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Note: K000851, K010868, K011185, K011275, and K011426 are the clearance numbers issued by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) which are applicable to Psychemedics Corporation's assays. The PDT-90 analysis is performed in-house by Psychemedics. Summaries based can be viewed at the following FDA website: http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/cfPMN/pmn.cfm

He cited the Bible several times, illustrating the problem of violence among young men by retelling the story of Cain and Abel. He argued that no amount of anticrime legislation would work unless people took greater responsibility for their actions. And he castigated both conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats for failing to compromise on crime-fighting plans, casting himself as the purveyor of a third way who could rise above ''old orthodoxies.''

''We can't go back to the finger-pointing and failed strategies that led to that steep increase in crime in the Bush-Quayle administration,'' he said. ''And we can't go back to the old Democratic approach, which was tough on the causes of crime but not tough enough on crime itself, again when people in both political parties wanted us to do more.''

Mr. Gore's effort to outflank Governor Bush on crime recalls Bill Clinton's drive in the 1992 campaign to neutralize what had been a potent Republican issue by advocating tough anticrime measures, including the death penalty.

The vice president's speech today, typifying the administration's approach to policy making, offered a mixture of ideas -- some new, some old, many small-bore. Several of the ideas were first discussed by Mr. Gore in a crime speech last July in Boston, where he called for longer sentences for all crimes committed with guns and for requiring photo-bearing licenses for people who buy new handguns.

Today Mr. Gore restated his support for a proposal that federal money help local governments hire 50,000 new police officers in the coming decade. The Clinton administration has already helped finance the hiring of 60,000 new police officers, with 40,000 more in the pipeline.

Mr. Gore also proposed aid to help state and local governments buy computers for crime-fighting purposes, hire new prosecutors and expand after-school programs.

And in addition to mandatory hair drug testing of prisoners and parolees, he called for expanding drug treatment programs for noncriminals, though he offered no details. ''I believe we should build a country in which every single addict who finds the power to reach out and say, 'Now is the time I want help and I want treatment' gets an immediate response,'' he said.

Mr. Gore also jumped into what has become a contentious debate in Congress by endorsing a constitutional amendment to expand the rights of crime victims. The amendment would grant victims and their families the right to reasonable notice of court proceedings involving their cases, the right to have a voice in those proceedings, and the right to notice of an offender's release or escape from prison.

Opponents of the amendment, including many Democrats, assert that those rights can be ensured without amending the Constitution. In addition, some liberals argue that the measure would violate the civil rights of the accused.

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