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CRS86760GOVpage16
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—~ -4 0 0 o C) E) {:3 0 --'C)(0(I)\l) 0 (II L101.) mwwmwmmbmmmmmm-Ll::3:777 wN4owmqmmhwm4ummumm5wm ._—D_.I...—«\._..O....b...5—-I...-.D_..4b -.h...—i1...J...a1...|....b..>_.b 00(1) Illa ( 6 m 137 138 G9 '40 ‘.41 142 143 m4 .145 146 147 -148 149 150 151 ‘I52 ‘:53 7A5L5 THE 0.5 ::LIn'=O POPULATION BY.CQHSRESSI1HAL DISTRICT RANKED 5Y -0r55R STA75 COnGR5SSIONAL '0&apos
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CRS86760GOVpage18
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)C)C')l\)C)(Df\)(.’)C)-—‘C)C) (0£)b(D01wIU—-®-Jfxfiv*~*# -ACJCJCJ-*-AC)-* .hI:4J) w c)oc)ou.or3oc)o—»A-»o—.oc)o—»» u)wrou)orou)m(uLsm—» m(n—~m—— N U_ATIC OTA 457.833 -435.257 575.845 472.538 517,088 541.130 481 834 517,075 535,219 434,347 525.223 :2/.908 525.484 578.735 514.788 553.715 575.943 53 .255 573.587 572.901 543.509 522.003 544.917 525.840 485.112 578.110 E“2,752 548.037 539.720 457.528 E'2.35T 573.154 574,011 472
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CRS86760GOVpage22
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TASLE 2. THE U.S. FILIPINO POPULATION, EY CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT RANKEO 5V NUMBER Q53 STAIE p CONGRESSIONAL 107A; FILIPINO I OISTRICT APOPULATION 499 NORTH CAROLINA 08 535.543 105 410 KANSAS 05 472.918 107 411 IONA 05 485.839 108 412 PENNSYLVANIA 18 514.585 108 413 NEW HAMPSHIRE 01 480.827 1 104 414 PENNSYLVANIA 04 515.514 104 415 NORTH CAROLINA 11 531,152 102 418 NEW YORK I 33 518.278 97 417
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CRS86760GOVpage07
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.484 .188 034 393 .388 .948 -.038 819.280 ' :;).;5;;;¢;.&‘. ®(08HO0MO 0101 0(1) 819,097~ 818.380 819.088 821.008 821,298 847,127 883,381 888,107 883,898 848.223 840.988 888.192 848,738 844,917 841.888 488.981 488.708 1488.829 488.480 488.839 488.491 472.139 472,988 472,488 473.180 472,918 828,844 ;rnJJ u) (3 :3 o) -» M» u) on 1. u) wstt) whomu)mu) .784‘ oo-—-mm\J\1ww--—-—: E. 3 3’. (13 3* l
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CRS86760GOVpage09
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| 0| 0) U)--—»l\)|\)h(A)——*—-» (D\J\J (A)l\) —-NO (A)0)Ul b(A)l\J \l LU!-» N "J no u) u) u) x: ~J \4 -4 ~ bm'unmummmmu»» 208 283 162 OOOC)--OOO()0(DOOC)OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO_OC)OOO(f)OOO (D (3 C) (3 C) CD ~4 ~4 -4 ~+ C) -4 C) L) in (II N -A N () L‘) - (1) \J 0) 0) x] (u an N u) N 0) (1) G) In C) 010} 5C1 (A)u)0)(D——-(D(D\J~~JI>L()(110 WOO ‘+87 181 256 4'—"\ 105 W
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CRS86760GOVpage01
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L_ C, / ‘1. /47: - RP+“Y #0’ -‘ 7 60” Report No. 86-760 GOV i’ Congressional Research Service The Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 20540 THE U.S. FILIPINO POPULATION, BY CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT Jennifer D; Williams Analyst in American National Government Government Division July 9, 1986 Government Pubiit:ations ' iUnH AUG 0 1 199,4 eivwraisttziington Uiniversiiity Librariies St. Louis, MO
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CRS87390Lpage26
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CRS-22 Welfare fraud BT RT Fraud Public welfare Welfare recipients BT RT Poor Public welfare Welfare state UF BT RT Government planning National planning State planning Social policy Economic policy Public welfare Work and training programs USE Youth USE Youth UF NT RT Manpower training programs Public assistance programs programs Youth services services Youth programs Federal aid to youth services Child welfare Social work
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CRS87390Lpage27
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CRS—23 The terms may be subdivided by geographic subdivisions or by SS subdivi- sions of general application as appropriate: Aid to dependent children--Michigan--State laws Entitlements--U.S.--Conferences Income maintenance programs--Seattle Medicaid‘-Statistics Negative income tax--U.S.--Mathematical models Poor--U.S.--Medical care Public assistance programs--Appropriations Public welfare--Ct. Brit.--Future Transfer payments--OECD countries--Evaluation Welfare recipients--U.S.--Political activities The 55 subdivisions of general application are: Addresses, statements, etc.; Appropriations; Authorization; Bibliography; Biography; Chronology; Conferences; Costs; Dictionaries; Directories; Economic aspects; Environmental aspects; Equipment and supplies; Evaluation; Fees; Film catalogs; Finance; Future; Graphs and charts; History; International cooperation; Law and legisla- tion; Legal cases; Legislative histories; Licenses; Management; Mathematical models; Medical care; Municipal ordinances; Periodicals; Planning; Political activities; Presidential messages; Prices; Pro and con; Public opinion; Researh; Safety measures; Salaries; Scenarios; Security measures; Simulation methods; Social aspects; Standards; State laws; States; Statistics; Study and teaching; Supplemental appropriations; Tariff; Taxation; Technological innova- tions; Treaties; Trends; and wages. In addition to topical descriptors in the Legislative Indexing Vocabulary, material in the CRS Bibliographic Daga Base may also be accessed using the names of laws, organizations, agencies, persons, legal cases, etc. Here are examples from the data base: Callahan v. Carey Computer Matching and Privacy Protection Act (Proposed) Snyder, Mitch U.S. Community Services Administation U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services U.S. National Commission on Social Security Reform
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CRS87390Lpage14
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CRS-10 Income maintenance programs (con't.) Veterans’ disability compensation BT Transfer payments RT Family allowances Family policy Poverty Public assistance programs Social security Income transfer programs USE Income maintenance programs Indigents USE Homeless Poor Vagrancy Infant mortality UF Maternal and child health Mortality y Neonatal mortality NT Sudden death in infants RT Child
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CRS-13 National health insurance UF State health insurance BT Government insurance Health insurance RT Medicaid Medicare National school lunch program USE School lunch program National service UF Alternative military service NT Compulsory military service Compulsory nonmilitary service BT Armed forces RT Conscientious objectors Publicswelfare Social work Technical assistance Volunteer workers
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‘CRS-3 Charities (con't.) Poor Poverty Public welfare Social work Volunteer workers Child care centers USE Day care Child health services NT Child mental health services Federal aid to child health services BT Child welfare Medical care RT Child health Maternal health services Child mental health services UF Mental health services for children BT Child health services Mental health services Child nutrition BT Nutrition RT Child health Infant formulas School lunch programs Child placing USE Foster home care Child welfare UF Protection of children NT Child health services Federal aid to child welfare Maternal and infant welfare BT Family policy Public welfare RT Aid to dependent children Child abuse Children Day care Foster home care Juvenile delinquency Orphans and orphanages Runaway children Unarried fathers Unmarried mothers Youth services Comunity-based residences USE Group homes C Group homes for children Group homes for the handicapped
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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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