CUMULATIVE INDEX No. 12 (Volumes 751 to 800)
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The American Legion [Volume 116, No. 5 (May 1984)]
one pair WHEN YOU PAIRS ORDER SHOES ANY FOR Yes! Wear them, try them, test one pair any way you wish before you decide to keep your order. Because Haband, the mail order people from Paterson, New Jersey, believe you can't tell a shoe by its cover! you must be sure they look as great, feel as great, and wear every bit as great as promised or pack them up and fire them back for full refund of the $29.95! HABAND RE-INVENTS THE SHOE!! No other product known to man can so immediately mpact your minute to minute personal comfort as your shoes! Yet who can afford the current outrageous $50 or $100 a pair? That's why Haband invented a whole New Factory Approach, just as cataclysmic as the reorganization of General Motors! You get a better product! Better Looks! and FAR MORE COMFORT! You get beautiful lustrous kid grained man-made uppers that, keep a soft natural lustre, & never need a shine! You get sure footed extra cushion crepe rubber heel & sole! Special built-in support shank in the arch! Long wear shape / holding heel counters. Loafers have built-in elastic gore. Oxfords have strong braided laces. In short, you get ALL YOU EVER WANTED in BEWARE THE RETURN OF INFLATION! Look Carefully and Act Fast! Shoe prices are at the edge of the springboard and on the way up! Do not miss this extraordinary chance RIGHT NOW to Haband 100% man-made ^\^\qc seize the LOWEST p 95 SHOE PRICE FOR executive Q hTs 5>Q THE REST S QUALITY SHOES V WtJ OF YOUR 4 for 39.50 ALL 5 for 08.95 LIFE! HABAND 265 IN. -
The American Legion [Volume 135, No. 3 (September 1993)]
I THE AMERICAN \ %%>^^ Legiom^ FOR GOD AND COUNTRY September 1993 Two Dollars HOME SCHflOUHB, Going To School By Staying Home It's Warm, it's Hefty, it's Handsome and it's 100% Acrylic Easy Care! Grey Use this coupon and grab yourself a couple today! Cardigan Sweater Q5 2 for 49.50 3 for 74.00 HAB 24 4 for 98.50 lOOFainiew HABAND COMPANY Prospect Park 100 Fairview Ave., Prospect Park, N J 07530 Send 07530 I Regular Sizes: S(34-36) M{38-40) L(42-44) XL(46-4£ sweaters, *Big Men Sizes: Add $4 each for cable knit I Handsome have enclosed 2XL(50-52) 3XL(54-56) 4XL(58-60) both front and back WHAT HOW is an expensive fealLir purchase price plus $3.50 7A7-72C SIZE? MANY? an amazing low pi le Burgundy postage and handling. A ECRU Check Enclosed B GREY D BURGUNDY 1 CARD # Name . Mail Addr ;ss ' Apt. # City 1 State Zip The Magazine for a Strong America Vol. 135, No. 3 ARTICLES September 1993 RETiraNG GRADUALLY By Gordon Williams 18 VA RESEARCH: WE ALL SeiEHT AWxnt^ VA research has improvedAmericans' health, budget cuts now threaten thisprogram. By Ken Schamberg 22 TO SCHOOL BY STAYING AT I More and more parents believe they can succeed at home where schools havefailed. By Deidre Sullivan 25 To dramatize the dangers, activists have been playingfast and loose with the numbers. By Steve Salerno 28 THE GHOST PLANE FROM MINDANAO You may have the information to help solve this WWII mystery. FAMILY TIES: LONGER UVES Centenarians reveal the secret oftheir long and healthy lives. -
Fighting Hunger As a Young Cavalryman in Vietnam, Bob 22 Nice Try Taliban Martin Saved a Baby in a Bombed-Out 26 Vietnam Vet Saves Baby Bunker
‘NICE TRY TALIBAN’ SEVERELY WOUNDED VET RETURNS TO AFGHANISTAN Fighting HungerON THE FRONT LINES ‘I CAN’T JUST LEAVE HER HERE’ A VFW member searches for a woman he saved 48 years ago in Vietnam REBUILDING MOTORCYCLES & VETS FOR THE MANY REASONS YOU SERVED, thank you. There are many reasons why you served, and our reason to serve is you. That’s why USAA is dedicated to helping support VFW members and their families. USAA means United Services Automobile Association and its affi liates. The VFW receives fi nancial support for this sponsorship. © 2018 USAA. 248368-0318 PHOTO BY TOM M. JOHNSON ‘NICE TRY TALIBAN’ SEVERELY WOUNDED VET RETURNS TO AFGHANISTAN Fighting HungerON THE FRONT LINES ‘I CAN’T JUST LEAVE HER HERE’ A VFW member searches for a woman he saved 48 years ago in Vietnam REBUILDING MOTORCYCLES & VETS AUGUST 2018 Vol. 105 No. 10 COVER PHOTO: Rich