Chapter 10 of 18 · 127288 words · ~636 min read

PART I

. (The Instructo-Film Series)

Appl. author: Louis G. Bayo.

© Audivision Language Teaching Service; title, descr., & 2 prints; 21Jan43; MU13214.

SPANISH INFLUENCE IN THE UNITED STATES. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Traces the march of the Spanish conquistadores from Florida to California and shows their influence on the architecture, language, religion, and customs of the United States.

Credits: Collaborator, Frederick G. Neel.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 13Apr48; MP3104.

THE SPANISH MAIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 100 min., sd., color. A Frank Borzage production.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Ames; director, Frank Borzage; original story, Aeneas MacKenzie; screenplay, George Worthing Yates, Herman J. Mankiewicz; music, Hanns Eisler; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Ralph Dawson. Technicolor.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Sep45; LP13682.

SPARE TIME IN THE ARMY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,135 ft., sd. (Panoramic, no. 7)

Credits: Conceived and produced by Franklin Coen, Bob Churchill, Bernard Rubin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Feb42; LP11096.

SPARK PLUGS IN AVIATION. Bray Studios, Inc., c1941. 3 reels.

© Bray Studios, Inc.; 21Feb41; MP10920.

THE SPARKLE STRUT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP53.

SPEAKING OF ANIMALS. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1941–49. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Directors, Lou Lilly, Lew Landers; writers, Walter Anthony, Dave Mitchell, Lou Lilly, Charles Shows; narrator, Ken Carpenter.

Down on the Farm. © 18Aug41; MP11070.

Y 1–1. In a Pet Shop. © 5Sep41; MP11518.

Y 1–2. In the Zoo. © 31Oct41; MP11719.

Y 1–3. At the County Fair. © 2Jan42; MP12078.

Y 1–4. In the Circus. © 29May42; MP12535.

Y 1–5. At the Dog Show. © 28Aug42; LP11580.

Y 1–6. In South America. © 25Sep42; LP11648.

Y 2–1. And Their Families. © 18Dec42; MP13179.

Y 2–2. At the Bird Farm. © 26Feb43; MP13404.

Y 2–3. In Current Events. © 7May43; LP12050.

Y 2–4. At the Cage Door Canteen. © 25Jun43; LP12123.

Y 2–5. In the Garden. © 20Aug43; MP14571.

Y 2–6. In the Desert. © 5Oct43; MP14036.

Y 3–1. Tails of the Border. © 17Dec43; MP14438.

Y 3–2. In Winter Quarters. © 28Jan44; MP14454.

Y 3–3. In the Newsreels. © 17Mar44; LP12548.

Y 3–4. Your Pet Problem. © 20May44; MP14893.

Y 3–5. In a Harem. © 14Jul44; MP15063.

Y 3–6. Monkey Business. © 15Sep44; MP15194.

Y 4–1. As Babies. © 24Nov44; MP15442.

Y 4–2. Who's Who in Animal Land. © 19Jan45; MP15594.

Y 4–3. In the Public Eye. © 16Mar45; MP15746.

Y 4–4. As the Talk of the Town. © 18May45; MP15959.

Y 4–5. In a Musical Way. © 20Jul45; MP16155.

Y 5–1. Animal-ology. © 30Nov45; MP16595.

Y 5–2. The Hill-Billies. © 18Jan46; MP129.

Y 5–3. In the Post War Era. © 21Feb46; MP217.

Y 5–4. In the Wilds. © 10May46; MP552.

Y 5–5. The Lonesome Stranger. © 14Jun46; LP376.

Y 5–6. Be Kind to Animals. © 30Aug46; MP1064.

Y 6–1. Stork Crazy. © MP1234.

Y 6–2. Pooch Parade. © 27Dec46; MP1481.

Y 6–3. Country Life. © 21Feb47; MP1736.

Y 6–4. They're Not So Dumb. © 28Mar47; LP907.

Y 6–5. In Love. © 30May47; LP1025.

Y 6–6. As Our Friends. © 27Jun47; LP1077.

Y 7–1. Dog Crazy. © 6Oct47; LP1225.

Y 7–2. Ain't Nature Grand. © 1Nov47; LP1287.

Y 7–3. Monkeyshines. © 12Dec47; LP1347.

Y 7–4. Home Sweet Home. © 6Feb48; MP2767.

Y 7–5. Tain't So. © 16Apr48; MP2888.

Y 7–6. As Headliners. © 18Jun48; LP1678.

Y 8–1. The Gnu Look. © 29Oct48; MP3472.

Y 8–2. Calling All Animals. © 7Jan49; MP3667.

Y 8–3. Meet the Champ. © 11Feb49; MP3858.

Y 8–4. Hocus Focus. © 22Apr49; MP4011.

Y 8–5. Goin' Hollywood. © 14Jun49; MP4160.

Y 8–6. Video Hounds. © 10Aug49 (in notice: 1948); MP4425.

SPEAKY-SPAK-SPOKE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jan42; MP12089.

SPECIAL AGENT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on material by Milton Raison.

Summary: The agent of a small railroad station in California apprehends a pair of train robbers. Based on fact.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William C. Thomas; screenplay, Lewis R. Foster, Whitman Chambers; music score, Lucien Cailliet; film editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: William Edythe, George Reeves, Laura Elliot, Paul Valentine.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Jul49; LP2519.

SPECIAL SERVICE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 15Oct47, 5 prints, 11Oct47; MU2381.

THE SPECIFIC GRAVITY OF HEALTHY MEN. Leon Schlesinger Productions for the U. S. Navy.

Appl. author: Hugh MacMullan.

© Leon Schlesinger Productions; title & descr., 21Dec43; 3 prints, 22Jan44; MU14437.

THE SPECK ON THE WALL. SEE Law of the Timber.

SPECTER OF THE ROSE. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 10 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Lee Garmes; directed and written by Ben Hecht; music score, George Antheil; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Jun46; LP355.

A SPEECH BY THE LATE PRESIDENT CALVIN COOLIDGE ON ECONOMY, GIVEN IN THE SPRING OF 1925. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Appl. author: Lee DeForest.

© Henrietta K. Clark; title & descr. 3Feb40; 2 prints, 10Feb40; MU10059.

SPEECH: STAGE FRIGHT AND WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT. Centron Corp., Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the causes of stage fright, and shows what can be done to conquer this fear. For high school and college classes.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 28Oct49; MP4751.

SPEED COUNTS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the Dearborn Motors mower at work in an alfalfa field, with the farmer easily adjusting the cutter bar from the tractor seat.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 13Apr49; MU3999.

SPEED COURIERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Russ Johns.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Jun44; MP14958.

THE SPEED NUT SAVINGS FACTOR. Presented by Tinnerman Products, Inc. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 12 prints, 5Oct46; MU1144.

SPEED TO SPARE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A stunt driver gives up racing to become a member of a cargo-trucking firm. Rivalry between the driver and a mechanic results in tragedy.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Milton Raison; film editor, Monty Pearce.

Cast: Richard Arlen, Jean Rogers, Richard Travis, Roscoe Karns, Nanette Parks.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14May48; LP1621.

SPEEDBALL FOR GIRLS. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Introduces girls' physical education classes to speedball, a field game combining features of soccer, basketball, and football. Includes slow-motion shots of players in action, and explains rules.

Credits: Collaborator, Marjorie E. Fish.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 1Dec47; MP3277.

SPEEDING YOUR READING. Teaching Aids Exchange, c1946. 10 min., sd., 16mm.

Credits: Written by John Randolph Humphreys, Jr.; narrator, John Grover.

© John Randolph Humphreys, Jr.; 20May46; MP607.

THE SPELL OF THE FANDANGO (EL EMBRUJO DEL FANDANGO) c1941. Presented by Arthur Sanchez. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Jean Angelo; original music, Jose Maria Palomo.

Appl. author: Carmen Amaya.

© Arthur Sanchez; 6Mar41; MP11182.

SPELLBOUND. Released by United Artists, c1945. Presented by David O. Selznick. 12 reels, sd. A Selznick International picture. Suggested by Francis Beeding's novel "The House of Dr. Edwardes."

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, Ben Hecht; adaptation, Angus MacPhail; music, Miklos Rozsa; photographer, George Barnes; film editor, Hal C. Kern.

© Vanguard Films, Inc.; 28Dec45; LP13711.

SPELLING IS EASY. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Educational author, Viola Theman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 5Feb47; MP2015.

SPENT FULLERS EARTH FOUND EFFECTIVE IN CONTROL OF INCENDIARY BOMBS.

Appl. author: Guilford C. Jones.

© Floridin Co.; title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Dec42; MU13160.

SPICY AND SPANISH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Oct44; MP15339.

THE SPIDER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 5,160 ft., sd. Based on a play by Charles Fulton Oursler and Lowell Brentano.

Credits: Director, Robert Webb; screenplay, Jo Eisinger, Scott Darling; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Nov45; LP97.

THE SPIDER RETURNS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels). Based upon "The Spider" magazine stories. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, Larry Darmour; director, James W. Horne; story, Morgan B. Cox, Lawrence E. Taylor, John Cutting, Harry Fraser; screenplay, Jesse A. Duffy, George Plympton; music, Lee Zahler; film editors, Dwight Caldwell, Earl Turner.

1. The Stolen Plans. © 5May41; LP10962.

2. The Fatal Time-Bomb. © 13May41; LP10963.

3. The Secret Meeting. © 20May41; LP10964.

4. The Smoke Dream. © 26May41; LP10965.

5. The Gargoyle's Trail. © 2Jun41; LP10966.

6. The X-Ray Eye. © 9Jun41; LP10967.

7. The Radio Boomerang. © 16Jun41; LP10968.

8. The Mysterious Message. © 21Jun41; LP10969.

9. The Cup of Doom. © 27Jun41; LP10970.

10. The X-Ray Belt. © 7Jul41; LP10971.

11. Lips Sealed by Murder. © 9Jul41; LP10972.

12. A Money Bomb. ©21Jul41; LP10973.

13. Almost a Confession. © 24Jul41; LP10974.

14. Suspicious Telegrams. © 26Jul41; LP10975.

15. The Payoff. © 3Aug41; LP10976.

THE SPIDER WOMAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd. Based on the story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Roy William Neill; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; film editor, James Gibbons.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Nov43; LP12378.

THE SPIDER WOMAN STRIKES BACK. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Arthur Lubin; original screenplay, Eric Taylor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Apr46; LP256.

SPILLS AND CHILLS. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sports News Review) Warner Bros.

Summary: Scenes of daredevils of yesterday, including acrobats, motorcyclists, speeding car drivers, and many other stunt men.

Credits: Directed and written by Robert Youngson; narrator, Dan Donaldson; editor, Albert Helmes.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Nov49; MP4723.

SPILLS FOR THRILLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 19 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Producer and director, DeLeon Anthony; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures. Inc.; 17Jun40; MP10279.

SPIN THE BOTTLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11681.

SPINACH FER BRITAIN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Carl Meyer; animation, Jim Tyer, Abner Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Jan43; LP11807.

SPINACH PACKIN' POPEYE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Bill Turner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jul44; LP12804.

SPINACH VS. HAMBURGERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color. 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Larz Bourke; animation, Al Eugster, Tom Moore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Aug48; LP1785.

SPINNING A YARN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 135)

Credits: Produced, directed and written by Thomas Mead, Joseph O'Brien.

© Universal Pictures Co.; Inc.; 7Aug44; MP15238.

SPINNING ROPES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Jun46; MP679.

SPINNING STEPS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr45; MP15777.

THE SPIRAL STAIRCASE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 83 min., sd. Based on the novel "Some Must Watch" by Ethel Lina White.

Credits: Producer, Dore Schary; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Mel Dinelli; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editors, Harry Marker, Harry Gerstad.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec45; LP123.

THE SPIRIT OF ANNAPOLIS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevity)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Nov42; LP11693.

SPIRIT OF BOOGIE WOOGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Aug42; MP12851.

SPIRIT OF DEMOCRACY. SEE Variety Views, no. 114.

THE SPIRIT OF 1941. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 894 ft., sd. (The Washington Parade)

Credits: Narrative, William M. Nelson; narrator, Basil Ruysdael; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Mar41; MP11226.

THE SPIRIT OF STANFORD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Charles Barton; story, William Brent, Nick Lukats; screenplay, Howard. J. Green, William Brent, Nick Lukats; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Sep42; LP11604.

THE SPIRIT OF WEST POINT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevity)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 5Dec42; LP11715.

THE SPIRIT OF WEST POINT. Bro-Rog Pictures Corp., c1947. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on an original story by Margaret Mary Howard.

Credits: Director, Ralph Murphy; written for the screen and narrated by Tom Reed.

Cast: Felix "Doc" Blanchard, Glenn Davis.

© Bro-Rog Pictures Corp.; 1Oct47; LP1269.

SPIRITUAL REARMAMENT. Willard Pictures, c1941. Presented by National Bible Press. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Robert T. Furman, Jr.

© National Publishing Co.; 26Nov41; MP11862.

THE SPIRITUALIST. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A young woman is victimized by a fraudulent medium who claims he can communicate with the spirit of her supposedly dead husband. The medium, when he sees the girl led into danger, repents his deception and exposes a criminal plot against the girl.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Bernard Vorhaus; original story, Crane Wilbur; screenplay, Muriel Roy Bolton, Ian McLellan Hunter; music director, Irving Friedman; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: Turhan Bey, Lynn Bari, Cathy O'Donnell, Richard Carlson, Donald Curtis.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 7Jul48; LP1730.

SPITFIRE. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 90 min., sd. A Leslie Howard production.

Credits: Director, Leslie Howard; original story, Henry C. James, Kay Strueby; screenplay, Miles Malleson, Anatole De Grunwald; music, William Walton; music direction, Muir Mathieson; film editor, Douglas Myers.

Appl. authors: Misbourne Pictures, Ltd. and British Aviation Pictures, Ltd.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Jun43; LP12106.

SPLASH HAPPY. Soundies Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc.; 30Dec46; MP1776.

SPLITS, SPARES AND STRIKES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 913 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 68)

Credits: Narrator, Dan Seymour; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Feb41; MP11169.

THE SPOILERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Frank Lloyd; director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Lawrence Hazard, Tom Reed; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Apr42; LP11208.

SPOILERS OF THE NORTH. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, Richard Sale; original screenplay, Milton M. Raison; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, William Thompson.

Cast: Paul Kelly, Adrian Booth, Evelyn Ankers, James A. Millican.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP901.

SPOILS OF CONQUEST. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 12.

SPOOK BUSTERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jan Grippo; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, Edmond Seward, Tim Ryan; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, Harry Neumann; editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Aug46; LP535.

SPOOK LOUDER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,456 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Apr43; LP11984.

THE SPOOK SPEAKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Aug40; LP9875.

THE SPOOK SPEAKS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, Julian Woodward; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Dec47; LP1336.

SPOOK TO ME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 2 reels.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, Harry Edwards; story, Edward Bernds.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Dec45; LP90.

SPOOK TOWN. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Robert C. Cline; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 3Jun44; LP13597.

SPOOKS RUN WILD. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Phil Rosen; original story and screenplay, Carl Foreman, Charles R. Marion; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Oct41; LP11219.

SPOONHANDLE. SEE Deep Waters.

SPORT OF KINGS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 912 ft., sd. (The World of Sports, no. 60)

Credits: Narrative by Stanley Frank; narrator, Dan Seymour; photography, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18May40; MP10291.

SPORT OF KINGS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Gordon Grand.

Credits: Producer, William Bloom; director, Robert Gordon; screenplay, Edward Huebsch; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Aaron Stell.

Cast: Paul Campbell, Gloria Henry, Harry Davenport.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Jun47; LP1051.

SPORT OF MILLIONS. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: A tour of race tracks throughout the world.

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20Mar49; MP3970.

SPORTING BLOOD. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Grace Norton.

Credits: Producer, Albert E. Levoy; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Lawrence Hazard, Albert Mannheimer, Dorothy Yost; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Jul40; LP9765.

A SPORTING CHANCE. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Paul Gangelin.

Credits: Associate producer, Rudolph E. Abel; director, George Blair; screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14May45; LP13355.

THE SPORTING EVERGLADES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Oct40; MP10494.

SPORTING SPHERES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Summary: Presents ten sports and shows the difference between the balls used in each game.

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing; photographer, Russell T. Ervin.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Jul49; MP4323.

SPORTS A LA MODE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Oct42; MP13075.

SPORTS COVERAGE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 6)

Summary: Different methods of reporting sports events as exemplified by newspaper columnist, Joe Williams, AP photographer Matty Zimmerman, television reporter, Clem McCarthy, and broadcaster, Red Barber.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; script, Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 6Feb48; MP2892.

SPORTS DOWN UNDER. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Sports of Australia, including motorcycle racing, cricket matches, bowling, golf, tennis, horse racing, and swimming.

Credits: Director, Arthur Collins; written by Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Oct48; MP3430.

SPORTS GO TO WAR. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, A. Pam Blumenthal, Andre de La Varre; director, Van Campen Heilner; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Nov45; MP16494.

SPORTS GOLDEN AGE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 10)

Summary: The film shows the wide variety of sports which make the United States the most sportsminded nation in the world, and such champions as Babe Ruth, Johnny Lujack, Ben Hogan, Jack Dempsey, and Helen Wills in action.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; script, Burton Benjamin; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 23Jul48; MP3273.

SPORTS I. Q. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Oct42; MP12941.

SPORTS IN THE ROCKIES. SEE Variety Views, no. 103.

SPORTS NEW AND OLD. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Highlights of modern sports as performed by fun-loving Egyptians. Includes tennis, volley ball, soccer, gymnastics, sailing, swimming, and diving.

Credits: Written by Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Knox Manning; editor, Everett Dodd.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Nov49; MP4722.

SPORTS QUIZ. Loew's Inc., c1944. 971 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q? no. 8)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; film editor, John Durant.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Aug44; MP400.

SPORTS STICKLERS. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 949 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q? no. 10)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, J. J. Durant, Jr.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct45; MP16493.

SPORTS TOP PERFORMERS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 8)

Summary: Top performers in sports gather at the Hotel Astor in New York for the Sports Magazine's awards.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Andre Baruch; editor, Harold Oteri.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 8Apr49; MP4270.

SPORTSMAN'S MEMORIES. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 877 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Narrator, Pete Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr44; LP259.

SPORTSMAN'S PLAYGROUND. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade). Warner Bros.

Credits: Narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 2Jul47; MP2220.

SPORTSMEN OF THE FAR EAST. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Bombay, India, is presented as the playground of the Far East. The western influence is seen in such sports as swimming, sailing, diving, field hockey, cricket, polo, and horse racing, and the traditional pastimes of snake charming, sword twirling, and pole climbing are still popular.

Credits: Written by Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 3Jan49; MP3613.

SPOT TAG. Motion Picture Service Co., c1949. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon featuring Spotty, who jumps about on the screen while the audience tries to catch him with automobile spot-lights. Designed for use in drive-in theatres.

© Motion Picture Service Co.; 15Apr49; MP4340.

SPOTLIGHT ON INDO-CHINA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; narration, Lowell Thomas; music score, L. de Francesco; editor, Lew Lehr.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Dec40; MP11095.

SPOTLIGHT ON MEXICO. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 2)

Summary: A pictorial excursion into Mexico. Shows the Pan American Highway, the Pyramids, a bullfight, Mexican arts and crafts, the Palace of Fine Arts, the art school at San Miguel Allende, and the industrialized city of Monterrey.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director and photographer, Larry O'Reilly; written by Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Paul Sawtell; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 11Nov49; MP4811.

SPOTLIGHT SCANDALS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, William X. Crowley, Beryl Sachs; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Aug43; LP12396.

SPOTLIGHT SERENADE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series)

Summary: Lillian Russell, Eddie Leonard, Anna Held, and George M. Cohan are shown in cartoon drawings while the songs with which they are associated are sung.

Credits: Director, Benjamin R. Parker; screenplay, Courtney Leigh; editor, Leonard Anderson.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Jun48; MP3495.

SPOTS BEFORE YOUR EYES. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 904 ft., sd. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, John Hines; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 10May40; LP9654.

SPREAD A BIT OF SUNSHINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Oct44; MP15359.

SPREADIN' THE JAM. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 889 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Sam Baerwitz; director, Charles Walters; original story and screenplay, Sid Kuller; music director, L. Friedman; orchestration, Calvin Jackson, Walter Sheets, Max Terr; film editor, George Hively.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Sep45; LP13527.

SPREE FOR ALL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel. (A Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Otto Messmer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Oct46; LP624.

SPRING COMES TO NIAGARA. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: The great falls of the Niagara River are shown at the beginning of the spring season.

Credits: Director, Gordon Sparling; narrator, Lamong Tilden; music, Lucio Agostini.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Jul49; MP4432.

SPRING ON THE FARM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Two children on a farm observe the developments that take place in plant and animal life during the months of March, April, and May. A classroom film for primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, E. Laurence Palmer.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Nov47; MP2641.

SPRING PARADE. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Henry Koster; original story, Ernst Marischka; screenplay, Bruce Manning, Felix Jackson; music, Robert Stolz; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Joe Valentine; film editor, Bernard Burton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Sep40; LP9943.

SPRING SONG. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, I. Klein; animation, Myron Waldman, Larry Liverman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Jun49; LP2336.

