Miner, Ralph E.2023-06-272023-06-271961-06https://hdl.handle.net/1794/28446121 pagesSpring of 1956, Congress passed the Treasury-Post Office department's appropriation bill which included $2,984,340,000 for the operation of the Post Office Department for the 1957 fiscal year, beginning July 1, 1956. The appropriated amount was $15,660,000 less than requested by the President in his 1957 Budget. The House of Representatives had approved a report of its Committee of Appropriations which recommended a cut of $26,100,000, and the Senate had approved a reduction of $5,220,000. The conference committee recommended an even split of the difference between the two amounts, and this compromise passed both the House and Senate on March 28, with a minimum of debate. The President signed the bill into law on April 2, 1956.enCreative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0-US1958 Regular Appropriation1957 Deficiency Requesthouse hearingssenate hearingshouse debateUltimatum to Congress: A Case Study of a Deficiency AppropriationThesis / Dissertation