SAE TWO II I HT AN - A I'll y -AOE TWO -BAT V~BAY, A~Th~-2~, 1~29' hERO ANNUALPLACED ON SALE BY EDITORS Samuel S. Bradley, '91, Completes Work On 1929 Edition Of Aircraft Annual LISTS 1928 AIR FEATS Radio Night Program Will Be Broadcast By Chicago Alumni Charles W. Fisher, '18, Will Send Out Greeting From Allertonr Club Over KYW Michigan alumni, students, and faculty members will receive an of- ficial greeting from Charles W. Fisher, '18, president of the Univer- sity of Michigan club of Chi- cago, over radio-broadcasting sta- tion KYW, Chicago, according to YOUTH IN UNMORAL, SAYS MUYSKENS TALK BEFORE STUDENT FORUM Buffalo Alumni Club Hopes To Raise Large Sum For Lectureships In Business School As Contribution To Ten Year Betterment Program "A young person has no experi- .ior in religion. Christianity is posi- ence that forms moral law before tive, and cannot be taught. We the- age of eighteen," said Prof. must stand on our own feet, and John E. Muyskens, of the speech make our own heaven and our own department, at a student forum hell. Others cannot tell us what is Thursday at Lane hall. "Young Ijright and what is not. Most of the people are neither moral nor im- churches do not know the true moral, but unmoral. Early educa- Christianity, which is fundament- tion is merely 'bell-ringing' with- I al." out any experience at all, and a "A word,,whether we hear.it or negative character is formed in- speak it, is in itself a mechanical stead of a positive one." thing and has no meaning except Professor Muysken spoke on for the dynamic force behind it. A. Lectureships in the School of Business Administration are to be provided by the University of Mich- igan club of Buffalo as its effort in entering the University Ten Year program, it was announced yester- day. The Buffalo alumni group which is the fifth to announce a project in the University better- ment program which will come to a conclusion in 1937 has set a mini- mum goal of $10,000 for these lec- tureships and hopes to exceed that goal by far by the time they are ready to present the gifts to the University. Because of the very restricted tsecretary of the association and Di- funds which the School of Business rector Fielding H. Yost followed Administration is allowed to use for this up recently and spent a whole lecture series at the present time day in Buffalo with the Tfesult that the endowment of additional lec- the alumni announced their pro- tureships was included in the sug- ject and named Henry W. Willis, gestions in the catalog for the Ten "02, campaign committee chairman. Year program. The germ was plant- The entire amount collected will ed by President Clarence Cook Lit- be presented to the University in tle and President E. J. Ottaway of the same way as other Ten Year the Alumni association who were program projects in 1937, the year the principal speakers at a banquet of the University's hundredth at the club several months ago and birthday. The interest on the fund who at that time explained the will be then used to secure big bus- aims and hopes of the Ten Year iness men for lectures in the busi- program. T. Hawley Tapping, Field ness administration school. Samuel Stewart Bradley, '91, edi- tor of the Aircraft Yearbook, pub- lished by the, Aeronautical Cham- ber of Commerce of America, has just' released the 1929 edition of that annual. Commenting on the 1928 advance of aviation, the volume notes, "Fly- ing, has become a recognized pub- lic service. American aviation, in- cluding not only flying but also manufacture'of equipment and the development of airports and air- ways, was beginning to assume the proportions of a major industry." Figures compiled by Bradley and, his: associate editors state that the number of persons licensed to be- come aviators increased during 1928 from 1,500 to more than 11,000. Mail planes flew a total average of 27,848 miles every 24 hours, carry- ing three times as much mail as in 1927. Air transport mileage doubl- ed during the year, and the num- ber of passengers carried more than quadrupled. Thirty-two air line companies operated on regular daily schedules with traffic increas- ing at a steady and profitable rate, indicating that the United States l will soon show the way in the aerial transport business to, theI heavily subsidized lines of Europe. A chapter of the book is devoted to the air feats of 1928, including the Wilkins-Eielsdn Point Barrow- to-Spitzbergen flight, the rescue of the Italia's crew, the Graf Zeppe- lin's trans-Atlantic round trip, the 4,466-mile non-stop flight from Rome to Brazil, and the trans-Pac- ific 7,400-mile of the Southern Cross,, Miss Earhart's Atlantic crossing, and the 144-mile-an-hour average of the Yankee Doodle across the continent. "Communication and Life" at the nmeeting, which was under the au- spices of the Student Christian as-. _ , _" _ announcements received yesterday. ijsociation. "Normal American home This talk will be one of the features life,' he asserted' "is repression, not of the Michigan night program be- expression. Is it any wonder that+ ing presented next Monday night,'young' people want to Jump thel April 22, from 6:30 to 7 o'clock by fence when they reach the age of the Allerton House in its capacity iuniversity students? The ideal sys- as Official Intercollegiate Alumni Item of education will be objective headquarters of Chicago. learning completely. I object to Another feature of.the evening's any kind of authority in education, program will be the singing of -_- _____ numerous University songs by the_1 Allerton club which is considered Ii one of the finest singing groups in III T Ima word causes a reflex which we call knowledge. All learning is a series of reflexes." The talk Thursday was next .to the last meeting on a series spon- sored by the S. C. A. Professor William A. Frayer, of the history department will deliver the last talk of the semester next Thursday afternoon on "The New World After the World War." All who are inter- , ested are invited to attend. Fi~E I I I I the country. Every Monday night from 0:30 to 7:00, the Allerton House broadcasts on a popular hour known as the 'Collegiate Hour" and' each of these programs is dedicated to one cer- tain university or college. 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