SPRINGBOARD FOR CHAMPIONS. Produced for Cambridge Tile Manufacturing Company. 9 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Sprague Mullikin.

© Henry Spruck; title & descr., 12Jan42; 4 prints, 8Dec41; LU10953.

SPRINGBOARD TECHNIQUES. Coronet, in collaboration with Michael Peppe, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 11Apr47; MP2014.

SPRINGTIME FOR PLUTO. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Nick George, Eric Gurney; animation, George Nicholas, Norman Tate, Marvin Woodward, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 20May44; LP13102.

SPRINGTIME FOR THOMAS. Loew's Inc., c1946. 707 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ed Barge. Michael Lah, Kenneth Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Mar46; LP167.

SPRINGTIME IN TEXAS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Strohbach; director, Oliver Drake; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, William A. Sickner; film editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21May45; LP13694.

SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKAGE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordan; animation, Myron Waldman, Dick Williams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Aug40; LP9878.

SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 8,171 ft., sd. Based on a story by Philip Wylie.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, Walter Bullock, Ken Englund; adaptation, Jacques Thery; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 6Nov42; LP12043.

SPRINGTIME IN THE SIERRAS. Republic Productions. Inc., c1947. 75 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, William Witney; original screenplay, A. Sloan Nibley; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Roy Rogers, Trigger, Jane Frazee, Andy Devine, Bob Nolan.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP 1138.

SPRONGE EN PAALSPRING. SEE Jumps and Pole Vault.

SPY SHIP. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 62 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by George Dyer.

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; screenplay, Robert E. Kent; film editor, James Gibbon.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15Aug42; LP 11519.

SPY SMASHER. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. Suggested by the character appearing in "Whiz Comics" magazine. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Apr42; no. 1–6, LP11235; no. 7–12, LP11409.

Credits: Associate producer, W. J. O'Sullivan; director, William Witney; original screenplay, Ronald Davidson, Norman S. Hall, William Lively, Joseph O'Donnell, Joseph Poland; musical score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editors, Tony Martinelli, Edward Todd.

Cast: Kane Richmond, Sam Flint, Marguerite Chapman, Hans Schumm, Tristram Coffin.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. America Beware.

2. Human Target.

3. Iron Coffin.

4. Stratosphere Invaders.

5. Descending Doom.

6. The Invisible Witness.

7. Secret Weapon.

8. Sea Raiders.

9. Highway Racketeers.

10. 2700° Fahrenheit.

11. Hero's Death.

12. V...—.

SPY TRAIN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Max King; director, Harold Young; original story, Scott Littlefield; screenplay, Leslie Schwabacker, Bart Lytton; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28May43; LP12089.

DIE SPYSVERTERINGSKANAAL (THE ALIMENTARY TRACT) Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with A. J. Carlson and H. G. Swann, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul46; MP1641.

SQUADRON LEADER X. Made with the cooperation of the Royal Air Force and the Air Ministry, c1943. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 99 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Victor Hanbury; director, Lance Comfort; story, Emeric Pressburger; screenplay, Wolfgang Wilhelm; music, William Alwyn; editor, Michael C. Chorlton.

Appl. author: RKO Radio British Productions, Ltd.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21May43; LP12113.

SQUARE DANCE JUBILEE. Lippert Productions, Inc. Released through Screen Guild productions, Inc., c1949. 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western in which two talent scouts discover a wealth of musical ability for their television show.

Credits: Producer, Ron Ormond; director, Paul Landres; story, William Nolte; screenplay, Ron Ormond, Daniel B. Ullman; music director, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Don Barry, Mary Beth Hughes, Wally Vernon, Spade Cooley and his Band; Max Terhune.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2658.

THE SQUARE KNOT. Presented by United States Navy. sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 25Feb44; 7 prints, 21Feb44; MU14521.

SQUAREHEADS OF THE ROUND TABLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; directed and written by Edward Bernds.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Mar48 (in notice: 1947); LP1502.

SQUATTER'S RIGHTS. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Harry Reeves, Rex Cox; animation, Hugh Fraser, Murray McClellan, Bob Carlson, Blaine Gibson; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 21Mar46; LP335.

THE SQUAWKIN' HAWK. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1942. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Blue Ribbon Cartoon) A re-release.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Dec42; MP3248.

THE STAFFORD FAMILY STORY. SEE Easy Money.

STAGE DOOR CANTEEN. Released thru United Artists, c1943. Presented by Sol Lesser. 14 reels, sd. A Frank Borzage production.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Frank Borzage; original screenplay, Delmer Daves; music score, Freddie Rich; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Hal Kern.

© Principal Artists Productions; 14Jun43; LP12294.

STAGE DOOR CARTOON. Warner Bros. Cartoons, c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Jack Bradbury, music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 8Jan45; MP15540.

STAGE FRIGHT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Story, Rich Hogan; animation, Ken Harris.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Sep40; MP10487.

STAGE STRUCK. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A story of crime with a night-club background.

Credits: Producer, Jeffrey Bernerd; director, William Nigh; original story, George Wallace Sayre; screenplay, George Wallace Sayre, Agnes Christine Johnston; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, William Austin.

Cast: Kane Richmond, Audrey Long, Conrad Nagel, Ralph Byrd, John Gallaudet.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Jun48; LP1747.

STAGE TO CHINO. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Edward Killy; story, Norton S. Parker; screenplay, Morton Grant, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jul40; LP9895.

STAGE TO MESA CITY. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; screenplay, Joseph F. Poland; music, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" La Rue, Al "Fuzzy" St. John, Jennifer Holt, George Chesebro, Brad Slavin.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 1Nov47; LP1352.

STAGECOACH BUCKAROO. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story "Shotgun Messenger" by Arthur St. Claire.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Ray Taylor; screenplay, Al Martin; cameraman, Jerry Ash.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29Oct41; LP10807.

STAGECOACH EXPRESS. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, George Sherman; original story, Doris Schroeder; screenplay, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, John MacBurnie; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Mar42; LP11154.

STAGECOACH KID. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which the spoiled daughter of a rich absentee ranch owner complicates the capture of a trio of outlaws.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lew Landers; story and screenplay, Norman Houston; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Les Millbrook.

Cast: Tim Holt, Richard Martin, Jeff Donnell, Joe Sawyer, Thurston Hall.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 7Jul49; LP2462.

STAGECOACH OUTLAWS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 17Aug45; LP13578.

STAGECOACH TO DENVER. Republic Pictures Corp., c1946. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Fred Harman's "Red Ryder" comic.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Cast: Allan Lane, Bobby Blake, Martha Wentworth.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Dec46; LP747.

STAGECOACH TO MONTEREY. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 3Aug44; LP12827.

STAGECOACH WAR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Norman Houston, Harry F. Olmstead; music score, John Leipold; photography, Russell Harlan; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Jul40; LP9769.

STAIR-A-TONE REVUE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Oct44; MP15281.

STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN. The Archers Film Productions, Ltd., England, c1946. 104 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Produced, directed and written by Michael Powell, Emeric Pressburger; music, Allan Gray; editor, Reginald Mills.

Cast: David Niven, Raymond Massey, Roger Livesey, Kim Hunter, Marius Goring.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec46; LP1015.

STAIRWAY TO LIGHT. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 944 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story, John Nesbitt; screenplay, Rosemary Foster; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Sep45; LP13519.

STALINGRAD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Apr44; MP14727.

STALKING BIG GAME AT HOME. Smith-McIntyre Pictures. 9 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. authors: Dale McIntyre, Richard B. Smith.

© Smith-McIntyre Pictures; title & descr., 25Mar47; 4 prints, 10Mar47; MU1829.

STALLION ROAD. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A First National picture. Based on Stephen Longstreet's novel.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, James V. Kern; screenplay, Stephen Longstreet; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; film editor, David Weisbart.

Cast: Ronald Reagan, Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Apr47; LP933.

STAMP THE POLKA AWAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14May45; MP15944.

STAMPEDE. Allied Artists Productions, Inc., c1949. 78 min., sd., sepia, 35mm. Based on the novel by Edward Beverly Mann.

Summary: A Western in which cattlemen and land settlers' fight to the death over water rights.

Credits: Producers, John C. Champion, Blake Edwards; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, John C. Champion, Blake Edwards; film editor, Richard Heermance.

Cast: Rod Cameron, Gale Storm, Don Castle, Johnny Mack Brown, Don Curtis.

© Allied Artists Productions, Inc.; 1May49; LP2522.

STAN KENTON AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Jack Scholl.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 28Dec46; MP2422.

STAND BY ALL NETWORKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story, Maurice Tombragel; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel, Doris Malloy, Robert Lee Johnson; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Oct42; LP11688.

STAND BY FOR ACTION. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Suggested by the story "A Cargo of Innocence" by Laurence Kirk.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; original story, Harvey Haislip, R. C. Sherriff; screenplay, George Bruce, John L. Balderston, Herman J. Mankiewicz; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Dec42; LP11764.

STAND UP FOR YOUR RIGHTS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17May43; MP13589.

STANDARDIZE ON STAINLESS. Vogue Wright Studios, Inc. 818 ft.

Summary: Emphasizes the advantages of using stainless steel barrels in breweries.

© Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 1Dec48; MU3540.

STANDING ROOM ONLY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Allan Martin.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Jones; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Darrell Ware, Earl Tunberg; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Jan44; LP12546.

STANLEY AND LIVINGSTONE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. 8,900 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry King; story outline, Hal Long, Sam Hellman; screenplay, Philip Dunne, Julien Josephson; music direction, Louis Silvers.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Aug39; LP9333.

STAR BRIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1,788 ft., sd., color. (A Paramount Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Louis Harris; director, Hugh Bennett; original screenplay, Ray C. Spencer; music director, Irvin Talbot; music arranger, Harry Simeone; editor, Helene Turner. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Dec44; LP13015.

STAR DUST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 7,662 ft., sd. Based on a story by Jesse Malo, Kenneth Earl, Ivan Kahn.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Apr40; LP9733.

STAR IN THE NIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Don Siegel; original story, Robert Finch; screenplay, Saul Elkins.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct45; LP13550.

A STAR IS BORN; introducing Luther Peeple. Fred Amster Cine-Art Animation Studio. 1 min., sd.

© Frederick Arthur Amster; title & descr., 1Mar47; 4 prints, 15Feb47; MU1740.

STAR OF RIO. SEE Stern von Rio.

STAR OF THE CIRCUS. SEE The Hidden Menace.

STAR SPANGLED CITY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Technicolor Adventures)

Credits: Director, Carl Dudley; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 2Oct46; MP1224.

STAR SPANGLED CITY. Released by Warner Bros., c1946. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Technicolor Adventure)

Credits: Director, Carl Dudley; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Nov46; MP1374.

STAR SPANGLED RHYTHM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Marshall; original screenplay, Harry Tugend; music director, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Paul Weatherwax.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Dec42; LP11867.

STARDUST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26May41; MP11181.

STARDUST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14May45; MP15942.

STARDUST ON THE SAGE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, William Morgan; original story, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; screenplay, Betty Burbridge; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25May42; LP11407.

STARS AND VIOLINS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Vernon Keays; music director, H. J. Salter; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Mar44; LP12598.

STARS IN YOUR EYES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16319.

THE STARS LOOK DOWN. Distributed by Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. A Grafton film. From the book by A. J. Cronin.

Credits: Producer, I. Goldsmith; director, Carol Reed; screenplay, J. B. Williams; adaptation, A. J. Cronin; scenario, J. B. Williams, A. Coppel; music, Hans May; camera, Mutz Greenbaum, Henry Harris; editor, Reginald Beck.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Jul41; LP10608.

STARS OF THE FOLLIES THEATRE. Quality Pictures Co., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Series 25)

Summary: Six burlesque dances.

Cast: Evelyn West, Dorothy Miller, Rene Andree, Billie Ware, Pat O'Connor.

© W. Merle Connell, Nathan Robin, d.b.a. Quality Pictures Co.; 20Nov47; MP2812.

STARS ON HORSEBACK. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Director, Myron J. Swartz; written by Roger Q. Denny and Myron J. Swartz; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Oct43; MP14006.

STARS ON PARADE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Monte Brice; film editor, Jerome Thomas.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25May44; LP13025.

STARS OVER TEXAS. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1946. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Emmett Tansey; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Roscoe Ates, Shirley Patterson, Lee Bennett, Flash.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 18Nov46; LP734.

START. Shell Oil Co., Inc. 1 reel, sd., color.

Summary: Depicts in animation the basic fundamentals of selling, using case histories of salesmen of Shell Oil Co., Inc.

© Shell Oil Co., Inc.; title & descr., 27May49, 4 prints, 9May49; MU4137.

STATE DEPARTMENT—FILE 649. Film Classics, Inc., c1949. 88 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: The story of a young American Foreign Service officer who meets his death while resisting the Mongolian invasion forces in North China.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original story and screenplay, Milton Raison; music score, Lucien Cailliet; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Cast: William Lundigan, Virginia Bruce, Jonathan Hale, Frank Ferguson, Richard Loo.

© Film Classics, Inc.; 17Jan49; LP2110.

STATE FAIR. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 8,975 ft., sd. From the novel by Philip Stong.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Oscar Hammerstein, II; adaptation, Sonya Levien, Paul Green; music directors, Alfred Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Aug45; LP16.

STATE OF THE UNION. Loew's Inc., c1948. 122 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the play by Howard and Russel Crouse.

Summary: An airplane manufacturer's campaign as Republican nominee for President.

Credits: Producer and director, Frank Capra; screenplay, Anthony Veiller, Myles Connolly; music score, Victor Young; film editor, William Hornbeck.

Cast: Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Van Johnson, Angela Lansbury, Adolphe Menjou.

© Liberty Films, Inc.; 23Mar48; LP1534.

STATIONS WEST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a novel by Luke Short [pseud. of Frederick Dilley Glidden]

Summary: A mystery melodrama of the Old West in which an undercover Government agent investigates a gold robbery and solves two murders.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sparks; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Frank Fenton, Winston Miller; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Heinz Roemheld; film editor, Frederic Knudtson.

Cast: Dick Powell, Jane Greer, Agnes Moorehead, Burl Ives, Tom Powers.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20Oct48; LP1928.

STEAK AND POTATOES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Nov44; MP15439.

STEALIN' AIN'T HONEST. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, Thomas Johnson, Frank Endres.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9496.

STEAM FOR POWER. Audio Productions, Inc., for Babcock & Wilcox Co., c1949. 43 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: With animation and actual photography, the film describes the history of the steam engine from the first Newcomen engine to the present steam turbines and high pressure boilers.

© Babcock & Wilcox Co.; 6May49 (in notice: 1948); MP4190.

STEAMBOAT ON THE RIVER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. de Francesco; photography, Jack Painter; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Mar44; MP14813.

STEDELIKE VERKEER. SEE Arteries of the City.

STEEL AGAINST THE SKY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 68 min., sd. From a story by Maurice Hanline and Jesse Lasky, Jr.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmund Grainger; director, A. Edward Sutherland; screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith; film editor, Doug Gould.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 13Dec41; LP10898.

STEEL FOR VICTORY. Presented by U. S. Steel. 2 reels.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© United States Steel Corp. of Delaware; title, descr., & 297 prints, 22Jun42; MU12622.

STEELHEAD FIGHTERS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. de Francesco; photography, Chalmer Sinkey; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Dec42; MP14849.

STEEPLECHASERS. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd., 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 13)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 9Aug46; MP1062.

STELLA POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Aug45; MP16225.

STEP BY STEP. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 62 min., sd., 35mm. Based on an original story by George Callahan.

Credits: Director, Phil Rosen; screenplay, Stuart Palmer; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Jul46; LP560.

STEP LIVELY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr43; MP13486.

STEP LIVELY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 88 min., sd. Based on the play "Room Service" by John Murray and Allen Boretz as produced by George Abbott.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Tim Whelan; screenplay, Warren Duff, Peter Milne; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestra arrangements, Gene Rose; editor, Gene Milford.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jun44; LP12787.

STEPCHILD. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Jerry Briskin; director, James Flood; original story, Jules Levine; screenplay, Karen DeWolf; music, Mario Silva; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

Cast: Brenda Joyce, Donald Woods.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 7Jun47; LP1057.

STEPPIN' IN SOCIETY. Republic Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Marcel Arnac.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph Bercholz; director, Alexander Esway; screenplay and adaptation, Bradford Ropes; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Harry Keller.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18May45; LP13324.

STEPPIN' PRETTY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Jan45; MP16210.

STEPPING ALONG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Nov43; MP14128.

STEPPING FAST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Nov44; MP15388.

STERN VON RIO (STAR OF RIO). sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Tobis Klangfilm.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title & descr., 8Dec46; 9 prints, 19Dec46; LU722.

STICK TO YOUR GUNS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; photography, Russell Harlan; film editor, Carrol Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Sep41; LP10930.

STICKS AND STONES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jan43; MP13275.

A STOLEN LIFE. B. D., Inc., c1946. Presented by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. 107 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Karel J. Benes.

Credits: Director, Curtis Bernhardt; screenplay, Catherine Turney; adaptation, Margaret Buell Wilder; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; photographer, Sol Polito; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29Jun46; LP429.

STONE COLD DEAD IN THE MARKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Sep46; MP1167.

STOP—HEAVY TRAFFIC. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 7.

STOP, LOOK, AND GUESS 'EM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary by Justin Herman; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Dec47; MP2516.

STOP THAT DANCIN' UP THERE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Aug44; MP15149.

STORK BITES MAN. Comet Productions, Inc., c1947. 75 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the book by Louis Pollock.

Credits: Producers, Buddy Rogers, Ralph Cohn; direction and screenplay, Cyril Endfield; adaptation, Fred Frieberger; music score, Raoul Kraushaar; film editor, Lynn Harrison.

Cast: Jackie Cooper, Gene Roberts, Gus Schilling, Emory Parnell.

© Comet Productions, Inc.; 1Aug47; LP1208.

THE STORK CLUB. Paramount Pictures Inc, c1945. Presented by B. G. DeSylva. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, B. G. DeSylva; director, Hal Walker; screenplay, B. G. DeSylva, John McGowan; music director, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Gladys Carley.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Dec45; LP13709.

STORK MARKET. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; animation, Al Eugster, Wm. B. Patteng.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Apr49; LP2209.

THE STORK PAYS OFF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story and screenplay, Fanya Foss, Aleen Leslie; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Milford.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Nov41; LP10994.

THE STORK'S HOLIDAY. Loew's Inc., c1943. 715 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, George Gordon; story, Otto Englander, Webb Smith; animation, Michael Lah, Rudy Zamora, Carl Urbano, and others; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Oct43; LP12331.

THE STORK'S MISTAKE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 29May42; MP12525.

STORM. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 687 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Paul Burnford; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret, Max Terr; film editor, John D. Faure.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Oct43; LP12333.

STORM AT SEA. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Harry Watt.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 1Oct47; MP2373.

STORM OVER LISBON. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original story, Elizabeth Meehan; screenplay, Doris Gilbert; adaptation, Dane Lussier; music score, Walter Scharf; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Jun44; LP12777.

STORM WARNING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series, no. 5)

Credits: Producer, Harry A. Kapit; director, Benjamin R. Parker; editor, Charles R. Senf.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec46; MP2325.

STORMY WEATHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12356.

STORMY WEATHER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 6,980 ft., sd. From an original story by Jerry Horwin and Seymour B. Robinson.

Credits: Director, Andrew Stone; screenplay, Frederick Jackson, Ted Koehler; adaptation, H. S. Kraft; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jul43; LP12206.

STORY OF A DOG. The Vitaphone Corp. of cooperation with the United States Coast Guard, c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 1Dec45; MP16560.

THE STORY OF A FOUNTAIN PEN. C. O. Baptista, c1941. 500 ft., 16mm.

© C. O. Baptista; 1Aug41; MP11452.

THE STORY OF ALTERNATING CURRENT ARC WELDING. General Electric Co., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

© General Electric Co.; 31Jul44; MP15345.

THE STORY OF AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION. The Jam Handy Organization, Inc. 2 reels.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 11 prints, 17Jun45; MU16033.

THE STORY OF BOB AND SALLY. Social Guidance Enterprises, Inc., c1948. 8 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: This film shows how the lack of proper sex instruction affected the lives of the daughters of the Wright family. Includes sequences explaining the process of reproduction and the treatment of venereal diseases.

Credits: Producer, J. G. Sanford; director, Erie Kenton; original story, Margarite Buell Wilder; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Social Guidance Enterprises, Inc.; 25May48; LP1634.

THE STORY OF CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS. Emerson Film Corp., c1948. 18 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Columbus' youthful dreams of discovering a new route to India are realized when he sets sail under the Spanish flag. He dies without knowing the importance of his discovery of the continent of North America.

Credits: Director, Walter Colmes; screenplay, Jerry Warner; film editor, Jason Bernie.

© Emerson Film Corp.; 15Mar48; LP1636.

STORY OF CULTURE. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 6 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11893.

THE STORY OF DR. WASSELL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 15 reels, sd., color. Based on the story of Dr. Wassell as told by him and also on the story by James Hilton.

Credits: Produced and directed by Cecil B. DeMille; screenplay, Alan LeMay, Charles Bennett; music score, Victor Young; editor, Anne Bauchens. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Apr44; LP13472.

