THE “BLEATING PROGENY.”
New influences are at work, new guidance is .demanded, and the banner o.r education must ever ‘be ceirrie-:! forward to some higher, ojr at least to another hill-top. Meanwhile the “bleating progeny,” or whatever it be termed, recks not of education commissions or of the .'kind. Providence that has endowed it witlf a certain measure 'of assimilative capacity 'and no more. Education, says the Government. must be developed on 'more, practical lines. If' that- means the helping of parents with the .problem of what to do with their boys There will be a general approval. Not fresh commitments, however, -but curtailments of expenditure, are perforce the order of the day. The education system. which is not without what, liiav be regarded as its little and furbelows, will do well enough in l the meantime if it tlje|;eyen tenor of its way untouched bv the economy axe.—“Otago Daily times.”
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Hokitika Guardian, 16 August 1930, Page 6
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151THE “BLEATING PROGENY.” Hokitika Guardian, 16 August 1930, Page 6
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