Page 2049 - 1970S

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IVISITTHE
LAST CHANCE FOR PEACE?
Here is the eye-opening story of the inner
workings of what may be man's
last chance to bring about world peace.
Does the fate of the world - of us al/
-
depend on its success7
W
HAT POSSffiLE
significance
could the International
Court of Just ice - better
known as the World Court at The
Hague in the Netherlands - have in
your life and mine? Chances are,
many of our ieaders know very little
or almost nothing about this court.
Yet it is man's final and ultimate
instrumentality developed after four
thousand years of striving to put an
end to wars.
On invitation from one of the
Court's distinguished justices, I vis-
2
by
Herbert W. Armstrong
ited the World Court to bring you
the plain truth about man's ultimate
machinery to produce world peace.
The invitation carne from my
good friend, Dr. Nagendra Singh of
India, now a justice on this world's
supreme court. Justice Singh is one
of the most distinguished advocates
for world peace by rule of inter–
nationallaw. 1 first met Dr. Singh in
New Delhi on one of my severa!
visits with President V. V. Giri of
India. Dr. Singh was then executive
secretary to the presiden!.
Because we both work for world
peace - 1, by means of education in
the way that is the
cause
of peace,
he, by means of rule by inter–
national law - Justice Singh and 1
have become good friends. He has
addressed our Ambassador College
student bodies - twice on the Brit–
ish campus and also at Pasadena.
Justice Singh has earned the high–
est law degrees in a number of fa–
mous universities and has worked
all his life for world peace. And
now, by vote of the United Nations'
PLAIN TRUTH December 1973