Date: June 14, 1973

Time: 9:30 am – 10:52 am

Location: Oval Office

The President met with Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

Vietnam

-Henry A. Kissinger’s schedule

Negotiations

-Kissinger’s view

-Military situation in South Vietnam

-South Vietnam’s performance

-North Vietnam

-Training

-Kissinger

-Briefings

-Cambodia

-Bombing

-Duration

-Possible cease-fire

-Kissinger’s view

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Congressional action

-House of Representatives, Senate

-September 1973

-Kissinger

Ronald L. Ziegler and an unknown man entered at 9:31 am.

President’s schedule

-Clothing [?]

The unknown man left at an unknown time before 9:34 am.

President’s address to nation announcing price control measures, June 13, 1973

-Response

-News summary

-Democrats, business, Republicans, networks

-Public opinion

-Delivery

-Importance of beginning and end

-George P. Shultz

-Price freeze

-Calls to President

-Speechwriters

-President’s writing

-Washington Post

-Draft, war

-Labor response

-Charles W. Colson

-Frank E. Fitzsimmons’s call to President

-News summary

Kissinger entered at 9:34 am.

Vietnam negotiations

-President’s telegrams to Kissinger, Charles Whitehouse

-Communique

-Kissinger’s efforts

-Difficulty

-President’s recent conversation with Haig

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-President’s messages to Nguyen Van Thieu

-Tone

-Brent G. Scowcroft’s call to Thieu

-President’s conversation with Gen. Tran Kim Phuong

-Congressional leaders

-South Vietnamese mood

Kissinger’s forthcoming briefings

-Tone

-President’s activities

-Year of Europe

-Middle East

-Vietnam negotiations

-Year of Europe

-Forthcoming summit

-Duration

-Year of Europe

-Vietnam negotiations

-Communique

-Recent staff meeting

-Year of Europe

-Vietnam

-US leadership in world, peace

-President’s meetings with Georges J. R. Pompidou, Edward R. G. Heath, Willy

Brandt

-Pompidou

-Gen. Charles A. J. M. De Gaulle

-President’s possible trip to Europe

-Year of Europe

-Leonid I. Brezhnev’s Forthcoming Visit

-Compared to 1972 meeting

-Cancellation

-Dialog

-President’s meeting with Andrei A. Gromyko in October 1972

-Tone

-President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

-Watergate

-Wiretapping

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Conduct of foreign policy

-Peace

-1971, 1972

-Compared to the Battle of the Bulge

-Follow-through

-Brezhnev

-Kissinger’s meeting with People’s Republic of China [PRC] Foreign Minister [Ji

Pengfei] in Paris, June 13, 1973

-Possible lunch with J. William Fulbright, Hugh Scott

-Kissinger

Kissinger’s meeting with PRC Foreign Minister in Paris

[Tape recording system malfunction: 36 seconds]

US-PRC relations

-Possible visit to San Clemente [by Huang Zhen]

-Nationalist ambassador

-Washington, DC

-Century Plaza Hotel

Mao Tse-tung and Chiang Ching

-Invitation to President

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

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 4

[National security]

[Duration: 13 s ]

