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Cassin and Declaration
The underlying structure of the Universal Declaration was introduced in its second draft which was prepared by René Cassin.

Cassin and with
The second generation of Classicists, often trained in philosophy as well ( following Heidegger and Derrida, mainly ), built on their work, with authors such as Marcel Detienne ( now at Johns Hopkins ), Nicole Loraux, Medievalist and logician Alain De Libera ( Geneva ), Ciceronian scholar Carlos Lévy ( Sorbonne, Paris ) and Barbara Cassin ( Collége international de philosophie, Paris ).
Cassin turned to the Alliance Israelite Universelle, and, together with the American Jewish Committee and the Anglo-Jewish Association, founded the Consultative Council of Jewish Organisations, dedicated to providing encouragement from a Jewish perspective to the nascent UN human rights system.
Originally considered its own species, in the 1950s, based on morphological data, the two Blue-headed Vireo sub-species were grouped with the Plumbeous Vireo ( Vireo plumbeus ) and the Cassin ’ s Vireo ( V. Cassinii ).
Beyond the other side of the hill, across the Charles River in Charlestown, the USS Constitution and the USS Cassin Young may be seen docked at Boston Navy Yard with the Bunker Hill Monument in the distance.
Just about any ornithologist active in the United States during the first half of the 19th century, including John James Audubon, William Bartram, Charles Lucien Bonaparte, John Cassin, Thomas Nuttall, George Ord, John Kirk Townsend, and Alexander Wilson ( the " father " of American ornithology ), either operated out of or worked closely with The Academy of Natural Sciences.
Born in Philadelphia, the son of naval officer John Cassin, Cassin entered the United States Navy as a midshipman in 1800, and served in Philadelphia in the West Indies during the latter part of the Quasi-War with France.
: Resolved, That the President of the United States be requested to cause gold medals to be struck, emblematical of the action between the two squadrons, and to present them to Captain Macdonough and Captain Robert Henley, and also to Lieutenant Stephen Cassin, in such manner as may be most honorable to them ; and that the President be further requested to present a silver medal, with suitable emblems and devices, to each of the commissioned officers of the navy and army serving on board, and a sword to each of the midshipmen and sailing masters, who so nobly distinguished themselves in that memorable conflict.
She is now co-presenter of Nationwide with Anne Cassin, having been so for a time with Michael Ryan.
While the Cassin was searching for the submarine, Ingram sighted the torpedo coming, and realizing that it might strike the ship aft in the vicinity of the depth charges, ran aft with the intention of releasing the depth charges before the torpedo could reach the Cassin.
Along with one crewmember killed and nine wounded, the Cassin had lost her entire stern including the rudder and was in danger of sinking.
So Dark the Night is the story of a detective, Henri Cassin from Paris, who falls in love with an innkeeper's daughter Nanette while on a long overdue vacation.

Cassin and .
* 1909 – Riccardo Cassin, Italian mountaineer ( d. 2009 )
Well known members of the Commission included Eleanor Roosevelt of the United States, who was the Chairperson, Jacques Maritain, René Cassin and Stéphane Hessel of France, Charles Malik of Lebanon, and P. C. Chang of the Republic of China, among others.
According to Globalizing Family Values, the Declaration's pro-family phrases were the result of the Christian Democratic movement's influence on Cassin and Malik.
Cassin worked from a first draft prepared by John Peters Humphrey.
** René Cassin, French judge, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize ( b. 1887 )
* October 5 – René Cassin, French judge, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize ( d. 1976 )
Crawford's mother subsequently married Henry J. Cassin.
The family lived in Lawton, Oklahoma, where Cassin ran a movie theater.
Crawford was unaware that Cassin was not her birth father until her brother Hal told her.
Cassin was first listed in the City Directory in 1917, living at 403 East Ninth Street.
Hence, the history of the dialectical method is the history of philosophy .< ref > Cassin, Barbara ( ed.
Cassin and Chuck Hazel ( Bay Partners ) provided the initial $ 3 million funding and the company officially began operations on July 1, 1982.
He married Pauline Cassin, the author of the Pêche de Madeleine and other well-known novels.
These were awarded to Captain Thomas Macdonough, Captain Robert Henley, and Lieutenant Stephen Cassin of the U. S. Navy, and to Alexander Macomb ( 20 October 1814 3 Stat.
After the intervention of René Cassin, the vice-president of the Conseil d ' État, who pointed his fierce opposition to the German occupation, his citizen rights were restored on 5 October 1945.
The USS Cassin Young, a World War II-era destroyer serving as a museum ship, is also berthed here.
* M. m. americanus Cassin, 1852.

compared and Declaration
Because each processor's System Declaration can be compared to the document's SGML Declaration it is always possible to know whether a document is supported by a particular processor.
Seventh-day Adventists interpret the " two horned beast " that " came out of the wilderness " and " spoke meekly " to mean the United States because it passed the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, was established in a thinly settled part of the world compared to Roman and Byzantine Europe, and because it declared support for democracy, rule of law, and at least the rights of all white men, rich or poor.
When compared to other documents of the time, the " Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence " supposedly adopted on May 20, 1775, is simply incredible.

