We immediately feel that the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guaranty of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows which are advertised on the billboards of our cities and towns, and which regards them as emblems of public safety,... Proposed Investigation of the Motion-picture Industry - Page 19by United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1922 - 64 pagesFull view - About this book
| Law - 1915 - 520 pages
...contention. We immediately feel that the argument is wrong or strained, which extends the guaranties of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows which are advertised on billboards of our cities and towns, and which regards them as emblems of its public safety, to use... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce - 1934 - 92 pages
...* The first impulse of the mind is to reject the contention. We immediately feel that the argument wrong or strained which extends the guaranty of free...Lord Camden, quoted by counsel, and which seeks to bring motion pictures and other spectacles into practical and legal similitude to a free press and... | |
| Ray Broadus Browne - History - 1986 - 316 pages
...and spectacles." The Court held that "the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guarantees of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows...are advertised on the bill-boards of our cities and towns."36 Further, there was a long history of legal precedent for extending police power over such... | |
| Walter F. Pratt - Biography & Autobiography - 1999 - 340 pages
...contention. We immediately feel that the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guaranties of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows...Lord Camden, quoted by counsel, and which seeks to bring motion pictures and other spectacles into practical and legal similitttde to a free press and... | |
| Matthew Bernstein - Performing Arts - 1999 - 308 pages
...and spectacles." The Court held that "the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guarantees of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows...advertised on the billboards of our cities and towns." 36 Further, there was a long history of legal precedent for extending police power over such forms... | |
| Matthew Bernstein - Social Science - 2000 - 314 pages
...and spectacles." The Court held that "the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guarantees of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows...are advertised on the billboards of our cities and towns."36 Further, there was a long history of legal precedent for extending police power over such... | |
| Murray Pomerance - Social Science - 2004 - 380 pages
...and shows. "We immediately feel that the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guarantees of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows...advertised on the billboards of our cities and towns. . . . They [motion pictures], indeed, may be mediums of thought, but so are many things. So is the... | |
| Sunday - 1918 - 866 pages
...immediately feel that the argument wrong or strained which extends the guarantee of free opinion and fipeech to the multitudinous shows which are advertised on...spectacles into practical and legal similitude to a free preĀ» and liberty of opinion. "The judicial lense supporting the common <ense of the country is against... | |
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