We argue that nuclear magnetic resonance experiments are a site-sensitive
probe for the electronic spectrum in the mixed state of the high-Tc
cuprates. Within a spin-fermion model, we show that the Doppler-shifted
electronic spectrum arising from the circulating supercurrent changes the
low-frequency behavior of the imaginary part of the spin-susceptibility. For a
hexagonal vortex lattice, we predict that these changes lead to {\it (a)} a
unique dependence of the 63Cu spin lattice relaxation rate, 1/T1, on
resonance frequency, and {\it (b)} a temperature dependence of T1 which
varies with frequency. We propose a nuclear quadrupole experiment to study the
effects of a uniform supercurrent on the electronic structure and predict that
T1 varies with the direction of the supercurrent.Comment: RevTex, 5 pages, 3 figures embedded in the tex