[Congressional Record Volume 143, Number 10 (Thursday, January 30, 1997)]
[Senate]
[Pages S898-S899]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                         ADDITIONAL COSPONSORS


                                  s. 4

  At the request of Mr. Ashcroft, the name of the Senator from 
Mississippi [Mr. Cochran] was added as a cosponsor of S. 4, a bill to 
amend the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 to provide to private sector 
employees the same opportunities for time-and-a-half compensatory time 
off, biweekly work programs, and flexible credit hour programs as 
Federal employees currently enjoy to help balance the demands and needs 
of work and family, to clarify the provisions relating to exemptions of 
certain professionals from the minimum wage and overtime requirements 
of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, and for other purposes.


                                 s. 11

  At the request of Mr. Inouye, his name was added as a cosponsor of S. 
11, a bill to reform the Federal election campaign laws applicable to 
Congress.


                                 s. 19

  At the request of Mr. Dodd, the name of the Senator from Nebraska 
[Mr. Kerrey] was added as a cosponsor of S. 19, a bill to provide funds 
for child care for low-income working families, and for other purposes.


                                 s. 29

  At the request of Mr. Lugar, the name of the Senator from Mississippi 
[Mr. Cochran] was added as a cosponsor of S. 29, a bill to repeal the 
Federal estate and gift taxes and the tax on generation-skipping 
transfers.


                                 s. 30

  At the request of Mr. Lugar, the name of the Senator from Mississippi 
[Mr. Cochran] was added as a cosponsor of S. 30, a bill to increase the 
unified estate and gift tax credit to exempt small businesses and 
farmers from inheritance taxes.


                                 s. 31

  At the request of Mr. Lugar, the name of the Senator from Mississippi 
[Mr. Cochran] was added as a cosponsor of S. 31, a bill to phase-out 
and repeal the Federal estate and gift taxes

[[Page S899]]

and the tax on generation-skipping transfers.


                                 s. 86

  At the request of Ms. Snowe, the name of the Senator from New York 
[Mr. D'Amato] was added as a cosponsor of S. 86, a bill to amend the 
Public Health Service Act to provide, with respect to research on 
breast cancer, for the increased involvement of advocates in decision 
making at the National Cancer Institute.


                                 s. 122

  At the request of Mr. Moynihan, the name of the Senator from West 
Virginia [Mr. Byrd], was added as a cosponsor of S. 122, a bill to 
amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to correct the treatment of 
tax-exempt financing of professional sports facilities.


                                 s. 127

  At the request of Mr. Moynihan, the names of the Senator from 
Arkansas [Mr. Bumpers], the Senator from Indiana [Mr. Coats], the 
Senator from Mississippi [Mr. Cochran], the Senator from California 
[Mrs. Feinstein], the Senator from Hawaii [Mr. Inouye], the Senator 
from Vermont [Mr. Jeffords], the Senator from New Jersey [Mr. 
Lautenberg], and the Senator from Maryland [Mr. Sarbanes] were added as 
cosponsors of S. 127, a bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 
to make permanent the exclusion for employer-provided educational 
assistance programs, and for other purposes.


                                 s. 183

  At the request of Mr. Dodd, the name of the Senator from Illinois 
[Ms. Moseley-Braun] was added as a cosponsor of S. 183, a bill to amend 
the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 to apply the Act to a greater 
percentage of the United States workforce, and for other purposes.


                                 s. 207

  At the request of Mr. McCain, the names of the Senator from Michigan 
[Mr. Abraham] and the Senator from Maine [Ms. Collins] were added as 
cosponsors of S. 207, a bill to review, reform, and terminate 
unnecessary and inequitable Federal subsidies.

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