Date: March 7, 1973

Time: 10:54 am – 11:41 am

Location: Oval Office

The President met with Thomas C. Pappas; the White House photographer was present at the

beginning of the meeting.

Photographs

-Trustworthiness

Henry J. Tasca

-Assignment

-New position

-Assistant secretary

-Economic area

-Ambassador to Greece

-Retention

-Retention in Greece

-George P. Shultz’s conversation with Tasca

-Talk with Pappas

-Experience in Korea

-Tasca’s wishes on assignment

-Greece

-Italy

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-John A. Volpe

-State Department

-Middle East desk

Greek prime minister [George Papadopoulos

-State visit

-Anti-communist

-Problems

-State Department

-President’s support

-Compared with Norway, Denmark

-Timing of state visit

-Greece’s independence

-Pappas’s conversation

-Pappas’s visit to Washington, DC

-Support for president

-Respect, administration

-Other countries

-Italy, France, Balkans

-Prisoners of war [POWs] return

-Col. Robinson Risner [?]

-Visit to us

-Talk with President

-Problems

Frank Birch [?]

-Friend of Nixon family

-Acquaintance with President

-Gas distributor

-Whittier

-Conflict with oil companies

-Pappas’s financial assistance

-Partnership with Standard Oil

Watergate

-Pappas’ activities

-President’s knowledge

-Maurice H. Stans

-Gratitude

-Stans

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-Innocence

-John N. Mitchell

-Innocence

-Committee to Re-elect the President [CRP]

-Involvement

-Guilt

-Low level staff

-Break-in

-White House involvement

-Pappas’s support

-Break-in

-Democratic National Committee [DNC]

-Value

Paper for President

-Copy for Shultz

Meeting with Shultz

-Arrival

-Trip to Europe

An unknown person entered at an unknown time after 10:54 am.

Copies of a paper

The unknown person left at an unknown time before 11:01 am.

Dinner for the President’s supporters in the business community

-Attendees

-Army Chorus

-“Stout-Hearted Man”

-Tricia Nixon Cox, Julie Nixon Eisenhower and Thelma C. (“Pat”)

Shultz

-Pappas’s greeting

1960 election

-Pappas, Leonard Garment

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

Shultz entered at 11:01 am.

Pappas’s memo on international monetary situation

Pappas left at 11:02 am.

Shultz’s trip to Europe

-Length of time

-Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [USSR]

-Itinerary

-Paris

-Bonn

-Moscow

-Bonn

-London

-Brussels

An unknown man entered at an unknown time after 11:02 am.

Schedule

-Henry A. Kissinger’s attendance at meeting

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 11:10 am.

Shultz’s trip

-Original schedule

-Rome, Moscow

-Paris meeting

-Meeting with Italians

-USSR

-Shultz’s talk with Kissinger

-Political considerations

-Aleksei N. Kosygin

-Leonid I. Brezhnev

US-USSR trade

-Agreement [?]

-Guidance [?]

-Gas

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-Most Favored Nation [MFN] status

-President’s position

-Support

-Soviet Jewry

-Golda Meir

Kissinger entered at 11:10 am.

US-USSR trade

-MFN status

-President’s commitment

-US position on internal affairs in USSR

-Soviet Jewry

-Kissinger’s talk with Dobrynin

-Brezhnev

-Shultz’s talks with USSR

-Avoidance of topic of Soviet Jewry

-Congress

-Jackson Amendment

An unknown man entered at an unknown time after 11:10 am.

Refreshment

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 11:39 am.

US-USSR trade

-MFN status

-Shultz’s talks with USSR

-Jackson Amendment

-USSR domestic issue

-Avoidance of topic of Soviet Jewry

-Rearrangement of procedure

-President’s commitment

-Brezhnev

-Re-approachment

-Kissinger’s conversation with Dobrynin

-Natural gas

-Shultz’s handling

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-Brezhnev’s visit to US

-Shultz’s analysis

-Price increases in US

-Speculation

-Supplies

-Impact on USSR prices

-Protocol

-Brezhnev’s visit to US

-Concessions

-Gas companies

-John B. Connally

-William E. Simon

-Negotiating protocol

-US subsidies

-Role of President in negotiations

-Brezhnev’s relationship with President

-Significance for US-USSR diplomacy

-Strategic Arms Limitation Talks [SALT]

-Space agreements

-Environment

-Middle East

-Europe

-Vietnam

-Mining

-Brezhnev’s role

-Visit to US

-Export-Import Bank of the US [Ex-Im bank]

-Credits for USSR

-Kissinger’s talk with [First name unknown] Voroskov [?]

