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September 28, 1947 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1947-09-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

TWO

r THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1947

WE BEAT 'EM, TOO:
First Televised Athletic Event
Termed 'Unqualified Success'
(Continued from Page 1) spotters only as a double check.
"You have to be much faster and
ier in the week on the afterdeck of more reliable on television than
then prssbox. With them in the on regular radio," he explained.
tent, which the sun soon wamed Because the audience also can see
to oven intensity, were the moni- what's going on television separ-
tors (like those pictured above) ates the men from the boys in this
which show what each camera business of sportscasting."
picks up, as well as other control The band formations during the
mechanisin, a maze of cords and half came in very well ovei' the
wires and a direct wire to De- television cameras because of their
Both cameras operated through- extreme height above the playing
oth caerseaed thrh-a field. Close-ups were used too, in
out the entire game. Each was fact one caught the huge grin on
equipped with several lenses, en- Conductor William D. Revelli's
abling it to get both close-up shots face as he led the crow through "I
and4 overall views. Wne OBc oMcia.
Eberle directed his entire staff Wanna Go Back to Miehigai."
by an intercom system, calling for Commercialst
a cherladerfro onecamra, Commercials for the broadcast
a cheerleader from one camera., were signs set up within the nar-
the scoreboard from another. He row confines of the press box and
watched the cameras findings in camera operators dangled precari-
the two monitors and with one of ously over the top railing as they
the many buttons and dials he spun theirhcameras around to
switched from camera to camera spunrtndtr
to make a complete picture catch them. The entire television
The ou e' studsetup was thea object of a great
The producer's most difficulteu deal of curiosity in the press box.
time came before the game start- hotograhrs an ep o.r
ed. The cameras picked up allPwahewt an duep ote in
- sots f sght, ad h ha toex-watched with open1 moutins the in-
sorts of sights, and he had to ex- tricacy and skillful timing requir-
plain .thembtovPaul Williams on e cnstantly throughout the
the floor below so he in turn brodcostanlhouhu h
could describe them on the air.
" Contrary to most beliefs, an
"There's Number 49, Paul," he'd overcast day is sometimes the
snap, and Williams would come best for television. "The tantera
back with a commentary on Bob is as sensitive as a human eke,"
Chappuis. b Walbridge explained, "and it op-
Spontersthouble Check erates best when the light is con-
On~c the game actually started, stant. It doesn't make any differ-
Williams merely described the ence whether it's dark or light, so
garne, depending on the crews and long as it stays that way. Contin-
the bustling Mr. Eberle to follow ually changing skies are our bug-
the action. Williams always mem- aboo."
orizes the entire roster of each WWJ-TV plans to televise all
team before the game and uses his Michigan home games this season.
Ji f _

Maddy Directs'
City Orchestra
Few Openings Still
For Student Players
Prof. Joseph E. Maddy, of the
music school and director of the
National Music Camp will direct
the musical training of the Ann
Arbor Civic Orchestra which will
begin rehearsals for Fall activ-
ities tomorrow.
Although organized primarily
of adult city residents, a few
openings for University student
players are available.
Interested students should at-
tend the meeting at 7:30 p.m. to-
rmorrow at the city high school.
Orchestra president, Mrs. Geral-
dine Seeback, or manager Philip
0. Potts, may be contacted for
further information.
Communities at home and
abroad return to Standard Time
today (Sun), and millions of cit-
izens get back that extra hour of
shuteye they lost on April 27.
Standard Time returns in mostf
of the communities at 2 a.in.

Campus Highlights

I

MCF Sunday l eet.. .
Michigan Christian Fellowship
will hold it regular Sunday after-
noon meeting at 4:30 p.m. today
in Lane hall. A talk by Paul Beck-
,ith, Inter-Varsity staff member.
will be followed by refreshments.
Church Honor Tea . .
Officers of the First Congre-
gational Church will honor Dr.
and Mrs. Leonard A. Parr for
their ten years of ministry in
the church at a tea at 3 p.m. to-
day. Dr. Parr is also president
of the Ann Arbor Ministerial
Association.
* * *
Carillon Recital ...
Sidney Giles, Assistant Caril-
lonneur, will present a recital
at 3 p.m. today.
The program will include
American folk songs, semi-clas-
sical compositions, and several
works written especially for car-
illon.

IZFA Movie ...
The Intercollegiate Zionist Fed-
eration of America will present
A Pass to Tomorrow," at 8 p.m.
today at B'nai Brith Hillel Foun-
dation.
The film is a documentary pro-
duction on Palestine and is nar-
rated by Frederic March.
Refreshments and a social hour
open to all students will follow.
Deutscher Verein . .
Deutscher Verein will hold its
first meeting of the semester at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Union.
Elections will be held at this
meeting which will be followed by
a social hour. The meeting is
open to all interested students.

ANNOUNCES BRITISH OFFER ON PALESTINE--Arthur Creech-Jones (center), Witish secretary
of state, talks with Farle el-Khouri of Syria (left) and Herschel Johnson of the UN delegation, afterj
Crech-Jones told the UN General Assembly Palestine Committee in Lake Success, N.Y. that Britain
is ready to give up her 25-year-old League of Nations mandate over Palestine.

