| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1934 - 1324 halaman
...on, step by step, in a like development of other great natural territorial units within our borders. Many hard lessons have taught us the human waste that...there a few wise cities and counties have looked ahead ami planned. But our Nation has "just grown." It is time to extend planning to a wider field, in this... | |
| Otis L. Graham Jr. - 1976 - 378 halaman
...social environment. When sending the Tennessee Valley Authority proposal to Congress in 1933, he said: Many hard lessons have taught us the human waste that...grown." It is time to extend planning to a wider field. 10 The argument here is not that Roosevelt had a secret but conscious self-identification as a "planner,"... | |
| D. W. Meinig - 2010 - 483 halaman
...planning, regionalism — and the young profession of planners — suddenly took on a new potency. "Many hard lessons have taught us the human waste that results from the lack of planning," said the former governor of New York in 1933. "Here and there a few wise cities... | |
| Richard A. Colignon - 1997 - 384 halaman
...basin and its adjoining territory for the general, social, and economic welfare of the nation. . . . Many hard lessons have taught us the human waste that results from lack of planning . . . ... It is time to extend planning to a wider field, in this instance comprehending in one great... | |
| Pierangelo Maria Toninelli - 2000 - 342 halaman
...capitalist enterprises that had failed the nation in the early 1930s. President Roosevelt explained, "It is time to extend planning to a wider field, in...great project many States directly concerned with the basis of one of our greatest rivers." More would follow, he said: "If we are successful here we can... | |
| Neil M. Maher - 2007 - 328 halaman
...President Roosevelt introduced the idea of regional planning in one of his first congressional addresses. "Many hard lessons have taught us the human waste that results from a lack of planning," he explained to the nation's legislators.40 To avoid such waste, Roosevelt brought... | |
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