More than 12 hours of the infamous Watergate tapes are now online. These
tapes are of Oval Office conversations following the 1972 burglary of the
Offices of the Democratic national committee in the Watergate office,
residence, and entertainment complex in Washington. We hear all the gems:
John Dean declares a cancer on the Presidency; richard Nixon explores a
smoking gun, and H.R. Halderman develops a cover up. There are also other
historical tapes on the site. There are no Monica tapes <grin>
kelly
February 9, 2000
The Watergate Tapes: Nixon and Dean Online
The Associated Press
_________________________________________________________________
Many people have a favorite moment from the Nixon White House
tapes. For Jerry Goldman, a professor of political science at
Northwestern University, it is the point at which John Dean sneaks
up on the phrase "cancer on the presidency" in a conversation with
President Richard M. Nixon.
"I remember when Dean testified about having this conversation with
the president and was not believed at the time," Dr. Goldman said.
"But he knew about the taping at the White House and he knew that
he could be vindicated by these tapes."
Dr. Goldman is taking the 12 1/2 hours of White House tapes that
were recently released by the National Archives and posting them on
the Web site History and Politics Out Loud (www.hpol.org)
, an online library of American political recordings. "I had to pay
$432 to get all the tapes," Dr. Goldman said. "I thought, 'Gee,
these belong to the American people.' "
With the help of a RealPlayer, which can be downloaded, listeners
can hear the original words of Mr. Nixon, Mr. Dean and Mr. Haldeman
and follow the conversation with synchronized transcripts. The
site, which Dr. Goldman operates in partnership with Michigan State
University, also features recordings of Presidents Franklin D.
Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr.
Dr. Goldman began posting the Watergate tapes with the notable
conversations about the break-in, the "smoking gun" and his
favorite exchange between Mr. Dean and Mr. Nixon. "The quality of
the audio is particularly crisp," Dr. Goldman said of the cancer
conversation. "And it's really riveting."
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