The Watergate Story


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Key Nixon Adviser John D. Ehlrichman Dies at 73: By Martin Weil (Post, December 16, 1999; Page B06)

Watergate Scandal May Have Sprung From '71 Nixon Memo to Haldeman: PRESIDENT SUGGESTED COLSON 'CHECK' ON DEMOCRAT, PAPERS SHOW (Post, May 29, 1987; Page A04)

Federal Judge Robert R. Merhige Dies (Post, February 20, 2005; Page C08)

Federal Transcriber William Reckert Dies (Post, April 16, 2005; Page B06)

Robert Mardian; Attorney Caught Up in Watergate Scandal (Post, July 21, 2006; Page B07)

Martin F. Dardis, 83; Investigator Linked Watergate Crime to Nixon (Post, May 19, 2006; Page B06)

Watergate-Era FBI Chief L. Patrick Gray III Dies at 88: Deep Throat Revelation 'Shocked' Acting Director (Post, July 7, 2005; Page B06)

Chesterfield Smith; ABA Head During Watergate (Post, July 18, 2003; Page B07)

James Bierbower; Lawyer in High-Profile Cases (Post, February 10, 2005; Page B07)

Watergate Papers Go Public: University of Texas to Unveil Woodward-Bernstein Collection (Post, February 4, 2005; Page A03)

Rose Mary Woods Dies; Loyal Nixon Secretary (Post, January 24, 2005; Page B04)

Watergate 'Bagman' Fred LaRue, 75, Dies (Post, July 29, 2004; Page B06)

Watergate Committee Chief Counsel Samuel Dash Dies (Post, May 30, 2004; Page C10)

Archibald Cox, 1912-2004: Watergate Prosecutor Faced Down the President (Post, May 30, 2004; Page A01)

Haig Said Nixon Joked of Nuking Hill: Transcripts of Phone Talks Are Released by Archives (Post, May 27, 2004; Page A29)

Helen M. Smith Dies; Aide to Pat Nixon (Post, April 15, 2004; Page B06)

Still Bugged By Nixon: Archives Releases More Watergate Tapes (Post, December 11, 2003; Page C01)

Nixon Data May Be Calif.-Bound: Sponsors Vow Continued Public Access to Tapes, Papers (Post, November 13, 2003; Page A12)

John J. Rhodes Dies; Led GOP In House During Watergate (Post, August 26, 2003; Page B04)

Watergate Papers Sold For $5 Million: University of Texas Deal Keeps Sources Secret (Post, April 8, 2003; Page C01)

Second Trial Opens In Watergate Case: Ex-DNC Worker Suing Gordon Liddy (Post, June 25, 2002; Page B05)

DNC's Stanley Greigg Dies; Signed Watergate Complaint (Post, June 16, 2002; Page C08)

Nixon Logs Burn to Ashes (Post, July 1, 1998; Page A21)

Maurice Stans Dies (Post, April 15, 1998; Page B07)

Nixon Papers Portray Fear Of News Plot (Post, March 19, 1998; Page A06)

U.S. Argues Against Return Of Excerpts of Nixon Tapes (Post, December 2, 1997; Page A17)

Nixon's Fateful Reversal (Post, October 30, 1997; Page A01)

Watergate Libel Suit Settled (Post, July 23, 1997; Page C01)

Nixon Lawyers Battle For Return of `Private' Segments of His Tapes (Post, July 7, 1997; Page A17)

For Subjects of Tapes, the Voice of History (Post, June 17, 1997; Page A01)

Behind the Statesman, A Reel Nixon Endures (Post, June 17, 1997; Page A01)

The Watergate Watershed: A Turning Point for a Nation and a Newspaper (Post, January 28, 1997; Page D01)

Buchanan Outlined Plan to Harass Democrats in '72, Memo Shows (Post, March 4, 1996; Page A07)

Richard M. Nixon, 37th President, Dies: Funeral Scheduled for Wednesday in California for Only Chief Executive Forced From Office (Post, April 23, 1994; Page A01)

