The Forest Crop Law & general information
In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89099261406
Includes "Application for entry Forest Crop Law, form 2450-16". ; "Rev. 5-72" -- p. 9. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/wu.89099261406
Includes "Application for entry Forest Crop Law, form 2450-16". ; "Rev. 5-72" -- p. 9. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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This Note concludes that (1) the Geneva Protocol of 1925 and the Biological Weapons Convention of 1972 provide conventional restraints upon the use of lethal or seriously injurious CBWs; (2) modern treaties, customs, judicial decisions, and writings form a public international law norm that imposes a legal restraint limiting the use of lethal or seriously injurious CBWs and binding all states regardless of their acceptance of conventional prohibitions; and (3) the law of war today is characterized more accurately as the "law of armed conflict," because it must of necessity apply to conflicts that are not purely interstate. Before discussing international law as it applies to the instant hypothetical case, however, this Note will examine conventions and general international law concerning the use of CBWs.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015077936733
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; "Secret hearing held on September 11, 1974; sanitized and made public on January 10, 1975." ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 75 S381-11 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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The arrival of the highly-touted "information age" may precipitate a crisis for the United States if attention is not directed toward the impact of rapidly-changing communications technology on the American economy and society. Most discussions about the implications of the information age have centered on specific problem areas - such as regulation of transborder data flows, allocation of radio frequencies and deregulation of telecommunication services. This Perspective, however, will attempt to provide a cohesive discussion by examining the components of United Stats international communications and information policy, demonstrating their interrelationships, and pinpointing some of the implications of a failure to understand and harness the "information genie." The scope of this examination must be international because information is not constrained by national borders. Policymakers will be required to synthesize competing and complementary interests in order to develop coherent, rational, and effective policies that will promote United States interests at home and abroad. Ultimately, however, a solution to the problems of the information age will require an activie partnership between the government and the private sector.
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An American general who formerly headed the United Nations Truce Supervision Organization in Palestine stated recently: "The American mind is being manipulated as far as Palestine is concerned." He was referring to Zionist manipulations. My own experiences with the Zionist Organization of America, which refused to answer any of my requests for varied information, confirm the general's charge. My own acquaintance with the Palestine problem has revealed that the equities involved in the area have been buried under a mass of distortion, misinformation and insidious propaganda which have misrepresented the actual facts and veiled the historical and legal truth to the extent that the Palestinian victims are made to appear as being the wrongdoers and the Zionist wrongdoers as the victims. The present problem in Palestine is the derivative of an extraordinary accumulation of injustices, illegalities and violations by Zionism of many decencies: violations of international law, violations of League of Nations and United Nations provisions, violations of fundamental human rights. For more than three-quarters of a century there has been interminable conflict between the indigenous Palestinian Arab people and alien-imported Zionist ideology which maintains that Palestine belongs to "the Jews." On the other hand, there is the international law perspective which rejects the Zionist ideological claim and its form of extralegal logic. It may be stated with historical assurance that the great powers and organized international Zionism have used power politics, including a large measure of military methods, to deal with the problems of Palestine. From this accurate premise it may be erroneously deduced that international law has been a failure in the Palestine question. It would be far more accurate to conclude that international law has not even been applied in the Zionist-Palestinian issue. A careful legal and historical analysis demonstrates beyond doubt that the Balfour Declaration is invalid under the criteria of modern international law; it should also be recalled that the instruments of Zionist discrimination and oppression of the Palestinian people in Palestine-Israel have not been established in a day or even as short a period of time as a half century, Zionist beginnings, at the latest, were at the First Zionist Congress in Basle, Switzerland in 1897. From there Zionism has proceeded extralegally one step at a time in a carefully planned program utilizing political, military and propaganda instruments, culminating in the illegal military fait accompli of 1948 when "the Jewish State" of Israel was installed by organized Zionism. The native Arab people were ruthlessly driven out as part of an Israeli master-plan to rid Palestine of its Arab people in order to build an exclusivist "Jewish" state, and the few Arabs who remained in "Israel" have been exploited and repressed by the Israeli Zionist establishment. Any objective student of the Middle East will reach these conclusions if he analyzes Zionist history and its consistent violations of international legal principles and norms. Moreover, without an understanding of these causative factors of the Palestine problem, it is important to recognize that the plight of the Palestinian people will continue to be ignorantly ignored. What must be axiomatically recognized is that the violent uprooting of the Palestinians from their native land by international Zionist Jewry and their suppliants can have no legal or moral justification. Not only is it a violation of international law and the principles of the United Nations Charter, it also constitutes an unparalleled violation of elementary principles of humanity and civilization. This, the writer has disclosed in his analysis of the Balfour Declaration in the context of international law.
