A possible copy of the Skull & Bones Society was at Tulane University
This is taken from Antony C. Sutton's book, America's Secret Establishment: An Introduction to the Order of Skull & Bones. How The Order Controls Education Memorandum Number Two: The Look-Say Reading Scam A tragic failure of American education in this century has been a failure to teach children how to read and write and how to express themselves in a literary form. For the educational system this may not be too distressing. As we shall see later, their prime purpose is not to teach subject matter but to condition children to live as socially integrated citizen units in an organic society - a real life enactment of the Hegelian absolute State. In this State the individual finds freedom only in obedience to the State, consequently the function of education is to prepare the individual citizen unit for smooth entry into the organic whole. However, it is puzzling that the educational system allowed reading to deteriorate so markedly. It could be that The Order wants the citizen components of the organic State to be little more than automated order takers; after all a citizen who cannot read and write is not going to challenge The Order. But this is surmise. It is not, on the basis of the evidence presently at hand, a provable proposition. In any event, the system adopted the look-say method of learning to read, originally developed for deaf mutes. The system has produced generations of Americans who are functionally illiterate. Yet, reading is essential for learning and learning is essential for most occupations. And certainly those who can read or write lack vocabulary in depth and stylistic skills. There are, of course, exceptions. This author spent five years teaching at a State University in the early 1960s and was appalled by the general inability to write coherent English, yet gratified that some students had not only evaded the system, acquired vocabulary and writing skills, but these exceptions had the most skepticism about The Establishment. The Order comes into adoption of the look-say method directly and indirectly. Let's start at the beginning. The Founder Of Deaf Mute Instruction Look-say reading methods were developed around 1810 for deaf mutes by a truly remarkable man, Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet. Thomas H. Gallaudet was the eldest son of Peter Wallace Gallaudet, descended from a French Huguenot family, and Jane Hopkins. Jane Hopkins traced her ancestry back to John Hopkins and the Reverend Thomas Hooker in the seventeenth century, who broke away from the Congregational Church to help found Hartford, Connecticut. This parallels the story of the Lord family (see Volume One). The Lords also traced their ancestry back to Hopkins and Hooker and the Lords founded Hartford, Connecticut. And it was in Hartford, Connecticut in 1835 that a printer named Lord produced Thomas Gailaudet's first look-say primer, Mother's Primer. Gallaudet's original intention was to use the look-say method only for deaf mutes who have no concept of a spoken language and are therefore unaware of phonetic sounds for letters. For this purpose, Gailaudet founded the Hartford
following directions to the teacher: ". . . pointing to the whole word Frank, but not to the letters. Nothing is yet to be said about letters. . ."
Mann's teacher was Samuel Barratt and we quote: "in arithmetic he was an idiot. He could not recite the multiplication table and could not tell the time of day by the clock ... Six months of the year he was an earnest and reliable teacher, tasting nothing stronger than tea, then for another six months he gave himself up to a state of beastly drunkeness . . ." By 1840 there was a backlash, and the look-say system was dropped in Massachusetts.
The Second Attempt Towards the end of the 19th century The Order came on the scene - and the look-say method was revived. The youngest son of Thomas Hopkins and Sophia Gallaudet was Edward Miner Gallaudet. Two of his sons went to Yale and became members of The Order:
Then the method was adopted by Columbia Teachers' College and the Lincoln School. The thrust of the new Dewey-inspired system of education was away from learning and towards preparing a child to be a unit in the organic society. Look-say was ideal for Deweyites. It skipped one step in the learning process. It looked "easy," and de-emphasized reading skills. The educational establishment rationalized look-say be claiming that up to the turn of the century reading was taught by "synthetic" methods, i.e., children were taught letters and an associated sound value. Then they learned to join syllables to make words. This was held to be uninteresting and artificial. Educational research, it was claimed, demonstrated that in reading words are not analyzed into component letter parts but seen as complete units. Therefore, learning to read should start with complete units. Education Of course, there is a gigantic nonsequitur in this reasoning process. Certainly a skilled reader does see words as complete units. And a really skilled reader does see lines and paragraphs at a glance. But the accuracy of perceiving the whole is based on the degree of understanding and knowledge of the component parts. The educational establishment argues today in the 1980s that, based on further experimental testing, it is easier for a child to read the line "the rocket zoomed into space" than "the cat sat on the mat." The first line has "constrasting visual structure" and the second quote has a "similar visual pattern." What they have done now is to make a mountain out of a molehill, convert the relatively simple task of learning to read into an unnecessarily complex system. Why? That we shall see as the story progresses.
