4 SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1930 Alexand.e Will Ope] WILL PROVIDE NEW SERVICEFOR CITY Routes to be in Communication With Almost Every City in the Country. EXPRESS TO BE CARMUED Passenger Station for New Air, Route to be Situated at Ann Arbor Airport. T. MI CHIQ;AN DA II Y. PAGE' Er Simpson n Campaign Air passenger service directly from Ann Arbor to points east and west will be inaugurated Monday Y by the Thompson Aeronautical cor- poration, operators of airways n Michigan, Illinois, Ohio, and Indi- Associatec Press Photo ana. The Ann Arbor airport willi Alexander Simpson, be used as a passenger station. Of New Jersey, who is a Demo- Announcement of this serevice cratic candidate for United States which was made possible by an ex- senator New Jersey. tension of passenger lines from-. ChicagoI-to. Kalamazoo was made yesterday by Charles A. Rhein- strom, of Detroit, general traffic manager. Tickets for this new service have been placed at the lo- cal branch of the Detroit Motor KNIGHT ___ club on East Liberty street. I To Use Stinson Planes. I h Ch of Central Ohio In issuing the statement of change in policy, Rheinstrom stated Will Raise History Fund that the United States air-mail in Ten-Year Drive. service has been operating in Ann i Arbor with great success and that Endowment of the George W. the addition of passenger service, Knight Fellowship in American which was made possible by the History is the project of the Uni- Waters airmail bill which President!versity of Michigan club of Central Hoover recently signed, was an in- Ohio in the Alumni Ten-Year pro- dication of the faith in Michigan io nteAun e-erpo air patronage. tI gram, according to an article in ir ptronae. be~ current issue of the Alumnus. The type of plane which will bet fun iiss toeAlumnust used in Ann Arbor is the Stinson-,The fund which is to amount to Detroiter monoplane of the cabin1 $15,000 will be raised between the variety. Powered with WrightI present year and 1937, the close of Whirlwind motors, which have been the program. Many checks have al- especially adapted for passenger ready been received by the Univer- traffic, the Thompson lines are as sity from members of the, alumni well . equipped as any transportI in and around Columbus. company in the United States. Not Funds for the fellowship which only passenger service has been is being given in honor of Dr. added to the regular flying sched- George Wells Knight, 78, A.M. '83 ule through Ann Arbor, however, Ph.D. '84, professor of history at for express. will also be carried by Ohio State university, are being the new additions to the Thomp- raised under the direction of Con v ent Schedule Planned. Charles E. Blanchard, chairman of Students planning to leave in the the campaign committee. early part of June via airlines will Dr. Knight who was born in be in direct communication with. Ann Arbor in 1858 at one time any city in the country now onEserved a term as principal of the transport lines by virtue of this new Lansing High school. In 1885 he service. Fares to points in Michi- i began his career on the Ohio State gan and neighboring states are as' faculty where he has taught Amer- follows: to Detroit, $4; to Pontiac, ican history, and political science, $5; to Jackson, $4; to Battle Creek, has been chairian of the Gradu- $6; to Kalamazoo, $8; to South ate School for a time, and also was Bend, $12; to Chicago, $16. Similar Dean of the College of Education. rates are being offered from Chica- He has served. as managing editor go, South Bend, and Kalamazoo to of the Ohio Archaeological and Lansing, Flint, Saginaw, Bay City, Historical Quarterly and has been Muskegon, Grand Rapids, and many a member of numerous commis- other Michiganrcities. sions and scientific societies. Schedules for the new transpor-___________________ tation east and west include pas- senger planes daily except Sunday M which will leave the Chicago air- port at 9 o'clock in the morning,i Ann Arbor time, in two sections, making connections at Kalamazoo, and arriving here at noon for points east. Return to the Ann Ar- bor airport will be scheduled for 5:05 o'clock at night each evening for Kalamazoo and points west. Rail and water connections have been figured in compiling the new sched- ules and students wishing to make trains leaving Chicago for points south and farther west will find ample time via the new air route. I s i ., l .I : s . . l I ' , . COMMITTEE *SESi ~E AINCOUS Committee From Schoolmasters' Club Desires Methods of Instruction. NEW UNITS FORMULATED I Combining reports of numerous high schools in the Midwest, a com- mittee of the Classical conference of the Michigan Schoolmasters' club interested in Latin study re- cently suggested to Michigan sec- ondary schools a course of study that assimilated the best quantita- tive uniform methods of the junior- senior high school. After presenting a preliminary report last year for criticism and suggestion of the proposed course of study that was to eliminate pre- valent diversity in the secondary teaching of the subject, the com- mittee made its final report. Dr. Albert H. Crittenden of the Uni- versity Latin department was chair- man of the state committee that also included Prof. B. L. D'Ooge of the Ypsilanti State Narmol school and Miss Irma Anschultz ~of the Bay City Junior college. Charged with the responsibility of formulating definitions of the units of Latin which should be in- cluded in the junior-senior school curriculum, the committee was con- fronted with such queries as when the subject should be begun, how the units of credit shall be adjust- ed to facilitate the transfer of stu- dents from one school to another, what the value of short prelimin- ary language courses is, and how the work should be efficiently ap- portioned among the successive years of the course. The committee, while recogniz- ing the fact that most schools be- gin the teaching of Latin in the ninth grade and that consequently there is a reason for the prevalent practice, suggested that the begin- ning of the Latin course be in the i second semester of the eighth grade to relieve the congestion of first year high school work, to afford an easier graduation of work, and to give sufficient time for the enrich- ment of the course by the intro- duction of collateral and back- ground material. STUDENTS STAGE STRIKt. LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVER- SITY-Almost half of the the stu- dents of Lincoln Memorial Univer- sity remained on strike today, spending their leisure in shops, dormitories, and college gathering places.j The students walked out when four members of the faculty were discharged without a reason and were requested to leave the campus by May 30. U, of* GRAS 1 930 IJss TIC FULL PAGES of mew Tv' PICTURES t -jlll +.+wk."" Sunday In TheN THE HOME NEWSPAPER STOFFLET NEWS CO. 618 E. Liberty St. Phone 6911 M ARKETS 7 .- . _ .._. FOR THE Economical FOOD STUFFS Bue t t n e r Investigates News of Mastodon Find W. H. Beuttner, preparateur of. the paleontology museum, and three students made a hasty trip to Eaton Rapids yesterday to as- certain the value of a reported dis- covery of a specimen of bones of a mastodon. Excellent bones of a mastodon discovered in the projecting of a proposed park in Jackson have re- cently been received through the courtesy of Capt. Wm. Sparks of that city. WOMEN BLAMED FOR DRINKING UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN- In his testimony before the House Judiciary committee, Glenn This- tlethwaite, Wisconsin football coach, stated that it is the college women rather than the men who are becoming the biggest drinkers and thus the greatest foes of pro- hibition. PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS We have all makes. Remington, Royals. Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60.1 0. D. 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