Labor-Health, Education, and Welfare Appropriations for 1963: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, Eighty-seventh Congress, Second Session, on H.R. 10904, Making Appropriations for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education, and Welfare, and Related Agencies, for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30, 1963, and for Other Purposes, Volume 15U.S. Government Printing Office, 1962 - 2101 pages |
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Page 137
... increase of $ 20,749,000 , for 2,500 positions to continue the rebuilding of the State employment services . With ... increase in the total number of placements made . We are estimating that in 1963 we will make 7,130,000 placements ...
... increase of $ 20,749,000 , for 2,500 positions to continue the rebuilding of the State employment services . With ... increase in the total number of placements made . We are estimating that in 1963 we will make 7,130,000 placements ...
Page 157
... increase from $ 34.75 in 1962 to $ 35.50 in 1963 . Fiscal year 1961 averaged $ 34.05 , increasing from $ 33.29 in July 1960 to a high of $ 34.46 in April 1961. In fiscal year 1962 it has increased from $ 33.86 in July to $ 34.64 in ...
... increase from $ 34.75 in 1962 to $ 35.50 in 1963 . Fiscal year 1961 averaged $ 34.05 , increasing from $ 33.29 in July 1960 to a high of $ 34.46 in April 1961. In fiscal year 1962 it has increased from $ 33.86 in July to $ 34.64 in ...
Page 177
... increase of $ 750,000 over the appro- priation for 1962. However , none of this increase is for salaries and expenses of Bureau employees . We expect to have about the same number of employees in the Bureau as we had in 1962 . The increase ...
... increase of $ 750,000 over the appro- priation for 1962. However , none of this increase is for salaries and expenses of Bureau employees . We expect to have about the same number of employees in the Bureau as we had in 1962 . The increase ...
Page 221
... increase will provide for a very greatly needed expansion of 10 addi- onal positions in the Washington Office to meet the added workload due to the pansion of services in the Department . This increase is estimated at $ 76,222 . A ...
... increase will provide for a very greatly needed expansion of 10 addi- onal positions in the Washington Office to meet the added workload due to the pansion of services in the Department . This increase is estimated at $ 76,222 . A ...
Page 229
... increase requested for this operation is $ 30,000 , of which $ 9,000 is for con- tion of " stay - in - school " exhibits which will be a part of our departmental ram to do something about the 7.5 million potential school dropouts . Due ...
... increase requested for this operation is $ 30,000 , of which $ 9,000 is for con- tion of " stay - in - school " exhibits which will be a part of our departmental ram to do something about the 7.5 million potential school dropouts . Due ...
Common terms and phrases
activities additional administration agencies air pollution amendments amount appropriation areas authorized automation average budget Bureau centers Chairman changes claimants committee Congress construction continue costs dental disabled disease domestic workers drugs effective emphysema employees employment service equipment facilities Federal field fiscal year 1963 Full-time equivalent funds grants hospital improve increase industry laboratory LARRICK legislation manpower MCCALLUM medlars ment million National nursing Obligations by object Office old-age and survivors operations payments percent Personnel benefits Personnel compensation persons planning Posi present problems projects proposed Public Buildings Service Public Health Service reduction rehabilitation requested responsibility RIBICOFF Salaries and expenses schools Senator BYRD Senator COTTON Senator HILL Social Security staff statement studies Subtotal syphilis technical tion Total obligations tuberculosis unemployed venereal disease water pollution water pollution control welfare West Virginia workers workload
Popular passages
Page 888 - State publicwelfare agencies in establishing, extending, and strengthening, especially in predominantly rural areas, public -welfare services (hereinafter in this section referred to as "child welfare services") for the protection and care of homeless, dependent, and neglected children, and children in danger of becoming delinquent...
Page 888 - State to extend and improve (especially in rural areas and in areas suffering from severe economic distress), as far as practicable under the conditions in such State, services for locating crippled children, and for providing medical, surgical, corrective, and other services and care, and facilities for diagnosis, hospitalization, and aftercare, for children who are crippled or who are suffering from conditions which lead to crippling...
Page 50 - THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE THE SECRETARY OF COMMERCE THE SECRETARY OF LABOR THE SECRETARY OF HEALTH. EDUCATION. AND WELFARE THE SECRETARY OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT THE SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION THE ADMINISTRATOR OF VETERANS...
Page 888 - For the purpose of enabling each State to extend and improve, as far as practicable under the conditions in such State, services for promoting the health of mothers and children, especially in rural areas and in areas suffering from severe economic distress...
Page 457 - ... facilities. A report of the Joint Committee of the American Hospital Association and the Public Health Service (PHS publication No. 855) on "Areawide Planning for Hospitals and Related Health Facilities...
Page 408 - Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, it gives me great pleasure to appear before you and explain our request for a fiscal year 1971 supplemental appropriation.
Page 212 - An act to provide conditions for the purchase of supplies and the making of contracts by the United States, and for other purposes," approved June 30, 1936 (49 Stat.
Page 694 - Improved methods and procedures to identify and measure the effects of pollutants on water uses, including those pollutants created by new technological developments...
Page 694 - Practicable means of treating municipal sewage and other waterborne wastes to remove the maximum possible amounts of physical, chemical, and biological pollutants in order to restore and maintain the maximum amount of the Nation's water at a quality suitable for repeated reuse...
Page 33 - Nation. 2. This progress can and must be achieved without the sacrifice of human values. 3. Achievement of technological progress without sacrifice of human values requires a combination of private and governmental action -consonant with the principles of a free society.