Word: cardozos
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...unwritten common law: "If there is no law now under which to try these people, it is about time the human race made some" (TIME, Oct. 21). Perhaps the most striking of several legal opinions, diligently gathered by Keenan, was one by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo (1934): "International law . . . has at times, like the common law within states, a twilight existence during which it is hardly distinguishable from morality or justice till at length the imprimatur of a court attests its jural quality. The gradual consolidation of opinions and habits has been doing its quiet work...
...lineups: Kirkland: le, Snow; lt, Gill, Pettingill, Creighton; lg, Blanchard; c, Sharp; rg, Cardozo; rt, McCaffrey; re, Rich, Minton; backs, Bell Glynn, Kameese, Weston, Muldoon...
...lineups: Kirkland: re, McCafferey, Beard; rt, Burke; rg, Cardozo; c, Sharpe, Palmer; lg, Blanchard; lt, Gill; le, Snow, Minton; backs, Glynn, Weston, Comisc, Bell...
...production of novels. (Never a shrewd businessman, Alger sold most of his works outright at moderate prices. At the height of his reputation, he had to piece out his literary earnings by tutoring schoolboys in French and Latin. One of his pupils: the future Supreme Court Justice Benjamin N. Cardozo...
...Judge Takes the Stand," by Joseph N. Ullman; "The Nature of the Judicial Process," by Benjamin N. Cardozo; "Free Speech in the United States," by Zechariah Chafee; "The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club," by Charles Dickens...