The educational screen (c1922-c1956])

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Editorial 283 T* HE first complete and authoritative Bibliography on Visual Education ■*■ will soon appear as another of the publications of The Educational Screen, nc. This bibliography has been prepared by Dr. Joseph J. Weber, formerly of he University of Kansas, with the assistance of two of his graduate students n visual instruction. It covers all significant writings on the subject—in >eriodical or book form—from the beginning of the movement down to July, [922. Each succeeding year Dr. Weber will prepare an additional bibliography to cover the material of that year. We shall publish this regularly as a supple- ment, thus keeping complete reference data at the disposal of all students and investigators in the visual field. (Further announcement later.) From the Commercial Angle TPHERE are perhaps 15,000 motion picture theatres now active in the United States. These represent the whole theatrical field and its development is com- pleted; the theatrical has attained its maximum. TTHERE are more than 200,000 schools—more than 200,000 churches—more than 200,000 clubs, lodges, community centers, etc.—a total of over 600,000 in the United States, or FORTY TIMES THE NUM- BER OF THEATRES. This is the potential non- theatrical field and its development is hardly begun; the non-theatrical market is for those producers who have eyes to see.