| Edwin Brown Firmage, Richard Collin Mangrum - 2001 - 480 strani
...constitutional guarantee of a free press. The Illinois Constitution's Declaration of Rights, section 22, stated: The printing presses shall be free to every person, who undertakes to examine the proceedings of the General Assembly or of any branch of government; and no law shall ever be made to restrain the right... | |
| Ellen Frankel Paul, Fred Dycus Miller, Jeffrey Paul - 2004 - 468 strani
...preserved" (Schwartz, 378). means of communication. When Pennsylvania's 1790 Constitution says that "the printing presses shall be free to every person...of the legislature, or any branch of government," it means that government may not stand in the way of any person or organization that has the resources... | |
| Thomas Paine - 2004 - 260 strani
...removable at their pleasure, and to be commissioned by the President in Council. SECTION the Thirty-fifth. THE Printing Presses shall be Free to every person...examine the proceedings of the legislature, or any part of government. SECTION the Thirty-sixth. As every Freeman, to preserve his Independence, (if without... | |
| Jeffrey Manber, Neil Dahlstrom - 2006 - 368 strani
...Article IX, Section VII of the Pennsylvania State Constitution, dedicated to the freedom of the press to "examine the proceedings of the legislature, or any branch of government." Hodgson would have known well the spirit of this right, if not the words themselves. He was building... | |
| Timothy E. Cook - 2006 - 199 strani
...government certainly was written with the idea of "scrutiny of government" in mind where it states, "The printing presses shall be free to every person...examine the proceedings of the legislature, or any part of government." This is what Tim Cook calls in his introductory essay the "watchdog" model of... | |
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