| New York (State) - 1859 - 1348 pages
...provided for, shall have the preference over all the other objects of expenditure specified herein, in case there shall not be means adequate for them...fundamental law that nations and men should do unto *>ach other as they would be done by, and on such other branches of knowledge as in the opinion of... | |
| William Rhinelander Stewart - 1911 - 642 pages
...in order to carry out Peter Cooper's direction that instruction should be given in the Cooper Union on social and political science, meaning thereby not...fundamental law that nations and men should do unto others as they would be done by. We must depend, then, on education to induce the coming generations... | |
| Winifred Eva Howe, Henry Watson Kent - 1913 - 394 pages
...history of the New York institutions of art, and these we shall quote and then discuss in order. I. "Regular courses of instruction, at night, free to...just and equitable form of government, based upon the fundamental law that nations and men should do unto each other as they would be done by, and on such... | |
| John Fordyce Markey - 1928 - 618 pages
...required of his Trustees that always there be given in the Great Hall of Cooper Union instruction in the science and philosophy of a just and equitable form of government in which men and nations do to one another as they wish to be done by. This is just the trouble, someone... | |
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