Presidential Files; Folder: 7/19/77; Container 32

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Presidential Files; Folder: 7/19/77; Container 32 7/19/77 Folder Citation: Collection: Office of Staff Secretary; Series: Presidential Files; Folder: 7/19/77; Container 32 To See Complete Finding Aid: http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov/library/findingaids/Staff_Secretary.pdf WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF CORRESPONDENTS OR TITLE DATE RESTRICTION DOCUMENT memo From Bob Thomson to The President (2 pp.) re: 7/15/77 c Nomination of Don Tucker to the CAB/ enclosed in Hutcheson to Moore 7/19/77 -. " - .• FILE LOCATION Carter Presidential Papers- Staff Offices,. Office of the Staff Sec.- Presidential Handwriting File 7/19/77 Box ~ RESTRICTION CODES (A) Closed by Executive Order 12356'governing access to national security information. (B) Closed by statute or by the agency which originated the document. (C) Closed in accordance with restrictions contained in the donor's deed of gift. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION. NA FORM 1429 (6-85) ~l'IIE PRESIDENT'S SCHEDULE Tuesday ~ July 19, 1977 . 7:15 Dr. Zbignicw Brzezinski - Oval Office. 7:45 Mr. Frank Moore - The Oval Office. 8:00 Breakfast with Senate Group. (Mr. Frank Moore). ( 6 0 min.) The Roosevelt Room. 9:15 Senator Daniel Moynihan. (Mr. Frank Moore). (15 min.) The Oval Office. 10:00 Hr. Jody Pmvell The Oval Office. 10:30 Arrival Ceremony for.His Excellency The Prime ' Minister of Israel and Mri. Menahe~ Begin. The South Grounds. 11:00 Meeting with Prime Minist~r Menahem Begin. (90 min.) (Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski) - Oval Office and Cabinet Room. 1:30 Vice President lval ter F. Mondale, Admiral (20 min.) Stansfield Turner, a~d Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski. The Oval Office. 2:15 Drop-By Meeting with Secretary Brock Adams, (lS min.) Mr. James Schlesinger, Mr. Charles Schultze, and Mr. Bert Lance. (Mr. Jack Watson). The Cabinet Room. 7:30 l ·lo'r ld n g Din nc r ( Bu s inc s s S u i t ) ,~. i t h Pr imc i'linL; tcr i'lenctllc m Beg in - Sta tc Floor. 4~~wt fe-7... ~ 1111(11 #~/ 2-A -du..v.~ ' "~- h,e,t~~,;-c- .k~uc.,f'A-e:.-' cf- ~.......... ./ .... n.J 5.7.?"£.-.-:t; ;W/z:/ .i€.P ~~A94-6"C: ~~t,.,e:,h:,u r · ~Er/~Cf"c ~~_) d 4o nA-J~ E tt~tl?t:7~ ~.Te"c7- 4c::'"E. :X.>A?1tbl - _,#,v,; 7),1£ ~d-'1!/C D~ i'('.l ~HT Ei:Jt./.J"-Vc-J".f .>H'A'~ ~e ,PEAcE #PJ ""hE Er--.::=e::.?T "C),_- ,t',4.,;re::2r...q,v~ ~ud:=r,v~~3 I #rJ~~.vc.c= 4 ~6;/4--7::<:? ElectroltatJc Copy Made for Preservation Purposes ---- - - - THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON ci>cP/. ~~· .X,/~~~ z ~ Z..ce ~,A'/7 ~1.4,(! "?' .r~ &/. A_,~ ~/~~~d ,J-~ -~"!- . ~d ~ a/~z--.k:4. 4-fL?': ' ~~~~ ~D_,(~ --/ho ~/// ~A"./C ~ ,,,~ ~ ~r-,6' E1ectr01t8t1C Copy Made fw Preaarvation Purposes THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON ~ ruJ"d-'-#--- ]... / ~# ~,4..-::_.w-.. ~ Electrc*&tiC Copy Made for ~on Purposes 6 // .Wa--1/ - .s--d'/ ~r,.,~ j//c. ~,..,/ ~ .r~-._.,t,_ ~ .~ A.- ,a:4 ~v...;~L e..e-')4-1' ,y;" .1'~./.__, ~ - s ke~ ~ /' ~'"""'.#"" z:£_. ~4-... ~~r;t~ ~,..,..;(;; Zt!