PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1954 i 1'ACV ~1X TIlE MIChIGAN DAiLY SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1954 State Board Surveys Plan For Turnpike' By WALLY EBERHARD A Bay City-Toledo Turnpike by '56. That's the goal of the Michigan, Turnpike Authority. When traffic! surveys between the two points are completed sometime in July, the feasibility of such a pay-as-you- drive highway will be known for certain, according to William E. Slaughter, Jr., of Detroit, Author- ity chairman. * * * SEVERAL PROBLEMS face the Authority before bonds are issued and work begins on the road. First, if the road is to connect Bay City and Toledo via De- troit, a route must be chosen close enough to the Motor City without incurring too great a purchase price for right of way. And, as Slaughter said, "People aren't going to drive out to Ann Arbor to get on a turnpike going north." So, the turnpike must be close enough for convenience but far enough out for economy of construction. The estimated cost is $225,000,- 000 and would take two full con- struction "seasons." Present plans call for financing the construction by a bond issue to be paid by revenue from tolls on the proposed road, but before the bonds can be issued a court test of the law cre- ating the authority must be won. * * * THE TEST suit is viewed as necessary to establish the legality of bonds which would be offered to nation-wide investors. The bond issue, according to Slaughter, is a possibility "by late fall or early winter." T h e north-south turnpike could eventually link up with the Ohio turnpike now under construction. Once this Bay City-Toledo pro- ject is successfully underway, the Authority may turn to its number two goal, an east-west pike con- necting Chicago and Detroit, says Slaughter. This toll road, with an estimated cost of about $210,000,000 would begin near Willow Run and stretch eastward 176 miles through Michi- gan to link with the planned Indi- ana turnpike at the Indiana state line. 5@%#242 %#........%':.. v .+32:.. LABORATORY SETUPS WILL BE DEMONSTRATED AS PART OF THE 'U' HOSPITAL OPEN HOUSE TODAY Displays To Be Featured At Hospital Open House Men's Glee To Perform, Here Today' The Men's Glee Club, under the direction of Prof. Philip A. Duey. will give a concert at 8:30 .m. to- day in Hill Auditorium. They will start their program with the traditional opening hymn, "Laudes Atque Carmina" by Stan- ley, '90. Next on the program will be "A Mighty Fortress is Our God" by Luther, to be followed by Han-' del's "Care Selve," Haydn's "To The Women," and Schubert's "The Omnipotence," with K. Thomas Lester, Grad., as tenor soloist. * * * RUSSELL Christopher, Grad.,, will follow as baritone soloist in Balakiriff's "The Call of Freedom" and Verdi's "Ford's Monologue" from "Falstaff." The Glee Club will conclude the first part of the program with R. Vaugh Williams' "Let. Beauty Awake" and "The Infin- ite Shining Heaven" with K. Thomas Lester, Grad., as solo- ist; "The Trumpeter" by J. Airlie Dix; "Far Above The Purple Hills" by Vittorio Gianinni, with Robert McGrath, '54SM, as ten- -; or soloist; and "Luck Be A Lady" from "Guys and Dolls" by Frank Loesser, with Russell Christo- pher, Grad., as soloist. After the intermission, the Glee Club will perform a work they callj "Boy Meets Girl" which includes:: "Romance," "Love Is Where You I Find It," "Easy To Love;" "In The Still Of The Night;" "I'm Getting Sentimental Over You;" "I've Nev- er Been In Love Before;" and "Ah,. Sweet Mystery of Life." A group of selections by the Novelaires will follow. MCFA To Holdj Annual CourseI For Managers i "Tn~ucR~noP_4PnrT AIovie Of n*ed ilaki Everything from a tablet mak- ing' machine used in the hospital pharmacy to a radioactive isotope unit used in detecting cancer will be displayed at the University Hos- pital Day open house for the peo- ple of Ann Arbor from 3 to 6 p.m. tomorrow. Held completely in the Out-Pa- tient Building, Hospital Day will be an opportunity for the com- munity to learn more about the hospital and the people who staff it. Instead of the usual planned tours, the exhibits, being shown by thirty seven of the hospital TV To Show Medical Work 'U' television will present an- other in the Michigan Report ser- ies today at 5:45 p.m. highlighting research on high blood pressure, allergies and industrial health that is being carried on at the Univer- sity's new Kresge Medical Re- search Building. The 15-minute show on WWJ- TV will also describe other parts of the $3,500,000 building which is to be dedicated on May 15. departments, will be examined at close range. T * * OF GENERAL interest will be the Central Services display, show- ing how gloves and needles are tested before use. Some of the equipment which will be used was developed in the University Hos- pital. Also, the University Respira- tory Center -ill demonstrate the equipment used in polio treat- ment. This along with the oc- cupational therapy, physical inedicine and therapy, dietetics, business and finance portions of the program will be explained. One of the more unusual aspects of the program will be that of the hospital school. It will show the play and teaching materials used to make the stay of the, child in the hospital both educational and recreational. rs Tell Pro blem s Making movies has involved e% erything from shooting "on loca- tion" from a helicopter to a staged Michigras parade for the Univer- sity Audio-Visual Education Cen- ter. The Center, in addition to stock- ing 7,500 films for campus use, has