закрити [x]
приховати бюлетень | кошик

08.08 - 40 lat od afery Watergate (202)

first next 123456... з 11 next last
190x60
New Rada

кошики

Ви повинні увійти в систему, щоб мати доступ до кошика

 

Зображення

EN_00945865_9499
EN_00945865_9499

Assistant prosecutor Richard Ben-Veniste, left, arrives with unidentified woman at U.S. District Court in Washington on Friday, Dec. 27, 1974 for the Watergate cover-up trial. He is scheduled to deliver the government's rebuttal as the case nears completion following 11 weeks of testimony and argument. (AP Photo)

EN_00945120_0516
EN_00945120_0516

Country western stars Johnny Cash and wife June Carter Cash arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington to watch the Watergate cover-up trial, Nov. 11, 1974. The two were invited by prosecutor James Neal. (AP Photo/Bob Daugherty)

EN_00945120_1188
EN_00945120_1188

Country western stars Johnny Cash and wife June Carter Cash arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington to watch the Watergate cover-up trial, Nov. 11, 1974. The two were invited by prosecutor James Neal. (AP Photo/Bob Daugherty)

EN_00945865_7762
EN_00945865_7762

Three of the assistant Washington prosecutors in the Watergate cover-up trial arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington on Friday, Nov. 8, 1974. From left are: Richard Ben-Veniste, Jill Volner, and James Neal. (AP Photo/CB)

EN_00018977_0004
EN_00018977_0004

Picture shot in August 1974 of Republican president of the United States Richard Nixon giving a speech at the White House following his resignation from the presidency after the Watergate scandal. Richard Nixon had been elected in 1968 and re-elected in 1972.

EN_00018977_0001
EN_00018977_0001

HOTO: EAST NEWS/AFP Picture dated 09 August 1974 of Republican president of the United States Richard Nixon thumbing up after announcing his resignation from the presidency after the Watergate scandal. Richard Nixon had been elected in 1968 and re-elected in 1972.

EN_00947511_0661
EN_00947511_0661

On the day of his resignation, Aug. 9, 1974, Richard M. Nixon waves goodbye from the steps of his helicopter as he leaves the White House following a farewell address to his staff. The Watergate scandal forced Nixon to become the first U.S. president to resign from office. (AP Photo/Chick Harrity)

EN_00948002_1551
EN_00948002_1551

The U.S. presidential yacht Sequoia, carrying President Richard Nixon and his family, returns to port after a late-afternoon cruise on the Potomac River in Washington, D.C., Monday, Aug. 5, 1974. A few hours earlier Nixon made his latest Watergate disclosure. (AP Photo)

EN_00945120_3965
EN_00945120_3965

U. S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica, left, talks with his law clerk Todd Christofferson during the court's lunch recess Friday, August 3, 1974 in Washington. Earlier Friday Sirica sentenced former White House counsel John W. Dean III to prison for his part in the Watergate cover-up. The dome of the U. S. Capitol is in the background. (AP Photo/William Smith)

EN_00945865_8543
EN_00945865_8543

Richard Ben-Veniste, right, Jill Volner, both of the Special Watergate Prosecutor's office, arrive at U.S. District Court in Washington on Friday, Aug. 2, 1974. Both were on hand for the delivery of additional White House tapes to Judge John Sirica. The prosecutor's office is seeking the tapes for the upcoming Watergate cover-up trial of six former top presidential aides. (AP Photo/WAS)

EN_00945656_9205
EN_00945656_9205

Martha Mitchell, is shown in Washington, in 1974. She is changing her act, picking up the pieces of a life she says was destroyed by Watergate. (AP Photo/Harvey Georges)

EN_00945865_7682
EN_00945865_7682

Special Watergate Prosecutor Leon Jaworski arrives at U.S. District Court in Washington on Friday, July 26, 1974, accompanied by two of his assistants seeking compliance to the Supreme Court that President Richard Nixon produce White House tapes for use in the Watergate cover-up trial. From left are; Philip Lacovara; Jaworski; and Richard Ben-Veniste. (AP Photo)

EN_00945865_7304
EN_00945865_7304

Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter had his say at a press conference shortly before he spoke to the Southern Baptist Convention on Thursday, June 13, 1974 in Dallas, Tex. He said he expected President Nixon to be impeached and convicted by the Senate because of his refusal to turn over more evidence to the house judicial committee. He said at the press conference that the Watergate scandal

EN_00945279_3059
EN_00945279_3059

Dan Mann, left, administration officer for the Watergate Special Prosecution Force in Washington, D.C., communicates with deaf messengers hired to deliver documents and sort the mail for Leon Jaworski's lawyers, June 9, 1974. They are, from right, Meriam Schroeder, Buddy Pitcher and Robin Edwards. They were hired because they can't hear discussions among prosecution staffers. (AP Photo)

EN_00945120_4053
EN_00945120_4053

Three White House lawyers disagree on where their car is parked as they leave U.S. district court in Washington Monday, June 3, 1974 during Watergate trial. They are, from left, Michael Sterlacci, James St. Clain and Jerome Murphy. (AP Photo)

EN_00945120_3951
EN_00945120_3951

White House lawyer James St. Clair talks with newsman prior to entering U.S. district court in Washington Monday, May 13, 1974 for the Watergate trial. (AP Photo)

EN_00947067_3627
EN_00947067_3627

Democratic National Committee Chairman Robert S. Strauss tells newsmen in Washington on Wednesday, May 8, 1974, that the Democratic Party will hold another fund raising telethon in June. Strauss said party leaders had previously decided to stay away from President Richard Nixon's Watergate troubles and the impeachment move in the House but added,

EN_00949902_3257
EN_00949902_3257

** FILE ** President Richard M. Nixon is shown pointing to the transcripts of the White House tapes in this April 29, 1974, file photo, after he announced during a nationally-televised speech that he would turn over the transcripts to House impeachment invesigators. 30 years ago, on Aug. 9, 1974, US-President Richard M. Nixon resigned due to the Watergate affair. (AP Photo) ** zu unserem Korr **

EN_00947067_8651
EN_00947067_8651

Washington Post reporters Carl Bernstein, left, and Bob Woodward, who uncovered the Watergate scandal, along with other editorial employees, walk off the job at the Post in Washington, April 8, 1974, after Baltimore-Washington arm of the American Newspaper Guild struck the paper. (AP Photo)

EN_00983828_6163
EN_00983828_6163

Rose Mary Woods, President Richard Nixon's personal secretary, walks arm in arm with her attorney Charles Rhyne after appearing before an executive session of the Senate Watergate Committee, March 23, 1974 in Washington. Miss Woods is testifying before the panel in its probe of campaign financing. (AP Photo)

вгору

first next 123456... з 11 next last