Constitutional Government in the United StatesColumbia University Press, 1908 - Počet stran: 236 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 100
Strana
Woodrow Wilson. CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES BY WOODROW WILSON , PH.D. , LL.D. = PRESIDENT OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 1754 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 1893 PRESS IN - LITTERIS LIBERTAS New York COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS 1917 All ...
Woodrow Wilson. CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN THE UNITED STATES BY WOODROW WILSON , PH.D. , LL.D. = PRESIDENT OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 1754 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 1893 PRESS IN - LITTERIS LIBERTAS New York COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS 1917 All ...
Strana
... UNITED STATES IN CONSTITU- TIONAL DEVELOPMENT III . THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES IV . THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES V. THE SENATE VI . THE COURTS PAGE . 1 25 25 54 82 112 142 VII . THE STATES AND THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT • • 173 VIII ...
... UNITED STATES IN CONSTITU- TIONAL DEVELOPMENT III . THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES IV . THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES V. THE SENATE VI . THE COURTS PAGE . 1 25 25 54 82 112 142 VII . THE STATES AND THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT • • 173 VIII ...
Strana 1
... United States as a constitutional system as simply and directly as possible , with an eye to practice , not to theory . And yet at the very outset it is necessary to pause upon a theory . The government of the United States cannot be ...
... United States as a constitutional system as simply and directly as possible , with an eye to practice , not to theory . And yet at the very outset it is necessary to pause upon a theory . The government of the United States cannot be ...
Strana 2
... Give us your solemn promise as monarch that this document shall be your guide and rule in all your dealings with us , attest that promise by your sign manual attached in solemn 2 CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN UNITED STATES.
... Give us your solemn promise as monarch that this document shall be your guide and rule in all your dealings with us , attest that promise by your sign manual attached in solemn 2 CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT IN UNITED STATES.
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
action actual adjustment administration affairs America appointments authority Bill of Attainder Bill of Rights body cabinet caucus character checks and balances choice circumstances Columbia University commerce committees common counsel Congress consciousness constitutional government constitutional system convention coöperation critics debate definite deliberative assembly doubt duties economic elections England English executive federal government formal House of Commons House of Representatives independent individual influence instrument interest intimate king leaders leadership LECTURES legislation legislature liberty LL.D look machinery Magna Carta majority matter means ment merely Montesquieu nation natural necessary never organization Parliament Philadelphia convention political politicians practice president pro tempore principle privilege processes Prussia purpose question regard regulation representative assemblies rule Runnymede self-government Senate separate social speak Speaker spirit stand statesmen statute Supreme Court thing thought tion tional tive understanding United vital voters Whig theory whole
Oblíbené pasáže
Strana 70 - The President is at liberty, both in law and conscience, to be as big a man as he can.
Strana 69 - But the Constitution of the United States is not a mere lawyers' document: it is a vehicle of life, and its spirit is always the spirit of the age.
Strana 54 - Leadership and control must be lodged somewhere; the whole art of statesmanship is the art of bringing the several parts of government into effective co-operation for the accomplishment of particular common objects — and party objects at that.
Strana 166 - The judicial power of the United States, shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such inferior courts as Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.
Strana 79 - We have but begun to see the presidential office in this light; but it is the light which will more and more beat upon it, and more and more determine its character and its effect upon the politics of the nation. We can never hide our President. again as a mere domestic officer. We can never again see him the mere executive he was in the thirties and forties. He must stand always at the front of our affairs, and the office will be as big and as influential as the man who occupies it.
Strana 78 - President," he writes now (p. 78), "can never again be the mere domestic figure he has been throughout so large a part of our history. The Nation has risen to the first rank in power and resources. The other nations of the world look askance upon her, half in envy, half in fear, and wonder with a deep anxiety what she will do with her vast strength.
Strana 173 - It cannot, indeed, be settled by the opinion of any one generation, because it is a question of growth, and every successive stage of our political and economic development gives it a new aspect, makes it a new question.
Strana 191 - And this fact is just as significant and as characteristic a trait of human behavior as is the opposite disposition to respond to every change in the social atmosphere of the world about him. It is for this reason, as much as for any other, that man invariably builds himself...
Strana 69 - He may be both the leader of his party and the leader of the nation, or he may be one or the other. If he lead the nation, his party can hardly resist him. His office is anything he has the sagacity and force to make it.