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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2017
1 U.N. Press Release GA/AB/1203 (1969).
2 New York Times (Sept. 30, 1969), at p. 32, col. 6.
3 A/RES/2538(XXIV). The Secretary General’s proposals for limiting documentation are contained in A/7579 (1969) and in E/L.1249 and Add. 1-2 (1969). Under the circumstances, it is perhaps not surprising that the U.N. Administrative Tribunal rejected the plea of a summarily dismissed employee who attempted further to burden delegations by distributing through official channels copies of his personal complaint, marked “restricted and confidential” and resembling a U.N. document in appearance. Judgments of the United Nations Administrative Tribunal, Nos. 87 to 113, 1963-1967, AT/DEC/87 to 113 at 176 (1969).
4 United Nations Law Reports, edited by the Chairman of this Committee and distributed by Walker Publishing Company, Inc., 720 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y., 10019.
5 Annual Report of the Headquarters Library, etc., 1968, ST/LIB/23 at 4 (1969).
6 Ibid, at 17. At the end of 1968 there were 293 depositaries in 102 states and territories.
7 A/7740 at 7(1969).
8 Ibid, at 8.
9 In May, 1970, two months after the Commission session and a month after completion of this report, Commission documents in the limited series were published in mimeographed form, E/CN.4/1038.
10 For an instance of resistance to U.N. procedures by a “treaty organ,” see Report of International Narcotics Control Board on its work in 1969, E/INCB/5 at 27.
11 For a listing of recent ILO documents, see 53 Official Bulletin, No. 1 at 53 (1970).