State, New Models for a. 174 The Worship of the... Constitution Day, The Observance of.. Constitutional Aspects of An English-Speaking Federation.. 3 46 "Constitution, The, and What It Means Today," Corwin, reviewed 253 254 113 185 195 223 "Constitutional Power and World Affairs," Sutherland, reviewed Corwin, "The Constitution and What It Means Today," reviewed Democracy and Hereditary Legislators, Canadian View of.. 190 223 253 3 245 88 67 Dorsey, William C., The Nebraska Constitutional Convention. 223 229 206 Essentials of a State Constitution..... English-Speaking Federation, Constitutional Aspects of an. Federal Constitution, Popularizing the. 195 119 94 235 Federal Devolution Within the United Kingdom. 67 Federation, English-Speaking, Constitutional Aspects of an. 195 119 Garnsey, E. R., Federal Principle of Government in Australia.. "Government Organization in War Time and After," Willoughby, reviewed ... 54 Hackett, F. W., Concurrent Power, The Eighteenth Amendment. 229 102 125 251 176 Hereditary Legislators, Democracy and. The Canadian View of.. Our Charter of Law and Liberty.. "Judicial Settlement of Controversies Between States," Scott, reviewed .. . . . 186 Kester, "Conservative Democracy," reviewed.. 126 Law and Liberty, Our Charter of. 75 Lawrence, John S., The Constitution in the Light of History 131 Light of History, The Constitution in the.... 131 Light from Tolstoy on Russia..... 122 MacDonald, Federal Devolution Within the United Kingdom.... 67 Magazine Articles: Federation of the English-Speaking Peoples.. 119 Light from Tolstoy on Russia.. 122 Majority, Government by the Will of the. 51 "Man Versus the State," Spencer, reviewed. 128 Migratory Game Birds Law.... 240 "Moral Basis of Democracy," Hadley, reviewed.... Morrow, William W., Americanism of the Constitution. Washington, the Great American. National Budget System... Nebraska Constitutional Convention.. 125 21 142 38 223 240 174 165 "Pocket Edition of the Constitution," Gates, reviewed. Popular Ratification of Constitutional Amendments. Popularizing the Federal Constitution. 63 113 235 Porter, Louis H., Individual Rights and State Supremacy. 217 Russell, "Bolshevism and the United States," reviewed. 56 Russia, Light from Tolstoy on.... 122 Satterthwaite, Linton, Essentials of a State Constitution... 94 Scott, James Brown, "Judicial Settlement of Controversies Be Sutherland, "Constitutional Power and World Affairs," reviewed 190 Talley, George A., "The Constitution Triumphant," reviewed.. Willoughby, "Government Organization in War Time and After," Worship of the Constitution, The.. 54 3 The National Association for Constitutional Government was formed for the purpose of preserving the representative institutions established by the founders of the Republic and of maintaining the guarantees embodied in the Constitution of the United States. The specific objects of the Association are: 1. To oppose the tendency towards class legislation, the unnecessary extension of public functions, the costly and dangerous multiplication of public offices, the exploitation of private wealth by political agencies, and its distribution for class or sectional advantage. 2. To condemn the oppression of business enterprise, the vitalizing energy without which national prosperity is impossible; the introduction into our legal system of ideas which past experience has tested and repudiated, such as the Initiative, the Compulsory Referendum, and the Recall, in place of the constitutional system; the frequent and radical alteration of the fundamental law, especially by mere majorities; and schemes of governmental change in general subversive of our republican form of political organization. 3. To assist in the dissemination of knowledge regarding theories of government and their practical effects; in extending a comprehension of the distinctive principles upon which our political institutions are founded; and in creating a higher type of American patriotism through loyalty to those principles. 4. To study the defects in the administration of law and the means by which social justice and efficiency may be more promptly and certainly realized in harmony with the distinctive principles upon which our government is based. 5. To preserve the integrity and authority of our courts; respect for and obedience to the law, as the only security for life, liberty, and property; and above all, the permanence of the principle that this Republic is "a government of laws and not of men." |