TAB! i OF < ONTENTS XI 



X. International Scientific Cooperation, 1959-79 -Con. p age 



Apollo-Soyuz 412 



Keeping the committee members informed .... 413 



Progress of negotiations 1972 415 



Opposition to Apollo-Soyuz 416 



The Teague-Winn trip to Russia — 1972 416 



Teague opposition to Apollo-Soyuz 417 



Astronaut Stafford moderates Teague's opposition . 419 



Stabilizing factors 420 



Safety and money limitations 421 



Teague presses for more experiments 421 



More money for experiments 422 



Apollo-Soyuz a success — 1975 423 



DISPA— 1975-76 424 



Ray Thornton as chairman 425 



International implications of early hearings — 1975 • 426 

 Impact of Thornton subcommittee recommenda- 

 tions 427 



Technology transfer to OPEC countries 428 



U.S.-U.S.S.R. cooperative agreements — 1975 • . 428 



Council of Europe Conference in 1975 429 



DISPAC— 1977-78, Chairman Scheuer 430 



Jurisdictional problems 432 



Law of the Sea Conference 432 



Comparative criminal justice 433 



Nutrition 435 



"Appropriate" technology 435 



Science, Technology, and DiplomacyAct of 1978 . . 436 



Transfer of technology to OPEC countries .... 438 



U.S.-U.S.S.R. cooperative agreements — 1978 . . . 438 



U.N. Conference on Science and Technology . . . 439 



Other DISPAC activities 440 



European oversight trip 440 



The Wydler reports 441 



Antarctic Conservation Act of 1978 443 



International space activities 445 



Institute for Scientific and Technological Coopera- 

 tion 446 



United States-China scientific exchanges 447 



European oversight trip in 1979 448 



Conclusion 449 