French Film Wi
"Children of Paradise," French
film made during the German oc-
cupation, will be presented by the
campus chapter of AVC and the
Art Cinema League at 8:30 p.m.
Friday and Saturday at the Lydia
Mendelssohn Theatre.
Featuring Jean-Louis Barrault,
Arletty and Pierre Brasseur, the
film tells the strange and tragic
love story of a pantomimist and a
Parisian actress in the days of
Louis Philippe. The poor people
that watch from the top balcony,

ll Be Givenl
up with the "gods," and the crowd-
ed Parisian streets from the back-
ground for the drama.
English subtitles are - provided.
Tickets will go on sale at.3 p.m.
Wednesday at the Lydia Men-
delssohn Theatre box office.
Although "Les Enfants du Par-
adis" as originally presented ran
some five hours, it was cut to
about two hours for American au-
diences. The condemned version,
which was shown on campus dur-
ing the summer, will be presented

Report Octuplets
Born to Chinese
SHANGHAI, Sunday, Sept. 28
-(/P)-The newspaper Sheng Pao'
said in a wholly unconfirmed dis-
patch today that a Chinese wom-
an had given birth to octuplets in
Hopeh Province, and seven had
survived.
The dispatch was dated Ihsing
and quoted Chang Shu-Ping,
chief of the direct tax bureau, as
saying the Wife of a nephew had
given birth to the octuplets.
They live in Communist terri-
tory, the newspaper said Chang
reported,

I)
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Have You Called Sally Yet?
We are all set to again supply our unusually good food through
our prompt delivery service-and by the way-we have en-
larged our menu this year to include:
TEXBURGER SANDWICHES
and French Fried Potatoes
CALL US ANYTIME
&"4$J .a 4ich epfive 4

Call 2-6606

i

Call 2-6606

NOT

11

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

The

}

WHITE SPOT
517 East Williams
is
NOW OPEN
from 6 A.M.-2 A.M.
7 Days a Week

MISCELLANEOUS
NEED GARAGE for my car relatively
near Law Club. Liberal Rental. Phone
Joe Lackey at 4145. If not in leave
number and I will call. )32
FOR RENT
VETERAN AND WIFE desperate for
apartment. Call Wayne 2782W4 col-
lect evenings. )2
STUDENT will pay reasonable price
for single room in or out of town.
Call Kardy. Between 6 and 7 p.m.
)36
1 ROOM DELUXE APARTMENT, steam
heat, new furniture, gas to cook,
refrigerator, $12.50 per week, J. C.
Joseph, phone Brighton 7-1301. )6
CLEAN and comfortable living quarters
for ,2 men students. New furniture
with inner spring mattressps. Near
carpus between State and Main. 437
Hamilton Place. )11
2-ROOM, well built cottages, insulated.
Indpor toilet and shower, gas to
cook, oil heat, children welcome,
$15.00 per week. Call J. Joseph,
Brighton, 7-1301.)7
BUSINESS SERVICES
BY ESTABLISHED tradition, we do all
types of sewing, alterations, formal
restyling. Hildegarde Sewing Shop,
116 E: Huron. Phone 24669. )29

II_'~.~------~__________________________________.a~-4 ii

LOST AND FOUND

F,

Ill

BEAUTIFUL~LY
R[IDIECORATrED

LOST: Gold ring inscribed with Psi
Upsilon crest. Reward. Call. 2-3159.
)2
RONSON Whirlwind lost in Union Caf-
eteria Sept. 24. Initial T.' Reward.
Phone 7248, ask for Jim. )43
LOST FRIDAY. Brown leather wallet
between Lincoln Ave. and Hutchins
Hall. Finder please call 8483. )28
HELP WANTED
BABY SITTERS wanted. Call 7253, 6-7
p.m. ) 25
WAITRESS-Full and part time. No
evening or Sunday work. Apply Nut
& Nibble Shop, 339 S. Main St. )16
Attendants Wanted
THE NEW
LAUNDERETTE
Full or part time day and evening
hours avaailable. Clean, interesting.
steady work with a good future. Call
for appointment, 2-4241. )10
A RELIABLE, capable girl to take re-
sponsibility in home following re-
turn of mother from hospital Nov.
1-15. Phone 9636 after 6 p.m. )8
PART-TIME JOBS available for stu-
dent waitresses. Apply Chandran's
Cottage Inn, 512 E. William St.
between 1:30-4:30. )1
ATTENTION--Former telephone opera-
tors, we have a limited number of
part time jobs to offer. Apply Michi-
gan Bell Telephone Co., 323 E. Wash-
ington St. )22
SODA BAR
FULL OR PART TIM£
Days only. Apply in person. Witham's
Drug. Corner of Forest and South
University. )20
FOR SALE
ROYAL PORTABLE Typewriter, only
70.00 Call 8600. D. R. Anderson. )24
TWO MICROSCOPES, Savage 720 shot-
gun for sale. Phone 2-0995. )17
SLIDE RULE-K & E Log Log duplex
trig with leather case. Excellent con-
dition. Call 27829, after 6. )23

