| Theodore Dreiser - 1987 - 1168 str.
...render it productive. Congress have undertaken to do more; they have proceeded to form new States; to erect temporary Governments; to appoint officers for...All this has been done; and done without the least colour of constitutional authority. Yet no blame has been whispered; no alarm has been sounded. A GREAT... | |
| George Anastaplo - 2001 - 392 str.
...render it productive. Congress have undertaken to do more: they have proceeded to form new States, to erect temporary governments, to appoint officers for...All this has been done; and done without the least colour of constitutional authority. Yet no blame has been whispered; no alarm has been sounded. 69.... | |
| José López Baralt - 1999 - 400 str.
...render it productive. Congress has undertaken to do more: they have proceeded to form new states, to erect temporary governments; to appoint officers for...states shall be admitted into the confederacy. All this had been done without the least color of constitutional authority." When the Constitution of 1787 was... | |
| Joseph M. Lynch - 2005 - 340 str.
...Exercising what he termed "an excrescent power," Congress, he wrote, had "proceeded to form new States; to erect temporary Governments; to appoint officers for...such States shall be admitted into the confederacy." 28 Since Congress had done all these things "without the least colour of constitutional authority,"... | |
| Kimberly C. Shankman - 1999 - 152 str.
...republican government: Congress have . . . proceeded to form new states, to enact temporary government, to appoint officers for them, and to prescribe the...states shall be admitted into the confederacy. All this had been done without the least color of Constitutional authority. ... I mean not by anything here... | |
| James H. Read - 2000 - 228 str.
...Continental Congress] have proceeded to form new States, to erect temporary governments, to appoint off1cers for them, and to prescribe the conditions on which...blame has been whispered; no alarm has been sounded The public interest, the necessity of the case, imposed upon them the task of overleaping their constitutional... | |
| Christina Duffy Burnett, Burke Marshall - 2001 - 448 str.
...render it productive. Congress have undertaken to do more: they have proceeded to form new States; to erect temporary governments; to appoint officers for...All this has been done; and done without the least colour of constitutional authority."17 Madison was referring to the Congress's governing of territorial... | |
| E. Robert Statham - 2002 - 176 str.
...American mainland: Congress have undertaken to do more: they have proceeded to form new States, to erect temporary governments to appoint officers for them, and to prescribe the conditions in which such States shall be admitted into the Confederacy. All this has been done; and done without... | |
| Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, John Jay - 2003 - 642 str.
...render it productive. Congress have undertaken to do more; they have proceeded to form new States; to erect temporary Governments; to appoint officers for...All this has been done; and done without the least colour of constitutional authority. Yet no blame has been whispered; no alarm has been sounded. A GREAT... | |
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