Archibald Cox : conscience of a nation

Type
Book
Authors
ISBN 10
0201407132 
ISBN 13
9780201407136 
DDC
345.73 
Category
American Law  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1997 
Publisher
Pages
xxii, 585 pages 
Subject
American Biography 
Abstract
"In October 1973, America was transfixed by a battle of wills between President Richard Nixon and a 61-year-old law professor. Archibald Cox was serving in a new post - Special Prosecutor - to investigate the Watergate break-in. Quietly but resolutely he asked the White House to release tapes of important conversations. Facing a Supreme Court deadline, Nixon ordered Cox to be fired. The top two officials of the Justice Department resigned in protest. Overnight, public opinion swung against Nixon and turned Cox into an American hero.Ken Gormley's gripping biography shows how that confrontation was a natural result of the principles, hard as New England granite, which guided Archibald Cox through life. In his distinguished and dramatic career, Cox had clerked for the legendary judge Learned Hand, carpooled into Washington with Harold Ickes during World War II, and chaired Harry Truman's Wage Stabilization Board. On the Harvard faculty he was the nation's foremost expert in labor law, and he became the top academic adviser to the handsome young senator from Massachusetts, John F. Kennedy. After President Kennedy named him Solicitor General of the United States, the professor grew into the leading Supreme Court lawyer of the century. Through extensive interviews, the author illuminates Cox's crucial role in the debates within Bobby Kennedy's Justice Department over how to handle integration sit-ins, voting rights, and other constitutional questions.Cox's quietly growing reputation led to the two biggest challenges of his career. The first was his little-known responsibility for handling Vietnam-era protests at Harvard, fully told here for the first time. The second came after men linked to the White House broke into Democratic Partly headquarters in the Watergate Hotel. Using newly released documents, Gormley reveals how badly leaks had compromised the Justice Department investigation of this break-in and how the White House planned to edit its tape transcripts. In gripping detail he describes the constitutional tug-of-war over those recordings and the dramatic Saturday press conference when Archibald Cox roused the conscience of an nation." - Voila 
Description
Contents:
Part one: the making of a lawyer -- "Billy" Cox -- Harvard -- Learned Hand -- Pioneer in labor law -- A call from the White House -- A Yankee professor -- Part two: the Kennedy years -- Young Senator Kennedy -- The candidate's academic advisor -- Tensions in the 1960 campaign -- The celestial general -- The landmark cases -- New president -- Student riots -- Part three: Watergate and beyond -- A third-rate burglary? -- The new special prosecutor -- Opening arguments -- Battle for the tapes -- Showdown with the President -- The Saturday Night Massacre -- White House mysteries -- The Watergate cleanup -- Semiretirement -- Epilogue: home to New England. 
Biblio Notes
Includes bibliographical references (pages 441-459) and index.  
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