Synek, a member of VFW’s Department of New York, displays AFGHANISTAN VET RETURNS products available at his food pantry in After being blown up and losing parts of both legs in a 2011 IED Utica. Synek and his wife, Michele, created 22 the nonprofi t Feed Our Vets, providing explosion in Afghanistan, Justin Lane revisited the country earlier free food to veterans and their families. It this year. The trip allowed the former combat engineer to fulfi ll a goal includes a pantry in Watertown, a mobile he had carried with him for seven years. BY JIM SERVI unit in Syracuse and a gift card program that helps hungry vets around the country. -
John Davis Lodge Papers
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft9c6007r1 Online items available Register of the John Davis Lodge papers Finding aid prepared by Grace Hawes and Katherine Reynolds Hoover Institution Library and Archives © 1998 434 Galvez Mall Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-6003 [email protected] URL: http://www.hoover.org/library-and-archives Register of the John Davis Lodge 86005 1 papers Title: John Davis Lodge papers Date (inclusive): 1886-1987 Collection Number: 86005 Contributing Institution: Hoover Institution Library and Archives Language of Material: English Physical Description: 288 manuscript boxes, 27 oversize boxes, 3 cubic foot boxes, 1 card file box, 3 album boxes, 121 envelopes, 2 sound cassettes, 1 sound tape reel, 1 sound disc(156.6 Linear Feet) Abstract: Correspondence, speeches and writings, dispatches, reports, memoranda, clippings, other printed matter, photographs, sound recordings, and motion picture film relating to the Republican Party, national and Connecticut politics, and American foreign relations, especially with Spain, Argentina and Switzerland. Digital copies of select records also available at https://digitalcollections.hoover.org. Creator: Lodge, John Davis, 1903-1985 Hoover Institution Library & Archives Access Boxes 310-311 closed. The remainder of the collection is open for research; materials must be requested at least two business days in advance of intended use. Publication Rights For copyright status, please contact the Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Acquisition Information Acquired by the Hoover Institution Library & Archives in 1986. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], John Davis Lodge papers, [Box no., Folder no. or title], Hoover Institution Library & Archives. Alternate Forms Available Digital copies of select records also available at https://digitalcollections.hoover.org. -
How to Research International Treaties and Agreements
Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review Volume 20 Number 4 Article 2 12-1-1998 How to Research International Treaties and Agreements Edward Grosek Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/ilr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Edward Grosek, How to Research International Treaties and Agreements, 20 Loy. L.A. Int'l & Comp. L. Rev. 641 (1998). Available at: https://digitalcommons.lmu.edu/ilr/vol20/iss4/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Reviews at Digital Commons @ Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Loyola Marymount University and Loyola Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. How to Research International Treaties and Agreements EDWARD GROSEK* I. Preface ...................................................................................................... 643 II. Table .......................................................................................................... 644 III. General Compilations of Treaties and of Other Sources of Treaty Texts and the Indices to Them ............................................................... 661 A G eneral International Treaty Collections ......................................... 661 B. International Law ................................................................................ 665 IV . The Im portance -
The American Legion [Volume 132, No. 4 (April 1992)]
