WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1935. THE NEBRASKAN THREE School Heads Report on Trends in Fh '..:ce, Program and Personnel Editor s Note: This is the last in a series of four tabulations from a questionnaire sent out by the Nebraska State Teachers As sociation to every superintendent in the state. Questions dealt with finance, program and personnel trends. Out of about 650 blanks which were sent out, 300 were returned. Question: Are you planning to expand your high school program for 1935-36? Classes of Schools Schools Reporting Yes No 46 teachers or more rT". 12 4 8 21-45 14 9 t 6 U-20 66 . 28 38 I- 10 149 63 86 3 or less 13 . 3 10 Special 7 4 3 All schools 261 111 150 List of courses included in the expanded high school programs: Commercial, 32; music, 29; home economics, social science, physical education, 7 each; debate, public speaking, dramatics, vocational agricul ture, art, 4 each; science. 12; manual training, 10; vocational work, more grades, 3 each; senior English, Smith Hughes, 6-6 organization, 2 each; visual education, arithmetic, language, French, Latin, pre-school, me chanical drawing, current events, junior high school, extra grade teacher, German, post-graduate, extra-curricular, corrective study, and college pre paratory, 1 each. Question: How has the depression (1932) affected your high school en rollment? Classes of schools Schools Reporting No Effect Increase Decrease 46 teachers or more 12 2 10 0 21-45 14 4 6 4 II- 20 69 30 25 14 4-10 167 80 51 .36 3 or less i4 10 4 1 Special 9 ? 2 0 All schools 185 141 98 55 Question: How has the depression (1932) affected your grade school en rollment? Classes of Schools Schools Reporting No Effect Increase Decrease 46 teachers or more 12 9 3 V 21-45 12 8 3 1 ' :::::::::::::::::::::: S S 4 3 or less 11 2 n 1 Special 4 3 f All schools 268 209 33 25 Minimum age at which child may enter school: ,Vr -Y No Classes of Schools 4Yr 4Yr 4Yi 4Yr 4Yr 4Yr 4Yr 5Yr 5Yr 5Yr 6Yr No sc"00'8 Report- U 7 8 9 W 11 6 9 lim a . "IT1?!! "s 1 s i sjrrr-:.:: s : i s 11-20 7 1 0 8 0 2 J32 47 11U" 3-:::::::::::: I I S 1 cial 284 S 15 1 7 12 8 8 222 3 1 1 4 AwohooisVeported2any change In the i","'- Question: Do you employ married women tn your school? Classes of Schools Schools Reporting Yes 46 teachers or more l. 4 jo 21-45 " 56 11-20 128 4-10 , 3 1 J2 3 or less " 6 4 Special j 77 215 A" QutionY ' Has" VheVe ' been " ' tendency to in your schoo. during the past two years? If .0, ha. this beenat.sfactory Spools Rn3g Yes No factory factory Enre!y 46 teachers or more 12 5 ' 0 0 21-45 14 6 8 4 :::::::::::: i?i S ' ? SAT.::::::::: ll J J a? All hoo'-Q-i-ave election, been held there for 1935-36? Closes of Schools School Reporting Yes Except Some No 46 teachers or more 12 ii n 0 21-45 14 14 u 11-20 70 67 2 1 4-10 17 15 J? 3 or less 13 J ; 2 irhoois':::::::::::::: S 259 1. News Parade by Marylu Petersen STAR gazing scientist met in Paris last week for the fifth congress cf the International As tronomical Union. Among other things, they recommended ditching the present 12 hour time notation and proposed adoption of a 24 hour clock. No longer would trains leave at 1 p. m. or 11 p. m. Under the sys tem, already in use in Europe, 1 p. m. becomes 13 o'clock and 11 p. m. is changed to 23 o'clock. War bent Italy agrees to attend the League of Nations special council session called for July 31, but threatens to withdraw from tne League If it dares to discuss phases of the Halo-Ethiopian situ ation which Mussolini says to leave alone. Italy's "I quit if you won't play my way" attitude blocks all efforts at peace. If the council does not want to risk Italy's resigning from the League, It must steer away from all questions but the frontier clash at Ueluel last December, in which thirty Italians and 110 Ethi opians died. Latest move toward reestab lishing Archduke Otto on the throne is the proposal that the head of the Hapsburg house re turn to his ancestral home as Re gent in the name of bis mother. If this proposal, seen as the work of Ex-Empress Zita. Ot to's mother, was made to quell opposition of the Little Entente, Rent a car for any trip at any hour. You'll be surpried hew good, how cheap and how e-sy to rent. Call or drop M We ar. ut addmg 1935 Chevrolet to our line. Motor Out Company tl p h . ! Phone BSe'1 its proponents must be disap pointed. The Prager Press, Czechslo vakian paper said, "The whole of the Little Entente is prepared to accept .the last consequences of its decision to oppose not only