Educational screen & audio-visual guide (c1956-1971])

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Michigan professor uses Argus TV camera to teacli TV instruction Edward Stasheff, Professor of Speech at the University of Michigan, explains: "For my course in TV production, I need a camera that is compact and easy to move between studio and classroom, yet gives me sharp, clear results," NOW JUST *595* -the cost of a movie projectorcan bring your school closed -circuit television. This new Argus Direct-Wire TV Camera transmits a clear, vivid picture with ordinary room light. It telecasts up to 1000 feet through standard co-axial cable. It hooks up to any TV receiver without interfering with regular reception. It can produce the same picture on several receivers at once, or as many as four cameras can be channeled to a single receiver. It costs about one third as much as other closed-circuit TV cameras. 'price includes 1-inch, f/1.9 lens; telephoto and wide-angle lenses available at modest extra cost argus "The Argus Uirect-Wire TV Camera gives me the picture quality I need with nothing more than normal room light." "It attaches to any TV receiver, warms up in just five minutes. And you don't have to be an engineer to operate it." Available for purchase under the National Defense Education Act. argus AV Audio-Visual Systoms Ann Arbor, Michigan WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET: How to use Direct-Wire TV as a lowcost educational tool. Argus A/V Systems Dept. AA Argus Cameras, Inc. Ann Arbor, Michigan Name Schools GENERAL TELEPHONE & ELECTRONICS \«S?/