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light source so that it is shared by both the film and the live TV pick-up sections of the unit. In ordinary film¬ ing, the director first sets up his shot by peering in the camera’s view¬ finder. After that, while the camera is rolling, only the cameraman can see what the film is recording. Because of the live TV aspects of Electronicam, the director sees simultaneously on his monitor screens what all his cameras, whatever their number (Gleason uses four), are picking up. In addition, a film director, sitting at another monitor control panel, can judge the technical quality of the film. The camera itself allows the same freedom of movement and ease of focusing as a standard live TV camera. A single focus handle permits con¬ tinuous control of focusing through¬ out the shooting sequence. And the cameraman can switch from one lens to another—from a long shot to a close-up—by pushing a button. If you had a chance to sit in on a studio rehearsal of The Honeymoon- ers, you’d hardly suspect the show was to be filmed. Gleason, Art Carney, Audrey Meadows, Joyce Randolph and others in the cast start rehearsing at about 2 o’clock in the afternoon and finish about an hour-and-a-half later. When they come back in the evening to film the shows before the live au¬ dience, they complete the entire half- hour script in about 40 minutes. As Gleason himself points out, it might take three days to film a show by standard filming procedures. Since two Saturday night shows are filmed each week, on Tuesday and Thursday the whole season’s series can be finished by early spring. It may be that the process will per¬ suade many shows that are now being telecast live, to switch to film. She’s popular! Because she meets so many people, she relies on internal sani¬ tary protection. There’s lots about the bulky belt-pin-pad harness that is defi-. nitely repellent to fastidious women. The possibility of odor, for example. Or bulges. All the many difficulties and problems that Tampax eliminates! She’s a leader! She was the first in her set to turn to Tampax. Nobody urged her, nobody advised her—she made up her own mind from an ad such as this. Every Tampax advantage seemed logical, true—and desirable. The way it ends disposal problems. The fact it’s invisible and unfelt when in place. She’s a Tampax user! She wouldn’t go back to "all that other rigmarole’’ (as she puts it) for the world. She’s even grateful for the small size and incon¬ spicuousness of Tampax. You can get your choice of 3 absorbencies of Tampax (Regular, Super, Junior) at any drug or notion counter. Do it tins month ITampax Incorporated, Palmer, Mass. — Adv. 19