Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 104 Part 4.djvu/68

 104 STAT. 2384 PUBLIC LAW 101-542—NOV. 8, 1990 20 USC 1092 note. Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act of 1990. 20 USC 1001 note. 20 USC 1092 note. "(6) The Secretary shall waive the requirements of this subsection for any institution of higher education that is a member of an athletic association or athletic conference that has voluntarily published completion or graduation rate data or has agreed to publish data that, in the opinion of the Secretary, is substantially comparable to the information required under this subsection. "(7) The Secretary, in conjunction with the National Junior College Athletic Association, shall develop and obtain data on completion or graduation rates from two-year colleges that award athletically related student aid. Such data shall, to the extent practicable, be consistent with the reporting requirements set forth in this section, "(8) For purposes of this subsection, the term 'athletically related student aid' means any scholarship, grant, or other form of financial assistance the terms of which require the recipient to participate in a program of intercollegiate athletics at an institution of higher education in order to be eligible to receive such assistance.". (b) EFFECTIVE DATE. — The amendments made by this section shall take effect July 1, 1992, except that the first report to the Secretary of Education shall be due on July 1, 1993. SEC. 105. ANALYSIS OF ATHLETIC ACTIVITY REVENUES. (a) IN GENERAL.— The Secretary, in conjunction with institutions of higher education and collegiate athletic associations, shall analyze the feasibility of and make recommendations regarding a requirement that institutions of higher education compile and report on the revenues derived and expenditures made (per sport) by such institutions' athletic department and intercollegiate athletic activities. (b) REPORTS.—The Secretary shall prepare a report on the activities described in subsection (a) and transmit such report to the appropriate committees of Congress before April 1, 1991. TITLE II—CRIME AWARENESS AND CAMPUS SECURITY SEC. 201. SHORT TITLE. This title may be cited as the "Crime Awareness and Campus Security Act of 1990". SEC. 202. FINDINGS. The Congress finds that— (1) the reported incidence of crime, particularly violent crime, on some college campuses has steadily risen in recent years; (2) although annual "National Campus Violence Surveys" indicate that roughly 80 percent of campus crimes are committed by a student upon another student and that approximately 95 percent of the campus crimes that are violent are alcohol- or drug-related, there are currently no comprehensive data on campus crimes; (3) out of 8,000 postsecondary institutions participating in Federal student aid programs, only 352 colleges and universities voluntarily provide crime statistics directly through the Uniform Crime Report of the Federal Bureau of Invest^ation, and other institutions report data indirectly, through local police

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