THE DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE '
PAGE FIFTEEN
WILL DANCE AT Y. 0. M. BALL
Thus far, the educational situation
he rabbis limited the ruthlessly discarded like a torn glove.!
ma-'. in New York has presented a peculizie
the class to .:5. If ion lace I ..'111" you cannot demand of ha. e
in
what k demanded of the teach- :aspect Oyer one - half the children
•
40 boys, employ an assistant. They
---
which
The teacher who peri tits his I the schools belong to races of
•
ABRANI LIPSKY .
, tttlyt`e'l adaptation "I in`ttmit"" t° tel -
n_
the
administrators
arc
not
members.
i nto
the intik idual iiee(k of the pupils. cr.
1,111111. to 1- Y111;1111 idle," says t a
' in .hooting at ides, or "'gage in other wo k during Certain imperfections in the system
In every held of intellectual accotn- Tit". did not behest
large part to this
ce
II school time. or is careless about his are probAly It Inc is in likely
for example
plishment are to be found great Jew- • an a‘erage boy. Boy, s■ host. 1 0 1 1 11
the
the
class
was h arm - iii,tra,.iion. I,,, long, to i tOOO of WIWI, , CtAt a t I i. ti I.
Test of
ish names—in the sciences, ill mus k s "0" It
man- that superintendents would permit
o u u ld be eliminated 'They hot
fill
h
a
it
is
said,
'Cursed
be
Mos
the huge univieldly classes that are
I i painting, statesmanship, finance.s
o f atom basely.
In one department they are missing—' 't i t' "I that stupid ithdatt Y of a :me the work
l system now to be found, if their own children
The result of the taint nfi ca
111,
1
"unt(crsal.
compulsory
in that of education. There are no I It"'
intimate friends
that the Jews ni , a n d those of their
for-
Jewish names to set besides those of ' e tlue " t, t ""' t 51 Ittch encourages the of education was
had to attend then?, The little for-
nli no
e (locutin ill 11111' Cla , S-1- 011111 , Furopc through the n middle ages
,
eigners
who
compose
the bulk of the
educational
reformers
and!
the great
re .
ce 5, up
renaissance
, "t hoys who never metier any benefit to the time of the re
theorists like Comenius, Itousst•au,
of , school population are presumed not
Ilebart, Pestalozzi, Froebel or Spen- them.
Mn
a
the instruction lavished awn
p probably better educated than any ew t t o mind the crowding since they are
but instead acquire habit
s of heir
neighbor'. "The average J
t
The
reason
for
this
deficiency
I
Crowding at (mute—as well
cer.
nnot be a lack of interest in the ', idleness and a thorough distaste for could read and write, which was more used to
ca all culture. than the ordinary layman of the mid- as in the subway. The little foreign
subject. No people of the present
, a re working their w ay into the
Hie rabbis permitted light corporal
cornice-
.
(lay are more enthusiastic for educa-
punishment,
intended
to frighten
more
learning
Europe
the awak-
for than
to hurt. upon
young
children.
A (Iles
ages in
could
dt ." meant
The revival
of • et teaching ranks. Is there no
lion
than the has
Jews. become
"Talmo almost as much I ening of Christi, n interest in educa- tion between this fact and the growth
learning
nt of of the factory system in teaching con-
' tt"", but it is;,„ a l so concom it a
Id " that left a mark teaslin-hidden
ot oo o f th e jews . 1 &lions? Jews are however slowly,
a by-word as their success in finance..
educa- , our regulations forbid teachers in our a rev i va l o f p‘ . , ect
restrictions, the getting a foothold on the administra-
The interest of the Jews in
se h ook to touch achild. but Confined by in 111111;111
tion is not a recent tlevelopment., public
practice of teach- Iews failed to expand their conceit- , tive level also. Jewish writers of text-
Judaism is based upon education.' the aehn° "Iled g ed
of education. It books on pedagogy are increasing. It
'i o n of the
• ' n. tu
Thou shalt teach them( the words
d the limited circle of . will not be long before the influence
as circumstances demand. No teacher moved round
of the law) to thy children." The .
i• minds will It , • felt on eduea -
of Jewlt
vitality permits himself, or legal and linguistic disputation. tithe Mutat
theory and educational admin-
rabbis of the talmutlical period were 1 0f anal
,
""" a class- soundness of th e t a i nnn Iteal p et i a -
-
istration
in America.
keen students of pedagogy, and many' herself, to he t,",."t
ront
any
ews
f
e
J
,i
th
. e
, bully,
u,nf,y, even when gogy tars(ry
a )1111111111
1
of their precepts ought be adopted ; room
, the
e youngster
youngster has the regulations 1111 11111114 like complete intellectual col-
our
schools
Mith
profit.