H.R. Haldeman Dies: Was Nixon Chief of Staff; Watergate Role Led to 18 Months in Prison (Post, November 13, 1993; Page A12)

John Sirica, Watergate Judge, Dies (Post, August 15, 1992; Page A01)

A Watergate Mystery in Its Own Right (Post, June 17, 1992; Page B01)

Watergate Revisited: 20 Years After the Break-in, the Story Continues to Unfold (Post, June 14, 1992; Page A01)

Watergate: The Biggest Story - And the Most Intense Moment of Our Lives (Post, June 14, 1992; Page C01)

Journalism's Finest 2 Hours and 16 Minutes (Post, June 14, 1992; Page )

John N. Mitchell, Principal in Watergate, Dies at 75 (Post, November 10, 1988; Page A01)

Nixon Resigns (Post, August 9, 1974; Page A01)

Court Orders Nixon to Yield Tapes; President Promises to Comply Fully: Justices Reject Privilege Claim in 8-to-0 Ruling (Post, July 25, 1974; Page A01)

Nixon Debated Paying Blackmail, Clemency: 'Keep Cap on Bottle' (Post, May 1, 1974; Page A01)

President Hands Over Transcripts: Initial Reaction on Hill Divided Along Party Lines (Post, May 1, 1974; Page A01)

Another Tape Found Faulty, Sirica Is Told: Haldeman, Nixon Talk Is Involved (Post, November 22, 1973; Page A01)

Nixon Tells Editors, 'I'm Not a Crook' (Post, November 18, 1973; Page A01)

Pressure for Impeachment Mounting (Post, October 21, 1973; Page A01)

Court Battle Set as Nixon Defies Subpoenas (Post, July 27, 1973; Page A01)

Text of Letter From Nixon to Sam Ervin Rejecting a Request for Tapes (Post, July 24, 1973; Page A17)

The First Day of Watergate: Not Exactly High Drama (Post, May 18, 1973; Page A01)

Haldeman, Intensely Loyal, Key to Access to Nixon (Post, May 1, 1973; Page A11)

Editorial: Watergate: The Unfinished Business (Post, May 1, 1973; Page A18)

Nixon Pledges No Whitewash On Watergate (Post, May 1, 1973; Page A01)

News Analysis: Still Secret - Who Hired Spies and Why (Post, January 31, 1973; Page A01)

Nixon Wins Landslide Victory; Democrats Hold Senate, House: McGovern Admits Defeat; President Calls for Harmony (Post, November 8, 1972; Page A01)

President Signs D.C. Crime Bill (Post, July 29, 1971; Page A7)

U.S. Planned Before Tonkin For War on North, Files Show (Post, June 14, 1971; Page A1)

Richard M. Nixon Becomes President With 'Sacred Commitment' to Peace: Promises to Listen as Well as to Lead in Quest for Unity (Post, January 21, 1969; Page A1)

Nixon Wins With 290 Electoral Votes; Humphrey Joins Him in Call for Unity: Democratic Edge in House, Senate Trimmed Slightly (Post, November 7, 1968; Page AO1)

President Refuses to Turn Over Tapes; Ervin Committee, Cox Issue Subpoenas: Action Sets Stage for Court Battle on Powers Issue (Post, July 24, 1973; Page A01)

Cox Is Chosen as Special Prosecutor: Democrat Served Under Kennedy as Solicitor General (Post, May 19, 1973; Page A01)

Judiciary Committee Approves Article to Impeach President Nixon, 27 to 11: 6 Republicans Join Democrats to Pass Obstruction Charge (Post, July 28, 1974; Page A01)

Haig Tells of Theories on Erasure (Post, December 7, 1973; Page A01)

Nixon Forces Firing of Cox; Richardson, Ruckelshaus Quit: President Abolishes Prosecutor's Office; FBI Seals Records (Post, October 21, 1973; Page A01)

Break-In Memo Sent to Ehrlichman (Post, June 13, 1973; Page A01)

