PAOK TWO
eilAPIif. HILL NEWS LEAOiR
f^ONDAY
^ovemb^
’ =■
1
I ol'f, the doctors walk away Trom
their “stage” and the crew remove
i their earphones. It is time to strike
I (he multiplicity of wires, lights and
' bulky cameras.
toastmasters n,
‘Tsumo
:
,t
is li-VJR-
Seemingly it is not unlike
night the circus leaves town.
the
weekly meetiiiB
I'eay
3
25,000 VICTIMS
iW
'."Mtvi
{\ T
iySLV-J^
;,•*/* c
Before the end of the year
loss precautionary measures are
redoubled, North Carolina will
.have .'Ufferecl 25,000 traffic
deaths. Moth Vehicles Depart
ment records reveal that fi'otn
1930 through 1954, 23,097 per
sons have been killed in Tar
Heel trafJ'ic accidents.
lioom of
T'liillips will serve
ler of this meetina
^''erj
1955,
Cht
Toast,
If
y°f' have a nh
un-^your name your creSi"Vi'
deader ciassif;
News
led Ads,
gran p
CHILD^ESj]
Agent
JEFFERSON STANhAB*
L'PE 'NSURance J
GETTING READY FOR THE SHOW
. . . Chccl:i-!iii On Interc.om With The ('nnieram^yi .
From WUNC-TV's Mobile Nerve Center, . .
SHOOTING THE
Cu'ntf’ra Mvvin/ hi On The
TITLE
hi.troduclioii
Roll
'AAONITORING' THE SHOW
Cmnenmian Views A.s' He 'Shoots
Project Health'—Nine Hours Preparation For One On The Air
the heavy cameras and other ap
paratus are as deft as a precision
watchmaker’s.
For
By SCOTT SKINNER
10 hours last Fi’iday several
!h)Cl
black elcclrical cables
! r
-trctdied 250 feet from a red, yel
low and blue bus. through a sec
ond-floor wiiulow, to the clinic of
the • University Dental School.
Wt.hYC T'V's Project Health was in
hs nine hours of preparation for
one hour of broadcasting.
So it is every two weeks when
“Project Health" roams the Chap
el Hil campus and vicinity with
its mobile unit, aconverted trail-
ways bus outfitted with intricate
power and relay equipment. Two
television cameras, liglits, cables,
sound equipment, and the mobile
unit leave the siiidio under the
supervision of WTilter Ryan, pro
ductions operations man.
nected to the bus by 150-foot ca
bles.
La t Friday night from 8:30 to
9:30. Project Health took the tele
vision audience into the Dental
School to show them liow football
olayers’ teeth are being protected
by newly developed mouthguards.
from the mobile unit? Were there
eclioes in the clinic which would
distort sound? And could the cam
eras move successfully from room
to room as the show progressed?
this:
When it is all over,
Flower SIioi
the lights go
Opposite
Post Office
Phone
4851
It •
Need Early Start
why the crew gets
$5 &
flus tax
"Fitall" with zipper closure and spring top
opening. Collapses to height of contents
Oiled »lk lined.
$5.00 & Up
plus tax
"Fitall" With aulon: 'fir sp'
Cfillaf/ses to he ght of copi
lined.
Tf if'p opening.
• ils. Oiled
Ilk
Carolina S
151 E. Franklin £
it Shop
Phono 87851
A crew of nine television tech
nicians and students may be tele-
. " ^
oir
vising classes at the Pharmacy
School, rehabilitation at Gravely
Sanatorium, physical therapy at
Memorial Hospital, nr any other
number of subjects dealing with
liealth in North Carolina.
The afternoon preparation of
:setting up the unit at the Dental
School was minor compared to the
last minute rehearsals and equip
ment checks. Was the micro-wave
signal reaching the transmitter
This is why the crew gets an
early start. Unlike the movies,
there, will 'be no re-takes if a mis
take occurs. But for all the prepa
ration, tlie minutes prior to the
telecast are tense. Surprisingly,
once on the air, the crew is relax
ed. T'lcir cat-like movements with
The nerve center of the program
is the five-man team in the bus,
headed by Duff Browne, WUNC-
TV Director. His staff includes an
engineer, audio operator, technical
director, and production assistant.
