Impeachment of President William Jefferson Clinton: The Evidentiary Record Pursuant to S. Res. 16: Volume III, Part 1
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 1618, wraps, Volume III, Part 1 of 2 only, footnotes. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 1618, wraps, Volume III, Part 1 of 2 only, footnotes. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 1564, wraps, Volume III, Part 2 of 2 only, illus., footnotes. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 56, wraps, Volume VIII only, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 293, wraps, Volume XI only, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 745, wraps, Volume XII only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 440, wraps, Volume XV only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 263, wraps, Volume XVI only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 94, wraps, Volume XVII only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 23, wraps, Volume XVIII only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 388, wraps, Volume XX only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 65, wraps, Volume XXII only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Place_Pub: Washington, DC: GPO, 1999. 98, wraps, Volume XXII only, footnotes, minor wear and soiling to covers. More
Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1999. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. 3121 total, 4-volume set, wraps, footnotes. This four-volume set contains the full record of the U.S. Senate proceedings in the impeachment trial of President Clinton, the only Presidential impeachment trial of the 20th century. Volume I contains preliminary proceedings; Volume II contains floor trial proceedings; Volume III contains depositions and affidavits; Volume IV contains statements of Senators regarding the impeachment trial of President Clinton. More
Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1999. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. 3121 total, 4-volume set, wraps, footnotes. This is an unopened set, shrink-wrapped with stiff cardboard at top and bottom, sealed with tight plastic bands north/south and east/west. Some indentation of the cardboard brom the banding noted. This four-volume set contains the full record of the U.S. Senate proceedings in the impeachment trial of President Clinton, the only Presidential impeachment trial of the 20th century. Volume I contains preliminary proceedings; Volume II contains floor trial proceedings; Volume III contains depositions and affidavits; Volume IV contains statements of Senators regarding the impeachment trial of President Clinton. More
New York: New American Library, 1974. First Printing. pocket-size, 316, wraps, index, soiling to fore-edge, pages slightly darkened, soiling to covers and spine Among other materials, this book contains the texts of relevant official Statements of Information, with supporting evidence, from the large number of volumes published by the House Committee on the Judiciary. More
Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1974. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. iii, [1], 163, [1] pages. Footnotes. [Excerpt] It is our view that the proper test is whether, in voting for impeachment, the member feels the President should be removed from office, that the prosecution should succeed. The standard of proof does not apply to the law. Standards of proof never apply to the law. One must be convinced as a matter of law that the offense, if proved, is constitutionally a valid charge. One then, we feel, must be convinced in the exercise of his political judgment that the best interests of the Nation warrant removal rather than retention of the officer. More
Washington DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1974. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. This is a complete set of the Statement of Information--28 separately bound items. The July 12, 1974 the Committee released of its accumulated evidence on the case, which ran to thousands of pages. Book I: Events Following the Watergate Break-in June 19, 1972-March 1, 1974 (ix, [1], 242 pages); Book II: Department of Justice-ITT Litigation (ix, [1], 208, [6] pages); Book III: Political Contributions by Milk Producers Cooperatives: The 1971 Milk Price Support Decision (ix, [1], 217, [1] pages); Book IV: White House Surveillance Activities (ix, [1], 225, [1] pages). Book II: Events Following the Watergate Break-in June 17, 1972-February 9, 1973 (xii, 680, [4] pages); Book III, Part 1, Events Following the Watergate Break-in (June 20, 1972-March 22, 1973 (xii, 687, [5] pages); Book III, Part 2, Events Following the Watergate Break-in June 20, 1972-(March 22, 1973 (iii, [1] 689-1281, [3] pages); Book IV, Part 1, Events Following the Watergate Break-in (March 22, 1973--April 30, 1973 (xii, 551, [5] pages); Book IV, Part 2, Events Following the Watergate Break-in (March 22, 1973-April 30, 1973 (iii, 555-1080 pages); Book IV, Part 3, Events Following the Watergate Break-in (March 22, 1973--April 30, 1973 (iii, [1], 1081-1659, [1] pages [spine discolored); Book V--Part 1, Department of Justice/ITT Litigation--Richard Kleindienst Nomination Hearings (xii, 477, [1]); Book V--Part 2, Department of Justice/ITT Litigation--Richard Kleindienst Nomination Hearings (ii, [2], 479-980, [4]);. More