PRC

END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1

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

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

Vietnam negotiations

-Kissinger’s schedule

-May, July 1973

Brezhnev’s forthcoming visit

-San Clemente visit

-President’s airplane visit

-President’s conversation with Anatoliy F. Dobrynin

-Thelma C. (“Pat”) Nixon

-Guest rooms

-Gromyko

Vietnam negotiations

-Forthcoming briefings

-Tone

-Response

-Europe

Brezhnev’s forthcoming visit

-President’s conversation with Michael J. (“Mike”) Mansfield

-Briefings on agreements

-President’s trip to Soviet Union, 1972

-News summaries

-William P. Rogers, Kissinger, President

-Agreements during President’s 1972 trip to Soviet Union

-Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty [SALT], communique

-Agreements

-Number

-SALT, principles [on prevention of nuclear war], communique

-Briefings

-Rogers, William H. Sullivan, Martin J. Hillenbrand

-Camp David

-Rogers and Gromyko’s schedule

-Dobrynin’s view

-Sequoia trip

-Security

-Dobrynin’s views

-Dinner

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Fulbright

-Sequoia trip

-Agenda

-Briefings on agreements

-California

-Number

-US-Soviet Agreement on Prevention of Nuclear War

-California

-Camp David

-Casa Pacifica

-Peaceful uses of nuclear energy, SALT communique

-Cancellation

-Security

-Brezhnev

-Scowcroft’s message

-Politics

-San Clemente

-Doctor

-Schedule

-Possible demonstrators

-Quakers

Kissinger’s schedule

-Vacation

-Sophia Loren

-Paris

Kissinger left at 9:51 am.

President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

-Response

-Press relations

-News summary

-Controversy

-Phase I, Vietnam, SALT

-Beginning and end

-President’s leadership

-Status quo

-Consumers

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Gasoline and food prices

-“Rollback”

-Public relations

-Confusion

-Raw agricultural products

President’s schedule

-Bryce N. Harlow

-Announcement

-Spiro T. Agnew

-Harlow

-Lawyers

-William W. Scranton

-George Putnam

-Photograph opportunity

-Scranton

White House staff

-Council to President

-Leonard Garment

-J. Fred Buzhardt

-Compared to Garment

-Garment

-Possible ambassadorship

-Personality

-John W. Dean, III

-Buzhardt

-Harlow

-Garment

-Role

-Legal work

Watergate

-Ervin Committee hearings

-President’s conversation with William F. (“Billy”) Graham

-Maurice Stans’s testimony

-Edward J. Gurney

-Polls

-Television [TV] coverage

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Senators

-Samuel J. Ervin

-Possible opponents in election

-President’s conversation with Graham

-Dean’s interview, June 15, 1973

-Dean’s forthcoming testimony

-White House response

-Buzhardt, Charles A. Wright

-Possible allegations against President

-Dean

-White House response

-News summary coverage

-Background

-Elliot L. Richardson

-News summary coverage

President’s schedule

-TV speeches

-Frequency

President’s speeches

-Beginning and end

-Public relations

-Raymond K. Price, Jr.

-Speechwriters

-Substance

-President’s role

-Politics

-President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

-Brezhnev

-Draft

-“Best-fed,” “best-clothed”

-First draft

-Price

-Demagoguery

-Gas prices, inflation, food prices, labor

-President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

-Press relations

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

White House staff

-Harlow

-Timing of announcement

National economy

-TV appearance of Earl L. Butz and James W. McLane

-National Broadcasting Company [NBC]’s Today Show

-Congressional relations

-William E. Timmons’s forthcoming efforts

-Ticklers

-Future speeches

Ziegler left at 10:03 am.

Congressional relations

Cabinet

President’s schedule

-Forthcoming conversation with Agnew

-Agnew’s speech to National Association of Attorneys General, St. Louis,

MO, June 11, 1973

-Role in administration

-Melvin R. Laird

-Harlow

-Presidency

-Speeches

-Congressional relations

-Farm legislation

-Economy

-Quadriad

President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

-Timing

-Tone

Agnew entered at 10:05 am.

President’s address to nation announcing price control measures

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Response

-Agnew’s schedule

Agnew’s speech in St. Louis

Watergate

-Ervin Committee hearings

-Possible attacks by witnesses

-Howard Hughes

-Buzhardt

-Howard H. Baker, Jr. Gurney

-Audience response

-TV

-Stans and Ervin, June 13, 1973

-White House response

-Victor Lasky

-1972 voting

-George McGovern

-Nixon

Investigation of Agnew

-Republican Party

-George Beall

-Staff

-Democrats

-[Barney Skolnik]

-Edmund S. Muskie supporter

-Muskie

-Elliot L. Richardson

-Agnew’s administrative officer [William E. Fornoff]

