Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 115 Part 3.djvu/459

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CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS—DEC. 10, 2001 115 STAT. 2533 (b) ALTERNATIVE NUMBER.— If the total printing and production costs of the number of copies provided under subsection (a) exceed $220,000, there shall be printed the maximum number of copies of the document referred to in section 1 for which such total costs do not exceed $220,000, with distribution allocated in the same proportion as in subsection (a). Agreed to December 7, 2001. "OUR FLAG"—HOUSE PRINT Dec. i, 2001 [H. Con. Res. 244] Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring), SECTION 1. PRINTING OF REVISED EDITION OF "OUR FLAG". A revised edition of the publication entitled "Our Flag", revised under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing, shall be printed as a House document. SEC. 2. NUMBER OF COPIES. (a) IN GENERAL.— Except as provided in subsection (b), there shall be printed a number of copies of the publication described in section 1 as follows: (1) 250,000 for the use of the House of Representatives, distributed in equal numbers to each Member of the House and each Delegate and Resident Commissioner to the Congress. (2) 51,500 for the use of the Senate, distributed in equal numbers to each Senator. (3) 2,000 for the use of the Joint Committee on Printing. (4) 1,400 for distribution to the depository libraries. (b) ALTERNATIVE NUMBER.— If the total printing and production costs of the number of copies provided under subsection (a) exceed $150,000, there shall be printed the maximum number of copies of the publication described in section 1 for which such total costs do not exceed $150,000, with distribution allocated in the same proportion as in subsection (a). Agreed to December 7, 2001. LAO-HMONG RECOGNITION DAY—SUPPORT Dec. 10, 2001 Whereas the Lao-Hmong, which means "free people", are Laotian members of the Hmong tribe and are noted for their warrior tradition, loyalty, and bravery; Whereas beginning in 1960 the United States recruited thousands of the Lao-Hmong to fight against the Communist Pathet Lao and North Vietnamese Army regulars in Laos; Whereas the United States relied heavily on the Lao-Hmong Special Guerrilla Units to engage in direct combat with North Vietnamese troops from 1960 to 1975; Whereas the Lao-Hmong conducted tactical guerrilla actions, flew thousands of deadly combat missions in support of the Armed Forces and the Central Intelligence Agency, and fought in conventional and guerrilla combat clashes with extreme casualties; [H. Con. Res.