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...main actors in this part of the Watergate drama form a remarkable profile of America. There is Frank Wills, the black guard who found the tape on the lock of a Watergate building door and called the police. Reporters Bob Woodward, an Ivy Leaguer, and Carl Bernstein, a dropout from the University of Maryland, enlarged that slender thread into the picture of corruption. Judge John Sirica, the Italian American and old welterweight, applied common sense and created a new sense of justice. Senator Sam Ervin, with a little help from St. Paul and Shakespeare, provided the best civics lesson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY by HUGH SIDEY: A Summer Week in Washington | 8/5/1974 | See Source »

NONFICTION 1-All the President's Men, Bernstein & Woodward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FICTION: Best Sellers | 7/22/1974 | See Source »

Even the Post, which performed outstandingly throughout, logically viewed the break-in as a local event. The paper assigned two unknowns who were not veteran sleuths or national political reporters and kept them on the story even as it grew. Bernstein, then 28, had been covering Virginia politics. Woodward, 29, an enrolled Republican who had been with the paper only nine months, was reporting on unsanitary restaurants and petty police graft. More experienced investigators like Sandy Smith of TIME, Jack Nelson of the Los Angeles Times, Seymour Hersh of the New York Times, and James Polk of the Washington Star...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COYER STORY: COVERING WATERGATE: SUCCESS AND BACKLASH | 7/8/1974 | See Source »

Many newspapers failed even to do that. Some clients of the Los Angeles Times/ Washington Post news service simply failed to run the early Woodward-Bernstein stories, or else buried them. The New York Times, though it did better than most, seemed sluggish. National Editor David Jones recalls: "It was a failure of editing judgment in our Washington bureau and on the national news desk in New York. We didn't perceive early enough the potential ramifications

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COYER STORY: COVERING WATERGATE: SUCCESS AND BACKLASH | 7/8/1974 | See Source »

...there were some. A serious Washington Post blunder occurred in October 1972. Immediately after the Los Angeles Times interview with Alfred Baldwin, Woodward and Bernstein came back with a story naming three men as recipients of the phone-tap transcripts that Baldwin had delivered to the Committee for the Re-Election of the President. The names were picked up by other publications, but it turned out that the Post reporters had grabbed some raw, garbled FBI data. "The decision to rush into print was a mistake," Woodward and Bernstein wrote later...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: COYER STORY: COVERING WATERGATE: SUCCESS AND BACKLASH | 7/8/1974 | See Source »

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