THE STORY OF IVY. SEE Ivy.

THE STORY OF LIFE. Crusade Productions, c1948. 71 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A feature picture which incorporates three educational pictures: "The Story of V. D.," "The Story of Reproduction," and "The Story of Birth." Animation and live action.

Credits: Producer, William Daniels (William D. Bacon); live action director, Howard Bretherton; story and screenplay, Larry Allen (Walter A. Lawrence); narration, Sam Balter, Hy Averback; animation artwork, Charles Shaw; animation, Lester Novros, Robert Moore; music scored by Edward Kilenyi.

Cast: Joseph Creehan, Wanda McKay, John Parker, Robert Leaver.

© Crusade Productions; 1Nov48; LP1896.

THE STORY OF LITTLE RED RIDING HOOD. Raymond F. Harryhausen, c1949. 15 min., si., color, 16mm.

Summary: A retelling of the French fairy tale by Charles Perrault.

Credits: Narration, C. Knight; animation, R. Hausen.

© Raymond F. Harryhausen; 1Nov49; MP4727.

THE STORY OF LUCKY STRIKE. Presented by The American Tobacco Co. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© The American Tobacco Co.; title, descr., & 77 prints, 12Sep41; MU11527.

THE STORY OF MENSTRUATION. Walt Disney Productions, for the International Cellucotton Co., c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Ansco color.

© Walt Disney Productions; 1Nov46; MP1355.

THE STORY OF MR. JIGGS. Bernard Rose and Richard Rose, c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how a totally blind dog is able to walk without injury to himself by wearing a headgear designed by his seventeen year-old owner, Richard Rose.

© Bernard Rose & Richard Rose; 28Jul49; MP4359.

THE STORY OF MOLLY X. Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama dealing with the rehabilitation of a woman criminal through modern penal methods at the California Institute for Women at Tehachapi.

Credits: Producer, Aaron Rosenberg; director and screenplay, Crane Wilbur; music, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

Cast: June Havoc, John Russell, Dorothy Hart, Connie Gilchrist, Cathy Lewis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2697.

THE STORY OF NEOPRENE. Presented by Neoprene Division, E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Rubber Chemicals Division, E. I. DuPont de Nemours & Co., Inc.; title & descr., 6Sep40; 253 prints, 9Sep40; MU10450.

THE STORY OF PALOMAR. sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A documentary film about the Palomar Observatory and the 200–inch Hale telescope. Includes views of Mt. Wilson Observatory and its smaller telescopes.

Credits: Authors, Edison R. Hoge, Sidney Zipser.

© The California Institute of Technology, a.k.a. California Institute; title, descr., & 15 prints, 22Sep48; MU3553.

THE STORY OF PRIMITIVE LIFE. M. Minter Culver, c1941, 3 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11892.

STORY OF SCIENCE. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11894.

STORY OF THE CITY. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 3 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11895.

STORY OF THE DESERT. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11896.

STORY OF THE DORSEY BROTHERS. SEE The Fabulous Dorseys.

STORY OF THE FOREST. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11980.

STORY OF THE JUNGLE. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11981.

STORY OF THE MOUNTAINS. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11897.

STORY OF THE POLAR REGIONS. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 3 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11898.

THE STORY OF THE PRODIGAL SON. Cathedral Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Cathedral Films, Inc.; 17Mar41; LP10404.

STORY OF THE SEA. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11899.

THE STORY OF THE VATICAN WITH HIS HOLINESS PIUS XII. The March of Time, c1941. Distributed by R. K. O. Radio Pictures, Inc. 52 min., sd.

Credits: Narrator, Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen.

© Time, Inc.; 18Jul41; LP11203.

STORY OF THE VIOLIN. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, 35mm.

Credits: Narrator, John Martin.

Cast: Jacques Thiebaud.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 22Jan47; MP1546.

STORY OF TRANSPORT AND TRAVEL. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization)

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11900.

THE STORY OF TWO CIGARETTES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15967.

THE STORY OF WAYNE CRANE. Norris Smitley Productions, 38 min., si., color, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes showing the construction and operation of the Wayne Crane. The film was made at the company's plants in Harrisburg, Milwaukee, and Dayton.

© Wayne Crane Division, American Steel Dredge Co., Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 8Mar48; MU2770.

THE STORY OF YOUR JOB. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Hamilton Watch Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8May47; 30 prints, 12May47; MU2001.

STRAIGHT SHOOTERS. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, MacDonald MacPherson, Jack Huber; animation, William Justice, Volus Jones, Judge Whitaker, Fred Jones; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 10Sep46; LP1119.

STRANGE AFFAIR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Burt Kelly; director, Alfred E. Green; original story, Oscar Saul; screenplay, Oscar Saul, Eve Greene, Jerome Odlum; music score, Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Oct44; LP13215.

THE STRANGE AFFAIR OF UNCLE HARRY. c1945. 9 reels, sd. A Charles K. Feldman Group production. From the play by Thomas Job.

Credits: Producer, Joan Harrison; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Stephen Longstreet; adaptation, Keith Winter; music director, Hans Salter; cameraman, Paul Ivano; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 14Aug45; LP13436.

STRANGE ALIBI. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. From a story by Leslie T. White.

Credits: Associate producer, William Jacobs; director, D. Ross Lederman; screenplay, Kenneth Gamet; cameraman, Allen G. Siegler.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 19Apr41; LP10428.

STRANGE BARGAIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by J. H. Wallis.

Summary: An unwilling accomplice to a supposed suicide is finally cleared of suspicion when the murderer is discovered.

Credits: Producer, Sid Rogell; director, Will Price; screenplay, Lillie Hayward; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Frederick Knudtson.

Cast: Martha Scott, Jeffry Lynn, Henry Morgan, Katherine Emery, Richard Gaines.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Sep49; LP2526.

STRANGE CARGO. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. A Frank Borzage production. Based on the book "Not Too Narrow—Not Too Deep" by Richard Sale.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, Frank Borzage; screenplay, Lawrence Hazard; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Feb40; LP9466.

THE STRANGE CASE OF DOCTOR RX. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Jack Bernhard; director, William Nigh; original screenplay, Clarence Upson Young; photography, Woody Bredell; film editor, Bernard Burton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11093.

STRANGE CONFESSION. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on a composition by Jean Bart.

Credits: Director, John Hoffman; screenplay, M. Coates Webster; photographer, Maury Gertsman; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13512.

STRANGE CONQUEST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Lester Cole and Carl Dreher.

Credits: Director, John Rawlins; screenplay, Roy Chanslor; cinematographer, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Phillip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Apr46; LP287.

THE STRANGE DEATH OF ADOLPH HITLER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, James Hogan; original story, Fritz Kortner, Joe May; screenplay, Fritz Kortner; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Sep43; LP12287.

STRANGE DECEPTION. SEE The Accused.

STRANGE DESTINY. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 940 ft., sd., b&w. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Paul Burnford; original story and screenplay, Julian Harmon; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep45; LP13507.

STRANGE EMPIRE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Photography, John W. Boyle; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Jan43; MP13300.

STRANGE FACTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Cinescope, no. 16)

Credits: Narrator, John S. Martin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Dec41; MP12082.

STRANGE GAMBLE. Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Summary: Hopalong Cassidy apprehends a counterfeiting gang operating in Silver City.

Credits: Producer, Lewis J. Rachmil; director, George Archainbaud; original screenplay, Doris Schroeder; film editor, Fred W. Berger.

Cast: William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Rand Brooks, Elaine Riley, James Craven.

© Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc.; 1Aug48; LP1802.

STRANGE HOLIDAY. Elite Pictures, c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, A. W. Hackel, Edward Finney, Max King; written and directed by Arch Oboler; original music score, Gordon Jenkins; photographer, Robert Surtees; editor, Fred Feitshans, Jr.

© Elite Pictures; 30Jul45; LP13475.

STRANGE IMPERSONATION. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 68 min., sd., 35mm. From a story by Anne Wigton and Lewis Herman.

Credits: Producer, William Wilder; director, Anthony Mann; screenplay, Mindret Lord; music director, Alexander Laszlo; photographer, Robert W. Pittack; film editor, John F. Link.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Mar46; LP240.

STRANGE INTERVIEW. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Haford Kerbawy; scenario, Tom Monroe.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7Mar47; 29 prints, 6Mar47; MU1769.

STRANGE JOURNEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, James Tinling; original story, Charles Kenyon; screenplay, Charles Kenyon, Irving Elman; music score, Rudy Schrager; film editor, William F. Claxton.

Cast: Paul Kelly, Osa Massen, Hillary Brooke.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Oct46; LP967.

THE STRANGE LOVE OF MARTHA IVERS. Hal Wallis Productions, Inc., c1946. 12 reels. From an original story by Jack Patrick.

Credits: Director, Lewis Milestone; screenplay, Robert Rossen.

© Hal Wallis Productions, Inc.; 7Mar46; LP131.

THE STRANGE MR. GREGORY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Louis Berkoff; director, Phil Rosen; original story, Myles Connolly; screenplay, Charles S. Belden; photographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Seth Larsen.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 14Nov45; LP57.

THE STRANGE MRS. CRANE. John Sutherland Productions, Inc. Released through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A crime melodrama. An innocent girl is tried for a murder which was committed by the forelady of the jury.

Credits: Producer, John Sutherland; director, Sherman Scott; screenplay, Al Martin; original story, Frank Burt, Robert Libott; music director, Paul J. Smith; film editor, Martin Cohn.

Cast: Marjorie Lord, Robert Shayne, Pierre Watkin, James Seay, Ruthe Brady.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 18Dec48; LP2134.

STRANGE TESTAMENT. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 966 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov41; LP10879.

STRANGE TRIANGLE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 5,850 ft., sd., 35mm. From a story by Jack Andrews.

Credits: Director, Ray McCarey; screenplay, Mortimer Braus; adaptation, Charles G. Booth; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17May46; LP478.

STRANGE VOYAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Louis B. Appleton, Jr.; director, Irving Allen; original screenplay, Andrew Holt; music score, Lucien Moraweck; music director, Lud Gluskin; photographer, Jack Greenhalgh, Jr.; film editor, Irving A. Applebaum.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Apr46; LP308.

THE STRANGE WOMAN. Mars Film Corp. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by Hunt Stromberg. 101 min., sd., 35mm. A Hunt Stromberg production. Based on the novel by Ben Ames Williams.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Edgar Ulmer; screenplay, Herb Meadow; music, Carmen Dragon; film editors, John M. Foley, Richard E. Wray.

© Mars Film Corp.; 25Oct46; LP692.

THE STRANGER. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. Presented by International Pictures, Inc., 95 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, S. P. Eagle; director, Orson Welles; original story, Victor Trivas; screenplay, Anthony Veiller; adaptation, Victor Trivas, Decla Dunning; music, Bronislaw Kaper; film editor, Ernst Nims.

© The Haig Corp.; 27Jun46; LP409.

THE STRANGER FROM PECOS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; cameraman, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 10May43; LP12056.

THE STRANGER FROM PONCA CITY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Derwin Abrahams; original screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp; film editor, Burton Kramer.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Virginia Hunter, Texas Jim Lewis and his Lone Star Cowboys.

© Columbia Pictures Corp., 10Jun47; LP1036.

STRANGER FROM SANTA FE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; story, Charles N. Heckelmann; screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Harry Neumann.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1Mar45; LP13153.

STRANGER ON THE THIRD FLOOR. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lee Marcus; director, Boris Ingster; story and screenplay, Frank Partos; music, Roy Webb; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Aug40; LP9935.

STRANGER THAN FICTION. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940–42. 1 reel each, sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; script, Henry Clay Bate; narrator, Alois Havrilla.

72. © 20Feb40; MP9990.

73. © 29Feb40; MP10010.

74. © 6Mar40; MP10029.

75. © 9Apr40; MP10102.

76. © 17Apr40; MP10117.

77. © 17Apr40; MP10118.

78. © 13Jun40; MP10275.

79. © 14Jun40; MP10281.

80. © 13Jun40; MP10276.

81. © 20Sep40; MP10478.

82. © 20Sep40; MP10479.

83. © 4Oct40; MP10505.

84. © 27Nov40; MP10629.

85. © 27Nov40; MP10630.

86. © 27Nov40; MP10631.

87. © 24Feb41; MP10899.

88. © 24Feb41; MP10900.

89. © 24Feb41; MP10901.

90. © 8May41; MP11117.

91. © 8May41; MP11118.

92. © 8May41; MP11119.

93. © 9Jul41; MP11315.

94. © 9Jul41; MP11316.

95. © 9Jul41; MP11317.

96. © 10Sep41; MP11535.

97. © 10Sep41; MP11536.

98. © 10Sep41; MP11537.

99. Junior Battle Fleet. © 18Nov41; MP11761.

100. Blacksmith Dentist. © 18Nov41; MP11762.

101. Barnyard Steam Buggy. © 18Nov41; MP11763.

102. Sugar Bowl Humpty Dumpty. © 24Feb42; MP12239.

103. Desert Ghosts. © 24Feb42; MP12240.

104. Pussy Cat Cafe. © 24Feb42; MP12241.

105. Tom Thumb Church. © 7May42; MP12445.

106. Master Carver. © 7May42; MP12446.

107. Mysterious Fountain of Health. © 7May42; MP12447.

108. Women at the Plough. © 14Aug42; MP12767.

109. Miles of Dough. © 14Aug42; MP12768.

110. Smoke Painter. © 14Aug42; MP12769.

STRANGERS IN THE NIGHT. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Rudolph E. Abel; director, Anthony Mann; original story, Phillip MacDonald; screenplay, Bryant Ford, Paul Gangelin; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jul44; LP12751.

THE STRANGLER. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Walter C. Mycroft; director, Harold Huth; screenplay, J. Lee Thompson, Lesley Storm; photographer, Claude Friese-Greene; film editor, Flora Newton.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 28Dec41; LP11055.

STRANGLER OF THE SWAMP. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, Frank Wisbar; original story, Frank Wisbar, Leo McCarthy.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 6Jan46; LP12.

THE STRATTON STORY. Loew's Inc., c1949. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A human interest drama about Monty Stratton's triumphant return to professional baseball after losing a leg in a hunting accident.

Credits: Producer, Jack Cummings; director, Sam Wood; story, Douglas Morrow; screenplay, Douglas Morrow, Guy Trosper; music director, Adolph Deutsch; film editor, Ben Lewis.

Cast: James Stewart, June Allyson, Frank Morgan, Agnes Moorehead, Bill Williams.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Mar49; LP2196.

THE STRAWBERRY BLONDE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 11 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a play by James Hagan.

Credits: Director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Feb41; LP10270.

THE STRAWBERRY BLONDE. SEE One Sunday Afternoon.

THE STRAWBERRY ROAN. Gene Autry Productions, c1948. 8 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Gene Autry, as a ranch foreman, saves the life of a wild stallion, pet of the ranch owner's son.

Credits: Producer, Armand Schaefer; director, John English; story, Julian Zimet; screenplay, Dwight Cummins, Dorothy Yost; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Henry Batista.

Cast: Gene Autry, Champion, Gloria Henry, Jack Holt, Dick Jones.

© Gene Autry Productions; 4Mar48; LP1488.

STRAWHAT CINDERELLA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Summary: The experiences of Marion Wilson, who works as an apprentice behind the scenes at the Bucks County Playhouse in Pennsylvania.

Credits: Directed and written by Justin Herman; editors, Robert Blauvelt, Frank W. Madden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Sep49; MP4551.

STREAMLINE AND STAMINA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; photography, Jack Painter; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Jul43; MP14821.

THE STREAMLINED DONKEY. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 677 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 10)

Credits: Story, Art Davis; animation, Sid Marcus; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 14Mar41; LP11255.

THE STREAMLINED HEART. SEE Skylark.

STREAMLINED TENDERFOOT. Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 2Mar40; 1,199 prints, 4Mar40; LU9455.

STREET CORNER. Wilshire Pictures Corp., c1948. Presented by James M. Doane. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A mother's failure to provide necessary sex instruction for her daughter results in tragedy. Includes sequences relating to childbirth and venereal diseases.

Credits: Producer, George McCall; director, Albert Kelley; original story, Albert Kelley; screenplay, Jack Jungmeyer; adaptation, Edwin Roth; music and music director, Bernard Katz.

Cast: Joseph Crehan, Marcia Mae Jones, John Treul.

© Wilshire Pictures Corp.; 3May48; LP1640.

STREET OF CHANCE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd. From a story by Cornell Woolrich.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, Jack Hively; screenplay, Garrett Fort; photographer, Theodore Sparkuhl; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Sep42; LP11813.

STREET OF MEMORIES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,390 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Shepard Traube; original screenplay, Robert Lees, Frederick I. Rinaldo; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Nov40; LP10154.

STREET OF SHADOWS. RKO Pathe, Inc, in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This Is America, no. 5)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Oviatt McConnell; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Robert W. Stringer.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 8Mar46; MP456.

THE STREET WITH NO NAME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A crime melodrama, presented with semi-documentary technique. An F. B. I. agent joins a gang of criminals in order to obtain the evidence necessary to convict them. Settings: slums, saloons, and poolrooms in a large city of the present day.

Credits: Producer, Samuel G. Engel; director, William Keighley; original screenplay, Harry Kleiner; music director, Lionel Newman; editor, William Reynolds.

Cast: Mark Stevens, Richard Widmark, Lloyd Nolan, Barbara Lawrence, Ed Begley.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Jun48; LP2008.

STREETS OF LAREDO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 92 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by Louis Stevens and Elizabeth Hill.

Summary: A Western melodrama about conflicting loyalties. When three jovial badmen become separated, two join the Texas Rangers and the third continues his life of banditry.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Charles Marquis Warren; music score, Victor Young; film editor, Archie Marshek.

Cast: William Holden, William Bendix, Macdonald Carey, Mona Freeman, Stanley Ridges.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27May49; LP2314.

STREETS OF SAN FRANCISCO. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about the redemption of a gangster's delinquent son who is befriended by a police officer.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, George Blair; screenplay, John K. Butler; story, Gordon Kahn, Adele Buffington; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Robert Armstrong, Mae Clarke, Gary Gray, Wally Cassell, Richard Benedict.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 9May49; LP2333.

THE STRICK ROOF. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. Summary: Shows how the Strick trailers are designed to set new standards of ease and economy of operation for the trucking industry.

Appl. author: Joseph Strick.

© Strick Film Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 27May49; MU4117.

STRICTLY IN THE GROOVE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Vernon Keays; original screenplay, Kenneth Higgins, Warren Wilson; photography, John W. Boyle; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Jun42; LP11346.

STRIFE OF THE PARTY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Written and directed by Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Oct44; LP13134.

STRIKE IT RICH. Monogram Pictures Corp. Released by Allied Artists, c1948. 81 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Action and romance abound in this story about a migrant oil prospector who develops an oil field, and becomes a political power in the state. Filmed in the oil fields of eastern Texas.

Credits: Producer, Jack Wrather; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Francis Rosenwald; music score, Rudy Schrager.

Cast: Rod Cameron, Bonita Granville, Don Castle, Stuart Erwin, Lloyd Corrigan.

© Allied Artists Pictures; 26Nov48; LP1987.

STRIKE UP THE BAND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Busby Berkeley; original screenplay, John Monks, Jr., Fred Finklehoffe; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Sep40; LP9949.

STRIKE UP THE BAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Sep41; MP11507.

STRIKES TO SPARE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 13)

Summary: This film shows the widespread interest in bowling, and demonstrates the techniques employed by champion bowlers.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Andre Baruch; editor, Marie Montagne.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 20Aug48; MP3401.

STRIKING CHAMPIONS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 925 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Jack Etra.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Dec44; MP15877.

A STRING OF PEARLS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr42; MP12418.

THE STRINGS. Teachings Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Script, Friedlich; editor, Stenius.

© Teaching Films, Inc.; 20Aug47; MP2296.

STRIP POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Oct42; MP13091.

STRIPS AND CURVES. J. I. Case Co., with assistance from USDA Soil Conservation Service and Agricultural Technicians of Canada. 3 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Leon George Samsel.

© J. I. Case Co., Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 13Apr47; MU1935.

STROLLING THRU THE PARK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, I. Klein; animation, Myron Waldman, Larry Silverman; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Nov49; LP2624.

STROLLING THRU THE PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Oct43; MP14031.

THE STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. Moscow Technical Film Studios. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Narration, Roger Q. Denny; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr44; MP14720.

STRUM FUN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13269.

STRUTTIN' TO SUTTON PLACE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Feb42; MP12179.

STUCK WITH IT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16108.

STUDENT TEACHING. SEE

The Broader Concept of Method.

Learning to Understand Children.

Maintaining Class Room Discipline.

STUDENTS OF FORM. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; photographer, William Storz; editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 30Jun44; MP15758.

STUDIES IN HUMAN FERTILITY; methods for the control of conception. c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. authors: H. L. Daiell and F. V. Sander.

© Ortho Products, Inc.; 7Nov40; MP10677.

STUDIO VISIT. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 881 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; film editor, J. J. Durant, Jr.

© Loew's Inc.; 7May46; MP554.

A STUDY IN AUDITOLOGY. 750 ft., 16mm.

© Mayer B. A. Schier; title, descr., & 12 prints; 16Jul40; MU10353.

STUDY IN BROWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jul44; MP15079.