Washington, DC: U. S. Government Printing Office, 1974. Presumed First Edition, First printing. Wraps. Book I, January 31-May 15, 1974, iii, 702, [2] pages; Book II, May 16-June 19, 1974 iii, [1], 703-1454; Book III, June 20-July 23, 1974, iii, [1], 1455-2258 pages. Footnotes. Appendixes. An impeachment process against Richard Nixon began in the United States House of Representatives on October 30, 1973, following the "Saturday Night Massacre" episode of the Watergate scandal. The House Judiciary Committee set up an impeachment inquiry staff and began investigations into possible impeachable offenses by Richard Nixon. The process was formally initiated on February 6, 1974, when the House of Representatives passed a resolution, H. Res. 803, giving the Judiciary Committee authority to investigate whether sufficient grounds existed to impeach Nixon[1] of high crimes and misdemeanors, primarily related to Watergate. More
New York: Coward, McCann & Geoghegan, [1974]. Second Printing. 22 cm, 214, illus., index, some underlining to text, pencil erasure on half-title Gerald Ford was the only U.S. president from Michigan. The author, a Grand Rapids reporter, examines Ford's childhood, war experiences, and political life in Grand Rapids and in Washington. More
Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1923. 24 cm, 540, v.1 only of a 3-vol. set, illus., footnotes, most pages uncut, some wear and soiling to boards. More
New York: Morrow, 1990. First Edition. First Printing. 25 cm, 395, The story of Arizona's 15-month national spectacle over Governor Evan Mecham. More
New York: Atheneum Publishers, 1975. Third Printing. 373, appendices, index, DJ worn and soiled: small tears. More
New York: Random House, 1991. First Edition [stated], Presumed first printing. Hardcover. 25 cm. xv, [3], 731, [3] pages. Notes. Index. Front DJ flap price clipped, edges soiled, DJ edges worn. Pencil erasure residue on fep. Thomas Grey "Tom" Wicker (June 18, 1926 – November 25, 2011) was an American journalist. He was best known as a political reporter and columnist for The New York Times. Wicker began working in professional journalism in 1949, as editor of the small-town Sandhill Citizen in Aberdeen, North Carolina. By the early 1960s, he had joined The New York Times. At the Times, he became well known as a political reporter; among other accomplishments, he wrote the paper's November 23, 1963 lead story of the assassination of President Kennedy, having ridden in a press bus in the Dallas motorcade that accompanied Kennedy. Wicker was a shrewd observer of the Washington, D.C. scene. In that capacity, his influential "In The Nation" column ran in the Times from 1966 through 1992. More
New York: Random House, 2019. First Edition [Stated], First Printing [Stated]. Hardcover. xxix, [1], 543, [3] pages. Illustrated endpapers. Illustrations. Dramatis Personae. Prologue. Part One: Battle Lines of Peace; Part Two: Impeachment; Part Three: Verdict; Part Four: Denouement. Epilogue. Appendix A: Tenure of Office Act. Appendix B: Articles of Impeachment. Appendix C. Dramatis Personae, Denouement. Notes. Selected Bibliography. Index. Brenda Wineapple is an American nonfiction writer, literary critic, and essayist who has written several books on nineteenth-century American writers. She graduated from Brandeis University. In 2014, Wineapple received an Literature Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and her book White Heat: The Friendship of Emily Dickinson and Thomas Wentworth Higginson was a finalist for a National Book Critics Circle Award. She was elected a Fellow of the Society of American Historians and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, she is also an elected Fellow of the New York Institute for the Humanities at NYU. She serves as literary advisor for the Guggenheim Foundation and the Library of America, and she is on the advisor board of Lapham's Quarterly and The American Scholar. Wineapple teaches in the MFA programs at Columbia University's School of the Arts and at the New School in New York City. She was previously the Director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography at The Graduate School, CUNY, and its Writer-in-Residence. She is a regular contributor to The New York Times Book Review, The Nation and other national publications. More
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1976. 476, illus., chronology, index, DJ soiled and small tears. More