Some airlines now include agricultural quarantine notices in publica- 
tions and time tables, and use training materials to acquaint airline 
personnel with quarantine restrictions. After the July 1965 meeting, 
one company and the Division preparedaspecializedflyeron 
agricultural quarantines applying to Hawaii. This flyer is now included 
inallticket folders fortravel toandfrom the Islands. Another company 
asked foragricultural quarantine flyers already available for use inthe 
West Indies. 
A similar meeting was held December 15, 1965, with the Passenger 
Traffic Committee of the American Merchant Marine Institute, 
representing the American flag steamship lines, to explore additional 
ways of providing information to travelers utilizing this means of 
transportation. 
During the year flyers on agricultural quarantine restrictions were 
provided to 1, 720 travel agents in the United States for theiruse when 
booking foreign travel. 
The Department, in cooperation with other border clearance agencies 
and the U.S. Travel Service, produced a 10-minute motion picture 
showing entry procedures. This movie includes notice of agricultural 
quarantines. Plans are being made to translate this movie into eight 
foreign languages for showing in U.S. TravelService offices throughout 
the world. 
A new flyer concerning plant quarantine restrictions that apply to 
persons 1eturning from travel to Mexicois being distributed by hotels, 
motels,) insurance offices, and travelagents. Also, three major 
gasoline companies are supplying this flyer in trip kits prepared for 
persons traveling to Mexico. 
Publications issued overseas to persons applying for visas for travel 
to the Unites States and to persons in the United States obtaining 
passports for travel abroad were continued. A notice of agricultural 
quarantine restrictions is printed in all U.S. passports issued since 
January 1,1965. During 1965 a publication displaying available photos 
of Division operations and selected foreign plant pests was sent to 
1,500 U.S. newspapers. As a result, copies of photos have been used 
in more than 100 newspaper and magazinearticles. One-minute 
televisionspot announcements were continued and three new announce- 
ments were sent to 200 television stations, reaching an estimated 75 
million viewers. Two longer television programs on agricultural 
quarantines were prepared for use by farm program directors. One 
was filmed and distributed to 200 stations; the second placed on video 
tape and supplied to stations requesting farm material. 