~ /!., 4 Ti .d.ot...:....... -,.G_; .r ~ &~~ Electroltatic Copy Made for ,._,..on Purposes i l THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON t Zbig: L As Fran Voorde has already replied to the invitation (attached} another letter from the President is l probably not appropriate. Frank will keep a copy of your memo in her file, I and a scheduling decision will be made closer to December. Rick Hutcheson Ir !, r W AS HI N GTON Date: July 16, 1977 MEMORANDUM c FOR ACTION: . FOR INFORMATION: Tim Kraft · Fran Voorde FROM: Rick Hutcheson, Staff Secretary SUBJECT: Z. Brzezinski m 'emo 7/16/77 re: .,. The Roger Baldwin International -- Human Rights A:ward -. ) . ..... -. '· YOUR RESPONSE MUST BE DELIVERED TO THE STAFF SECRETARY BY: TIME: -.. 11 A.M. DAY: TUESDAY DATE: JULY 19 ACTION REQUESTED: _.x_ Your comments . •· Other: < '' ... "~: . STAFF RESPONSE: __ I concur-; · __ No comment. Please note other comments below: -~ .. PLEASE ATTACH THIS COPY TO MATERIAL SUBMITTED. If you have any questions or if you anticipate a delay in submitting the required material, please telephone the Staff Secretary immediately. (Telephone, 7052) MEMORAND UM 4228 T HE WHITE HOUSE W ASH I NGTON ACTION Jllly 16, 1977 MEMORANDUM FOR: THE PRESIDENT FROM: ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI% ~--­ SUBJECT: The Roger Baldwin International Human Rights Award The president of the International League for Human Rights, Jerome Shestack, has written to invite you to accept the Roger Baldwin International Human Rights Award personally at a dinner to be held December 10, 1977, in New York City (Tab B). The ILHR is a highly respected organization with a prestigious membership. If you believe it opportune to make a public statement on international human rights in December, the ILHR would provide an excellent forum. If you should elect not to attend the dinner in New York, you could send a representative there to accept the award in your name. A proposed reply is attached at Tab A. RECOMMENDATION: That you sign the letter to Jerome Shestack. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON To Jerome Shestack It is with a great sense of pleasure that I accept the Roger Baldwin International Human Rights A ward.· The excellent work of the International League for Human Rights is well known and the cooperation it has given to this Administration in our endeavors to promote increased international respect for human rights is much appreciated. I am unsure whether my schedule will permit me to be present in New York December 10 to accept the Award personally. If I cannot, I will be represented at the dinner. We will be back in touch with you as soon as my schedule for December is somewhat clearer. Sincerely, Mr. Jerome J. Shestack President, The International League for Human Rights 777 United Nations Plaza New York, New York 10017 National affiliates< ihBinlerna ionaJ Loaona for Human ~Dhls correspondents around the wo (formerly The In ternational League tor th e Rights of Man) In consultative status with United Nations, UNESCO, ILO : 777 United Nations Plaza Council of Eurc New York, N.Y. 10017 Tel. (212) 972-9554 Cable HUMRIGHTS, N.Y. June 18, 1977 Honorary Presidents Rog er N. Baldwin Ren e Cass in (1887-1976) The President of the Gunnar Myrdal United States Honorary Vice -Presidents The White House Fenner Brockway Jan Pap anek Washington, D. C. Andrei D. Sakharov Board or Directors Dear Mr. President: President Jerome J. Shes tack