A STUDY IN SOCKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,485 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Al Giebler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11May42; LP11279.

A STUDY OF CUBES IN MOTION. 342 ft., si., 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Mylon Merriam.

© Mylon Merriam; title, descr., & 15 prints, 17Apr41; MU11066.

STUFF FOR STUFF. Loew's Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) A Philip Ragan production.

Summary: Traces the rise of large quantity production and world trade, emphasizing that full production and a revival of two-way world trade are necessary for future prosperity and peace.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Mar49; MP4008.

STUFF LIKE THAT THERE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16317.

STUFF YOU GOTTA WATCH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP59.

STUFFIE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 961 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Fred Zinnemann; original story, screenplay, and narration, Pete Smith; music score, David Snell; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Feb40; LP9551.

STUFFY IN DOWN WITH EVERYTHING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Producers, John A. Haeseler, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; narrator, Walter O'Keefe.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Sep43; MP14037.

THE STUPID CUPID. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Warren Foster; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 11Dec44; MP15468.

STUPID LITTLE CUPID. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb41; MP10854.

THE STUPIDSTITIOUS CAT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Carl Meyer, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Apr47; LP971.

THE STUPOR SALESMAN. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, Lloyd Turner, William Scott; animation, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins, Basil Davidovich.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Dec48; MP3669.

STYLE OF THE STARS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Feb47; MP2108.

STYLED FOR BEAUTY. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., color.

Credits: Technicolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 35 prints, 20Mar41; MU10949.

SUBCUTANEOUS BLOOD FLOW IN THE BAT'S WING. Indiana University, c1949. 10 min each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Indiana University; 21Jul49 (in notice: 1948).

Summary: Utilizing micro-cinematography, this series records the structure and behavior of the bat's minute blood vessels and their environment as seen through the compound microscope. For high school and college students and teachers of medicine and biology.

Credits: Produced and written by Paul A. Nicoll, Richard L. Webb; narration, Paul A. Nicoll; scientific photography, Walter Barnes; editor, Harold Otwell.

1. Vascular Pattern. MP4485.

2. Behavior of Blood and Vascular Components. MP4484.

3. Active Vasomotion. MP4483.

SUBMARINE ALERT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Maxwell Shane; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jun43; LP12581.

SUBMARINE BASE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Schwarz; director, Albert Kelley; original screenplay, Arthur St. Clair, George Merrick; music score, Charles Dant; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 20Jul43; LP13592.

SUBMARINE RAIDER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14May42; LP11330.

THE SUBSTITUTE. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by François Coppee.

Summary: A reformed thief allows himself to be imprisoned for a theft which he did not commit in order that the real thief can lead the sort of life that he admires but could never live.

Credits: Produced, directed, and written by Charles Haas; editor, Daniel Cahn.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 17Mar49; LP2181.

SUBTOTAL GASTRECTOMY FOR DUODENAL ULCER (POLYÁ METHOD) Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan, c1944. 1 reel.

© Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan; 28Dec44; MP15508.

SUBTRACTION IS EASY. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains how to do subtraction, and demonstrates the application of subtraction to everyday life.

Credits: Educational collaborator, F. Lynwood Wren.

© David A. Smart; 9Dec48; MP3720.

SUCKER LIST. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject) Based on a story by Samuel H. Chain and Alan Friedman.

Credits: Director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, Douglas Foster; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct41; LP10788.

SUDAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Paul Malvern; director, John Rawlins; original screenplay, Edmund L. Hartmann; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Milton Carruth. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Mar45; LP13157.

SUDDEN FRIED CHICKEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, Carl Myer, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Oct46; LP648.

SUDDENLY IT'S SPRING! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Apr44; LP12723.

SUDDENLY IT'S SPRING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Claude Binyon; director, Mitchell Leisen; original story, P. J. Wolfson; screenplay, Claude Binyon, P. J. Wolfson; music score, Victor Young; editor, Alma Macrorie.

Cast: Paulette Goddard, Fred MacMurray, Macdonald Carey, Arleen Whelan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Feb47; LP890.

SUFFERIN' CATS! Loew's Inc., c1943. 707 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jan43; LP11863.

SUGAR BABE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1559.

SUGAR HILL MASQUERADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Nov42; MP13115.

THE SUGAR PLUM TREE. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1948. 54 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A couple meet when they jointly win a run-down farm on a radio program. They improve the farm, combat soil erosion, disagree, and eventually find happiness together.

Credits: Director, Frank Stroyer; screenplay, Leo Rosencrans; film editor, Glen McGowan.

© Deere & Co.; 13Oct48; LP2099.

SUGAR WIND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 843 ft., sd. (Paramount Paragraphics, no. 5)

Credits: Photographer, Charles W. Herbert; editor, William C. Park.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jan40; MP9930.

SUGGESTIONS FOR FIGHTER PILOTS. Presented by United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 5Jun42; 132 prints, 6Jun42; MU12549.

SUICIDE SQUADRON. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William Sistrom; director, Brian Desmond Hurst; original story and screenplay, Terence Young; music, Richard Addinsell; music direction, Muir Mathieson; photography, Georges Perinal; editor, Alan Jaggs.

Appl. author: RKO Radio British Productions, Ltd.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 20Apr42; LP11317.

SUIZA RURAL—NIÑOS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Arthur I. Gates, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Children of Switzerland."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 27Jan47; MP1889.

THE SULLIVANS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lloyd Bacon; story, Edward Doherty, Jules Schermer; screenplay, Mary C. McCall, Jr.; music direction, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 9Feb44; LP12840.

SULLIVAN'S TRAVELS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; written and directed by Preston Sturges; photographer, John Seitz; film editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Dec41; LP11049.

SULPHUR AND IT'S COMPOUNDS. c1945. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: E. C. Waggoner.

© Esquire, Inc.; 31Dec45; MP1533.

THE SULTAN'S BIRTHDAY. SEE Mighty Mouse in the Sultan's Birthday.

THE SULTAN'S CHARM. Techniprocess, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Mario Castegnaro; director, Wallace Milam; music director, Lud Gluskin; photography, Ralph Hammeras.

© Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp. d.b.a. Techniprocess; 26Oct41; MP11967.

THE SULTAN'S DAUGHTER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Philip N. Krasne; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original screenplay, Milton M. Raison, Tim Ryan; music director, Karl Hajos; photographer, Johnny Alton; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Jan44; LP12610.

SUMMER CARE OF THE VICTORY GARDEN. SEE Pointers for Planters.

SUMMER HOLIDAY. Loew's Inc., c1947. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on Eugene O'Neill's play "Ah, Wilderness."

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Rouben Mamoulian; screenplay, Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett; adapted by Irving Brecher, Jean Holloway; music, Harry Warren; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestrations, Conrad Salinger; film editor, Albert Akst.

Cast: Mickey Rooney, Gloria De Haven, Walter Huston, Frank Morgan, Butch Jenkins.

© Loew's Inc.; New York; 26Nov47; LP1345.

SUMMER ON THE FARM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Two children take part in the summer activities on a farm. The picture shows seasonal changes and the rapid growth of plants and animals during the months of June, July, and August. For primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, E. Laurence Palmer.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Nov47; MP2640.

SUMMER STORM. Released through United Artists, c1944. Presented by Angelus Pictures. 106 min., sd. Adapted from "The Shooting Party" by Anton Chekov.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Douglas Sirk; screenplay, Rowland Leigh, Douglas Sirk; adaptation, Douglas Sirk, Michael O'Hara; original score and music direction, Karl Hajos; film editor, Greg G. Tallas.

© Angelus Pictures, Inc.; 14Jul44; LP12764.

SUMMER TRAILS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; music, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8Nov46; MP1652.

A SUMMER'S TALE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 10)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Arne Sucksdorff; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 30May47; MP2285.

THE SUN COMES UP. Loew's Inc., c1948. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on a novel by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings.

Summary: After the accidental death of her young son, a widowed concert-singer gives up her career and retires to the hill country where she meets and adopts an orphan boy.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, William Ludwig, Margaret Fitts; music score, Andre Previn; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

Cast: Jeanette MacDonald, Lloyd Nolan, Claude Jarman, Jr., Lewis Stone, Lassie.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Dec48; LP2073.

SUN-FUN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Apr41; MP11096.

SUN TAN STRUT. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Sep46; MP1245.

SUN VALLEY CYCLONE. c1946. 55 min., sd. Based on Fred Harman's comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Harry Keller, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Apr46; LP323.

SUN VALLEY FUN. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Summer and winter sports at Sun Valley, Idaho: skeet shooting, mountain golf, fishing, calf-roping, skating, and skiing.

Credits: Script, Charles L. Tedford.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 2Feb48; MP2729.

SUN VALLEY SERENADE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,732 ft.

Credits: Director, H. Bruce Humberstone; story, Art Arthur, Robert Harari; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Aug41; LP10689.

SUNBONNET SUE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Ralph Murphy; original story, Paul Gerard Smith, Bradford Ropes; screen adaptation, Ralph Murphy, Richard A. Carroll; music director, Eddie Kay; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Oct45; LP13662.

SUNDAY DINNER FOR A SOLDIER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Martha Cheavens.

Credits: Director, Lloyd Bacon; screenplay, Wanda Tuchock, Melvin Levy; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 14Dec44; LP13055.

SUNDAY PUNCH. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Fay and Michael Kanin.

Credits: Producer, Irving Starr; director, David Miller; screenplay, Fay and Michael Kanin, Allen Rivkin; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Apr42; LP11270.

SUNDOWN. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Walter Wanger. 10 reels, sd. A Henry Hathaway production. From the story by Barré Lyndon.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, Henry Hathaway; screenplay, Barré Lyndon; adaptation, Charles G. Booth; music score, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Dorothy Spencer.

© Walter Wanger Productions, Inc.; 13Nov41; LP10840.

SUNDOWN IN SANTA FE. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An outlaw, wanted for robbery and murder in Arizona, is suspected of having plotted the death of President Lincoln. This Western shows how the conspirator and his gang are brought to justice.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, R. G. Springsteen; written by Norman S. Hall; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Irving M. Schoenberg.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Roy Barcroft, Trevor Bardette, Jean Dean.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 23Nov48; LP2001.

SUNDOWN JIM. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 4,786 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Ernest Haycox.

Credits: Director, James Tinling; screenplay, Robert F. Metzler, William Bruckner; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Mar42; LP11242.

THE SUNDOWN KID. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Elmer Clifton; original story, Eddy White; screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Dec42; LP11757.

SUNDOWN VALLEY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Benjamin Kline; story and screenplay, Luci Ward; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Mar44; LP12781.

THE SUNFISH. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 12Dec41; MP14200.

SUNK BY THE CENSUS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, George Jeske; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Sep40; LP9910.

SUNK IN THE SINK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (All Star Comedy)

Summary: A slapstick comedy about domestic difficulties.

Cast: Andy Clyde.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Mar49; LP2179.

SUNNY. c1941. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 98 min., sd. A Herbert Wilcox production. From the musical comedy, book and lyrics by Otto Harbach and Oscar Hammerstein, II, music by Jerome Kern.

Credits: Associate producer, Merrill G. White; director, Herbert Wilcox; screenplay, Sig Herzig; music direction, Anthony Collins; orchestral arrangements, Anthony Collins, Gene Rose; editor, Elmo Williams.

Appl. author: Suffolk Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 30May41; LP10602.

SUNSET IN EL DORADO. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Leon Abrams; screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; orchestrations, Dale Butts; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Sep45; LP13509.

SUNSET IN THE PACIFIC. Vitaphone Corp., in cooperation with the United States Coast Guard, c1946. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Credits: Supervisor, Gordon Hollingshead.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 20Dec46; MP2448.

SUNSET IN WYOMING. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, William Morgan; original story, Joe Blair; screenplay, Ivan Goff, Anne Morrison Chapin; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul41; LP10662.

SUNSET ON THE DESERT. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1Apr42; LP11237.

SUNSET PASS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 60 min., sd., 35mm. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, William Berke; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Jul46; LP558.

SUNSET SERENADE. c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Kane; original story, Robert Yost; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Sep42; LP11570.

THE SUPAI INDIAN. Coronet, c1945. Made through the courtesy of the U. S. Dept. of Interior, Office of Indian Affairs. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: CIF Staff.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 5Nov45; MP2016.

SUPER CUE MEN. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Jimmie Caras and Willie Mosconi demonstrate their skill at pocket-billiards.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; script, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2098.

SUPER LULU. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Little Lulu Cartoon)

Credits: Direction, Bill Tytla; story, Joe Stultz, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Nov47; LP1339.

SUPERMAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels each, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; directors, Spencer Bennet, Thomas Carr; screenplay, Arthur Hoerl, Lewis Clay, Royal Cole; film editor, Earl Turner.

Cast: Kirk Alyn, Noel Neill, Tommy Bond, Carol Forman.

1. Superman Comes to Earth. © 15Jul48; LP1798.

2. Depths of the Earth. © 22Jul48; LP1770.

3. The Reducer Ray. © 29Jul48; LP1771.

4. Man of Steel. © 5Aug48; LP1799.

5. A Job for Superman. © 12Aug48; LP1871.

6. Superman in Danger. © 15Jul48; LP1772.

7. Into the Electric Furnace. © 26Aug48; LP1872.

8. Superman to the Rescue. © 15Jul48; LP1773.

9. Irresistible Force. © 15Jul48; LP1774.

10. Between Two Fires. © 6Sep48; LP1800.

11. Superman's Dilemma. © 6Sep48; LP1873.

12. Blast In the Depths. © 6Sep48; LP1806.

13. Hurled to Destruction. © 27Sep48; LP1822.

14. Superman at Bay. © 20Sep48; LP1868.

15. The Payoff. © 5Oct48; LP1833.

SUPERMAN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Seymour Kneitel, I. Sparber; animation, Steve Muffati, Frank Endres.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Sep41; LP10736.

SUPERMAN IN BILLION DOLLAR LIMITED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Seymour Kneitel, Isidore Sparber; animation, Myron Waldman, Frank Endres.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Jan42; LP11029.

SUPERMAN IN DESTRUCTION, INC. Paramount Pictures Inc. c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Jay Morton; animation, Dave Tendlar, Tom Moore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Dec42; LP11766.

SUPERMAN IN ELECTRIC EARTHQUAKE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Seymore Kneitel, Isidore Sparber; animation, Steve Muffati, Arnold Gillespie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15May42; LP11362.

SUPERMAN IN JUNGLE DRUMS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dan Gordon; story, Robert Little, Jay Morton.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar43; LP11964.

SUPERMAN IN SECRET AGENT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Jul43; LP12574.

SUPERMAN IN SHOWDOWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Jay Morton; animation, Steve Muffati, Graham Place.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Oct42; LP11667.

SUPERMAN IN TERROR ON THE MIDWAY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Jay Morton, Dan Gordon; animation, Orestes Calpini, Jim Davis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc; 28Aug42; LP11553.

SUPERMAN IN THE ARCTIC GIANT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner, Ted Pierce; animation, Willard Bowsky, Reuben Grossman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Feb42; LP11106.

SUPERMAN IN THE BULLETEERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner, Carl Meyer; animation, Orestes Calpini, Graham Place.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Mar42; LP11182.

SUPERMAN IN THE ELEVENTH HOUR. c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. A Famous Studio production. Stereoptical process.

Credits: Director, Dan Gordon; story, Carl Meyer, William Turner; animation, Willard Bowsky, William Henning; music arrangement, Sammy Timberg. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Nov42; LP11701.

SUPERMAN IN THE JAPOTEURS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Carl Meyer; animation, Myron Waldman, Nicholas Tafuri.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Sep42; LP11607.

SUPERMAN IN THE MAGNETIC TELESCOPE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordon, Carl Meyer; animation, Myron Waldman, Thomas Moore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Apr42; LP11247.

SUPERMAN IN THE MECHANICAL MONSTERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Story, Isidore Sparber, Seymour Kneitel; animation, Steve Muffati, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Nov41; LP10906.

SUPERMAN IN THE MUMMY STRIKES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Jay Morton; animation, Myron Waldman, Graham Place.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Feb43; LP11883.

SUPERMAN IN THE UNDERGROUND WORLD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Direction, Seymour Kneitel; story, Jay Morton.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Jun43; LP12110.

SUPERMAN IN VOLCANO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner, Carl Meyer; animation, Willard Bowsky, Otto Feuer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Jul42; LP11454.

SUPER MOUSE IN DOWN WITH CATS. c1943. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 1Oct43; LP12894.

SUPER MOUSE IN PANDORA'S BOX. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Jun43; LP12896.

SUPER MOUSE RIDES AGAIN. Terrytoons, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, color. (A Terrytoon)

Credit: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 6Aug43; MP14906.

SUPER-RABBIT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Ken Harris; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Jul43; MP13761.

THE SUPER-SALESMEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11565.

THE SUPREME COURT. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the relation of the Supreme Court to the "plain citizen," and depicts the Court as the guardian of our Constitutional rights. For high school and college students and adults.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Marshall Dimock.

© David A. Smart; 21Dec48; MP3728.

SURE CURES. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 972 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Oct46; MP1260.

THE SURFACE CONDENSER. Presented by Allis Chalmers. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (The Magic of Steam, no. 2)

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Allis Chalmers Mfg. Co.; title, descr., & 11 prints, 29Nov43; MU14294.

SURFBOARD RHYTHM. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, Charles Trego; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Oct47; MP2418.

SURGICAL DRESSINGS. sd. United States Navy.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 18Mar44; MU14611.

SURPRISE PACKAGE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 5 prints, 21Apr47; MU1954.

SURPRISE PARTY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Sep45; MP16263.

SURPRISED PARTIES. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; LP11377.

SURRENDER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Sep46; MP1170.

SUSAN AND GOD. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Rachel Crothers.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, George Cukor; screenplay, Anita Loos; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, William H. Terhune.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Jun40; LP9703.

SUSANNA PASS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 67 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a game warden investigates the mysterious dynamiting of a fish hatchery and solves a murder.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, William Witney; written by Sloan Nibley, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Estilita Rodriguez, Martin Garralaga, Trigger.

© Republic Pictures Corp. 9May49; LP2293.

SUSIE STEPS OUT. Comet Productions, Inc., c1946. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producers, Buddy Rogers, Ralph Cohn; director, Reginald Le Borg; original story, Reginald Le Borg, Kurt Neumann; screenplay, Elwood Ullman; music director, Hal Borne; orchestration, Emil Cadkin; film editor, Lynn Harrison.

Cast: David Bruce, Cleatus Caldwell, Nita Hunter.

© Comet Productions, Inc.; 13Dec46; LP803.

THE SUSPECT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 9 reels, sd. From a novel by James Ronald.

Credits: Associate producer, Islin Auster; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; adaptation, Arthur T. Horman; photographer, Paul Ivano; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Jan45; LP13116.

SUSPENSE. King Bros. c1946. 11 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Frank Tuttle; original screenplay, Philip Yordan; music director, Daniele Amfitheatrof; photographer, Karl Struss; film editor, Otho Lovering.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Apr46; LP302.

SUSPICION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 99 min., sd. From the novel "Before the Fact" by Francis Iles.

Credits: Director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, Samson Raphaelson, Joan Harrison, Alma Reville; music, Franz Waxman; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Nov41; LP10870.

SUVA, PRIDE OF FIJI. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 798 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston, C. Bakaleinikoff; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14May40; MP10238.

SWALLOW THE LEADER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Phil DeLara, John Carey, Pete Burness, Charles McKimson.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 25Oct49 (in notice: 1948); MP4642.

SWAMP FIRE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 69 min., sd., 35mm. A Pine-Thomas production.

Credits: Associate producer, L. B. Merman; director, William H. Pine; original screenplay, Geoffrey Homes; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Aug46; LP567.

SWAMP FIRE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP111.

SWAMP WATER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,935 ft., sd. From the story by Vereen Bell.

Credits: Director, Jean Renoir; screenplay, Dudley Nichols; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Dec41; LP10896.

SWAMP WOMAN. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, George M. Merrick, Max Alexander; director, Elmer Clifton; original story, Fred McConnell; screenplay, Arthur G. Durlam; photographer, Eddie Linden; film editor, Charles Henkel.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 12Nov41; LP10947.

THE SWAN OF TUONELA. Musicolor, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (David L. Loew Musicolor Short)

Summary: A musical short presenting "The Swan of Tuonela" by Jean Sibelius.

Credits: Producer, Werner Janssen.

© Musicolor, Inc.; 7Jan49 (in notice: 1946); MP4014.

SWANEE RIVER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. 7,894 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, John Taintor Foote, Philip Dunne; music director, Louis Silvers.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Dec39; LP9693.

SWANEE SMILES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10May43; MP13546.

SWANEE SWING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Jul44; MP15001.

THE SWANKIEST ISLE IN THE WORLD. SEE Going Places.

SWEATER GIRL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Beulah Marie Dix and Bertram Millhauser.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, William Clemens; screenplay, Eve Green; music direction, Victor Young; photography, John Mescall; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4May42; LP11463.

SWEATERS AND SUNDAES. Techniprocess, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Mario Castegnaro; written and directed by Roy Mack; music director, Lud Gluskin; photography, Ralph Hammeras.

© Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp. d.b.a. Techniprocess; 26Oct41; MP11972.

SWEDEN. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16392.

SWEDEN LOOKS AHEAD. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 5.