April 1992 Two Dollars Twelve Hot Spots That Threaten World Peace . Haband's EASY-TO-WEAR ~C "^tH \~—\~ ^jjjj^Ej?^ JOGGERS^JQGGERS the UNIVERSAL WALKING SHOE Black PAIRS for Only • Ultra-soft foam-backed brushed tricot linings throughout • Thick shock-absorbing cushion crepe midsoles • Foam-backed innersoles and fully padded comfort collar and tongue • Soft, supple yet durable MEN'S SIZES - Medium (D) Width: man-made uppers wipe clean with a damp cloth • Bouncy, flexible 7 - 7V2 - 8 - 8V2 - 9 - 9V2 - 10 - IOV2 - 11 - 12 - 13 sure-tread rubber outsoles • WIDE WIDTHS (EEE) * Please add $1.50 per pair for Wide Width: 7W - 7V2 W - 8W - 8V2W - 9W - Navy It's the Ultimate Comfort Shoe! 9V2 W - 10W - IOV2W - 11W - 12W - 13W Ever wonder what people do with all those overpriced running, jogging, and aerobic sprinting shoes? THEY- WALK IN THEM! In the yard, on vacation, down to the grocer, wherever — because they VUGGCHS 3 for 44.75 4 for 59.00 FEEL SO GOOD! Now here is HABAND COMPANY WHAT D or HOW all the Quality, all the 7TJ -42A SIZE? EEE/* MANY7 265 North 9th Street Comfort, all the Paterson, NJ 07530 c Grey Styling - NOT $85, G Navy Send pairs of joggers. NOT $50, but E Black enclose $ 95* purchase price. Please add S3. 70 toward postage & handling. 2tOQ of only 100* SATISFACTION GUARANTEED or FULL REFUND 0 Purchase Price at Any Time) The Omega®Jogger is Check Enclosed DVisa MasterCard Exp.: /_ Grey a quality import, sold only by Haband, the Card » mail order people in Paterson, N.J. -
Reunification: East Germanys Integration Into the European Communities
The European Dimension of German Reunification: East Germany's Integration into the European Communities Thomas Gtegerich--- Introdumon In 1989-1990, the German question, which had (again) been open since 19451, found a definite answer in the form of a reunification2 of the Fed- eral Republic of Germany, the German Democratic Republic (GDR) and the whole of Berlin. The answer was European in nature, and it partly * Dr. jur., LL.M. (University of Virginia 1985), Research Fellow at the Institute. Abbreviations: All E.R. All England Law Reports; BGBI. Bundesgesetzblatt; BL Basic Law; BR-Drs. Drucksachen des Bundesrates; BT-Drs. Drucksachen des Bundestages; BullBReg. Bulletin der Bundesregierung; BullEC Bulletin of the Euro- pean Communities; BVerfGE Entscheidungen des Bundesverfassungsgerichts; CMEA Council for Mutual Economic Assistance; C.M.L.Rev. Common Market Law Review; CSCE Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe; DA Deutschland Archiv; DtZ Deutsch-Deutsche Rechts-Zeitschrift; EA Europa-Archiv; EC European Communities; ECJ Court of justice of the European Communities; ECR European Court Reports; ECSC European Coal and Steel Community; EEC European Economic Community; EPIL Inst. R. Bernhardt (ed.), Encyclopedia of Public Interna- tional Law, Instalment; ERP European Recovery Program; EuGRZ EuropHische Grundrechte Zeitschrift; EuR Europarecht; EuZW Europiische Zeitschrift fdr Wirtschaftsrecht; FAZ Frankfurter Allgerneine Zeitung; FS Festschrift; JZ juristen Zeitung; n. note(s); NJW Neue juristische Wochenschrift; Oj Official journal of the European Communities; RIW Recht der internationalen Wirtschaft; SEA Single European Act; VVDStRL Ver6ffentlichungen der Vereinigung der Deutschen Staats- rechtslehrer. 1 Cf. D. B I u rn e n w i t z, What is Germany? (1989). -
Nuclear Kellogg-Briand Pact: Proposing a Treaty for the Renunciation of Nuclear Wars As an Instrument of National Policy
Georgetown University Law Center Scholarship @ GEORGETOWN LAW 2014 Nuclear Kellogg-Briand Pact: Proposing a Treaty for the Renunciation of Nuclear Wars as an Instrument of National Policy David A. Koplow Georgetown University Law Center, [email protected] This paper can be downloaded free of charge from: https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/facpub/1891 https://ssrn.com/abstract=2510612 42 Syracuse J. Int'l L. & Com. 123 (2014-2015) This open-access article is brought to you by the Georgetown Law Library. Posted with permission of the author. Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.georgetown.edu/facpub Part of the International Law Commons, Military, War, and Peace Commons, and the National Security Law Commons A NUCLEAR KELLOGG-BRIAND PACT: PROPOSING A TREATY FOR THE RENUNCIATION OF NUCLEAR WAR AS AN INSTRUMENT OF NATIONAL POLICY David A. Koplowt Si vis pacem, para bellum ("If you want peace, prepare for war") - Roman adage Si vis pacem, parapacem ("If you want peace, prepare for peace") - Inscription on the ceremonial pen used to sign the Kellogg-Briand Pact CONTENTS IN TR O D U C T IO N ............................................................................... 124 I. PARSING THE TEXT OF THE KELLOGG-BRIAND PACT..... 127 II. THE ANTECEDENTS AND SEQUELAE OF KELLOGG- B R IAN D .................................................................................... 132 A. Three Types ofAnti- War Treaties...................................... 135 B. The Evolution of the Kellogg-BriandPact ......................... 138 C. The Post-World War If Legacy.......................................... 140 D. PrincipalAttributes of Kellogg-Briand ............................. 145 1. Kellogg-Briandis Legally Binding............................... 145 2. Kellogg-Briandis, in Effect, a "No First Use" Com m itment .................................................................. 146 3. Kellogg-BriandDoes Not Address Disarmament, and Contains no Implementation Mechanisms or Diplomatic Infrastructure............................................ -
Selling the Economic Miracle Economic Reconstruction and Politics in West Germany, 1949-1957 Monograph Mark E
MONOGRAPHS IN GERMAN HISTORY VOLUME 18 MONOGRAPHS Selling the Economic Miracle Economic the Selling IN GERMAN HISTORY Selling The Economic Miracle VOLUME 18 Economic Reconstruction and Politics in West Germany, 1949-1957 Mark E. Spicka The origins and nature of the “economic miracle” in Germany in the 1950s continue to attract great interest from historians, economists, and political scientists. Examining election campaign propaganda and various public relations campaigns during this period, the author explores ways that conservative political and economic groups sought to construct and Selling the sell a political meaning of the Social Market Economy and the Economic Miracle, which contributed to conservative electoral success, constructed a Economic new understanding of economics by West German society, and provided legitimacy for the new Federal Republic Germany. In particular, the Miracle author focuses on the Christian Democratic Union/Christian Social Union’s (CDU/CSU) approach to electoral politics, which represented the creation of a more “Americanized” political culture reflected in the Economic Reconstruction borrowing of many techniques in electioneering from the United States, and Politics in West such as public opinion polling and advertising techniques. Germany, 1949-1957 Mark E. Spicka is Associate Professor of History at Shippensburg University in Pennsylvania. He received his Ph.D. from the Ohio State University in 2000 and was a Fulbright Scholar in Germany in 1996/1997. He has published a number of articles that have appeared in German Politics and Society, German Studies Review, and The Historian. Spicka E. Mark Cover Image: “Erhard keeps his promises: Prosperity for all through the social market economy” 1957 Bundestag election poster by Die Waage, Plakatsammlung, BA Koblenz. -
The American Legion [Volume 134, No. 4 (April 1993)]
1 1a bn ii (] Company S(34-36) M(38-40) L(42-44) 1 00 Fairvlew Ave., XL(46-48) Prospect Park, NJ 07530 Add $2.50 each for Please send me shirts. I enclose 2XL(50-52) 3XL(54-56) $ purchase price plus $3.95 toward postage and handling. 7B9-18A Check Enclosed or SEND NO MONEY NOW if you use your: J JtJ u llSffil Exp.: /__ berry card # _ name _ street _ city state zip \J 00% tttisfaction gu^^teeo[0£fdljefund£f£ujvl^se£ricej3t^nyjjme!j Haband Company Haband 100 Fairview Ave, Prospect Park, NJ 07530 NOT JUST A GOLF SHIRT! The perfect casual shirt for summer, for wearing made i loose, cool, and relaxed. You get handsome color tipping on collar & placket, and the soft, absorbent 60% cotton/40% polyester pique knit feels great against your skin. Full, roomy cut. Big chest - pocket. Neatly finished bottoms for wearing tucked in or out. Side vents. 5 colors to choose. 100% wash and wear No-Iron care. ALL FOR UNDER $10 A SHIRT! Filloutthe coupon andstock up now! The Magazine for a Strong America Vol. 134, No. 4 April 1993 ART C L E S IS THIS OPERATION REALLY NECESSARY? Here's whatyou should know about the 10 most over-prescribed surgeries. By Steve Salerno 14 FROM ARMY COOK TO HAMBURGER KING Wendy's restaurant owner Dave Thomas reveals his recipefor success. 18 DEMOCRACY IN NICARAGUA: STILL IN TROUBLE Now out ofthe headlines, this Central American country quietly struggles to stayfree. By ElliottAbrams 20 HOW WARS ARE WON Just like World War E, the GulfWarproved that aggressive offense—not containment- brings victory. -