Vice-Presidents The International League for Human Rights is Frances R. Grant delighted to advise you that you are the League's William vanden Heuvel unanimous choice as the first recipient of the Roger Secretary Nina Ferrero Raditsa Baldwin International Human Rights Award. Associate Secretary Bruce Rabb We salute your strong and courageous advocacy of Treasurer human rights and the many initiatives you have taken to Maxwell Dane advance the dignity and freedom of peoples everywhere. Associate Treasurers Jack David Barbara L. Greenfield The League is planning to present this Award at a Morris B. Abram dinner in New York City, on or about Human Rights Day, Richard Arens December 10, 1977. We shall be most honored if you Patricia Barnes Robert L. Bernstein would accept the Human Rights Award personally. The Willi am J. Butler David Carliner Award is also a tribute to our founder and great cham­ Valery Chalidze pion of civil and human rights, Roger Baldwin, now in Eugenio Ch ang-Rodriguez Msgr. John G. Clancy his ninety-fourth year. (It has been remarked that Gloster B. Curren t unpopular causes require not only stamina and persever­ Samuel Dash Richard N. Gardner ence, but also longevity!) Bryant George Jack Greenberg Feli ks Gross The Award Dinner will be an outstanding event Rita Hauser attended by human rights representatives from all over Dorothy Hibbert Philip Hoffman the world, United Nations dignitaries, and human rights John P. Humphrey supporters from the business and cultural communities. Florence Kandel! Sylvia Kaye Jerzy Kosinski By accepting this honor, Mr. President, you will Sidney Liskofsky James Lo eb encourage all of those who work on behalf of human rights Suzanne Massie in non-governmental and volunteer organizations. Charles Maynes Benjamin F. Mclaurin Alva Myrdal We are proud to bestow this award upon you and look George Obiozor Adamantia Pollis forward enthusiastically to your being with us at the Bogdan Raditsa Award Dinner on Human Rights Day. Andrei D. Sakharov Harrison Salisbury Alexa nd er Salzman Respectfully yours, Tony Smythe Harri s Wofford Counsel Jose A. Cabranes J~~~~-u_ Robert Delson Sheldon Stewart President, 1he Interhational Executive Director League for Human Rights Roberta Cohen International Advisory Committee S.O. Adebo Canon L. John Collins Donald Harrington Arthur Larson Alan Paton J.J. Singh Peter Archer Fernand Dehousse V.R. Haya de Ia Torre Pavel Litvinov G10rgio La Pira Mario Soares German Arciniegas Hermann L. Desir Theodore M. Hesburgh Benjamin Laureano Luna Jose Port uondo y de Castro Ju l1us Slone J. Jimenez de Arechaga Gonzalo Facio Philip C. Jessup Sean MacBride Vi ctor Reuth er Stefan Trech1 Luis Mana Botti Boggero Nasrollah S. Fatemi Victoria Ken t Ronald St. John Macdonald Lord Ritchie-Calder Mari etta Tree Angie Brooks-Randolph Per Federspiel C.N. Ahmad Khan Salvador de Madariaga Luis Alberto Sanchez Barend van N Rafael Caldera Jose Fi gueres Edward Kline Charles Malik Waller Schuppich Theodor Veil< Jean-Fiavien Lalive Luis Munoz Marin Basil Vlavia n• 0. Edmund Clubb Georges Fi scher . .. ~Ro.n s~~':E!~? c ......... "',.. w; y,,.,. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINt;TON Date: July 16, 1977 MEMORANDUM FOR ACTION: FOR INFORMATION: Tim Kraft Fran Voorde FROM: Rick Hutcheson, Staff Secretary SUBJECT: Z.
