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CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS-AUG. 7, 1974

I M P E A C H M E N T I N Q U I R Y - H E A R I N G S AND F I N A L R E P O R T

Resolved by the House of Representatives {the Senate concurring)^ That there shall be printed for use of the Committee on the Judiciary five thousand additional copies of all parts of its hearings concerning the impeachment inquiry, pursuant to H. Res. 803. SEC. 2. There shall be printed for the use of the House Committee on the Judiciary ten thousand additional copies of its final report to the House. Passed August 6, 1974.

HERBERT HOOVER-ONE HUNDREDTH BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY

2407 August 6, 1974 [H. Con. Res. 566]

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additional copies.

August 6, 1974 [s. Con. Res. 79]

Whereas Herbert Hoover, the thirty-first President of the United States, Avas born August 10, 1874, in a simple two-room cottage in the town of AVest Branch, Iowa; Whereas the Congress of the United States, by Act approved August 12, 1965 (79 Stat. 510), authorized the establishment of J^l^^^ "^^^ the Herbert Hoover National Historic Site, consisting of the Herbert Hoover birthplace and the place where he and his wife, Lou Henry Hoover, were buried, in West Branch, Iowa, to be administered by the Secretary of the Interior for the education and enjoyment of the public; and Whereas pursuant to the Presidential Libraries Act of August 12, 1955, the Administrator of General Services operates the Herbert ^'*4 USC 2101 Hoover Presidential Library at West Branch, Iowa, containing note. the personal and official papers of President Herbert Hoover: Now, therefore, be it Resolved by the Senate {the House of Representatives concurring)^ That the Congress hereby calls upon the Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of General Services to cause to be conducted on or about August 10, 1974, appropriate ceremonies in celebration of the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Herbert Hoover, thirty-first President of the United States, in the town of West Branch, Iowa. Agreed to August 6, 1974.

JOINT ECONOMIC COMMITTEE S T U D Y ON I N F L A T I O N

Whereas the United States economy has been suffering from serious and persistent inflation; and Whereas unemployment continues to be an economic problem, for the present as well as the near future; and Whereas extremely high interest rates have caused serious disclocations in the housing industry, in small business, and in other sectors of the economy; and Whereas the economy of the United States has been upset by shortages of basic resources; and Whereas prospective shortages continue to be a cause of concern; and Whereas solutions to these economic ills require the consideration of a large number of interrelated policy questions; and

August 7, 1974 [S. Con. Res. 93]

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