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  1. Essays for All the President’s Men. All the President's Men literature essays are academic essays for citation. These papers were written primarily by students and provide critical analysis of All the President's Men. The Narrator's Perspective in True Crime Books. All the President's Men: The Power of Smaller-Than-Life Heroes.

  2. Chapters 1-4 Summary and Analysis. All The President's Men by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein tells the story behind the Watergate scandal. It all started with a burglary at the Democratic headquarters, but proved to be something much more complex. This story tells how two reporters worked with sources to uncover deceit in the highest levels of ...

  3. All the President's Men Summary and Analysis of All The President's Men 3/5. Summary. The New York Times breaks a story about phone calls from an office in Miami to CREEP, the Committee to Re-Elect the President. $89,000 was exchanged between CREEP and a prominent Mexican lawyer. Woodward and Bernstein redouble their efforts.

  4. Bernard L. Barker, Virgilio Gonzalez, Eugenio Martinez, James W. McCord, Frank Sturgis. These five men are the burglars whose arrest inside the National Democratic Party Headquarters at the Watergate kicked off the biggest political scandal in U.S. history.

  5. All the President’s Men, an investigative, nonfiction book by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, details the investigation into the Watergate scandal of the 1970s caused by President Richard Nixon and his team. By detailing the investigation of a burglary, recounting the discovery of a high-profile scandal, and revealing the importance of both ...

  6. We watch as some men look through some papers in the room. The men are warned to be quiet. The cops see lights on the eighth floor, and they enter the building to find out what is going on. The men in the building are caught by the police. At the newspaper, the editor tells them that there has been a break-in at National Democratic Headquarters.

  7. Chapter 14 Summary. On March 23, the day after Gray testified that John Dean had probably lied to the FBI, Watergate burglar James McCord publishes a letter to Judge Sirica. In it he claims that he fears for his life and the life of his family, that he and others perjured themselves at the trial, and that he was pressured into changing his plea ...

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