Anticipatory Collective Self-Defense in the Charter
xv Anticipatory Collective Self... Defense in the Charter Era: What the Treaties Have Said George K. Walker DEBATE CONTINUES on whether anticipatory self,defense is A permitted in the era of the UN Charter.! Two recent commentators say that States need not await the first blow but may react in self,defense,2 provided principles of necessity and proportionality are observed. They differ, however, on when States may claim anticipatory self,defense.3 This is not surprising, since others seem to change views.4 Still others take no clear position.5 Most anticipatory self,defense claims since World War II have been asserted by States responding unilaterally to another country's actions. Claims of this nature are more likely to be raised in the future.6 The UN Charter, Article 51, declares in part that "Nothing in the ... Charter shall impair the inherent right of individual or collective self,defence if an armed attack occurs against a [UN] Member ... until the Security Council has taken measures necessary to maintain international peace and security." This article proposes to analyze the alternative to individual self,defense, i.e, collective security pursuant to treaty. After examining nineteenth century international agreements and those of the first half of this century, the scope of collective self,defense in Charter, era treaties What the Treaties Have Said will be analyzed. The inquiry for these agreements is whether a right of anticipatory collective self,defense is stated in them, paralleling States' right to claim individual anticipatory self,defense. If there is a right of anticipatory collective self,defense, what is the scope of that right, and what are the limitations on it? If the Peace of Westphalia (1648)7 began the nation,state system, the Congress of Vienna (1815)8 started the modem movement toward collective security.9 It is from this benchmark that Part I examines treaty systems through World War I. -
Final Report NATO Research Fellowship Prof. Dr. Holger H
Final Report NATO Research Fellowship Prof. Dr. Holger H. Herwig The University of Calgary Aggression Contained? The Federal Republic of Germany and International Security1 Two years ago, when I first proposed this topic, I had some trepidation about its relevance to current NATO policy. Forty-eight months of work on the topic and the rush of events especially in Central and East Europe since that time have convinced me both of its timeliness and of its relevance. Germany's role in SFOR in Bosnia since 1996, the very positive deployment of the German Army (Bundeswehr) in flood-relief work along the Oder River on the German- Polish border in the summer of 1997, and even the most recent revelations of neo-Nazi activity within the ranks of the Bundeswehr, have served only to whet my appetite for the project. For, I remain convinced that the German armed forces, more than any other, can be understood only in terms of Germany's recent past and the special military culture out of which the Bundeswehr was forged. Introduction The original proposal began with a scenario that had taken place in Paris in 1994. On that 14 July, the day that France annually sets aside as a national holiday to mark its 1789 Revolution, 189 German soldiers of the 294th Tank-Grenadier Battalion along with their twenty- four iron-crossed armoured personnel carriers for the first time since 1940 had marched down the Champs-Elysées in Paris. General Helmut Willmann's men had stepped out not to the tune of "Deutschland, 1 The research for this report was made possible by a NATO Research Fellowship.