Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1932

Page 19 of 84

 

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 19 of 84
Page 19 of 84



Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 18
Previous Page

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 20
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 19 text:

M ASM ID derived from competitive sports, [ he only activi- ties in which our young men have found time to lake a keen interest are those of a literary and cultural nature, such as oratory, dramatics, de- bating and writing in school publications. It is appropriate, however, to record at this lime the establishment of Scripta Mathematica, a quarterly devoted to the facts, history, and philosophy of mathematics, the first of the Yeshiva College pub- lications. This Journal owes its inception, in large measure, to the enthusiastic response in good work elicited by the editor. Prof. Jekuthicl Ginsberg, from his Yeshiva College students in higher mathe- matics, two of whom have articles in the first issue of the Journal. The high quality of the graduates ' work dur- ing then foui years leads us lo hop.- thai through- out then d..y they will ripen in wisdom and trengthen then piritual mould I hey will be l ' 11 ' ■ ' lr I I the college and source of inspira- tion to future clasps. J lru „ ,),.,,, ,,„,,, „, selves and in the many who come after them, the harmonious blending of modern knowledge and et eraal pirituality and faith will iu tain the gradu- ates of Yeshiva College through all the days of their life, and make them useful members of the community in every field of endeavor in which their fruitful work may lie. We send t hem forth with the fervent hope and prayer that they will become a force for good in the great brotherhood of mankind. The Value of the Yeshiva College By Charles F. Horne, Professor of English When the Yeshiva College was established four years ago, I entered its faculty with eager- ness. I thought I saw a very large value, both for Judaism and for the world, which this College might develop. In the last four years I have be- come steadily more convinced of the important place in education which the College can occupy and, so far as its limited facilities permit, is al- ready occupying. Today the College is supply- ing to a group of earnest students the same type of education as our New York State law requires of all colleges of the first rank. It is also supply- ing something far larger and deeper. Side by side with the regular studies required for a Bachelor ' s degree, strengthening these and making them sig- nificant, the College is giving its students a thor- ough training in advanced Hebraic studies, the

Page 18 text:

Sixteen MASMID strive zealously to imbue the American Jewish youth with the contribution of the spiritual values of Judaism, of the Jewish ideals of education, of the Jewish life-philosophy and of the Jewish per- spective upon learning and knowledge ; where Jewish studies will be an integral part of the course in the humanities. 3. To provide a college education that will tend to develop the future leaders of orthodox Jewry, rabbis in our houses of worship, teachers in our houses of learning, and a laity versed in the Torah and traditions of our people. At the cornerstone laying of the group of buildings which were to be the future home of the first and only liberal arts college under Jew- ish auspices anywhere in the world, great educa- tors and prominent men of affairs from many parts of our country gathered to bring word of greeting and cheer to the youngest of the city s family of colleges. They recognized in it an im- portant addition to the cultural and academic life of our city and nation and prophecied a brilliant future for it in the field of secular studies. Altho Yeshiva College is only four years old, too brief perhaps a time in which to form any definite conclusion as to the quality of work done by our boys, the results obtained in the various courses of studies and in the comparative tests given by members of our faculty and outside edu- cators, indicate that the work of the Yeshiva Col- lege students is in no respect inferior to that of colleges of the first class throughout the country. After the recent psychological tests Dr. Henry E. Garrett, Asst. Prof, of Psychology at Columbia University, states: These results are truly as- tonishing, when one considers the type of student body and the program carried . . . The Yeshiva student is able to do effectively much more work than the ordinary college student because as our tests show, he is highly intelligent. Furthermore, he is serious of purpose and industrious — traits as exceptional in college students as they are de- sirable. Prof. Charles F. Home, Prof, of English at the College of the City of New York, and senior among our associated faculty members, after four ye ' ars ' acquaintance with the Yeshiva College stud- ent, declares: I have never met youths more able, more alive, more eager to improve and de- velop themselves. A larger number of students earn high grades in their classes here than in any other classes I have ever taught. They grasp every new thought with eager appreciation . . . They are really noteworthy for their eagerness for knowledge, their industry and their breadth of understanding. Statements of the same sort have been volunteered by nearly every instructor and educator who has had opportunity to observe Ye- shiva College work. Pleasant as it is to feel that our student body is thus eminently qualified to derive great good from college work in an harmonious atmosphere of spirituality and culture, no little responsibility is thereby imposed upon the College authorities, to select a faculty adequate to the exceptionad de- mands such students would make upon them. This task has been met, and experts in the various fields, of sound scholarship, wide experience, and rich personality, have been provided, by choosing with the utmost care an organic College Faculty, and complimenting this group with an associated Fac- ulty drawn from the professors of great metro- politan colleges and universities nearby. In this way, in a controlled and harmonious environment, with proper equipment for their tasks, the stu- dents of Yeshiva College have found men by whose measure they may rise to worthy work. Of the many problems that naturally arise dur- ing the first years of a new institution, suffice it to say that for each year of the new college ' s work the official approval of the State Depart- ment of Education (the Board of Regents at Al- bany) was duly forthcoming. In its first year, Yeshiva College was placed upon the approved list of colleges State Scholarship holders may at- tend. Now, after four years of unceasingly de- voted activity, the first stage in its long journey has been reached and in its first Commencemeent Yeshiva College points its way through the years. The extra-mural life of Yeshiva College is as yet, unfortunately, because of lack of time, limited in scope. Thus far, athletics has played a minor role in the life of our institution, which is as it should be, with all due respects to the benefits