L~e

J!1Cfene?£Jdoie A

,PPi(at

2tnin

/Qoomj

CtOCKS-Repaired. Week service. SMS
Products. 210 N. Fourth Ave. Tel.
7082. )9
MOVING? Rent big trailers for a dol-
lar at East Ann Arbor Trailer Co.
3304 Platt Rd., 25-9931. )5
RADIOS REPAIRED. Careful work
reasonable prices. Open evenings for
convenience of students. Radio Doc-
tors, 512 E. William, 2-0671. )15
FOR BEST DANCING this fall, it's
music by TOM McNALL'S ORCH.
featuring vocals by JACKIE WARD.
Phone 2-3021 for record audition. )4
TYPING: Theses, term papers, address-
es, etc. Duplicating: Notices, form
letters, programs. A2 Typing Service,
208 Nickels Arcade, phone 9811. )38

WHITE Evening Coat, formals, suits,
coats, dresses, skirts. All excellent
condition. Sizes 9-16. Phone 5586. )42
MOVIE CAMERA Cinemaster II model
0-8, F. 2.5. Coated lens. Like new,
$58. Call 4854. )27
APARTMENT WASHER with stainless
Steel tub; study desk; electric plate.
1435 University Terrace, Apt. 733. )40
NEW, light-weight, 6x30 Binoculars, ex-
cellent for football games. Universal
Geneva Chronograph. 300 Tyler House,
2-4591. )44
LOOKING for a place to live? 1947
United 3-room Housetrailer for sale.
Used 8 weeks. Reasonable. 1026 Lin-
coln. )41
1947 WHIZZER motorbike-cheaper
than walking and much faster. Good
condition. 407 E. Liberty. Phone
2-0720. )30
WOMEN'S white shoe ice skates, ski
boots, raccoon coat, dresses, suits 12-
14. Shoes 6%,2-7AA. Wood clarinet.
Apt. 5, 720 South State. Phone 22035.
)26
'35 HARLEY "74." A-1 shape. Sacrifice.
Call 26824. Ask for Hopps. )19
HOUSE TRAILER $750. 18ft., two room.
Clayton Schooley Trailer No. 7. Shad.y
Park Trailer Camp, 5295 W. Michigan
Ave., Ypsilanti. )15
OLDSMOBILE 1940 - Tudor Sedan. A-1
Mechanical condition, brand new
tires, $1,050. Call 8156 after 9 a.m. )13
FOR SALE: 1937 Fond, good condition,
rebuilt motor, uses no oil, 1591 Lin-
den, Willow Village. Phone Ypsi 1426
R after 1 p.m. )12
CANARIES: Beautiful singers. Colorful
parakeets. Bird supplies and cages.
Mrs. Ruffins, 562 South 7th. )3
FOR SALE-Two beautiful new men's
wrist-watches, 17 jewel Swiss move-
ment. Also various styles of wrist
watch expansion bracelets, gold and
silver. Extremely reasonable prices.
Call 2-7422. )33
BEAUTIFUL diamond wedding ring-
left at the altar. Five matched full
cut registered blue white diamonds
(approximately 1/ carot each) in
platinum setting. Save $150 on pre-
sent retail price of $450. Reply Box
16, Michigan Daily. )34
Read and Use
Daily Classifed Ads
We print 'em all
No job too large or small.
Programs - Tickets
Stationery - Announcements
ROACH PRINTING
209 E. Washington Ph. 8132

Make your reservations with us
for Large Banquets or Private Parties

04
SThe Tavern Ca eteria
.. ~SERVING HOURS:v
LUNCH 11:30 A.M. - 1:30 P.M. DINNER 5 - 7 P.M.
IN BACK OF THE NICKELS ARCADEO
338 MAYNARD STREET
<------> 0<---- > <>--- o< ==----> g-o<= ---<50?<---. <=> --..Yo

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MICHIGAN

4

Now Playing

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Read and Use
The Daily Classifieds

SCOOTER
$225.00.
Sunday.

with side car, Lauson engine.
2217 Vinewood. Ph. 2-3830
Weekdays after 6 p.m. )14

,{
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126 EAST HURON

4
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1
'4
A

Phone 4241

1111 __________________ -fII

1i

E

COMING!!

IN PERSON!!

FRED WARING
AND HIS
PENNSYLVANIANS
sponsored by the
University of Michigan Men's Glee Club
at Hill Auditorium
October 31 and November 1, 1947 8:30 P.M.
(Use this convenient form for ordering concert tickets)
University of Michigan
Mn's Glee Club
Michigan Union
Ann Arbor, Michigan
Enclosed find check or money order for 4..........
for tickets to the Fred Waring concert-number, performadie
and section as indicated below.

a . dravv 11(e a w y c

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You shall find ten mis-
takes in this ad if you

look carefully.

To the

first ten people who bring
in the corrections 'to
Roach printing. 209 E.

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I'll WAM AIDA M

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