That is Louis Quinn
Hoping someone can answer this.
''One can see typing paper with red bands and the sides and with a large number printed on it. This is used for long-form stories, with the number indicating the page number in the typed story. The red bars represent approximate column width when translated into the printed story.''
''One can see typing paper with red bands and the sides and with a large number printed on it. This is used for long-form stories, with the number indicating the page number in the typed story. The red bars represent approximate column width when translated into the printed story.''
The movie is based on a 1974 non-fiction book of the same title, written by Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward.
At the time of the making of this film, Deep Throat's identity was still unknown to the public. In 2005, he was revealed to be William Mark Felt Sr. (1913-2008), who at the time was Deputy Director of the FBI, the second-highest position in the organization. Felt held that position from May 3, 1972 until his resignation on June 22,1973. Bob Woodward had met Felt a few years before Watergate. According to Woodward, while he was still in the US Navy he had been sent to deliver some papers to the White House. While waiting, he struck up a conversation with an older gentleman who was also waiting. That man was Mark Felt who was currently a lower rank official in the FBI. Woodward, who had not yet decided to take up journalism, asked Felt for some career advice and the two men became friendly. Later, when Woodward was working at the Washington Post, he would occasionally use Felt as a deep background source on stories. At this point, Woodward openly referred to Felt in the the newsroom as "My friend in the FBI." When Woodward and Bernstein began investigating Watergate, Woodward once again turned to Felt for inside information. To keep Felt's identity secret, Post editor Ben Bradlee began referring to him as "Deep Throat" a mashup of the journalistic term "deep background" and a reference to the then popular pornographic film "Deep Throat".
In his book about Felt, "The Secret Man", and in related interviews, Woodward has described Felt's motivations for acting as their source, as being entirely patriotic. Felt was concerned about the abuses of Power that Nixon was engaged in. However, Felt may have had less charitable and more personal motives as well. Felt was a protege of FBI director J Edgar Hoover. While he was alive, Hoover maintained an iron grip on control of the bureau and often had his agents engage in legally questionable tactics in pursuit of people who Hoover felt threatened American society, including political dissidents and civil rights leaders. When Hoover died on May 2, 1972, most of his subordinates at the FBI believed that he would be replaced from inside the bureau, by someone who would continue his legacy. Felt himself even apparently entertained the idea that he might be named director. However, Nixon had other ideas. He, like a number of Presidents before him, disliked the autonomy which the FBI had enjoyed under Hoover. With Hoover dead, Nixon saw this as his chance to rein in the Bureau. He appointed Deputy Attorney General L Patrick Gray as Director to head the bureau, while Felt was appointed as Deputy Director. Felt, like many Hoover loyalists, resented this as an attempt by Nixon to control the Bureau and trample on the autonomy which they had traditionally enjoyed. Ironically Felt himself would later be convicted of illegal break ins and wiretapping which he had authorized against radical left wing groups. One of the witnesses called by his defense team was former president Richard Nixon who also contributed to Felt's defense fund and actually sent him congratulatory bottles of champagne when Ronald Regan later pardoned him.
Prior to resigning from the FBI in 1973, thus ending his 31-year-career with the Bureau, Felt also anonymously planted leaks about Watergate with Time magazine, the Washington Daily News and other publications.
In his book about Felt, "The Secret Man", and in related interviews, Woodward has described Felt's motivations for acting as their source, as being entirely patriotic. Felt was concerned about the abuses of Power that Nixon was engaged in. However, Felt may have had less charitable and more personal motives as well. Felt was a protege of FBI director J Edgar Hoover. While he was alive, Hoover maintained an iron grip on control of the bureau and often had his agents engage in legally questionable tactics in pursuit of people who Hoover felt threatened American society, including political dissidents and civil rights leaders. When Hoover died on May 2, 1972, most of his subordinates at the FBI believed that he would be replaced from inside the bureau, by someone who would continue his legacy. Felt himself even apparently entertained the idea that he might be named director. However, Nixon had other ideas. He, like a number of Presidents before him, disliked the autonomy which the FBI had enjoyed under Hoover. With Hoover dead, Nixon saw this as his chance to rein in the Bureau. He appointed Deputy Attorney General L Patrick Gray as Director to head the bureau, while Felt was appointed as Deputy Director. Felt, like many Hoover loyalists, resented this as an attempt by Nixon to control the Bureau and trample on the autonomy which they had traditionally enjoyed. Ironically Felt himself would later be convicted of illegal break ins and wiretapping which he had authorized against radical left wing groups. One of the witnesses called by his defense team was former president Richard Nixon who also contributed to Felt's defense fund and actually sent him congratulatory bottles of champagne when Ronald Regan later pardoned him.
Prior to resigning from the FBI in 1973, thus ending his 31-year-career with the Bureau, Felt also anonymously planted leaks about Watergate with Time magazine, the Washington Daily News and other publications.
The man in the Howard Johnson hotel across from the Watergate complex, and the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee, is Alfred C. Baldwin III, portrayed in this movie by actor Gene Lindsey. Unlike the five Watergate burglars, Baldwin did not get caught that night, but he later testified before Congress in the televised Watergate hearings. He was never charged or convicted in his role in the Watergate break-ins. According to sworn testimony by Howard Hunt, immediately following the arrest of the five Watergate burglars, Hunt entered the Howard Johnson room occupied by Baldwin and ordered Baldwin to dispose of the sound bugging equipment immediately. Baldwin did so that night.
It is a Borgward Isabella, made in Germany, from 1954 to '62. It had a 1,500-cubic-centimeter (1,500 cc) engine, and was available in right-hand drive models, and so was exported to England, Australia, New Zealand.
Not so;I think it's 1967 Volvo 122S.
Not so;I think it's 1967 Volvo 122S.
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Top Gap
By what name was All the President's Men (1976) officially released in Canada in French?
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