Page 10-:-Friddy June 5, 1961-The'MichigoanDaily 'War of the Worlds'remembered 4 NEW YORK (AP)-"We did 'Dracula,' and it seemed to me that during 'Dracula,' I had high hopes that people would react as they do in a movie of that kind," a troubled Orson Welles said not long after CBS' "Mer- cury Theater of the Air" triggered mass panic with a show called "War of the Worlds." "And I don't know that they did," Welles told reporters. "So I had given up . . . You have no idea how many people are listening, or what they're thinking." "War of the Worlds," based on H.G. Wells' science fiction classic, was broadcast Oct. 30, 1938. In the program, the actor had simulated a radio newscaster reporting an invasion from outer space. clearly than any other previous program, the reach and impact of radio. "People ran into the streets and ar- med themselves against the invading Martians that millions believed were actually here," Dick Cavett recalls in a segment from "On the Air," a Home Box Office presentation on the history of radio in America. The program, the second in an HBO series called "Remember When," will be offered subscribers of the pay-cable network five times in June, beginning Monday. "Since its very beginning," says Cavett, host of public TV's continuing "Dick Cavett Show," "radio had been filling the theater of our minds with word-pictures of real-life disaster. We kne thvwre, a-ndwenWla presented his invasion from Mars in newscast format, we believed that, too." Assembling film for the "On the Air" production was a mammoth task that fell to Nancy Kapitanoff, senior resear- cher for Bruce Cohn Productions and the "Remember When" series. "In the earliest days," she says, "everyone was excited about the new medium, and everyone wanted to take moving pictures of radio people at work. It didn't take them long to lose that kind of interest, and that's where our problems began." Often, however, the pursuit of film led the researchers through some curious twists and turns. The "unsinkable" Titanic played a significant role in broadcast history, for No one, Kapitanoff recalls, could produce film of the Titanic at sea, so she turned to the movie on the disaster, "A Night to Remember," for dramatic footage, and went after stock film of old ocean liners. There, midway through a rather uninspiring reel, was a shot of the fated ship. No program on the history of radio would be complete without a shot of Edward R. Murrow on the air from London, during the Nazi Blitz. Ap- parently, no one at CBS through of filming the medium's best-known war correspondent at work. Kapitanoff was about to give up that search when someone located a brief clip of Murrow-in the Imperial War Museum in London. Clergy take on activist role again for the 80s (Continued from Page5) years has been fighting resolutions from minority shareholders that the company consider converting their production to peaceful purposes. "Such repetitive proposals to MDC's management and shareholders, espousing the same basic cause, are not in the best interests of the company or the majority of its shareholders," Mc- Donnell Douglas responded in a statement last month. The statement also said that to quit building warplanes would be "neither practical or necessary." LEWIS LIKEWISE was unyielding at the General Dynamics annual meeting. "We intend to continue building the Trident submarine," he told the minority shareholders. "We feel it's an extremely important part of our national defense." Some clergymen see a polarization developing that will encourage ac- tivism. FATHER JOSEPH Callahan of the Holy Cross Fathers of Bridgeport, Conn., said the large corporations "en- tertained us and our ideas. Now they're tired of us." Father Edward O'Donnell, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of St. Louis, described the mood among many clergymen as "frustration." "And as people deal with something they consider immoral, they want to do something direct to curb it," he added. SISTER MARY Anne McGivern of the Clergy and Laity Concerned in St. Louis said, "I believe companies are becoming more confrontationable. General Dynamics is pressing charges now - they wouldn't when I satin there three years ago. And McDonnell Douglas used to meet with us regularly, but they won't now." Heinonen, in a telephone interview from New York, said, "With the amount of money and attention being spent on war, it makes people feel they have nothing to lose by taking more ex- treme steps." Father Callahan said, "The first thing this administration is going to do is polarize us more and make things clearer. That's a plus for us." 1 aw-power There are 1-, 3-, 10-, and even 12-speed bikes, but some students opt for alternate means of transportation. This new way to get around comes in various models to suit any driver, and runs on a bowl of Purina a day. HOUSING DIVISION RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR 1981-82 ACADEMIC YEAR AVAILABLE STARTING JUNE 3, 1981 IN 1500) SAB POSITIONS INCLUDE: 4 RESIDENT ADVISORS EACH IN BURSLEY AND MARKLEY HALLS ALL ON MALE CORRIDORS. 1 ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR IN FLETCHER (MALE CORRIDOR) 3 GRADUATE STUDENT TEACHING ASSISTANTS IN PILOT PROGRAM ALICE LLOYD. Resident Advisor and Assistant Resident Director positions require the comple- tion of a minimum of 55 undergraduate credit hours by the first day of employ- ment: graduate status for Graduate Student Teaching Assistants in Pilot Program. Graduate Student Teaching Assistants teach courses of their own design in Alice Lloyd and have corridor counseling duties. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a resistered U of M student of the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in resident halls at the University level for at least one year. (3) Undergraduate applicants must have a 2.5 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they are enrolled by the first day of employment. Individuals who have an application on file must come to the Housing Office to up-date their application._ DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION-JUNE 12, 1981-3:30 P.M. A NON-DISCRIMINATORY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER