January 2013
The Crown Prints The Official Newspaper of Ida Crown Jewish Academy since 1992
Ad Meah V’Esrim: Fund Run: Preparing for The changes, challenges, and inspirations of the Yachad Marathon By Sarah Otis staff writer
This year, Junior Chaya Levinson, Senior Rachel Russman, Junior Esther Montrose, and Senior Rivka Polisky have started preparing for January 27, 2013, when four girls from ICJA will participate in a Yachad Miami 2013 Half- Marathon (about 13.1 miles). Yachad is a not-for-profit organization whose role is to involve all individuals with disabilities in the Jewish community. This annual fundraiser began four years ago. The half-marathon in Miami is just one of Yachad’s fundraisers. Last year was the first year any Ida Crown students ran the marathon, when Miriam Gutstein, Kayla Siebzener, and Rachel Russman ran. Coaches from the Yachad organization have encouraged them to start prepping for the race a few months before the event. A couple of them have begun training by joining the ICJA Cross Country team, though with a busy ICJA schedule, training as a group can be tough. Rachel said, “I think we all ran by ourselves to prepare last year because making a time when everyone can meet to run is hard.” On the day of the marathon, all participants will board the bus from a hotel. “We board it really early in the morning, at around 4 a.m,” said Montrose. Everyone will start the race at the Miami Heat’s Sports Center and continue through closed off streets and bridges until they arrive at the finish mark 13 miles later.
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“It’s incredible,” said Russman, talking about the marathon. “The city blocks off all the streets and bridges, and we start at the Miami Heat place. Every year, there are so many runners and supporters!” There will be rest stops and
Chaya Levinson, Esther Montrose, Rivka Polisky, and Rachel Russman who will be running the Miami halfMarathon to raise money for Yachad (Photo courtesy of Carly Gordon)
stations every mile along the way. At those stations, other Yachad members volunteer and connect with the runners as take a break. “I want to try my best the entire time,” said Polisky, “and I know that even if I do not run the full thirteen miles, it is still a huge accomplishment. I will not feel any shame if I need to walk some of the way.” Runners are also motivated during the race by other supporters at the sides of the streets. “When I was running that tough 13th mile,” said Russman, “thousands of people were cheering me on. It was incredible.” In addition to making sure they are physically ready to run, each of the four girls (continued on page 5)
Opinion: Open Networks: The case for Wi-Fi, p. 2
ICJA at seventy
By Elana Perlow news editor
This year celebrates the Academy’s seventieth year of providing both a Judaic and secular education to thousands of students. Over these years, Ida Crown has changed in its location, name, curriculum, and teachers. The Academy, first called the Chicago Jewish Academy, was founded in 1942 by eight leaders of the Associated Talmud Torahs and Hebrew Theological College. They feared that the Hebrew school system was not adequate enough to guarantee a future in Jewish scholarship. With this in mind, they established the Chicago Jewish Academy with the stated purpose of “[integrating] secular studies with a thorough Jewish education, in order to foster religious living and learning among the rank and file of American Jewish youth.” A dual curriculum would allow Judaism could continue to flourish without students having to attend Hebrew school after their regular school day. Initially, the Chicago Jewish Academy began as a three-year junior high school and had only 42 students who were in the seventh, eighth, and ninth grades. With each year that passed, the next higher grade was added until the school included grades seventh through twelfth. The Chicago Jewish Academy was first located in the Hebrew Theological College on the corner of Douglas Boulevard and St. Louis Avenue. In 1945,
Features: Four girls runs for charity, p. 5
because of the school’s rapid growth in student body, the Chicago Jewish Academy purchased the Metropolitan Masonic Temple, in Chicago’s West Side, and renovated it into its new residence. Sixteen years later, in 1961, due to the deterioration of the Chicago’s West Side, the school was again relocated to the Torah Center on Melrose. With this move, the Academy branched into two schools forming the Yeshiva High School in Skokie on the campus of the Hebrew Theological College. Yeshiva High School accommodated students who desired a more rigorous Talmudic studies program, including some from other cities. Two years later, in addition to the Chicago Jewish
Academy and Yeshiva High School, a third school was established for girls only. In 1964, the Associated Talmud Torah announced that the co-ed branch of the Chicago Jewish Academy would be moved to West Rogers Park, to its current location on 2828 W. Pratt Boulevard. Once the school moved in 1968, it was renamed Ida Crown Jewish Academy, after the member of the philanthropic Crown family. Early in the Academy’s history, clubs were established. Student council was active, and leadership opportunities were available to the students by allowing them to plan
Entertainment: Album Review: Mumford and Sons-Babel, p. 4
activities for the students. Both bi-weekly school paper, known as the “Academocrat” and an annual “Academy Memoirs,” capturing the students, clubs, and stories, were published. There was also a Girls’ Choir, many sports teams, and clubs in debate, home making, and drama, among many others. Although there were many similarities, the Academy has evolved over the past seventy years. Originally, many of the teachers were from Europe. Mrs. Shelley Stopek, a graduate and current teacher of Ida Crown, recalls that the relationships she had with her teachers were much more formal than relationships that current Academy teachers have with their students. Additionally, the Ida Crown curriculum has changed. For the Judaic studies, most of the honors classes were taught only in Hebrew and the regular classes were both English and Hebrew. Presently, there are more secular study classes offered, including English Seminar, Statistics, Economics, and eleven Advanced Placement courses. The Academy also has an abundance of famous alumni, both in the secular and Judaic world. Rabbi Nosson Tzvi Finkel z”l, the past head of the Mir Yeshiva, and Rabbi Berel Wein, the acclaimed author and historian are both Academy graduates, along with David Steinberg, vice president of Sony Productions, and Scott Shay, chairman of Signature Bank of New York. Illinois State Senator Jeff Schoenberg also attended the (continued on page 4)
Sports: Aces on the Mats, p. 8