Eisenhower's Executive OfficeBloomsbury Academic, 1999. gada 28. febr. - 224 lappuses When Dwight Eisenhower ran for president he was so confident that he could organize the Executive Office more effectively than his predecessor that he made it an issue in the campaign of 1952. When he entered office he found that Congress had given him just two months to reorganize the Council of Economic Advisers or see it dissolved. The changes he made in the Council still form the basis of its organization. This book, based largely on original sources, attempts to analyze what Eisenhower did and did not do, and how well the mechanisms he installed worked. |
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advice appointed April Arthur Flemming Assistant for National became Brundage budget bureau budget director Burns Cabinet chairman committee Congress coordination Council of Economic DDEL December decisions deputy developed Dillon Anderson discussion Dodge draft Dwight Economic Advisers Eisen Eisenhower Library Eisenhower's Elmer Staats established executive branch Executive Office February federal Finan Flemming functions Gordon Gray Harry Truman Hauge Hoover Ibid idea Jacoby January Joseph Dodge legislative Maurice Stans Memo ment Merriam Milton Eisenhower National Security Council NSC meetings NSC Organization NSC staff operations organizational PACGO papers personnel Planning Board position Prados Presidential problems programs proposal Psychological Strategy Board recommendations reorganization plan responsibility Robert Cutler Rockefeller role Saulnier Senate September served Sherman Adams special assistant Staats Interview Staff Secretary Stans thought tion told Truman vice president White House White House Office White House staff Whitman Administrative Files
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