-Shultz’s meeting with [First name unknown] Kemov [?]

-Kemov’s meeting with [First name unknown] St. Rego [?]

-Grain trade

-Shultz’s view

-Surpluses

-US farm subsidies

-Problems

-Impact on markets of Soviet purchases

-Sales to People’s Republic of China [PRC]

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

PRC

-David Packard

-Meeting with President

-Contract

-Research and development [R & D]

-Delays

-Coordinating Committee on Export Controls [COCOM] [?]

-Value of PRC trade

-Kissinger’s telephone call

-COCOM [?] list

-Overrule

International monetary situation

-US leadership

-Germany

-Political problem

-Intervention

-William H. G. Fitzgerald

-Partner of Hornblower and Weeks

-Conversation with Shultz

-Europe

-Need for US leadership

-Flexible response

-Europe’s reaction

-German secretary

-Intervention

-US exchange rate adjustments

-Reluctance

-Political benefits

-Germany and Japan

-Common float

-US support

-Germany’s reaction

-National float

-Domestic political consequences

-Germany

-Shultz’s talk with Helmut H. W. Schmidt

-Moderated common float

-Germany, Benelux, Switzerland, Denmark, Scandinavia

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-France’s absence

-US cooperation

-Managing currency floats

-Flexible guidelines

-Arthur F. Burns’s recommendation

-Japan

-Exchange rate adjustment

-Basket exchange rate adjustment

-Defense of rates

-Floating currency regimes

-Concerns

-Defense of exchange rates

-French elections

-Gaullists compared with Socialist victory

-Coalition with Center Party

-Chile election

-Press coverage

-Electoral margin

-Gerrymander

-Impact on political like

-Giscard d’Estaing

-Monetary preferences

-Intervention

-Shultz’s visit

-Georges J. R. Pompidou

-Statements regarding France

-Monetary position

-Gaulist Party

-Pompidou

-Kissinger’s talk with French Ambassador [Jacques Kosciusko-

Morizet

-Shultz’s statements

-US leadership

-Support for Pompidou

-Germany

-Schmidt

-Call to Kissinger

-Political views

-Successor to Willy Brandt

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-Domestic position

-US role

-Floating German Mark

-US role

-Germany’s resolution

-Intervention

-Relationship to US dollar

-Removal of bans

-Stabilization of Mark

-Relationship to Franc

-Floating Franc

-Impact on farm sector

-Political fallout in Germany

-US cooperativeness

-Massive intervention

-Yen, Franc, Mark

-Schmidt

-Diplomatic manner

-Domestic situation

-National float

-Call to Kissinger

-US support

-Flexible system

-Impact on France-Germany relations

President’s schedule

Treasury Department

-Helmut (“Hal”) Sonnenfeldt

-Abilities

-Work at Treasury

-East-West trade, USSR trade

-Kissinger’s agreement with Shultz

-June 1973 US-USSR summit

Kissinger left at 11:39 am.

Commission on Industrial Peace

-Organization

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. May-2010)

-Management Committee

-Subgroups

-Transportation

-Mass production

-David Coe

-Steel strike

-Chairman

-Frank E. Fitzsimmons

-Meeting with John T. Dunlop

-Concerns about James M. Roche

-General Motors [GM], chief executive

George Meany

-Dunlop

5.5 per cent wage settlement

-Meeting with Shultz and Dunlop

-5.5 per cent wage settlement

-President’s support

-Press relations

-President’s statement

-2.5 per cent inflation rate

-Meeting with Dunlop

-Shultz’s return

-Labor-management Advisory Committee

The President and Shultz left at 11:41 am.

-Walk

The conversation was cut off at an unknown time before 11:52 am.