(166,581 - 166,600 of 182,826)
Pages
-
-
Title
-
CRS861046SPRpage15
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:30496
-
Text
-
, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Testimony before House Comittee on Science and Technology. Subcommittee on Energy Research and Production. Thei Status of the Technical Infrastructure to Support Domestic Food Irradiation. Hearing, 98th Cong., 2d Sess., July 26, 1984. p. 69. ‘ H.
-
-
Title
-
CRS861046SPRpage32
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:30496
-
Text
-
petitioned for approval of irradiated ham. FDA rescinded the bacon approval in 1968, citing deficiencies ff] Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, Sec 409. 33/ Ibid., Sec. 201(5). fig] Ibid., Sec. 402(a)(7). 47/ Takeguchi, Clyde A. Irradiated Foods--Criteria for Deregulation. Presented at First National Workshop on Radiation Processing of Food, Uni- versity of Maryland, College Park, Md., July 16, 1981. H.
-
-
Title
-
CRS861046SPRpage30
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:30496
-
Text
-
; Peterson ed,, QRC Press, Inc., Boca Raton, v. I. p. 18-38. A Morrison, R. M. and T. Roberts. Food Irradiation: New Perspectives on a Controversial Technology. Economic Research Service, USDA, Chp. IX, Dec. 1985. p. 4-7. Neff, D. The Regulation of Food Irradiation. Nuclear Law Bulletin, no. 35, June 1983. p. 94-111. Vas, K. National and International Programs in: Preservation of Food by Ionizing Radiation
-
-
Title
-
CRS861046SPRpage60
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:30496
-
Text
-
, 1983. §§/ Libby, W. F. and E. F. Black. Food Irradiation: An Unused Weapon Against Hunger, Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Feb. 1978. p. 51-55.
-
-
Title
-
CRS861046SPRpage51
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:30496
-
Text
-
15 2 (35) Lobster meat 0.25 166 02 (35)% (boiled) ‘ Blue crab 0.75 90 l ("(33) ~ (cooked) A (3 i . King crab meat 0.20 23-28 6 (42). King crab meat 0.20 7-11. '1 (33)g Raw shrimp 0.15 10-15 l (33) (shelled) 9 Shrimp (cooked) 0.15 10-155 2 (35). Clams (soft 0.50 119 shelled) 75/ Hasselback, N. H.0 Irradiation: %Bombarding Bacteria Doubles Sea— H. I H‘
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage18
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
47.77 15.92 Illinois 28,591 14.66 11.60 63.00 7.77 Indiana 12,050 13.37 9.82 56.76 18.11 Iowa 6,537 15.01 7.36 60.55 7.97 Kansas 7,124 10.71 14.40 46.25 23.53 Kentucky 8,823 16.88 17.28 56.34 8.70 Louisiana 10,321 16.57 12.30 49.75 17.73 Maine 3,070 18.73 11.92 54.50 14.10 Maryland 18,125 9.88 23.27 35.91 29.59 Massachusetts 20,093 14.42 8.69 41.79 31.93 Michigan 19,978 I 18.09 8.14 62.72 9
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage35
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
Hampshire 0.36 0.40 New Jersey 2.86 2.75 New Mexico 0.70 0 80 New York 6.75 7.63 North Carolina 2.14 1.91 North Dakota 0.55 0.32‘ Ohio 3.38 3.89 Oklahoma 1.18 1.15 Oregon 0.82 0.92 Pennsylvania 4.38 4.93 Rhode Island 0.39 0.42 South Carolina 1.34 1.24 South Dakotai 0.34 0.29 Tennessee 1.72 1.92 _ Texas 7.18 5.49 Utah 0.59 0.61 Vermont 0.18 0.20 iVirginia 2.40 3.72 Washington 2.11 2.27 West Virginia 0.65 0.70
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage09
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
York 48,718 8.33 51,346 7.63 North Carolina 11,724 2.01 12,856 1.91 North Dakota 1,589 0.27 2,127 0.32 Ohio 26,207 4.48 26,171 3.89 Oklahoma 8,215 1.40 7,768 1.15 Oregon 6,010 1.03 6,215 0.92 Pennsylvania 29,525 5.05 33,134 4.93 Rhode Island 2,325 0.40 2,813 0.42 South Carolina 5,850 1.00 8,312 1.24 South Dakota 1,330 0.23 1,926 0.29 Tennessee 9,257 1.58 12,915 1.92 Texas 42,900 7.33 36,910 5.49 Utah
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage06
