| American Bar Association - 1913 - 1216 psl.
...government and to press fonvard the movement for national control and the extinction of local control. " The intervention of the national government in many...their duty toward the general body of the country." While it may be well disputed that the dilemma between the two alternatives is as sharp as would be... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1908 - 172 psl.
...forward the movement for national control and the extinction of local control. "STATES NOT ALIVE TO DUTY. "The intervention of the National Government in many of the matters which it tas recently undertaken would have been wholly unnecessary if the States themselves had been alive... | |
| American Bar Association - 1913 - 1172 psl.
...government and to press forward the movement for national control and the extinction of local control. " The intervention of the national government in many...their duty toward the general body of the country." While it may be well disputed that the dilemma between the two alternatives is as sharp as would be... | |
| Lamar Taney Beman - 1926 - 438 psl.
...government and to press forward the movement for national control and the extinction of local control. The intervention of the national government in many...of the country. It is useless for the advocates of states rights to inveigh against the supremacy of the constitutional laws of the United States or against... | |
| Charles Ellewyn George - 1917 - 476 psl.
...awakening on the part of the States to a realization of their own duties to the country at large, and that it is useless for the advocates of State rights to...inveigh against the supremacy of the constitutional law of the United States against the extension of national authority in the fields of necessary control... | |
| Bar Association of Arkansas - 1928 - 662 psl.
...and insidious; its cause easily seen and as easily justified. This tendency is not of recent origin. The intervention of the National Government in many...recently undertaken would have been wholly unnecessary if local governments had been alive to their duty toward the general body of the country. It is useless... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Government Operations - 1967 - 1120 psl.
...an awakening on the part of the States to a realization of their own duties to the country at large. The intervention of the National Government in many...of the country. It is useless for the advocates of States' rights to Inveigh against the supremacy of the Constitutional laws of the United States or... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations - 1967 - 1184 psl.
...an awakening on the part of the States to a realization of their own duties to the country at large. The Intervention of the National Government in many...of the country. It is useless for the advocates of States' rights to inveigh against the supremacy of the Constitutional laws of the United States or... | |
| Martha Derthick - 2004 - 216 psl.
...government and to press forward the movement for national control and the extinction of local controL The intervention of the national government in many...their duty toward the general body of the country."' Root's explanation for centralization was that of a statesman — an eminent lawyer, party leader,... | |
| Martha Derthick - 2004 - 222 psl.
...government and to press forward the movement for national control and the extinction of local control. The intervention of the national government in many...alive to their duty toward the general body of the country.22 Root's explanation for centralization was that of a statesman — an eminent lawyer, party... | |
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