Word: judgments
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Implicit Approval. In appealing for a declaratory judgment, Zemel argued that the Cuban travel ban, laid down by the State Department in 1961 violates both Kent's due-process requirement and the First Amendment right of free speech. Equally basic, argued Zemel, the Constitution (Article 1) gives Congress sole authority to make laws. The 1926 Passport Act vaguely empowered the State Department to grant passports "under such rules as the President shall designate." But Congress has not specifically empowered the President to impose area restrictions in peacetime. Otherwise, said Zemel, the statute is an unconstitutional delegation of Congress...
...them lose as much as 28 pounds in 28 days without dieting. Last week, after a 13-week trial in a Brooklyn courtroom, a federal jury found the producer, Manhattan's Drug Research Corp., its president and its advertising agency guilty of conspiring to defraud the public. The judgment against the ad agency-Kastor, Hilton, Chesley, Clifford & Atherton, Inc.-was the first ever made against an agency for promoting a fraudulent product. The decision could result in fines and imprisonment for Drug Research's president and fines against the ad agency on 41 separate counts...
...hemisphere nations gathered to discuss Latin America's economic problems and to weigh President Johnson's program to stem the dollar drain. On the Riviera at Cannes, the Common Market Monetary Committee, including a select group known as the Club of Six (see box), met to pass judgment on the British pound and Europe's growing inflation. In Basel, both the Bank for International Settlements and a subgroup called the Basel Club met behind carefully guarded doors to review Europe's most pressing monetary problems and to try to guess future trouble spots...
Sadly enough, not only youth has abandoned Simone de Beauvoir. So has judgment. That brilliant, recalcitrant mind, trained at the Sorbonne and annealed during the French Resistance, cannot accept the shape of the postwar world. When Dienbienphu falls, she exults, although the fallen are Frenchmen. The U.S. is decadent and bent on war. Russia is interested only in world peace, and fills the sky with Sputniks in proof of its military superiority, which will keep the peace. Pope Pius XII dies, and Mile, de Beauvoir, who renounced God at 15, accepts the news "with a certain amount of pleasure...
...allies. I do not share your judgment that the problem of public support for the South Vietnamese government is more severe now [than it was 18 months ago], and I certainly do not believe that there is general popular support for the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam. On the contrary, I think it plain, on the evidence of reliable observers from many countries, that the South Vietnamese as a people do not wish to be taken over by the Viet Cong...