487 résultats
195233220Washington D.C.: Press of Byron S. Adams 1952. Original printed wrappers with wrapper title as issued and original staples. ii 13 1 pp. Near Fine.<br/><br/> The Supreme Court heard argument in December 1952 but held the cases over for reargument in the following term. This is the Amicus Curiae brief submitted by the American Veterans Committee for the first argument. Supporting the District of Columbia children seeking to integrate the Washington public schools the Committee contends that the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments guarantee the right to be free from racial discrimination that equality of education is impossible under a regime of racially segregated schools that equality can be achieved only by abolition of compulsory segregation by race and that "The people of Washington are ready for and will accept integration of their public schools."<br/> The brief is signed in type by the Committee's National Counsel Phineas Indritz who was a distinguished civil rights and constitutional lawyer. Press of Byron S. Adams unknown books
16092Kemble Parochial School Record Book 1871-1904. Kemble Cirencester Gloucestershire. Collection of approximately over 100 documents on approximately 180 leaves many written on both sides comprising the complete records of the Kemble Parochial School. Unbound contained in original protective black cloth boards. Large legal "foolscap" size pages. Comprising both printed Circulars directed to the schools from the Education Department and handwritten copies of records the school was ordered to send as reports to the Education Department. This school is built from grant money received in the wake of the first of the Forster Acts known as the Elementary Education Act of 1870 which made education compulsory in England and Wales for all children aged 5 to 13. <br/><br/> The Forster Acts named for the sponsor of the original bill William Forster brought a sweeping change to elementary education in England by declaring public education for children to be mandatory. It also mandated that the schools should be publicly funded and overseen by regular inspections. The Kemble Parochial school founded at the very inception of this legislation provides a window into the dramatic shift to public education. The first document in this record is a Circular of Instructions and Rules for the construction of a school building. Through the handwritten retained copies of annual reports by Principal A.G.W. Wilts to the Inspector of Schools we are able to grasp the immensity of the change. Wilt first report comes in 1872 when the schools 18 students were taught in an old traditional schoolhouse by headmistress Ms. Hopkinson who did not have an official certification in teaching "This is an average country School carried on at present in rather inadequate premises but a new and handsome school-room and teacher's residence have just been erected.The mistress is a successful disciplinarian and has much natural aptitude for teaching." By 1875 the school has grown to 49 students though still under the tutelage of the unfortunate Ms. Hopkinson who continues struggling to obtain a teaching credential. By 1878 undergoing regular inspections it is reported that the school needs improvement in multiplication and to better follow the state mandated provisions as to Needlework. Their ranks swelled to around 80 students just before the end of the century before petering out and ending in 1904 with only 3 students registered. By then Ms. Hopkinson had been replaced by two subsequent teachers Ms. Lane and Ms. Reed who also struggle to obtain a Certificate while managing a large class.<br/><br/> Circulars from the Education Department show that the idea of public education while welcomed in many quarters arrived also with surprise and some distrust. In 1878 the Circulars report the most recent developments of the Forster Acts "As it has now become evident that by the operation of recent legislation the great majority of the labouring classes will be virtually compelled to send their children to Public Elementary Schools." A major controversy of the Forster Acts surrounded the requirement that the schools operate non-denominationally. While individual churches pushed for the right to educate children under their own religious tenets the Church of England feared that doing so would weaken state control of education. The archive contains notes of this church-state tension in a handwritten letter of 1880 in which the Rev. R.H. Taylor inquires of the Education Department "whether the School is now conducted as a public elementary school.Section VII of the Elementary Education Act 1870 having been conspicuously put up in the School. If not my Lords cannot direct H.M. Inspector to inspect the School annually as a public elementary school." <br/><br/>On the lighter side repeated entreaties from the Education Department in Whitehall during the 1870s call for "teachers of Schools will be willing to give their assistance in endeavoring by due warning to the scholars to put a stop to.the mischief caused by throwing stones at the insulators of telegraph wires." Threatened punishments to the "schoolboys" responsible for this "great evil" include "imprisonment and flogging." Documents are in very good condition on large size sheets of blue or white paper clear and legible. Some dog-ears and a couple pages of the archive have been chewed on the corners but most are complete. Names of all enrolled students appear yearly on the Examination Schedule. A very complete set of records and historical resource on the most dramatic transition ever to come to education; that of going from independent schoolhouses to systemized public education. unknown books
196825600NY: New York University 1968. Large 8vo pp.195. Periodical; Vol. 12 No. 3 T39 Spring 1968. Illustrations drawings diagrams. Wrappers. VG. Sixteen articles by Alvin Reiss Paul Baker Michael Kirby and others. New York University unknown books
197742866Rochester NY: R. I. T. 1977. 8vo pp. 15. With several illustrations. Pamphlet Selected acquisitions 1975-1976 laid in. Paper wraps. Cover very slightly creasec o/w a nice copy. R. I. T. unknown books
195945809Brookville OH: School of Living 1959. First separate edition. Staple-bound self-wrappers; 13pp. Fine. Individualist anarchist critique of government published under the auspices of Ralph Borsodi's decentralist cooperative The School of Living. School of Living unknown books