Lee Brooks Gets Ford Grant;
To Contmue At Whittier College
Prof. Lee Brooks, who retired
from the University sociology fac
ulty la.st year, has received a Ford i
Foundation grant at Whittier Col-
This is the same personnel needed lege in California where he is now
for a program
studio.
originating at the
Intercom For Director
THE GOLFER’S
Unique gift set for golfers. Exciting, dif
ferent. Famous MacGregor t^Ilander Goli
Bails and Color Magic '‘Scotty" ash trays
Atlractivcly packaged.
Carolina Sport Shop
151 E. Franklin St. Ph. 87851
By ttrlking over an intercom
system to the crew in the clinic,
Mr. Browne supervises the over
all-show as toe two cameras are
operating. And his men make sure
the program is broadcastin,g prop
erly. The heat given off by the
banks of their eleclronic equip
ment is intense. Thcretore the bus
houses two air-conditioners.
To relay tlic picture and sound to ‘
!he tran.smitter, a micro-wave unit!
was placed atop the Medical School, |
aimed at tlie transmitter, and con-
'.|i'
KEYNOTE
be first to see and hear the
New
1956
Mode!
COLUMBIA ”360
Phonograph
K
., w.:
i-
: , s' " N 'f ''' '
f i>S '
V 1:
^ "360" K PORT-
ABLE all wooden
case covered in
famous Goodyear
Neolile, Durable
and scuff-proof.
Available in
Suntan. Copper,
Charcoal, Green
and Royal Blue
$145.95
THE 1956 MODEL OF THE WORLD'S
MOST Vi/ANTED PHONOGxRAPH OF
FERS YOU THE ULTIMATE IN HIGH
FIDELITY SOUND. THE '56 COMES E-
QUIPPED WITH A DIAMOND NEEDLE,
at no extra charge! Completely automa
tic, three-speed record changer. . . ex
clusive, precision balanced Columbia
tone arm. . extra high compliance car
tridge. . world famous Columbia Kilo-
sphere sound system, .frequency range
from 50 to over 20,000 cps. .separate
control knobs for volume, treble and
bass. . one diamond and one sapphire
needle. . entire unit shuts off after last
record has been played.
teaching.
In a recent letter to Edgar
Tlioma.s here, Mr. and Mr.s. Brooks
told of his recent appointment.
He will continue at Whittier as
professor of .sociology. Following
are excerpts from their letter.
“. . . While I'm living in Cali
fornia I’ni working is ha.'d{ as
ever on tlic faculty of Whittier
College, Today I have just had
word tliat I am appointed under a
Ford grant as a graduate seminar
prof'e.s,sor in the gi-aduate program
of the Associated Colleges of Po
mona, Occidental, Whittier, Red
lands, and others for 1956-56. ...
Professorial, status and bulk of
teadiing will continue at Whittier.
“Whittier, the community, is a
city of over 30.000 in the big, buz
zing confusion that is the Los An
geles metropolitan area. ITowever,
the college is quietly located ....
a bit over 1,000 students. We are
two miles from the campus and 15
miles from the center of Los An
geles. A two-hour drive gets us
LirE BROOKS
tention of teaching anywhere this
coming summer but expect to
drive back to North Carolina and
probably to New England.
. . We still buy ice cream by
the barrel, about the same price
as in Chapel Hill. And here’s one
for the book, the only explanation
being, we guess, in some sort of
into the beauties and clear air of ’ gimmick or some qual-
the San Bernadino Mountains
where we w'ero witii about 100
students and faculty last Saturday
and Sunday for a penetrating study
of how to make the college better
and better ....
“We do not have the least in-
ity difference: Tire- Chapel Hill
News Leader tells of A and P
selling California Bartlett pears at
15 cents per pound- on the very
day we bought them here at the
Co-op store for 17 cents a pound.
Something’s crazy...” i
PASTORS' PARAGRAPHS
Excerpts From Sunday Sermons
4 ' '
THE FASHION !N SOUND
IS COLUMBIA
Carolina Sno
151 E. Franklin St.
Phone 87851
The Rev. Henry Ruark
Community Thanksgiving Service,
Carrboro Methodist Church
Subject: "Enriched For Generosi
ty"
Text: II Corinthians 9:11
As I tried to prepare for thi.s
occasion I found myself confront
ed by a question. At Thanksgiving,
when “all is safely gathered in,”
we are prompted to count our
blessings. And surely tliey are
very great. I suppose it is true
without question that no people
at any time any where on earth
have had such an abundance of
goods, as we today in America. In
deed, our most pressing economic
problem is just this: what are we
lo do wilh our surplus? In on&
respect at least we are like the
rich man in Jesus’ parable; our
barns are not big enough to hold
ail that we have acciimulaled.
