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Topic: James McCord


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In the News (Wed 30 Dec 09)

  
  washingtonpost.com - watergate scandal and deep throat update, james mccord
James W. McCord was one of the first of the president's men to take the fall for Watergate.
McCord's allegations that the White House knew of the burglary and attempt to cover it up were crucial in causing investigators to push further.
McCord was the security director of the Committee for the Reelection of the President at the time and had formerly worked as an officer in the CIA and FBI.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/james.html   (216 words)

  
 [No title]
The McCord family of Abbeville lived but a few miles from the Savannah River, but unless the querist was mistaken as to which side of the river she lived, it would be doubtful if the Mary McCord referred to in the query would have any close connection with the Abbeville family.
James McCord, son of John who settled in Abbeville before the Revolution and grandson of Johannes and Isabell McCord, was born either in Albemarle County, Virginia or in Abbeville District, South Carolina probably just prior to, or shortly after, his parents removal to South Carolina from Virginia.
James Milton McCord was the youngest son of Andrew A. and Mary Elinor McCord and was born in Anderson District, S.C., January 15, 1852.
www.angelfire.com /pe/shirleyspage/mccords.html   (9557 words)

  
 James McCord: Watergate
McCord testified that his fellow Plumbers, Hunt and Liddy, were to have carried out the break-in and theft of the papers and that Hughes interests were to have supplied them with a getaway plane and a safe hideout in an unnamed Central American; country.
McCord went inside the Watergate when the doors were still open and cut a piece of tape across the latch on a certain door so that it could not lock.
The curiosity was not put to rest by the additional incongruity of such accidental details as the early role of McCord's hired man Baldwin in the exposure of the Plumbers' basic relationship to the CRP and the White House.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /JFKmccordJ.htm   (8071 words)

  
 James W. McCord, Jr. - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
McCord led the June 17, 1972 early-morning burglary of the Democratic National Committee's headquarters at the Watergate office building in Washington, D.C., and pled guilty to six charges.
Prior to his conviction, McCord served as security director for the Committee to Re-elect the President (CRP), and had worked for the FBI and CIA, where he was in charge of physical security at Langley headquarters, as well as serving as a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserves.
After resigning from CRP under pressure in 1974, McCord became a booster for the University of Michigan athletic department.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/James_W._McCord,_Jr.   (298 words)

  
 McCord receives College’s highest honor for service
He has linked town and gown
McCord, by nature, is an affable, quiet man. He deflects praise; he builds relationships.
McCord expresses it differently: “I grew up in a small town in Florida, and everybody knew everybody else and tried to be helpful.
When McCord retires at the end of the semester, many of his colleagues assume his leadership will be sorely missed; however, those who know him well realize that he, if asked, will be available to meet many needs.
www.wm.edu /news/?id=4234   (966 words)

  
 David James McCord letter to David Bailie Warden   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
etter, 29 June 1831, of D[avid] J[ames] McCord (1797-1855), Columbia, to D[avid] B[ailie] Warden, Paris, includes a lengthy discussion of nullification-era politics and the political intrigue surrounding the Jackson administration.
An editor, attorney, and political agitator, McCord in 1823 assumed editorship of the Columbia Telescope in 1823, the most assertive of all the nullification papers.
McCord also discusses at some length the Eaton affair and growing discontent with the Jackson administration.
www.sc.edu /library/socar/uscs/1996/mccord96.htm   (376 words)

  
 David James McCord , Letter, 15 February 1827, to Carey And Lea, Philadelphia, PA.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
McCord made his mark in antebellum South Carolina as a spokesman for states rights and an editor of the state's important legal documents.
As state reporter, McCord usually arranged for the state printer to publish the law reports, but his press run produced more volumes than were "immediately saleable" in South Carolina.
Due to a recent merger in the courts of appeals, he had become responsible for the equity reports as well as the law reports, and he explained to Carey and Lea that he would like to arrange a barter agreement to exchange his unsold books for editions of their reports that he wanted to acquire.
www.sc.edu /library/socar/uscs/1998/mccord98.html   (282 words)

  
 Handbook of Texas Online:
McCord abandoned the passive patrol system begun by Norris and instituted a series of aggressive actions against the Indian raiding parties.
With McCord in command the Frontier Regiment saw its greatest success during the summer and fall of 1863.
McCord removed the six southern companies of the regiment from the frontier in May 1864 and remained in command of the detachment for the rest of the war in posts near the coast.
www.tsha.utexas.edu /handbook/online/articles/MM/fmc20.html   (549 words)

