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  • Library oral histories: http://discoverlbj.org/exhibits/show/loh/oh 6 meeting, and they'd do a memo, and such . Here we had a procedure that assured that the President got at least a quarterly review regularly of what was new in the economy, whether
  • of Congress U l M:>nthly IL Yo.le Review Yo.le U. Press U 1 Quarterly IL u 6 Legislative Iteos Recot:JDended by the President u 6 Weekly 3-M/R routes 3-IL Not~s froo Congressional Record u 6 Dnily Pre ss Releases u 2 As published 3-M
  • a--Wayne Kelley is a guy who is now with the Congressional Quarterly here, but at the time was at the Atlanta Journal, and this is something that might be worthwhile for your archives if they're not already there--magazine piece on the relationship between
  • for meetings, and the meetings were--I can't even be sure now whether they were quarterly or monthly--monthly maybe. about that. I'm even now a little vague But other than their meetings, the commissioners would arrive and we'd have an agenda for them, and I
  • -- 3 finally, at that time, the Bell-Dillon-Heller layer. This served both as a kind of factual agent to give the President something like a quarterly review--I don't know that we were quite that systematic but that was the objective--of the economic
  • have a call from Warren Smith--this was following the forecast model for the Council at the time. He raised a number of quite doubting questions about how we would get to nine hundred twenty billion dollars on a quarterly pattern through