4 Page Nine Thusday, May 5, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thusday, May 5, ~977 THE MICH(GAN DAILY Page Nine Nixon addresses Watergate issues (Continued from Page 1) and Nixon called the interview- er "attorney for the prosecu- tion." THAT IS exactly the way, Frost's staff had characterized his interrogation of Nixon at a rented house near San Clem- ente, Calif. One researcher said the interview was designed as a substitute for the trial Nixon never had. Nixon recalled that when he asked for the resignation of his top aides, H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman in late April 1973, he considered resigning too. But, he said, he stayed in office because of his concerns about approaches to China and the Soviet Union and the Viet- nam peace agreement. "I just didn't make mistakes in this period," Nixon said, adding that with the pressures of investigations by Congress and Watergate prosecutors "I said' things that were not true." FOR THAT, he said, he has deep regret. "It snowballed. And, it was my fault. I'm not blaming any- body else," he added. "I'm simply saying to you that as Voter fraud memo far as I'm concerned, I not only regret it; I indicated my own beliefs in this matter when I resigned. People didn't think it was enough to admit mistakes, fine. If they want me to get down and grovel on the floor, no. Never." Nixon said he might have won in a Senate impeachment trial, but that would have left the country without a full-time president. It was the same re- frain he sounded when he an, nounced his resignation, saying then that he had lost his politi- cal base. "I have impeached myself, [urned y. Gen. Executive privilege is the claim based on the constitutional separation of powers that the executive branch has used to withhold information t'rom Con- gress. The claim is usually cited to protect presidential com- mmications. HE SAID that in the Novem- ber 1976 election, well oVer 60 million eligible persons did not -vote. that speaks for itself," he said. "By resigning, that was a vol- untary impeachment . . . you're wanting me to say that I par- ticipated in an illegal cover-up? No." MUCH OF THE Frost inter- view concerned the meeting Nixon had with the counsel to the president, John Dean, in the Oval Office on March 21, 1973- the day when Dean laid out for him the deep cover-up involve- ment, of Nixon's top aide in the now-famed "cancer on the pres- idency" speech. Said Nixon: "During that period, I wlll ad- mit, that I started acting as lawyer for their defense. I will admit that acting as lawyer for their defense, I was not prose- cuting the case. "I CAME to the edge, and under the circumstances, I would have to sgy that a rea- sonable person could call that a cover-up. I didn't intend it as a cover-up. Let me say, if I in- tended to cover-up, believe me, I'd have done it. "You know how I could have done it? So easily. I could have done it immediately after the election simply by giving clem- ency to everybody and the whole thing would have gone away. "I couldn't do that because I said 'Clemency was wrong." Nixon told of his meeting at (Camp David, Md., with Halde- man and Ehrlichman in late April 1973 when he asked for their resig'satiions. He said that he- cried then, for-the first time since President Dwight Eisen- hower died. NIXON DIDN'T mention that he offered the two men the use of a $2011000 fund, held by his friend Bebe Rebozo, for any legal problems they faced. Ehr- lichman testified to that at his trial. Nixongrecalled his meeting with congressional leaders just before he announced his own resignation. He said Rep. Les Arends, an Illinois Republican, was shaking and sobbing,balong with half the other people in the room. "Just can't stand seeing some- body else cry, and that ended it for me," Nixon said. "I sort of cracked up; started to cry; pushed my chair b~ack, and then L blnrted it ant, and Isaid: 'I'm sorry. I ist hope I haven't let you down.' That said it all. I had. "i let down my friends. I let down the coduntry. I let down our system of government and the dreams of all those young people that ought to get into government but think it's all too corrupt and the rest . WASHINGTON (T) - Deputy Atty. Gen. Peter Flaherty de- cided yesterday to let Congress have a J u s t i c e Department memorandum warning of a pos- sible increase in fraudulent vot- ing under the administration's election-day registration bill. He had refused at a Senate Rules Committe hearing earlier in the day to turn over a copy of the memorandum. He said, in answer to a question, that he was invoking executive privi- lege. LATER, HOWEVER, a Jus- tice Department spokesman said that only the President can in- voke executive privilege and that President Carter had not given Flaherty permission to do Mark Sheehan, a department public inforamtion officer, told a reporter that Flaherty subse- quently decided to send the Senate committee a copy of the memorandum. He said a copy also would be given to a House committee that is considering the legislation.- Sheehan said Flaherty had wanted an opportunity to read the memo before making it available to Congress, and now has done so. AT THE SENATE hearing, Flaherty testiifed that it was an internal memo that he had never seem and, before agreeing to let the committee have it, he wanted to discuss it with Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell. The voting bill was among the electoral proposals submitted to Congress by President Carter, on March 22. It would permit persons to register on election day at a polling place and then vote in presidential and congres- sional elections. The memorandum prepared by the Justice Department's criminal division was disclosed at a hearing of the Senate panel. SEN. ROBERT Griffin (R- Mich.) said he had not seen the memo but was informed it de- clared the Carter administra- tion bill would be "an invitation to. fraud".. - Just what he -and other GOP opponenrs of the'-leg- islation contend. Questioned by Griffin about the memo, Flaherty said he had never heard of it. However, in response to an injury by Griffin, a lawyer in the criminal divi- sion, Craig Donsanto, acknowl- edged he had a copy with him. Griffin said he and other com- mittee members would like to see it so they could have the benefit of the department's re- search. Flaherty refused to let Donsanto give it to the com- mittee. "ARE YOU claiming execu- tive privilege," Griffin asked. "Yes, sir," Flaherty replied. BLODY CAESA jj RE! thtwas Dagtona'. Reemertgor Friends, Romans, Students... Take your thirsts and your empty glasses! And refill them with Bloody Caesars ... Relive the fun and com- raderie that was Florida last March. So "Caesar" every occasion, rushes, rallies, forums, quorums, parties and clambakes. Make every month "Bloody Caesar" season . Until you go Roamin' to Daytona again next year! ..... Where House Records and Here'sHow: BLOODY CAESAR Solo (for cozy dialogues) Vodka over icc in large glass Fill with CLAMATO Season if you like Garnish with lemon ssedge or celery stalk. G Daffy-Mll iCo. Inc. BLOODY CAIESAR ForuaMs, Quorums, Clambakes 4 Quarts of CLAMA TO 1 bottle of Vodka Season if you like (tabasco, Worcestershire, salt, pepper) Celery stalk and some lemons. Serves about 2, 6 oz,. servings. I nough for 8-10 Roman hordes rTT -u s~ tick os ow'- n S~r. eotr~g $7 Reserved $6 General Admission Sorry no personal checks