Recommended publications
  • Best Copy Available J "I \ I
    Document Symbol: A/2437 Best copy available j "i \ I UNiTED NA1'IONS REPORT OF THE SECURITY COUNCIL TO THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY Covering the period from 16 July 1952 to 15 July 1953 GENERAL ASSEMBLY OFFICIAL RECORDS: EIGHTH SESSION SUPPLEMENT No. 2 (A/2437) NEW YORK, 1953 UNITED NATIONS REPORT OF THE SECURITY COUNCIL TO THE GENERAL ASSEl\fBLY Covering the period from 16 July 1952 to 15 July 1953 GENERAL ASSEMBLY OFFICIAL RECORDS: EIGHTH SESSION SUPPLEMENT No. 2 (A/2437) New York, 1953 NOTE All United Nations documents are designated by symbols, i.e., capital letters combined with figures. Mention of such a symbol indicates a reference to a United :0T ations document. TABLE OF CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION V PART I Questions considered by the Security Council under its responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security C!z(l.pter 1. THE INDIA-PAKISTAN QUESTION 1 PART n Other matters considered by the Security Council 2. ADMISSION OF NEW MEMBERS 12 3. ApPOINTMENT OF THE SECRETARY-GENERAL .. 24 PART III The Military Staff Committee 4. \VORK OF THE MILITARY STAFF COMMITTEE. ........................... 26 PART IV Matters brought to the attention of the Security Council but not discussed in the COUlwiI 5. COMMUNICATIONS RELATING TO THE PALESTINE QUESTION. ............... 27 6. CO:\IMUNICATIONS RELATING TO THE KOREAN QUESTION . .. 28 7. COMPLAINT OF FAILURE BY THE IRANIAN GOVERNMENT TO COMPLY WITH PROVISIONAL MEASURES INDICATED BY THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE IN THE ANGLO-IRANIAN OIL COMPANY CASE 28 8. REPORT ON THE TRUST TERRITORY OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS. ............ 28 9. A REPORT OF THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE BRITISH-UNITED STATES ZONE OF THE FREE TERRITORY OF TRIESTE 29 10.
    [Show full text]
  • Presidents of the United Nations General Assembly
    Presidents of the United Nations General Assembly Sixty -ninth 2014 Mr. Sam Kahamba Kutesa (Pres i- Uganda dent-elect) Sixty -eighth 2013 Mr. John W. Ashe Antigua and Barbuda Sixty -seventh 2012 Mr. Vuk Jeremić Serbia Sixty -sixth 2011 Mr. Nassir Abdulaziz Al -Nasser Qatar Sixty -fifth 2010 Mr. Joseph Deiss Switzerland Sixty -fourth 2009 Dr. Ali Abdussalam Treki Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2009 Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann Nicaragua Sixty -third 2008 Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann Nicaragua Sixty -second 2007 Dr. Srgjan Kerim The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Tenth emergency special (resumed twice) 2006 Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa Bahrain Sixty -first 2006 Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa Bahrain Sixtieth 2005 Mr. Jan Eliasson Sweden Twenty -eighth special 2005 Mr. Jean Ping Gabon Fifty -ninth 2004 Mr. Jean Ping Gabon Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2004 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia (resumed twice) 2003 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia Fifty -eighth 2003 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia Fifty -seventh 2002 Mr. Jan Kavan Czech Republic Twenty -seventh special 2002 Mr. Han Seung -soo Republic of Korea Tenth emergency special (resumed twice) 2002 Mr. Han Seung -soo Republic of Korea (resumed) 2001 Mr. Han Seung -soo Republic of Korea Fifty -sixth 2001 Mr. Han Seung -soo Republic of Korea Twenty -sixth special 2001 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Twenty -fifth special 2001 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2000 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Fifty -fifth 2000 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Twenty -fourth special 2000 Mr. Theo -Ben Gurirab Namibia Twenty -third special 2000 Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • ISLA Journal of International & Comparative
    ILSA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW NOVA SOUTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SHEPARD BROAD LAW CENTER INTERNATIONAL PRACTITIONER'S NOTEBOOK EDITION Volume 12 Spring 2006 Number 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Litigating the Holocaust in U.S. Courts: Perspectives on the Process And its Aftermath International Law Weekend Panel on Litigating the Holocaust in U.S. Courts .................... Monica Dugot 389 Advancing the Effectiveness of International Law: Is U.N. Reform Necessary? Enhancing Accountability at the International Level: The Tension Between International Organization and Member State Responsibility and the Underlying Issues at Stake ................. Ralph Wilde 395 The Hague Convention on Choice-of-Court Agreements: Strengthening Compliance with International Commercial Agreements and Ex-Ante Dispute Resolution Clauses? After the Hague: Some Thoughts on the Impact of Canadian Law of the Convention on Choice of Court Agreements ......... H. Scott Fairley and John Archibald 417 The 2005 Hague Convention on Choice of Court Clauses ................................ Andrea Schulz 433 Applying Human Rights Law and Humanitarian Law in the Extraterritorial War Against Terrorism: Too Little, Too Much, or Just Right? Application of Human Rights Treaties Extraterritorially to Detention of Combatants and Security Internees: Fuzzy Thinking All Around? .. Michael Dennis 459 Filling the Void: Providing a Framework for the Legal Regulation of the Military Component of the War on Terror Through Application of Basic Principles of the Law of Armed Conflict ...... Geoffrey Corn 481 International Law and the Humanities International Law and the Humanities: Does Love of Literature Promote International Law? ... Daniel Kornstein 491 International Arbitrators: Civil Servants? Sub Rosa Advocates? Men of Affairs? The Role of International Arbitrators ............... Susan Franck 499 What is War? What is War? Terrorism as War after 9/11 ..........
