Word: haldemans
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Into Isolation. The April 15 date was also covered in a withdrawal of nine reels between July 9 and July 11 by Bull, who gave them to H.R. Haldeman, Nixon's former chief of staff. Bull also said that he checked out 22 tapes on April 25 and 26 and had given them to Haldeman-a surprising fact that Haldeman had not reported in his Senate Watergate testimony. Haldeman has admitted listening to only two tapes (Sept. 15 and March 21), He has been subpoenaed for questioning this week in the Sirica hearings. Further confusing the matter, Senate investigators...
...memo he dictated about the April 15 conversation with Dean-although Nixon's version is hardly apt to satisfy any of the many Watergate investigators. Some are openly skeptical of the White House claims and suspect that the missing April 15 tape might have been destroyed when Haldeman had it in his possession in July. Warren insisted that Nixon was determined "to clear up this matter" of the tapes and again felt compelled to reiterate that Nixon had no intention of resigning...
...other tapes include: a June 20, 1972 meeting at which Nixon first discussed the Watergate arrests with Aides John Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman; a June 30, 1972 meeting at which Nixon and John Mitchell discussed Mitchell's resignation as Nixon's campaign director; and five meetings involving John Dean and Nixon. According to Dean, Nixon congratulated him on Sept 15 1972 for helping to limit indictments; Nixon first mentioned silence money and clemency with him on March 13 1973; Dean warned Nixon at two meetings on March 21, 1973 of a "cancer" growing on the presidency...
...told Nixon that he had been elected to end the Viet Nam War and that "if he hung onto it, it would be his war." The Senator did not receive another White House invitation for more than four years. That was doubtless fine with John Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman, the President's two top advisers at the time, who were referred to as "those two Nazis" by Saxbe. More recently, Saxbe likened Nixon and his claims of nonawareness of the Watergate cover-up to "the man who plays piano at a bawdy house for 20 years and says...
...used as the factual basis for a highly readable chronology, but without tedious reliance on long quotations. The writers hold to a minimum all of those cluttering qualifications that blurred the news reports as the affair originally unfolded. The crafty evasions of John Ehrlichman, the astounding forgetfulness of Bob Haldeman, the dogged denials of John Mitchell are generally tucked between parentheses. The authors clearly consider them nearly irrelevant and feel that the truth might be better served by not reading the parenthetical matter-as indeed it would...