Word: programing
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Nothing Printable. North Korea has certainly done its best to keep its brethren in the South shivering. Late in 1966, Premier Kim II Sung launched a program of guerrilla subversion designed to disrupt the South and humiliate the U.S. at every turn...
Tougher Policies. Though Clifford handled questions from the committee with notable finesse, there was no mistaking that he planned to follow policies that will be tougher, and more palatable to senior military experts on Capitol Hill, than were McNamara's. Clifford emphatically endorsed a program of "nuclear superiority" vis-a-vis Russia; McNamara had advocated a program of "nuclear parity." Without committing himself, Clifford also supported such congressional pet projects -which McNamara opposed-as development of an advanced manned bomber to replace the B-52 and construction of a greatly expanded nuclear fleet of warships. He also expressed serious...
Most ambitious of the new proposals is the $2.1 billion manpower program, under which the President hopes to forge a partnership between industry and Government to provide jobs for the hard-core unemployed. Last year's "concentrated employment program" conducted by the Labor Department identified some 500,000 Americans-mostly Negro, Puerto Rican and Mexican-American slum dwellers-who have never had jobs or who face serious employment handicaps...
Congress to adopt a comprehensive student aid lems with the proposal. Under the terms suggested by the panel, it would be profitable for a wealthy student to borrow money, invest it, and buy out of the program immediately after graduation. Nevertheless, the easy availability of the loans is one of the principal attractions of the plan, and the committee has recommended that a student be required only to sign a form stating that he needs the money for his education...
Prospects for immediate passage of the program are dim. The Administration wants to delay new domestic expenditures until the war in Vietnam ends. The President's Science Advisor, Donald F. Hornig, refused to endorse the plan when he presented it to newsmen. Zaccharias had reported that his committee wanted the Bank plan "pressed and pressed to completion," but Hornig stressed that "we are not proposing establishment of the Bank. We are releasing the proposal as an idea that has to be shaped by public discussion...