    [Show full text]
  • A Biography of Charels Malik
    Institute of Lebanese Thought at Notre Dame University – Louaize, Lebanon Charles Malik Biography and Achievements (1906-1987) By Tony E. Nasrallah Childhood (1906-1923) Charles Malik was born in Bṭirrām on February 11th, 1906 to Dr. Ḥabīb K. Mālik and Ẓarīfa Karam, in what was the Mutuṣarrifiyyah of Mount Lebanon--an autonomous pocket in the Ottoman Empire. Charles received his primary and elementary education in the adjacent village Bishmizzīn and his secondary education in Tripoli in a Protestant missionary school known as the American Mission School for Boys. He graduated in 1923 with a high school degree. Many decades later, Charles referred to his village and its vicinity by projecting them into history to describe Christ’s setting:1 “He also moved about with his disciples in those idyllic Galilean villages only about a hundred miles south of where I was born, villages not much different from the villages that I know perfectly to my own region.” In school little Charles performed well though the external settings were not always smooth. During his school years, specifically between the age of six and twelve, the First World War erupted and the famine swept the region claiming the lives of one third of the population of the area.2 The prevailing poverty was an unbearable scene which probably stamped young Charles’ life. A professor at the American University of Beirut who eye-witnessed the First World War in Lebanon reported:3 “Those who did not flee to the interior in quest of sustenance joined the ever- increasing army of beggars in the city.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Presidents of the Presidents United Nations General Assembly
    Sixty-seventh session of the General Assembly To convene on United Nations 18 September 2012 List of Presidents of the Presidents United Nations General Assembly Session Year Name Country Sixty-seventh 2012 Mr. Vuk Jeremić (President-elect) Serbia Sixty-sixth 2011 Mr. Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser Qatar Sixty-fifth 2010 Mr. Joseph Deiss Switzerland Sixty-fourth 2009 Dr. Ali Abdussalam Treki Libyan Arab Jamahiriya Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2009 Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann Nicaragua Sixty-third 2008 Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann Nicaragua Sixty-second 2007 Dr. Srgjan Kerim The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia Tenth emergency special (resumed twice) 2006 Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa Bahrain Sixty-first 2006 Sheikha Haya Rashed Al Khalifa Bahrain Sixtieth 2005 Mr. Jan Eliasson Sweden Twenty-eighth special 2005 Mr. Jean Ping Gabon Fifty-ninth 2004 Mr. Jean Ping Gabon Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2004 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia (resumed twice) 2003 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia Fifty-eighth 2003 Mr. Julian Robert Hunte Saint Lucia Fifty-seventh 2002 Mr. Jan Kavan Czech Republic Twenty-seventh special 2002 Mr. Han Seung-soo Republic of Korea Tenth emergency special (resumed twice) 2002 Mr. Han Seung-soo Republic of Korea (resumed) 2001 Mr. Han Seung-soo Republic of Korea Fifty-sixth 2001 Mr. Han Seung-soo Republic of Korea Twenty-sixth special 2001 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Twenty-fifth special 2001 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Tenth emergency special (resumed) 2000 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Fifty-fifth 2000 Mr. Harri Holkeri Finland Twenty-fourth special 2000 Mr. Theo-Ben Gurirab Namibia Twenty-third special 2000 Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • The United Nations at 70 Isbn: 978-92-1-101322-1
