THE MICHIGAN DAILY Annual Spring Parley Opens FHersAril 19 Faculty, Student Group To Discuss Official Series Title And Plans Sunday Huyett Is Chairman The tenth annual Spring Parley will be held this year on April 19, 20 and 21, the first week-end after Spring Vacation, Daniel Huyett, '42, general chairman announced yester- day. Definite plans and the official ti- tle of the Parley will be discussed at a meeting of faculty and student members of the Parley continuations groups, at 4:30 p.m. Sunday in the League. The general theme of the Parley will be the chief topic for discussion at the meeting, Huyett said. Members of the continuations group are: Prof. Arthur -Smithies of the economics department; Prof. Erich A. Walter, Prof. Karl Litzen- berg, Prof. W. R. Humphreys and Prof. Mentor Williams of the English department; Prof. Paul Henle of the philosophy department; Prof. John F.Shepardi of the psychology depart- ment; Dr. Edward W. Blakemen, counsellor in religious education; Prof. George Benson of the political science department; Prof. Ferdinand Menefee, and Prof. John A. Van den Broek of the engineering college; Prof. L. G. VanderVelde of the his- tory department; Prof. Arthur Ham- mett of the College of Architecture and Design; Prof. John E. Tracy of the Law School and Dr. Isaac Rabin- owitz of Hillel Foundation. Student members of the group are: Ralph Erlewine, Grad., Law- rence Wells, '40L, Robert Rosa, Grad., Jack Shuler, '42L; Elliott Maraniss, '40, Harvey Swados, '40, Malcolm Long, '40, Helen Corman, '41, Mariam Lenoued, '42A, Dekle Taylor, Daniel Suits, '40, Tom Root, '40, Ronald Freedman, Grad., Clarence Kresin, Grad., J. Anderson Ashburn, '41BAd, Martin Dworkis, '40, Tom Downs, '40L, Jane Krause, '41, Bernice Klei- man, '40M, James Duesenberry, Grad., Lelan Sillin, '42L, Alberta Wood, '40, Tom Adams, '40, Frank Rideout, '41, Stanley Richardson. '40A, John Ragsdale, '42, and Grace Miller, '42.' French Society 0 Hear Jobin Romain, Noted Author, Will Be Discussed Surveying "Les Hommes de Bonne Volonte," Prof. Antoine Jobin of the romance languages department will lecture on the evidences of World War French society in the volumin- ous works of Jules Romain at 4:15 p.m. today in Room 103, Roiance Languages Building under the aus- pices of Le Cercle Francais. Sociological, historical, and politi- cal backgrounds will be pointed out by Professor Jobin as they affect the different stratas of French so- ciety from 1908 to 1919. Romain is the famous playwright of "Knock" and many other thesis plays and novels has produced this eighteen- volume saga containing more than 400 characters. Reoccurring individuals of the in- tellectual groups voice Romain's so- cial philosophies which Professor Jo- bin will evaluate. Purdom To Speak At Ohio Dr. T. Luther Purdom, director of the Bureau of Appointments and Oc- cupational Information, will speak at Ohio-Wesleyan University today on "Guidance and Placement." He will address a convocation and conduct a faculty discussion on the problems of placement. Dr. Purdom returns to Ann Arbor tonight. New Million Dollar Airport Hangar Is Ravaged By Flames IAe.S. Plans A _ - ri Stiis1on To Be Airecraft 1Factory, Visited By Group Inspection tours of the Stinson aircraft factory and the Wayne County airport will feature the trip to be taken Saturday by the Michi- gan chapter of the Institute of Aero- nautical Sciences, Dan Grudin, '40E, announced yesterday. Limited to 60 students who are also members of the Institute, the tour will leave the East Engineering Build- ing at 8 a.m. Saturday. At the Wayne County Airport, the functions and purpose of the air traffic control tower will be explained and demonstrations of the blind fly- ing traveling unit will be offered to the group. Aircraft stored in the hangar will also be inspected by the group. Full-scale airplane production will highlight the points of interest at the Stinson airplane factory. Be- cause of War Department regula- tions, the group will be limited en- tirely to members of the Institute. The trip, according to Grudin, is New Method Of Metal Analysis Developed Ii iyaboratory Here (Coilihedm from Pia) 1) have shown that the ratio of relative intensities of the two sets of lines between the two arc points. The re- ineneities wthesamplse of th es sulting arc, or spark, across the gap never varies with samples of thesame between the two prongs is of suffic- chemical composition. ient intensity to vaporize a small The measurement of the intensity quantity of the metal, which then of the lines is then measured by emits its characteristic spectral lines. means of light shining through the The spectral lines are recorded by' plate and through a narrow slit upon the spectroscope on a photographic an electric eye, which, together with film in an adjoining darkroom, where a galvanometer, measures the rela- the plate is quickly developed by a tive blackening of the lines. special high-speed method devised The ratio of the intensities of the for this purpose. various lines is then computed on a In interpreting the resulting lines, slide rule and the percentage of any the -intensities of the unknown lines metal or element present in the sam- are not compared with known stand- ple is readily obtained from a prev- ards as most previous methods have iously calibrated chart. The whole attempted, but rather with iron lines process of analyzing a sample con- of known intensity in the sample. taining as many as six constituents Thouugh the individual lines may can be accomplished in six minutes, vary greatly from one exposure to where chemical methods previously the next, extensive investigations by required between two and three hours Dr. Vincent and Professor Sawyer for the same accuracy. I STUDENT SUPPLIES PARKER PENS and PENCILS -NOTEBOOKS TYPEWRITER RIBBONS - TYPING PAPER Firemen are shown here pouring water on the flames that broke out in the Transcontinental and West- ern Air hangar at LaGuardia Field, New York airport. Early estimates placed the damage' at 80 percent, or about $1,000,000. No planes were in the hangar. one in a series of trips planned for' the Institute members designed to- ward acquainting student aeronau- tical engineers with plant and opera- tion conditions in neighboring air- craft factories and airnorts. Ball & Thrasher 229 South State Dial 3955 .. w .. .. .. .1 ..... .N. w. .a... r........,. If