Word: legalization
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...foreign state." The Arabs, insisting they are technically at war with Israel and therefore innocent passage does not apply, abstained. The practical situation was not altered, but a step had been taken in the codification of international law that gave Israel's rights the backing of world legal opinion...
...Agency Corporation rents office space in a commercial building at 4 Holyoke Street, on which taxes are paid by the landlord. The Agency Corporation has a separate status, as a private, non-profit charitable corporation, under the laws of Massachusetts, apart from the University. Harvard University has no legal or financial responsibility for the Agency Corporation...
...crisis, the U.S., as rarely before in the history of nations, forsook the rule of power for the rule of law. At basic issue was Nasser's seizure of the Suez Canal, and U.S. Government lawyers were by no means sure that Britain and France had the stronger legal case. When Britain and France fell back on force, the U.S. supported Egypt against longstanding allies. "There can be no peace without law," said President Eisenhower. "And there could be no law if we were to invoke one code of international conduct for those who oppose us and another...
...countries to refuse new private or public loans and credits to the country in default." The Universal Instinct. Through such efforts toward an orderly system that satisfies the principles held in common by most nations, a rule of law can be established that exerts its force even on the legal outlaws who this week celebrate May Day in their own way. More and more, as men of law become familiar with the legal systems of other nations, they find-often to their astonishment-that there are indeed basic common values. Impressive evidence of this fact is found by Assistant...
...Here a great opportunity will be won or lost-an opportunity to ensure peace under law. We lawyers must write the necessary legal machinery. To do this we must evaluate world law and develop new international legal machinery to maintain essential national sovereignty, yet provide for the peaceful settlement of disputes between nations under the rule of law." So doing, the U.S. could build on the experience of the past and the possibilities of the present to ensure a peaceful future...