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THE WAS HING T ON DAILY NEWS
D e cember 10, 1965
.
,:
., -
•·•
.,.. "-t . .." ' _
-
,,
THE shadow cast by threat of coming immense. Grafn ships stacked up in
world famine deepens with the Bombay har)>or last spring, at a muc_h _
emergency U. S. decision
-
their
countries
cou:itries
improvem,mt
may be directed
school system
than !laving a well articulated
p!'ojects
of new economic
objective
as in the
may be
policy,
in the smaller
in agriculture
toward
in
establishing
a
and this may be more
natic :ial
-
will strike India in August, September and October just before
the new crop is gathered in November, the following suggestion
is
offered for consideration.
The accession of the new Indian Prime Minister presents~
logical occasion to suggest that the mounting
- job of responding to the Indian famine. He isolated two iasuea of
immediate concern: (1) He had tG de-eide how to arrange the mission to
New Delhi that be had promised to Subra.mantam.
After sending a technical
group, he was thinking of leading a hlgh
-
primarily
through
state governments.
It is making a significant
contribution
toward
the health of the new
generation
in India, but what may be even more important
in the long
run, it is helping
the states
to establish
and gain operating
experience
- level demarches
include Kaul-Guhan
contacts with AID mention the probto Handley and Farr.
Working--level
lem almost daily.
,
HHS
DEC!
E0.1 ~
NSC'Me n 1 1/3
8/r·
N "';.A, D
t01
the leuet.ary
TiaDUIRII
1/8
DA • WUU•
1\11.RCt I
J.
HaDIIJ.q
+.r
-
descript~.ons
The major programs
annually
union specialist,
)
the United State
recipient.
contractors,
and doctors.
3
intimately
smaller
ones,
schools,
new·
are an exciting
university
in the economic
story.
hundreds
!
of peo~le,
Moreover
-
shipments
since P. L. 480 began in 1954 to 155 million metric tons of farm
products worth $14. 6 billion.
--New Commercial
Record:
Total U.S. agricultural
exports in 1965-
both P. L. 480 and commercial--reached
$6. 2 billion.
The $4. 8 billion in
normal
- for the Record
(Confidential)
12-27--65
Dept. of State to Am Embassy New Delhi
(Secret)
12-30-65
A
Dept. of State to Am.Embassy New Delhi
(Confidential)
12-30-65
A
McG. B. to the President (with Secret
attachment Komer to Pres.)
1-8-66
A
Memor and urn
- --the
consumers
also continued to rise--120
million more mouths every year.
vidual in the developing
in 1957-58.
countries
number
new humans every minute;
The result
was little better
indi
off in 1966 than he was
conditions
of per
over the period
- .
1,
I
l
DECLASSIFIED
E.O 13292,Sec.3.4
/
State Dept. Guidel~e s -cu
NARAiOate-:1'3 O__,,\
By~
I
, SECRET
-2-
1002,
October
15·, from New Delhi
(SECTION I OF III)
.. . \
.IN SUM, FROM ·INFORMATION NOW AVAILABLE,
\IE THINK DIRECT ECON
- ,
and mental retardation
which are the tragic consequences
of malnutrition.
United States food aid programs
entered a new
In 1966, however,
and more critical
stage.
The world's food problem was growing -- not
diminishing.
Despite our efforts,
serious food
- for goods
subscription
drive has reportedly
on Indian
need.
Has been considering
a
1,306
one
294
New Zealand
Has offered
1000 tons of milk powder worth NZ h 105,000
Norway
Has decided
to make a $350,000
Sweden
rne government has offered a grant
- percent
Future increases
raising
.,
in simple
the supply or new land that
can readily be brought under cultivation.
I:!
during its
The net area sown is
during the Fourth Plan period.
in food output· must cane almost entirely
output per acre
- THE ALLOCATION
Of INTERNAL·
RESOURCES,BUT FOREIGN.EXCHANGE
.•..
DECI..A.SSIHED
AuthotttySM{t ,~
IY1ftz
Bv~
N~.
Date
318-f:1
--€0NFIDEN11AL.:.-
,,
C~fAi
-2-
1440, December 8, (SECTIO~ 1 OF 4),
from New Delhi
0
FOR THE PURPOSEOF _m·ciUNG~.. SELF
- ,~i
MEMORANDUM
FOR THE PRESIDENT
t,11'~ ('( ~(1--'fI"'-
,,,,,,,
'
Good news on India food.
The Canadians
announced
yesterday
they will give India during this calendar
year about one million
tons of food, mainly
wheat and flour, worth about $71