Finally, we greet you as fellow members of the United Nations, which has done so much to guard the peace and to point the way to a better wo...
Our eyes are on the future but our hearts will never forget the past.
During fiscal 1963, about one-fourth of all technical assistance was carried out not by AID personnel, but by American colleges, universitie...
I want to welcome you warmly to the White House this afternoon.
Freedom is an active, dynamic, rolling credo.
We knew it was right and necessary to help these poorer countries to a better life if we were to preserve our own good life and expand the f...
We increased efforts to encourage American investment in the less-developed countries.
Policies designed to protect our balance of payments produced major results in fiscal 1963.
I hope that I will be seeing some of you again when you come here as White House Fellows.
Under these policies U.S. business and industry exported $855 million in AID-financed goods and equipment to Asia, Africa and Latin America ...
I invite the people of this Nation to observe that day in churches, schools, and other suitable places with appropriate ceremonies in honor ...
A hundred years from now when historians look back on the Johnson administration, I hope very much that they will be able to say: There, onc...
The purpose of the program is to give the Fellows first-hand, high-level experience with the workings of the Federal Government and to incre...
I also direct that the flag of the United States be displayed on all public buildings, on Columbus Day in honor of the great explorer.
A genuinely free society cannot be a spectator society.
Major assistance to Europe under the Marshall Plan had ended by the mid-fifties, but a few smaller supplemental programs continued during th...
Fiscal 1963 saw the beginning of significant economies in the management of aid programs by the Agency for International Development.
The 1961 Act also called for greater use of America's vast private resources in the battle against world poverty.