Treasury, Post Office, and Executive Office Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1969, Hearings Before the Subcommittee of ... , 90-2 on H.R. 164891968 - 848 pages |
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Page 82
... million is requested . Senator MONRONEY . Yes . A million is the budget estimate . Do you have a statement ? Mr. HUGHES . There is a brief statement which I can either read or furnish for the record . Senator MONRONEY . All right . Mr ...
... million is requested . Senator MONRONEY . Yes . A million is the budget estimate . Do you have a statement ? Mr. HUGHES . There is a brief statement which I can either read or furnish for the record . Senator MONRONEY . All right . Mr ...
Page 176
... million . For plant and equipment , $ 25 million . For postal public buildings , $ 38.2 million . Will you put in the record tables showing the 1968 appropriations , 1969 budget estimates and House action . ( The tables follow ...
... million . For plant and equipment , $ 25 million . For postal public buildings , $ 38.2 million . Will you put in the record tables showing the 1968 appropriations , 1969 budget estimates and House action . ( The tables follow ...
Page 180
... million for the Post Office Department . The reductions we are not appealing total $ 104 million or 11.3 percent of the request . If all items in the President's budget were reduced by 11.3 percent , reductions would total $ 21 billion ...
... million for the Post Office Department . The reductions we are not appealing total $ 104 million or 11.3 percent of the request . If all items in the President's budget were reduced by 11.3 percent , reductions would total $ 21 billion ...
Page 182
... million House reduction , $ 17.5 million represents savings identified by the Department and $ 12 million a reduction by the House because of the lesser mail volume assumption . We accept this cut for the same reasons given for ...
... million House reduction , $ 17.5 million represents savings identified by the Department and $ 12 million a reduction by the House because of the lesser mail volume assumption . We accept this cut for the same reasons given for ...
Page 186
... million . I am very much aware of the desire and need for economy . I under- score its necessity . It is my purpose ... Million $ 1 . 231 2. 386 25.000 38.252 66. 869 Using round figures , I am therefore appealing only $ 67 million and I ...
... million . I am very much aware of the desire and need for economy . I under- score its necessity . It is my purpose ... Million $ 1 . 231 2. 386 25.000 38.252 66. 869 Using round figures , I am therefore appealing only $ 67 million and I ...
Common terms and phrases
1968 appropriation 90th Congress A. S. MIKE MONRONEY activities actual 1968 estimate adjusted administrative agencies Amount Percent amounts in thousands Assistant audit average positions banks Bureau Chairman coins Commission Committee Congress Director economic employees enforcement equipment estimate 1969 estimate estimate Increase Executive expenditures expenses facilities Federal Telecommunications System finance fiscal year 1969 Full-time equivalent funds gold Government House allowed improvement includes Internal Revenue Service legislation Loan Accounts machines man-years marihuana ment million Narcotics NICHOLSON operations pay increase payments personnel compensation Philadelphia Mint planning Post Office Department postal service President problems processing projects proposed Public Law reduction regional reimbursements revenue salary Savings Bonds Secretary FOWLER Senator ALLOTT Senator MONRONEY staff stamp vending machines stamps statement subcommittee Tax and Loan taxpayers tion Total obligations transportation Treasury U.S. Senate United Unobligated balance vending workload
Popular passages
Page 109 - Program was initiated in 1948 by the Secretary of the Treasury, the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, and the Comptroller General, and was given statutory authorization in the Budget and Accounting Procedures Act of 1950.
Page 87 - Studv of the organization and administration of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, the Federal home loan banks, and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, by contract with Booz, Allen A Hamilton.
Page 153 - Federal grant and other programs requiring intergovernmental cooperation ; (3) give critical attention to the conditions and controls involved in the administration of Federal grant programs ; (4) make available technical assistance to the executive and legislative branches of the Federal Government in the review of proposed legislation to determine its overall effect on the Federal system...
Page 113 - To develop and recommend to the President national economic policies to foster and promote free competitive enterprise, to avoid economic fluctuations or to diminish the effects thereof, and to maintain employment, production, and purchasing power...
Page 180 - May 1 will be placed in the record at this point, and you may proceed with your statement.
Page 119 - Council shall be to advise the President with respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and military policies relating, to the national security so as to enable the military services and the other departments and agencies of the Government to cooperate more effectively in matters involving the national security.
Page 153 - Constitution, the most desirable allocation of governmental functions, responsibilities, and revenues among the several levels of government ; and (7) recommend methods of coordinating and simplifying tax laws and administrative practices to achieve a more orderly and less competitive fiscal relationship between the levels of government and to reduce the burden of compliance for taxpayers.
Page 466 - The Governors of the Central Banks of Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United States met in Washington on March 16 and 17, 1968 to examine operations of the gold pool, to which they are active contributors.
Page 767 - Narcotics, and (2) of the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
Page 119 - Council — (1) to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential military power, in the interest of national security, for the purpose of making recommendations to the President in connection therewith...