| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1954 - 1004 páginas
...we have good reason to expect the framing of an international bill of rlshts acceptable to all the nations Involved. That bill of rights will be as much a part of international life as our own Hill of Rights is a part of our Constitution. The charter is dedicated to the achievement nnd observance... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations - 1967 - 1214 páginas
...prevented formal action, President Truman, at the conclusion of the sessions at San Francisco said : Rights will be as much a part of International life as our own Bill of Eights is part of our Constitution. The Charter is dedicated to the achievement and observance of human... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Foreign Affairs Committee - 1974 - 72 páginas
...organization. President Harry S. Truman, in the closing address to the conference, declared that : The Charter is dedicated to the achievement and observance of human rights and freedoms, and unless we can attain these freedoms for all men and women everywhere without regard to... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Population - 1978 - 790 páginas
...(the Charter) we have good reason to expect an International bill of rights, acceptable to all the nations involved. That bill of rights will be as much a part of International life as our Bill of Rights 1s to our Constitution. 24 The Intention, therefore, was to entrust the task of preparing... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Population - 1978 - 788 páginas
...(the Charter) we have good reason to expect an international bill of rights, acceptable to all the nations involved. That bill of rights will be as much a part of international life as our Bill of Rights is to our Constitution. 24 The intention, therefore, was to entrust the task of preparing... | |
| 1980 - 316 páginas
...himself at the San Francisco Conference in favor of developing an international bill of rights that "will be as much a part of international life as our own Bill of Rights is part of our Constitution," but his subsequent foreign policies cannot be said to have been mortgaged... | |
| Richard Pierre Claude - 1992 - 484 páginas
...reason," he told the delegates, "to expect the framing of an international bill of rights . . . that . . . will be as much a part of international life as our own Bill of Rights is a pan of our Constitution" twhich, he might have added, also began life without onei. As if inspired... | |
| Michael L. Krenn - 1998 - 336 páginas
...will require readjustments -but they will be readjustments of peace and not of war. . . . The Charier is dedicated to the achievement and observance of...human rights and fundamental freedoms. Unless we can anain those objectives for all men and women everywhere - without regard to race, language, or religion-... | |
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