President Taped Talks, Phone Calls; Lawyer Ties Ehrlichman to Payments: Principal Offices Secretly Bugged Since Spring 1971 (Post, July 17, 1973; Page A01)

Dean Alleges Nixon Knew of Cover-up Plan (Post, June 3, 1973; Page A01)

3 Top Nixon Aides, Kleindienst Out; President Accepts Full Responsibility; Richardson Will Conduct New Probe (Post, May 1, 1973; Page A01)

Last Two Guilty in Watergate Plot: Jury Convicts Liddy, McCord in 90 Minutes; Ex-Aides of Nixon to Appeal (Post, January 31, 1973; Page A01)

FBI Finds Nixon Aides Sabotaged Democrats (Post, October 10, 1972; Page A01)

Mitchell Controlled Secret GOP Fund (Post, September 29, 1972; Page A01)

Bug Suspect Got Campaign Funds (Post, August 1, 1972; Page A01)

GOP Security Aide Among Five Arrested in Bugging Affair (Post, June 19, 1972; Page A01)

5 Held in Plot to Bug Democrats' Office Here (Post, June 18, 1972; Page A01)

Deep Throat's Other Secret: Watergate Source's New Book Reveals His Wife Committed Suicide (Post, April 22, 2006; Page C04)

The Watergate Story (Post, November 15, 2005; Page )

The Garage Where Secrets Were Parked (Post, July 1, 2005; Page C01)

Felt Gave Identity Away in 1976 (Post, July 1, 2005; Page C01)

Felt Gave Identity Away in 1976, Book Reveals  (Post, June 30, 2005; 7:56 PM)

Gray: Revenge Was Felt's Motive (Post, June 27, 2005; Page A04)

Watergate and the Two Lives of 'Deep Throat': Roles as FBI Official, 'Deep Throat' Clashed (Post, June 20, 2005; Page A01)

Deep Throat's Daughter, The Kindred Free Spirit (Post, June 12, 2005; Page A01)

'Deep Throat' Prosecution Unlikely (Post, June 4, 2005; Page A18)

Essay: The Secret That Didn't Reach Washington's Lips (Post, June 3, 2005; Page C01)

Deep Silence On Redford Place (Post, June 3, 2005; Page C01)

The Surprise Ending: A 33-Year-Old Pledge Was Kept at a Price: The Post's Lost Scoop (Post, June 2, 2005; Page A13)

Nixon Spoke on Behalf of Felt in Court: Nixon Spoke on Behalf of Felt in Court (Post, June 2, 2005; Page A12)

The FBI's Role: Leaks Came Against Backdrop Of a Post-Hoover Power Struggle (Post, June 2, 2005; Page A13)

Follow the Money: The Marketing of Deep Throat: Publishers and Producers Eager for Secret Source's Story (Post, June 2, 2005; Page C01)

How Mark Felt Became 'Deep Throat': As a Friendship -- and the Watergate Story -- Developed, Source's Motives Remained a Mystery to Woodward (Post, June 2, 2005; Page A01)

At FBI, Reflections On Felt and Loyalty (Post, June 2, 2005; Page A21)

Essay: The Illuminating Experience of Being Kept in the Dark (Post, June 1, 2005; Page C01)

How Watergate Unfolded: How Watergate Unfolded (Post, June 1, 2005; Page A07)

Deep Background: The Best-Kept Secret in Washington Nearly Stayed That Way (Post, June 1, 2005; Page C01)

The Reaction: Contemporaries Have Mixed Views (Post, June 1, 2005; Page A09)

Conflicted And Mum For Decades (Post, June 1, 2005; Page A01)

FBI Official Was 'Deep Throat': Mark Felt Ends 30-Year Mystery of The Post's Watergate Source (Post, June 1, 2005; Page A01)

Q&A Transcript: Watergate: 25 Years Later (washingtonpost.com, June 17, 1997; 12:00 PM)

Court Upholds Order on Tapes for Nixon Estate (Post, April 1, 1998; Page A03)

Watergate: 25 Years Later (washingtonpost.com, June 17, 1997; 12:00 PM)

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