Word: recessive
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...93rd U.S. Congress began last week on the eve of the Chinese New Year, the Year of the Tiger. But there were very few tigers in evidence among the returning 431 Congressmen and 100 Senators. Their sojourn among the voters back home during the 29-day holiday recess exposed them to an American public that was angry, suspicious, impatient and sour, and one, moreover, that was sharply divided on how to solve the nation's problems. Energy shortages, exploding prices, dwindling jobs, all conspired to make 1974, for most legislators, loom as their Year of the Nervous Stomach...
...tape report also came at a time when Representatives and Senators touring their home districts during a congressional recess had detected no overriding tide of opinion for the impeachment of the President. Ford had even declared, wishfully perhaps, that "the corner has been turned," and Nixon was regaining popularity. Fresh opinion polls quickly challenged that optimistic assumption. A Louis Harris Survey indicated that Operation Candor had been a dismal flop. Despite it, Nixon had skidded to a low point in popularity: only 30% of the public found his job performance acceptable. More significant, for the first time a plurality...
...largely unsuccessful Operation Candor was over. Nixon, said a White House spokesman, will now turn to "dealing with the problems and issues that he feels are good for the country." Yet there is no way to simply turn the key on Watergate. Despite the fact that Congress was in recess and the President still in seclusion in California (see following stories), last week three fresh developments produced a variety of new problems and worries for the White House. The three...
...arrived at the hard core," said a staff member of the Senate Watergate Committee as he looked forward to the return of Congress next week after the extended Christmas recess. With the Senate investigation of Watergate nearly completed, Congress is finally facing the crucial question: to impeach or not to impeach Richard Nixon. GEORGE TAMES-Last week, while most of their congressional bosses were vacationing and sampling public opinion, staffers of the House Judiciary Committee and the Senate Watergate Committee were compiling evidence that will eventually supply the answer to the question...
...Price, Dean of the Kennedy Law School, said Monday that the Corporation confirmed his selection for the God kin lecturer during the Christmas recess...