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I
The A. I. D. Program and Policies: 1963-68. .
II
Foreign Assistance Act and P. L. 480: 1963-68.
III
Congressional
Attitudes Toward Foreign Aid .
IV
Public Support for A. 1. D. . . . . . . . . . . ..
V
The War on Hunger - Food, Nutrition, Health
VI
- Foreign aid
- adminhist-aid-b01-f01
- relationship and the changing nature
of this relationship in light of Iran's economic growth was
8
_. SFGRE'f== --
the Memorandum of Understanding of July 4, 1964.
This
Memorandum reflected our decision to move from grant aid to
credit sales.
Two of its
- food and populadon problem can only be
solved through ~ctive popuhtion control efforts and
faster development of agriculture
in the hungry
countries.
Therefore,
it is recommended that U.S.
aid programs for developing countries should be
shifted much
- Foreign aid
- adminhist-aid-b01-f02
-
and Turkey.
ment emphasis
Aid programs
and economic
or accelerate
economic
to acceptable
rates
proved
share
aid recipients:
India,
the leverage
policy change and has contributed
larger
some of the benefits
growth.
to effect
significantly
Per
- Foreign aid
- adminhist-aid-b01-f03
- 1963,
President Johnson was determined to continue the policy of
the Kennedy Administration toward the UAR.
However, in
November 1963, the US Senate inserted a provision in the foreign
aid act barring further assistance to countries engaged
- .
In this period American strategy for Cyprus stressed
continued access to American connnunications facilities, an
economic aid program to facilitate development and to combat
Communism, and reliance on the guarantor powers to maintain
the constitutional order
- -:----------Table 4-Aids to navigation maintained by Coast Guard, a~ of March 31, 1967
Table !>--Distribution of operating hours for major Coast Guard functions,
fiscal year 1967 ----------------------------------------------
Table ~Regular Coast Guard personnel
-
OFFICEOF THESECRETARY
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
.DOT-- 9
March 20, 1967
Secretary
allocations
available
of Transportation
of Federal-aid
for obligation
The $1.1 billion
release
highway funds totalling
on April
total
of $750 million,
was announced
- price regulation of mass transit,
as well as large Federal
Governmentgrants~in-aid to private highway transportation;
(b) externalities,
transportation
and
such as adverse environmental tmpacts of alternate
syitems,_ discussed below.
It shou1d
-
leaders.
if
program
The Secretary
on March 16, ordering
20
award program in Cleveland.
should
program
therefore
directive
• During
compliance
aid highway
assisted
and it
was essential
contract
the Federal
largest
to settle
agencies
-
and that the users of such
facilities
should pay for their
development.
Federal
aid
has been only a small percentage
of terminal
development
cost.
The government is trying
to encourage
more, efficient
terminal
utilization
through advocacy of the·use
of
differential
- motor vehicl_~Ei~
__program through
such means as federally
supported· aid for driver training and
education and, in particular,
research
into vehicular
design.
Some
thought might be given to minimum federal standards
for driving
licenses.
5.
collection
- ' new communities.
including
the
to
best
oi' HUD, Robert
in an
ways
'interdepartmental
of aiding
the
development
1
or· new communi tics
Rober t H. Br·utons
1
o
urban
planning
special-
i
is t in
the
Of'fice
of' Policy
work
-
Nigerian amendments --------------------------------
249
Romanian amendments --------------------------------
2^0
Swedish amendment -------------------- ,--------------
25C
Swiss aide-memoire ---------------------------------
253
UAR amendments
- ::.r or, policies end propam:J in· the :C'ielcm o-:
lacel.th, educ:11tion, a.mi weli"are.
" J.
...
·•
...., ..
I
• =--\'~••.•
AW&.i.
-.>-u-dc:..:.Ll".m.
· ;aid p::.-oblc::..:;or today,. whether in tnc ci tieu, in runl
u.reu, or ir •. isolu c.-1d
- States had
given some restricted nuclear information to the British after
they developed a modest nuclear force by their own efforts,
but it had withheld any aid to the French. The Soviets, after
giving some initial assistance to the Chinese (1959-1960
- 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
- support through research, preparation
of reference aids such as bibliographies, infor
mation abstracts and extracts, information sum
maries and digests.
Work has begun on indexing
the results of Agency research efforts and othertechnical materials
-
ation of a most useful r·eport which· should aid materially·
in_ moving..
•
forward with more effective
personnel
and traini_ng polides_
and programs
in the Dep?;e;:.
iL.
o~t,:I;ta~i~
'.
..
....._
Attachment
-,,,.
.~t~-•'
'.;
i ..
. •• ~,. t
- invasion of Syria, all Arab countries
would come to Syria's aid, and a major conflict would surely
develop. The Syrian Foreign Minister added that his Govern
ment wished to avoid war. He urged Ambassador Smythe to
bring Syrian views of the existing border
- efforts in this field.
ACDA Research
A C P A engaged in a substantial amount of staff work, aided
by an intensive contract research program, to determine whether
a formal agreement or treaty on the exploration of outer space
was feasible and technically