There are currently 1,779 Hours of Nixon White House Tapes available for reproduction at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland, which is approximately half of the total hours of tapes. Out of that 1,779 hours, only 60 or so hours have been transcribed. This is our private effort to transcribe all 1,779 hours of tape, a half-hour at a time. If you'd like to help, please contact J.C. Stanton at jcstanton at totse dot com(anti-spam email address).
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Nixon Project FAQ |
by J.C. Stanton |
| Frequently asked questions about the Nixon Project. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: April 14, 1973 |
| Discussions of press coverage and the issue of campaign funding; Hunt's testimony; President insisting, publicly, to Mitchell, Magruder, Liddy not to withhold testimony thinking they to protect the President; reports of promises of pardons, clemency; implications of hush money to defendants; possible Ehrlichman meetings with Mitchell, Magruders and their lawyers; possible grand jury appearance by the President; legal exposure of Dean, Haldeman, Chapin in the cover-up. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: Cancer on the Presidency |
| Transcript of a recording of a meeting amoung the President, John Dean, and H.R. Haldeman in the Oval Office, on March 21, 1973. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: January 8, 1972 |
| Transcript of recording of a meeting between the President and Charles Colson on January 8, 1973, from 4:05 to 5:34 PM in the Executive Office Building office. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: June 23, 1973 |
| Transcript of a recording of a meeting between the President and H.R. Haldeman, the Oval Office, June 23, 1972 from 1:04PM to 1:13PM. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: March 17, 1973 |
| Transcript of recording of a meeting among the President, John Dean, and H.R. Haldeman in the Oval Office on March 17, 1973 from 1:25 PM to 2:10 PM |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: March 23, 1971 |
| Meeting Amonng President Richard M. Nixon, John B. Conally, John D. Ehrlichman, Clifford M. Hardin, John Whitaker, George P. Shultz, J. Phil Campbell, Donald B. Rice on March 23, 1971 from 5:05 to 5:38 PM in the Oval Office. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: Sept. 15, 1972 |
| A discussion of press treatment of the break-in and lawsuits; discovery of another bug in the DNC; bugs in other political campaigns; DNC lawsuits; Edward Bennett Williams; RNC countersuits; election law violations; Congress; the burglars' civil rights; the Washington Post's TV & Radio licenses; depositions on sex-lives of DNC members. |
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Nixon Tapes Transcript: The Smoking Gun |
| Transcript of a recording of a meeting between the President and H.R. Haldeman in the Oval Office on June 23, 1972 from 10:04am to 11:39am |
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Perot and Nixon |
by William Safire |
| Ross Perot used to make himself useful around the Nixon White House,
in hopes of settling disputes his company was having with the Social
Security Administration. |
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Review of the Book SECRET AGENDA |
by Anthony Marro |
| His account goes well beyond, to include a prostitution ring,
heavy CIA involvement, spying on the White House as well as
on the Democrats, and plots within plots, with McCord
scheming at the end to sabotage his own break-in. |
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Richard Nixon's Social Security Number |
by The Reflex |
| Richard Nixon has all the charm and warmth of an obscene Christmas card.
Let's remember him always. |
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The Articles of Impeachment of Richard Nixon |
by US Congress |
| Articles of Impeachment exhibited by the House of Representatives of the
United States of America in the name of itself and of all of the people of the
United States of America, against Richard M. Nixon, President of the United
States of America, in maintenance and support of its impeachment against him
for high crimes and misdemeanors. |
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The Kennedy-Nixon-Bush Connection |
by Paul Kangas |
| A newly discovered FBI document reveals that George Bush was directly involved in the 1963 murder of President John Kennedy. The document places Bush working with the now-famous CIA agent, Felix Rodriguez, recruiting right-wing Cuban exiles for the invasion of Cuba. |
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The Resignation Speech |
by Richard Milhouse Nixon |
| To leave office before my term is completed is abhorrent to every instinct in my body. But as President, I must put the interest of America first. America needs a full-time President and a full-time Congress, particularly at this time with the problems we face at home and abroad. |
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United States v. Nixon |
by The Supreme Court |
| The District Court issued a subpoena to the president requiring him to produce certain tapes and documents relating to precisely identified meetings between the president and others. Although President Nixon released edited transcripts of some of the subpoenaed conversations, his counsel filed a "special appearance" and moved to quash the subpoena on the grounds of executive privilege. When the District Court denied the motion, the president appealed and the case was quickly brought to the Supreme Court. |