Finished reading Part III of "Hover Car Racer" this morning. Also finished listening to "King Lear" by William Shakespeare on abridged audiobook (with Emma Thompson as Cordelia). I suppose it might've been a great story if I had actually been able to understand more than 15% of it. Oh, well.
Listened to the following CDs today: "Songbird" by Eva Cassidy, "Shades of Purple" by M2M, [Self Titled] by Bayanga, "Freak of Nature" by Anastacia, and "J. Lo" by Jennifer Lopez.
In case I forget, the Community Services Block Grant (CSBG) Act (and changes thereto) can be looked up via several sources, including the Library of Congress' Thomas website, are available in PDF form from the Gov't Printing Office (Pub. L. 105-285), and are also found in the official United States Code (U.S.C. title 42, chapter 106, sections 9901 et seq.). Also, so I don't have to look it up again, the CSBG Act has been amended several times by various Human Services Reauthorization Acts: PL 97-35 (1981), 97-115 (1981), 98-558 (1984), 99-425 (1986), 101-501 (1990), 101-624 (1990), 103-94 (1993), 103-252 (1994), and 105-285 (1998). And for reasons yet unknown to me, there seems to be a dual naming convention for it, "42 USC 9904(c)(1)" equalling "Sect. 675(c)(a)(1) of the CSBG act". Policitians, hmmmph.
Also, the naming convention for Public Law (e.g., PL 98-558) is broken into two simple parts: the first number is the Congress number (the number of the Congress changes each year; i.e., "the 98th Congress"), followed by a hyphen, then the number of the law that year (i.e., the 558th law finalized that year). The official U.S. Code can be found in several places, including at the GPO, Cornell's LII, the House of Representatives' site, and at FindLaw. Also, any section of the U.S. Code can be downloaded in DOC format.
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