THE MICHIGAN DAILY Irimm Sees News Photography In Need Of More Discrimination Places Exhibit Of Gases Here New Apparatus Supplants Quite Similar Machine; DisplaysMetals, Carbon An exhibit of carbon, metals andj gases and their derivative productsI -the only one of its kind ever de- vised-is now on. display in the lobby of the East Engineering Building. The apparatus on display, which combines. both motion and varied lighting effects to demonstrate the value of the substances, is sponsored by the Union Carbide and Carbon Corp., of which Jesse J. Ricks, '01 and '03L, is president. It supplants a somewhat similar exhibit was estab- lished here 13 years ago by the same corporation. While the exhibit will be here per- manently, it will be taken back to the factory for changes if it does not- prove satisfactory, Prof. A. H. White, head of the chemical engineering department, said yesterday. It was because of his suggestion that the other exhibit was deemed inade- quate, he said. The machine is divided into two , sections. l'he first exhibits carbon and allied substances in four window displays which include, "Carbon and Gases"; "Synthetic Organic Chem- icals"; "Carbons and Batteries" and "Alloys and Metal." The other shows' four series of slides which elaborate on the displays. Buttons control the action of the slides and moving parts at the observer's will. Unique in this apparatus is that a replica of practically every substance shown is supplied in the bottom of' the apparatus used in classes, Pro-1 fessor White said. NEWS IN BRIEF, By MONROE SCHWARTZ "Unless controlled and directed in the interests of an intelligent public opinion, news pictures may more and more tend to betray newspaper prac- tices." Such is the judgment of Prof.1 John L. Brumm of the Department of Journalism, expressed in an inter- view relative to the sudden popular-I ity of picture magazines and the in- creasing use of pictures in the daily press. A distinction should be made, Pro- fessor Brumm declared, between im- portant news and news that is mere- ly interesting. Important news, he said, embraces all those matters which have vital social significance.1 Important matters are not always- perhaps not usually-superficially in- teresting. A fiscal report issued by a state treasurer, he pointed out, may be much less exciting than a good dog fight, but it need not be so. An in- telligent reporter, he added, may dis- cover in an intricate financial state- ment sufficient drama to stimulate the heartbeats and raise the ire of even the dullest citizen, but the dog fight is easier to photograph. The public is becoming increasingly picture-minded, Prof. Brumm be- lieves. This he attributes very largely to the popularity of the motion pic- ture, which has made reading un- attractive, if not unnecessary to great numbers of people. While the camera may reveal the wonders of science and recreate his- tor yin a vivid realism, it may easily substitute fictions for reality. He called attention to the foreigner's probable misconception of American life as depicted in American movies sent abroad. These pictures, he stats, Ld Detroit exhibit us as extravagant and waste- ful, given to continuous drinking of MUSSOLINI TURNS HIS SHOUL- MILLIONS FOR 'PROMISED' potent beverages, sophisticated and DER. Premier Benito Muss olini LAND. Seven hundred delegates, at- daring, morally inhibited, and devot- plunged Great Britain and France tending a national conference of the into a new p' edicament last night Jewish National Fund of America lastj ed exclusively to love and racketeer- with a note turning a cold shoulder night in Detroit, heard reports show- ien. ofthe d.i toward the Spanish peace efforts of ing that Jews throughout the world News of these days is dramatic, the two powers. have contributed $24,000,000 for the complex, andar-yrsaging te- acquisition of land in Palestine. quires keen analysis and authentic - Psychologists Vwork -On Eve Acuteness Test. A new method of testing visual, acuteness, expected to supplant pre- sent methods, is being perfected by Prof. Carl R. Brown and Dr. Burton D. Thuma of the psychology depart- ment. Professor Brown, in an interview yesterday, said that uncertainty of the Snellen and Landolt tests, now used by oculists, resulted in this fur- ther experimentation. He added that it was impossible to say which of the tests is better, because of the arbitrary nature of the definition of visual acuteness. The Snellen test uses the letter "E" which the observer sees in various positions, each time he is asked the direction in which the bars of the "E" are pointing. The Landolt ring test, used mainly in Europe, employs the same princi- ple, but the "E" is replaced by a ring with a break in the circumference. The observer, in this case, is asked the position of the gap. The test being perfected here, Pro- fessor Brown explained, uses an el- lipse with a. small dot in the center as the object. From the data.compiled thus far, he said, it has been found that the shape of the ellipse varies greatly in each case. This shows that each individual is stimulated differently, Prof. Brown explains thatthis is caused by the varied positions of the cells in the retina of the eye. The cells are covered by the mi.. nutely small