Page 20 text:

Eishte MASM1D history, learning, and tradition of the Jews through all the ages. Thus the students are given oppor- tunity to become learned not only in the wisdom of the Moderns, but also in that of their own ancient race. That marks the peculiar function and value of the Yeshiva College; it turns forth men who can be equally able as Jews and as Americans. Our State has many colleges, great and learned colleges, to which Jewish boys are welcome; but the tendency of most of these institutions is to turn the student into a capable Modern, not into a capable Jew. To those people who believe that the Jew should welcome this prospect of becom- ing thus absorbed in the melting pot, should abandon his racial identity in order to become a good American, the Yeshiva would seem use- less, an obstruction to the desired process. Per- sonally, I am not of the group who think this. As the descendant of a long line of New Englanders, I believe the spiritual forces of earth are greater, far greater, than the material forces. I would wish to encourage every spark of spiritual fire which I find anywhere in the world. The divine force which I believe spoke through Abraham, Moses, Isiah and many another Hebrew pro- phet, must not be lost; it cannot be lost. I be- lieve the Jew has a distinctive power, a distinctive understanding which should not be rejected either by him or by the world. I believe he should re- main emphatically himself, a unique indi duality profound in spiritual sensitiveness as well as in intellectual depth. There are two different types amid our Ameri- can Jews. One type, the business man, looks to the future. He assimilates quickly the new customs and ideas he meets here ; but in becoming a very good American, he sometimes almost ceases to be a Jew. The other type, the thoughtful Jew, clings more persistently to the past. He remem- bers his racial culture and traditions. He is con- servative rather than radical. It is to this more conservative Jew that we may look hopefully for some real and important contributions to Ameri- can civilization, through his harmonizing of his Jewish wisdom and intensity of feeling with our Americanism. We do not want to educate him to forget his traditions. Hence we do not want him to become absorbed wholly into our public school system. The Yeshiva College is exactly the institution he needs. It is indeed the capstone, the highest point of Jewish education, the culmination of the great series of institutions which have been built up by the gener- ous and benevolent Jews of America. It should be the pride of every Hebrew, whether orthodox or modern. The work of the Yeshiva College is to take there, the most serious, the most earnest, and often the ablest of the younger Jews, and to educate them in this double knowledge I have described, Hebraic and American. They meet modern philosophy — which says some very wild and con- fusing things ; and they meet modern literature — which is not always courteous toward the Jew. But they meet all these things as discussed in a kindly spirit. Even those harsher criticisms of their race which they will inevitably meet in the world at large, they learn to understand in our College by means of sympathetic discussion instead of angry attack. Hence they are enabled to har- monize past and present, their own world and the outer world, in an intellectual understanding of each. They thus emerge from the Yeshiva not as bewildered Jewish scholars in an alien civiliza- tion, but as American college graduates knowing all that our State educational authorities demand for a college degree, and knowing also the high value of their own race and its traditions. They thus become citizens of peculiar value both to their own people and to America. Up to five hundred years ago, the Jews pos- sessed great universities of their own, colleges the foremost in the world in learning and in culture. In all the centuries since then the Jews have been without these great instruments of development, and have suffered sorely for the lack of them. Only in our own day has this distinctive culminat- ing voice of Jewish culture been revived. Today the Jewish people have founded both the Uni- versity at Jerusalem and the Yeshiva College in New York. The first is, of necessity, far removed from America in spirit as well as in location ; it

Suggestions in the Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Yeshiva University - Masmid Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935


Searching for more yearbooks in New York?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online New York yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.