International Education, Hearings Before the Task Force on International Education of The...89-2, on H.R. 12451 and H.R. 12452, March 30 to April 7, 1966

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Page 4 - Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed to authorize any department, agency, officer, or employee of the United States to exercise any direction, supervision, or control over the curriculum, program of instruction, administration, or personnel of any educational institution or school system...
Page 142 - Agency and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the Department of State. The...
Page 4 - Federal funds paid to the applicant under this section ; and (3) provides for making such reports, in such form and containing such information, as the Secretary may require to carry out his functions under this section, and for keeping such records and for affording such access thereto as the Secretary may find necessary to assure the correctness and verification of such reports.
Page 4 - Federal funds made available under this title for any fiscal year will be so used as to supplement and, to the extent practical, increase the level of funds that would, in the absence of such Federal funds...
Page 438 - Ideas, not armaments, will shape our lasting prospects for peace. The conduct of our foreign policy will advance no faster than the curriculum of our classrooms.
Page 3 - Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare (hereinafter referred to as the Secretary...
Page 233 - I appear here today on behalf of the American Book Publishers Council and the American Textbook Publishers Institute, in which organizations I currently serve as chairman of a joint committee concerned with governmental affairs.
Page 4 - ... provides for such fiscal control and fund accounting procedures as may be necessary to assure proper disbursement of and accounting for Federal funds paid to the applicant under this...
Page 448 - Students under these exchange arrangements attend the Military Academy at West Point, the Naval Academy at Annapolis, and the Air Academy at Colorado Springs.
Page 438 - First, to assist the education effort of the developing nations and the developing regions. Second, to help our schools and universities increase their knowledge of the world and the people who inhabit it. Third, to advance the exchange of students and teachers who travel and work outside their native lands. Fourth, to increase the free flow of books and ideas and art, of works of science and imagination. And, fifth, to assemble meetings of men and women from every discipline and every culture to...

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