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  • ·commitments by Appropriation Category (U~s. Fiscal Ye.ars - Millions of Dollars) Gr-and Total Development Loans Technical Cooperation/ Development Grants Supporting Assistance Contingency Fund 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 (Gross) 1,068 901
  • discrimi. natory ....• ::5 employment sub-contractors by Government and in Federally The DOT cooperates ing this practices with assisted the Secretary contractors and contruction contracts. of Labor in implement- policy. On July .5
  • Force, cooperation and administrative··· concepts·, keep "the the Task program,. the remainder in establis~ing possible for the Department.·· of the formation all that and other, and accounting then notified.the and ·establi,shments
  • , advances labor, -, 1·. t.~-'~ ,· and development to· encourage cooperation and other in P.ncl among all services to go·ver:.:unent, n:.a.nagew.ent, and labor matters; efficient, Ste.tes; throu,gh the of transportation and Governr.!ent
  • communities 7. Interagency cooperation B. Administration of Uniform Time Statute 9. DOTAchievements in 1968. Notes on Taped Documentation In addition to the printed n documentation included the Department of Transportation has submitted of taped
  • significantly in the sort of regional cooperation which is implied by the concept of a "Northern Tier" grouping. Originally the principal unifying element was the coimI1on requirement for security vis-a-vis the USSR, but in later years common problems relating
  • CHAPTER IV - THE NEAR EAST AND SOUTH ASIA A. OVERVIEW B. ECONOMIC SUCCESSES AND PROBLEMS 1. Iran 2. Pakistan 3. India's Food Crisis., 1965-67 C. REGIONAL COOPERATION: IRAN-PAKISTAN-TURKEY D. THE INDO-PAKISTAN CONFLICT
  • . D. Special Report Prepared for the House Foreign Affairs Committee 0 92 December,1965 - \Vhite House Confercnc~ on International Cooperation, Committee on Agriculture Food, urged that the U.S. "affirm and - as a matter of high policy
  • East and South Asia . Latin America .. . . . . . . . . Afric:a . . . . . . . . . . . East Asia Vieb1am . . . . . . . . 233 .................. ........ 310 343 377 PART III XIV xv XVI XVII XVIII. XIX xx XXI XXII Inter national Cooperation
  • given to preparation of contingency plans, designation of necessary material, possibility of operation, cost factors, labor and management cooperation, and other matters which would arise .during a partial operation of the roads? Answer: All
  • of the transportation programs of the Federal Government; THE NEW DEPARTMENT 3 To facilitate the development and improvement of coordinated trans­ portation service, to be provided by private enterprise to the maximum extent feasible; To encourage cooperation
  • the pro~er balance of legal 4 • resources not between ""the to centralize consolidate ·j the various legal Secretar•y in his view, personnel coopers. ting analysts ·3 .• were organized his too much· the Federal since data were
  • DCT and of the Part is the Development the of New Conununi ties Federal response Act· of 1968. New Cornmuni ties provides for developers a revolving fund Act necessitates the cooperation ments, the Department 18,· 1968
  • . At an audience on January 15 the Shah stated to our Ambassador his interest in maintaining cooperation with his Arab neigh­ bors in accordance with his wish that the future of the Gulf should be in the hands of indigenous states. 8/ At the same Department
  • leaderSj increased cooperation in peaceful nuc].ear activities^ closei‘ relations in non - proliferation efforts, consultations ^'Poster to Committee of P.rlncipals, memorandum. 1964j Secret. Aug. 2k, o .S£6-RM 7^ P 0RN:*15 , c with other
  • Plan Issuei of 19, 1968 rather than rely solely on February Section 204 of th~ Model Cities Act .. to· reflect this of th~ ~ontinui?i agreerr~ent was an initial cooperative arra~ge~erit.·: stage ., . to confirm our understanding that· DOT would
  • study be undertaken by the Federal Trade Co_mmission. On December 14, legislation was introduced authorizing a DOT study to be conducted in cooperation :with the Federal Trade Commission and other knowledgeable Federal agencies.: . ' Hearings
  • was for the most part highly satisfactory. AID staff were very cooperative in providing data and specialist assistance relating to arms trade and military expenditure. Three con­ tractual arrangements with Commerce Department worked very well and yielded
  • commitments. In the field of international relations, it s;rctn.= SERVj ,,.,_ ( . proved exceptionally cooperative during the Middle East war; it was responsive to the Vance mission's efforts and did all it could to discharge Greece's responsibility
  • arms e f ­ fort in space than a. United States commitment to such a program. This we will not do. At the same time that we are purs u i n g cooperative s cientific efforts in space through the Un i t e d Nations and otherwise, we will of course take
  • the level executive agency properly of charges. charged ' f~r rate of internation "in a cooperative the executive than the quasi-judicial required proclivities could not determine regulation. 8 that effort rate precepts shipping
  • , Including the risk Incident to ren90nable pricing pollclee; (4) Nature and extent of contribution to the defense effort, Including inven­ tive and developmental contribution and cooperation with the Government and other contractors in supplying technical
  • , the Bureau works in close cooperation with the Department of Defense. Many of the staff are military officers assigned on active duty to ACDA; c - 15 - the head of the Bureau is an officer with 3-star rank assigned on a rotating basis from one
  • on the General Assembly resolution of December 3 on the ground that a reference to "the improved possibilities for international cooperation in the field of seismic cooperation" might be used to justify the Western demand for international control _ Ninth