Word: strictly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Curtain as Communism's answer to Ian Fleming, was in London to do a little spying on "James Bond's town" and gather background for his new counterespionage epic, Avvakum Zakhov Meets James Bond. Chunky Gulyashki made it no secret that Communist Superagent Zakhov, armed mainly with "strict logic and a superior mind," will try to defeat the capitalist lout in a "struggle to create a society of free and dignified people...
...school boards can no longer merely refrain from discrimination. "It is up to the school boards," he said, "to eliminate racial imbalance in schools regardless of its cause." In 1963 Traynor spoke for his court in issuing another U.S. precedent: the idea that even non-negligent manufacturers now have "strict liability" to consumers injured by their defective products (TIME...
Taking their cue from California, the legislatures of Illinois and New Mexico have since enacted laws providing age-mistake as a defense. Critic Myers also urges that strict liability be imposed only when the girl is under 13, an age when she "is just gaining the physical capacity to engage in intercourse, but remains seriously deficient in comprehension of the social, psychological, emotional and physical significance of sexuality...
...sharpest division is over how hard FDA should bear down on drug safety. Dr. Sadusk was at first expected to favor strict enforcement. But he is convinced that practicing physicians should be free to make their own choices from among many available drugs, all of which have some degree of danger. His opponents now accuse him of betraying the public interest in favor of protecting the pharmaceutical manufacturers. Some recent examples of action, inaction and disputed decisions: ≫ SULFAS. FDA last week announced that it was requiring new labeling on two long-acting sulfa drugs marketed by three firms...
...procedures agreed to in a "social contract" or constitution. But to what extent will similar loyalties be preserved by a government which changes its procedures at will, in the interest of self-government? And would not constitutional safeguards of minority rights--the first eight amendments--be rendered meaningless by strict adherence to self-government by "the living?" Clearly, reapportionment and the other examples given pose no problems. But what I do question is the dogmatic way in which Frank constructs the theoretical foundation for his more limited contentions regarding reapportionment...