Their
FOR EVERYBODY"
today in
lapse, but they were denied the 0 1 , 1t 0 r - ."BOOKS
his 'hie.
conception of the importance of ,
training was. a C11111111011 - wilily o taking part in the intcllec- • MOVEMENT SEEKS $2,000,000
Nlaimal
teaching and of the teacher is revealed
lication of more
Y'' . Hie rabbis tual ad e"ncente"t gain
"" ar"" 1111 ' New York—Publication
in a number of aphorisms, although I P ia " Hi Ittlut, u ' lleal, da
(
not . only eni.
"
in ha"thcraft" then , . "In the sixteenth, `cventeenth books for the blind in the standard
these are at times of a rather fan- I huh practiced
them. Wed
The great tC ■ 11'11- :11111 C1 gliteenth centuries,". says Altra- Braille type, opening a wider avenue
tactical nature. Jerusalem, they said, o
75,1)00
the
' it;4 1
cntirely
lost
the
edu-
for
for
eNV,
self-education
1'
"the
I
an -cuter,
I' harm.
Millet "'It I ", w d-cuter, e; k",Itt
4'41
,01
was destroyed because the teachers et
in the United States,
sightless
pe
sighpersons
Inc slim catio nal sultrollacY which they had
1 ;1
11 , 1111:1 was a 1 /11
were dismissed. When you see lovely . • of
Theis-.. is strongly encouraged by the Amer-
the Theis-
tHatt ,t ,1 " 1 tee " - I t.l' iit "" I Y "j",tret,1" h e •1111111, 11. I t
t he l a w witht,'"t
the bright
gardens by a tel you aml
Associat ion in it s
Library
ican
dill Ima m it, in-, trots lost can only 111`
have a loom , p,Ition, they said, wiii
stars in heaven,
I
been consttleralIk• - The "Books for Everybody" movement,
terrupte d and end in sin. l there you! 1111 1 - 1 Jaye
of the true teacher who takes care
way throughout the na-
w under
me one of tilt- most ratlic "I ilt`ce
have
et - ' toes." sags Rena?). "might t" "et under
of the tender plants and sheds a gen- ,
The problem of placing the
i 'male" psychology, that of At aved a great hart in Mc work 01 tion.
tie light upon the dim world of grow- II, Ite` ", tence of motor habits upon 'the
1 he le""it-sii"ce• One of the reasons bust in literature, both technical and
tn e inlit
ing childhood, said a rabbi.
Why France was slow in graining by entertaining, within easy reach of
brain, in a nut-shell.
ti,, I the
'there was good thinking in these
about those so afflicted has largely in-
The teacher tea, honored but much . the great transformation is that
days upon 114110(1, too. The pedal-
the year 1500, France was quite (testi- creased with the numbers of former
gogy of the rabbis relates chiefly to was (sheeted of him. - The teach, : lute of a I ew ish element."
service men blinded in the war and
the study of langage, for the scrip- Precedes the father; the wise man ,
In the early part of the nineteenth the Association is promoting to the
'
tures, although taught primarily as the king." Rut great care was to
he
century
Lame
the
Jewish
awakening.
fullest
extent 111C printing of such
ethics and religion, WM. at the s;,Ilie exercised in the selection of
in the new, uniform type.
time also taught as a foreign Ian- teacher ..\ hot tempered mall cannot' Much of it is attributed to the in- books
The number of books printed in
observations of the rah_ be a teacher, said HIM. Ile must I finence (of Moses Niendelssolin, Jew-
gitage. The
itself began to broaden this ;tcceptcd trite is now very lint-
his upon this branch of pedagogy be a mature luau. 1. ' 11111 ■ 11, 1ell 111c11 1,11 1,111Cati ,1 11
allil a lets couldWit11 011t being ited, but the Association hopes, in
are in some respects practically an- w ere ineligible. T he leaching of young
an
apostate interest him- its Enlarged Program, to bring about'
to sour grapes and, C1/11 , 1111;rutl
ticipations of the m uc h vaun t e d so . men was likened
that of old teachers, to self in other subjects besides the Tal- such extension that equal opportuni- I
called direct method, recently intro- n ew wine;
Once inud :till the Scriptures. The in- ties fur self-education and acquiring
(bleed here front Frankfurt, The rea- ripe grapes and sit eel wine.
the joy contained in books will be
th
son for this may lie in the fact that the teacher was selected his tenure 1 thience of the Jews upon secular edu- gi(en those who are unable to read I
-' ---) (
MISS KATHLEEN PEREIRA
the principles for teaching a langauge (vas secure. Fven thought you have I cation could not, of course, he felt
I
are after all simple and few. The a more capable teacher for the place, as long as they were denied contact the ordinary printed page.
