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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
In the approaching national election, one of the paramount issues seems to be the problem of adjusting our governmental structure to permit the consideration of economic and social questions by political agencies of appropriate size. The powers of government should be as broad as the problems with which they must deal. But this truth is equally applicable to affairs which, traditionally, have been of municipal concern. The area of the city's influence has been widening and the centrifugal forces have had too great speed and volume to permit solution by the earlier method of enlarging city boundaries to encompass urban areas.
1 State ex rel Howland, Relator, v. Krause, 130 Ohio State 455.
2 See this Review, Vol. 30, p. 540 (June, 1936).
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