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  • PAPER General Nuclear Testing (B-la) Cuba - Status (B-7) European and Atlantic Political B C Situa~ion (B-8) D Laos (B-6) Communist Bloc (B-3) The EEC and Trade Negotiations MLF (B-4) (B-9) E F G H German, Italian, and United Kingdom Economic Aid
  • - - that in the political and economic sphere, we are in good shape with the Germans; that we are doing a respectable job in foreign aid. 2. They have gotten away from Adenauer's rigid attitude towards the East. 3. In the broadest sense, the U. S. and Germany have a lot
  • Wilson said if the Franc is devalued 15%, the pound would be under great pressure. The meeting of ten in Bonn on British urging. But after it was called, Jenkins said (after the new German tax was announced) it should be called off. Fowler felt we had
  • both by the govern­ ments in the developing areas and the aid organizations committed to help them. It will require changes in attitude and in method to do the job. The second point is narro_wer. It relates relation between agricultural diversification
  • to think Federal aid ought to go through Governors rather than to cities. The President said few governors had experience on police problems, but that was the House decision. The President said he'd asked for 50 bills concerning cities and had gotten 36
  • MANIII and POSEIDONmissiles, carrying multiple re-entry vehicles and equipped with modern penetration aids, will be capable of inflicting un­ damage to the acceptable Soviet Union. It is believed by some ex­ perts that the Soviet con­ ducted extensive
  • drastically reduced because of US military aid cuts and pressures to strengthen the civilian economy. The twelve ROKAand two US divisions in South Korea had, since 1970, keyed their defense plans almost entirely to the early use of nuclear weapons