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Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were the Washington Post writers who investigated and uncovered the Watergate scandal.
The 2 reporters, "Bob Woodward" and "Carl Bernstein," who worked for "The Washington Post"
The break in took place at the Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C.
The reporters were Bob Woodward & Carl Bernstein. The primary newspaper leading the reporting on the Watergate scandal was the Washington post. However crediting them with "uncovering" the scandal is incorrect. What they did was publicize Watergate, virtually all of the information they reported was known to the FBI, as evidenced by what was "leaked" to them by "Deep Throat" (FBI agent Mark Felt)
The outcome of the Watergate scandal was the resignation of Richard Nixon.
Watergate scandal.
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein were the Washington Post writers who investigated and uncovered the Watergate scandal.
The 2 reporters, "Bob Woodward" and "Carl Bernstein," who worked for "The Washington Post"
Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, they're the reporters who originally uncovered the Watergate scandal.
They won the Worth Bingham Prize for Investigative Reporting and the George Polk award for their work on the Watergate scandal. Their paper, the Washington Post, won a Pulitzer prize for their articles on Watergate.
Washington Post Woodward and Bernstein were some of the most prominent investigative journalists during the Watergate Scandal, obtaining secret information from an informant with the pseudonym "Deep Throat".
It was called Watergate, after the hotel in Washington .
The two Washington Post reporters who won a Pulitzer prize are Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein for their investigative reporting on the Watergate scandal in 1973.
The break in took place at the Watergate Hotel in Washington, D.C.
Watergate - it was exposed by the Washington Post
The reporters were Bob Woodward & Carl Bernstein. The primary newspaper leading the reporting on the Watergate scandal was the Washington post. However crediting them with "uncovering" the scandal is incorrect. What they did was publicize Watergate, virtually all of the information they reported was known to the FBI, as evidenced by what was "leaked" to them by "Deep Throat" (FBI agent Mark Felt)
Bob Woodard and Carl Bernstein were the Washington Post reporters who were made famous through their investigation of the Watergate cover-up. The Watergate scandal occurred when the Nixon administration tried to cover up a break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. on June 17, 1972.