90 



COMMERCIAL FISHERIES REVIEW 



Vol. 28, No. 8 



Senate July 12, 1966, passed with committee amend- 

 ments S. 3034 , to authorize feasibility investigations of 

 certain water resource development proposals. 



WETLANDS RECREATION AREA FOR FISH AND 

 WILDLIFE: Introduced in House H. iTTSTTOT Tenzer), 

 June 16, 1966; H. R. 16148 (Kelly), July 12; to provide 

 for the protection, conservation, and development of 

 the natural coastal wetlands of Hempstead -South Oyster 

 Bay, Long Island, for fish and wildlife and outdoor rec- 

 reation purposes, and for other purposes; to Commit- 

 tee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rep. Tenzer 

 in extension of his remarks ( Congressional Record, 

 June 16, 196% p. A3266) stated that this bill incorpo- 

 rates the araendments proposed at hearings held on 

 H. R. 11236 (introduced Sept. 23, 1965), and related 

 bills, to establish a Long Island National Wetlands Rec- 

 reation Area. These amendments are designed to im- 

 prove the provisions of the bill. 



Subcommittee on Fisheries and Wildlife Conserva- 

 tion of House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fish- 

 eries June 22, 1966, continued hearings on H. R. 11236, 

 and related bills. Testimony was heard from Stanley 

 A. Cain, Assistant Secretary of Interior for Fish and 

 Wildlife and Parks. 



H. R . 16008 (Wydler) introduced in House June 28, 

 1966, to provide for the establishment of a study com- 

 mission to consider methods for conserving, protecting, 

 and developing the Long Island Wetlands Conservation 

 Area; to Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries. 



WORLD HUNGER: Senate June 13, 1966, referred H. R 



14929 to Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. 



Food for Freedom Program and Commodity Re- 

 serves: Hearings before the Committee on Agriculture 

 and Forestry, United States Senate, 89th Congress, 2nd 

 session on S. 2157 , S. 2826 , S. 2933, S. 2995 and H. R . 

 14929, bills to promote international trade in agricul- 

 tural commodities to combat hunger and malnutrition, 

 to further economic development, to establish and 

 maintain reserves of agricultural commodities to pro- 



tect consumers, and for other purposes, Mar. 2, 3, 4, 

 7, 8, and June 15, 1966, 518 pp., printed. Contents in- 

 clude miscellaneous documents and statements of vari- 

 ous Federal and state officials; business representa- 

 tives and members of Congress. 



Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry 

 June 15, 1966, held hearings on H. R. 14929, proposed 

 Food for Freedom Act. Hearings were adjourned sub- 

 ject to call. 



Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry met 

 June 28, 1966, to consider H. R . 14929 , proposed Food 

 for Freedom Act. 



Sen. McGovern spoke in the Senate and inserted in 

 Congressional Record , June 30, 1966 (pp. 14153-14154), 

 the text of a resolution adopted in May 1966 by the In- 

 ternational Federation of Agricultural Producers, on 

 world economic development and world food policy. He 

 stated this resolution reflects a growing consensus on 

 the sort of war against want which he proposed in the 

 International Food and Nutrition Act, and which is now 

 embodied in the food-for-freedom bill pending before 

 the Senate Agriculture Committee. 



Rep. Quie spoke in the House ( Congressional Rec - 

 ord, July 12, 1966, pp. 15063-15064) voicing his objec- 

 tion to the amendment which was adopted by the House 

 to the Food for Freedom Act on June 9, 1966, which 

 would permit fish concentrate to be exported under Pub- 

 lic Law 480 without prior approval from the Food and 

 Drug Administration. He inserted excerpts from an ar- 

 ticle which appeared in a recent issue of the New Zea - 

 land Dairy Exporter by Sir Ernest Manden, fellow of the 

 Royal Society and elder statesman of science in New 

 Zealand, and stated that Manden's observations com- 

 mand more than passing note. 



Note: REPORT ON nsHERY ACTIONS IN ,89TH CONGRESS: The U. S. De- 

 partment of Interior's Bureau of Commercial Fisheries has issued a leaflet on 

 the status of most legislation of interest to commercial fisheries at the end of 

 the 1st session of the 89th Congress. For copies of MNL--3 "Legislative Ac- 

 tions Affecting Commercial Fisheries, 89th Congress, 1st Session 1965, " write 

 to the Fishery Market News Service, U, S. Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, 

 1815 N. Fort Myer Drive, Rm. 510, Arlington, Va. 22209. 



Editorial Assistants: Ruth V. Keefe and Jean Zalevsky 

 Compositors: Alma Greene and Mary Andrews 



Photograph Credits : Page by page, the following list gives the source or photographer 

 for each photograph in this issue. Photographs on pages not mentioned were obtained from 

 the Service's file and the photographers are unknown. 



p. 1— F. B. Sanford and C. F. Lee; pp. 56, 57 (fig. 3, upper left), 59 (left), 66, 67 

 and 68 (fig. 1)--R. S. Croker; pp. 57 (figs. 1-3) and 58 (fig. 4)— France Peche, 

 Lorient; p. 58 (figs. 5-8) — Marche's du Poisson; p. 59 (right) — Consulate General of 

 Japan, N. Y. ; p. 68 (fig. 2)--John Barrett; p. 78 (figs. 3 & 5) and 79 (figs. 6 & 7) — 

 U, S. Coast Guard. 



