Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 92 Part 1.djvu/1040

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PUBLIC LAW 95-000—MMMM. DD, 1978

92 STAT. 986

'•

Presidential report, transmittal to Speaker of the

House and Senate committee.

22 USC 2220 note.

PUBLIC LAW 95-426—OCT. 7, 1978 (b) I t is therefore the sense of the Congress that the President should— (1) advise the appropriate officials of any foreign government which subjects foreign news correspondents to harassment and restrictions that the United States considers such mistreatment a significant and potentially damaging factor in overall relations of the United States with such country; and (2) raise in appropriate international forums the issue of the treatment of foreign news correspondents, with a view toward gaining multilateral support for the legitimate rights of such correspondents. (c) Not later than January 20, 1979, the President shall transmit to the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations of the Senate a report describing fully and completely actions taken pursuant to subsection (b). INTERNATIONAL FOOD RESERVE

SEC. 604. (a) The Congress finds that— (1) half a billion people suffer regularly from malnutrition or undernutrition; (2) even very modest shortfalls in crop production can result in greatly increased human suffering, and undercut the benefits of bilateral and multilateral assistance programs, in poor developing countries with chronic food deficits; (3) increasing variability in world food production and trade presents a serious threat not only to consumers but also to producers; (4) the World Food Conference recognized the urgent need for an international undertaking to achieve a system of world food security based largely upon strategic food reserves: (5) the Congress through legislation has repeatedly urged the President to negotiate with other nations to establish such a system of reserves; (6) although the nations of the world have agreed to begin discussions on a system of grain reserves to regulate food availability, a«?reement on a global network of nationally held reserves still eludes the international community; (7) while some progress has taken place in the United States in creating domestic farmer held reserves, the scale of such reserves does not insure adequate protection against fluctuations in world production and price; and (8) the United States, as the world's leading producer of foodstuffs, remams m a unique position to provide the leadership necessary to make world food security a reality. (b) It is therefore the sense of the Congress that the President should continue his efforts directed toward achievement of an agreement establishing an international network of nationally held grain reserves which provides for supply assurance to consumers and income security to producers. SPANISH DEMOCRACY

27 UST 3005.

SEC. 605. (a) The Congress finds that— (1) the Senate, in rendering its advice and consent to ratification of the Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation between the United States and Spain (signed on January 24, 1976), declared