Law and Health

Pirmais vāks
U. S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1964 - 110 lappuses
 

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654. lappuse - Thus the Amendment embraces two concepts, — freedom to believe and freedom to act. The first is absolute but, in the nature of things, the second cannot be.
676. lappuse - Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficent. Men born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning, but without understanding.
693. lappuse - Congress to recognize, preserve, and protect the primary responsibilities and rights of the States in preventing and controlling water pollution...
671. lappuse - The extent and limits of what is known as the police power have been a fruitful subject of discussion in the appellate courts of nearly every state in the Union. It is universally conceded to include everything essential to the public safety, health, and morals, and to justify the destruction or abatement, by summary proceedings, of whatever may be regarded as a public nuisance.
673. lappuse - Miserable and disreputable housing conditions may do more than spread disease and crime and immorality. They may also suffocate the spirit by reducing the people who live there to the status of cattle. They may indeed make living an almost insufferable burden. They may also be an ugly sore, a blight on the community which robs it of charm, which makes it a place from which men turn. The misery of housing may despoil a community as an open sewer may ruin a river.
744. lappuse - When I use a word ... it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more nor less.
686. lappuse - It is surely no justification to a wrongdoer that he takes away only one twentyeighth of his neighbor's property, comfort, or life.' "* * * mere apprehension of injury from a dangerous conditon may constitute a nuisance where it interferes with the comfortable enjoyment of property (46 CJ, sec. 50, p. 680), and that the injured party need not seek an abatement of the nuisance but may sue for damages.
684. lappuse - ... authorized municipalities, declare the emission of dense smoke in cities or populous neighborhoods a nuisance and subject to restraint as such; and that the harshness of such legislation, or its effect upon business interests, short of a merely arbitrary enactment, are not valid constitutional objections. Nor is there any valid federal constitutional objection in the fact that the regulation may require the discontinuance of the use of property, or subject the occupant to large expense in complying...
647. lappuse - There is, of course, a sphere within which the individual may assert the supremacy of his own will and rightfully dispute the authority of any human government, especially of any free government existing under a written constitution, to interfere with the exercise of that will.
660. lappuse - Every person who provides, supplies, or administers to any pregnant woman, or procures any such woman to take any medicine, drug, or substance, or uses or employs any instrument or other means whatever, with intent thereby to procure the miscarriage of such woman, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life, is punishable by imprisonment in the state prison not less than two nor more than five years.

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