  
 Louis James Russell
Louis James Russell, the son of a FBI agent was born in Louisville, Kentucky in 1912.
McCord's appearance was unusual in that his shirt sleeves were rolled up and he was not well dressed.
James Webster and James Glover, key men in Congressman Mills' campaign, were killed in a car accident in February of 1972.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /JFKrussellL.htm   (8195 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
Joetta Ross Dobbs of SaLina, Kansas, descendant of Hannah McCord and John Jinings, and Dorothy Woodroof of Haysville, Kansas, a descendant of William and Jane McMurtry McCord.
The date from the bible given for Sarah McCord is the same date given for Sarah McMurtrey, If this is true, then William and Sarah McCord McMurtrey's eldest daughter, Jane, married Sarah's youngest brother, William.
From the notebook, Left by James T. McCord of Splitlog, Missouri, James McCord was born 1739, in Stewartstown, Tryrone County, Ireland, died 4 November 1824, at Spring Creek, Overton County, Tennessee.
www.geocities.com /sjperez_2000/Mccord.html   (258 words)

  
 McCordFamilyAssn Home Page
Most of the 100 McCords in the American Revolution, eleven of whom were at Valley Forge with General George Washington, appear related to a common ancestor in Scotland, James McCord, born in 1620.
McCord families were not only there when our nation's history was being made, they were a part of it.
David McCord has organized her files We are grateful to her family for providing them to us and to David for his organizational work.
www.mccordfamilyassn.com   (2589 words)

  
 James McCord, Jr. Biography | World of Criminal Justice
McCord left the agency, where he had risen to chief of security, to join the White House staff.
McCord was arrested for the June 17, 1972 burglary at the Watergate and convicted in early 1973.
McCord's letter set off a wave of confessions by officials that led to a full-blown criminal investigation into the role of Nixon and White House officials in the scandal.
www.bookrags.com /biography/james-mccord-jr-cri   (256 words)

  
 Clint McCord and James Zapp Profile | MWLguide.com
Butch McCord's first season at Paris was an unqualified success, as he led the League in most offensive categories (.363, 132 runs, 16 HR, he also managed 118 RBI without leading the league in that category).
McCord returned in 1952, and played at the same level (.392, 15 HR, 109 RBI).
He retired to Memphis, as did McCord a few years later; both were still attending Negro League celebrations in 1999.
www.mwlguide.com /biography/mccordandzapp.html   (522 words)

  
 [No title]
This propensity of the early McCord families to use the same given names is at least partly due to the adhering to the naming pattern in which the first son is named after the husband's father.
David McCord has given me some notes on Paul Jakes, who compiled the original files He apparently had a traveling job (perhaps church related), and everywhere he went he did research and either phoned or visited all the McCords in the area.
McCord M b.1835 md. Emma Hood 10 Julia McCord F b.183· SC d 1920 m Henry F Turquand in 1860 Dallas Co. Ala.
www.angelfire.com /pe/shirleyspage/mccordjakesfiles.html   (12593 words)

  
 Theology Today - Vol 47, No. 2 - July 1990 - EDITORIAL - James I. McCord: 1919-1990
The decades of the 'sixties and 'seventies, when Jim McCord came to Princeton, will always be associated with student unrest and protests against all kinds of establishments, including theological education and the church itself.
Jim McCord never ran with the latest theological headline, and he never lost faith in people, the church, or theological education.
It is the glory and, in some respects, the unfinished symphony of Jim McCord's legacy that his reach often exceeded his grasp.
theologytoday.ptsem.edu /jul1990/v47-2-editorial2.htm   (472 words)

  
 washingtonpost.com Politics
After leaving the infamous piece of tape on a door in the Watergate building that alerted a security guard to the break-in, James W. McCord was arrested the night of the burglary along with four other men.
He pleaded guilty, and was convicted on six counts.
He later wrote a letter to Judge John J. Sirica claiming that the defendants had pleaded guilty under pressure (from John Dean and John Mitchell, among others) and that perjury had been committed.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-srv/onpolitics/watergate/jamesmccord.html   (189 words)

  
 Official McCord Family, Clan MacCord, On-line NewsLetter
Murdo Ross is related to David McCord of Derry, son of the Patriarch William McCord who came to Pennsylvania ca.1720 and who helped found the Derry Presbyterian Church in Derry (Hershey) PA in 1724.
John McCord reported to have arrived at Cape Cod, MA with the Sir Charles Clinton party of 25 people from Northern Ireland that then went on to settle in New York.
McCord is the most famous of the private forts in America in the French and Indian War.
www.mccordclan.com   (5174 words)