SWEENEY STEPS OUT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Narrator, John Kieran.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Sep43; MP13986.

SWEEPING OARS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 885 ft., sd. (World of Sports)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Parris Emery; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jul43; MP13810.

SWEET ADELINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Oct41; MP11647.

SWEET AND LOVELY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16106.

SWEET AND LOW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 19 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Louis Harris; director, Jerry Hopper; screenplay, Jim Henaghan, Jack Roberts; music director, Irvin Talbot; editor, Frank Bracht.

Cast: Catherine Craig, Richard Webb, Sammy Davis, Jr.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Mar47; LP906.

SWEET AND LOW DOWN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 6,810 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Archie Mayo; original story, Richard English, Edw. Haldeman; screenplay, Richard English; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Aug44; LP12823.

SWEET BUSINESS. Norris, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates how to increase sales of Norris candies by correct display of merchandise. Training film for retail clerks.

© Norris, Inc.; 21Sep48; MP4018.

SWEET CHEAT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; story, Leslie Goodwins; screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Vince Barnett, Jack Rice, Robert Jellison.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Oct49; LP2687.

SWEET EVALINA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jul46; MP906.

SWEET GENEVIEVE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Arthur Dreifuss; screenplay, Jameson Brewer, Arthur Dreifuss; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Jean Porter, Jimmy Lydon, Al Donohue.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Oct47; LP1249.

SWEET HAWAIIAN DREAMS. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP12006.

SWEET JAM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Vernon Keays; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Saul Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Sep43; LP12286.

SWEET KISSES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec43; MP14487.

SWEET LEILANI. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Sep44; MP15228.

SWEET LORRAINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jan45; MP15588.

SWEET ONION TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Nov42; MP13121.

SWEET POTATO POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Sep45; MP16257.

SWEET ROSIE O'GRADY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 6,850 ft., sd. Based on stories by William R. Lipman, Frederick Stephani, Edward Van Every.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, Ken Englund; music direction, Alfred Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Oct43; LP12462.

SWEET SPIRITS OF NIGHTER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1,463 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Al Giebler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Dec41; LP11142.

SWEET SUE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jan45; MP15610.

SWEET SUE, JUST YOU. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1335.

SWEET SWING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Josef Berne; music director, Ted Cain; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Edgar Zane.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Feb44; LP12508.

SWEETHEART-DARLING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11568.

SWEETHEART OF ALL MY DREAMS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16315.

SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jeffrey Bernerd; director, Jack Bernhard; original story, George Waggner; screenplay, Michel Jacoby; music director, Edward J. Kay.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Dec46; LP886.

SWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11159.

SWEETHEART OF THE CAMPUS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Edward Dmytryk; story, Robert D. Andrews; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews, Edmund Hartmann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Jun41; LP10666.

SWEETHEART OF THE FLEET. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Charles Barton; story, Albert Duffy; screenplay, Albert Duffy, Maurice Tombragel; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10May42; LP11276.

SWEETHEART SERENADE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd, (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; music, Sammy Fain, Irving Kahal.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Nov43; MP14105.

SWEETHEART SERENADE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; music, Sammy Fain, Irving Kahal.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 7Dec43; MP14261.

SWEETHEARTS OF THE U.S.A. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, Lew Collins; original story, Jane Keith; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire, Richard Long, Jane Keith; music director, Dave Chudnow; photography, Ira Morgan; film editor, George M. Merrick.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Jan44; LP12465.

SWELL GUY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 86 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play "The Hero" by Gilbert Emery.

Credits: Producer, Mark Hellinger; director, Frank Tuttle; screenplay, Richard Brooks; music, Frank Skinner; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

Cast: Sonny Tufts, Ann Blyth, Ruth Warrick, William Gargan, John Litel.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Dec46; LP740.

THE SWIM PARADE. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports News Review) Warner Bros.

Summary: Swimming and diving stars display their talents in this cavalcade of water sports, and show the bathing fashions which were in vogue from the gay nineties to the present day.

Credits: Directed and written by Robert Youngson; narrator, Dan Donaldson.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20Mar49; MP3972.

SWIMCAPADES. Paramount pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credit: Narration, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Jan44; MP14424.

SWIMCAPADES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, A. Pam Blumenthal, Van Campen Heilner; director, Andre de La Varre; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Sep45; MP16309.

SWIMMING THROUGH BURNING OIL AND SWIMMING THROUGH SURF. Presented by U. S. Coast Guard. sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 35 prints, 26Jul43; MU13778.

SWING CATS BALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP144088.

SWING CLEANING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story. Bob Wickersham; animation, Willard Bowsky, Arnold Gillespie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Apr41; LP10393.

SWING FEVER. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Irving Starr; director, Tim Whelan; screenplay, Nat Perrin, Warren Wilson; music direction, Georgie Stoll, David Snell; music arrangements, Earl Brent; orchestration, George Dunning, Phil Moore, Wally Heglin; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec43; LP12427.

SWING FOR SALE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Aug41; MP11443.

SWING FOR YOUR SUPPER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11125.

SWING FROLIC. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11078.

SWING HIGH, SWING SWEET. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; music director, Milton Rosen; orchestrations, Loyd Akridge; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29Nov45; LP13688.

SWING HOSTESS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Louise Rousseau, Gail Davenport; music director, David Chudnow; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 8Sep44; LP13563.

SWING IN THE SADDLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 69 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story, Maurice Leo; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher, Morton Grant, Bradford Ropes; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Aug44; LP13088.

SWING IT, MR. SCHUBERT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Nov42; MP13105.

SWING IT SOLDIER. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Harold Young; original screenplay, Dorcas Cochran, Arthur V. Jones; photography, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Oct41; LP10771.

SWING OUT SISTER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard W. Burton; director, Edward Lilley; original story, Eugene Conrad, Edward Dein; screenplay, Henry Blankfort; photographer, Paul Ivano; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8May45; LP13261.

SWING OUT THE BLUES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Mal St. Clair; story, Doris Malloy; screenplay, Dorcas Cochran; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Jan44; LP12439.

SWING PARADE OF 1946. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 8 reels., sd.

Credits: Producer, Harry A. Romm; director, Phil Karlson; original story, Edmond Kelso; screenplay, Tim Ryan; cameraman, Harry Neumann; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Feb46; LP138.

SWING RHUMBA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16316.

SWING SERENADE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer. Will Cowan; director, Robert Wilmot; film editor, Ace Herman.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Jan45; LP13115.

SWING SHIFT CINDERELLA. Loew's Inc., c1945. 710 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair, Ed Love; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Aug45; LP13460.

SWING SHIFT MAISIE. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on characters created by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Norman Z. McLeod; original screenplay, Mary C. McCall, Jr., Robert Halff; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May43; LP12079.

SWING, SHIFT, SWING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Sep42; MP12937.

SWING SOCIAL. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 776 ft., sd., color. (An M.G.M. Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22May40; MP10395.

SWING STYLES. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 27Aug47; MP2419.

SWING THAT BAND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Arthur Dreifuss; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Alvin Todd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Mar43; LP11916.

SWING THE WESTERN WAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Derwin Abrahams; story, Bert Horswell; screenplay, Barry Shipman; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: The Hoosier Hotshots, Jack Leonard, Mary Dugan, Thurston Hall.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Jun47; LP1050.

THE SWING TO SPORTS. Presented by Remington Arms Company, Inc. and Peters Cartridge Division, 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc,; title & descr., 9May46; 13 prints, 13May46; MU561.

SWING WITH BING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. with the cooperation of the Professional Golfers Association of America, c1940. reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Herbert Polesie; script. Grant Garrett; photography, Al Wetzel; editor, Angelo Ross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22Jul40; LP9789.

SWING YOUR PARTNER, c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Richard Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11May43; LP12091.

SWING YOUR PARTNER. c1943. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker, Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. A Walter Lantz Productions; 19Apr43; MP13493.

SWINGEROO CIRCUS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun43; MP13624.

SWINGIN' AT THE SEANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11121.

SWINGIN' DOWN THE SCALE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13May46; LP404.

SWINGIN' IN THE BARN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940.

Credits: Director, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 14May40; LP9641.

SWINGIN' IN THE GROOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Oct45; MP16427.

SWINGIN' ON A RAINBOW. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, William Beaudine; original story, Olive Cooper; screenplay, Olive Cooper, John Grey; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Jul45; LP13424.

SWINGIN' ON NOTHIN'. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Aug42; MP12856.

SWINGIN' SOLDIER MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jun42; MP12670.

SWINGIN' WITH WILLIAM. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R.C.M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec46; MP1409.

SWINGING IN A HAREM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Feb43; MP13283.

SWINGING IT THE KITCHEN WAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec42; MP13158.

SWINGING O' THE GREEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Aug43; MP13890.

SWINGING ON A STAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15223.

SWINGING THE BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Dec44; MP15474.

SWINGOMANIA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13191.

SWING'S THE THING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald LeBorg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Oct42; LP11630.

SWINGTIME BLUES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald LeBorg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Alvin Todd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Dec42; LP11787.

SWINGTIME HOLIDAY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Larry Ceballos; music director, H. G. Salter; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Edgar Zane.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Jul44; LP12851.

SWINGTIME JOHNNY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Warren Wilson; director, Edward F. Cline; screenplay, Clyde Bruckman; film editor, Ed Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12420.

SWISS FAMILY ROBINSON. c1940. Presented by Gene Towne. 93 min., sd. Towne and Baker Productions. From the novel by Johann David Wyss.

Credits: Producers, Gene Towne, Graham Baker; director, Edward Ludwig; screenplay, Walter Ferris, Gene Towne, Graham Baker; editor, George Crone.

Appl. author: The Play's the Thing Productions.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb40; LP9544.

SWISS FROLICS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jul43; MP13792.

SWISS HILLY BILLY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Dec43; MP14319.

SWISS SKI YODELERS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 17May40; MP10283.

SWISS TEASE. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody, no. 130)

Credits: Producers, Raymond Katz, Henry Binder; director, Sid Marcus; animation, Howard Swift, Roy Jenkins; music, Darrell Calker.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 11Sep47; LP1201.

SWITZERLAND TODAY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 2)

Summary: The traditions, geography, government, railroads, industries, and military training of Switzerland.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by H. Dudley Hale; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Dave Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 12Dec47; MP2602.

THE SWOONER CROONER. c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, George Cannata; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 17Jun44; MP14959.

SWOONING THE SWOONERS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Sep45; LP25.

SWORD IN THE DESERT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about the struggle of the Jews to establish a homeland in Palestine in 1947.

Credits: Produced and written by Robert Buckner; director, George Sherman; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Dana Andrews, Marta Toren, Stephen McNally, Jeff Chandler, Philip Friend.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Sep49; LP2558.

SWORD OF THE AVENGER. UPA Films, Inc. Released by Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 75 min., sd., sepia, 35mm.

Summary: With scenes laid in the Philippines around the year 1827, this melodrama follows the adventures of a falsely accused sailor who escapes from jail to recover his sweetheart, find a treasure, and avenge his unjust treatment.

Credits: Producer and director, Sidney Salkow; screenplay, Julius Evans; music composition and direction, Eddison von Ottenfeld; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

Cast: Ramon Delgado, Sigrid Gurie, Ralph Morgan, Duncan Renaldo.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 4Mar48; LP1644.

THE SWORDSMAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 81 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Burt Kelly; director, Joseph H. Lewis; original screenplay, Wilfrid H. Pettitt; music score, Hugo Friedhofer; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

Cast: Larry Parks, Ellen Drew, George Macready, Edgar Buchanan.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Dec47; LP1354.

SYMPHONIC SHADES. Attwood Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Songs of America)

Summary: Presents the songs "Rise Up Shepherd an' Foller," and "Ting de Banjo."

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder.

© Attwood Productions, Inc.; 4Nov49; MP4650.

SYMPHONIE PASTORALE. Gibe Films, Inc., Paris, for Pathe Cinema. Released in the U. S. through Films International of America, Inc., c1948. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on "La Symphonie Pastorale" by André Gide.

Summary: A tragedy about a married clergyman and a blind orphan girl who commits suicide when she realizes that the pastor's fatherly affection has developed into an overpowering love.

Credits: Producer, J. Bercholz; director, Jean Delannoy; adaptation, Jean Delannoy, Jean Aurenche; dialogue, Pierre Bost, Jean Aurenche; English titles, Justin O'Brien; music, Georges Auric.

Cast: Michele Morgan, Pierre Blanchar, Line Noro, Louvigny, Jean Desailly.

© William Marshall, Inc.; 2Sep48; LP2092.

SYMPHONY HOUR. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse)

© Walt Disney Productions; 9Jan42; LP11125.

SYMPHONY IN SNOW. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941, 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; narrator, Ed Thorgersen; music score, L. De Francesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Mar41; MP11094.

SYMPHONY IN SPINACH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Larry Riley; animation, Tom Johnson, John Gentiella.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec48; LP2052.

SYMPHONY IN SWING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Danny B. Landres.

Cast: Duke Ellington and his orchestra.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Apr49; MP4087.

THE SYNCHRO-MESH TRANSMISSION; theory and principles of operation. 3 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 242 prints, 25Oct43; MU14070.

SYNCOPATED SIOUX. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 1 reel. (A Walter Lantz Cartoon)

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Dec40; MP10676.

SYNCOPATION. c1942. 88 min., sd. From an original story "The Band Played On" by Valentine Davies.

Credits: Producer and director, William Dieterle; screenplay, Philip Yordan, Frank Cavett; music director, Leith Stevens; editor, John Sturges.

Application author: William Dieterle Productions.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22May42; LP11371.

SYNCO-SMOOTH SWING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; orchestrations, Lloyd Akridge; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Sep45; LP13514.

T

T-BONE FOR TWO. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 29Jan42; LP11493.

THE T FORMATION. Sport Film Slides, Inc. Distributed by Curriculum Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, si., 16mm.

Appl. author: Howie Odell.

© Curriculum Films, Inc.; 1Sep46; MP1302.

T. G. BOOGIE WOOGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Dec45; MP61.

T-MEN. Released by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. Presented by Edward Small. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Reliance picture. Suggested by a story by Virginia Kellogg.

Summary: Law enforcement agents of the Treasury Department break up a ring of counterfeiters. Based on fact, and photographed on actual settings in Detroit and Los Angeles.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Anthony Mann; written by John C. Higgins; music score, Paul Sawtell.

Cast: Dennis O'Keefe, Mary Meade, Alfred Ryder, Wally Ford.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 10Jan48; LP1455.

T-MEN OF THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

TABBY THE CAT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jul45; MP16151.

TABLE TENNIS TOPNOTCHERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 823 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shilkret; photography, Don Malkames.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Apr44; MP14884.

TABU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc; 25Oct43; MP14129.

TABU. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1334.

TACKLING IN FOOTBALL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Collaborator, Andrew Kerr.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 31May46; MP659.

TAHITI HONEY. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, John H. Auer; original story, Frederick Kohner; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Frederick Kohner, H. W. Hanemann; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Richard Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 23Mar43; LP11945.

TAHITI NIGHTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Will Jason; original screenplay, Lillie Hayward; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Dec44; LP13124.

TAILOR-MADE DOLLARS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., for the New York Life Insurance Co., c1949. 53 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A training film for sales representatives showing how to acquaint prospective clients with the benefits of the New York Life Insurance Company's Planned Security Service.

© New York Life Insurance Co.; 29Aug49; LP2524.

TAINT LEGAL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Charles E. Roberts, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24May40; LP9737.

'TAINT YOURS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Aug44; MP15097.

TAKE A LETTER, DARLING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd. A Mitchell Leisen production.

Credits: Associate producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, Mitchell Leisen; story, George Beck; screenplay, Claude Binyon; music score, Victor Young; editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Jul42; LP11438.

TAKE A LETTER, PLEASE. United States Navy. sd., 16mm.

Appl. authors: George W. Chapman, H. Bauernschmidt.

© De Frenes & Co.; title & descr., 15Nov43; 8 prints, 27Oct43; MU14136.

TAKE A LOOK AROUND, Presented by Chevrolet.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 154 prints, 3Feb41; LU10225.

TAKE A NUMBER. sd.

Credits: Producer, Augustus Thorne.

© August H. Torenberg; title, descr., & 7 prints, 1Jun40; MU10240.

TAKE BACK YOUR GOLD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., 13Oct41; MP11660.

TAKE EVERYTHING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Apr45; MP15865.

TAKE HEED MR. TOJO. Walter Lantz Productions, for the U. S. Navy.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title, descr., & 4 prints, 12Jul44; MU15014.

TAKE IT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Aug45; MP16226.

TAKE IT AND GIT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Jul46; MP818.

TAKE IT BIG. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William Pine, William Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Howard J. Green; music director, Rudy Schrager; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr.; editor, Howard Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jun44; LP13187.

TAKE IT EASY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Jul44; MP14985.

TAKE IT FOR GRANTED. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by New England Electric System. color, 16mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 5Mar47; 50 prints, 3Mar47; MU1750.

TAKE IT OFF. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13194.

TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940–41. 1 reel each, sd. (Columbia Quiz Reels) Based on the radio program.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; continuities, William M. Nelson, George Blake; photographer, Charles Harten; editors, Harry Foster, Leonard Weiss.

Series 1.

1. © 22Nov40; MP10872.

2. © 29Nov40; MP10910.

3. © 23Dec40; MP11113.

4. © 1May41; MP11189.

5. © 21Jul41; MP12079.

TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 6,425 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Benjamin Stoloff; screenplay, Harold Buchman, Snag Werris, Mac Benoff; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Jul44; LP13933.

TAKE ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Aug42; MP12857.

TAKE ME BACK, BABY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11874.

TAKE ME BACK TO MY BOOTS AND SADDLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41; MP11217.

TAKE ME BACK TO OKLAHOMA. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Robert Emmett; photographer, Marcel A. LePicard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Nov40; LP10331.

TAKE ME BACK TO TULSA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jul44; MP15075.

TAKE ME IN YOUR ARMS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15970.

TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Sep41; MP11544.

TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Mar45; MP15731.

TAKE ME OUT TO THE BALL GAME. Loew's Inc., c1949. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A song and dance comedy about a baseball team. Setting, Florida in 1910.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Busby Berkeley; story, Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen; screenplay, Harry Tugend, George Wells; music director, Adolph Deutsch; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

Cast: Frank Sinatra, Esther Williams, Gene Kelly, Betty Garrett, Edward Arnold.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Mar49; LP2174.

TAKE MY ALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Oct46; MP1194.

TAKE MY LIFE. Released in the U. S. by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 79 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Cineguild production. Adapted from an original screen story by Winston Graham and Valerie Taylor.

Summary: A man on trial for a murder that he did not commit is set free when his wife, aided by Scotland Yard, finds the real murderer.

Credits: Producer, Anthony Havelock-Allan; director, Ronald Neame; music score, William Alwyn; music director, Muir Mathieson; film editor, Geoffrey Foot.

Cast: Hugh Williams, Greta Gynt, Marius Goring, Francis L. Sullivan, Henry Edwards.

© Independent Producers, Ltd.; 3Dec47; LP1527.

TAKE ONE FALSE STEP. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. Released through Universal International, c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story "Night Call" by Irwin and David Shaw.

Summary: The adventures of a university professor who becomes implicated in a pseudo-murder.

Credits: Producer and director, Chester Erskine; screenplay, Irwin Shaw, Chester Erskine; music, Walter Scharf; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

Cast: William Powell, Shelley Winters, Marsha Hunt, James Gleason, Dorothy Hart.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Jun49; LP2405.

TAKE THE "A" TRAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11682.

TAKE THE AIR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 20 min. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Nat Hiken.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec40; LP10266.

TAKE THREE TENSES. SEE Enchantment.

TAKIN' THE BREAKS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; orchestrations, Loyd Akridge; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Apr46; LP246.

TAKING THE AIR.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 27Mar41; 682 prints, 28Mar41; MU10991.

TALE OF A DOG. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 987 ft., sd., b&w. (Miniature)

Credits: Director, Cyril Endfield; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr44; LP221.

TALE OF ONE CITY. Major Films. 702 ft., color, 16mm.

Summary: Traces the development of Florida from prehistoric days to the present time, and shows the changes in the resort city of St. Petersburg since the year of its founding as a terminus of the Orange Belt Railroad.

Appl. author: Burrell Smith.

© Major Films; title, descr., & 2 prints, 31Oct49; MU4666.

TALE OF THE NAVAJOS. Loew's Inc., c1948. 58 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A documentary study of the legends and folkways of the Navajos. Filmed in the Navajo country of Arizona.

Credits: Producer, John A. Haeseler; story, Harry Chandlee, John A. Haeseler; narrator, Edwin Jerome; music, Lan Adomian; music director, Jack Shaindlin.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Nov48; (in notice: 1946); LP2205.

A TALE OF TWO CAFES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1,726 ft., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by Anthony Gibbs. (A Paramount Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer and director, George B. Templeton; screenplay, Franz Rosenwald; music director, Irvin Talbot; film editor, Helene Turner. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul46; LP476.

TALE OF TWO CITIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jun41; MP11269.

A TALE OF TWO KITTIES. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Blue Ribbon Cartoon) A re-release.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Aug48; MP3246.

TALE OF TWO MICE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Warren Foster; animation, Arthur Davis; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 2Jul45; MP16161.

