campaign of political spying and sabotage" on Nixon's behalf. (Globe Photo)
  • 11. On Nov. 7, 1972, Nixon was re-elected by a landslide over Sen. George W. McGovern of South Dakota. (Globe Photo)
  • 12. On Jan. 30, 1973, G. Gordon Liddy (pictured) and James W. McCord were convicted of conspiracy, burglary, and wiretapping in the Watergate break-in. Liddy, a former FBI agent, was not among those first arrested, but was convicted of planning the burglary. (Globe Photo)
  • 13. In February 1973, the Senate established the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities to investigate the Watergate break-in and rumors of other operations. Sam Ervin, a North Carolina Democrat who cultivated a folksy "country lawyer" persona, is chairman; Howard Baker, a Republican from Tennessee, is his deputy. (Globe Photo)
  • 14. On March 19, days before his sentencing in the original Watergate burglary, James W. McCord sent a letter to Judge John Sirica, describing how other suspects had withheld information and charging that payments were made by high White House officials to persuade them to lie and plead guilty. Sirica made the letter public. (Globe Photo)
  • 15. Presidential Counsel John Dean was fired at the end of April for cooperating with the Watergate Committee. His testimony the following summer would be key to the investigation, and his description of the cover-up as "a cancer on the presidency" would become one of the best-remembered remarks from the scandal. (Globe Photo)
  • 16. Also at the end of April, Nixon's top aides, Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman (left) and domestic-affairs assistant John Ehrlichman (center), resigned over their roles in the widening scandal. Also resigning was the attorney general, Richard Kleindienst. Elliot Richardson of Massachusetts is named to replace Kleindienst. (Globe Photo)
  • 17. On May 18, 1973, the Senate Select Committee (later known simply as the "Watergate Committee") began its hearings, which were nationally televised. The same day Richardson, about to take office as attorney general, appointed Archibald Cox as a special prosecutor for Watergate. (Globe Photo)
  • 18. Alexander Butterfield, a former presidential appointments secretary, testifed before the Senate committee in July, confirming that Nixon had a system in place for taping all conversations and phone calls in his office. The committee and Nixon began a battle over the tapes. (Globe Photo)
  • 19. Nixon, increasingly embattled in his refusal to hand over any tapes, began a series of events known as the "Saturday Night Massacre" by ordering Richardson to fire Cox (pictured). Richardson refused and resigned. Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus was also ordered to fire Cox, refused and resigned. Robert Bork, then solicitor general (and later, briefly, a Supreme Court nominee), finally fired Cox. (Globe Photo)
  • 20. Nixon finally released some of the tapes. In December 1973, investigators discovered an 18 1/2-minute gap in one of them. Chief of Staff Alexander Haig (pictured) said one theory was that "some sinister force" erased the segment. (Globe Photo)
  • 21. Rosemary Woods, Nixon's secretary, took the blame for the gap, demonstrating in this photo how she could have accidentally erased the segment of the tape. (Globe Photo)
  • 22. Nixon, who had been named an "unindicted co-conspirator" when charges were filed against seven of his aides, had also been the subject of impeachment hearings by the House Judiciary Committee, which began considering the matter in February 1974. (Globe Photo)
  • 23. By April 30, 1974, the Senate committee still hadn't gotten all the tapes it had asked for. Instead of handing them over, Nixon released 1,200 pages of edited transcripts. The transcripts were notable for the frequent use of the delicate "expletive deleted" to replace saltier language. (Rolling Stone ran a quiz suggesting a range of profanities that might have filled a few Important gaps.) That summer, the Supreme Court affirmed a lower court order that Nixon turn over all the tapes. (Globe Photo)
  • 24. Late in July, the House Judiciary Committee passed the first of three articles of I mpeachment against Nixon. On August 5, under increasing pressure, he released transcripts of three conversation he had with Haldeman six days after the Watergate break-in. The June 23 tape became known as "the smoking gun" because it revealed that Nixon ordered the FBI to abandon its investigation of the break-in. Under increasing threat of impeachment, Nixon resigned three days later. (Globe Photo)
  • 25. Vice President Gerald Ford assumed the presidency to fill out Nixon's term. One of his early acts in office was to issue a full pardon for Nixon for all charges related to the Watergate case. (Globe Photo)
  • 26. One of the lasting impacts of Watergate was a change in the relationship between government and the media. Reporters Woodward and Bernstein -- and their editor, Ben Bradlee, and publisher Katharine Graham (pictured) -- are credited with moving past the Nixon administration's attempts at a cover-up to bring the web of misdeeds to light. Other journalists joined the chase, and more than 50 journalists appeared on Nixon's "enemies list.“ (Globe Photo)
  • 27. Watergate made its way into popular culture with the publication of Woodward and B ernstein's book, "All the President's Men," and the movie based on it, starring Dustin Hoffman and Robert Redford as the two reporters. Phrases like "expletive deleted" and "credibility gap" entered the language during the height of the story, and subsequent scandals – Monicagate, Irangate -- had "-gate" appended to their names. (Globe Photo)
  • 28. The presidents who came after Nixon found greater restrictions on their activities, including a ban on "slush funds" and a law requiring them to report financial statements. They also faced more public cynicism and deeper questioning of the facts behind their actions. Ultimately, many believe that the system of checks and balances worked, and that the result was astronger democracy. (Globe Photo)