Nutrition and Human Needs--1971: Hearings, Ninety-second Congress, First Session ..., Volumes 6-9; Volume 95, Issue 95, Part 6 - Issue 971, Part 10U.S. Government Printing Office, 1971 |
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Results 1-5 of 99
Page 1522
... percent . Senator Cook . About 70 percent of Detroit's contribution ? Dr. CLEXTON . Yes . Senator Cook . In other words , that 70 percent of the balance of the contribution does not really represent tax dollars of the city of Detroit ...
... percent . Senator Cook . About 70 percent of Detroit's contribution ? Dr. CLEXTON . Yes . Senator Cook . In other words , that 70 percent of the balance of the contribution does not really represent tax dollars of the city of Detroit ...
Page 1533
... percent and the city paying 20 percent . We had the Department of Agriculture officials in San Antonio on several occasions to discuss the question of inkind and what is inkind . I have a letter from the regional office of USDA which is ...
... percent and the city paying 20 percent . We had the Department of Agriculture officials in San Antonio on several occasions to discuss the question of inkind and what is inkind . I have a letter from the regional office of USDA which is ...
Page 1549
... percent in the city of Detroit . But the very dates given - and the mendacity of this is appalling - the very dates given are those dates when the General Motors strike was in effect and when the UAW- CIO managed to get Detroit strikers ...
... percent in the city of Detroit . But the very dates given - and the mendacity of this is appalling - the very dates given are those dates when the General Motors strike was in effect and when the UAW- CIO managed to get Detroit strikers ...
Page 1559
... percent and its seasonally ad- justed rate 12.5 percent ; and That visitors from other States tell us they have never visited any other place where food - just plain ordinary food - was such a con- stant concern of so many . In response ...
... percent and its seasonally ad- justed rate 12.5 percent ; and That visitors from other States tell us they have never visited any other place where food - just plain ordinary food - was such a con- stant concern of so many . In response ...
Page 1560
... percent . Today , it is 11.6 percent - 16.5 in Kings County - almost double the 1969 peak . If 164,000 households were potentially eligible for food stamps in 1969 , when the unemploy- ment rate was half of the present rate , I should ...
... percent . Today , it is 11.6 percent - 16.5 in Kings County - almost double the 1969 peak . If 164,000 households were potentially eligible for food stamps in 1969 , when the unemploy- ment rate was half of the present rate , I should ...
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Common terms and phrases
administration agencies amendment amount August 13 breakfast program budget cents CHAIN STORES Chairman Child Nutrition Committee on Nutrition Congress cost County Department of Agriculture Detroit Director Education eligibility standards Federal feeding fiscal Food and Nutrition food program Food Service Program Food Stamp Program free and reduced free lunches free or reduced GEORGE MCGOVERN gram hemoglobin hunger hungry income inner city iron Joint Resolution lunches served Lyng meal meat milk million National School Lunch needy children Niacin nutrients Nutrition Service Office operation packaging participation percent poor President problem proposed regulations Puerto Rico receive recipients recommended reduced price lunches reduced-price lunches Riboflavin Richard Lyng school districts School Food Service School Lunch Act school lunch program Section 11 Section 32 funds Senator Cook Senator MCGOVERN Senator PERCY South Dakota survey Sutter County Thiamin tion U.S. Department U.S. Senate USDA Vitamin warehouse Washington welfare
Popular passages
Page 1837 - It is hereby declared to be the policy of Congress, as a measure of national security, to safeguard the health and well-being of the Nation's children and to encourage the domestic consumption of nutritious agricultural commodities and other food...
Page 1973 - States through grants-in-ald and other means, to initiate, maintain, or expand nonprofit food service programs for children in service Institutions.".
Page 2169 - Government would be necessary. In framing a Government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this : you must first enable the Government to control the governed ; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.
Page 1583 - Supply lunches without cost or at reduced price to all children who are determined by local school authorities to be unable to pay the full price thereof...
Page 1993 - All time on the amendment has been yielded back. The question is on agreeing to the amendment of the Senator from New York.
Page 2019 - Mr. Speaker, on that I demand the yeas and nays. The yeas and nays were ordered. The question was taken; and there were— yeas 376, nays 6, not voting 50, as follows : [Roll No.
Page 1937 - The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection? The Chair hears none, and it is so ordered.
Page 2021 - The result of the vote was announced as above recorded. A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.
Page 1568 - States direct distribution or other programs, without regard to whether such area is under the food stamp program or a system of direct distribution, to provide, in the immediate vicinity of their place of permanent residence, either directly or through a State or local welfare agency, an adequate diet to needy children and low-income persons determined by the Secretary of Agriculture to be suffering, through no fault of their own, from general and continued hunger resulting from insufficient food.
Page 1998 - Mr. Speaker, I demand a second. The SPEAKER. Without objection, a second will be considered as ordered. There was no objection. The SPEAKER.