Treaties and Executive Agreements: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-third Congress, First Session, on S.J. Res. 1, Proposing an Amendment to the Constitution of the United States Relative to the Making of Treaties and Executive Agreements and S.J. Res. 43 Proposing an Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, Relating to the Legal Effect of Certain TreatiesU.S. Government Printing Office, 1953 - 1267 pagini |
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Pagina 25
... objection as far as I am concerned if you give the committee a little more time than that . Certainly it is a most important subject we are dealing with , and while I think it ought to be pushed along as the chairman suggests The ...
... objection as far as I am concerned if you give the committee a little more time than that . Certainly it is a most important subject we are dealing with , and while I think it ought to be pushed along as the chairman suggests The ...
Pagina 46
... objection has been offered to the first sentence rendering void all treaties in conflict with the Constitution , except that such a statement is " unobjectionable in itself but unnecessary " ( Zechariah Chafee , Jr. , Harvard Law School ...
... objection has been offered to the first sentence rendering void all treaties in conflict with the Constitution , except that such a statement is " unobjectionable in itself but unnecessary " ( Zechariah Chafee , Jr. , Harvard Law School ...
Pagina 47
... objection has been voiced to the second section , designed to make it clear and unequivocal that Congress has the power " to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper " to control executive agreements ( Constitution , art . I ...
... objection has been voiced to the second section , designed to make it clear and unequivocal that Congress has the power " to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper " to control executive agreements ( Constitution , art . I ...
Pagina 51
... objected to the provisions concerning treaties , because they thought there was no control on the treatymaking power . They thought there was no control the way the clause is presently drawn because it says that statutes must be ...
... objected to the provisions concerning treaties , because they thought there was no control on the treatymaking power . They thought there was no control the way the clause is presently drawn because it says that statutes must be ...
Pagina 60
... objection has been offered to the first sentence rendering void all treaties in conflict with the Constitution , except that such a statement is " unobjectionable in itself but unnecessary " ( Zechariah Chafee , Jr. , Harvard Law School ...
... objection has been offered to the first sentence rendering void all treaties in conflict with the Constitution , except that such a statement is " unobjectionable in itself but unnecessary " ( Zechariah Chafee , Jr. , Harvard Law School ...
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10th amendment action adopted American Bar Association Article authority Bill of Rights Bricker amendment CHAIRMAN clause committee on peace conference Cong congressional constitutional amendment Covenant on Human danger decision declaration defense Defense Production Act Department domestic jurisdiction domestic law draft effective as internal enact executive agreements exercise Federal Government freedom Genocide Convention HOLMAN house of delegates Human Rights implement internal law Joint Resolution 130 Justice Labor legislation limitation MASLOW matter McGRATH ment Missouri organization peace and law PERLMAN plaintiffs present President prohibited proposed amendment protection provisions question ratified regulations relations require respect Reverend Boss SCHWEPPE seizure self-executing Senate Joint Resolution Senator Bricker Senator BUTLER Senator DIRKSEN Senator WATKINS SMITHEY statement statute steel submitted Supreme Court supreme law thing tion treaties and executive treaty power treatymaking power United Nations Charter United States Senate vote Wage Stabilization Board WILLIAM LANGER