September 16, 1940 DAILY NEBRASKAN 15 Educators attend su miner session i,: ! A series of seven administra tive and teaching clinics, climaxed by a two week WPA education training conference, was con ducted this summer for midwest ern teachers and educators attend ing the university summer ses sion. Educators representing schools in Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and Colorado attended weekly clinics on subjects ranging from safety education to standardization of re quirements for teachers' certifi cates. Rosenlof speaks. Dr. George W. Rosenlof, univer sity registrar, spoke at the first clinic session on the work and aims of the Progressive Educa tion Association. Following the opening session, me euueators mei or a conference on certification and standardization. Purpose of the conference was to standardize and simplify the requirements for teachers' certificates and to devel op better relationships between the states in regard to certifica tion. Other speakers in the confer ence series were Herman V. Wei gel, NYA state employment direc tor, who spoke on the need for ed ucation in government; Dr. Ray J. Bryan, Kansas Wesleyan, who spoke on the public relations ac tivities of small schools; Philip H. Mitchell, superintendent of schools at Arapahoe, who spoke on voca tional training .in high schools; and Miss Louise Cottrell, consul tant in safety education for the schools of East Orange, New J", sey, who spoke on safety tii ' in the elementary school. Alumni will grant four club charters , Four new alumni clubs in prin cipal U. S. cities which have sent petitions to the alumni associa tion will soon be granted charters. The new clubs are located in Kan sas City, Washington, D. C, Hous ton, and Los Angeles. Dallas, Texas, alumni may organize a fifth new club. j Nine clubs have been granted charters since the organization of the association. Cities haying chartered clubs are, in order of their formation, New York City, Chicago, Milwaukee, Council Bluffs, Ran Francisco, Indianapo lis, Lexington, Ky., York, Neb., and Denver. Lawrence Ely Ail-American center from Nebraska was instru mental in the formation of the new club in Kansas City. To receive a petition a new chih must have a minimum of ten members and show a willingness to follow a national rules set by the Association. The national board, meeting in Lincoln, has di vided the country into eleven zones. Each zone with the excep tion of the Nebraskan zone elects two members to serve on the na tional board. The Nebraska zone has a total of ten members mak ing in all a board of 32 members. Norwich university was the first military-collegiate "institution in the United States. Omicron NU lops second semester scholarship rating Top scholastic honors for the second semester of last year went to three professional sororities, according to a report released by the office of the dean of student affairs. Omicron Nu, a home economics sorority ranked first with a rat ing of 3.291. Mu Phi Epsilon, a music group, was in the number two spot. Another home economics- sorority, Phi Upsilon Omicron, placed third. The same relative positions were held by these groups the previous semester. With a ranking of 3.043, Wilson Hall, women's cooperative house, rated at the top of the women's halls and fourth in the entire group. Mining group first fraternity. Heading professional fraterni ties is Sigma Gamma Epsilon, a mining and geology organization. In the second position is the men's journalism group, Sigma Delta Chi. Gamma Phi Beta led the social sororities and Beta Sigma Psi the social fraternities. The latter's ranking jumped from twelfth place during the first semester of last year. Coeds showed scholastic superi ority over men students, the all women average being 2.516 while I ' the all men average was 2.273. Sorority and fraternity averages dropped slightly below their rec ords of the previous semester. Morse speaks before Iouisville Lions cltih Prof. C. K. Morse, assistant di rector of the university extension division, addressed ladies night at the Louisville, Neb., Lions club Friday evening. Sept. 6, on "Bal ancing Your Accounts." Werkmeisler reviews hook for July Ethics A review of Joseph Maier's book, "On Hegel's Critique of Kant," has been written by Dr. W. H. Werkmeister of the phil osophy department and appears in the July quarterly issue of Ethics, international journal of social, po litical, and legal philosophy pub lished by the University of Chicago. Split Pompadours Are News! 5 i )ur fXncritMirfMl Ui tiki tin v m;il u l iitl ttC tit1 nomnudmir in W ull its mimrrtiii stilish anil iiro now rmdv ttilli lh pw Snlit 1'ontpndoiir to enhance jour lure and personality. A Fashion-Right Shampoo and Fingerwave ...75c, 50cf 35c Are Surprisingly Just Nebraska Beaute Salon S 219 No. 12th St. X. 2'2796 if Su minor sludcnls gel 2JMI degrees; MMflCJ IUI 1111.1 1 Largest number of degrees and : a 4 : ,i i . e . i i ci micaies in ine nisiory or uie nunmmer term were granted by the University of Nebraska at the close of the 1940 session. The 288 degrees presented brings the number granted during the last school year to 1,383, also a record surpassing 1939's high mark of 3,324. Fifteen certificates were presented. All colleges except dentistry and engineering showed increases in number of degrees awarded. k Total summer session enrollment reached 2,238, six more than last year. Every state and 47 foreign coun tries are represented in the Harv ard University student body. Author Thomas Mann has been named honorary rector of the Uni versity of Dubuque. i w i 4 ill 1 i impirad by Th Paramount Picture "I WANT A DIVORCI" tarring joan iond:ll Hollywood inspired, excit ingly feminine hat fashions to give your costume an au daciously different Fall .viewpoint! $295 and $350 VERA'S HAT SHOP 116 No. 13th I I 1 S3 I SHE'S a Nebraska Girl 00 Ol IK'S young, full of ambitions fun In lie willi. . .we eheer Iter, because we believe in Iter, just as w elieer and leliee in her football hero when we file into I he Nebraska stadium this fall. We like to serve YOUTH. SUITS a v shine li vise miss. Nie wants Iter hair In ike gold, lo look natural but never stringy, so she starts out right with a new 'ERMANENT WAVE at Miller's Heaulv Salon. Right now she ran gel a machinelcss one for f I, uhich, of course, includes her shampoo and hair dress. SHE wants her elolhes lo look as if she dressed vilhoiit an effort, lo be casual, Million! being sloppy. So she chooses sport logs with flat less tailoring. . .at MILLER'S she invests in a host of sweaters; she's brave about eolor. Slipons are only 2.29 and matching cardigans that keep their shape, at 3.29, second floor. H E N in d o 11 b t, she iitk for Mil. I I ITS CLOTH F,S : O N S I L T . ANTS, second floor I ho girl hIio understand college girls' noU nd liuve all the anwen! N .. iinVll "V ' , fMv'X - X " (ILL. ' (tt;'". '!y0i'"m ' ""''''' C'T' iiialtiieK lier sm-Un l Iicr nweal- fi tf"0 fx, mid hiiyn lluin al MIUKK'S ttf '? ""' " " lierc hlie enn find lluil rolor kIic wuiiIn. 5 ,1(e (uir29c and 50r, on Mre.l floor. fffi (On U L & fymflfin si CHF.'S rareful of the money lluil romrn from home, Hiid she'd hii'y iiImhiI llir r-liof htr lindH in MilU'r' ni'w t.io- Kliop on tliird floor. I lr are yoiiiix clux-ti, sImm-m Milll wnuhliy lofrt for Mulltini pliireo, miiiih lo ir dancing, llie puir only 3.9S. 1.1 1 ' 11