Congressional Reference Bureau: Hearings Before the Committee on the Library, House of Representatives, on Various Bills Proposing the Establishment of a Congressional Reference Bureau. February 26 and 27, 1912U.S. Government Printing Office, 1912 - 114ÆäÀÌÁö |
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... passing the bills ; it is they that conduct the bills through the Houses of Parliament , and therefore the drafting of ... passed at the instance of the executive government . There is another difference to which I must advert to in ...
... passing the bills ; it is they that conduct the bills through the Houses of Parliament , and therefore the drafting of ... passed at the instance of the executive government . There is another difference to which I must advert to in ...
9 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passing of private bills , by subjecting our private bills to a species of judicial procedure . They are sent to committees whose members make a solemn declaration that they will not be affected by any private interest in dealing with ...
... passing of private bills , by subjecting our private bills to a species of judicial procedure . They are sent to committees whose members make a solemn declaration that they will not be affected by any private interest in dealing with ...
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... passed . Thirdly , the legal form in which bills pass into acts is a great deal better than it used to be under the old system . Since 1870 the form of our statutes has been far superior to what it was in earlier years , and especially ...
... passed . Thirdly , the legal form in which bills pass into acts is a great deal better than it used to be under the old system . Since 1870 the form of our statutes has been far superior to what it was in earlier years , and especially ...
14 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passed by individual Members of Con- gress , and are passed by it and its committees without any inter- vention by the administration . It is , of course , for you gentlemen to consider how far any such advantages could be secured for ...
... passed by individual Members of Con- gress , and are passed by it and its committees without any inter- vention by the administration . It is , of course , for you gentlemen to consider how far any such advantages could be secured for ...
15 ÆäÀÌÁö
... passed in Canada , Australia , and New Zealand deals with problems very much the same as yours , and the same is true of the legislation passed in Germany , France , and other countries throughout conti- nental Europe . A bureau , which ...
... passed in Canada , Australia , and New Zealand deals with problems very much the same as yours , and the same is true of the legislation passed in Germany , France , and other countries throughout conti- nental Europe . A bureau , which ...
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administration amendment appointed assistance BEAMAN bill drafting BRUNCKEN BRYCE called CHAIRMAN clerk CLEVELAND collect committee congressional consideration corps course courts deal desire digest draftsmen draw a bill EVANS executive government experience GARDNER gather gentlemen give Government head hear HERBERT PUTNAM House of Commons House of Lords idea instance interested introduced James Bryce kind lative law school lawyer legis legislative reference bureau legislature LESTER LEWIS Librarian Library of Congress MANN material matter MCCARTHY McKIRDY Members of Congress ment minister mittee NELSON nonpartisan opinion organization Parliament parliamentary counsel particular Pennsylvania person PICKETT political practical prepared present President private bills private members proposed proposition public bills PUTNAM question rules salary scientific Senate session SHERLEY side Slayden Speaker CLARK STATEMENT statutes submitted suggest thing tion TOWNSEND Wiscon Wisconsin words
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43 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... bearing upon legislation, and to render such data serviceable to Congress, and committees and Members thereof...
8 ÆäÀÌÁö - Parliament in 1783, but his career both in the House of Commons and in the House of Lords was in striking contrast with that at the bar.
24 ÆäÀÌÁö - To printed literature it often adds written memoranda as to fact and even opinion as to merit, which it secures by correspondence with experts. The above work, which organizes and concentrates all the data pertinent to a question in such form as to be readily responsive, is beyond the abilities of the Library with its present organization. The Library would gladly undertake it; it could undertake it without additional appropriation for the material itself, so far as this is in printed form; but it...
25 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... organization of these to respond to the legislative need, and the aid to their use; or in addition to this, (2) the preparation of indexes, digests, and compilations of law not having directly such ends in view; or in addition to both the above, (3) the drafting and revision of bills. In any case it must be emphasized — 1. That the organization must be elaborate beyond that provided by any State, since the subjects to be dealt with are far wider in scope, the material more remote, more complex,...
33 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... Supreme Court does ? Mr. CLEVELAND. I am not here to argue or present a brief on the subject : I am responding to a request for an opinion with respect to the need for scientific agencies in Government as an aid to officers responsible for the work of each branch. The opinion given is not a new idea. It is the German idea, of having a scientific staff back of the line : and to my mind it is the one thing that has made Germany more proficient than any .other nation in its governmental processes....
33 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... application of science in every department of life, including the Government. In the words of the chairman of the President's Economy and Efficiency Commission, Dr. Cleveland, at the House committee hearings last session on the proposed legislative reference bureau and a corps of legislative investigators: To state the view in a summary form, in my opinion the Government should have back of each one of its three branches a scientific agency which would be nonpartisan and which would provide those...
53 ÆäÀÌÁö - THE DRAFTING ROOM. 1. No bills will be drafted in the reference room. A separate drafting room and a separate force have been provided. 2. No bill will be drafted nor amendments prepared without specific detailed written instructions from a member of the legislature.
53 ÆäÀÌÁö - 1. No bills will be drafted in the Reference Room. A separate Drafting Room and a separate force have been provided. "2. No bill will be drafted, nor amendments prepared, without specific detailed written instructions from a member of the Legislature. Such instructions must bear the member's signature. "3. The draftsman can make no suggestions as to the contents of the bills.
25 ÆäÀÌÁö - The first appropriation should be, therefore, a "lump sum." 3. That for the work to be scientific (ie, having only truth as its object) it must be strictly nonpartisan; and that, therefore, whatever the appointing or administrative authority, the selection of the experts and the direction of the work should by law and in fact be assuredly nonpartisan.
86 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... shall be referred to the same committee) by the President of the Senate or the Speaker of the House of Representatives, as the case may be.