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 NIXON C30 C60 C90   GO  LONG SLEEVE 

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 HISTORY v RICHARD NIXON 

 

   

"TITTER YE NOT"

******************

 

What's the difference between Watergate and Zippergate?


At least this time,

there's no doubt about the identity of "Deep Throat."

  ******************

 

A honeymoon couple is in the Watergate Hotel

in Washington.

The bride is concerned. “What if the place is still bugged?”  The groom says, “I’ll look for a

bug.” He looks behind the drapes, behind the pictures and under the rug. “AHA!” Under the rug was a disc with four screws.

 

He gets a screwdriver, unscrews the screws, and throws the disc out the window. The next day, the hotel manager asks the newlyweds,

 

“How was your room? How was the service? How was your stay at the Watergate Hotel?”

 

The groom says, “Why are you asking me all of these questions?”  The hotel manager says

 

“Well, the room under you complained of the chandelier falling on them!”
 

******************

 

It is the 33rd

anniversary of the Watergate break-in.

That was a time when the president of the United States couldn’t be trusted to tell the American people the truth… thirty years ago… but it feels just like yesterday.

 

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The Watergate Hotel
Nixon Watergate
Nixon Resigns
Nixon Badges

 

The Nixon White House tapes are audio recordings of the

communications of U.S.  President Richard Nixon  and

various Nixon administration officials and White House staff,

ordered by the President for his personal records.

 

The taping system was installed in selected rooms in the

White House in February 1971 and was voice activated. The

records come from line-taps placed on the telephones and

small hidden microphones in various locations around the

rooms. The recordings were produced on up to nine  Sony 

 TC-800B  open-reel tape recorders. The recorders were

turned off on July 18, 1973, two days after they became

public knowledge as a result of the Watergate hearings.

 

Nixon was not the first president to record his White House

conversations; the practice began with President Franklin D.

Roosevelt and continued under Presidents Harry S. Truman,

Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon B.

Johnson. It also continued under Presidents Gerald Ford,

Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill

Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama and Donald Trump.

What differentiated the Nixon system from the others,

however, is the fact that the Nixon system was automatically

activated by voice as opposed to being manually activated by

a switch.  The Watergate tapes  are interspersed among the

Nixon White House tapes. The tapes gained fame during the

Watergate scandal of 1973 and 1974 when the system was made public during the

televised testimony of White House aide Alexander Butterfield. Only a few White House

employees had ever been aware that this system existed.

 

On August 20, 2013,  the Nixon Library  and the National Archives and Records

Administration released the final 340 hours of the tapes that cover the period from April 9

through July 12, 1973.

On February 16, 1971, the taping system was installed in two rooms in the White

House: 

          the  Oval Office  and the Cabinet Room. Three months later, microphones were

added to President Nixon's private office in the Old Executive Office Building, and the following year microphones were installed in the presidential lodge at Camp David. The system was installed and monitored by the Secret Service, and tapes were kept in a room in the White House basement. Significant phone lines were tapped as well, including those in the Oval Office and the Lincoln Sitting Room, which was Nixon's favourite room in the White House. Only a select few individuals

knew of the existence of the taping system. The recordings were produced on as many as nine Sony TC-800B machines using very thin 0.5 mil tape at the extremely slow speed of 15/16 inches per second. The tapes contain over 3,000 hours of conversation. Hundreds of hours are of discussions on foreign policy, including planning for the 1972 Nixon visit to China and subsequent visit to the Soviet Union. Only 200 hours of the 3,500 contain references to Watergate and less than 5% of the recordings have been transcribed or published.

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"I would have made a good Pope."

 

"I would not like to be a Russian leader. They never know when they're being taped."

 

—President Richard Nixon

Watergate Wanted

 

The existence of the White House taping system was first confirmed by

Senate Committee staff member  Donald Sanders , on July 13, 1973, in

an interview with White House aide Alexander Butterfield. Three days

later, it was made public during the televised testimony of Butterfield,

when he was asked about the possibility of a White House taping system

by Senate Counsel Fred Thompson.

 

On July 16, 1973,  Alexander Butterfield  told the committee in a televised

hearing that Nixon had ordered a taping system installed in the White

House to automatically record all conversations; it was possible to

concretely verify what the president said, and when he said it. Only a few

White House employees had ever been aware that this system existed.

Special Counsel Archibald Cox, a former United States Solicitor General

under President John F. Kennedy, asked District Court Judge John Sirica

to subpoena nine relevant tapes to confirm the testimony of White House

Counsel John Dean.

President Nixon initially refused to release the tapes, for two reasons:

                                                                                                              first,

that the Constitutional principle of executive privilege extends to the tapes

and citing the separation of powers and checks and balances within the

Constitution, and second, claiming they were vital to national security. On

October 19, 1973, he offered a compromise; Nixon proposed that U.S.