1967258255Brookville OH: The School of Living 1967. Magazine. 61p. stapled wraps 6x9 inches wraps worn and soiled a few small stains on front wrap else very good condition. Contributions by Harry Elmer Barnes Laurance Labadie James J. Martin Vardis Fisher Holley Cantine and others. The School of Living unknown books
1967140078Freeland MD: The School of Living 1967. 46p. stapled wraps 6x9 inches wraps foxed else very good condition. Decentralist pro-homesteading viewpoint. The School of Living unknown books
1967140029Brookville OH: The School of Living 1967. Magazine. 61p. wraps very good condition 6x9 inches. Anarchist magazine with contributions by Harry Elmer Barnes Laurance Labadie James J. Martin Vardis Fisher Holley Cantine and others. The School of Living unknown books
1964166286Brookville OH: The School of Living 1964. p.67-95 wraps very good condition. Anarchist magazine with contributions by Mildred J. Loomis Ralph Borsodi Bill Jacoby Don Calhoun and others. The School of Living unknown books
1964151519Brookville OH: The School of Living 1964. p.67-95 wraps. Anarchist magazine with contributions by Mildred J. Loomis Ralph Borsodi Bill Jacoby Don Calhoun and others. Minor pencil underlining on cover. The School of Living unknown books
1962179985Brookville OH: The School of Living 1962. 8.5x11 inch handbill printed in green ink on both sides fold-creased 1/2 inch closed tear along crease else very good. Advertisement for an upcoming publication outlining its various features and the School's perspectives. Founded by Ralph Borsodi the School of Living was and remains a Gandhian decentralist ecologically conscious communitarian group. The School of Living unknown books
1977241394York PA: The School of Living 1977. 43p. stapled wraps 8.5 x 22 inches toned and worn address stamp and 1/2 closed tear on rear wrap pen notation and 1/2 inch closed tear on front wrap else good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. Contains an interview with Lawrence Ferlinghetti. Pages 31 through 34 consist of the Aquarian Research Foundation Newsletter written by Art and Judy Rosenblum and containing articles on alternative energy Transcendental Meditation and parapsychology. The School of Living unknown books
1975241400Freeland MD: The School of Living 1975. 22p. stapled wraps 8.5 x 11 inches vertically creased address label on rear wrap else good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1994241402Cochranville PA: The School of Living 1994. 8p. wraps 8.5 x 11 inches horizontal crease from being folded for mailing rear wrap has address written in pen postage stamp and several scars from tape else good condition. No staples secured only by folding. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1998241401Cochranville PA: The School of Living 1998. 15p. wraps secured by folding 8.5x11 inches horizontal crease from being folded for mailing sticker scar on rear wrap else very good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
166292Brookville OH: School of Living 196-. Four panel brochure 5.5x8.5 inches very good condition. School of Living unknown books
1971166289Brookville OH; Freeland MD: The School of Living 1971. Two issues of the tabloid format newspaper 8 pages each evenly toned address stamps on front wraps else very good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1973241399Freeland MD: The School of Living 1973. 23p. stapled wraps evenly toned address stamped on front wrap else very good condition on newsprint. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1975241595Freeland MD: The School of Living 1975. 6 1p. folded tabloid format evenly toned vertically creased remains of an address label on rear wrap else very good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1975259575Freeland MD: The School of Living 1975. 19p. stapled wraps 8.5x11 inches vertically creased wraps worn rear wrap stained address label and "Please Renew" stamp on rear wrap else good condition. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. The School of Living unknown books
1971241398Freeland MD: The School of Living 1971. 8p. tabloid format newspaper folded in half as issued evenly toned address written in pen on front wrap else very good condition with subscription form laid in. Decentralist communitarian publication affiliated with the ideas of Ralph Borsodi. Cover story on the Bear Tribe "the first new Indian tribe in this century.the tribe was founded to make possible a movement to the land and a return to the Indian way of life The School of Living unknown books
1966231096Brookville OH: The School of Living 1966. Magazine. 28p. wraps browned else very good condition binders tape along spine as issued 8.5x11 inches mimeographed. Includes a discussion "Pro and con Spooner-Tucker Rothbard" with contributions by Mildred Loomis Tom Marshall Laurence Labadie and others also includes Marie Anderson's "Religion in School of Living The School of Living unknown books
1966231106Brookville OH: The School of Living 1966. Magazine. 28p. wraps browned with minor ink marks printed mailing address of Laurence Labadie on the rear wrap else very good condition binders tape along spine as issued 8.5x11 inches mimeographed. Includes a discussion "Pro and con Spooner-Tucker Rothbard" with contributions by Mildred Loomis Tom Marshall Laurence Labadie and others also includes Marie Anderson's "Religion in School of Living The School of Living unknown books
1966231097Brookville OH: The School of Living 1966. Magazine. 28p. wraps browned with some foxing red felt tip pen markings on cover and internally a few small splash stains on front wrap binders tape along spine as issued 8.5x11 inches mimeographed. Includes a discussion "Pro and con Spooner-Tucker Rothbard" with contributions by Mildred Loomis Tom Marshall Laurence Labadie and others also includes Marie Anderson's "Religion in School of Living The School of Living unknown books
1967004758Brookville OH: School of Living. Good. 1967. Softcover. Volume 23 October 1967. Stapled soft cover. Few underlinings and markings wraps are moderately soiled with some sunning on edges. Hard to find.; Book; 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall . School of Living paperback books