| Indiana University - 1892 - 1208 páginas
...encourage, by all suitable means, moral, intellectual, scientific, and agricultural improvement; and to provide, by law, for a general and uniform system...shall be without charge, and equally open to all. HKC. 7. All trust funds, held by the State, shall remain inviolate, and be faithfully and exclusively... | |
| Richard Gause Boone - 1892 - 480 páginas
...recognition of the spirit of the Constitution, and holds that " the provisions that the Legislature shall provide by law for a general and uniform system of common schools does not mean that the Legislature must directly and by a statute levy all taxes for each locality,... | |
| Indiana - 1893 - 300 páginas
...encourage, by all suitable means, moral, intellectual, scientific and agricultural improvement, and to provide by law for a general and uniform system...tuition shall be without charge and equally open to all. 1. SCHOOLS A STATE INSTITUTION. Under our former Constitution we had had two systems of common schools,... | |
| Indiana, Harrison Burns - 1894 - 1050 páginas
...encourage, by all suitable means, moral, -intellectual, scientific, and agricultural improvement, and to provide, by law, for a general and uniform system...shall be without charge, and equally open to all. A statute providing for the submission to the voters of a township, the question of raising a special... | |
| New York (State). Constitutional Convention - 1894 - 1436 páginas
...to practice law. ARTICLE VIII. Education. 1. Duty of the State to encourage Improvements in schools. defending their lives and liberties; that of acquiring, possessing and pro aud the lands belonging thereto, etc. 3. The principle to remain Invloiate._Inoome to be applied for... | |
| New York (State). Constitutional Convention, George A. Glynn - 1894 - 1126 páginas
...shall be the duty of the Legislature to establish and maintain a general and uniform system of public schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all, and to adopt all suitable means to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education.... | |
| New York (State). Constitutional Convention, George A. Glynn - 1894 - 1120 páginas
...shall be the duty of the Legislature to establish and maintain, a general and uniform system of public schools, wherein tuition shall be without charge, and equally open to all, and to adopt all suitable means to secure to the people the advantages and opportunities of education.... | |
| Indiana. Supreme Court, Horace E. Carter, Albert Gallatin Porter, Gordon Tanner, Benjamin Harrison, Michael Crawford Kerr, James Buckley Black, Augustus Newton Martin, Francis Marion Dice, John Worth Kern, John Lewis Griffiths, Sidney Romelee Moon, Charles Frederick Remy - 1895 - 776 páginas
...one of that article, which enjoins upon the Legislature the duty "to provide, by law, for a general system of common schools wherein tuition shall be without charge and equally open to all." This is the leading thought, the prime object of the whole article. That is the great end in view in... | |
| 1895 - 850 páginas
...territory, and all the taxable property of the state. This common school system was to be uniform, — "to provide by law for a general and uniform system of common schools " is the very language of the constitution. The framers of this constitution felt that there was a... | |
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1896 - 254 páginas
...or special). — Taxation. Funds (permanent or special). — The common-school fund shall consist of the surplus revenue fund, the saline fund and the lands belonging thereto, the banktax fund and the fund arising from section 114 of the charter of the State bank of Indiana, the... | |
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