How children are taught to read - and why they can't.
Get The Book!
Suggested Reading List - the Demise of the Educational System - OBE (Outcome-Based Education), NEA (National Education Association), educational psychology, German psychology & influences, demise of public education, educational sabotage, Wundt, Pavlov, Dewey, Skinner, Watson.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
vvtfzgALL, vvtsutton03, say no to psychiatry, FTR, Foundation for Truth in Reality
![]() Harry Everett Nelson ![]() Dr. A.L. Metz ![]() Dr. Isadore Dyer ![]() Dr. Rudolph Matas ![]() Pledge Button |
The First Honor Society at
Tulane
An academic honorary fraternity, "The Skull and Bones Society," was established in secret at Tulane by Harry Everett Nelson and four of his classmates in October 1907, but the existence of the society was not made known until Mr. Nelson was in his senior year in the autumn of 1911. Nelson's handwritten description of "The Skull and Bones Society" simply states that "one man from each class 1907-1908-1909-1910 had been selected, and their identity would be kept secret until the tenth anniversary of the establishment of the organization would take place." As a matter of the record, the identity of the other members of The Skull and Bones Society has never been revealed and only that of Dr. Harry Nelson is known. The purposes of The Skull and Bones Society as conceived by its Founders at Tulane were two-fold: (1) To reward students who have performed diligent work in the Medical Department and (2) To create a fund from said students to be known as the "Skull and Bones Fund" to assist financially distressed medical students who are worthy of the same. The membership was divided into two groups (1) faculty membership and (2) senior membership. On November 30, 1911, Thanksgiving Day, the first regular meeting of The Skull and Bones Senior Scholastic Society of the Medical Department of Tulane University of Louisiana was called to order by Dr. A.L. Metz, serving as acting chairman. Those selected by the Founders of the Society from the faculty and senior class were made members, and formal organization of the Society took place. The session was held in the library of the Hutchinson Memorial Building. The creed of the new society was written by Dr. Isadore Dyer: "Our emblem will always be an inspiration to duty remembering it stands for excellence in all things, purity of purpose and honesty of method and effort, with the blessing of an Alma Mater upon each who wears the badge of honor. May our lives lie among the stars which light the way to the great mystery, and may we so live that when we reach the end of the road, we may find the veil, which parted leads to the heights of everlasting peace. Sic ad Astra!" On each Thanksgiving Day at the ceremony for initiation, there was an oration, and some of these annual orations from 1914 to 1929 have been preserved. At the first meeting in 1914, the speaker was Rudolph Matas, M.D., LL.D., D.Sc., F.A.C.A., F.R.C.S., who said (regarding the Society) "...it is intended as a stimulus and incentive to earnestness in study, to steadiness and work, to honesty and purpose, intelligent appreciation of opportunity and rectitude of conduct, and in this life, the keys which symbolically open the gates that lead to the Stars, are coveted by all those who are steadily looking forward and upward for the ultimate reward." Professors of the Medical Department of Tulane University who had attained distinction in their respective branches of medicine were eligible for membership. Student membership was open to "...any undergraduate student who had completed his third year (having spent at least the Sophomore and Junior Years at the Tulane University of Louisiana) and who had an average of not less than eighty percent for two or three years prior to the senior year." Beginning in 1912, only ten percent of the class were eligible. Scholarship was the first requisite, but a student's personality as well as interest in university affairs, was to be considered in determining membership. The Committee on Membership was initially composed of the four founders of the Society, but beginning October 12, 1912, three members of the faculty were chosen from the Skull and Bones representation on the faculty to elect the members. Three new faculty men were to be elected to Skull and Bones each year. Notice of their election to membership was sent to the students in the last week of October. The second notice was mailed the first week in November, and Honorary Keys were