    DOUBLESPECIAL DOUBLESPECIAL asdf The magazine of the United Nations BLE ISSUE UN Chronicle ISSUEIS 7PMVNF-**t/VNCFSTt Rio+20 THE UNITED NATIONS AT 70 ISBN: 978-92-1-101322-1 COVER.indd 2-3 8/19/15 11:07 AM UNDER-SECRETARY-GENERAL FOR COMMUNICATIONS AND PUBLIC INFORMATION Cristina Gallach DIRECTOR OF PUBLICATION Maher Nasser EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Ramu Damodaran EDITOR Federigo Magherini ART AND DESIGN Lavinia Choerab EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Lyubov Ginzburg, Jennifer Payulert, Jason Pierce SOCIAL MEDIA ASSISTANT Maria Laura Placencia The UN Chronicle is published quarterly by the Outreach Division of the United Nations Department of Public Information. Please address all editorial correspondence: By e-mail [email protected] By phone 1 212 963-6333 By fax 1 917 367-6075 By mail UN Chronicle, United Nations, Room S-920 New York, NY 10017, USA Subscriptions: Customer service in the USA: United Nations Publications Turpin Distribution Service PO Box 486 New Milford, CT 06776-0486 USA Email: [email protected] Web: ebiz.turpin-distribution.com Tel +1-860-350-0041 Fax +1-860-350-0039 Customer service in the UK: United Nations Publications Turpin Distribution Service Pegasus Drive, Stratton Business Park Biggleswade SG18 8TQ United Kingdom Email: [email protected] Web: ebiz.turpin-distribution.com Tel +1 44 (0) 1767 604951 Fax +1 44 (0) 1767 601640 Reproduction: Articles contained in this issue may be reproduced for educational purposes in line with fair use. Please send a copy of the reprint to the editorial correspondence address shown above. However, no part may be reproduced for commercial purposes without the expressed written consent of the Secretary, Publications Board, United Nations, Room S-949 New York, NY 10017, USA © 2015 United Nations.
    [Show full text]
  • Gendered and Orientalist Language in U.S.-Egyptian Foreign Relations, 1952-1961
    ALL ABOUT THE WORDPLAY: GENDERED AND ORIENTALIST LANGUAGE IN U.S.-EGYPTIAN FOREIGN RELATIONS, 1952-1961 A dissertation submitted to Kent State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy By Kelly M. McFarland August 2010 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………………iii Chapter I. Introduction…..……………………………………………………………………1 II. Chapter One: The Truman Administration and Revolution in Egypt: The Language of Stability and Middle East Defense…..........................................23 III. Chapter Two: Eisenhower and Dulles Tackle Egypt: Old and New Strategic Issues, But the Language Remains the Same………………………………...51 IV. Chapter Three: Alpha and Western Orientation: A Divergence toward Negativity….………………………………………………………………....97 V. Chapter Four: Nasser as Nemesis: Omega, Suez and the Souring of U.S.-Egyptian Relations.......………………..…...…....……………………………………136 VI. Chapter Five: U.S.-Egyptian Relations after Suez: Continued Negativity, 1957- 1958……………………………………...…………………………....….…180 VII. Chapter Six: As It Was in the Beginning, It Shall Be in the End: American Language and the Nasser Regime, 1958-1960…....................................222 VIII. Conclusion………………………………………...........................................…241 iv BIBLIOGRAPHY………………………………………………………………………249 iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS For the great majority of the time, writing a dissertation is a very solitary endeavor. That being said, there are a multitude of individuals behind the scenes that make that writing a possibility. Over the course of my graduate career a number of individuals and groups have played an important part in my life, offering support, guidance, advice, encouragement, friendship, help, and love. Without their patience and help this project would have been much more difficult to complete and taken an exponentially longer time to finish. While I could never fit all of these people into these acknowledgements, I will attempt to do so in the lines that follow.