  
 Page County, Iowa: McCord Family page 6
October Court 1779.  Elisabeth Black and James Miller, Administrators of James (Thomas) Black decd, return into open Court an Inventory of said deceased's estate.  Ordered that the personal estate of said deceased be sold by the sheriff.
Because David and Robert McCord are so closely associated in Georgia, Tennessee and Illinois, David's records will be included here.  Robert was guardian or adopted Abraham's children so Abraham's records will be included.  Some of the other McCords will also be included for other reasons.
Inferior Court Minutes 1794-1808, p.18 David McCord was on the Petit Juror panels for the June Term 1795.  P.42 William McCord was on the Petit Juror panels for November Term 1796.
iagenweb.org /page/famrecd/McCord/page6.htm   (1521 words)

  
 HoosierRoots - McCord Family
James married twice, first Margaret JULIAN, and after her death, Margaret's sister Climena Drusilla JULIAN; six children were born of each union.
James moved his family to Clinton County, Indiana in the late 1870s.
The descendants of James McCord held annual reunions for most of the 20th century.
mccord.hoosierroots.com   (378 words)

  
 Theology Today - Vol 40, No. 3 - October 1983 - EDITORIAL - In Tribute: James I. McCord
Eventually the structure of "a Center" evolved, and an early prospectus stated that "undergirding the Center is a philosophy, shared increasingly with the larger scientific community, that truth is essentially one." (A public announcement of the Center was made in THEOLOGY TODAY, Oct. 1981, p.
As Chancellor of the Center which has already begun, with plans approved for a new building, Jim McCord moves from one part of the Princeton academic campus to another, and at the same time fulfills a dream for advanced, communal theological scholarship in the service of the Christian church and contemporary culture.
In defining theological education and religious studies in general as "a community of scholars [students and faculty] who are disciplined by the Word of God," we catch an early clue to Jim McCord's remarkable ability to distinguish between the mere fads of the times and the enduring Gospel truth that is always relevant and self-renewing.
theologytoday.ptsem.edu /oct1983/v40-3-editorial1.htm   (1135 words)

  
 DvdJmsMcrd   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
David was the son of Russell McCord, son of John McCord (The "Catawba Trader" of the area then known as "McCord's Ferry" in South Carolina) and wife Sophianisba Russell.
This is McCord Family I and it is believed that John McCord (the trader) was the grandson of David McCord of Armagh, Ireland, and John came to the South Carolina area about 1740.
Henrique is a descendant of Russell Paul McCord who was a son of David James.
www.geocities.com /symmmccord/dvdjmsmcrd.htm   (210 words)

  
 James McCord's Letter to Judge Sirica [March 19, 1973]
James McCord's Letter to Judge Sirica [March 19, 1973]
This is the full text of the letter from James W. McCord to Judge John Sirica.
The letter was filed in: United States v.
www.watergate.info /chronology/73-03-19_mccord-letter-to-sirica.shtml   (572 words)

  
 Save The Franklin Battlefield   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-20)
Letter from Pvt James A. McCord of Co G, 30th Georgia Infantry to his brother Capt William McCord who commanded Company G until wounded at Jonesboro, Georgia August 31, 1864.
Capt McCord was recuperating at his home in Jackson, Georgia when this letter was written.
(6) Pvt James A. McCord enlisted on November 1, 1862.
www.franklin-stfb.org /letters1.htm   (725 words)

  
 In praise of James McCord
Excerpts from letters of nomination
Following are excerpts from selected letters of nomination for James McCord in connection with the College's Jefferson Award for service.
He had time for virtually every committee in the liberal arts faculty and some left over for city council or the campaign to build a better Williamsburg Library.
Jim’s lifetime of service and commitment to generations of students, to the history department and the College, and to the cultural and political life of Williamsburg seems to me to embody an admirably broad eighteenth-century vision of knowledge as part of life.
www.wm.edu /news/?id=4232   (861 words)

  
 OSCN Found Document:JAMES MCCORD CO. v. JOHNSON GROCERY CO.
Error from District Court, Stephens County; Chain Jones, Judge.
Action by the Johnson Grocery Company and others against the James McCord Company.
From a judgment of the district court in favor of the plaintiffs on appeal from a judgment of justice court in favor of the plaintiffs and from denial of motion for a new trial, defendant brings error.
www.oscn.net /applications/oscn/DeliverDocument.asp?citeID=28575   (738 words)

  
 MCCORD JAMES W JR
MCCORD JAMES W JR Anderson,J. Peace, War, and Politics.
MCCORD JAMES W JR Click on a name for a new proximity search:
These names share the indicated number of pages with the above name.
www.namebase.org /main2/James-W-jr-McCord.html   (73 words)

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