| 1940 - 1266 strani
...Washington, who had presided over the Convention, urged : "I cannot forbear intimating bo you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement, as well to the...exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home." In response to this suggestion— and to the pressure of inventors seeking private bills of monopoly... | |
| 1941 - 1604 strani
...Washington, who had presided over the Convention, urged: "I cannot forbear intimating to you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement, as well to the...exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home." In response If} this suggestion — and to the pressure of inventors seeking private bills of monopoly... | |
| United States. Patent Office - 1940 - 88 strani
...means, will not, I trust, need recommendation; but I cannot forbear intimating to you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement, as well to the...exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home; * * *." In its reply to this address the House concurred in the sentiment regarding the expediency... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1960 - 900 strani
...industries which they built up.8 And Washington in his first inaugural address urged "the expediency of giving effectual encouragement, as well to the...of new and useful inventions from abroad as to the exertion of skill and genius at home." But our patent system, following the pattern of the Statute... | |
| Alastair Hamilton, Alexander Hamilton, Harold Coffin Syrett - 1966 - 656 strani
...country; will not I trust need recommendation. But I cannot forbear intimating to you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement as well to the introduction...exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home . . ." (GW, XXX, 493). 209. See note 99. 1 io. "An Act to encourage and protect the Manufactures of... | |
| Joseph E. Stiglitz - 2003 - 424 strani
...Congress in 1790, George Washington pointed out that the objective of patent legislation was to give "effectual encouragement, as well to the introduction...exertions of skill and genius in producing them at home." Non-US citizens were not granted patent protection until 1836. Having succeeded, were we now pulling... | |
| Doron S. Ben-Atar - 2008 - 304 strani
...president's first State of the Union Address was equally explicit. "I cannot forbear to you the expediency of giving effectual encouragement as well to the introduction of new and useful inventions from abroad." 21 Washington had been a proponent of importing European technology since the end of the Revolutionary... | |
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