compared and portico
The following year Bevis Hillier drew more comparisons in The Spectator ( London ) with other poems by Cawein ; he compared Cawein's lines "... come and go / Around its ancient portico " with Eliot's "... come and go / talking of Michelangelo.

compared and Greek
The name has been compared to a divine epithet Carnonos in a Celtic inscription written in Greek characters at Montagnac, Hérault ( as καρνονου, karnonou, in the dative case ).
While Cernunnos was never assimilated, scholars have sometimes compared him functionally to Greek and Roman divine figures such as Mercury, Actaeon, specialized forms of Jupiter, and Dis Pater, the latter of whom Julius Caesar said was considered the ancestor of the Gauls.
She is compared with Penthesilea, mythical queen of the Amazons, by the Greek historian Nicetas Choniates ; he adds that she gained the epithet chrysopous ( golden-foot ) from the cloth of gold that decorated and fringed her robe.
The pair has been compared to similar figures found in Greek, Roman and Vedic mythology, and may also be connected to beliefs surrounding the Germanic " wolf-warrior bands ", the Úlfhéðnar.
While Greek fire remained a potent weapon, its limitations were significant when compared to more traditional forms of artillery: in its siphon-deployed version, it had a limited range, and it could be used safely only in a calm sea and with favourable wind conditions.
In the context of the age and period it held the meaning of seeking or forming part of a cultural entity, that of iudea, the Greek derivative of Persian Yehud, and can be compared with hellenismos, meaning acceptance of Hellenic cultural norms ( the conflict between iudaismos and hellenismos lay behind the Maccabeean revolt and hence the invention of the term iudaismos ).
W. J. Johnson has compared the importance of the Mahabharata to world civilization to that of the Bible, the works of Shakespeare, the works of Homer, Greek drama, or the Qur ' an.
In Greek mythology, Noah has often been compared to Deucalion, the son of Prometheus and Pronoia.
It can be compared with Edwyn R. Bevan's full translation in The House of Ptolemy ( 1927 ), based on the Greek text with footnote comments on variations between this and the two Egyptian texts.
The sun itself also was compared to a wheel, possibly in Proto-Indo-European, Greek hēliou kuklos, Sanskrit suryasya cakram, Anglo-Saxon sunnan hweogul ( PIE ).
Leonard Wolf praised the film as "... an exquisite work of art " and compared it to a Greek tragedy, noting the lack of onscreen violence.
The earliest major philosophers to publish in English, such as Francis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke also routinely wrote in Latin and French, and compared their terms to Greek, treating the words " logos ", " ratio ", " raison " and " reason " as inter-changeable.
European explorers and missionaries made brief visits to the area as early as 1856, and they compared the organisation of the kingdom of Burundi with that of the old Greek empire.
In a celebrated passage, he compared the introduction of the ‘ New Music ’ into Greek theatres to the barbarization of the Poseidoniates in the Bay of Naples.
The writing has been compared to that of Jane Austen, one of Rowling's favourite authors, of Roald Dahl, whose works dominated children's stories before the appearance of Harry Potter, and of the Ancient Greek story-teller Homer.
Greek writers call this place Khemmis and indicate that it is near the city of Buto, but in the myth, the physical location is unimportant compared with its nature as an iconic place of seclusion and safety.
This is to compensate for perspective distortions which would otherwise make the memorial appear to bulge out at the top when compared with the bottom, a common feature of Ancient Greek architecture.
Later commentators have compared the accounts of child sacrifice in the Old Testament with similar ones from Greek and Latin sources speaking of the offering of children by fire as sacrifices in the Punic city of Carthage, which was a Phoenician colony.
Though the consonants differ little from the text generally accepted in the early 2nd century ( and also differ little from some Qumran texts that are even older ), it has numerous differences of both greater and lesser significance when compared to ( extant 4th century ) manuscripts of the Septuagint, a Greek translation ( made in the 3rd to 2nd centuries BCE ) of the Hebrew Scriptures that was in popular use in Egypt and Israel and that is believed by scholars to be the source often quoted in the New Testament.
In addition, Eir has been theorized as a form of the goddess Frigg and has been compared to the Greek goddess Hygiea.
In Greek mythology, the Niobids were the children of Amphion of Thebes and Niobe, slain by Apollo and Artemis because Niobe, born of the royal house of Phrygia, had boastfully compared the greater number of her own offspring with those of Leto, Apollo's and Artemis ' mother: a classic example of hubris.
In an effort to raise funds, Butler arranged an exhibit with the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York: Bodybuilders would become " living sculptures ," posing on rotating platforms while art critics analyzed the aesthetics of the bodybuilding physique and compared and contrasted the men to Greek sculpture.
Although Vanth has no real Greek counterpart, she has been compared to the Greek Furies, the Erinyes, especially in older publications.

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