restoration but the mere return of Otto and Zita to Austrian soil. "An attempt at restoration would throw the Little Entente states into an alliance with Ger many against the Hapsburgs," the organ continued. Canned Cheddar Cheese Is New Dairy Process Canned Cheddar cheese Is the newest development in cheeses ac cording to Prof. H. P. Davis, chair man of the department of dairy husbandry at the college of agri culture. Possibilities of offering yellow American cheese in .cans should find favcr in the eyes of both the prospective consumer and manu facturer because it presents a more sanitary method of handling cheese, he stated. It should be popular with the housewife because it is available at an instant's notice. There is no rind or waste on this canned cheese and it is perfectly cured. The cheese may be kept indef initely if It is held under moderate refrigeration. Professor uavis ex- . NEW SUMMER POLICY NOW AIR CONDITIONED Another Well Matched Program FRIDAY. AUG. The Awakening of Jim Buwe with JACK HOLT KATHLEEN FLORENCE BURKE RICE (2 Women After One Man) Yenne Recalls Brilliant New York Productions Seen While at Cornell By Jane Keefer. "The theater depression is end ing!" said the blonde man. This was a startling statement in Ne braska. But he didn't mean Ne braska. "Broadway had its most bril liant season in years last winter. More new plays more successful plays" He sighed and looked reminiscently thru the open win dow near which the leaves or an elm tree swayed lifelessly in the faint July breeze. The blonde man was Herbert Yenne, professor of dramatics, and he was remembering Katherine Cornell in "Romeo and Juliet," or perhaps Elizabeth Bergner in "Escape Me Never." For "Eliza beth Bergner is the most brilliant actress on Broadway," he declared, adding that she "Couldn't touch Katherine Cornell in Shakespeare, however." Saw Fourteen Shows. Mr. Yenne, who spent the first part of last year at Cornell uni versity in Ithaca, New York, work ing toward his Ph.D. degree in theater, managed to spend enough time there to see fourteen of the season's great stage productions. The small office with its Union Loan and Insurance Company cal endar surmounting a row of books such as Cheney's "The Theater," and its desk cluttered with mag azines such as the yellow-covered "Settings and Costumes of the Modern Stage" and the black-covered "Theater Art," faded into the background as the shirt-sleeved professor declaimed the glories of the Great White Way. Among the fourteen dramas he found time to see besides writing three papers a week, "each the equivalent of a term paper," were "Point Valaine" with Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontaine, Sinclair Lewis' "Dodsworth," with Walter Huston and Fay Bainter, and Eva Le Gal- lienne in L'Aiglon, with Bar- rymore playing the port of mother. "We had tickets for Leslie Howard in "Petrified Forest," but they in formed us at the door that Howard was seriously ill, and gave us our money back. Of course we were disappointed we wanted to see him." He also saw Judith Anderson and Helen Mencken in the Pulitzer prize play, "Old Maid," a dram atization of Edith Wharton's novel, and "Within the Gates." with Lil lian Gish, a "glorious production" with lots of music. Music, how- plained. If it is allowed to stand in a room where the temperature is over 70 degrees F. The cheese sharpens or ages and the surface becomes oily. The pressed curd is packed in a valve-vented can, either round or square, which permits gaes to es cape the package but which pre vents air from entering. These cans are then sealed and the cheese is stored to ripen. There is no shrinkage In weight during this curing process as there is in the usual method of curing cheese. "The entire manufacturing and canning process may be completed within thirty-six hours after the milk is received at the factory, and no other work is necessary since curing takes place in the cans." This eliminates many of the for mer labor problems. Successful experiments as to the feasibility of making this kind of sviaa in NphrflKkft have been con- t...tri hv Prr.f V. L. Reichart of the dairy husbandry department who has been wonting in cuimtt ..Mtn the nnirv Division of the United L'Utes department of agri culture. GASOLINE 6 Gal. $1.00 Ask about our Treasure Card Discount HOLMS 14th at W 14th at W 17 NEW SUMMER PRICES 2 THRU 1H "Champagne for Breakfast" MARY CARLISLE LILA LEE HARDIE ALBRIGHT A Tonit ts Love, Life and Laughter -Nttct 10c "id 20c. ever, is not