State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Edn > Title-6 > Article-87 > 4302

§ 4302. Object of institution.  The primary object of the school shall  be,  to  furnish  to  the  blind  children  of  the state the best known  facilities for acquiring a thorough education, and to train them in some  useful profession or manual art, by means of which they may  be  enabled  to  contribute to their own support after leaving the school; but it may  likewise, through its industrial department, provide such of  them  with  appropriate  employment  and  boarding accommodations as find themselves  unable, after completing their course of instruction  and  training,  to  procure  these  elsewhere  for themselves.   It shall, however, be in no  sense an asylum for those  who  are  helpless  from  age,  infirmity  or  otherwise, or a hospital for the treatment of blindness.

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Edn > Title-6 > Article-87 > 4302

§ 4302. Object of institution.  The primary object of the school shall  be,  to  furnish  to  the  blind  children  of  the state the best known  facilities for acquiring a thorough education, and to train them in some  useful profession or manual art, by means of which they may  be  enabled  to  contribute to their own support after leaving the school; but it may  likewise, through its industrial department, provide such of  them  with  appropriate  employment  and  boarding accommodations as find themselves  unable, after completing their course of instruction  and  training,  to  procure  these  elsewhere  for themselves.   It shall, however, be in no  sense an asylum for those  who  are  helpless  from  age,  infirmity  or  otherwise, or a hospital for the treatment of blindness.

State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > New-york > Edn > Title-6 > Article-87 > 4302

§ 4302. Object of institution.  The primary object of the school shall  be,  to  furnish  to  the  blind  children  of  the state the best known  facilities for acquiring a thorough education, and to train them in some  useful profession or manual art, by means of which they may  be  enabled  to  contribute to their own support after leaving the school; but it may  likewise, through its industrial department, provide such of  them  with  appropriate  employment  and  boarding accommodations as find themselves  unable, after completing their course of instruction  and  training,  to  procure  these  elsewhere  for themselves.   It shall, however, be in no  sense an asylum for those  who  are  helpless  from  age,  infirmity  or  otherwise, or a hospital for the treatment of blindness.