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(3) Soviet Employees on U.S. Diplomatic Premises

Partial Text of Public Law 99-93 [H.R. 2068], 99 Stat. 405, approved August 16,

1985

AN ACT To authorize appropriations for fiscal years 1986 and 1987 for the Department of State, the United States Information Agency, the Board for International Broadcasting, and for other purposes.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SEC. 136. SOVIET EMPLOYEES AT UNITED STATES DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR MISSIONS IN THE SOVIET UNION.

(a) LIMITATION.-To the maximum extent practicable, citizens of the Soviet Union shall not be employed as foreign national employees at United States diplomatic or consular missions in the Soviet Union after September 30, 1986.

(b) REPORT.-Should the President determine that the implementation of subsection (a) poses undue practical or administrative difficulties, he is requested to submit a report to the Congress describing the number and type of Soviet foreign national employees he wishes to retain at or in proximity to United States diplomatic and consular posts in the Soviet Union, the anticipated duration of their continued employment, the reasons for their continued employment, and the risks associated with the retention of these employees.

1 22 U.S.C. 3943 note.

8. Child Health Revolution

Public Law 98-198 [S.J. Res. 111], 97 Stat. 1355, approved December 1, 1983

JOINT RESOLUTION Expressing the sense of the Congress with respect to international efforts to further a revolution in child health.

Whereas the report entitled "State of the World's Children, 198283" of the United Nations Children's Fund (hereafter in this joint resolution referred to as "UNICEF") offers unprecedented hope for a "revolution in child health" which could save the lives of up to twenty thousand of the forty thousand children who perish daily around the world from malnutrition and disease; Whereas the techniques involved in this health revolution including oral rehydration home treatment, low-cost vaccines which do not require refrigeration, promotion of breast-feeding, and use of child growth charts to detect malnutrition, are estimated to cost only a few dollars per child;

Whereas this UNICEF report and the activities of UNICEF have been widely acclaimed by the Secretary General of the United Nations and the heads of the governments of such countries as the United Kingdom, France, Sweden, India, and Pakistan; and Whereas the President of the United States on April 18, 1983, has issued a statement endorsing this health revolution for children and calling on the cooperation of United States Government agencies with international organizations and agencies associated in this effort: Now, therefore, be it

Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That it is the sense of the Congress that

(1) the techniques articulated by UNICEF in its report entitled "The State of the World's Children, 1982-1983" represent an unprecedented low-cost opportunity to significantly reduce child mortality and morbidity throughout the world, and have the full support and encouragement of the Congress at a time of economic difficulty and constriction for all countries;

(2) the President be commended for taking steps to promote, encourage, and undertake activities to further the objectives of the child health revolution and for directing all appropriate United States Government agencies, including the Department of State, the Agency for International Development, and the Department of Health and Human Services to support and cooperate with UNICEF, the World Health Organization, the United Nations Development Program, and other international financial and assistance agencies participating in fostering this child health revolution; and

(3) other public and private organizations involved in health, education, finance ications, and humanitarian

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USE OF THE INDEX

The index is organized by subject matter only. Each subject entry also includes the legal citation indicating the document to which it refers. These legal citations were not chosen on the basis of standard legal citation form, but rather for the amount of information they provided and for convenience in producing a computer-printed index. A list of abbreviations used in the legal citation section of the index appears below:

Art-Article

EO-Executive Order
fn-Footnote

FR-Federal Register

H Con Res-House Concurrent Resolution

HRes-House Resolution

PL-Public Law

Sec-Section

Stat-United States Statutes at Large.

Page references, wherever possible, indicate the exact page on which mention of the entry is made. Entries of a more general nature that refer to a large section or to an entire document are listed with the page on which the reference begins.

(1011)

ABM

ACDA

ADB

AFDB

AFDF

AID

EEC

FAO

FCC

GAO

IADB

IAEA

ICA

IDA

IDCA

IFAD

IFC

IFIS

IMF

ΜΙΑ

NATO

OAS

OPIC

POW

SALT

SDAF

SEATO

U.N.

UNCTAD

UNDP

UNESCO

USIA

GLOSSARY OF TERMS USED IN THE INDEX

Anti-Ballistic Missile

Arms Control and Disarmament Agency
Asian Development Bank

African Development Bank
African Development Fund

Agency for International Development
European Economic Community
Food and Agriculture Organization
Federal Communications Commission
General Accounting Office

Inter-American Development Bank
International Atomic Energy Agency

International Communication Agency

International Development Association

International Development Cooperation Agency

Internationl Fund for Agricultural Development
International Finance Corporation

International Financial Institutions

International Monetary Fund
Missing-in-Action

North Atlantic Treaty Organization

Organization of American States

Overseas Private Investment Corporation

[blocks in formation]

United Nations Conference on Trade and Develop-
ment

United Nations Development Program

United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural
Organization

United States Information Agency.

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