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Neutrality and was
Neutrality was the central element of Cambodian foreign policy during the 1950s and 1960s.
The original alignment system ( which grouped all characters and creatures into ' Law ', ' Neutrality ' and ' Chaos ') was derived from the novel Three Hearts and Three Lions by Poul Anderson.
The Abilene network study was the basis for the testimony of Gary Bachula to the US Senate Commerce Committee's hearing on Network Neutrality in early 2006.
The legacy of the Neutrality Acts in the 1930s was widely regarded as having been generally negative: they made no distinction between aggressor and victim, treating both equally as " belligerents "; and they limited the US government's ability to aid Britain and France against Nazi Germany.
Powerful forces in United States Congress pushing for non-interventionism and strong Neutrality Acts were the Republican Senators William Edgar Borah, Arthur H. Vandenberg, Gerald P. Nye and Robert M. La Follette, Jr., but support of non-interventionism was not limited to the Republican party.
He prevailed over the isolationists, and on November 4 the Neutrality Act of 1939 was passed, allowing for arms trade with belligerent nations on a cash-and-carry basis, thus in effect ending the arms embargo.
Furthermore, the Neutrality Acts of 1935 and 1937 were repealed, American citizens and ships were barred from entering war zones designated by the President, and the National Munitions Control Board ( which had been created by the 1935 Neutrality Act ) was charged with issuing licenses for all arms imports and exports.
Britain had been paying for its material in gold under " cash and carry ," as required by the US Neutrality Acts of the 1930s, but by 1941 it had liquidated so many assets that it was running short of cash.
Ashgabat was also home to the Arch of Neutrality, a 250-foot-tall tripod crowned by a golden statue of late president Saparmurat Niyazov ( also known as Turkmenbashi, or leader of all Turkmen ).
The armistice was reduced to fourteen weeks, but during it Armed Neutrality would be suspended and the British were to have free access to Copenhagen.
( The Soviet-Japanese Neutrality Pact of 1941 was a five-year agreement of neutrality between the two nations ; in 1943 the Soviet Union was not at war with Japan, whereas China, the U. K. and the U. S. were.
The International Agreement on the Neutrality of Laos was signed on 23 July 1962, and went into effect in October.
In December 1800 Denmark, Sweden and Russia acceded to a second League of Armed Neutrality, directed against Great Britain ; and the arsenal of Karlskrona, in all probability, was only saved from the fate of Copenhagen by the assassination of the emperor Paul of Russia, which was followed by another change of system in the north.
The country's problems were added to by the First League of Armed Neutrality, which was formed to counter the British blockade strategy, and threatened British naval supplies from the Baltic.
The invasion was allegedly in fear that Reza Shah was about to align his petroleum-rich country with Nazi Germany during the war: However, Reza Shah's earlier Declaration of Neutrality and refusal to allow Iranian territory to be used to train, supply, and act as a transport corridor to ship arms to Russia for its war effort against Germany, was the strongest motive for the allied invasion of Iran.
Mackenzie went to the United States where he was arrested and charged under the Neutrality Act.
Neutrality was eventually broken, and the towns took the side of the English in 1340.
The camp was originally designed to link Britain and the United States at a time when the US was forbidden by the Neutrality Act to be directly involved in World War II.
Back in California, he was put on trial for conducting an illegal war, in violation of the Neutrality Act of 1794.

Neutrality and when
He published " American Neutrality, Its Cause and Cure " ( 1916 ) for the purpose, and when in 1916 he survived a German torpedo attack on the " Sussex " in the English channel-on the return trip from a visit to William Osler at Oxford-his open telegram to the President of the United States on the affair became frontpage news ( New York Times ).
Neutrality means that at a given trophic level in a food web, species are equivalent in birth rates, death rates, dispersal rates and speciation rates, when measured on a per-capita basis.

Neutrality and General
Foreign policy of Turkmenistan is based on the status of permanent positive neutrality recognized by the UN General Assembly Resolution on Permanent Neutrality of Turkmenistan on 12 December 1995.
On August 9, Kwantung Army supreme commander, General Otozō Yamada, informed Puyi that the Soviet Union had violated the Soviet – Japanese Neutrality Pact and had invaded across the Manchukuo frontier.

