The Nixon Tapes: Nixon and Haldeman Discuss Mark Felt
The Presidential Recordings Program (http://millercenter.org/academic/presidentialrecordings) at the University of Virginia's Miller Center of Public Affairs (http://www.millercenter.org) has a spectacular Watergate collection of Nixon tapes and transcripts online: "¢ http://tapes.millercenter.virginia.edu/transcript/nixon/watergate
In particular, there's this Oct. 19, 1972 conversation between Nixon and Robert Haldeman, in which Haldeman reports that he's heard from a confidential source that Mark Felt is leaking information to the news media about the FBI's investigation into the Watergate break-in:"¢ http://tapes.millercenter.virginia.edu/clips/1972_1019_felt/
Nixon also mentions Felt in the June 23, 1972 "Smoking Gun" conversation with Haldeman:"¢ http://tapes.millercenter.virginia.edu/transcript/nixon/smoking-gun
PRP scholar Ken Hughes puts the Nixon tapes in perspective in an online essay, Why Didn't Nixon Burn the Tapes? -- which also includes tapes and transcripts of Nixon-Haldeman conversations. "¢ http://tapes.millercenter.virginia.edu/exhibit/why-didnt-nixon-burn-tapes
Also feel free to use these tapes and transcripts in your stories and online exhibits, and to link to the transcripts. Please credit the Miller Center for the transcripts.
The Presidential Recordings Program is an ambitious effort to transcribe, annotate, and interpret more than 5,000 hours of the secret White House recordings of Presidents Roosevelt through Nixon. Between 1940 and 1973, six American presidents from both political parties recorded thousands of meetings and telephone calls. The Miller Center is the only institution with a team of scholars dedicated to making this unique historical record publicly accessible.
The Miller Center of Public Affairs is a leading nonpartisan public policy institution aimed at bringing together engaged citizens, scholars, members of the media, and government officials to focus on issues of national importance to the governance of the United States, with a special interest in the American presidency.