[Rhodes22-list] Slim's issues

Bob Weber ruba1811 at hotmail.com
Tue Oct 5 12:54:31 EDT 2004


Brad, after 16 years of catholic education, 8 with the Jesuits, I can 
confirm your story and agree whole heartly.  I have already started saving 
for little Miss Carolines highschool and dropping money in the basket for 
her grade school.  I will still pay my taxes and send someone elses kid to 
public school even if we do have to pay 1/2 of the kids' cab fare to get 
from the inner city to the better funded county schools.  This is a hot 
issue this election season in my town.  There is so much waste and 
corruption.  The people who can fix it cannot do anything that is required 
because commonsense and fiscal responsibility will never get someone 
elected.  That is the extent of my political diatribe.  If my daughter needs 
a soap bar put in her mouth (I will never forget my darn experience of it) 
then that is what they should do.  Education is the foundation of my 
daughter's experience of her life, there is no room for "touchy-feely / 
please everone" policies while providing the information to enter a world 
which is otherwise.  Enough of that - GO CARDS.  We will see the twins in a 
couple weeks.

Bob Weber

>From: brad haslett <flybrad at yahoo.com>
>Reply-To: The Rhodes 22 mail list <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
>To: The Rhodes 22 mail list <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
>Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Slim's issues
>Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2004 09:09:16 -0700 (PDT)
>
>To All,
>
>This discussion about education reminds me of a
>lecture I listened to a few years ago.  Both of my
>boys attended all-boys Catholic high schools.  My
>oldest, Spencer, attended Little Rock Boys Catholic
>High which was run by Father Tribou for over forty
>years.  The non-Catholic parents (his mother and I for
>example) had to attend a special orientation.  Father
>Tribou's lecture to the parents was so memorable I can
>almost quote it verbatum.  It went something like
>this:
>
>"Welcome.  Most of you are familiar with our school or
>you wouldn't be sending your child here but in case
>you're not, here's how we work.  This is a meat and
>potatoes school - no spices, no dessert, nothing
>fancy.  Four years of science, english, and math -
>meat and potatoes.  Our textbooks are old, when they
>have completely fallen apart we'll change them.  It's
>been our experience that the boys have enough trouble
>learning the basics without worrying about what
>changed in the last five years.  We don't have metal
>detectors like some of the public schools.  If guns
>and knives became a problem, metal detectors would be
>of no value anyway because all the lead in your boy's
>ass would constantly set them off anyway.  Now I'm
>sure some of you have boys with learning disabilities.
>  Frankly we never heard of ADD and some of these other
>"challenges" until recently and haven't done anything
>to address these issues.  If your boy has a handicap,
>chances are he'll have to deal with it for life so
>he'll just have to learn to overcome it here.  Study
>harder or accept lower grades, we have no intention in
>changing our methods that have worked so well for us
>for over a hundred years.  I'm sure a lot of you have
>kept up with all the new science and theories
>associated with education, we haven't.  If you insist
>on sharing them with us, Father David will refund your
>money as you leave. ... One last thing, no doubt your
>son will come home and say things about his teachers.
>Ignore them and we'll ignore all the things your son
>tells us about you."
>
>Father Tribou had cancer his last several years but
>wanted to live long enough to see the Class of 2000,
>Spencer's class, graduate.  He died in 2001.  The
>public school system in most parts of the country
>could use some of his wisdom.
>
>Brad Haslett
>"CoraShen"
>
>
>--- R22RumRunner at aol.com wrote:
>
> > Slim,
> > You have to understand where Ed is coming from. In
> > SC, the SAT test scores
> > are the worst in the nation and have been for ever.
> > 1/2 of all 9th grade
> > students today, will not graduate from high school.
> > Now, the state is throwing
> > millions of dollars into constructing new schools
> > and getting rid of the
> > portable classrooms. They are also at the same time
> > making the requirements  tougher
> > on the teachers. Property taxes have gone up some
> > since I moved here,  but
> > they are still ridiculously low compared to taxes in
> > Wisconsin. About 1/5th  of
> > what I would pay in WS for the same house.
> > Since all this money has been thrown at education
> > (the past four years)
> > everybody is expecting the test scores to come up
> > proportionally with the  level
> > of spending. I'm afraid it's going to take a few
> > generations to do  that.
> >
> > Rummy
> > __________________________________________________
> > Use Rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org, Help?
> > www.rhodes22.org/list
> >
>
>
>
>
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