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What should be the foreign aid policy of the United States? A collection of excerpts and a bibliography relating to the national high school debate topic, 1966-1967. Pursuant to Public Law 88-246 compiled by the legislative reference service Library of Congress

Title
What should be the foreign aid policy of the United States? A collection of excerpts and a bibliography relating to the national high school debate topic, 1966-1967. Pursuant to Public Law 88-246 compiled by the legislative reference service Library of Congress. [electronic resource]
Published
Washington, DC, 1966
Physical Description
268 p. : tables.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
1966 foreign aid message to the Congress, by Lyndon B. Johnson, p. 1.
A study of certain aspects of foreign aid, by John H. Ohly, p. 217.
Aid to Yugoslavia and Poland: Analysis of a controversy, by Milorad M. Drachkovitch, p. 195.
Alliance for progress: Alliance with whom? by Jack Baranson, p. 239.
Billions in U.S. aid -- and Tito wants to bury capitalism, by Alex Kucherov, p. 221.
Buttressing the foundations: The U.N. -- the next twenty years, by Paul G. Hoffman, p. 189.
Foreign aid as a defense against Communism, by Victor C. Ferkiss, p. 225.
Foreign aid to Spain and Yugoslavia, by Louis W. Koenig, p. 210.
Foreign aid, by Walter Krause, p. 11.
Foreign aid? Yes, but with a new approach, by James W. Fulbright, p. 68.
Foreign economic aid: Means and objectives, by Milton Friedman, p. 57.
Importance of nonmilitary judgments in the direction of military assistance, by the House of Representatives of the United States Congress, p. 119.
International aid: The next steps, by Dudley Seers, p. 172.
Let's stop sending U.S. dollars to aid our enemies, by Charles Stevenson, p. 230.
Military assistance and militarism in Latin America, by John Duncan Powell, p. 108.
Multilateral versus bilateral aid: An old controversy revisited, by Robert E. Asher, p. 131.
New look for military assistance: The shift and split, by Armed Forces Management, p. 81.
On ending the foreign aid program, by Harold A. Hovey, p. 89.
President urges careful review of international agency budgets, by Lyndon B. Johnson, p. 129.
Soviet and American policies in international economic organizations, by Alvin Z. Rubinstein, p. 150.
Statement before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in support of the fiscal year 1967 military assistance program, by Robert S. McNamara, p. 77.
Table of contents, p. VII.
Table of United States contributions to the United Nations special fund and the expanded program of technical assistance, calendar years 1951-1965, by the House of Representatives of the United States Congress, p. 130.
Tables on American military assistance, by Department of Defense, p. 88.
The foreign aid controversy, by William P. Gerberding, p. 30.
The international potentials of foreign aid, by John D. Montgomery, p. 124.
The lure and the limits of aid to Soviet satellites, by George Liska, p. 237.
The program and its critics, by Harold A. Hovey, p. 104.
The threat of multilateralism, by Wayne Morse, p. 185.
U.S. foreign aid and the United Nations, by Kenneth Keating, p. 168.
What else to ask recipients of aid, by Herbert Feis, p. 244.
Electronic reproduction. Chester, Vt.: NewsBank, inc., 2008. Available via the World Wide Web. Access restricted to Readex U.S. Congressional Serial Set subscribers.
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© 2009 by NewsBank, Inc. All rights reserved.
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 05, 2012
Genre/Form
Monographs.
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