Word: lawã
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...existence of nearby schools, let alone their proximity to them. For instance, the Radcliffe Child Care Center below the DeWolfe apartments affects students in Lowell House. All in all, 10 of the 12 houses fall fully or partially within school zones. There is nothing necessarily wrong with the law??s underlying logic, which considers giving minors access to controlled substances a higher crime than simply possessing drugs. The law was sold to the public and the legislature in 1989 by then-Governor Michael Dukakis on the idea that it would punish those who would put drugs into children?...
...purpose of the letter is to express real disappointment that this point of view was coming out of the defense department and to reiterate our view of the important principle of American law??that everyone is entitled to good representation,” Kagan said...
...striving towards objectivity as well as the encouraging of independent enquiry among students. Unfortunately, my current enrollment in a seminar taught at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, has forced me to amend this view. The seminar, entitled “U.S. Hegemony and International Law?? and taught by Professor Shirley Scott, consists of weekly classes in which U.S. foreign policy is routinely lambasted. Should the legality of a U.S. action be dubious under international law, it will indubitably be viewed as illegal in class. For instance, the class devoted to the illegality...
Similarly, the argumentation you have employed in this editorial is akin to much of the dialogue used to deny me equal protection under the law??that gay people, as the court of New York erroneously mentioned, have no “lasting history of discrimination.” Harvard’s own history reveals otherwise...
...consider in regulating wartime conduct. Kennedy is a peacenik—a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War, in fact (see the interview with him on page B2). But this thin volume reflects two decades of his rethinking on war’s permissibility and the proper role of law??a rethinking that he says was prompted by questions from students who urged military intervention in war-torn Bosnia and Darfur. The result is spectacular. Kennedy’s book is extremely nuanced, as it should be, given his subject. And the prose is immensely readable: clearly expressed...