    [Show full text]
  • H. E. Mr. Peter Thomson
    Seventy-first session United Nations The Sustainable Development Goals: General Assembly a universal push to transform our world President of the seventy-first session of the United Nations General Assembly H. E. Mr. Peter Thomson On 13 June 2016, the United Nations General Assembly elected Ambassa- dor Peter Thomson of Fiji to serve as President of its seventy-first session, which runs from September 2016 to September 2017. Ambassador Thomson took office in New York as Fiji’s Permanent Repre- sentative to the United Nations in February 2010, serving concurrently as Fiji’s Ambassador to Cuba until assumption of his duties as President of the UN General Assembly’s seventy-first session. Ambassador Thomson held office as Vice-President of the UN General Assembly in 2011-2012. He was elected as President of the Assembly of the International Seabed Authority’s 2011-2012 session and then as President of the Council of the Authority’s 2015-2016 session. For the duration of 2013, he chaired the United Nations’ largest negotiating bloc, the Group of 77 and China. From January 2014 to January 2015, he served as President of the Executive Board of UN Development Programme/UN Population Fund/UN Office for Programme Support (UNDP/UNFPA/UNOPS). Between 1972 and 1987, he was a civil servant in the Government of Fiji working in the fields of rural development and then foreign affairs. His Fiji government career began as a district officer in the rural regions of Navua, Macuata and Taveuni. In 1978, he joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Suva, where he took on political and overseas development assistance responsibilities before being seconded to the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat in 1979.
    [Show full text]
  • Personalism, Community, and the Origins of Human Rights
    4 Personalism, Community, and the Origins of Human Rights Samuel Moyn In the summer of 1947, the Institute for International Law reconvened after a ten-year hiatus. For decades the self-appointed tribune of European “civiliza- tion” and the legal conscience of humanity, the Institute now hoped to retake its former role. Given its prominence in the rhetoric of the Allied new order during World War II, the new concept of human rights – though interna- tional lawyers had not even fl irted with it before – stood as the fi rst item on their agenda. 1 The atmosphere was one of bitter disappointment: Whatever the idealism of wartime dreams, the sad but obvious fact was that when it came time to enact a peaceful order – most fl agrantly in the Dumbarton Oaks documents, in which human rights did not even fi gure – a theory of sovereign power politics ruled. As for the United Nations Charter, the great powers had it adorned with the phrase human rights without providing either any defi nition of its values or any institutional means for their defense. 2 The inter- national lawyers of Europe were, they believed, perhaps the last best hope for making good on what now seemed like broken promises. “Neither the Charter nor diplomatic wrangling is reassuring,” noted Charles de Visscher, Belgian international lawyer and judge (1946–1952) on the International Court of Justice who prepared the Institute’s report and proposal on human rights, in his opening remarks. “International organiza- tion,” he complained indignantly, “looks like a mere bureaucracy with neither 1 On the Institute from its nineteenth-century origins through this period, see most notably Martti Koskenniemi, The Gentle Civilizer of Nations: The Rise and Fall of International Law (Cambridge, 2002).
    [Show full text]
  • Human Rights As International Consensus the Making of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1945-1948
    Human Rights as International Consensus The Making of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1945-1948 Åshild Samnøy R 1993: 4 May 1993 Report Chr. Michelsen Institute .¡ Bergen Norway Recent CMI Reports R 1992: 6 RAKNER, Lise Trade unions in processes of democratisation. A study of party labour relations in Zambia. Bergen, December 1992, 177 pp. R 1992: 7 FJELDSTAD, Odd-Helge (red.) Verdensbankens verdensbilde. Bergen, desember 1992, 70 s. R 1992: 8 CHA TTERJEE, Ratnabali The queens' daughters: Prostitutes as an outeast group in colonial India. Bergen, December 1992, 34 pp. R 1992: 9 WIIG, Arne Opprinnelsesland - signal om kvalitet? En samvalganalyse av konsumenters vurderinger ved kjøp av klær fra utviklingsland. Bergen, desember 1992, 99 s. R 1992: 10 TJOMSLAND, Mart Negotiating the "in-between 'I. Changes in practice. thought, and identity in post-colonial Tunisia. Bergen, December 1992. 201 pp. R 1993: 1 GRANBERG, Per Hva får vi igjen? En statistisk analyse av norske leveranser til det multilaterale bistandsmarkedet. Bergen, februar 1993,91 s. R 1993: 2 WIIG, Arne Representerer opphavsmerking en konkurransevridende faktor? Bergen, mai 1993, 44 s. R 1993: 3 GLOPPEN, Siri and Lise Raker Human rights and development. The discourse in the humanities and social sciences. Bergen, May 1993, 103 pp. A complete list of publications and Annual Report avaI1able free of charge Three easy ways to pay: Cheque, issued in Norwegian kroner Post office giro, pai d by International Giro: 0808 5352661 Bank giro, Den Norske Bank, account no: 5201.05.42308 Order from: Chr. Michelsen Institute Fantoftvegen 38, N-5036 Fantoft-Bergen Norway Fax: + 47 5 574166 Phone: + 47 5 574000 Human Rights as International Consensus The Making of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 1945-1948 o .
