Chapter 4- Federalism

123456789101112131415161718192021222324
Across
  1. 2. a revolt against the government
  2. 5. those powers that the Constitution does not grant to the National Government nor deny to the States
  3. 7. delegated powers of National Government that are suggested by the expressed powers in Constitution
  4. 10. clause no state can draw unreasonable distinctions between its own residents and persons from another state (3 words)
  5. 11. those powers that can be exercised by the National Government
  6. 14. delegated powers of National government spelled out in the Constitution
  7. 15. congressional act admitting a new state to the Union
  8. 16. specific, listed, identified
  9. 20. implied powers (3 words)
  10. 22. provision in the Constitution that states the Constitution is “Supreme Law of the Land”
  11. 23. legal process by which a fugitive from justice in one state is returned to that state
  12. 24. powers granted in the Constitution to the National Government
Down
  1. 1. program of federal money or other resources to State, cities, local governments (3 words)
  2. 3. grants for specific projects to states, localities, or private agencies who apply for them
  3. 4. government system where power is divided between national and state governments
  4. 6. Constitution’s requirement that each state accept the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state (4 words)
  5. 8. principle that assigns certain powers to national government and reserves others to the states
  6. 9. formal agreement between or among states
  7. 12. grant made for specific, closely defined, purpose
  8. 13. order that one be sent to another country
  9. 17. grant for some particular but broadly defined area of public policy
  10. 18. those powers that both the National and States possess and exercise
  11. 19. powers the Constitution is presumed to have delegated to the National government because it is a sovereign state in a world community
  12. 21. congressional act directing people of a territory to frame a state constitution for admission to the Union