TALENTED BEAUTIES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Feminine World)

Summary: Shows several talented girls who participated in the 1948 beauty pageant at Atlantic City.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Vyvyan Donner; narrator, Bob Russell; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Apr49; MP4364.

TALES FROM THE VIENNA WOODS. Ambassador Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: In the park of Leopoldskron Castle near Salzburg, Austria, the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Josef Krips, plays Johann Strauss' "Tales from the Vienna Woods."

Credits: Producer, Eugen Sharin; director, Leopold Hainisch.

© Ambassador Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4371.

TALES OF MANHATTAN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 10,663 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Julien Duvivier; original stories and screenplay, Ben Hecht, Ferenc Molnar, Donald Ogden Stewart, Samuel Hoffenstein, Alan Campbell, Ladislas Fodor, L. Vadnai, L. Gorog, Lamar Trotti, Henry Blankfort; music director, Edward Paul.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 30Oct42; LP12023.

TALES OF THE EAST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; described by Lowell Thomas; music score, John Rochetti; editor. Lew Lehr.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24May40; MP10306.

TALES OF UNCLE REMUS. SEE Song of the South.

TALK ABOUT A LADY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Robert D. Andrews and Barry Trivers.

Credits: Producer, Michel Kraike; director, George Sherman; screenplay, Richard Weil, Ted Thomas; music director, Mario Silva.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Mar46; LP264.

THE TALK OF THE TOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 12 reels, sd. Based on a story by Sidney Harmon.

Credits: Producer and director, George Stevens; screenplay, Irwin Shaw, Sidney Buchman; adaptation, Dale Van Every; music, Fredrick Hollander; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Jul42; LP11797.

THE TALKING HOIST. Cinecraft Productions, Inc., c1949. Presented by Yale and Towne Manufacturing Co. 14 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the features of the Yale Load King Wire Rope Electric Hoist.

Appl. author: Bernard A. West.

© The Yale & Towne Mfg. Co.; 14Feb49; MP3949.

THE TALKING MAGPIES. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 4Jan46; LP209.

THE TALKING MAGPIES IN FLYING SOUTH. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15Aug47; LP1449.

THE TALKING MAGPIES IN THE INTRUDERS. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 9May47; LP1182.

TALL, DARK, AND GRUESOME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; film editor, Henry DeMond; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: Hugh Herbert, Dudley Dickerson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Apr48; LP1682.

TALL, DARK AND HANDSOME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,100 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, H. Bruce Humberstone; original screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Jan41; LP10526.

TALL IN THE SADDLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 87 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Edwin L. Marin; original story, Gordon Ray Young; screenplay, Michael Hogan, Paul P. Fix; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Philip Martin, Jr.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Oct44; LP12914.

A TALL SHIP ON DEEP WATERS. Warwick M. Tompkins, c1947. 18 min., sd., color, 16mm.

© Warwick M. Tompkins; 1Dec47; MP2553.

TALLY-HO. Color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© Adolph Louis Otto Rasch; title, descr., & 8 prints, 9Apr40; MU10099.

THE TAMING OF THE SNOOD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28May40; LP9711.

TAMPICO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 6,800 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Lothar Mendes; original story and adaptation, Ladislas Fodor; screenplay, Kenneth Gamet, Fred Niblo, Jr., Richard Macaulay; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Apr44; LP12814.

TAMPICO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Nov45; MP16531.

TANBARK CHAMPIONS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Earl Allvine; continuity, Phil Shea; narrator, Mel Allen; music, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23May47; MP2300.

TANGERINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Apr42; MP12478.

TANGIER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Malvern; director, George Waggner; original story, Alice D. G. Miller; screenplay, M. M. Musselman, Monty F. Collins; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Feb46; LP183.

THE TANGLED ANGLER. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 693 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 16)

Credits: Story and direction, Frank Tashlin; animation, Chic Otterstrom; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 10Jan42; LP11048.

TANGLED TELEVISION. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 658 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 69)

Credits: Director, Sid Marcus; animation, Art Davis, Herb Rothwill; music, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 31Aug40; LP9874.

TANGLED TRAVELS. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 634 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 37)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Al Geiss; animation, Volus Jones, George Grandpre; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 8Jun44; LP12685.

THE TANGO. Folke Robert Espling, c1942. 1 reel.

© Folke Robert Espling; 10Feb42; MP12164.

TANKS A MILLION. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Fred Guiol; original screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith, Warren Wilson, Edward E. Seabrook; music director, Edward Ward; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Sep41; LP10684.

THE TANKS ARE COMING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with the United States Army under the auspices of the Motion Picture Committee for National Defense, c1941. 20 min., color. (Service Special)

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original screenplay, Owen Crump. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Sep41; LP10741.

TANTALIZIN'. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1564.

TAP HAPPY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14449.

TAP ROOTS. Walter Wanger Pictures, Inc. Released by Universal-International, c1948. 109 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by James Street.

Summary: A drama about the efforts of an influential Mississippi family to keep the Lebanon Valley neutral during the Civil War.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Alan LeMay; music, Frank Skinner; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Milton Carruth.

Cast: Van Heflin, Susan Hayward, Boris Karloff, Julie London, Whitfield Connor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., & Walter Wanger Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Jun48; LP1945.

TAR WITH A STAR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, Carl Meyer, Jack Mercer; animation, George Germanetti, Steve Muffatti; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Aug49; LP2491.

TARGET FOR TONIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. with the cooperation of the R. A. F., c1941. 5 reels.

Credits: Director, Harry Watt.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov41; LP10815.

TARGET: JAPAN. March of Time, Division of Time Inc., for the U. S. Navy. Released by the Office of War Information. Distributed by the War Activities Committee, Motion Picture Industry, c1944. 1,250 ft., sd., 35mm.

© Time Inc.; 26Oct44; MP15338.

TARS AND SPARS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 9 reels.

Credits: Director, Alfred E. Green; story, Barry Trivers; screenplay, John Jacoby, Sarett Tobias, Decla Dunning.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jan46; LP34.

TARTU. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios, Ltd., London, c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Harold S. Bucquet; original story, John C. Higgins; screenplay, John Lee Mahin, Howard Emmett Rogers; music director, Louis Levy; photographer, John J. Cox; film editor, D. Myers.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Jul43; LP12175.

TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS. c1945. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 76 min., sd. Based upon the characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Kurt Neumann; screenplay, John Jacoby, Marjorie L. Pfaelzer; music score, Paul Sawtell; photography, Archie Stout; film editor, Robert O. Crandall.

© Champion Productions, Inc.; 13Apr45; LP13346.

TARZAN AND THE HUNTRESS. Sol Lesser Productions, Inc., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Kurt Neumann; original story and screenplay, Jerry Gruskin, Rowland Leigh; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Merrill White.

Cast: Johnny Weissmuller, Brenda Joyce, Johnny Sheffield.

© Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.; 25Mar47; LP989.

TARZAN AND THE LEOPARD WOMAN. c1945. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 72 min., sd. Based upon the characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Kurt Neumann; original story and screenplay, Carroll Young; music score, Paul Sawtell; photographer, Karl Struss; film editor, Robert O. Crandall.

© Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.; 31Dec45; LP254.

TARZAN AND THE MERMAIDS. Sol Lesser Productions, Inc., c1948. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Summary: A story of the African coast. Tarzan rescues the heroine from the clutches of pearl thieves and ends their nefarious undertakings.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Robert Florey; original story and screenplay, Carroll Young; music director and composer, Dimitri Tiomkin.

Cast: Johnny Weissmuller, Brenda Joyce, Linda Christian, George Zucco, Andrea Palma.

© Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.; 23Mar48; LP1567.

TARZAN TRIUMPHS. c1943. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 76 min., sd. From a story by Carroll Young. Based upon the characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, William Thiele; screenplay, Roy Chanslor, Carroll Young; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; photography, Harry Wild.

© Principal Artists Productions; 12Jan43; LP11970.

TARZAN'S DESERT MYSTERY. c1943. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 70 min., sd. From a story by Carroll Young. Based upon characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, William Thiele; screenplay, Edward T. Lowe; music score, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; photography, Harry Wild, Russ Harlan; film editor, Ray Lockert.

© Principal Artists Productions; 26Nov43; LP12444.

TARZAN'S MAGIC FOUNTAIN. Sol Lesser Productions, Inc. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 1948. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Summary: A jungle adventure in which Tarzan saves the African natives' "fountain of youth" from commercial exploitation.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Lee Sholem; screenplay, Curt Siodmak, Harry Chandlee; music, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Merrill White.

Cast: Lex Barker, Brenda Joyce, Albert Dekker, Evelyn Ankers, Charles Drake.

© Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.; 31Dec48; LP2168.

TARZAN'S NEW YORK ADVENTURE. Loew's Inc., c1942. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Summary: On a vacation in New York Tarzan resorts to jungle tactics when police methods fail, and finds "Boys" who had been taken by a circus.

Credits: Producer, Frederick Stephani; director, Richard Thorpe; story, Myles Connolly; screenplay, William R. Lipman, Myles Connolly; music score, David Snell; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

Cast: Johnny Weissmuller, Maureen O'Sullivan, John Sheffield, Virginia Grey, Charles Bickford.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Mar42; LP2061.

TARZAN'S SECRET TREASURE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., sepia, blue tone. Based on the characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Credits: Producer, B. P. Fineman; director, Richard Thorpe; original screenplay, Myles Connolly, Paul Gangelin; music score, David Snell; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Nov41; LP10872.

TASCO, THE NAVAJO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, si., b&w, 8mm. Adapted from the sound films "Navajo Children" and "Navajo People."

Summary: The film shows typical scenes from the life of a Navajo Indian, from childhood to marriage.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Nov48; MP3565.

TASK FORCE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the United States Coast Guard, c1944. 20 min., color.

Credits: Narrator, Jackson Beck. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27May44; LP12669.

TASK FORCE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 116 min., sd., b&w with color sequences, 35mm.

Summary: A drama about the growth of U. S. naval aviation from 1921 to the time of the Japanese defeat. Included are clips from Navy films showing the actual attack on Pearl Harbor, and the battles of Midway and Okinawa.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; written and directed by Delmer Daves; music, Franz Waxman; film editor, Alan Crosland, Jr.

Cast: Gary Cooper, Jane Wyatt, Wayne Morris, Walter Brennan, Julie London.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Sep49; LP2557.

TATTLE TALEVISION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 19 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, George Jeske, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Nov40; LP10050.

TAVERN IN THE TOWN. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Roy Mack.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12331.

TAWNY PIPIT. Two Cities Films, Ltd., London. Released in U. S. by Universal-International, c1947. A Prestige picture. 85 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A portrayal of English manners. The discovery that a pair of rare birds, known as tawny pipits, are nesting near an English village creates excitement in which the Royal Ornithological Society, the British army, the Minister of Agriculture, and the local villagers become involved. Setting, wartime England.

Credits: Producer, Bernard Miles; written and directed by Bernard Miles, Charles Saunders; music, Noel Newton-Wood; music director, Muir Mathieson; film editor, Douglas Myers.

Cast: Bernard Miles, Rosamund John, Niall MacGinnis, Jean Gillie, Christopher Steele.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 11Dec47; LP1979.

TAXI, MISTER. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Fred Guiol; director, Kurt Neumann; screenplay, Earle Snell, Clarence Marks; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Sep42; LP11967.

TCHAIKOWSKIANA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11079.

TE QUIERO PARA MI. Universal Films Española, S. A., Barcelona, Spain, c1944. 10 reels, sd. Inspirada en la novela de Luisa Maria Linares.

Credits: Director, Ladislao Vadja; adaptación y dialogo, Luis De Vargas, Alfredo Echegeray, Manuel Tamayo.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Nov44; LP13077.

TEA FOR TWO HUNDRED. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Donald Duck Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Nick George, Bill Berg; animation, Judge Whitaker, Volus Jones, Bob Carlson, Bill Justice; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Sep48; LP2143.

TEA ON THE TERRACE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar42; MP12341.

TEACH THEM TO DRIVE. c1945. 20 min., sd., 16mm. The Pennsylvania State College in cooperation with the Automotive Safety Foundation and sponsored by the War Transportation Committee.

Credits: John Henry Frizzell.

Appl. author: Frank S. Neusbaum.

© The American Legion; 1Apr45; MP651.

TEACHER! TEACHER! Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12681.

TEACHING. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Aug46; MP1073.

TEAMWORK. Presented by Bundy Tubing. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Bundy Tubing, Co.; title, descr., & 79 prints, 1Jun42; MU12527.

TEAMWORK. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Frigidaire Division, General Motors Corp. 33 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Sequences from early silent motion pictures and a revival of "Sand on the Slippery Sidewalks" are combined with narration to teach a lesson in teamwork.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc; title, descr., & 22 prints, 25Mar48; MU2910.

TEAR GAS SQUAD. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 6 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Terry Morse; original screenplay, Charles Belden, Don Ryan, Kenneth Gamet.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4May40; LP9620.

THE TECHNIC OF AMALGAM RESTORATIONS. 900 ft., si., color.

Appl. author: Merrill James Shepro.

© Shepro Scientific Film Co.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 3Jun44; MU14903.

A TECHNIQUE FOR THE ORAL APPLICATION OF ELECTRO SURGICAL METHODS. si., color, 16mm.

© William A. Coles; title & descr., 15Apr40; 18 prints, 3Apr40; MU10113.

THE TECHNIQUE OF LITHOGRAPHY. 2 reels, si., 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Lester H. Kohs.

© Lester H. Kohs; 2May40; MP11849.

THE TECHNIQUE OF LITHOGRAPHY. 16mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Lester H. Kohs.

© Lester H. Kohs; title, descr., & 7 prints, 2May40; MU10176.

TECHNIQUES OF GROUP CHEST X-RAY SERVICES. Sun Dial Films, Inc., c1946. 20 min., sd., 16mm.

© Sun Dial Films, Inc.; 23May46; MP680.

THE TECHNOLOGY AND MACHINING OF MEEHANITE THE GENERAL IRON WORKS WAY. sd.

Appl. author: Herbert A. Reece.

© The Meehanite Metal Corp.; title & descr., 4Oct44; 4 prints, 19Aug44; MU15244.

TECHNOLOGY AT MID-CENTURY. American Film Services, Inc., for the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 45 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The role played by science and engineering in the modern world, both in war and peace, is illustrated by showing the work done at M. I. T.

Credits: Script, Joseph Coburn Smith; narrator, Hugh James.

© Massachusetts Institute of Technology; title, descr., & 6 prints, 27Jul49; MU4355.

TED FIO-RITO AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; continuity, Justin Herman; photographer, George Webber.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Oct39; MP10280.

TED FIO RITO AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Danny B. Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Apr49; MP4084.

TED, HIS MIKE, AND YOU. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Westinghouse. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 24Mar47; 10 prints, 23Mar47; MU1820.

TED WEEMS AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Danny B. Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Jan49; MP3853.

TEDDY, THE ROUGH RIDER. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 19 min., sd., color. (Historical Featuret)

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; original screenplay, Charles L. Tedford. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Feb40; LP9440.

TEE FOR TWO. Loew's Inc., c1945. 648 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Pete Burness, Kenneth Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Jul45; LP13396.

TEE UP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 942 ft., sd. (The World of Sports, no. 72)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; music score, Jack Shaindlin; photographer, J. Borgi Contner; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Aug41; MP12063.

TEEN AGE. Continental Pictures, Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Dick L'Estrange; original story, Elmer Clifton.

© Continental Pictures, Inc.; 15Aug43; LP12200.

TEEN AGE TARS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 7)

Summary: Yacht racing on Long Island Sound. Junior members of the Pequot Yacht Club receive instruction; Miss Pat Hoyt, captain of the A-Forty-Nine, wins in the Atlantic class at Larchmont.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; script, Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 5Mar48; MP2893.

THE TEEN NUMBERS. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The meaning of the numbers 10 through 19 is shown in relation to the single-digit numbers. For primary grades.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 30Dec47; MP2686.

THE TEETH. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Chinese.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 30May46; MP949.

THE TEETH. SEE

La Dentadura.

Os Dentes.

THE TEETH; development and care. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15989.

TEHERAN. SEE The Plot To Kill Roosevelt.

THE TELEPHONE. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 6)

Summary: Pat shows his puppet, Pirro, how people can talk to each other on the telephone.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2341.

TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Aug46; MP1074.

TELEVISION PREVIEW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 913 ft., sd. (Paramount Paragraphics)

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; narrator, Ted Husing; photographer, George Webber; film editor, Robert Blauvelt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Apr40; MP10204.

TELEVISION SKETCH NO. 1. Eastman Kodak Co. 15 ft., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A timed film storyboard containing sequences showing still photographs representative of the setting and content which will appear in the finished motion picture production.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 22Nov49; MU4718.

TELEVISION TELEVISED. Cinecraft Productions, Inc., c1948. Presented by The Austin Co. 26 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Five films emphasizing the technical aspects of television: The Television Station, The Television Camera, The Television Control Room, Television Broadcasting, and The Television Mobile Unit.

Appl. author: Richard F. Reynolds.

© Cinecraft Productions, Inc.; 14Jun48; MP3191.

TELEVISION TURMOIL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Edgar Kennedy, Florence Lake, Dot Farley, Jack Rice.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Aug47; LP1362.

TELE-WINDOW-SHOPPING. 300 feet.

Summary: A presentation of outstanding window displays by such stores as Macy's, Altman's, and Lord and Taylor, all in the New York area.

Appl. author: Samuel Momrod Lewton.

© Teletime, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 18Aug48; MU3228.

TELL IT TO A STAR. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Walter H. Goetz; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Gerald Drayson Adams, John Krafft; screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; orchestrations, Dale Butts; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Jul45; LP13426.

TELL IT TO THE JUDGE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A farce about an ex-husband's efforts to win back his wife.

Credits: Producer, Buddy Adler; director, Norman Foster; story, Devery Freeman; screenplay, Nat Perrin; music score, Warner R. Heymann; music director, Morris Stoloff; editor, Charles Nelson.

Cast: Rosalind Russell, Robert Cummings, Gig Young, Marie McDonald, Harry Davenport.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Nov49; LP2627.

TELL IT WITH TELEVISION. Presented by American Central Manufacturing Corporation. sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 15 prints, 13Jul45; MU16123.

THE TELL-TALE HEART. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. By Edgar Allan Poe.

Credits: Director, Jules Dassin; screenplay, Doane Hoag; music score, Sol Krandel; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Nov41; LP10934.

THE TEMPERAMENTAL LION. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 27Dec40; MP10744.

TEMPERATURE, PULSE, AND RESPIRATION.

Appl. author: James R. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct43; MU14014.

LE TEMPS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "The Weather."

Summary: Shows the circulation of air on the earth's surface, traces the progress of a wave cyclone, and presents the instruments used in weather observation.

Credits: Collaborator, Harry Wexler.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Sep48; MP3380.

TEMPTATION. International Pictures Corp., c1946. 10 reels, sd., 35mm. From the novel "Bella Donna" by Robert Hichens and the play by James Bernard Fagan.

Credits: Producer, Edward Small; director, Irving Pichel; screenplay, Robert Thoeren; music, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Ernest Nims.

© International Pictures Corp.; 9Oct46; LP631.

TEMPTATION HARBOR. Associated British Picture Corp., Ltd., London, 1947. Released in the U. S. through Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "Newhaven-Dieppe" by Georges Simenon.

Summary: The tragedy of an honest railway signalman who is tortured by his conscience after he comes into the illegal possession of £5,000.

Credits: Producer, Victor Skutezky; director, Lance Comfort; screenplay, Rodney Ackland, Frederick Gotfurt, Victor Skutezky; music, Mischa Spoliansky; film editor, Lito Carruthers.

Cast: Robert Newton, Simone Simon, William Hartnell, Marcel Dalio, Margaret Barton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 27Mar49; LP2630.

TEN CENTS A DANCE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 60 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Michel Kraike; director, Will Jason; original screenplay, Morton Grant; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30May45; LP13288.

TEN GENTLEMEN FROM WEST POINT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 9,180 ft., sd. Suggested by a story by Malvin Wald.

Credits: Director, Henry Hathaway; screenplay, Richard Maibaum; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Corp.; 26Jun42; LP11772.

TEN MINUTES OF TWO. 1,600 ft., color, 16mm.

© Herbert Austen Hall; title, descr., & 3 prints, 22Jul41; MU11353.

TEN PIN ACES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 915 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shilkret; photography, Charles Harten.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Nov43; MP14283.

TEN PIN MAGIC. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 122)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Oct46; MP1973.

TEN THOUSAND YEARS AGO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15972.

TENDER COMRADE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 102 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, David Hempstead; director, Edward Dmytryk; written by Dalton Trumbo; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Dec43; LP12590.

THE TENDER YEARS. Alson Productions, Inc. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. Adapted from a story by Jack Jungmeyer, Jr. 81 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Because of his son's interest in a mistreated boxer, a minister becomes involved in a legal case with the owner of dogs trained for pit-fighting. Setting, a small mid-western town in the 1880's.

Credits: Producer, Edward L. Alperson; director, Harold Schuster; screenplay, Jack Jungmeyer, Jr., Arnold Belgard; adaptation, Abem Finkel, Edward Kilenyi; film editor, Richard Farrell.

