The Foreign Aid Program (S. 1367) |
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THE FOREIGN AID PROGRAM REMARKS OP SENATOR J. W. FULBRIGHT, CHAIRMAN, SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE Mr. President, I send to the desk a bill to promote the foreign policy, security, and general welfare of the United States by furnishing economic assistance to friendly countries and areas, and for other purposes, I ask that this bill be appropriately referred. The bill which I introduce is in partial implementation of the President's foreign aid message of January 14, 1965 recommending authorization for military and economic programs aggregating $3.38 billion of appropriation requests. This bill is concerned solely with the President's request for authorization for appropriation of $846,000,000 for economic aid. Ihis authorization for economic aid, plus previous authorizations for Development Loans and the Alliance for Progress, will support a total appropriation for
Object Description
Title | The Foreign Aid Program (S. 1367) |
Abstract | Fulbright speech providing detailed analysis of the need for the foreign aid contained in senate bill S. 1367, but more importantly, for the need to decouple foreign aid from military assistance. |
Creator | Fulbright, J. William |
Date | March 4, 1965 |
Audience of Speech | United States Senate |
Institution Where Speech Was Given | United States Senate |
City and State | Washington, D.C. |
Subject |
Foreign Aid Foreign Policy International Relations |
Item Location | J. William Fulbright Papers (MS F956 144, Series 71, Box 30, File 3) |
Rights | Please contact Special Collections for information on copyright. |
Digital Publisher | University of Arkansas Libraries |
Series Title | A Calm Voice in a Strident World: Senator J.W. Fulbright Speaks |
Description
Title | The Foreign Aid Program (S. 1367) |
Abstract | Fulbright speech providing detailed analysis of the need for the foreign aid contained in senate bill S. 1367, but more importantly, for the need to decouple foreign aid from military assistance. |
Creator | Fulbright, J. William |
Date | March 4, 1965 |
Audience of Speech | United States Senate |
Institution Where Speech Was Given | United States Senate |
City and State | Washington, D.C. |
Subject |
Foreign Aid Foreign Policy International Relations |
Transcript | THE FOREIGN AID PROGRAM REMARKS OP SENATOR J. W. FULBRIGHT, CHAIRMAN, SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE Mr. President, I send to the desk a bill to promote the foreign policy, security, and general welfare of the United States by furnishing economic assistance to friendly countries and areas, and for other purposes, I ask that this bill be appropriately referred. The bill which I introduce is in partial implementation of the President's foreign aid message of January 14, 1965 recommending authorization for military and economic programs aggregating $3.38 billion of appropriation requests. This bill is concerned solely with the President's request for authorization for appropriation of $846,000,000 for economic aid. Ihis authorization for economic aid, plus previous authorizations for Development Loans and the Alliance for Progress, will support a total appropriation for |
Item Location | J. William Fulbright Papers (MS F956 144, Series 71, Box 30, File 3) |
Rights | Please contact Special Collections for information on copyright. |
Digital Publisher | University of Arkansas Libraries |
Series Title | A Calm Voice in a Strident World: Senator J.W. Fulbright Speaks |
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