Senator  John C. Stennis , a Democrat of Mississippi, review and

summarize the tapes for accuracy and report his findings to the special

prosecutor's office. Special prosecutor Archibald Cox refused the

compromise and on Saturday, October 20, 1973, Nixon ordered the

Attorney General, Elliot Richardson, to dismiss Cox. Richardson refused

and resigned instead, as did Deputy Attorney General William

Ruckelshaus. Solicitor General and acting head of the Justice Department

Robert Bork discharged Cox. Nixon appointed Leon Jaworski special

counsel on November 1, 1973.

 

According to President Nixon's secretary,  Rose Mary Woods , on

September 29, 1973 she was reviewing a tape of the June 20, 1972,

recordings when she said she had made "a terrible mistake" during

transcription. While playing the tape on a Uher 5000, she answered a

phone call. Reaching for the Uher 5000 stop button, she said that she

mistakenly hit the button next to it, the record button. For the duration of

the phone call, about 5 minutes, she kept her foot on the device's pedal,

causing a five-minute portion of the tape to be re-recorded. When she

listened to the tape, the gap had grown to 18½ minutes and she later

insisted that she was not responsible for the remaining 13 minutes of

buzz.

 

The contents missing from the recording remain unknown to this day. It is

widely believed that the tapes recorded a conversation between Nixon and

Chief of Staff  H. R. Haldeman . Nixon said that he never heard the

conversation and did not know the topics of the missing tapes. Haldeman's

notes from the meeting show that among the topics of discussion were the

arrests at the Watergate Hotel. White House lawyers first heard the now

infamous 18½ minute gap on the evening of November 14, 1973, and Judge Sirica, who had issued the subpoenas for the tapes, was not told until November 21, after the President's attorneys had decided that there was "no innocent explanation" they could offer.

 

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                                                                                            Woods was asked to replicate the position she took to cause that                                                                                                accident. Seated at a desk, she reached far back over her left                                                                                                      shoulder for a telephone as her foot applied pressure to the pedal                                                                                                controlling the transcription machine. Her posture during the                                                                                                        demonstration, dubbed the " Rose Mary Stretch ", resulted in many                                                                                              political commentators questioning the validity of the explanation.

 

                                                                                            In a grand jury interview in 1975, Nixon noted that he initially                                                                                                        believed that only four minutes of the tape was missing. When he                                                                                                later heard that 18 minutes was missing, he said, "I practically blew                                                                                              my stack."

 

                                                                                            Nixon's counsel, John Dean, has said that "These recordings also

                                                                                            largely answer the questions regarding what was known by the                                                                                                    White House about the reasons for the break-in and bugging at the                                                                                              Democratic National Committee headquarters, as well as what                                                                                                    was erased during the infamous 18½-minute gap during the June                                                                                                20, 1972, conversation and why."

A variety of suggestions have been made as to who

could have erased the tape. Years later, former White House Chief of Staff   Alexander Haig  speculated that the erasures may conceivably have been caused by Nixon himself. According to Haig, the President was spectacularly inept at understanding and operating mechanical devices, and in the course of reviewing the tape in question, he may have caused the erasures by fumbling with the recorder's controls; whether inadvertently or intentionally, Haig could not say. In 1973, Haig had speculated aloud that the erasure was caused by an unidentified "sinister force". Others have suggested that Haig was involved in deliberately erasing the tapes with Nixon's involvement, or that the erasure was conducted by a White House lawyer.

 

Nixon himself launched the first investigation into how the tapes were erased. He claimed that it was an intensive investigation but came up empty. On November 21, 1973, Sirica appointed a panel of persons nominated jointly by the White House and the Special Prosecution Force. The panel was supplied with the Evidence Tape, the seven Sony 800B recorders from the Oval Office and Executive Office Building, and two  Uher 5000 recorders . One Uher 5000 was marked "Secret Service". The other was accompanied by a foot pedal, respectively labelled Government Exhibit 60 and 60B. The panel determined that the buzz was of no consequence, and that the gap was due to erasure performed on the Exhibit 60 Uher. The panel also determined that the erasure/buzz recording consisted of at least five separate segments, possibly as many

as nine, and that at least five segments required hand operation; that is, they could not have been performed using the foot pedal. The panel was subsequently asked by the court to consider alternative explanations that had emerged during the hearings. The final report, dated May 31, 1974, found these other explanations did not contradict the original findings.

 

white house recorder
watergate reel to reel tapes

 The National Archives  now owns the tape, and has tried several

times to recover the missing minutes, most recently in 2003. None

of the Archives' attempts have been successful. The tapes are

now preserved in a climate-controlled vault in case a future

technological development allows for restoration of the missing

audio. Corporate security expert Phil Mellinger undertook a project

to restore Haldeman's handwritten notes describing the missing

18½ minutes, though that effort also failed to produce any new

information.

 

In April 1974, the  House Judiciary Committee  subpoenaed the

tapes of 42 White House conversations. At the end of that month,

Nixon released edited transcripts of the White House tapes, again

citing executive privilege and national security; the Judiciary

Committee, however, rejected Nixon’s edited transcripts, saying

that they did not comply with the subpoena.

