Word: invalidation
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...Senate has once more made an empty gesture to the invalid of the American economy, the family farmer...
...still a citizen. The "relation-back" concept, as Justice Potter Stewart called it in his majority opinion, was "a legal fiction, at best." If it applied in Costello's case, said Stewart, it could also apply to someone whose original naturalization "was not fraudulent, but simply legally invalid upon some technical ground...
...suppliers." It observed that "a customer is never forced to buy" and that "there are numerous problems of an open door policy which would lead to general abuse and to the detriment of the student body." This is nearly classic rationalization of monopoly. The argument is not necessarily invalid, but the HCUA should have gone to some lengths to see if present restraints on the HSA are sufficient and to determine what the real effects of limited or open competition might be. The HCUA statement that "the HSA is more closely controlled by the Administration than any other undergraduate organization...
...college and can't get into a sorority, you can always start your own," she says. "That's what I did." Her company occupies a converted electric-fan factory and does seven mixed-bag productions a year (Harvey, Moliere's Imaginary Invalid, Chekhov), was an amateur group for seven years before going Equity in 1954. In 1960, the Ford Foundation began giving the Alley $2,000 a week to hire ten professional actors and keep them there for at least three seasons. New York professionals rushed to the scene and stayed. The subscription roll has built...
...week in Manhattan, the U.S. Court of Appeals overturned Seeger's conviction. The draft law's requirement of belief in a Supreme Being, ruled the court, is unconstitutional. The decision leaned heavily on 1961's Torcaso v. Watkins case, in which the U.S. Supreme Court declared invalid a Maryland law requiring every notary public to take an oath professing belief in the existence of God. Neither the Federal Government nor a state, said the Supreme Court, "can constitutionally pass laws or impose requirements which aid all religions as against nonbelievers, and neither can aid those religions based...