ellipse. This line of experimentation was started about five years ago under the joint sponsorship of the: American Medical Society and the American Society of Ophthalmologists. When the test is carried out, Pro- fessor Brown said, the subject is seat- ed at one end of a small dark room. .An ellipse is projected on the far wall and the patient asked the posi- tion of the spot inside. A glass prism in front of the subject is turned in four different positions. This ofters the line of vision four times. The subject signals the position in which he sees the spot by pressing a buzzer a number of times. Each position in the ellipse is designated by a number. Read Daily ClassifiedAds recording, Prof. Brumm holds. Events must be projected -against a back- ground of history. Every picture that deserves publication should be as val- uable in imparting information as the verbal copy it displaces. As for pictur'es that are aestheti- cally valuable, and even those which depict what is strange and incongru- ous, Prof. Brumm thinks that they should be published as newspaper supplements. By the same token the news columns should exhibit only pictures that have real news value. Such pictures will have to be taken by the trained reporter rather than by commercial and staff photograph- ers, as is mostly the case today. F'aris MORE ITALIANS IN SPAIN? Sources close to the French Foreign Office yesterday said a special cab- inet meeting Monday will study French Secret Service reports alleg- ing new movements of Italian troops to Spain.; Spainj FRANCO PRESSES ON GIJON. Spanish Insurgents hurled their full strength into battle today to blast a path for a final advance on Gijon, the Government's last Biscayan stronghold. S Muskegon INVITATION TO A PARLEY. A telegram was dispatched to Gov. Frank Murphy last night by the United Radio, Electrical, and Ma-1 chine Workers, a CIO affiliate, ask-1 ing that he meet with their repre- sentatives at his office in Lansing at 10 a.m. Monday and attempt to aid them in settling their differences with the Consumers Power Co. 245 MILES OF PIPE UNDER CITY A network of pipes stretch under Ann Arbor. There are 145 miles of gas mains, 30 of storm sewer and 70 of sanitary sewer. CHORA F hitler Criticized EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 1- I I I ., WJR P.M. 6 :00-Joe Penner. 6 :30-Romantic. 7:30--Open House. 7:30-Phil Baker. 8:00-Columbia Wprkshop, 8:30-Birthday Party. 9:00-Sunday Evening Hour. 1 0:00-,Tack Randolph. 10:15--Comedy Stars. 10 :30-Hermit's Cave. 11 :00-Glen Gray. 11:30-Ca.b Caloway. 12 :00-Henry King. WWJ P.M. 6:00-Catholic Hour. 61:30-Smoothies. 6:45-Sports. 7:00-Jack Benny. 7:30-Fireside Recital. 7 45-Interesting Neighbors.' 8,:00-Charley McCarthy. 9:00-Manhattan Merry-Go-Round. 9:30-'Familiar Music. 10:00-Sunday Night Party. 11:00-Dance Music. 11:30-News, Music. WXYZ P.M. 6-00-George Jessel. 6:30-Green Brothers. 7:00-Dinner Concert. 7 :30-Ozzie Nelson. 8 :00-Qrchestra, Soloists. 9:00-Hollywood Playhouse. 9:30-Walter Winchell. 9:45Irene Rich, 10 :00-Fousdat ion. 10:30-Cheerio. 1'1 :00-Juidy and Bunch. 11:0-Eddie Varzos. 12 :00-Fredlie Rivard. CKLW P.M. 6:00-George Jessell. 6:30-Tim and Irene. 7:00-Sports. 7:15-News. 7:30-Ted Weems. 8:00-Stardust Revue. 8:30-Wayne King. 9:00-Passing Parade. 9:30-Pontiac aptst. J0:00-Goodwill. 10:30-Gospel Services. 11:30-Reporter. 11:45-Ted Weems. 12:00-George Olsen. By Upper Classes Frankema States Secret criticism of Hitler and his regime is noticeable among the bet- ter-educated classes, while the rest of the German pouplace appears too busy directing their efforts toward earning a living to evidence their dis- content toward economic and political conditions, Dr. William Frankema of the philosophy department, who has recently returned from Germany, claimed yesterday. A certain amount of discretion is used by those who complain of the Nazi government, according to Dr. Frankema who said that "persons with complaints make very sure that those to whom they air their views are in no way connected with the governm~ent." Dr. Frankenia described Hitler's at- titude towards non-party members as "arrogant and arbitrary." Party members, he said, as a rule, are more privileged than those unaffiliated with the Naz'is. Present in Europe at the time of the rise of leftist government in France, he noticed the enormous amount of anti-communistic propa- ganda filling the newspapers and periodicals. Der Fuhrer, he said, seems to be making very strenuous efforts towards influencing public opinion away from any tendency towards democracy and socialism. SOCIAL DANCING Toe, tap, acrobatics. caught daily. Terrace Garden Studio. Wuerth Theatre Bldg. Ph. 9895 2nd Floor. Open eves. TI' Saele erti J IL IL A IL v IL IN ILA vi ALUNO CKETS. he-ounter" VlI Begin 8:30 a.m. . i Ruth Slenczynski X12-$I -$ 8 the Office or the L O1F MUSIC at Have You Heard About TRADE MARK The QA'lure wearer knows how completely comfortable it is! It never slips, binds, or drags on the shoulders - it always holds and molds the breasts into a softly rounded, youthfully uplifted contour. Here's a brand new edition! The "Alphabet" A.'lure of Lastex batiste and fine net -designed in one style to fit all types perfectly. 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