produced 16 movies in the last two years to fill University instruction- al and public relations needs. Al- though business has fallen off in Hollywood, Center directors have found that the demand for their films far exceeds their capacity for production, MOVIE MAKING is a long and complicated process, according to production director Aubert Lavas- ,b tida. For just one eight second scene in the Center's latest release, "The First Hundred," the crew took more than 10 days to build a Michigras float, had to do re- search on an 1850 bathing suit and then get local police to shut off traffic while the actual filming took place, Then there are always last minute changes torbe made, with every detail being recorded on the shooting script and later on a master script. Comparing it to a scavenger hunt, Lavastida told of a "constant collecting iu the sound track and camera un- ROLL til you have it all completed." The actual filming is just the beginning, however. In parts where the sound could not be recorded along with the shooting, the nar- rator or actor must read against the picture over and over until the two syncronize. Then music, in some cases an original score, is re- corded and matched frame for frame. All this editing is done on a work print, which has every foot num- bered. Optical effects must , be worked in and by the time the "pilot" film, on which final chan- ges are made, is ordered, there are often as many as five film strips and sound tracks to be combined. The whole process is under di- rection of a production commit- tee, with a University collabora- tor as co-sponsor if it is an edu. cational movie. Personnel are recruited individually for each show and due to lack of space filming is often scattered over a wide area. Judging from sales and rentals, the University's venture into the movie industry has been success6 ful. A New York television firm has distributed films to all 48 states and the State Department has translated one movie into 12 lan- guages. In addition, prints for sales EVERY DETAIL and rental have been ordered from as far away as New Zealand. LAST ADJUSTMENTS BEFORE THE CAMERAS ARE READY TO ,A, ft ' tc ca~ixiai i 1O~ty svManager-meeting -i- Laboratory set ups will be run day's Challenge" will be the theme by medical technicians who have for the Michigan Consumer Fi- included in their program a blood nance Association (MCFA) when1 bank, demonstrating exactly how they hold their annual meeting laboratory tests are carried out. May 11-12 at the University. Some 90 managers will take a IN CONTRAST with these mod- study course on consumer finance ern techniques and methods the management problems. The man- Medical Illustrations Department agers will be divided into two will have a gallery of illustrations groups, an introductory and an showing how medicine has chang- advanced section. ed over the years. The MCFA is being sponsored' Hospital officials have empha- by the business administration sized that those on the staff of school. the hospital will answer any Dean Russell A. Stevenson of the questions that visitors may have business administration will close According to Dr. Albert Kerli- the course with presentation of kowske, Director of University certificates. Hospital, "Our staff will be avail - able to depict at close range the I v ... .... PARKING TROUBLES GOT YOU IN A WHIRL? They won't if you shop at the * BEER Daily 10 m BEER DEPOT 11 .: { 1 i You drive through * SOFT DRINKS * WINE 114 E. Williams Phone 7191 A.M. - 10 P.M. - Sunday, Noon - 7 P.M. many groups which contribute to the medical care for the hospitall patient." Blue Team There will be an important rehearsal of the Blue Team floorshow of this year's Frosh Weekend at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the League Ballroom. All mem- bers of the cast must attend the meeting. Now, 11 GRADUATING SENIORS, ORDER CAPS and GOWNS t Campus Calendar Students of the Christian Stu- dent Foundation of Michigan State: College, sponsored by the Univer- sity Wesley Foundation, will pre- sent Christopher Fry's "A Sleep of Prisoners" at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist Church. In the play Fry portrays man's struggle to understand himself and his relationship to God. This is the second presentation of the play this semester. The performance is open to all students and faculty. African Union will present its third annual cultural show fea- turing native art, music and danc- ing at 8 p.m. today in the Rack- ham Bldg. Foreign students will perform African dances accompanied by native music. They will also give a commentary on the culture of that continent. Exhibitions of art from different parts of Af- rica will be featured. The eve- ning will conclude with social dancing. A fee of 25 cents will cover re- freshments, SL Guild "Bloodhounds of Broadway" starring Mitzi Gaynor, Scott Brady and Wally Vernon will be shown by the Student Legis- lature Cinema Guild at 7 and 9 p.m. today and 8 p.m. Sunday in the Architecture Auditorium. Admission is 50c. Although orchids were once thought to be parasites on trees, it is now known that they cling to trees, but do not take any nour- ishment from them. - 3 WRITE IT, CHANGE IT, REVISE IT-SCRIPT CONFERENCES GO OVER] . . , at. . . 7v rspt S. k 71 1 N. University -- Harold S. Trick - South State FILM AND SOUND TRACKS MUST BE COORDINATED,. . ... AND CHECKED FOR PERFECT SYNCHRONIZATION f L II Graduatin Order your DAILY for next year now!l DAILY PHOTO FEATURE ,,. .:v <: :h::vt"i:. j;:: ..:y 1 n .. .... ..... .. r'.:'y . .. . :. _.