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Show I " ; : Several Teachers In M.H.S.Will Be New 1 Milford With several new faces among the teaching staff and everything pointing toward a most successful school year, reeistration for the fall term of the Milford high school has been set for Monday and Tuesday, September 2-3, with instruction to begin on Monday. September '.). This is the information informa-tion given The Xews this week by Principal E. R. Mocdy. Registration for freshmen and sophomores is set for September 3, beginning at 7:00 p.m., while the next evening, beginning at the same time, will be devoted to juniors jun-iors and seniors. To accomodate Minersville students, the bus will leave that community at 6:30 p.m. September 3, returning at 9:30. Prominent among the new teachers for Milford high school for the coming year will be one of our own Milford girls, Miss Marie Gillies, herself a graduate of the M. H. S. and last June a graduate of the University of Utah, with a degree in home economics, which department she will supervise in the Milford high school. She takes the place of Laah Hancey of Og-den. Og-den. Taking the place of Miss Josephine Jose-phine White of Beaver will be Miss Alma Andrus of Spanish Fork, a graduate of the Brigham Young university and an accomplished accomp-lished musician. She will have charge of the girls' physical education edu-cation and art departments. A Mr. Whitby of Logan, graduate gradu-ate of the Utah State Aigriculural college, will have charge of the business department of the high school, taking the place of Miss Jane Moffitt of Castle Dale, and also acting as dramatic coach, a department which has been deplorably de-plorably inactive for some time. John D. Lillywhite of Salt Lake City, who is reported to have had three or four years experience in seminary work, will have charge of this work, which, though not a part of the high school curriculum, has a substantial appeal for many of the students. Of direct interest to this department too is a movement move-ment , to secure new desk-chairs for installation in the room in the L. D. S. church building set apart for seminary purposes. More or less new to many of j the Milford high school student will be another Milford girl, also a graduate of the M. H. S. and University of Utah, Miss Julia Hendrickson, who will have the newly created position of librarian, librari-an, for which she took special work at the university, later acting act-ing as librarian in the Cedar City schools. She taught in the Milford elementary school last year. Harry Clark, who came here last June as music instructor, from Helper and got in only a limited amount of summer band work before be-fore his month's vacation period was upon him, will also be new to a considerable portion of the music students but not to quite a j number of the younger boys andj girls w-llo took advantage of the j early summer work and have noth-j ing but praise for their instructor. Jean Fugal, who took over the position of agriculture instructor! late last school year on the resig-i nation of Clair Acord to accept a! nice position in government ser-j vice, though a.classoom instructor! in Milford only a few weeks, has ' become almost a veteran with the boys with whom he has been doing a spendid work this summer, soj can hardly be termed a new man. ! E. R. Moody, principal; Zolaj Fernley, english; J. M Hugfties.j science; Gene Hardy, mechanic arts; and Floyd Kotter, physical education and coach all with from J one to ten or more years of experience ex-perience in the Milford high school round out the teaching staff for the 1940-41 school year. 1VT ! |