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  1. Nixon's refusal to comply with a subpoena for the tapes was the basis for an article of impeachment against him, and led to his resignation on August 9, 1974. On August 19, 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.

  2. Nixon recordings are numbered by location of the original recording. The locations are broken into five groups: White House Telephone Recordings: Tape #s 1 - 46. Cabinet Room Recordings: Tape #s 47 - 129. Camp David Recordings: Tape #s 130 - 244. Executive Office Building Recordings: Tape #s 245 - 449. Oval Office Recordings: Tape #s 450 – 949.

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  4. Executive Office Building: Audiotapes 348-448. Oval Office: Audiotapes 746-950. Tapes will be added as the National Archives continues its digitization project. For Tapes still pending online release, contact the Nixon Library to explore copies. White House Telephone - Audiotape 001 to Audiotape 046 - Phone Conversations.

  5. Aug 25, 2023 · A Sony tape recorder used to tape conversations in the White House. (Records of the Watergate Special Prosecution Force, RG 460) About sixty hours of Richard Nixon's White House tapes will be opened by the National Archives sometime in 1989. This is the first segment of the tapes to be opened, other than the twelve and a half hours of ...

    • How many hours did Nixon make a tape?1
    • How many hours did Nixon make a tape?2
    • How many hours did Nixon make a tape?3
    • How many hours did Nixon make a tape?4
    • How many hours did Nixon make a tape?5
  6. Jul 11, 2007 · On September 24, 1971, President Nixon met with Michael Naranjo, a Pueblo Indian and Vietnam War veteran who had been blinded by a grenade during the war. During this meeting, Mr. Naranjo, an artist, presented a gift to President Nixon, a bronze sculpture of a Pueblo Indian dancer.

  7. Jan 31, 2010 · It wasn't until after the Nixon Administration that the public learned about the combined 5,000 hours of secretly recorded conversations from all six administrations. The Uher 5000 was one of the tape-recording machines used in the White House. (Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum, National Archives and Records Administration, 2010.1.30)

  8. Jul 29, 2014 · Richard Nixon taped roughly 3,700 hours of his conversations as president. About 3,000 hours of those tapes have been released, while the rest remain closed to protect family privacy or national ...

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