Supplements accompany most issued. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; The newspaper was intentionally identified as an "Organ der Unabhängigen Sozial demokratischen Partei Deutschlands" until Dec. 8, when the name of the merged parties appeared in the masthead as Vereinigte Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands. ; Not the organ of the regular Unabhängige Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands but of its radical left wing, which split from that party to join, under the name of Vereinigte Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands. ; A facsimile reprint of the original edition published in Berlin.
Includes appendices ; "Workshop guideline on women in an interdependent world." ; "W-9." ; Cover title ; Includes bibliographical references ; Mode of access: Internet.
This comment will analyze the relative success of the various approaches taken to implement Indian treaty rights in the international fishery. It will discuss the domestic litigation resulting from these approaches and will identify the key legal issues involved. Finally, it will suggest possible means of resolving the dilemma in which the United States currently finds itself. By providing an appreciation of both the scientific complexities of managing this valuable resource and the limitations on unilateral judicial efforts in the United States, it will become apparent that the solution to this sensitive problem rests not in unilateral, but in cooperative United States-Canadian efforts. Only through diplomatic negotiations can we be assured that these recently resurrected Indian treaty rights will be accommodated in harmony with the conservation and enhancement of the salmon resource. It is hoped that the two national governments will come to realize the role of cooperation and act to avoid imposing upon the resource and its beneficiaries the futility of future summers in court.
Issues missing or imperfect at time of reprinting are in Anhang vol. ; Issues for 27. Sept. 1921- have ed. statement: Deutsche Ausg. ; Title from caption. ; Some issues also carry "Sondernummer" designation. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; Issued also in a weekly ed.: Internationale Presse-Korrespondenz für Politik, Wirtschaft und Arbeiterbewegung, -März 1926. ; Reprint. Originally published several times a week: Berlin : Inprekorr, 24. Sept. 1921-20. Dez. 1923, Apr. 1926-; Wien : Inprekorr, 22. Dez. 1923-März 1926.
Looking back at the 5th session, at the spirit of its debates and negotiations and at its results, one could indeed conclude that it reflected more cooperation than the preceding ones. Some of the reasons why this happened may be found in the general development. However, to a great extent it was owed to the personality of the President, Mr. Quartley, the Shipping Commissioner in the Government of Ghana. He had proved his ability to chairing international meetings already in IMCO and elsewhere. He has encouraged cooperation by the members of all groups with the effect that no decision was taken under pressure. The 5th session has therefore been that with the least number of resolutions adopted but one of the most successful.
In October the third report to the Club of Rome was published under the title Reshaping the International Order (RIO).1 It was formulated by a group of about twenty experts from developing as well as developed countries, including one from Romania. The initiative to undertake this study of the international order was taken by the Club of Rome Board, especially by its chairman Dr Aurelio Peccei and the study was financed by the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs at the initiative of the Minister for Development Cooperation, Jan Pronk. The report was presented to the Club of Rome in a meeting at Algiers, hosted by the Algerian Government, 25–28 October 1976. ; Summary of the RIO Report of the Club of Rome
Probably in few regions of the world are the opportunities for international scientific cooperation greater than in the Far North. From west to east, the United States (Alaska), Canada, Newfoundland (Labrador), Iceland, Denmark (Greenland), Norway, Sweden, Finland, and the Soviet Union are all vitally concerned in Arctic and Subarctic problems. And many other countries have contributed significant chapters in the ever-expanding book of knowledge entitled "The North". Scientific problems are similar regardless of international boundaries, and the number of problems in the Arctic and Subarctic that can be best solved by international cooperation is legion. In fact many of them can be solved only by international cooperation. The desirability of such cooperation and of a circumpolar background is stressed by Professor V. C. Wynne-Edwards: "Parallel investigations along many lines are being made in Alaska, Scandinavia and the U.S.S.R. The importance, from the purely scientific as well as the practical and economic standpoint, of acquainting the investigators of this country at first hand with similar problems and conditions in other northern lands cannot be too strongly stressed. Understanding and insight are born of experience; and the need for a circumpolar background must be evident to many besides myself." .
Scientific co-operation between the nations is found already in Antiquity and the Middle Ages and has proved a strong stimulus to the development of astronomy. Different forms of modern international co-operation in astronomy may be distinguished: (1) co-ordinated observations at widely separated stations; (2) collective achievement of a great amount of work; (3) creation of international centres; (4) unification of notations and terminology. The increasing need for co-operation in astronomy was the reason for the constitution of international bodies, among which the I.A.U. acquired the greatest importance; the history of the Union shows that scientific co-operation must be kept outside political implications. International meetings, colloquia, travels, and exchanges should be encouraged. The introduction of an auxiliary international language would be highly desirable. International co-operation is a necessary complement to the national development of science.
View from the runway at Amilcar Cabral International Airport. Later named for the revolutionary leader of the same name, the airport on Sal was originally built by the Italian government under Benito Mussolini. Following the end of the second World War the airport was purchased by the Portuguese colonial government. ; https://digitalcommons.ric.edu/baxter_gallery/1241/thumbnail.jpg
The Papers, 1933-1981, of Stetson Kennedy comprise correspondence; subject files on various organizations, individuals, and ideas; typescripts of articles written by Kennedy; newsclippings; press releases; bulletins and fliers; pamphlets; periodicals; and photographs. The subject files pertain to economic conditions, labor and anti-black violence, peace groups, peonage, Southern politicians, Mexico, the Spanish Civil War, and Kennedy's own campaign for a U.S. Senate seat from Florida in 1950. Articles, clippings, and pamphlets concern civil rights, international affairs, the Ku Klux Klan, labor (particularly CIO) organizing, and southern politics. The photographs depict WPA work in progress, attacks against Negroes (including lynching), and various organizations. The many periodicals include two issues (1947) of Eugene Talmadge's The Statesman, twenty-one issues (1943-1950) of The Southern Patriot, and eight issues (1939-1943) of Lillian Smith's North Georgia Review. The correspondence covers the period 1935-1979, and includes as correspondents students and peace groups, several committees to aid Spanish loyalists, social reform and civil liberties groups, government agencies, writer's organizations, publishers, literary agents, newspapers and magazines, and the New York Public Library, which obtained some Kennedy manuscripts for its Schomburg Collection in 1952. [L1979-37]
March 1980. ; Statement before the Subcommittee on International Organizations of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Washington, D.C., February 21, 1980. ; Mode of access: Internet.
The question of the international status of Bangladesh seems to be a problem which, besides embracing different aspects of international law, is also permeated with international politics, financial issues, and the racial and religious tension of the Indian subcontinent. And while we are here concerned with the legal principles relevant to the problem it does not seem right to disregard the underlying realities - especially the political reactions - of the Bangladesh question. ; peer-reviewed
The majority of the scrapbook contains photos of the International Ball depicting prominent individuals attending the event, such as political figures, International Institute board members, and other attendees during the event. The scrapbook also contains photographs of various cultural outfits that are worn by people from different groups. There are also documents indicating the hierarchy of the International Institute's board members and list of programs occurring at specific dates. Various newspapers are also evident in the scrapbook that focuses on the date of the International Ball. ; https://digitalcommons.ric.edu/int_inst_scrapbooks/1011/thumbnail.jpg
"A publication of the Geographic Health Studies, John E. Fogarty International Center for Advanced Study in the Health Sciences." ; Includes bibliographical references and index. ; Mode of access: Internet.