Don't forget to vote today THE Michigan Daily Vol. LXXXIV, No. 56-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, August 6, 1974 Ten Cents Twelve Pages 'Xe HELD B EVIDE CE Backers abandon President WASHINGTON UP) -- President Nixon admitted yesterday that he withheld Watergate evidence from Congress and his own lawyers. The new evidence that Nixon made public shows that he authorized an attempt to thwart an FBI Water- gate investigation. Nixon also acknowledged that his impeachment by the House is "vir- tually a foregone conclusion" and that he will stand trial in the Sen- ate. REFERRING to his failure to turn over the evidence, Nixon said it was a "serious act of omission for which I take full responsibility and which I deep- ly regret." Nixon's statement and the disclosure of three new transcripts evoked strong negative reactions and calls for resigna- tion or impeachment from members of Congress, including some of those hither- to most steadfast in the President's de- fense. Tape excerpts, Page 10 One transcript shows that within a week after the June 17, 1972, Watergate breakin-, Nixon okayed a plan by his top aide to use the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to blunt the FBI's inves- tigation. THE TRANSCRIPT also shows that White House chief of staff H. R. :'Bob" Haldeman then told Nixon that his cam- paign director, John Mitchell, may have had some general prior knowledge of the wiretapping and break-in. He said Mitchell and White House Counsel John Dean had suggested get- ting top CIA officials to tell acting FBI director Patrick Gray to "Stay the hell out of this." Nixon concurred. The latest developments were sur- rounded by strong reaction's from de- fenders of the President. ! Rep. Charles Wiggins, (R-Calif.) who led the President's defense on the House Judiciary Committee, called for Nixon's impeachment. . Rep. Wiley Mayne, (R-Iowa) anoth- er supporter on the committee, said he is reversing his previous position and also will vote for impeachment. WiGGIS: . .I. is a time tor wte President, the Vice President, the Chief Justice and the leaders of the House and Senate, to gather in the White House to discuss the orderly transition of power from Richard Nixon to Gerald Ford. * Sen. Robert Griffin, (R-Mich.) the Republican whip in the Senate, called for Nixon to resign. Griffin made his state- ment before Nixon revealed the latest transcript. * Vice President Gerald Ford, pre- viously a vocal candidate of of Presi- dent's innocence, said he would no long- er discuss impeachment in public "until the facts are more fully available." NIXON SAID in a written statement: "In order to insure that no other sig- nificant relevant materials are withheld, I shall voluntarily furnish to the Senate everything" from 64 tapes, ordered sur- rendered by the Supreme Court, which U. S. District Judge John Sirica "rules should go to the special prosecutor." Nixon said that last May he listened to two of the three June 23 conversations. See NIXON, Page 8 AP Photo BEFORE PRESIDENT Nixon's announcement yesterday, Sen. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.) called for him to resign. "We have arrived at a point where both the national interest and his own interest will be served by resignation," he said.