Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 114 Part 6.djvu/150

 114 STAT. 3206 CONCURRENT RESOLUTIONS—OCT. 24, 2000 Oct. 24, 2000 "THE UNITED STATES CAPITOL"— SENATE PRINT [S. Con. Res. 141] Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That (a) a revised edition of the publication entitled "The United States Capitol" (referred to as "the pamphlet") shall be reprinted as a Senate document. (b) There shall be printed a total of 2,850,000 copies of the pamphlet in English and seven other languages at a cost not to exceed $165,900 for distribution as follows: (1)(A) 206,000 copies of the pamphlet in the English language for the use of the Senate with 2,000 copies distributed to each Member; (B) 886,000 copies of the pamphlet in the English language for the use of the House of Representatives with 2,000 copies distributed to each Member; and (C) 1,758,000 copies of the pamphlet for distribution to the Capitol Guide Service in the following languages: (i) 908,000 copies in English; (ii) 100,000 copies in each of the following seven languages: Spanish, German, French, Russian, Japanese, Italian, and Korean; and (iii) 150,000 copies in Chinese. (2) If the total printing and production costs of copies in paragraph (1) exceed $165,900, such number of copies of the pamphlet as does not exceed total printing and production costs of $165,900, shall be printed with distribution to be allocated in the same proportion as in paragraph (1) as it relates to numbers of copies in the English language. Agreed to October 24, 2000. DEATHS OF JOHN KAISER AND OTHERS IN Oct. 24, 2000 KENYA—CONDEMNATION AND INVESTIGATION [S.Con. Res. 146] Whereas Father John Kaiser, a Catholic of the Order of the Mill Hill Missionaries and a native of Minnesota, who for 36 years served as a missionary in the Kisii and Ngong Dioceses in the Republic of Kenya and advocated the rights of all Kenyans, was shot dead on Wednesday, August 23, 2000; Whereas Father Kaiser was a frequently outspoken advocate on issues of human rights and against the injustice of government corruption in Kenya; Whereas fellow priests report that Father Kaiser spoke to them of his fear for his life on the night before his assassination; Whereas the murders of Father Stallone, Father Graife, and Father Luigi Andeni, all of Marsabit Diocese in Kenya, the circumstances of the murder of Brother Larry Timors of Nakaru Diocese in Kenya, the murder of Father JVIartin Boyle of Eldoret Diocese, and the murders of other local human rights advocates in Kenya have not yet been fully explained, nor have the perpetrators of these murders been brought to justice; Whereas the report of a Kenyan governmental commission, known as the Akiwumi Commission, on the government's investigation into tribal violence between 1992 and 1997 in Kenya's Great

