Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 81.djvu/1177

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[81 STAT. 1143]
PUBLIC LAW 90-000—MMMM. DD, 1968
[81 STAT. 1143]

81 STAT. ]

PROCLAMATION 3819-NOV. 9, 1967

1143

ANNEX I T E M S ON W H I C H F U R THE R REDUCTIONS ARE B E I N G T E R M I N A T E D, L E V E L OF RATE REDUCTION IN E F F E C T ON J U N E 30, 1967, AND DATE ON W H I C H SUCH L E V E L BECAME EFFECTIVE

TSUS Item Number 222. 245. 245. 535. 544. 607.

60 30 90 31 51 50

607. 51 646. 92 648. 97 651. 37 660. 10 660. 22 661. 20 685. 42 694. 60 708. 722. 734. 737. 737. 745. 745. 756. 760.

72 40 20 50 80 70 72 04 10

770. 80 773. 05 792. 60

June 30, 1967, Rate

Date June 30, 1967, Rate Became Effective

Interim Agreement or Agreements

23% ad val. 26% ad val. 4% ad val. 28% ad val. 33% ad val. 0.720 per lb. on silicon content 0. 840 per lb. on silicon content 17% ad val. 21. 5% ad val. 21. 5% ad val. 13% ad val. 13% ad val. 1 1 % ad val. 13% ad val. 9% ad val.

May Jan. Jan. Oct. Oct. Jan.

1, 1967 1, 1967 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1967

United Kingdom. Canada. Canada. Japan. Japan. Canada and Japan.

Jan.

1, 1967

Canada.

Jan. Oct. Oct. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan.

1, 1967 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1967 1, 1966

33% ad val. 33% ad val. 10% ad val. 4 1 % ad val. 4 1 % ad val. 48% ad val. 38% ad val. 48% ad val. 320 per gross & 30.5% ad val. 24% ad val. 16% ad val. 11% ad val.

Oct. Oct. Jan. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct.

1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1967 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966

Canada and Japan. Japan. Japan. Canada. Canada. Canada. Canada and Japan. Canada and United Kingdom. Japan. Japan. Canada. Japan. Japan. Japan. Japan. Japan. Japan.

Oct. Oct. May

1, 1966 1, 1966 1, 1966

Japan. Japan. United Kingdom.

Proclamation 3819 THANKSGIVING DAY, 1967 By the President of the United States of America A Proclamation

The first American tradition grew out of gratitude for survival. I t began—long before independence was a dream—with families responding to an even deeper human impulse. They had suffered the rigors of winter in a new world—and they had endured. They put aside their plows and thanked God for the harvest's bounty. Over the years, we have made Thanksgiving a unique national occasion. Thanking God for His goodness, we thank Him as well for the promise and the achievement of America. Our reasons for gratitude are almost without number. We are grateful for the endurance of our government for one hundred and eighty years. We are grateful that the founding fathers planned so wisely for the generations that followed them. We are grateful for a material abundance beyond any mankind has ever known. I n our land, the harvests have been good.

November 9, 1967