The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, November 14, 1968, Image 4

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    THE BATTALION
Pag-e 4 College Station, Texas Thursday, November 14, 1968
Nixon To Shake Up
Presidential Staff
NEW YORK (JP) — Richard M.
Nixon made it clear Wednesday
he plans a major shakeup of the
traditional White House staff
system. And a top aide indicated
the president-elect intends to be
a more “activist” president than
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Nixon announced through a
spokesman the appointment of a
second assistant to the president
— H. R. “Bob” Haldeman, 42, a
Los Angeles advertising execu
tive, who will handle general
administrative matters and Nix
on’s daily schedule.
Haldeman, a chief of staff for
Nixon during the campaign, told
newsmen there’ll be only three
or four jobs comparable to his,
all of them “generalists” involved
in general planning rather than
details.
“We don’t want specific people
locked into specific boxes,” Hal
deman told a briefing session at
the Hotel Pierre, where the Nixon
camp is working out the details
of the transition of power Jan.
20.
There won’t be a press secre
tary or appointments secretary
as such in the Nixon administra
tion, he said. There was specu
lation, for example, that Herbert
G. Klein, Nixon’s communications
chief during the campaign, would
become an assistant to the presi
dent, with Ron Ziegler, the travel
ing press secretary in the cam
paign, serving as a special assist
ant doing the detail work with
the press.
Beneath the three or four as
sistants to the president, Halde
man said, there will be several
special assistants assigned to spe
cific areas of responsibility.
The staff will be smaller than
in other recent administrations,
Haldeman said, and will certainly
be one of the youngest.
With this kind of organization,
Haldeman indicated in answer to
questions, the president-elect will
be a more activist president than
Eisenhower, whom he served as
vice president.
“I think,” he said, “he’ll be
very much in it from the begin
ning.”
The preliminary planning for
the White House staff was done
during the campaign, Haldeman
said, and the details are still
being worked out. The first as
sistant named, on Tuesday, was
Bryce N. Harlow, 52, a White
House aide in the Eisenhower
Administration.
“We’ve spent a lot of time on
a review of the White House
staff,” Haldeman said. “We’ve
talked to a number of people
who held the posts in past and
present administrations and we
feel there are a lot of ways we
can improve the White House
staff structure.”
m
HOFFA REBEL TAKES A BEATING
An unidentified assailant kicks Bernard Jacubus, 43, dur
ing- rukus outside Detroit’s Teamster Hall. Jacubus was
beaten while passing out literature challenging imprisoned
Teamster president James R. Hoffa’s slate of officers.
Inside the hall Hoffa was renominated for another term as
head of home Local 299. (AP Wirephoto)
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