Date: January 30, 1973

Time: 6:15 pm – 6:45 pm

Location: Executive Office Building

The President met with H. R. (“Bob”) Haldeman.

Press relations

-Henry A. Kissinger

-Mood

-Conversation with Ronald L. Ziegler

-Conversation with Haldeman

-White House plans

-Memorandum

-Transcript

-James B. (“Scotty”) Reston

-Leaks

-President’s response

-Motives of foreign governments

-Distortions

-Quote on bombing

-Loyalty

-Quote on bombing

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Mar.-09)

-Peter Lisagor

-President’s opponents

-Ziegler

-“Peace is at hand” press conference

-References to President

-December 1972 press conference

-References to President

-Motives

-January 23, 1973 press conference

-Vietnam settlement

-References to President

-Nguyen Van Thieu

-Negotiations

-Concerns

-Washington Post

-Purpose of Haldeman’s conversation

-Reston

-Joseph C. Kraft

-Relations with Alexander M. Haig, Jr.

-January 23, 1973 press conference

-“Peace with honor”

-Vietnam settlement

-Relations to President’s policy

-Reston

-Kraft

-John F. Osborne

-George S. McGovern

-Statements on President’s policy

-Reston

-Bombing

-Conversation with Haldeman

-Public relations

-Stories on relations between President and Kissinger

An unknown person entered at an unknown time after 6:15 pm.

Delivery

The unknown person left at an unknown time before 6:45 pm.

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Mar.-09)

-Bombing and negotiations

-Stories on Vietnam settlement

-Effectiveness

-Cost

-Stories on President’s role

-Kissinger’s role

-Jerrold L. Schecter

-Bombing

-Communications with political left

-Motives

-Bernard Gwertzman

-Reston

-Conversation with Haldeman

-President’s role in peace process

-Kissinger’s role

-President’s role in Vietnamization

-1968 campaign statements

-Melvin R. Laird

-Defense Department

-President’s role in PRC trip

-Writing

-President’s views on Soviet Union

-President’s decisions

-November 3, 1969

-Cambodia, Laos

-May 8, 1972

-December 1972

-Kissinger’s role

-Future statements by Kissinger

-Hanoi trip

-“Peace with honor”

-Liberal establishment

-Destruction

-President’s critics

-US as world power

-“Peace with honor”

-Results

-US credibility

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Mar.-09)

-President’s role in peace process

-Congress, the media

-Courage

-Wisdom

-President’s decisions

-November 3, 1969

-Cambodia, Laos

-May 8, 1972

-December 1972 bombing

-Consequences of premature US withdrawal

-“Bloodbath”

-Communist takeover

-December 1972 bombing

-Results, justifications

-President’s and Kissinger’s roles

-Targets

-“Terror bombing”

-Liberal establishment’s credibility

-President’s achievements

-Bureaucracy, Congress, opinion leaders

-Liberal establishment

-Consequences of views

-Vietnam, allies, enemies

-Statements

-Television [TV]

-Vietnam settlement

-Defense

-January 23, 1973 press conference

-President’s role

-Press contacts

-Reston

-White House PR plan

-Haldeman’s conversation with Ziegler

-Kissinger

-Evaluation of TV appearances

-Press reaction

-President’s role in December 1972 bombing

-Negotiations

-Announcement

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NIXON PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM

Tape Subject Log

(rev. Mar.-09)

-Importance

-Kissinger’s dissemination of story

-Trip to Hanoi

-POWs return

-Kissinger

-January 23, 1973 press conference

-Amnesty

-President’s conversation with Kissinger

-Sweden

-Canada

-Possible penalty

-Peace Corps

-Domestic Council

-Moral issue

-Kissinger

-Conversation with Haldeman

-Purpose

-Ziegler

-Memorandum

-Kissinger

-Conversation with Haldeman

-John A. Scali, William P. Rogers

-Kissinger

-Motives

-“Georgetown Set”

-Choices

Haldeman left at 6:45 pm.