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The Swiss Institute of Comparative Law seated at Lausanne was established by the federal statute of October 6, 1978. The Institute is envisioned as a center for the "documentation of and research into comparative, foreign, and international law." According to the statute and the implementing decree of December 19, 1979, the Institute serves the following purposes: (1) to supply federal agencies and the federal administration with material and studies that may be needed for decisions concerning legislation and international treaties; (2) to contribute towards international efforts at the harmonization and unification of law; (3) to provide information and expert opinions to courts, administrative agencies, attorneys, and other interested parties; [and] (4) to pursue its own scholarly research studies, to support and coordinate studies at the Swiss universities and to offer to scholars and researchers an adequate research center in Switzerland. . Two principles resulting from the purposes of the Institute affect the character of the library. First, to satisfy the practical and scholarly orientation of the Institute, the collection is designed to facilitate research into the present state of law and its future development. Thus, material on legal history of antiquity, the Middle Ages, and, with rare exceptions, Roman or canon law will not be collected. More recent legal history, however, will be placed in the collection if such material is useful in the application or scientific treatment of modern law.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015075211733
Mode of access: Internet. ; Author corporate affiliation: General Accounting Office, Washington, D.C. ; Subject code: FGE ; Subject code: FICB ; Subject code: HCEK ; Subject code: RCC ; Subject code: RCCP ; Subject code: VQ
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015011936872
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 75 S381-7 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015078615575
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 76 S381-27 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; Hearings held Mar. 6-July 31, 1979. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 80 H521-9 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015035947855
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; "Serial no. 4." ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 75 H521-26 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Books Received Aspects of the International Banking Safety Net By G.G. Johnson, with Richard K. Abrams Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund, 1983. Pp. v, 36. $5.00 ============ The Soviet Viewpoint By Georgi Arbatov and Willem Oltmans New York: Dodd, Mead, 1983. Pp. xviii, 219. $13.95 ============ The Law of Corporate Groups: Procedural Problems in the Law of Parent and Subsidiary Corporations By Phillip I. Blumberg Boston and Toronto: Little, Brown and Company, 1983. Pp. xxxii, 527. $65.00 ============= Iraq & Iran: Roots of Conflict By Tareq Y. Ismael Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1982. Pp. xii, 226. $24.00 cloth; $12.95 paper ================ European Banking Law By Stanley Crossick and Margie Lindsay London: Financial Times Business Information, 1983. Pp. xvi, 228. $175.00 =============== The European Monetary System: The Experience, 1979-82 By Hoist Ungerer, with Owen Evans and Peter Nyberg Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund, 1983. Pp. v, 41. $5.00 =============== Alternatives to the Central Bank in the Developing World By Charles Collyns Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund, 1983. Pp. v, 23. $5.00 =============== German Industrial Property, Copyright and Antitrust Laws Vol. 6. Edited by Friedrich-Karl Beier, Gerhard Schricker, and Eugen Ulmer Munich: Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Patent, Copyright, and Competition Law, 1983.Pp. 222. $38.00 =============== Government Employment and Pay: Some International Comparisons By Peter S. Heller and Alan A. Tait Washington, D.C.: International Monetary Fund, 1983. Pp. vii, 64. $5.00 ============== Hague Conference on Private International Law: Collection of Conventions (1951-1980) Edited by the Permanent Bureau of the Conference. Boston: Butterworth, 1983. Pp.313. ================= International Business Transactions; A Guide to Research Sources By Igor I. Kavass Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1983. Pp. 88 ================ International Capital Markets: Developments and Prospects, 1983 By Richard ...
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Casebook on Carriage by Sea. By E.R. Hardy Ivamy London: Lloyd's of London Press, 1982. Pp. xxxix, 203. £11.50. ===================== Casebook on Shipping Law By E.R. Hardy Ivamy London: Lloyd's of London Press, 1982. Pp. xxx, 205. £11.50. ======================= Regional Development Agencies in Europe Edited by Douglas Yuill Hampshire, England: Gower, 1982. Pp. vii, 449.$44.50. ===================== United States Trade Policy Legislation: A Canadian View By Rodney de C. Grey Montreal: The Institute for Research on Public Policy, 1982. Pp. xvii, 130. $7.95. ========================= Transfer of Technology: U.S. Multinationals and Eastern Europe By Marilyn L. Liebrenz New York: Praeger Publishers, 1982. Pp. xv, 363. ============================ Women's Rights & the EEC By Vanessa Hall-Smith, Catherine Hoskyns, Judy Keiner, and Erika Szyszczak London: Rights of Women Europe, 1983. Pp. 161. £3.00. ========================= Tax Avoidance, Tax Evasion Compiled for International Bar Association London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1982. Pp. viii, 104. ======================= Main Points in the Decisions of the World Bank Administrative Tribunal By C.F. Amerasinghe and D. Bellinger Washington, D.C.: International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, 1983. Pp. ii, 29. ======================== Meeresforschung und Meeresfreiheit: Perspektivennach der dritten UN--Seerechtskonferenz By Alex Borrmann and Hermann Weber Hamburg: Verlag Weltarchiv, 1983. Pp. 479. ====================== Freedom of Information Trends in the Information Age Edited by Tom Riley and Harold C. Relyea London: Frank Cass,1983. Pp. 172. $27.50. ======================= Economic Diplomacy Between the European Community and Japan 1959-1981 By Albrecht Rothacher. Hants, England: Gower, 1983. Pp. xvii, 377. $41.00. ========================== International Handbook of the Ombudsman Vol. 1-2. Edited by Gerald E. Caiden Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1983 Vol. 1, pp. xxiii, 190; vol. 2, pp. xix, 366. $95.00 set. ======================== Politics and ...
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015082035802
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 78 H521-12 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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