 

Sirica, acting on a request from Jaworski, issued a subpoena for

the tapes of 64 presidential conversations to use as evidence in

the criminal cases against indicted former Nixon administration officials. Nixon

refused, and Jaworski appealed to the Supreme Court to force Nixon to turn over

the tapes. On July 24, the Supreme Court voted 8-0 (Justice William Rehnquist

reacused himself) in  United States v. Nixon  that Nixon must turn over the

tapes.

In late July 1974, the White House released the subpoenaed tapes. One of those

tapes was the so-called "smoking gun" tape, from June 23, 1972, six days after

the Watergate break-in. In that tape, Nixon agrees that administration officials

should approach Richard Helms, Director of the CIA, and Vernon A. Walters,

Deputy Director, and ask them to request  L. Patrick Gray , Acting Director of the

FBI, to halt the Bureau's investigation into the Watergate break-in on the grounds

that it was a national security matter. The special prosecutor felt that Nixon, in so

agreeing, had entered into a criminal conspiracy whose goal was the obstruction

of justice.

 

Once the " smoking gun " tape was made public on August 5, Nixon's political

support practically vanished. The ten Republicans on the House Judiciary

Committee who had voted against impeachment in committee announced that

they would now vote for impeachment once the matter reached the House floor.

He lacked substantial support in the Senate as well; Barry Goldwater and Hugh

Scott estimated no more than 15 Senators were willing to even consider

acquittal. Facing certain impeachment in the House of Representatives and

equally certain conviction in the Senate, Nixon announced his resignation on the

evening of Thursday, August 8, to take effect noon the next day. After Nixon's

resignation, the federal government took control of all of his presidential records, including the tapes, in the Presidential Recordings and Materials Preservation Act of 1974. From the time that the federal government seized his records until his death, Nixon was locked in frequent legal battles over control of the tapes; Nixon argued that the act was unconstitutional in that it violated the Constitutional principles of separation of powers and executive privilege, and infringed on his personal privacy rights and First Amendment right of association.

 

The legal squabbling would continue for 25 years, past Nixon's death. He initially lost several cases, but the courts ruled in 1998 that some 820 hours and 42 million pages of documents were his personal private property and had to be returned to his estate. On July 11, 2007, the National Archives were given official control of the previously privately operated Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace in Yorba Linda, California. The newly renamed facility, the  Richard Nixon Presidential Library and   Museum , now houses the tapes and releases additional tapes to the public periodically, which are available online and in the public domain.

 

Nixon Crookson Tape Cartoon
  • In an updated version of his song "Alice's Restaurant",

      shortly after Nixon's death in 1994, musician Arlo Guthrie

      recalls learning that Chip Carter had found a copy of the

      original LP in the Nixon library, and later wondering

      whether it was a coincidence that both the original

      "Alice's Restaurant" track and the infamous gap in the

      Nixon tapes were "exactly 18 minutes and 20 seconds

      long."

 

  • Joe Strummer references the Watergate Tapes in the

      lyrics of the song "I'm So Bored With the U.S.A." by the

      Clash.

 

  • In the 2007 film National Treasure:

                                                             Book of Secrets,

      protagonist Riley Poole mentions the missing segment

      of the tapes in his conspiracy theory novel.

 

  • In the film Dick, Arlene records a love message to Nixon and sings a song for 18½ minutes, which Nixon later erases for fear of people thinking he was having an affair with a minor.

 

  • In the "Day of the Moon" episode from the television show Doctor Who, the Doctor tells Nixon he must record all conversations in his office in case he is under the influence of the Silence, aliens that could use post-hypnotic suggestion to make him do what they wanted. At the end of the episode the Doctor informs Nixon, who now believes the human race to be safe, that there are still other aliens out there wanting to destroy Earth, indicating this is the reason the tapes began and continued, in fear of aliens influencing him.

 

  • In "The Obsolescent Cryogenic Meltdown", an episode of the ABC Family series The Middleman, a previous Middleman is at a high-stakes card game where the only items in the pot are priceless objects; he stakes an old-fashioned tape recorder, claiming that it holds "the missing eighteen minutes".

 

  • In the film X-Men:

                                  Days of Future Past, Nixon is featured as a character and it is suggested that the contents of the tapes        relate to the US government's involvement with anti-mutant activities.

 

 

You must pursue this investigation of Watergate even if it leads to the president. I'm innocent. You've got to believe I'm innocent. If you don't,

take my job.

                                                                                                Richard M. Nixon

 

Richard M Nixon
Hand Over Watergate Tapes
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watergate scandal 1973
news nixon goodbye
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nixon tapes 3500 hours
Newsweek The Nixon Tapes
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 The material on this site does not necessarily reflect the views of What If? Tees. 

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 The material on this site does not reflect the views of What If? Tees. 

 The Images and Text are not meant to offend but to Promote Positive Open Debate and Free Speech. 

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