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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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030689
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03068900.050
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1990-09-17
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FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
Stories like John Tower's come along with uncomfortable
regularity on Capitol Hill. Hays Gorey knows that. TIME's chief
congressional correspondent can't stay away from the beat he first
covered more than 20 years ago. Back then, Gorey watched the Senate
agonize over passing judgment on another of its own: in the dock
in 1967 was Connecticut's Thomas Dodd, eventually censured for a
misuse of campaign funds. Now happily back on the Hill after a
two-decade hiatus reporting on national politics, Gorey finds
Congress is still just as loath to bring down a colleague.
Last Thursday evening Gorey watched it happen again. A Senate
aide told him that the Senate Armed Services Committee was about
to hold its momentous vote on whether John Tower, the former G.O.P.
Senator from Texas, should be the nation's next Secretary of
Defense. Gorey hustled over to Room 608 of the Senate Dirksen
Office Building. But he knew the outcome even before the vote was
taken. "After I got there, two Senators, Republicans John McCain
and Pete Wilson, arrived," Gorey recalls. "I could see by their
glum expressions that they knew Tower did not have the votes."
That kind of prescience comes with the territory. Gorey is,
after all, no stranger to Capitol controversies involving
senatorial indiscretions. Since he last covered Congress, he has
kept TIME's readers abreast of a number of national scandals, from
Chappaquiddick to Watergate to Iran-contra. Although last week's
vote against Tower ran strictly along party lines, Gorey hastens
to point out that the flap is not as partisan as it may seem.
"Senators are co-workers who see one another daily, travel together
and become friends," Gorey explains. "Senators do not exult in the
fall of a colleague." Nor, contrary to popular opinion, do
journalists such as Gorey. "No one finds joy in the misfortune of
politicians. Members of Congress are pretty much like the rest of
us," he says, "but less fortunate in one respect. Most of us are
not compelled to read about our indiscretions on the front page or
hear them recited on the nightly news."