-[N. Dale Anderson]

-Kick-backs

-Indictment

-Relations with Agnew

-Transactions

-Baltimore County

-Engineers, architects

-[Fornoff]

-Agnew’s role

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Compared to New York State

-Nelson A. Rockefeller

-Compared to California

-President’s conversation with Ronald W. Reagan

-Political contributions by highway and other contractors

-Grand Jury

-Income Tax investigation

-Watergate

-Scale

-1972 election

-Celebrity night for Agnew

-Leslie T. (“Bob”) Hope, Francis A. (“Frank”) Sinatra

-Congressional candidates committee

-Maryland

-District of Columbia

-Julie Nixon Eisenhower

-Loan from Committee to Re-elect the President [CRP]

-Indictment of fund-raiser [Blagdon H. Wharton]

-Records falsification

-Anne Arundel County, Maryland

-1972 election

-Press coverage

-Agnew

-Agnew’s contacts

-Background

-Haig

-Harlow

-Laird

-White House response

-Beall

-Baltimore County

-Agnew’s possible role

-Inability to interfere

Watergate

-Possible accusations against Agnew

-Compared to allegations concerning President and Watergate

-Cover-up

-Fund for the burglars

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-San Clemente home

-Denials

-Strategy

-Democrats

-Beall

-Investigation of Agnew’s successor [Anderson]

-[Fornoff]

-Plea bargaining and guilty plea

-Implication of engineers

-Immunity

-President’s knowledge of criminal law

Watergate

-Dean

-Immunity

-New York Times article

-Meetings with President

-Removal of classified documents from the White House

Investigation in Baltimore County, Maryland

-White House response

-Special prosecutor

-Lack of necessity

-Possible accusations

-Agnew

-[Mandel]

-Anne Arundel County executive

-Mayor of Baltimore

-Agnew

-Kick-back

-Federal judge

-Engineer [Matz]

-Plea bargaining

-Background

-Political contributions

-Plea bargaining

-Fornoff

-Guilty plea

-Timing

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Engineers [Matz et al.]

-Effects on Maryland politics

-Governor [Marvin Mendel]

-J. Glenn Beall, Jr.

Watergate

-Ervin Committee hearings

-Lowell Weicker’s possible questioning of H. R. (“Bob”) Haldeman

-Origin of $350,000

-Herbert Kalmbach

-Weicker’s campaign contributions

Investigation of Agnew

-George Beall

-Internal Revenue Service [IRS] investigators

-Glenn Beall

-Campaign contributions

-1970 campaign

-Colson

-Handling of investigation

-Glenn Beall, George Beall

-Possible indictment

-Skolnik

-Muskie supporter

-Administration enemies

-Bureaucracy

Watergate

-Popular opinion

-Ervin compared to President

-Agnew’s speech in St. Louis

-Response

-John N. Mitchell

-Possible prison term

-Martha (Beall) Mitchell’s health

-New Jersey, Maryland

-Possible investigation of Democrats

-Files

-Murray M. Chotiner

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Steve Sachs

Investigation of Agnew

-President’s and Haig’s role

-Buzhardt

-Agnew’s conversations

-Haldeman

-Colson

-Possible letter

-Advisability

-Jud Best

-David Shapiro

-Possible legal relationship with Agnew

-Jeb Stuart Magruder’s possible testimony concerning Colson

-Press coverage

Watergate

-Magruder’s possible testimony

-Colson

-Lawrence O’Brien

-International Telephone and Telegraph [ITT]

-Haldeman

-Mitchell

-Dean

-Dean’s possible testimony

-John D. Ehrlichman

-Haldeman

-President

-Meetings with President

Investigation of Agnew

-Agnew’s legal relationship with Colson and Best

Watergate

-Egil (“Bud”) Krogh, Jr.

