The Rand report found strong cost-benefit advantages from the two programs that followed participants the longest.
The Rand report was praised by union leaders.
The Rand report said: "The interdiction system is not a single entity."
The Rand report offers voluminous evidence that homosexuals and heterosexuals could indeed work together effectively.
Donald Hamilton, a spokesman for the Bennett office, said officials there had not yet seen the Rand report.
Finally, the RAND report raises questions about what a "passing" score on the state test actually means.
After the Rand report became public, a joint Committee of Parliament eventually recommended the judge's removal and he resigned.
The Rand report also found many of these characteristics in some public "magnet" schools that focused on one theme, like arts or science, and drew children citywide.
His first work was published a RAND report in 1960, with more papers generalizing the techniques in the next two years.
According to the Rand report: