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Thursday November 14, 1974
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This Day In 1970's History: Thursday November 14, 1974
  • Nelson Rockefeller, on the second day of questioning by the Senate Rules Committee, agreed to pledge to make no gifts or loans to federal employees if confirmed as Vice President, except for "nominal" gifts for birthdays or weddings or "in the event of medical hardships of a compelling human character." He spent five and a half hours at the hearing. Former Associate Justice Arthur Goldberg was then called as a witness. He was the subject of a derogatory campaign biography that involved financing by Mr. Rockefeller and a brother, Laurance Rockefeller. [New York Times]
  • President Ford declared that it was time for Congress "to fish or cut bait" in confirming his nomination of Nelson Rockefeller as Vice President, made nearly three months ago. "There should be a specific deadline for both the President to nominate and for the Congress to confirm a Vice President," Mr. Ford said. He will ask the next Congress to re-examine the seven-year-old 25th Amendment under which Mr. Rockefeller was nominated and Mr. Ford became Vice President last year. [New York Times]
  • The government issued new figures on the economy that showed a resumption of the steep climb in wholesale food prices in October, some abatement in the upward movement of other prices and further evidence of an overall slowdown in the economy. Wholesale food prices last month rose 4.7 percent, increasing the overall index of wholesale prices by 2.3 percent. [New York Times]
  • The Ford administration is taking a gloomier view of the nation's economic prospects in the coming months because of a worse-than-expected decline in automobile sales and increasing layoffs in assembly plants. The President's economic advisers are revising their estimates downward for economic activity and upward for unemployment throughout the economy. [New York Times]
  • President Ford personally rebuked Gen. George Brown for his critical comments about American Jews but said later that he had "no intention" of replacing him as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mr. Ford reaffirmed his support of General Brown at a news conference in Phoenix, Ariz. Earlier in the day he had summoned General Brown to the Oval Office to reprimand him for his comments at Duke University last month suggesting that the Jewish community had undue influence in Congress and controlled banks and newspapers. [New York Times]
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