72 S T A T. ]
PUBLIC LAW 8 5 - 4 7 7 - J U N E 30, 1968
(g) I n section 409(c), which relates to ocean freight charges, strike out "1958" and "$2,200,000" and substitute "1959" and "$2,100,000", respectively. (h) In section 410, which relates to Control Act expenses, strike out "1958" in the first sentence and substitute "1959". (i) Amend section 411, which relates to administrative and other expenses, as follows: (1) I n subsection (b), strike out "1958" and "$32,750,000" and substitute "1959" and "$33,000,000", respectively; and insert "and title II of chapter II " immediately before the close of the first parentheses; (2) I n subsection (c), insert "functions of the Department under this Act or for" before "normal". (j) Amend section 413, which relates to encouragement of free enterprise and private participation, as follows: (1) In section 413(b)(4), which relates to encouragement of free enterprise and private participation, strike out "the agency primarily" and substitute "an agency"; insert immediately before the semicolon at the end of subparagraph (E) the following proviso: ": Provided, Thsit in the event the fee to be charged for a type of guaranty is reduced, fees to be paid under existing contracts for the same type of guaranty may be similarly reduced"; and insert after "Director of the International Cooperation Administration" both times it appears in subparagraph (F) "or such other officer as the President may designate". (2) Insert the following new subsection: "(c) Under the direction of the President, the Departments of State and Commerce and such other agencies of the Government as the President shall deem appropriate, in cooperation to the fullest extent practicable with private enterprise concerned with international trade, foreign investment, and business operations in foreign countries, shall conduct a study of the ways and means in which the role of the private sector of the national economy can be more effectively utilized and protected in carrying out the purposes of this Act, so as to promote the foreign policy of the United States, to stabilize and to expand its economy and to prevent adverse effects, with special reference to areas of substantial labor surplus. Such study shall include specific recommendations for such legislative and administrative action as may be necessary to expand the role of private enterprise in advancing the foreign policy objectives of the United States." (k) A t the end of section 414(b)., which relates to munitions control, add the following: "Such regulations shall prohibit the return to the United States for sale in the United States (other than for the Armed Forces of the United States and its allies) of any miliary firearms or ammunition of United States manufacture furnished to foreign governments by the United States under this Act or any other foreign assistance program of the United States, whether or not advanced in value or improved in condition in a foreign country. This prohibition shall not extend to similar firearms that have been so substantially transformed as to become, in effect, articles of foreign manufacture." (1) I n section 419(a), which relates to atoms for peace, strike out "1958" and "$7,000,000" in the second sentence and substitute "1959" and "$5,500,000", respectively. (m) I n section 420, which relates to malaria eradication, insert after the word "authorized" in the second sentence "to use funds made available under this Act (other than chapter I and title II of chaper II) "; insert immediately before the period at the end of the second sentence the following proviso: ": Provided, That this sec-
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22 USC 1929. 22 USC 1930. 22 USC 1931.
22 USC 1933, Free enterprise,
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