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CRS861018Apage21
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of an employee would not be "protected" as matters of 63 H.R. Rpt. No. 1717 (Conference Report), supra at 132. 64 H.R. Rpt.No. 95~l7l7, supra at 130. 65 795 F.2d 1544 (Fed. Cir. 1986).
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CRS86545EPWpage33
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- lcas-14 public schools tend to ignore the role of religion, especially fundamentalist Protestantism, in contemporary American life. lg/" Critics of this line of argument have stated that*these complaints come ‘ from individuals disgruntled by the Constitutional requirement for'the public.’h schools to be religiously neutral. They argue that no "religion" of Fsecular humanism
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CRS86545EPWpage21
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. or approaches that are seen as embodying these non-academic‘and‘Fmorally rela- tivisticf characteristics. A selected list of such topics, as specified by several such analysts, is provided belowf 5/ '1. ‘ moral education, 2. values clarification. .3. situation ethics‘ 4. group counseling. 5. group therapy‘ 6. .surviva1 games _ . 7. sensitivity training 8. affective education in general, including
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CRS86545EPWpage05
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; ”SE¢ula; Hfimanfism" as “Un£ntended Consequepce“..;....;..5 . . . . . . . . ..7 CL "Secular Hu$anism" a$ "Religiofi".L;f...; . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .,.....il II;%ETHE TOPIC os "SECULAR HUMANISM" IN FEDERALVA EDUCATION LEGISLATION,.....J,..., . . . . . . ..f.........;.,;§....J.;....}L;16 A. ‘Education Afiendménfis of 1976 . . . . . . . . . . . . ....f
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CRS86545EPWpage03
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r- , ' % AESTRACT C This panef pzovides a~discussion of the range of meanings for the concept. I of "secular humanism,"‘as applied to the curricuium of elementary and secondary'h , x hschools. Included is an butline of Federal education legislatien in which this * 0 term has been used.
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CRS83557EPWpage15
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a slightly different universe of antecedent programs than has been used in this CRS paper. The primary difference is their exclusion of programs in the Secretary's discretionary fund under chapter 2. 4/ According to the authors, the FY 1980 funding level for antecedent programs for sample districts was $137.0 million; the FY 1981 level was $90.6 million. The FY 1982 funding level under chapter 2
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CRS861038Fpage13
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CRS-6 FY87 (1986) COLA ACTIONSi The Reagan Administration+s FY87 DoD budget proposed to eliminate the military retired pay COLA scheduled for January 1, 1987.If accepted, this proposal would have meant that there would have been no COLA between that paid on January 1,,198S, and the one scheduled, under permanent law, for January i, 1933. The final ConcurrentReso1ution on the FY87 Budget ($s Con
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CRS86635ENRpage23
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industrial and value-added products. USDA must make at least $10 million available annually through 1989 for grants and other cooperative arrangements, provided that enough matching requests are made (Federal funding is limited to 50 percent).. Other research language requires the Secretary to carry out demonstrations promoting the development or commercialization of native agricultural crops to be used
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CRS86635ENRpage11
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cas-7 problems. ACS, among other things, can provide to cooperative boards technical assistance and information on marketing techniques and strategies; it also conducts studies of cooperatives and their activities. Total FY86 budget: about $4.7 million. CONTACT: ACS, USDA, Washington, DC 20250; telephone: (202) 447-8870. RESEARCH EXTENSION AND INFORMATION Market News Service AMS is responsible
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CRS86635ENRpage07
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, DC 20250; telephone: (202) 447-8998. Marketing Orders The Agricultural Marketing Agreement Act of 1937 was enacted to foster orderly marketing conditions for certain commodities and thus help stabilize producers’ prices, which otherwise might fluctuate widely in response to a relatively smaller change in supply. Marketing orders are organized geographically and based on mandatory agreements between
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CONTACT: ERS and SRS Information Offices, Room 228, l30l New York Ave. N.W., USDA, Washington, DC 20005; telephone: (202) 786-1504. §/ Commerce Department Economic Information Several offices within the U.S. Department of Commerce also offer business and market information that can prove helpful to agricultural interests. The International Trade Administration (ITA) now publishes 4/ Interested persons
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CRS86635ENRpage14
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reports ofia technical or specialized nature. Finally, the Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis calculates numerous agricultural commodity and food demand-related indicators, such as personal income, employment, wages and price indices. CONTACT: Department of Commerce, Fourteenth St. Between Constitution Ave. and E St. N.W., Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 377-2000. NTIS is located
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