| Roscoe Lewis Ashley - California - 1904 - 392 pages
...Encouragebeing essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of ment of edu" the people, the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricultural improvement. Section 2. A Superintendent of Public Instruction... | |
| United States - Constitutions - 1969 - 348 pages
...school purposes and so no other provisions were made for financing the schools, but it was provided that "the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral and agricultural improvements ' ' and schools were required to be maintained for... | |
| California. State Department of Education - Moral education - 1969 - 84 pages
...short, those legislators of 1879 included all segments of education under the constitutional mandate that "the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the promotion of ... moral . . . improvement." It should be evident to everyone that at that time it included higher... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Education and Labor - 1972 - 1400 pages
...knowledge and intelligence being essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people, the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricutural improvement/' (See also Piper v. Big Pine School Dist, supra, 193... | |
| Helen M. Jellison, Bascomb Associates - Education and state - 1975 - 404 pages
...knowledge and intelligence being essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people, the Legislature shall encourage by all suitable means the promotion of intellectual, scientific, moral, and agricultural improvement. STATUTORY PROVISIONS Education Code (sec. 5001 to... | |
| Law reports, digests, etc - 1920 - 1112 pages
...shall be forever encouraged," even the anticipatory Constitution of 1S35 (article 10, ยง 2) provided, "The Legislature shall encourage, by all suitable means, the promotion of intellectual, sclentiflcal, and agricultural improvement," and a constitutional mandate of like import has since... | |
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