Discover Our Collections


15 results

  • planner. by India'• foremost economi.c l hope that in six months we will be able to point to Indian ag-1"iculture as a major example of a self-help program induced by our ·aid policy. This, and a few other ezamplee which may be ripe by then, ehould p
  • ft.AN ARE BEING POSTPONED IN HOPE, AS ONE PLANNING OFFICIAL Ptrf IT, THAT INTERNATIONAL SITUATION WILL BECOME CLEARER IN THAT PERIOD.
  • will promise have not been established. About the best that can be reasonably hoped for in the short run is the maintenance of sufficient public order and levels of nutrition to get the distribution system operating and maintain the flow of grain imports until
  • ?.1i-\ ,,;I( 7 ~" "\ Q,I"" • /> /1~pr;; Dear Bob: / 9 ~~Jr I think you will find the enclosed memorandum well worth readingo It was written by Ed Lindblom I the remarkable Yale economist whom I lmught with me to Irrlia two and a half years agoo
  • of most wars -- past and present. A large cooperative To stimulate free world effort such an effort, the Development Assistance appoint report of overshadow This gap cannot be closed by U.S. action that hunger. ing of Ministers hope
  • produc­ tion by next April. The ~ov­ ernment had hoped to increase agricultural production by about 30 percent through a program that included increased irrigation, a fivefold increase in fertilizer Background ~ltrJP· Approved Ft;, !Releaseli~09'-f
  • . Sallftclera Enc. Cy Joint Resolution, 3/7 /66 ~ch 28, 1966 MEMO FOil DOB.OTH1' JACOBSON Bob Kamer aeat the attached letter to S.cntuy Freemaa. Now here la all_i~.,..J the bacJm.p material .Dr. Ewell ••t to fiiiL You can mab better uae ol lt th .. we
  • was the .cause of agric:uHurc ~nd there grant thr T,r1shmir plebiscite Pa,s, ned m 19GO for a 4-year pro- is promise that in India's fourth kislan demands. al lhou
  • ;~ OPOS AL FOR A t·1.D.T C:H ;•JG :S 5 S i'• :ILLIO :·J f£r(TILIZER LOAN WOU~D HAVE REQUI~ED . ·4. FULL SCOP ~ OF CAS I ~ET D~CIS I0 ~5 WILL BE REFLECTED IN _SU 3R At:AtHAl'l !..OK S!\B HA STAi z:,: :: ;·~T DE CE: [E5::R 7. l;j £ URGENTLY HOPE FOR QUIC K
  • food, ~ broad treatment of the problem; the growing urgency of chronic £60d scarcity; the race with population growth; our efforts to stimu­ late self-help; the bitter irony of Congressional aid-cutting just when tbe need is greatest; and the hope
  • FREEMAN INR CIA "THESE ARESOMEOF THE STEPS WHICHWEHAVETAKENANDI HOPE NSA ANDTRUSTTHATWITKALL THESEMEASURES - NOTTHATTHEREWILL NOT BE FURTHERSCOPEFOR IMPROVEMENTS; I HAVENO DOUBTTHEREIS DOD BUT AS WEGO ON WECANGO ON IGA MUCHMORESCOPEFOR IMPROVEMENT
  • the race against population. productivity remai~ to new problems-­ However, con­ hope that food production of lo4 C. Other Food for Peace Programs Title II of :the revised A.I.D. of agricultural P. L. 480 law prjyided commodities to voluntary
  • though we may not have ended up as dispassionate hoped, we have tried policy changes, appropriate, personal to describe the problems statement we are equipped and the achievements. foreign Plan were strength in Europe, narrative