71. Besides curbing excessive circulation, the bill also would ban governments and private companies from selling Social Security numbers or displaying them on public documents. 72. Besides curbing excessive use, the bill also would ban governments and private companies from selling Social Security numbers or displaying them on public documents. 73. Instead of capping expenditures, opponents said the bill should ban special interest money from organizations such as political action committees, lobbyists and unions. 74. One bill bans cosmetic surgery ads that use misleading before-and-after photos or make scientific claims that cannot be substantiated. 75. That bill would ban soft money from federal campaigns, large donations that political parties and some politicians seek from corporations, labor and individuals. 76. The bill also banned the common practice by employers of requiring women to submit proof of sterilization or a pregnancy test as part of job admission. 77. The bill would ban so-called soft money, the loosely regulated, unlimited donations that unions, corporations and individuals make to political parties. 78. The bill would virtually ban soft money, the unlimited donations that unions, corporations and individuals make to the political parties. 79. The bill bans the freezing of embryos, considered worldwide to offer couples the best chance of achieving success. 80. The bill bans the sale of mines and other natural resources, allowing only the leasing of their operational rights. |