The "Rooks for Everybody" move-'I
The rise ...:f
rabbis favored much repetition and it is inadvisable to discharge the old I with secular schools.
educative in its scope well known accomplished local dancer who will perform at
nothing better has yet been found as incumbent. tor, reason.d the rabbis.' stale compulsory education and the meat is broadly
a means of driving a language into your capable teacher, having no cant- employment of Jews in the public including extension of library service
the Y. 0. M. Dance at the Hotel Stotler Sunday evening.
tul,
although
schools
gave
them
their
chance.
I
be
to
every
man,
woman
and child in 1
Anil,
the head of an unwilling boy. The • itetitor, will grow
altered state of affairs the United States who are now with-'I
repetition should be vocal—that is the rabbinical reasoning may seem effect of this
one of the latest discoveries. Do lit- faulty, the conclusion, as usual, is bet- upon educational theory is only now out such facilities. For the success- 1
Among appropriations made by the
. the Democratic Central Commit-
tie talking yourself, they advised the ter than the logic. Don't engage an beginning to make itself felt. It will ful accomplishment of the program, a 1
$2,000,000 is being obtained , tee of Hamilton county has indorsed Adath Israel Sisterhood, Owensboro,
have
been
undoubtedly
become
much
greater
as
fund
of
teacher. Let you explanations be incompetent teacher, must you have time goes on and we shall probably by librarians. Library trustees and 1 w. A. Julian and Simeon M. Johnson Ky., at its December monthly meet-
their thought, but utter
clear but terse. "Always teach your . taken
him in, he has a stake in the see the most marked evidence of the friends of libraries, rather than ' for delegates to the National Pr•si- ing, was a contribution to the He-
pupils in the shortest possible man-
of the Jewish mind in edu- through the usual agency of an inten-
Convention from the First brew Union College Scholarship
;
institution
in which he is employed. activity
ner."
right here in the city of New sive drive. This will cover the work dential
Our machine education today does I Teaching is a divine calling. A man cation
Fund.
Congressional District of Ohio.
three
ears.
for
the
next
York.__
not be
not balk atgiving a teacher a classonce admitted _ to it _.. should _
Jews As Educators' .,„ S0 of
T .
1
1
1
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wir 411/411/4/4/4/411/4111, iiririlrAfir/r4rAgrArlerArAir/OrAr4107.1,410? 041PrAirdillnir/FrAllirieArillrAtirillr.0:0074114":41rAlrAirAlrirdire4 0
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0
MAYOR C0111ENS PLAN DOES NOT PROMISE
To Better Street Railway Conditions for the Majority of the Car Riders, Even if it is Practical,
,.
Which it is Not
THE MAJORITY OF THE PEOPLE Will Still Have to Ride on D. U. R. Lines, Which the
Couzens Plan Promises to Make Less Useful for Service.
THE RUIN OF THE D. U. R. SYSTEM is held Up as the Principal Good Reason for Adopting
the Mayor's Plan.
WILL THE RUIN OF THE D. U. R. SYSTEM Produce Better Service Conditions in Detroit,
or Worse Ones?
ISN'T THE BETTERMENT OF SERVICE on the Existing Lines What the Public Wants, and
Wherein is the Public to be Benefited by the Ruin of Any Existing Facilities, No Matter Who
Owns Them?
THE EXISTING STREET RAILWAY SYSTEM Is Carrying Eight Hundred Thousand Passen-
gers a Day in Some Fashion or Other. The Mayor's Plan Is to Provide for Less Than One Hun-
dred Thousand Passengers. Are Seven Hundred Thousand Passengers to Be. Given Worse
Conditions That a Few May Possibly Be Given Better Ones?
iv
iv
DETROIT DEMAND IS FOR SERVICE
, ,i . ,
for Everybody, Not Ruin for Anybody—Service Can Only Be Gained by Bettering the Present
System, Not by Ruining It.
When the Water System Falls Short, We Do Not Ruin It. We Improve It, Because We Want
Service.
When the School System Falls Short, We Do Not Ruin It. • We Expand It.
When the Police Department Becomes Inefficient, We Do Not Abolish It: We Enlarge It.
When the Fire Department Fails to Suit, We Do Not Put It Out of Business. We Increase Its
Numbers and Build New Firehouses.
WHY DESTROY PRESENT RAILWAY FACILITIES TO GET OTHERS THAT ARE OF
DOUBTFUL VALUE?
CITIZENS' COMMITTEE ON STREET RAILWAY SERVICE.
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