Shocking Abuse Of Decencies: The Arabs and Their Refugees Commentary, Page 2 THE JEWISH NEWS A Weekly Review of Jewish Events Michigan's Only English Jewish Newspaper — Incorporating The Detroit Jewish Chronicle VOLUME 28—No. 7 27 17100 W. 7 Mile Rd.—VE. 8-9364—Detroit 35, October 21, 1955 $4.00 Per Year; Single Copy 1 5c ANNUAL EDUCATION ISSUE A Hearty Salute to Our Community Schools NOW AND 10 YEARS AHEAD —Drawing used through the courtesy of the National Citizens Commission the Public Schools and the Better Schools Campaign. See explanatory note on Page 2, editorial on Page 4 and special Education Month articles on Page 24, Our Community's educational needs demand an under- standing of future as well as present requirements. It is always easy to see big things close at hand, but the real test of good vision is to be able to see what looks small and far away. This is applicable to our public schools, and to our corn- munal school system—the United Hebrew Schools—and our religious schools. It is applicable to the problem of two short- ages—of teachers and school rooms. Already in evidence is a keener realization of the need to encourage more young people to enter the teaching profes- sion, and to assure them a living wage that will encourage them to remain in that important profession. communities must, therefore, provide for a future when school enrollments will be even larger. All of us, therefore, are charged with serious obligations: not only to assure high enrollments of our children and our grandchildren in our schools, but also to provide for them the ablest and best paid teachers and adequate school rooms. These are obligations to our public schools; they are obligations to our Hebrew and community religious schools. On the occasion of Annual Education Month, we call our community to action, in the spirit of the Psalmist's declaration, "Thou host taught me from my youth" (Ps. 1 xxvi. 17)'. May the ideal of training our children from youth continue un- Also—many communities now see more clearly the im- interruptedly, and may the means for such teaching be ac- mediate problems created by overcrowded schools. These cording to the highest standards of Judaism and Americanism.