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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
The problem with which your Committee has been concerned since its appointment early in 1941 is the place of Congress in the American scheme of government under the emergency conditions of peace and war that have prevailed during the past decade. We have asked ourselves such questions as these:
1. What changes have taken place in the relations between Congress and the Executive? Why? Has there been in fact any surrender of power and responsibility by Congress? If so, to what extent? How can an organic and continuous relationship between Congress and the Executive be established?
* The Committee on Congress was appointed in February, 1941, by President Frederic A. Ogg and reappointed, with one or two changes in personnel, a year later by President William Anderson. Its membership is as follows: Marshall E. Dimock, Washington, D. C.; Pendleton Herring, Harvard University; Meyer Jacobstein, Brookings Institution; Robert D. Leigh, Federal Communications Commission; Benjamin B. Wallace, U. S. Tariff Commission; Schuyler C. Wallace; Columbia University; George B. Galloway (chairman), Washington, D. C. The preliminary report presented herewith is as of the date June 30, 1942.
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