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Watergate Scandal: Washington Post
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Thumbs up from the 37th President Watergate has entered the political lexicon as a term synonymous with corruption and scandal, yet the Watergate Hotel is one of Washington's plushest hotels. Even today, it is home to former Senator Bob Dole and was once the place where Monica Lewinsky laid low. It was here that the Watergate Burglars broke into the Democratic Party's National Committee offices on June 17, 1972. If it had not been for the alert actions of Frank Wills, a security guard, the scandal may never have erupted. MORE
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Accuracy in Media (AIM) today said that the naming of former FBI official Mark Felt as the “Deep Throat” source for The Washington Post’s Watergate coverage does not resolve questions about an underlying sex/prostitution ring behind the scandal. “Woodward and Bernstein never got to the bottom of Watergate,” said Cliff Kincaid, editor of AIM. “And since Mark Felt repeatedly lied about his own role as Deep Throat, one cannot say with any certainty at all that his disclosure is the final revelation.”
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In the early stages of the Watergate scandal almost of the media reported the break-in as a minor story with little national significance. This was until two young reporters, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward who were working for the Washington Post began to dig deeper into the mystery.
The recent revelations about the man often seen as the "moral hero" of the Watergate scandal, the Washington Post's Bob Woodward, have the feel of an interment ceremony. Reading press accounts of how Woodward swallowed the first Plame leak for a mere two-plus years without a peep and then went out on the Larry-King circuit to dismiss the significance of Plamegate, what came to mind was the burial ceremony that, in "committing" a body to the ground, goes, in part, "ashes to ashes, dust to dust." If there were a Watergate/Plamegate version of this, those two phrases might be replaced by "Nixon to Bush, Woodward to Woodward."
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A scandal surfaced in June 1972, when five men were arrested for breaking into the Democratic national headquarters at the Watergate office-apartment building in Washington. When it was learned that the burglars had been hired by the Committee to Re-Elect the President (CRP), John Mitchell, a former U.S. attorney general, resigned as director of CRP.
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Video:In 1973 the political scandal known as Watergate deepened, implicating U.S. President Richard M. … A major issue at the beginning of Nixon's second term became known as the Watergate scandal. In June 1972, agents hired by the Committee for the Reelection of the President had been arrested while breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate apartment-office complex in Washington, D.C. Early in 1973 they were convicted of burglary and political…
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