-Transportation Department

-Firing by Claude S. Brinegar

-Ken Rietz

-Firing by George H. W. Bush

-15-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Activities

-San Diego

-Demonstrations

Investigation of Agnew

-Agnew’s legal relationship with Colson and Best

-Colson as witness

-[Metz]

-Plea-bargaining

-Effect on other accused’s reputation

Watergate

-President’s opponents’ goal

-Carl B. Albert

-President’s resignation or impeachment

-1972 election

Agnew

-Role in administration

-Energy

-Inadvisability

-Workload

-Salesmanship

-Economic, energy, and foreign policies

President’s address to nation addressing price control measures

-Importance of beginning and end

-Telephone calls

-Vietnam, draft, Brezhnev visit

-President’s role

Agnew

-Role in administration

-Republican Party leaders

-Influence-makers

-Chicago clubs, New York City clubs

-Press

-Editors, publishers

-Labor

-16-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

National economy

-Wages

-Lack of freeze

Agnew

-Role in administration

-Compared to President’s role with Dwight D. Eisenhower

-Eisenhower’s health

-Meetings

-Compared to President’s

-Cabinet, National Security Council [NSC]

-Meeting with President, May 2, 1973

-Quadriad meetings

-Specialization

-Federal Reserve Board [FRB]

-Shultz

-Domestic Council

-Cabinet

-Rogers, Laird, Dr. James R. Schlesinger

-Soybeans

-France

President’s address to nation addressing price control measures

-Consumers

-State Department, NSC staff

-Possible resignations

Agnew

-Role in administration

-Quadriad

-Foreign policy

-Avoiding appearance of “Froth”

-Press reports of Africa trip

Press relations

-President’s experience

-Watergate compared to Hiss case

-Herbert L. Block

-17-

NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

-Caracas

Agnew

-Role in administration

-Asia

-Kissinger

-Possible trips

-Confidentiality

-PRC

-Mansfield, Congress

-August 1973

-Kissinger

-Timing

-September, October 1973

-Union of Soviet Socialist Republics [USSR]

-Negotiations

-President’s trips under Eisenhower

-Reporting

-East Europe

-Poland, Hungary, Romania, Italy, Greece

-North Atlantic Treaty Organization [NATO]

-Past trips

-Italy, Iran, Greece, Spain

-Latin America

-Africa

-Chad

-Confidentiality

-PRC, USSR, Eastern Europe

-Congressional relations

-Alaska pipeline

-Export controls

-Trade bill

-Meat surcharge

-Farm legislation

-Inflation

-Republicans

-Government spending

-Attacks on Ervin Committee

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

Watergate

-Attacks on Ervin Committee

-Possible jail terms

-Mitchell, Stans

-Agnew’s speech

-Hugh Scott’s statements

-Wiretapping, plumbers

-Agnew’s possible response

-President’s comments to POWs

-Agnew’s possible statements

-Scott’s statement

-Robert F. (“Bobby”) Kennedy

-Newsmen, civil rights leaders, politicians

-Federal Bureau of Investigation [FBI]

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

BEGIN WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 9

[National security]

[Duration: 23 s ]

END WITHDRAWN ITEM NO. 1

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

Agnew’s role in administration

-Forthcoming conversation with Harlow

-Trips

-Congressional relations

-Liberals

Charles McC. Mathias, Jr.

-Record of support for President

-Comments concerning Maryland State Republican Chairman [Alexander

Lankler]

-Alleged disloyalty

-Congressional relations

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

Agnew

-Possible guilt

Watergate

-Mitchell

-Possible conversation with President

Agnew

-Investigation

Harlow

-Role on White House staff

-Politics

-Bush

Agnew

-Speeches

-Patrick J. Buchanan

-Harlow

Agnew left at 10:49 am.

President’s schedule

-Scranton

Agnew

-Possible investigation

-Fear

-Administration support

-Possible trip to PRC

-Harlow

-Dignity

Watergate

-Dean

-President’s activities

-Richardson

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. March-2011)

Cabinet

-Brinegar

-Performance

-Future

President’s schedule

-Scranton

Haig left at 10:52 am.