presented on each Thanksgiving morning by a member of the Skull and Bones faculty so designated. The initiation fee was seven dollars which covered the cost of the gold key, pledge button, engraving of invitations and insertion in the university yearbook "Jambalaya." The first President (faculty) was Dr. Creighton Wellman "...whose name is universally known in his branch of Tropical Medicine. We feel sure that our choice is a wise one in this direction and that under his guidance the Society cannot help but to prosper." The pledge button was a triangle of black and gold divided into three parts with the letters "S &B" inscribed on it. These were presented on the first Saturday in November after the second notices had been mailed and the initiation fee paid. The Honorary Key was of gold; the body was square in shape, on one end was a holder, on the other a winder. "S & B" was also engraved on the key. |
|
I promise to answer your message -- click here to send me a personal message
|
SUBSCRIBE: The Wednesday Letter is a free electronic monthly newsletter written and published by Karl Loren. You can view more than 50 back issues of this publication by clicking here. The Wednesday Letter subscription list is maintained on a secure server, no name is ever given or sold to anyone, and it is never used except for this Newsletter. It is automatically published on the Tuesday night just before the first Wednesday of every month. You can subscribe to this free monthly electronic letter by entering your eMail address and name below. You will then automatically receive a request for confirmation, sent to whatever address you have entered. If you do NOT receive this confirmation request, then you will not be subscribed. There may have been an error with your address and you should resubmit. The letter is never sent twice to the same address -- so you do not have to worry about a duplicate subscription. When you receive this confirmation request you must reply to it, or your subscription will not become active. No one can subscribe your name, and address, without you being notified, and if you get an unwanted notice of subscription you only need to DO NOTHING and the subscription will NOT be active.
REMOVAL: You can remove yourself from the subscription list in several different ways. Click here to read about this entire newsletter system. Every edition of The Wednesday Letter is delivered to your address with YOUR name and address in view on the letter, with a link that allows you to remove THAT name from the subscription list. If you try to send this removal message from an address different from the one you used to send in your original confirmation, then you will get a warning notice first, sent to the subscription address, asking you to confirm that you want to be removed from the list -- by replying to THAT request for confirmation, you will then be automatically removed. Thus, no one else can unsubscribe you, from some other computer, without your knowledge. But, if you send in the unsubscribe notice from the same machine used to receive the Letter, then the removal from the subscription list is automatic.
Personal Message: When you send a personal message to Karl Loren, you will receive a personal reply as per his instructions. Karl pledges that every personal message will get a personal answer. When you provide your mail address, we will send you free information including our free catalog and a cassette tape lecture by Karl Loren about heart disease, no charge, by mail, even if outside the US. You can select particular information you would like to receive, along with the free cassette tape and catalog.
You can reach Vibrant Life in many ways, including by mail to Vibrant Life, 2808 N. Naomi St., Burbank, CA 91504. Within the US and Canada, use the toll free number: (800) 523-4521, the local number: (818) 558-1799, the FAX: (818) 558-7299, eMail to kimberly@oralchelation.com or any one of the hundreds of message forms throughout the 50 web sites. Vibrant Life normally ships the same day we get an order. There are message forms on each of the 100,000+ pages on this and other sites where you can communicate with Vibrant Life. Check out our companion site, at: http://www.oralchelation.net where Karl's 2000 page book is published. Karl Loren is the author and webmaster for this BOOK, as well as for another web site about ORAL CHELATION. His personal philosophical articles are at PHILOSOPHY.
Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:24 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.