I The question tiiat presents it
self is this: why arc we so enrich
ed? Why are we in this time and
place blessed witli a greater abun
dance than any others have ever
known? A.s I have reflected on
that que.stion, i( has seemed to me
that the true answer is to be found
not so much in terms of economics
as of religion.
The reason for our riclies is not
'vay,” he says, “for great generos-
ty.” The purpose for which these
blessings are so generously given
0 us is that w-e might give gen-
;rou.sly to others.
Here then is our real thanksgiv-
ng; in the generosity of our shar-
ng the abundance that has been
)e.stowed upon us. For only in our
living can we show that we really
ippreciate the fact that these
chings have been given us Out of
aich simple service comes the ov
erflow of “many thanksgivings to
lod.”
I 'hat we arc '‘the people”. Some
times wo arc apt to assume thal
I tills is so: tliat jusl because we
I are Amei’icans we are richer by
I riglU, Bui Peter, wlio had a similar
I notion in liis head, had to learn
I that God is no respecter of per-
■ sons.
j The Cliristian answer to our
I question, I think, is imbedded here
in Paul’s letter to the Corinthians:
j "You will be enriched in every
Moyffower
Coilecfion Se
For Library
A move to bring all materials
■nd records relating to the May-
lower Cup, annual award given
)y toe State Society of the May-
lower Descendants, to the Uni-
■ersity Library at Chapel Hill has
lecn announced by Sturgis E. Lea-
’itl, lieutenant governor, of the
locicty and Kenan prpfessor of
ipnnish at UNC.
Ail winners of, the Mayflower
'up in nasi years and in the fut-
rc will be requested to deposit
a tile f.ibrary tlie ori.ginal manu-
cript.s, note.s, cards and other doc- j
imenialion relating to the compo- |
ition of tile award-winning book. :
?he University Library is current- i
y planning an exhibit of b loks j
vhich wall be in competition fc the
1955 Mayflow’cr Award, to b : an- j
nounced on December 2.
m
le-c
Monday
Hov
28 Is
opening
Ben
ne^'t
8c
B\ocksH9®
SfORt
OPE»*
UHT'E
9^0
CLOCtt
riere’.s vonr cimnee, .sir, to
make tliis Christmas a REAL
surprise! Come to our Men’s
Night and see all the new
Frigidaire Appliances — in
color—and pick the one Aour
lady wants most. A new
Frigidaire Appliance will be a
gift to give her a new Lift to
Li\ing-for years! Sure we’ll
trade—and make r-ou a pretty
big offer for your old refriger
ator, range or washer. Be sure
to see us on IMEN’S NIGHT!
New automatic Washer
witli Econo-Dial. Live-
Water Action, Float-Over
Rinsing and Rapidri' Spin
get clothes sparkling clean
and pounds drier; some
ready for ironing.
Moiiel! WI-56, DI-5(
Filtra-niatic Electric elotlies
Dryer —needs no veiiti,
plmnlhng nr duets. Male!
any hour of the day or nigh,
the perfect drying tinie-
regardless how good nr bad
tile W'eathej.
"Y-
(ipfe
I
T
Model RI-70-56
14.3 tu. ft. Cold-Pantry Model CP-143-.56
with E’ood Freezer on tlie bottom.
2-Oven, Imperial Electric Range "i'di
Miracle Filter. zVll porcelain LiislA
WE’LL DELIVER ON CHRISTMAS EVE
To help keep ^■our surprise a secret, we’ll make delivery,
of anv Frigidaire Appliance you buy, on Christmas Eve
—anci if you can get her out of the house at that time-
great! Ask us about tlie new Frigidaire products. ^
Make a note NOi!
Be here
Monday
•%*
Night
•4'
The lovely items pictureci above are not the only
gifts th,3t you will find here to enhance the beauty ot
heme and make it a more convenient ^ lace in which to
the better luxuries of life
Pave
suit th
Bennett & Blocksidge
"Your Frigidaire Dealer"
105 E. Franklin St. phone 6h