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
: Maryland (18.1), New Jersey (12.5), New Hampshire (11.1), Virginia (8.4), Kansas (5.6), Connecticut (4.4), Rhode Island (4.2), Washington (2.1), South Carolina (1.8), and Wisconsin (1.5). 4/ Congressional Research Service Report No. 82-28 E. Estimated Fed- eral Tax Payments by Residents of Individual States Compared to Federal Out- lays in the States, Fiscal Year 1977, with additional tables for fiscal
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage29
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
,342 8 566 6 199 19 1,469 8 52 34 55 27 North Carolina 1,588 50 309 46 118 49 1,101 44 25 48 1 35 37 North Dakota 2,561 4 546 7 206 17 1,188 39 0 86 24 536 1 Ohio 1,984 33 339 40 140 41 1,379 16 103 20 23 42 Oklahoma 1,804 44 325 44 170 27 1,199 37 47 35 63 23 Oregon 2,160 19 437 15 235 11 1,370 17 78 25 41 34 Pennsylvania 2,337 11 405 20 164 30 1,647 4 67 29 53 28 Rhode Island 2,250 17 509 9 140 40 1,530
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage19
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
8.66 51.07 18.89 1.89 North Carolina 12,856 14.61 20.94 55.64 7.16 1.65 North Dakota 2,127 17.49 17.40 38.83 9.17 17.11 Ohio 26,171 _ 13.92 10.41 57.69 17.04 0.94 Oklahoma 7,768 13.84 22.00 54.25 7.23 2.68 Oregon 6,215 18.71 12.12 61.27 6.16 1.74 Pennsylvania 33,134 14.54 10.98 60.19 12.38 1.91 Rhode Island 2,813 17.27 13.04 53.87 14.43 1.39 South Carolina 8,312 13.39 23.41 47.01 15.37 0.82 South
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage17
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
), Hawaii (137), New Mexico (133), Missouri (133), Connecticut (130), Washington (124), Massachusetts (124), California (119), North Dakota (109), Florida (106), Mississippi (104), Rhode Island (102), Kansas (102), Nevada (101), and New York (101) (computations based on data in table 3). For fiscal year 1983, 48.0 percent of the $672.6 billion of Federal expen- diture allocated to the 50 States
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage25
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
than on the total including defense contract awards. The States with the largest downward ad- justments for defense spending, in descending order (dollar amounts in paren- theses) are: Virginia (0.61), Hawaii (0.53), Connecticut (0.26), California (0.22), Washington (0.21), Missouri (0.17), Mississippi (0.16), Alaska (0.16), Wyoming (0.15), New Hampshire (0.12), Maryland (0.10), Massachusetts (0.10
-
-
Title
-
CRS84777Epage04
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:80094
-
Text
-
to be prepared by the Census Bureau for three fiscal years (1983-1985). These data have been used to provide the basic information in the several tables included in this report. In addition, the Comptroller General submitted a report to Congress on October 1, 1984, on ways in which the consistency and uniformity of the data can be improved. A copy of the Comptrol- ler General's report was not available
-
-
Title
-
CRS84508ENRpage15
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:84055
-
Text
-
by underground storage tanks. The State of New York has estimated that 16,000 (19 percent) of its 83,000 active underground gasoline tanks are leaking, and that another 28,000 tanks may have been abandoned during the past 10 years. The State of Maine estimates that 25 percent of its 1,600 retail gasoline outlets have underground tanks that are leaking a total of some 11 million gallons yearly. 2/ The State
-
-
Title
-
CRS84508ENRpage11
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:84055
-
Text
-
of Solid Waste Management Programs. January 1977. Washington, p0 V 2/ Shaner, J. Richard. How Non-Detection Can Cost You: The Tank Leak Mess. National Petroleum News, vol. 74, July 1982: 36-40.
Pages