Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 185, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1958 — Page 10
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• 5 Aa '' ' e B ’ 4 I fIV SEEK? v■ & vlv i '' .fl '■ * ■■ W‘V ; ■■ I * w&Mh : •■•? JSaEEr ** \ '*%agV *ij'- % '’* ■’*«>*«** rw* ’L - WANDA NEUENBCHWANDER, seated far right, of Monroe and Adams Central high school, is attending the yearbook division of the high school journalism institute at Indiana University. She will return home Aug. 9. Other yearbook editors looking over samples with Mrs. Ann H. Adman, seated left, publications advisor at Fairmont high school, Kettering, 0., are, left to right, seated: Bradley Blair, Ossian: and Dianne Brandt. Fort Wayne; and standing: Cathy Noble, Huntertown; Carol Houser, Huntington, and Nancy Kaufman, Roanoke. •
Converts Old Filins Into Safety Filins Films Converted For Presentation UPI Hollywood Correspondent
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HOLLYWOOD (UPD—It doesn't, cost a. nickel to see one of the best movies in town, a 50-year-old charmer made by a French magician whose films were mixing , “live” actors with cartoon characters before Walt Disney was born. The movie. “The Golden Spec-! taeles,” belongs to the film li-
, brary of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and now is being converted to 16 mm safety film for preservation purposes by Kemp Niver, a leading specialist in the film reclamation field. Niver makes documentaries and educational films on a full-time basis and works on the academy library as his avocation. “Up to 1948, when safety film ' was introduced, all film for the- ! atre projection was on nitrate i stock,” he explained. “In spite of ; all care and precaution, nitrate i film shrinks and disintegrates with time.’’ , Can Be Salvaged That was what was happening to the collection before Niver came up with a means of salvaging the. .molding film.... Th is _is a accomplished by re-photographing each frame 1 of the film. “Another three or four years and there wouldn’t have been anything left to salvage,” Niver said, opening a container labeled “W-. S. Hart” to illustrate his point.
The pungent odor of decay was strong as he handled the film, each frame hand-colored as was the technique in the pre-Techni-color days. The celluloid was laced with rot'and buckled with an almost alligator-like finish. Niver is adamant on the subject of preserving movie classics for historical purposes if for no Either reason. — “Cecil B. DeMille doesn’t have a print of his silent movies that he can project,” Niver said. “And the same true of the other early movie makers.” -Storage Is Costly “They pay storage all these years, and even if it’s on their own lot they’re paying storage, and all that’s left are cans of a i highly-inflammable powder which ! gives off poisonous gas when i burned—and no film. “It's like paying for a barnful I of hay that’s not edible. It's silly ito pay storage on it.” i Trade in a g< od town — Decatur
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR. INDIANA
All-American Girl Hit Os World Fair U. S. Hostesses Popular At Fair By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor BRUSSELS (UPD—The AllAmerican girl is a hit with all who visit the U.S. Pavilion at the Brussels World’s Fair. And this includes the men who first ask the hostesses for information but stick around to ask for dates. The information is readily available; the dates are not. “Oh, I have plenty of sociallife here,” said Kaye Karlan, a blueeyed brunette of 23, from Denver. Colo. “But most of us date boys we’ve met through friends, the same as back home. We get plenty of other offers, especially from Gl's stationed over here,” said
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Kaye, a graduate of Northwestern University. “We expect that," laughed Freida Weisblatt, 21, of Fort Worth, Texas, a junior at thd University of Texas. “That’s part of the American routine." Too Young “Only thing is, the Gl’s usually are younger than we are,” said Renee Straus, 22, of Camden, N.J. The be - friendly - but - not-too-friendly policy is one hostesses have adopted for their summer long job of putting America’s best foqt forward at the fair, where 54 countries including Russia are exhibiting. All will stay until the fair closes Oct. 19. I stood for an hour by the U.S. information center, just inside the American Pavilion, watching these three cheerfully answer questions from a steady stream of visitors. My own reaction was one of pride in these girls, all attractive, all looking well-scrubbed and neat in their pale gray two-piece suit uniforms. They are doing a good job of diplomacy at the person-
to-per Son level. And the European reaction to them is friendliness in return. “So many of them come back to say we are nice,” Miss Karlan said. Speak Other Languages All told, we have 190 hostesses working in various parts of the American Pavilion, plus other young men and women serving as guides and demonstrators. The hostesses were selected for their personality, appearance and intelligence. And all speak at least two languages besides English. I asked the three girls what questions were most frequent. All three" agreed mey were: “Where can we get a hot dog?” (any snack bar). “Where is Circarama?” (an impressive, and free, tour of the
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United States with a movies-in-the round technique): and “Where are the rest rooms?” Foil Wayne Purdue Center's Fall Term Fall Semester Will Open September 18 Fall semester classes will begin Sept. 18 at the Fort Wayne center of Purdue university, Dr. R. M. Bateman, center director, announced today. Registration should be completed early for all those expecting to enroll at the center. "Diose who
THURSDAY. AUGUST 7, 1958
have not filed applications for admission should do so lyTime schedules for placement tests will be mailed to all newly admitted students. The registration office will be open from 9 a.m. until 8 p.m. Monday through Thursdays, and unt'l 4 p.m. Fridays. Counseling and pre-registering will be done at the registration office during these hours. One to two years of the entire range of the university’s undergraduate baccalaureate program, plus some graduate work, is offered at the center. New courses offered this semester include general zoology, advanced electronic circuits, and psychology of the slow-learning child.«