Paper- Editions To lBe Replaced By-,,Microf1ims The necessity of filing bulky vol- umes of rag paper editions of var- ious daily newspapers in the Univer- sity library is being rapidly removed by the extended use of microfilm reproductions of the material, ac- cording to a pamphlet of library notes released recently. Microfilms are photographic re- productions of printed material, stored in small rolls of film and available for use in a projector sim- ilar to an ordinary motion picture machine. They are considered as useful, for they allow study of ma- terial which is not available for gen- eral circulation. The University has recently un- dertaken to obtain microfilms of all eighteenth century American maga- zines which are absent from the Uni- versity libraries. It is hoped that eventually a complete record of all magazine literature printed in the United States before 1801 will be made available for study. The micro- films are to be stored in the Clements Library. Among those newspapers which have been microfilmed and stored in the Library are the New York Times and the Chicago Tribune. The old practice of filing rag paper editions of these journals has been discon- tinued in favor of the new process. t Senior Is Placed On Board Of Trade (Continued from Page 1) ville has dreamed of a career there for years. At Michigan he kept that in mind, taking courses in economics, accounting and geography. He stud- ied geography so he would know the distribution of grains and the climat- ic effects upon them. Scoville's plans for a career on the Chicago exchange took form when he petitioned for membership. He purchased, for $1,700, a membership, paid the $250 transfer fee, and was yesterday voted in by the board of directors. A member of Scabbard and Blade, honorary military fra- ternity, he will serve at Camp Custer as part of his ROTC duties before following his chosen profession. Walter isn't the only member of the Scoville family at Michigan. His sister, Mary May, also attends school here and is prominent in women's activities. The world of right and wrong dresses in shades of gray. The pepper-and-salt of ordinary human na- T r ture. .. the protective coloration of the rascal ... the unprepossessing garments that can hide a clean white motive. the Heirs of Huey Long Use FOLLETT'S Rl C. NTRqL LIBRARY O N THE MORNING OF JUNE 7, 1939, a hot tip came in to the city desk of the New Orleans States, evening newspaper sister of the famous Times-Picayune. When a truck drove up before a half-built house in the suburbs and began unloading window sash, the States' photographer was hiding behind a hedge. The picture he got touched off a string of giant firecrackers that blew hundreds of Louisiana politicos out of the public trough. I For the license plate proved that the truck be- longed to Louisiana State University-and the half- built house belonged to the wife of a colonel on the governor's staff. Just a drop in the bucket of graft that the political heirs of Huey Long had been passing around for years. But the first case that could be proved-libelproof, airtight. That night 64-year-old Jim Crown, the States' fighting editor, sat down on his bed and sobbed- reaction from months without respite in the front- line editorial trenches. "At last we get a break!" With the fuse once lit, the firecrackers kept pop- ping around the cowering Longsters. Three men committed suicide; more than 200 faced federal and state indictments. It had been a great spree, but thanks to the battling Picayune papers, it was Nast pound him on the back. And through him William Lloyd Garrison speaks again: "I am in earnest. I will not equivocate; I will not excuse; I will not retreat a single inch; and I will be heard!" Courage is probably, next to truth, the greatest quality that a newspaper can have. For the world abounds in forces, actions, events, and people be- fore which neither man, nor newspaper, nor the Newsmagazine, can be coldly objective. Silence, indifference, genteel or amiable omissions are not true impartiality-they are just what the forces of corruption or stupidity want, the broth in which they thrive. TIME has never believed that icy indifference or pure objectivity" is either possible or desirable in news reporting. Any colorful, humanized story con- tains something of the mental attitudes and jqdg- ments of the men who wrote and edited it. But over and above this is the sense of height- ened responsibility that characterizes these times, as it has other periods of crisis. These days are big; with destiny for our country and the world. And the Newsmagazine in this era has a deep and pe- culiar responsibility. It is, in a sense, the national news- paper; it has the same obli- Studying that, gray crowd-picture, penetrating its disguises, throwing a searchlight here and an X-ray there, is part of TIME's job. TIME queries its reporters and correspondents again and again: "What's behind this? Who's behind it? Give us the background." TIME listens to people-all kinds of people, with all kinds of causes and crusades-bal- ances their ideas against events, against knowledge, horse sense, and plain old Amezican morals. And sometimes when every possible scrap of fact, every line of expert and inexpert opinion is on the table, TIME editors still miss the last train home, trying to decide what's right, who's right, and how to let the people know it. Judgments arrived at this way are not infallible, for nothing human is. But they are genuinely re- sponsible. Essential to people who share TIME's attitudes-stimulating to people who don't. And backed by the courage of conviction. This is one of a series of advertisements in which the Editors of TIME hope to give all the readers of this newspaper a clearer picture of the world of news-gathering, news-writing, and news-reading-and the part TIME plays in help- ing you to grasp, measure, and use the history of your lifetime as you live the story of your life. 4' Our RENTAL LIBRARY not only offers a complete selection of both the older and the very latest in all the fields of literature, but also has inform- ation available on future publications. . . a library where a large range of titles and the courteous assistance of our librarian will help to satisfy your personal tastes . . . that is our rental library .. . truly in keeeping with a university community! I