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gbooul m m i m s
(All General B@mmi.mm will be hold in Separtaeat Mâttorïms,, 3etrth Gilding)
ìÈaৣ* M s ê œ 1
*>r»4ng
Olinto« P* Jtedemos,
Seereiaiy of Agriculture

9*45 Th« first I n n of Peace -

UTlüS JTÏ CUAL SITUATI OK

Mg®# loyer, President,

10*30 Intamali ormi Finance

ÎBteittational Bmkfor

Vtsemsbruetim and Sut l B pMPl

13.ilS World Situation for Food ató Agriculture —

B« A* FitsOerald,Seojp-öeneral,
International Emergency Food
Cenaseli

lEfOO Questions
12*30 Ad¿o*xnMitt
Aftwrnocm

MIESTIC SlTOAtlO»
Marrioer Sw ioeles, CSsalmssit, ^
Board of Governors» Federal
/
Reserve S^ste»
2iS0 Wational Ihoogj# ami tbe desterai Prismi
M* Joseph Mastem, Aest# Director,
Off! ss of Business Eoono^ie»,
Department of Or-sasree
3*00 A^rlecl tarai Otstlook

i ISO t e r s i Discussion
4i£0 Adjournment




0. C» Stine, last# Chief,
Burma of Agri miltnrel Beoncmies

20U* Current Policy Problems of American Agriculture
Fall, 1 Credit
T.Roy Reid and
Special Lecturers
A lecture course designed to give clerical and junior professional
personnel a review of some of the major problems of American agriculture.
Conditions giving rise to these problems will be surveyed and current
proposals for meeting them will be critically studied* Outstanding men
from both the executive and legislative branches of the Government and
from outside the Federal Service will participate in the lectures.
716#

Seminar in Economic and Social Implications of Current Agricultural
Policies
Fall, 2 Credits
William A# Minor
Robert H* Shields and
Special Lecturers
Designed to bring before students some of the outstanding economists
of the country with from one-third to one-half of the meetings led by
guest instructors* The seminar is devoted to a continuing analysis and
evaluation of the major components of current agricultural policies. Pre­
requisite: Master*s degree in economics or permission of the instructors*

1*

Agriculture and the National Economy

E. G. Nourse, Chairman,
Economic Council

Sept. 23 > 19U6

Agriculture and Industrial Expansion

T* W. Schultz
Univ* of Chicago

Sept. 30, 19h6

3*

Monetary Policy and Agricultural Problems Marriner S* Eccles, Chairman
Federal Reserve Board

U.

The Influence of Foreign Trade on ü. S.
Agriculture

William L. Clayton, Under
Secretary of State

0ct* Ik, 19U6

5*

International Agricultural Problems

Sir John Boyd Orr
Director General, Food
and Agri. Organization

Oct* 21, I I

6.

Meeting the World Food Needs

D. A. FitzGerald
Secretary General, IEFC

Oct. 28, 191*6

7*

Wage Price Policy and Its Relationship
to Agriculture

Sumner H. Slichter
Harvard Univ.

N0v. U, 19U6

8#

The Economic Influence of Agricultural
Controls on Agriculture

John D. Black
Harvard Univ.

Nov. 18, 19U6

9*

How Farm Policies are Made

Judge Marvin Jones
(J. S. Court of Claims

N0v. 2S, 1 9h6

The Rural Community and the National
Economy

Msgr. L. G. Ligutti,
Executive Secretary
National Catholic Rural
Life Conference

Dec. 2, I I

10*




Oct. 7, 19h6

946

946

II«

Trends and Problems in Agricultural
Marketing

W. I. l^rers, Dean, N. Y.
State College of Agri.,
Cornell Univ.

Dec. 9, 19U6

12*

Land Use and Conservation

Chester Davis, President
Federal Reserve Bank of
St. Louis

Dec. 16, 191*6

13*

The Effect of Technology on the
Agricultural Economy

Henry A. Fallace
Secretary of Commerce

Jan. 6, 19U7

liw

Farm Price Relationships

l£.

Putting Agricultural Policies into
Practi ce




Jan. 13, 19U7
Clinton P. Anderson
Secretary of Agriculture

Jan. 20, 19U7