stressed in the New York theater, said Yenne. In many theaters there is no mu3ic between acts instead nearly every one leaves to have a smoke. It was a mild surprise to learn that Mr. Yenne did not see the Follies, for the Follies is con sidered a most- "New Yorkish" part of New York. He said, how ever, that the show wasn't open when he was in the big city. He did see two musical shows, "Life Begins at 8:40," and "Great Waltz," a very spectacular operetta, Greac attention, remarked Yenne, is given to detail in the New York theater. The sets are simple, but costumes, makeup, and lighting are very detailed. As to Mr. Yenne's work at Cor nell, his Ph.D. is just half earned. In other words he has done one year and one summer of the two years and two summers' residence work required by that university. As to what he is taking, his first minor is in theater literature, and his second is in public speaking and rhetoric. His work was en tirely in theory with the exception of a role in Tchekov's "Uncle Vanya," one of the two graduate productions of the first semester The other graduate play was Ibsen's "Rosmersholm." Cornell University has its own theater on the campus, and the undergrad uate dramatics students give a show every two weeks. Yenne was on the theater production staff with a tuition scholarship. "Cornell is one of the three schools in the United States to offer Ph.D. work in theater," he stated. "Some offer work in speech correction, but only three in actual theater production." He "wouldn't go on the stage for anything!" Even when he is Doctor Yenne instead of Professor, he de clares he will want to teach. Let's say, More power to you, Yenne! Ag College Professors Home After Conference Prof. W. J. Loeffel, of the ani mal husbandry department at the college of agriculture, Miss Matilda Peters of the home economics de partment, and Miss Helen Baeder will return from a lard conference held in Chicago during the past weekend. GRAND HOTEL Good Coffee Shop Quick Service European Corner 12th and Q Streets STUDENT -Cffk LUNCHES V to Also Short Orders Mrs. C. Rock. 'tan Bemberg SLIPS with bandeau tops Tlie favorite slip of many, many young misses. w m 28 FORMER STUDENTS GET TEACHING POSTg Moritz Announces Names Those Securing Positions. Twenty-eight graduates of the teachers college have recently re ceived teaching positions, accord ing to a report issued by Professor R. D. Moritz, director of the sum mer school session. Those who have obtained posts are: Verdells Lageschulte, Randolph, English and dramatics at Callaway, Neb. Sylvia Schaefer, Lincoln, English, dra matics, and music at Module, Iowa. . Mildred Barrett, Lincoln, commercial arts and mathematics at Modale, Iowa. Robert H. Westbrook, Dunbar, physics and education at Buena Vista College, Storm Lake, Iowa. Paul Lamb, Lincoln, supervised corres pondence study at Alliance, Neb. Thomas C. Hilliard, Spencer, accounting at University of Akron, Akron, O. Ardith Pierce, Lincoln, music and girls physical education at Goodland, Kansas. Enid Williams, Lincoln, 2nd gradu at Hartington, Neb. Alvina Olson, McCooK. 3rd and 4th grades at Beatrice, Neb. Lorraine Brake, Lincoln, home economics at Walthill, Neb. Dorothy Hetherington, Beatrice, 6th, 7th and 8th grades at Weston, Neb. Jeannette Baker, Lincoln. 2nd grade at Curtis, Neb. Herman C. Wahl, Bayard, sixth, seventh and eighth grades with coaching at Sny der, Neb. Fred Winger, El wood, commercial arts at Norfolk, Neb. Edward Pancoast, Ceresco, music and English at Stratton, Neb. lliff Miller, Greenwood, 3rd grade at Hartington, Neb. Clara Schoettger, Arlington, home econo mics and English at Tilden, Neb. Norris Enders, Gandy. vocational agri culture at Etratton, Neb. A. Elliott McDermid, Lincoln, sciences and music at Meadow Grove, Neb. Helen McFarland. Red Cloud, 3rd and 4th grades at Hardy, Neb. Beth Schmid, Lincoln, mathematics and Latin at Hardy, Neb. Fred Mllhelms, Garland, Supt., at Kene saw, Neb. Hazel Baler, Avoca, history and mathe matics at Blue Hill, Neb. Elvira Benne, Loup City, home econo mics at Arnold, Neb. Anna Lowder, Ansley, 3rd and 4th grades at Arnold, Neb. Ervln Brier, DeWitt. sciences, history, athletics at Pleasanton, Neb. Ruth Kuehn, Murdock, music and Latin at Pleasanton, Neb. Englishmen, warns a London dispatch, may have to pay higher price for the monocles in future. Which impresses the average American as nothing at all to worry about. The New Orleans (La.) Times-Picayune. 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