Neutrality and .
Target Switzerland: Swiss Armed Neutrality in World War II.
* Everett HughesThe " Gleichschaltung " of the German Statistical Yearbook: A Case in Professional Political Neutrality.
* 1962 – The International Agreement on the Neutrality of Laos is signed.
In October 1935, US President Franklin D. Roosevelt invoked the recently passed Neutrality Acts and placed an embargo on arms and munitions to both sides, but extended a further " moral embargo " to the belligerent Italians, including other trade items.
In 1971, ASEAN issued its neutralist and anti-nuclear Zone of Peace, Freedom and Neutrality ( ZOPFAN ) Declaration.
* 1939 – World War II: U. S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Customs Service to implement the Neutrality Act of 1939, allowing cash-and-carry purchases of weapons by belligerents.
* National Day, celebrates the anniversary of the Declaration of Neutrality in 1955.
* Halbrook, Stephen P. Target Switzerland: Swiss Armed Neutrality In World War II ( 2003 ) excerpt and text search
The United States, concerned with events in Europe and Asia, passed the Neutrality Act in August.
* November 4 – WWII: U. S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders the United States Customs Service to implement the Neutrality Act of 1939, allowing cash-and-carry purchases of weapons to non-belligerent nations.
* April 2 – First Battle of Copenhagen: The British fleet under Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, along with Admiral Horatio Nelson, attack Copenhagen ; the Armed Neutrality of the North is dissolved.
* April 22 – George Washington signs the Neutrality Proclamation.
* February – The League of Armed Neutrality is formed between Denmark, Sweden, and Russia.
* March 8 – Formation of the League of Armed Neutrality.

was and broken
The laces were broken at the bottom of the eyelets but there was still a bow knot at the top.
It may be that in this comment he has broken from the conventional pattern more violently than in any other regard, for the treatment in his books is far removed from even the genial irony of Ellen Glasgow, who was the only important novelist before him to challenge the conventional picture of planter society.
Trevelyan was at least in part attracted to the period by an almost unconscious desire to take up the story where Macaulay's History Of England had broken off.
With facts mainly in his mind, he was often acute in the matter of style, and he said, `` The young who have as yet nothing to say will try larks with initial letters and broken lines.
Another remained when an American Army car was recovered but with a broken glass.
He ran for the sick room, found his pistol was broken, and threw it away.
but this grinning, broken head, not ten feet away from me, was the sharp definition of what my reality had become.
But just when she seemed to have sunk into some depravity of peasanthood she would disappear and come down bathed, brushed, and taking breaths of air, and even with her broken nails her hands would come to rest on a table or a leaf with a thoughtless delicacy, a grace of history, so to speak, and for an instant one saw how ferociously proud she was and adamant on certain questions of personal value.
This colt arrived at the Raceway early last November, and immediately was put into harness and line-driven for a few days, and then put to cart and broken in very nicely, knowing nothing but trot.
When that was broken up after the First World War, its name was changed once more.
It would be fine publicity for the man who was willing to walk to the mayor's throne over the broken reputation of a helpless girl!!
and a store was broken into and robbed.
Often, threading through the overcast, he was forced to fly close to the ground by a low ceiling, skimming above the Winooski or the White River along the line of the broken railroad.
Greene was in actuality a young ruffian from Kent, who had broken with his parents in order to keep the company he preferred -- pimps, panders and whores.
Hardly a window has been broken since Dunbar first was opened ( and vandalism in schools is a major problem in many slum areas ).
It had been shut again, but the lock was broken ; ;
Just how many sub secrets were being handed over when the ring, watched for six months, was broken remained untold.
But Palmer knew, as did everybody else at Augusta, that his streak was about to be broken.
But she was learning that so long as she was in this country, and wore civilian dress in the Club, there would always be transient young men who would approach her with broken English.
This was one time I'd have gladly broken my own rule, but habit was too strong.
The bulb was broken when it was delivered, perhaps during transportation.

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