Word: coxes
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...forward by the White House, but no innocent ex planation for the erasure itself seems at all likely. The missing words involve a conversation between Nixon and Hal deman on June 20, 1972, just three days after the original Watergate arrests. The tape was among those subpoenaed by Archibald Cox, the special prosecutor whom Nixon fired last October. It was later turned over to Judge Sirica. Cox had drawn the "irresistible inference" that Haldeman had reported to the President that day whatever he knew about the origins of the Watergate conspiracy...
Nixon, claimed Cox, might well have advised Haldeman how to handle the cover-up of the affair in its earliest stages. Haldeman's own notes of the conversation describe it as a discussion of a "PR [public relations] offensive to top" the effects of the break-in on the 1972 presidential campaign...
...then." Mostly, it seems, about sharing the housework. "No matter how hard I try to reassure her that letting down on household chores doesn't mean I feel any less affection, I get the sense she can't understand that." Meanwhile, Tricia and Eddie Cox have had to endure a three-week geographical separation. From Christmas Day until last Tuesday, Tricia was with her parents at San Clemente and at the White House, while Eddie stayed in Manhattan to work at his law firm. Returning last week to their apartment, Tricia quashed the rumor that they were...
Richardson, now director of a project for the Wood row Wilson international Center for Scholars at Princeton University, resigned as Attorney General last October after President Nixon's firing of Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox...
Richardson, who resigned as attorney general when President Nixon fired Watergate special prosecutor Archibald Cox '34 last October, will lecture on foreign policy. The Godkin lecturer traditionally gives three lectures on three consecutive nights...