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Death of American Virtue - Ken Gormley [545]

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Henry, Ed. “Overwhelming Events Overwhelm Everyone.” Roll Call, 21 Dec. 1998, 1.

“The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson: The Impeachment Managers,” Harper’s Weekly, 21 Mar. 1868, 179

Isikoff, Michael. “A Twist in Jones v. Clinton.” Newsweek, 11 Aug. 1997, 30.

“It’s Definitely Going to Be the Years of Hillary and Tipper.” Beverly Hills Magazine, vol. 1, no. 2, 1992

Kelly, Amy. “House Impeaches President: Two of Four Articles Go to Senate for Trial.” Roll Call, 21 Dec. 1998, 1, 26

Klaidman, Daniel. “Branded, Besieged, and Battling Back.” Legal Times, 5 Dec. 1995, 1

Maxa, Rudy. “The Devil in Paula Jones.” Penthouse, Jan. 1995, 107

Mayer, Jane. “Distinguishing Characteristics.” The New Yorker, 7 July 1997, 34

O’Neill, Ann W. “Steel Magnolia.” Los Angeles Times Magazine, 9 May 1999

Starr, Ken. “From the Editor’s Desk: Golden Rule Is Often Forgotten in Everyday Activities on Campus.” Harding (University, Searcy, AR) Bison, 15 Apr. 1965, 2.

______. “Star Dust: Crowded Cities, Plentiful Problems.” Harding (University, Searcy, AR) Bison, 12 Jan. 1966, 2

Toobin, Jeffrey. “Presiding Over the President.” The New Yorker, 9 Mar. 1998, 45

Waas, Murray. “False Witness: Part I.” Salon, 12 Aug. 1998.

“Was Dash’s Starr Role Ill-Fated from the Start?” Legal Times, 29 Apr. 1996, 1

Watson, Russell. “Vince Foster’s Suicide: The Rumor Mill Churns.” Newsweek, 21 Mar. 1994, 32

York, Byron. “The Ordeal of Charles Bakaly.” American Spectator, Sept. 2000.


Magazines and Journals Consulted

American Lawyer

American Political Report

American Spectator

Beverly Hills Magazine

California Lawyer

George

Legal Times

Los Angeles Times Magazine

Maclean’s (Canada)

Nation

National Law Journal

New Republic

Newsweek

New Yorker

Penthouse

People

Salon

Time

Vanity Fair

Washington Lawyer


Newspapers Consulted

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Press Services

Arkansas Times

Associated Press

BBC News (London)

Bergen (NJ) Record

Boston Globe

Boston Herald

Chicago Tribune

Cincinnati Enquirer

Dallas Morning News

Darien (CT) Times

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Harding (University, Searcy, AR) Bison

Houston Chronicle

International Herald Tribune

Investor’s Business Daily

Los Angeles Times

Martinsburg (WV) Journal

Memphis Commercial Appeal

Montgomery County (AK) News

New Jersey Star-Ledger

New York Daily News

New York Post

New York Times

Philadelphia Inquirer

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Richmond Times

Roll Call (Washington, DC)

Russellville (AR) Courier-Democrat

Sacramento Bee

San Antonio Express-News

San Francisco Chronicle

Seattle Times

Sunday Telegraph (London)

USA Today

Wall Street Journal

Washington (PA) Observer-Reporter

Washington Post

Washington Times

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Reaching the end point of a project of this magnitude requires more thanks than an author could fit in print without doubling the size of the book.

My first nonfiction book, Archibald Cox: Conscience of a Nation—about the principled Watergate special prosecutor who was one of the great constitutional lawyers and public servants of the twentieth century—was published just as the Monica Lewinsky affair exploded in the news in early 1998. Cox, my former professor at Harvard, was so distraught over the Clinton-Starr imbroglio that it ultimately caused him to give up on the independent counsel law that he had helped to forge after Watergate. Fortunately, he agreed to sit for an interview with his former student before his death in 2004—I am pleased that his voice appears in the pages of this work. If only America could figure out how to build new models like him.

One of the first people I contacted, when I decided to pursue this project in 1999, was Ken Starr. At the time, Starr had just stepped down as independent counsel. Despite a slew of demands on his time, he completed more than fifty hours of interviews with me at his home in McLean, Virginia, and at George Mason

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