Cast: Joe E. Brown; Richard Lyon, Noreen Nash, Charles Drake, Josephine Hutchinson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Oct47; LP2306.

TENDERFOOT TRAIL. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd., 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Neil Sullivan; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Red Barber; music, Harold Anderson.

Appl. author: Pathe News, Inc.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 19Apr46; MP674.

TENEMENT SYMPHONY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Oct42; MP13052.

TENNESSEE JOHNSON. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Milton Gunzberg and Alvin Meyers.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, William Dieterle; screenplay, John L. Balderston, Wells Root; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Dec42; LP11802.

TENNIS CHUMPS. Loew's Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ed Barge, Kenneth Muse; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Nov49; LP2648.

TENNIS IN RHYTHM. Loew's Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Passing Parade) MGM picture.

Credits: Director, Warren Murray; music, Jack Shaindlin.

Cast: Alice Marble, J. Scott Smart, Marry Orr, Frank Novak, William Weissbuch.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Aug47; MP2372.

TENNIS RACQUET. Walt Disney Productions, Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Goofy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack Kinney; story, Dick Kinney; music, Oliver Wallace; animation, Wolfgang Reitherman, Ed Aardal, John Sibley, Jack Boyd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18Aug48; LP2348.

TENNIS RHYTHM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 854 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 80)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; cameraman, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Jun42; MP12868.

TENNIS TOWN. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Credits: Directed and written by Saul Elkins; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 13Oct47; MP2425.

TENNIS WIZARDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 127)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; narrator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

Cast: Robert Riggs, Donald Budge.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Mar47; MP1876.

THE TENOR. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the short story by Henry Cuyler Bunner.

Summary: At the turn of the century a teenager's adulation of a famous tenor leads her to become a maid in his household, where her illusions are shattered.

Credits: Produced and written by Elihu Winer; director, Sobey Martin; editor, Edward Mann.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2428.

TENSION. Loew's Inc., c1949. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A triangle melodrama in which an unfaithful wife and a mild-mannered pharmacist become involved in murder.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, John Berry; story, John Klorer; screenplay, Allen Rivkin; music score, André Previn; film editor, Albert Akst.

Cast: Richard Basehart, Audrey Totter, Cyd Charisse, Barry Sullivan, Lloyd Gough.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Nov49; LP2651.

TENTH AVENUE ANGEL. Loew's Inc., c1947. 74 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on a story by Angna Enters and a sketch by Craig Rice.

Summary: A little girl in a New York tenement district suffers heartbreak when the world of imagination which she shares with her mother crashes around her.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Wheelright; director, screenplay, Harry Ruskin, Eleanore Griffin; music score, Rudolph G. Kopp; film editors, Ralph E. Winters, George Boemler.

Cast: Margaret O'Brien, Angela Lansbury, George Murphy, Phyllis Thaxter.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Dec47; LP1395.

TENTING TONIGHT ON THE OLD CAMP GROUND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Lewis D. Collins; original story, Harry Fraser; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; music director, H. J. Salter; photography, William Sickner; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Sep42; LP11598.

TEORIA DE VOO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators: R. Joseph Stephenson, Walter Brownell.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Jun46; MP716.

THE TERMITE'S LOVE SONG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Nov42; MP13106.

TERMODINÃMICA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, H. Horton Sheldon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP782.

TERRA MEXICANA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Wallace W. Atwood.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jul46; MP892.

TERRITORIAL POSSESSIONS OF THE UNITED STATES. International Geographic Pictures, c1939. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Script, Richard Montague; narration, John S. Martin.

© International Geographic Pictures; 15Jun39; MP9877.

TERROR BY NIGHT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd. Adapted from a story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Producer and director, Roy William Neill; screenplay, Frank Gruber; music director, Mark Levant; film editor, Saul A. Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Feb46; LP182.

TERROR TRAIL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original story and screenplay, Ed Earl Repp.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Nov46; LP676.

TERRORS ON HORSEBACK. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, George Milton; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 14Aug46; LP491.

TERRY AND THE PIRATES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. Based upon the cartoon strip created by Milton Caniff. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

1. Into the Great Unknown. © 3Apr40; LP9525.

2. The Fang Strikes. © 6Apr40; LP9540.

3. The Mountain of Death. © 13Apr40; LP9565.

4. The Dragon Queen Threatens. © 20Apr40; LP9619.

5. At the Mercy of a Mob. © 27Apr40; LP9671.

6. The Scroll of Wealth. © 4May40; LP9672.

7. Angry Waters. © 11May40; LP9681.

8. The Tomb of Peril. © 18May40; LP9682.

9. Jungle Hurricane. © 28May40; LP9705.

10. Too Many Enemies. © 4Jun40; LP9695.

11. Walls of Doom. © 12Jun40; LP9696.

12. No Escape. © 18Jun40; LP9713.

13. The Fatal Mistake. © 22Jun40; LP9736.

14. Pyre of Death. © 29Jun40; LP9747.

15. The Secret of the Temple. © 6Jul40; LP9759.

A TEST OF SLUDGE SOLVENTS. Brilco Laboratories. 400 ft.

Summary: A test of sludge solvents conducted by Foster D. Snell, Inc. Advertises Brilco Sludge Solvent.

© Brilco Laboratories; title, descr., & 6 prints, 10Mar49; MU3845.

TEST TUBE TALE.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 682 prints; 20Mar41; MU10950.

TESTING THE EXPERTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Apr46; MP449.

TEX BENEKE AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Mar48; MP2872.

TEX BENEKE AND THE GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Dec46; LP756.

TEX GRANGER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the Tex Granger adventures featured in "Calling All Boys" and "Tex Granger" comic magazines. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Derwin Abrahams; story, George H. Plympton; screenplay, Arthur Hoerl, Lewis Clay, Harry Fraser, Royal Cole; film editor, Earl Turner.

1. Tex Finds Trouble. © 1Apr48; LP1620.

2. Rider of Mystery Mesa. © 4Apr48 (in notice: 1947); LP1549.

3. Dead or Alive. © 15Apr48 (in notice: 1947); LP1552.

4. Dangerous Trails. © 22Apr48; LP1562.

5. Renegade Pass. © 29Apr48 (in notice: 1947); LP1573.

6. A Crooked Deal. © 6May48; LP1585.

7. The Rider Unmasked. © 13May48; LP1587.

8. Mystery of the Silver Ghost. © 20May48 (in notice: 1947); LP1603.

9. The Rider Trapped. © 27May48; LP1632.

10. Midnight Ambush. © 3Jun48; LP1639.

11. Renegade Roundup. © 10Jun48; LP1647.

12. Carson's Last Draw. © 17Jun48 (in notice: 1947); LP1658.

13. Blaze Takes Over. © 24Jun48; LP1819.

14. Riding Wild. © 1Jul48 (in notice: 1947); LP1695.

15. The Rider Meets Blaze. © 8Jul48 (in notice: 1947); LP1704.

TEX WILLIAMS AND HIS WESTERN CARAVAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Mar48; (in notice: 1947); MP2870.

TEXAS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, George Marshall; story, Michael Blankfort, Lewis Meltzer; screenplay, Horace McCoy, Lewis Meltzer, Michael Blankfort; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Oct41; LP10756.

TEXAS. Time, Inc., c1944. 2 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15215.

TEXAS, BROOKLYN, AND HEAVEN. Golden Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists, Inc., c1948. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story by Barry Benefield.

Summary: A comedy in which a young man and woman from Texas meet on the way to New York. The young woman's involvement with a reformed pickpocket and three spinsters results in absurd business ventures, such as an attempt to put an insolvent "riding academy," equipped with mechanical animals, on its feet.

Credits: Producer, Robert S. Golden; director, William Castle; screenplay, Lewis Meltzer; music director, Emil Newman; music score, Arthur Lange; film editor, James Newcom.

Cast: Guy Madison, Diana Lynn, James Dunn, Lionel Stander, Florence Bates.

© Golden Productions, Inc.; 27Aug48; LP1796.

TEXAS HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Sep45; MP16262.

THE TEXAS KID. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; story, Lynton Wright Brent; screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Oct43; LP12391.

TEXAS MANHUNT. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, William Lively; music, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 8Dec42; LP13689.

THE TEXAS MARSHAL. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, William Lively; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 26May41; LP10486.

TEXAS MASQUERADE. Released through United Artists, c1943. Presented by Harry Sherman Productions. 58 min., sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Norman Houston, Jack Lait, Jr.; music director, Irvin Talbot; film editor, Walter Hannemann.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 8Dec43; LP12523.

TEXAS PANHANDLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Dec45; LP58.

TEXAS RANGERS RIDE AGAIN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, James Hogan; original story and screenplay, William R. Lipman, Horace McCoy; photographer, Archie Stout; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Dec40; LP10124.

TEXAS REDHEADS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 1)

Summary: As thousands of ducks, including the Texas Redheads, migrate to the lower Rio Grande Valley, Eltinge Warner, publisher of Field and Stream Magazine, and Robert Montgomery, international sportsman, enjoy a successful day hunting.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 24Sep48; MP3488.

TEXAS STAGECOACH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Joseph H. Lewis; original screenplay, Fred Myton.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13May40; LP9640.

THE TEXAS STRIP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Nov42; MP13107.

TEXAS TERRORS. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Doris Schroeder, Anthony Coldewey; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, John MacBurnie; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Nov40; LP10094.

TEXAS TO BATAAN. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, Robert Tansey; story and screen adaptation, Arthur Hoerl; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 11Sep42; LP11592.

TEXAS TROUBLE SHOOTERS. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 15)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; story, Elizabeth Beecher; screen adaptation, Arthur Hoerl; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 12Jun42; LP11417.

THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 127 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From an original story by Everett Freeman and Arthur Schwartz.

Credits: Producer, Mark Hellinger; director, David Butler; screenplay, Norman Panama, Melvin Frank, James V. Kern; director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; film editor, Irene Morra.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Oct43; LP12303.

THANK YOUR LUCKY STARS AND STRIPES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11572.

THANKFUL DANDELION. C. O. Baptista Films, c1947. 14 min., sd., b&w, and color, 16mm.

© C. O. Baptista Films, owner of Scriptures Visualized Institute, 15Feb47; MP2247.

THANKS FOR THE BOOGIE RIDE. Soundies Distributing Corp of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Feb42; MP12180.

THAR SHE COMES! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8May44; MP14809.

THAT BABIES MAY LIVE. Apex Film Corp., c1949. Presented by the Carnation Co. 47 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how doctors and scientists have discovered the importance of formulas in infant feeding. Emphasizes that evaporated milk increases a baby's chance of survival through its first year.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, David P. Sheppard; narrator, Gerald Mohr; music, David Chudnow; film editor, Frank Capacchione.

Cast: Heather Angel, Frederick Worlock, Jimmie Clark, Art Baker, Donald Woods.

© Apex Film Corp.; 1Oct49; MP4801.

THAT BRENNAN GIRL. Republic Pictures Corp., c1946. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story by Adela Rogers St. Johns.

Credits: Producer and director, Alfred Santell; screenplay, Doris Anderson; music score, George Antheil; music director, Cy Feuer; film director, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: James Dunn, Mona Freeman, William Marshall, June Duprez.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Dec46; LP745.

THAT DID IT, MARIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Feb42; MP12230.

THAT FORSYTE WOMAN. Loew's Inc., c1949. 112 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on "The Forsyte Saga" by John Galsworthy.

Summary: The way of life of a self-centered family clan is disrupted when an outsider marries into the family. Setting, London in the 1880s.

Credits: Producer, Leon Gordon; director, Compton Bennett; screenplay, Jan Lustig, Ivan Tors, James B. Williams; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frederick Y. Smith.

Cast: Errol Flynn, Greer Garson, Walter Pidgeon, Robert Young, Janet Leigh.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Oct49; LP2596.

THAT GAL SALOMAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Aug41; MP11382.

THAT GANG OF MINE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Joseph Lewis; original story, Alan Whitman; screenplay, William Lively; photography, Bob Cline; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Sep40; LP9950.

THAT HAGEN GIRL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the novel by Edith Kneipple Roberts.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Charles Hoffman; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangement, Leonid Raab; film editor, David Weisbart.

Cast: Ronald Reagan, Shirley Temple, Rory Calhoun, Lois Maxwell, Dorothy Peterson.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov47; LP1282.

THAT HAMILTON WOMAN. Released thru United Artists, c1941. Presented by Alexander Korda; original screenplay, Walter Reisch, R. C. Sherriff; music, Miklos Rozsa; cinematographer, Rudolph Mate; film editor, William Hornbeck.

© Alexander Korda Films, Inc.; 27Mar41; LP10361.

THAT LADY IN ERMINE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 89 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A light comedy in which the princess of a small mid-European kingdom saves her country by charming the commander of an invading army.

Credits: Producer and director, Ernst Lubitsch; screenplay, Samson Raphaelson; music director, Alfred Newman; editor, Dorothy Spencer.

Cast: Betty Grable, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Cesar Romero, Walter Abel, Reginald Gardiner.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Aug48; LP2027.

THAT MAN OF MINE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. An Alexander production.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Sep46; MP1244.

THAT MIDNIGHT KISS. Loew's Inc., c1949. 99 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: The musical romance of two young opera-singers.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Norman Taurog; screenplay, Bruce Manning, Tamara Hovey; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

Cast: Kathryn Grayson, Jose Iturbi, Ethel Barrymore, Keenan Wynn, Mario Lanza.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Aug49; LP2504.

THAT NIGHT IN MANHATTAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Nov42; MP13103.

THAT NIGHT IN RIO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,175 ft., sd. Based on a play by Rudolph Lothar and Hans Adler.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, George Seaton, Bess Meredyth, Hal Long; adaptation, Jessie Ernst; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Apr41; LP10399.

THAT NIGHT WITH YOU. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 84 min., sd. Based on a story by Arnold Belgard.

Credits: Director, William A. Seiter; screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; music director, H. J. Salter; music adapted by H. J. Salter, Edward Ward; film editor, Fred R. Feitshans, Jr.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Sep45; LP13496.

THAT OL' GHOST TRAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun42; MP12637.

THAT OTHER WOMAN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,852 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Ray McCarey; screenplay, Jack Jungmeyer, Jr.; music direction, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Nov42; LP11771.

THAT ROOTIN' TOOTIN', SHOOTIN' MAN FROM TEXAS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Jul42; MP12778.

THAT SPOT. SEE Sign of the Wolf.

THAT TEXAS JAMBOREE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; story, Paul Gangelin; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music direction, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16May46; LP374.

THAT UNCERTAIN FEELING. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Victorien Sardou and Emile de Najac.

Credits: Producer and director, Ernst Lubitsch; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart; adaptation, Walter Reisch; music, Werner Heymann; film editor, William Shea.

© Ernst Lubitsch Productions, Inc.; 21Feb41; LP10301.

THAT WAY WITH WOMEN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A first National picture. From a story by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Producer, Charles Hoffman; director, Frederick de Cordova; screenplay, Leo Townsend; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; film editor, Folmer Blangsted.

Cast: Dane Clark, Martha Vickers, Sydney Greenstreet, Alan Hale, Craig Stevens.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29Mar47; LP897.

THAT WONDERFUL URGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A new version of the 1937 motion picture "Love Is News." Based on a story by William R. Lipman and Frederick Stephani.

Summary: When a tabloid reporter writes lurid stories about the private life of an heiress, she retaliates by announcing her marriage to the reporter.

Credits: Producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, Robert Sinclair; screenplay, Jay Dratler; music director, Lionel Newman; editor, Louis Loeffler.

Cast: Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, Reginald Gardiner, Arleen Whelan, Lucile Watson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Dec48; LP2125.

THAT WONDERFUL, WORRISOME FEELING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Apr44; MP14703.

THAT'S A LOTTA SCHICKLGRUBER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jul43; MP13741.

THAT'S ALL BROTHER, THAT'S ALL. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R. C. M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov46; MP1294.

THAT'S AN IRISH LULLABY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Feb45; MP15631.

THAT'S FOR ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec41; MP11997.

THAT'S HOW I SPELL IRELAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jul41; MP11424.

THAT'S IRELAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., 31Dec43; MP14447.

THAT'S MY BABY. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Walter Colmes; director, William Berke; original story, Irving Wallace; screenplay, Nicholas Barrows, William Tunberg; music director, Jay Chernis; photographer, Robert Pittack; film editor, Robert Johns.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1Sep44; LP12829.

THAT'S MY GAL. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 66 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, George Blair; original story, Frances Hyland, Bernard Feins; screenplay, Joseph Hoffman; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Donald Barry, Pinky Lee, Frank Jenks, Jan Savitt.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7May47; LP1064.

THAT'S MY MAN. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 104 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Frank Borzage; written by Steve Fisher, Bradley King; music score, Hans Salter; music director, Cy Feuer; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: Don Ameche, Catherine McLeod, Roscoe Karns, John Ridgely, Joe Hernandez.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7May47; LP1034.

THAT'S MY WEAKNESS NOW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Nov41; MP11779.

THAT'S RIGHT—YOU'RE WRONG. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1939. 95 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, David Butler; story, David Butler, William Conselman; screenplay, William Conselman, James V. Kern; music arrangements, George Duning; editor, Irene Morra.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec39; LP9386.

THAT'S THE HAWAIIAN IN ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Oct45; MP16395.

THAT'S THE MOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13192.

THAT'S THE SPIRIT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producers, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; director, Charles Lamont; original screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Fred Feitshans.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Apr45; LP13254.

THAT'S WHAT I LIKE ABOUT SWING (CORN). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Mar44; MP14662.

THAT'S WHY I LEFT YOU. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 862 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story, Doane Hoag; music score, Max Terr, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Jun43; LP12134.

THEIR DIZZY DAY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Director and photographer, Mervyn Freeman; narration, Roger Q. Denny; narrator, George O'Hanlon.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Oct44; MP15290.

THEN AND NOW. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec41; MP12480.

THEN IT ISN'T LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Oct46; MP1227.

THÉORIE MOLÉCULAIRE DE LA MATIÈRE. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 6Jun46; MP844.

THEORY OF FLIGHT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 12Jun41; MP14225.

THERE AIN'T A TOWN IN TEXAS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Nov45; MP16567.

THERE AIN'T NO SUCH ANIMAL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Narration, Joel Maline, Rich Hall; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8May42; MP12448.

THERE ARE EIGHTY REASONS WHY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16301.

THERE GOES KELLY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Strohbach; director, Phil Karlstein; original screenplay, Edmond Kelso; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, William Sickner.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Jan45; LP13127.

THERE GOES THAT GUITAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Dec44; MP15460.

THERE I GO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb41; MP10853.

THERE I GO. Techniprocess, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Mario Castegnaro; written and directed by Roy Mack; music director, Lud Gluskin; photograph, Ralph Hammeras.

© Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp. d.b.a. Techniprocess; 26Oct41; MP11968.

THERE IS A TAVERN IN THE TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11876.

THERE IS NO SUNSHINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Nov45; MP16536.

THERE MUST BE A WAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16452.

THERE WAS A LITTLE GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11080.

THERE WAS A LITTLE MAN. SEE The Luck of the Irish.

THERE WON'T BE A SHORTAGE OF LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Jul42; MP12733.

THERE'LL ALWAYS BE AN IRELAND—AND THE BLARNEY STONE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Nov42; MP13122.

THERE'LL BE SOME CHANGES MADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jul41; MP11346.

THERE'S A HOLE IN THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Jun41; MP11236.

THERE'S A PAMPAS MOON ON THE CAMPUS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Jul42; MP12781.

THERE'S GOOD BOOS TONIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Bill Turner, Larry Riley; narration, Frank Gallop; animation, Myron Waldman, Morey Reden, Nick Tafuri; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Apr48 (in notice: 1947); LP1574.

THERE'S MONEY IN IT. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Demonstrates that the Ford tractor is adaptable to all sorts of farm work.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 13Apr49; MU4003.

THERE'S MUSIC IN YOUR HAIR. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 616 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 11)

Credits: Story, Art Davis; animation, Sid Marcus; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 28Mar41; LP10493.

THERE'S NO YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16178.

THERE'S NOTHING LIKE THE SMILE OF THE IRISH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Aug41; MP11446.

THERE'S NOTHING TO IT. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co. sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Justin Herman.

© Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.; title, descr., & 3 prints, 12Dec41; MU11885.

THERE'S ONE BORN EVERY MINUTE. Universal Picture Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Harold Young; original story, Robert B. Hunt; screenplay, Robert B. Hunt, Brenda Weisberg.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Feb42; LP11113.

THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT A SOLDIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Nov43; LP12635.

THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT A SOLDIER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Aug41; MP11449.

THERE'S SOMETHING ABOUT A SOLDIER. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 604 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Alec Geiss; story, Ed Seward; animation, Grant Simmons, Chic Otterstrom; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 26Feb43; LP12002.

THE THERMOMETER. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 2)

Summary: Pat explains to his puppet, Pirro, what a thermometer is.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 15Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2345.

THESE ARE THE PEOPLE. Presented by the Kimberly-Clark Corp. b&w.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Kimberly-Clark Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15349.

THESE PEOPLE. sd., b&w.

Credits: Narration, Vincent Pelletier.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Frigidaire Division of General Motors Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15351.

THEY ALL KISSED THE BRIDE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd. From a story by Gina Kaus and Andrew P. Solt.

