Word: milks
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...SCHOOLS. A cut-for a change-from $260 million this fiscal year to $159 million in 1966-67 in federal subsidies for school lunches and recess milk. Though the President said that the remaining funds would be rechanneled to provide food for children "who need it most," his suggested savings stirred pious protest in Congress...
...MOROCCO Medical technologists will work in hospital and public health labs, performing tests and supervising students in their lab work. Generalists will work in labs or TB sanatoriums, doing lab examinations, supervising Moroccan assistants, screening for tuberculosis, and performing routines surveillance of food, water and milk products or will work at the animal hospital. Veterinarians will work with the Moroccan and international staff of the Fes animal hospital. MD's will head a Rabat-based mobils lab unit doing mass screening and health studies and will assist the Director of the Institute of Hygiene...
...member before threat turns into reality. The U.S., which has already started moving 4,500,000 tons of grain to India, granted a $100 million loan for economic aid. Burma and Thailand agreed to sell more of their rice to India. France, West Germany and Japan started sending powdered milk and vitamins for children and nursing mothers. Italians donated $6,000,000 for Indian famine relief. The response in Italy and elsewhere, said Pope Paul VI, "is one of the most beautiful things happening in our time...
...budget reaches into every national nook and cranny. It concerns itself with appropriations for a nuclear aircraft carrier, for cancer research and free school milk, for the cost of shoveling snow in Washington. It takes up the building of hydrogen bombs, Christmas vacations for Job Corps enrollees, postmen's rounds. It sets out the figures for developing a vaccine against syphilis and paying the pensions of 10,500 surviving veterans of the Spanish-American War. From the smallest single project ($5,000 for the Potomac River Basin Commission) to the largest ($3.6 billion...
...President used the old device of calling for cutbacks in popular programs that he knows Congress is highly unlikely to slash. Among them: cuts of $150 million in agricultural conservation, $85 million in aid for depressed-area schools and $52 million in the school milk program. Any plan to take milk away from the kiddies is not going to get very far in Congress. Johnson also trimmed his allowances for emergency disaster relief by $100 million on the theory that there will be fewer disasters in 1967, a kind of Parkinsonian precept that the number and gravity of disasters depend...