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CRS83511SPpage03
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with _ additions of information from other sources. 1/ W ‘_L/ Jahn, Robert. The Persistent Paradox of Psychic Phenomena: An Engineering Perspective. Proceedings of the IEEE, v. 70, no. 2, 1982. p. 136-170.
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CRS87390Lpage20
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CRS-16 Public housing (con't.) RT Federal aid to housing Housing authorities Low-income housing Public service employment . [Use for writings on public sector employment programs intended to provide jobs for unemployed or underemployed during periods of high unemployment, and to provide training and manpower services related to such employment.] UF Emergency employment ‘ BT Federal aid
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CRS87390Lpage16
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CRS-12 Medicaid [Application of this term is limited to the U.S. This term used beginning July 1973. Earlier materials can be found under the term Medical assistance programs.] i M UF Medical assistance programs Medical care for the aged Medical care for the medically indigent BT Medical care RT Medicaid fraud Medicare National health insurance Prospective payment systems (Medical care) Public
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CRS85624page39
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CRS-17% enactment of specific legislation was illustrated in the passage of the I National Defense Education Act following the launch of the Russian Sputnik. isince the public support, and possibly the need, for program development efforts often decline after a few years, an initial cost-sharing requirement with a declining Federal share might increase the possibility of the program having
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CRS85624page31
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CRS-13 improvethe overall quality of existing graduate education programs in col- leges or universities, or to support the initiation and development of addi- tional graduate programs. If the goal is toimprove access, a relatively small amount of funds can have considerable impact. If the goal is to improve the quality of existing graduate programs, the cost could vary depending upon the share
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CRS85624page13
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CRS-4 . The first grants were awarded in FY 1978; awards were made to 55 colleges ‘land universities. Of the total of $3,250,000 in funds allocated in that year, $485,340 was for part A activities, and the remainder was for part B fellow- ships. For the 1979-80 academic year, institutional grants totalled $1,114,281 of the $8,000,000 total grants for parts A and B; and for the 1980-81 academic
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CRS85624page37
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CRS-16 relatively small level of funding and that funds can be secured from non- Federal sources if there is sufficient interest in the concept. Targeted Support As with the current CLEO and clinical programs for law students, fellow- ships and support could be limited to select specific graduate programs that are deemed important for economic development or national interest reasons. Programs
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CRS85624page07
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GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN HIGHER EDUCATION TITLE IX OF THE HIGHER EDUCATION ACT-- SUMMARY, ISSUES, AND OPTIONS Various types of Federal assistance are provided for graduate programs in higher education through programsfunded by the National Science Founda- tion and research and development funds from a variety of Federal agencies, but title IX of the Higher Education Act has been the principal source of funds not related to specific research programs or identified national prior- ity fields of study. Current provisions of title IX of the Higher Education Act authorize funding for graduate education through five parts. Part A authorizes grants, to institutions of higher education to maintain, strengthen, and improve grad- uate programs and also to strengthen undergraduate programs when such action is considered necessary to strengthen graduate programs; however, these funds are allocated in conjunction with part B grants. Under part B, funds are au- thorized for grants to institutions of higher education for the purpose of providing fellowships to graduate and professional students who demonstrate , financial need. A program of national graduate fellowships in the arts, hu- man ities, and social sciences has been authorized under part C. Under part D, the Secretary of Education is authorized to enter into contracts with agen- cies other than institutions of higher education for the purpose of assisting individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds to undertake training for the legal profession. This program has been administered through noncompetitive grants to the Council on Legal Education Opportunities (CLEO). Part E authorizes the Secretary of Education to enter into grants or contracts with accredited law " ' t
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CRS85624page29
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for graduate and professional opportunity fel- lowships under part B increased slightly from $11,000,000 to $11,750,000, and appropriations for public service fellowships continued at $2,500,000. For FY 1985, appropriations were increased from the FY 1984 level of 1$1,000,000 to $1,500,000 for part D programs related to legal education of the gdisadvantaged and also for part E programs to support law school
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CRS861048Apage17
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a sexually oriented conversation between lovers, in violation of each party's right of privacy. 9 41 721 F.2d 1281 (10th Cir. 19s3). 5?
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CRS861048Apage18
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it unlawful to knowingly display any of these materials "in a manner whereby juveniles may examine and peruse" them, and was held by the court to be unconstitutionally overboard-' Under the standard established in a 1975 Supreme Court decision, Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville,44 a statute is not facially overboard unless (1) it cannot easily be given a narrowing construction, and (2) it has
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CRS86564Epage11
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CRS-4 TABLE 1- Relative Contributions to Growth Over the=First',l1 Quarters ' ‘ of Economic Expansion (measured in real terms) ' = ' Current Expansion‘: ’Average Expansion Total‘GNP ‘.‘_ ‘ ‘ 1 ‘. 100.0 Z ,1~ , * 100.0 % Personal»Consumption Expenditures ‘ » 66.7 i 50.8 Gross Private Domestic Investment 50.3 1 A y-‘ 29.5 Government Purchases of Goods and‘Services 12.8 ,2 2 * y
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CRS861048Apage19
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in accordance with 47 U.S.C. § 223(b)(2) stated that it was a defense to prosecution under § 223(b) that the defendant had taken either of the following steps to restrict access to the prohibited conversations: (a) operating only between the hours of 9:00 p.m- and 8:00 a.m. Eastern Time, or (b) requiring payment by credit card before 45 802 F.2d at 695 n. 8, 696. 45 £1. at 696.
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CRS861048Apage15
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that there are other requirements which must be met before these laws will be upheld. For example, there is an additional requirement, now set forth as the second element of the Miller standard, that the proscribed material be "specifically I 35 £3: at 636, citing Bookcase, Inc. v. Broderick, 18 N.Y.2d 71, 75, 218. N.E.2d 668, 671 (1966), appeal dismissed for want o£_a_properly presented federal question sub
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CRS861048Apage13
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to such matter can be restricted, the question becomes to what extent, if at all, adult accessa. can also be limited if this is necessary to protect minors in this fashion- 23 423 u.s. 49 (1973). 24 "Telephone Pornography," su ra n. 15/ at 518. 25 United States v. Reidel, 402 U.S. 351 (1971). 25 United States v.Thirty-Seven Photographs, 402 U.S. 363 (1971). 27 The 1983 amendment's legislative
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CRS87317Apage03
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ABSTRACT About half the states have recently modified or eliminated their laws on joint and several liability. In these states, if two or more defendants con- ; . tribute to a tort, then, at least in some circumstances, each is liable onlyp in proportion to his share of responsibility, instead of 100 percent liable.
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