Discover Our Collections


  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Collection > Administrative Histories (remove)
  • Type > Text (remove)

26 results

  • equipment, does not have seats. It does, however, have handrails. The test train will depart Philadelphia at 9:19 a.m.; travel to New Brunswick at normal speed and make two high-speed test runs from New Brunswick back to Trenton. The train will stop twice
  • Folder, "Volume I, Documentary Supplements, News Releases," Department of Transportation Administrative History, Box 3
  • to the· total transportation picture in North America and to the role of air transport. - 3 What I will --That ask of you you be aware of --that you be aware.of new technology; of --and that your actions today is quite the desires
  • contractors an active areas counties., rate all and Philadelphia. worked in cooperation 2) a low employment cities. the Order by bringing supervision target that - San Francisco., The Cleveland access major maintain special of Labor
  • 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
  • . Equal opportunity programs f. Organization for emergency preparedness 3. New administrative elements a. Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation , b. Urban Mass Transit Administration 1. B. Programs of the Department of Transportation 1. Highway
  • . Faithfully yours. /!2!/JI Contents Pog• vii Foreword---------------------------------------------··---··--------·Organization,Department of Transportation -----------------------------­ Chapter I THE NEW DEPARTMENT
  • -building at one stage or another. By stretching definitions to include Greece, Turkey and Israel, all can be described as traditional societies .in transition toward new patterns of modern nationhood. Through­ out the area, the "warring sects" of great
  • the key determinant of the leyel of consumer demand·for transit (and more important than price). While th~ purchase of new equipment through mass transit grants may help achieve service ·improvementsin these area~, it wilLnot do so automatically
  • 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
  • Security Information. The Office maintains a daily liaison with the press in Washington and also at Geneva when the ENDC is in session and at New York when the General Assembly is in session. It also prepares press guidance and materials related to arms
  • -Chairmen of the ENDC, with the daily chairmanship rotating among all members. The American delegation was usually led by ACDA Director William C. Poster or ACDA Deputy Director Adrian S. O Fisher. Formerly, ACDA also had a resident Ambassador
  • considerably Secretary easier in to the new Depart­ made the transition than it might otherwise have been. Besides personnel and personnel from Mr. Boyd's Bureau at Commerce, functions were transferred to the Department ~Agency, Coast Guard
  • to say, demands upon the Secretary's would deal directly active Will Guard Daily Morgan File) .. newness and the importance Administration, and Management" and and Under Secretary the "heaviest "external documents, was alsq of Foreign
  • Kuchuk (Turkish-Cypriot) as Vice President. During the following three years the new Republic prospered economically, but the mutual suspicions of the two communities increasingly interfered with the orderly working of a very complex system of government
  • in the co.i;r.itment or e.n 1~.ct-e~sing nu::iber of personnel tor this pUX1)ose. Bo~"l 1:.w· e.nd :-:Ewhave created new offices ., intercover:l:lCntp.l rclo.tions. with responsibility for As DOT encoui·a.gos J:10rccOJnprchcnsiveti·3..""Ls- porta:~io:i
  • ) along the Israeli-Eg-.rp__Q.,a n border in Sinai. Secretary­ General U Thant promptly COffiPiled with the Egyptian request. In these new circumstances, President Johnson sent a letter to Prime Minister EslL~ol of Israel on May 17 expressing sympathetic
  • testing in 1961.^ Proposed Approach to Soviet Leaders In a memorandum of November 23, 1964, to the Committee of Principals, ACDA Director Foster submitted an outline of sub­ jects for discussion with the new Soviet leaders who had recently ^See
  • gressive step against a corrupt and inefficient monarchy and hoped that the new revolutionary leaders might be able to reach an accommodation with Israel which would bring stability to the area. There was a reciprocal interest in the United States
  • --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
  • 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
  • ---- -eONri-M 3Ii ITIM> - 11- Page Communist China and the Proliferation Problem . .......................................... 15 Proposed Approach to New Soviet Leaders .......... 18 Effects of the Vietnam Wa r ......................... 18 Disarmament
  • dollar amounts, whet~er new legislation would be required, or whether the program could be accomplished under existing legislation but with budgetary increases. 2. :• Develop alteJ.:D.~ti.v:~ _reQ.:r,.gaz:i_iz~Jionp}.~1:te..JfL,i~p_r,.9y_tLth
  • contracts which the Board determines do not_have a direct and immediate connection with the national defense. Contracts and subqontracts for the sale of new durable productive equipment al'e partially exempt from renegotiation, and contracts and subcontracts
  • concluded lines. flag allocations considerable a new conference The conference the objection listed arrangements Examiner's delay following agreement that the new pooling arrangements lines Affairs' involved Affairs' office procedure
  • . 3 The Arms Control and Disarmam.ent Agency (ACDA) was quick to respond to the new impetus toward Latin American d e n u c l e a r i ­ zation. In a background paper dated October 25, 1962, the Agency recommended that the United States support
  • a new set of program objectives which could perhaps be achieved in a reasonable time period, say 10-20 years. In early 1964 an effort was initiated to develop a formal statement of objectives which after many false starts finally led to the establishment