Word: legalism
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...simultaneously, two U. S. editions appeared. Publishers Houghton Mifflin,* who owned the copyright, sued Stackpole Sons for piracy. Stackpole refused to haul down their jolly roger. Said they: Hitler's copyright was illegal. Besides, said Stackpole, no royalties from their edition would go to Author Hitler. After preliminary legal skirmishes, a District Court last summer granted a temporary injunction, restraining Stackpole from selling their edition...
...CRIMSON is publishing a two-page sports extra today, instead of its usual larger paper. Ordinarily no paper would be published on today's legal holiday, Armistice...
...Both Norway and Germany are studying the legal aspects of the situation, and beyond that there are no new developments," a source close to the Wilhelmstrasse said...
...owner (as the U. S., after a Supreme Court decision, eventually released the Appam), she would antagonize Germany. While Germany had put Russia on the spot, as she had put the U. S. on the spot with the Appam in 1916, the U. S. evaded the legal tangle, hammered away at its unquestioned right for information about the crew...
...Every man ... is entitled to nourishment, housing, covering, medical care and attention. ... He is entitled to sufficient education to make him a useful and interested citizen. ... He and his personal property ... are entitled to police and legal protection. ... He shall have adequate protection from any lying or misrepresentation that may distress or injure him. . . . There shall be no secret dossiers in any administrative departments. ... He may engage freely in any lawful occupation. ... He may move freely about the world at his own expense. ... He shall have the right to buy or sell. ... A man, unless he is duly certified...