3age Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, August 9. 1974 SNixon cites past record wt h i By AP and UPI In announcing his resignation, former President Richard Nix- on dwelled heavily on his past achievements and his hopes for the future of the United States. The following is a partial text of his remarks which were broadcast on nation-wide tele- vision beginning at 9 p.m. yes- terday. His address lasted slightly more than 15 minutes. "This is the 37th time I have spoken to you from this office where so many decisions have been made that shape the his- tors of the nation. I have always tried to do what is best for the nation. Therefore, I shall resign the presidency effective at noon Friday ..." In turning os-er the office to Gerald Ford, Nixon said "S know, as I said when I nomi- nated him, that the leadership of America will be in good hands, but as he assumes that responsihility he will des'erve the help and the support of all of us." Nixon went on to say that he would have preferred to have carried to the finish" the im- peachment process "despite the personal agony and my family unanimously urged me to do z so. - But he said he had lost the base in Congress to continue in office and thus would. turn over the reigns of government to AP Photo Ford. The former president, as he often had done, cited his part in ending the Vietnam War and presidential helping bring peace to the ting Nixon's world. "We must complete a struc- ture of peace so that it can be said of our generation of Amer- icans that not only did we end one war, we helped prevent s others. ; I shall leave this office with regret," Nixon said. He called the Sita years of his administra- tion "a momentous time, a time of achievement," "As we look to the future, the first essential is to begin healing the wounds of the na- tion," Nixon said, as well as to restore the strength and high ideals of America as a "great and free people" "By taking this action, I hope I will speed this process," he said. Nixon said he had regrets for some of the things he had done. "If some of my judgments were wrong, and some of them were wrong, they were taken in what I felt to be the best in- terests of the nation." Ile thanked the friends and supporters who had stuck with him and said he would be "eternally grateful." "And to those who have not felt able to give me their sup- port, let me say I leave with- itt bitterness to those who op- pose me. "All of us have been con- cerned with the good of the country whatever our judgment might have been. So let us all join together in our common commitment and helping our new president." Nixon said he had always "fought for what I believe in" and tried to meet his respon- sibilities. "Sometimes I have succeed- ed. Sometimes I have failed," he said, "but I have always taken heart" from Theodore Roosevelt's famous tribute to those who fought hard for what they thought right. Nixon said he took an oath 52 years ago to help bring peace to the world, and "I have done my very best to be true to that pledge. This more than anything I hoped to achieve. This more than anything I hoped to be my legacy." As a result he said he thinks Americans now have a better chance for "living in peace rather than dying in war." "May God's grace be with you in all your days," Nixon said, his voice calm in the mo- ments of high drama, Nixon pledged that "as long as there is a breath of life in my body," he would continue to work for the cause of peace. ~ Nixon said he has done his best and is confident "the world is a safer place today for America and all nations, and all our children have a better chance than before of living in peace rather than dying in war. " He said he entered the presi- dency with "a very personal sense of kinship with each and every American." Vindicated? SENATOR GEORGE McGOVERN (D-S.D.), who lost to Richard Nixon in the 1972 race by a landslide vote, reads a Washington newspaper headline yesterday torecas resignation. Use Daily Classified Gillo Pontecorro's 1966 BATTLE OF ALGIERS The most sympathetic portrait of the gruesome death of French colonialism, gripping semi-documentary style. (French subtitles) . .4c cs'+' .s+ .. , : M i ' ; THE ANN ARBOR ART ASSOCIATION PRESENTS A Pottery Sale FOR THOSE INDIVIDUALS WHO APPRECIATE FINE CRAFTSMANSHIP on Display at CENTICORE BOOKSTORE MAYNARD ST. Friday-Sunday: 10 a.m.-10 p.m. f i ail ) ; jl , I; l { Sat.: ONE DAY IN THE LIFE OF IVAN DENISOVICH SHOWS AT 7:30 AND 9:45 ANGELL HAI CINEMA 1 1 tickets on sale AUD. CIEMoi uS 6.30 p-. adm. QLGA MADAR President, Coalition of Labor Union Women WILL SPEAK ON Trade Unions and the Working Woman: A History of Strife, a Future of Power Tuesday, August 13-8:00 p.m. Lecture Room 1, MLB Sponsored by the Women's Studies Office Admission is FREE Information: 763-2047