    [Show full text]
  • Presidents of the United Nations General Assembly
    Vienna International Centre PO Box 500, A-1400 Vienna, Austria Tel: (+43-1) 26060 4666 Fax: (+43-1) 26060 5899 Email: [email protected] http://www.unis.unvienna.org/ For information only – not an official document 61st Session of the United Nations Fact Sheet 3 General Assembly September 2006 Presidents of the United Nations General Assembly Session Year Name Country First 1946 Mr. Paul-Henri Spaak Belgium First special 1947 Mr. Oswaldo Aranha Brazil Second 1947 Mr. Oswaldo Aranha Brazil Second special 1948 Mr. José Arce Argentina Third 1948 Mr. H. V. Evatt Australia Fourth 1949 Mr. Carlos P. Rómulo Philippines Fifth 1950 Mr. Nasrollah Entezam Iran Sixth 1951 Mr. Luis Padilla Nervo Mexico Seventh 1952 Mr. Lester B. Pearson Canada Eighth 1953 Mrs. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit India Ninth 1954 Mr. Eelco N. van Kleffens Netherlands Tenth 1955 Mr. José Maza Chile First emergency special 1956 Mr. Rudecindo Ortega Chile Second emergency special 1956 Mr. Rudecindo Ortega Chile Eleventh 1956 Prince Wan Waithayakon Thailand Twelfth 1957 Sir Leslie Munro New Zealand Third emergency special 1958 Sir Leslie Munro New Zealand Thirteenth 1958 Mr. Charles Malik Lebanon Fourteenth 1959 Mr. Víctor Andrés Belaúnde Peru Fourth emergency special 1960 Mr. Víctor Andrés Belaúnde Peru Fifteenth 1960 Mr. Frederick H. Boland Ireland Third special 1961 Mr. Frederick H. Boland Ireland Sixteenth 1961 Mr. Mongi Slim Tunisia Seventeenth 1962 Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan Pakistan Fourth special 1963 Sir Muhammad Zafrulla Khan Pakistan Eighteenth 1963 Mr. Carlos Sosa Rodríguez Venezuela Nineteenth 1964 Mr. Alex Quaison-Sackey Ghana Twentieth 1965 Mr. Amintore Fanfani Italy Twenty-first 1966 Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Religious Freedom Institute
    Religious Freedom: Why Now? Defending an Embattled Human Right The Witherspoon Institute Task Force on International Religious Freedom • Timothy Samuel Shah, principal author Matthew J. Franck, editor-in-chief Thomas F. Farr, chairman of the Task Force Princeton, New Jersey Copyright © 2012 by the Witherspoon Institute, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in print, broadcast, or online media. Cover design by Barbara E. Williams Book design and layout by Margaret Trejo Printing by Thomson-Shore, Inc. Published in the United States by the Witherspoon Institute 16 Stockton Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 Library of Congress Control Number: 2012931788 ISBN 978-0-9814911-9-6 (softback) ISBN 978-0-9851087-0-0 (ebook) Printed in the United States of America Contents executive summary v introduction 1 Part One: The Ground of Religious Freedom chapter one What Is Religion? The Anthropological Basis of Religious Freedom 11 chapter two A Political Case for Religious Freedom 19 chapter three A Moral Case for Religious Freedom 26 chapter four A Religious Case for Religious Freedom 32 A Jewish Case for Religious Freedom by David Novak 37 A Christian Case for Religious Freedom by Nicholas
    [Show full text]