Credits: Producer, Edward Kaufman; director, Alexander Hall; screenplay, P. J. Wolfson; adaptation, Andrew P. Solt, Henry Altimus; music, Werner R. Heymann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Jun42; LP11392.

THEY CALLED HIM DEATH. SEE The Patient Vanishes.

THEY CAME TO BLOW UP AMERICA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 6,586 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Edward Ludwig; original story, Michel Jacoby; screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7May43; LP12416.

THEY CUT DOWN THE OLD PINE TREE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov41; MP11747.

THEY DARE NOT LOVE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, James Whale; story, James Edward Brant; screenplay, Charles Bennett, Ernest Vajda; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Apr41; LP10754.

THEY DIDN'T KNOW. Presented by W. F. and John Barnes Co., sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr, 8Mar45; 9 prints, 9Mar45; MU15667.

THEY DIED WITH THEIR BOOTS ON. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 140 min., sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert Fellows; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Wally Klein, Aeneas MacKenzie; film editor, William Holmes.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Jan42; LP10933.

THEY DREAM OF HOME. SEE Till the End of Time.

THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 11 reels, sd. From a novel by A. I. Bezzerides.

Credits: Director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Thomas Richards.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Aug40; LP9821.

THEY FIND THEIR HOME. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr, & 88 prints, 20Mar41; MU10951.

THEY FOLLOW ON. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. 30 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A promotional film for Moody Bible Institute showing various phases of school activities.

Credits: Photographer, Henry Ushijima.

© The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago; title & descr., 13Jun49; 4 prints, 11Jul49; MU4320.

THEY GO WILD (SIMPLY WILD OVER ME). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16073.

THEY GOT ME COVERED. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 94 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, David Butler; original story, Leonard Q. Ross, Leonard Spigelgass; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz; music, Leigh Harline; photography, Rudolph Mate; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 31Dec42; LP11963.

THEY KNEW WHAT THEY WANTED. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 90 min., sd. From the play by Sidney Howard.

Credits: Producer, Erich Pommer; director, Garson Kanin; screenplay, Robert Ardrey; music, Alfred Newman; editor, John Sturges.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Oct40; LP10045.

THEY LIVE BY NIGHT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Previously entitled, "Your Red Wagon." Released in England under title, "The Twisted Road." Based on Edward Anderson's novel, "Thieves Like Us."

Summary: A tragedy dealing with the futile efforts of an escaped convict and his young wife to find happiness.

Credits: Producer, John Houseman; director, Nicholas Ray; screenplay, Charles Schnee; adaptation, Nicholas Ray; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Leigh Harline; film editor, Sherman Todd.

Cast: Cathy O'Donnell, Farley Granger, Howard Da Silva, Jay C. Flippen, Helen Craig.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec48; LP2685.

THEY LIVE FOREVER. 1,600 ft., sd., color, 16mm.

Credit: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Irwin A. Moon.

© The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago; title, descr., & 1c, 24Feb44; MU14525.

THEY LIVE IN FEAR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on an idea by Hilda Stone and Ruth Nussbaum.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Josef Berne; story, Wilfrid Pettitt; screenplay, Michael L. Simmons, Sam Ornitz; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Jun44; LP12705.

THEY MADE ME A KILLER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 66 min., sd. A Pine-Thomas production. Based on an original story by Owen Francis.

Credits: Director, William C. Thomas; screenplay, Geoffrey Homes, Winston Miller, Kae Salkow; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Jan46; LP315.

THEY MEET AGAIN. Stephens-Lang. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 67 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Erle C. Kenton; original story, Peter Milne; screenplay, Peter Milne, Maurice Leo; music director, Constantin Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Alexander Troffey.

Appl. author: Stephens-Lang Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Jul41; LP10638.

THEY MET IN ARGENTINA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 77 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; directors, Leslie Goodwins, Jack Hively; story, Lou Brock, Harold Daniels; screenplay, Jerry Cady; music, Richard Rodgers; music director, Lud Gluskin; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Apr41; LP10475.

THEY MET IN BOMBAY. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. A Clarence Brown production. Based on a story by John Kafka.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, Clarence Brown; screenplay, Edwin Justus Mayer, Anita Loos, Leon Gordon; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun41; LP10575.

THEY MET IN THE DARK. English Films, Inc., London, c1945. From a story by Anthony Gilbert.

Credits: Producer, Marcel Hellman; director, Carel Lamac; screenplay, Anatole De Grunwald, Miles Malleson; scenario, Basil Bartlett, Victor Mac Clure, James Seymour; music, Ben Frankel; cameraman, Gus Drisse; film editor, Winifred Cooper.

© English Films, Inc.; 12Jun45; LP13311.

THEY PLANTED A TREE IN THE VALLEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jun44; MP14929.

THEY RAID BY NIGHT; a story of the Commandos. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, David Harwin; director, Spencer Gordon Bennet; original screenplay, Jack Natteford; music score, David Chudnow; film editor, Charles Henkel.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 15Jun42; LP11379.

THEY RAIDED THE JOINT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jul46; MP860.

THEY STOOGE TO CONGA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,418 ft., sd.

Credits: Producers, Del Lord, Hugh McCollum; director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Monty Collins; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Jan43; LP12046.

THEY WALK ALONE. SEE Daughter of Darkness.

THEY WENT THAT-A-WAY. SEE Variety Views, no. 177.

THEY WERE EXPENDABLE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 14 reels, sd., b&w. A John Ford Production. Based on the book by William L. White.

Credits: Associate producer, Cliff Reid; director, John Ford; screenplay, Frank Wead; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editors, Frank E. Hull, Douglass Biggs.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Nov45; LP13661.

THEY WERE SISTERS. Released by Universal, c1946. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 11 reels, sd., 35mm. A Gainsborough picture. From the novel by Dorothy Whipple.

Credits: Producer, Harold Huth; director, Arthur Crabtree; screenplay, Roland Pertwee; adaptation, Katherine Strueby; music director, Louis Levy; cinematography, Jack Cox; film editor, Charles Knott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Jul46; LP444.

THEY WON'T BELIEVE ME. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story by Gordon McDonell.

Credits: Producer, Joan Harrison; director, Irving Pichel; screenplay, Jonathan Latimer; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Elmo Williams.

Cast: Robert Young, Susan Hayward, Jane Greer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Jun47; LP1144.

THEY'RE GOING TO BUILD A MONUMENT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Oct43; MP14030.

THEY'RE MAKING ME OVER IN THE ARMY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar41; MP10968.

THEY'RE OFF. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Goofy)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Riley Thompson, Campbell Grant; animators, John Sibley, Al Bertino, Volus Jones, Jack Buckley; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 16Jun47; LP1423.

THEY'RE OFF. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sports News Review) Warner Bros.

Summary: Turf champions of yesterday and today. Includes scenes of Man O'War and Ponder, the Hambletonia, the Preakness, the Kentucky Derby, and the Grand National Steeplechase.

Credits: Directed and written by Robert Youngson; narrators, Clem McCarthy, Dan Donaldson; editor, Albert Helmes.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Nov49; MP4721.

THE THIEF OF BAGDAD. Alexander Korda Films, Inc., c1940. Presented by Alexander Korda. 12 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Alexander Korda; directors, Ludwig Berger, Michael Powell, Tim Whelan; screenplay & dialogue, Miles Malleson; scenario, Lajos Biro; music score, Miklos Rozsa; music director, Muir Mathieson; film editor, Charles Crichton.

© Alexander Korda Films, Inc.; 11Nov40; LP10040.

THIEVES FALL OUT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 7 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a play by Irving Gaumont and Jack Sobel.

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Charles Grayson, Ben Markson.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3May41; LP10439.

THIEVES LIKE US. SEE They Live by Night.

THE THIN MAN GOES HOME. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. From an original story by Robert Riskin and Harry Kurnitz, based on the characters created by Dashiell Hammett.

Credits: Producer, Everett Riskin; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, Robert Riskin, Dwight Taylor; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph E. Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec44; LP13059.

THINGS EXPAND WHEN HEATED. Centron Corp., Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates by animation and simple photography the movements of molecules before and after heat is applied. Examples of expansion and contraction from everyday life are shown. For elementary grades.

Credits: Author, Arthur H. Wolf; adviser, Gerald S. Craig.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 24Jun49; MP4753.

THE THINGS I LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Oct41; MP11661.

THE THINGS PEOPLE WANT. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A young salesman and a sales manager demonstrate principles of good salesmanship.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 25Mar48; MU2909.

THIRD AVENUE. SEE Easy Come, Easy Go.

THIRD DIMENSIONAL MURDER. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Three-dimensional film, 657 ft., sd., color with green sequence. (A Pete Smith Metroscopix Special)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; screenplay, Jerry Hoffman; film editor, Philip Anderson. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 31Dec40; LP10293.

THIRD FINGER, LEFT HAND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Robert Z. Leonard; original screenplay, Lionel Houser; music score, David Snell; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Oct40; LP9974.

THE THIRD MAN. London Film Productions, Ltd., c1949. Presented by Alexander Korda and David O. Selznick. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Graham Greene.

Summary: In postwar Vienna a black market racketeer is hunted by the British authorities and betrayed by his friend.

Credits: Producer and director, Carol Reed; screenplay, Graham Greene; zither music, Anton Karas; editor, Oswald Hafenrichter.

Cast: Joseph Cotten, Valli, Orson Welles, Trevor Howard, Paul Hoebiger.

© London Film Productions, Ltd.; 31Aug49; LP2580.

THE THIRTEEN. SEE Sahara.

13 LEAD SOLDIERS. Reliance Pictures, Inc. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Bulldog Drummond solves three murders with the aid of 13 lead soldiers which hold the key to hidden treasure.

Credits: Producers, Ben Pivar, Bernard Small; director, Frank McDonald; screenplay, Irving Elman; film editor, Saul Goodkind.

Cast: Tom Conway, Maria Palmer, Helen Westcott, John Newland, Terry Kilburn.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 6Apr48; LP1880.

13 RUE MADELEINE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on factual records of the U. S. Office of Strategic Services.

Credits: Director, Henry Hathaway; original screenplay, John Monks, Jr., Sy Bartlett; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: James Cagney, Annabella, Richard Conte, Frank Latimore, Walter Abel.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Jan47; LP942.

THE 13TH GUEST. SEE The Mystery of the 13th Guest.

THE THIRTEENTH HOUR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System program "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Clemens; story, Leslie Edgley; screenplay, Edward Bock, Raymond L. Schrock; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

Cast: Richard Dix, Karen Morley, John Kellogg, Jim Bannon, Regis Toomey.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Mar47; LP927.

THIRTY SECONDS OVER TOKYO. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 14 reels, sd., b&w. A Mervyn LeRoy production. Based on the book and story by Ted W. Lawson and Robert Considine.

Credits: Producer, Sam Zimbalist; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Nov44; LP13020.

THIRTY-TWO FIFTY A MONTH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10907.

THIS ABOVE ALL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 9,939 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Anatole Litvak; story, Eric Knight; screenplay, R. C. Sherriff; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Jul42; LP11718.

THIS AMAZING UNIVERSE. Scriptures Visualized Institute, c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Severt Andrewson.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 19Dec42; MP13146.

THIS CHANGING WORLD. Presented by Frigidaire.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Frigidaire Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 22Jan41; 277 prints, 21Jan41; LU10183.

THIS GUN FOR HIRE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Graham Greene.

Credits: Director, Frank Tuttle; screenplay, Albert Maltz, W. R. Burnett; photographer, John Seitz; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jun42; LP11412.

THIS HAPPY BREED. Two Cities Films, Inc., London. Released in the U. S. by Prestige Pictures through Universal, c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 110 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Cineguild production. Based on the play by Noel Coward.

Summary: An episodic chronicle of a lower-middle-class English family from the close of the first World War to 1939.

Credits: Producer, Noel Coward; director, David Lean; screenplay adaptation, David Lean, Ronald Neame, Anthony Havelock-Allan.

Cast: Robert Newton, Celia Johnson, John Mills, Stanley Holloway.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 11Dec47; LP1962.

THIS IS ALUMINUM. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1947. 29 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, George Hoover.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Aluminum Co. of America; 18Mar47; MP2032.

THIS IS BLITZ. c1942. Presented by United Artists. 22 min., sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 1May42; MP12741.

THIS IS CHINA. Roland Shang-Yoong Lawler. 103 min., si., color, 16mm.

Summary: A travel film, including scenes of Shanghai, Nanking, the Kuling summer capital, the gorges of the Yangtze, the city of Hanchow, the town of Fenghwa (home of Chiang Kai-shek), and the province of Taiwan (formerly Formosa).

© Roland Shang-Yoong Lawler; title, descr., & 10 prints, 20May48; MU3008.

THIS IS ENGLAND. Crown Film Unit, c1941. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 897 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 12)

Credits: Narrator, Ed. Murrow.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Mar41; MP11170.

THIS IS MAGNESIUM. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dow Chemical Co. 1–1/2 reels, b&w, 35mm. A combined, condensed version of "Magnesium, Metal from the Sea" and "The Working of Magnesium."

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 4May47; 22 prints, 5May47; MU1987.

THIS IS NEW ENGLAND. Presented by New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad; title & descr., 24Feb41; 171 prints, 26Feb41; MU10869.

THIS IS NO LAUGHING MATTER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar42; MP12284.

THIS IS NYLON. Apex Film Corp. Presented by Nylon, division of Dupont.

Summary: Shows how nylon was discovered, how it is made, and the variety of manufactured articles for which it is being used.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, William J. Thiele; screenplay, Francis P. Scannell, William S. Dutton, William J. Thiele; music, Mahlon Merrick; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Apex Film Corp.; title & descr., 23Dec48; 3 scenes, 25Apr49; MU4021.

THIS IS ROMANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14648.

THIS IS THE BOWERY. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 952 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Gunther V. Fritsch; original story and screenplay, Herbert Morgan; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Jun41; LP10546.

THIS IS THE LIFE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd. Based on a stage play by Sinclair Lewis and Fay Wray.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Felix E. Feist; screenplay, Wanda Tuchock; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 17Nov43; LP12382.

THIS IS THE NIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Oct46; MP1197.

THIS IS TOMORROW. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) Adapted from the motion picture "The City" originally presented in 1939.

Credits: Present adaptation, John Nesbitt; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec43; LP12428.

THIS IS YOUR ENEMY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning; English commentary, Roger Q. Denny; editor, Doug Gould.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Feb43; MP13224.

THIS LAND IS MINE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 103 min., sd. A Jean Renoir-Dudley Nichols production.

Credits: Director, Jean Renoir; screenplay, Dudley Nichols; music, Lothar Perl; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Apr43; LP11952.

THIS LOVE OF MINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12173.

THIS LOVE OF OURS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 90 min., sd. Based on the play "Come Prima Maglio de Prima" by Luigi Pirandello.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, William Dieterle; screenplay, Bruce Manning, John Klorer, Leonard Lee; music, H. J. Salter; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 25Oct45; LP13644.

THIS MAN'S NAVY. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an idea by Herman E. Halland.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, William A. Wellman; story and screenplay, Borden Chase; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Jan45; LP13051.

THIS NATION'S POWER. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 1155 prints, 10Oct40; LU9988.

THIS THING CALLED LOVE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 9 reels, sd. Based on the play by Edwin Burke, as produced by Patterson McNutt.

Credits: Director, Alexander Hall; screenplay, George Seaton, Ken Englund, P. J. Wolfson; music director, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Feb41; LP10247.

THIS TIME FOR KEEPS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the characters created by Herman J. Mankiewicz.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, Charles Riesner; screenplay, Muriel Roy Bolton, Rian James, Harry Ruskin; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Feb42; LP11391.

THIS TIME FOR KEEPS. Loew's Inc., c1947. 105 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Richard Thorpe; story, Erwin Gelsey, Lorraine Fielding; screenplay, Gladys Lehman; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, John Dunning.

Cast: Esther Williams, Jimmy Durante, Lauritz Melchior, Johnnie Johnston, Xavier Cugat.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct47; LP1271.

THIS VITAL EARTH. The Conservation Foundation in association with the New York Zoological Society. Released by Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm. (The Living Earth Series, pt. 2)

Summary: A conservation film which shows the interdependence of plant and animal life and the consequences of man's misuse of natural resources. Includes animated drawings. For High school students and adult groups.

Credits: Director, George E. Brewer, Jr.; story, John H. Storer.

© New York Zoological Society; 6Jul48; MP3454.

THIS WAS A WOMAN. Excelsior Film Productions, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. through Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 102 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a stage play by Joan Morgan.

Summary: A portrait of a scheming woman who dominates her family, attempts to wreck her daughter's marriage, poisons her husband, and eventually undone by her son.

Credits: Producer, Marcel Hellman; director, Tim Whelan; screenplay, Val Valentine; music, Mischa Spoliansky; editor, E. B. Jarvis.

Cast: Sonia Dresdel, Barbara White, Walter Fitzgerald, Cyril Raymond, Marjorie Rhodes.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Jan49; LP2233.

THIS WAS PARIS. c1942. Presented by Warner Bros. Pictures, Ltd. 77 min., sd. Based on an original story by Gordon Wellesley and Basil Woon.

Credits: Director, John Harlow; screenplay and dialogue, Brock Williams, Edward Dryhurst; music director, Jack Beaver; photographer, Basil Emmott; editor, Les Norman.

© Warner Bros. First National Pictures, Inc.; 21May42; LP11413.

THIS WOMAN IS MINE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based on the novel "I, James Lewis" by Gilbert W. Gabriel.

Credits: Producer and director, Frank Lloyd.; screenplay, Seton I. Miller, Frederick Jackson; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 25Aug41; LP10679.

THOMAS JEFFERSON. Emerson Film Corp. Released by Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents Thomas Jefferson as statesman, diplomat, man of letters, and progressive farmer, pointing out his greatness as author of the Declaration of Independence, as Governor of Virginia, as Secretary of State, as Minister to France, as founder of the University of Virginia, and as Vice President and President of the United States. For junior and senior high school and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Julian P. Boyd.

© Emerson Film Corp.; 27Sep49; MP4735.

THOROUGHBREDS. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Lester Sharpe; director, George Blair; screenplay, Wellyn Totman; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Nov44; LP13037.

THOSE ENDEARING YOUNG CHARMS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 82 min., sd. From the play by Edward Chodorov.

Credits: Producer, Bert Granet; director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Jerome Chodorov; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3Jun45; LP133447.

THOSE GOOD OLD DAYS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; original screenplay, Jack Scholl.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Aug41; MP11478.

THOSE GOOD OLD DAYS. Loew's Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture. Based on an idea suggested by Robert Abel.

Summary: A comedy short that compares present day living with that of the good old days.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Mar49 (in notice: 1947); LP2235.

THOSE WE LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 976 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Ben Parker.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Jun41; LP10517.

THOSE WERE THE DAYS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on the "Siwash" stories by George Fitch.

Credits: Producer and director, Jay Theodore Reed; screenplay, Don Hartman; music director, Victor Young; photography, Victor Milne; editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31May40; LP9678.

THOU SHALT NOT KILL. c1939. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, John H. Auer; original story, George Carleton Brown; screenplay, Robert Presnell; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Dec39; LP9427.

A THOUSAND AND ONE NIGHTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 93 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Alfred E. Green; original story, Wilfrid H. Pettitt; screenplay, Wilfrid H. Pettitt, Richard English, Jack Henley; music score, Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick. Technicolor.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jun45; LP13385.

A THOUSAND SHALL FALL. SEE The Cross of Lorraine.

THOUSANDS CHEER. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., color. Based on the story "Private Miss Jones" by Paul Jarrico and Richard Collins.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Pasternak; director, George Sidney; original screenplay, Paul Jarrico, Richard Collins; music direction, Herbert Stothart; film editor, George Boemler. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Sep43; LP12340.

THREAD GRINDING FULLY AUTOMATIC. Presented by Jones and Lamson Machine Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Jones & Lamson; title, descr., & 30 prints, 4Mar44; MU14568.

THE THREADS OF A NATION. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 985 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 2)

Credits: Producer and director, Ben K. Blake; story and dialogue, I. A. Jacoby; narrator, Basil Ruysdael; music score, Jack Schaindlin; photography, Frank Zucker; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jan40; MP9969.

THE THREAT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A gangster melodrama about a ruthless killer who escapes from prison to kill the three persons who convicted him.

Credits: Producer, Hugh King; director, Felix Feist; story, Hugh King; screenplay, Hugh King and Dick Irving Hyland; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: Michael O'Shea, Virginia Grey, Charles McGraw, Julie Bishop, Frank Conroy.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Oct49; LP2683.

THREE BEARS IN A BOAT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producers, John A. Haeseler, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; narrator, Joe Laurie, Jr.; music score, George Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Aug43; LP12228.

THREE BLONDE MICE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,482 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Arthur Ripley, Jack Cluett; screenplay, Jack White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Jan42; LP11069.

THE THREE CABALLEROS. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, c1944. Presented by Walt Disney. 6,614 ft., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Norman Ferguson; story, Ernest Terrazzas, and others; animation, Ward Kimball, and others; music directors, Charles Wolcott, Paul J. Smith, Edward Plumb; photographer, Ray Rennahan; film editor, Don Halliday. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 28Oct44; LP13147.

THREE CHEERS FOR THE GIRLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12May43; LP12052.

THREE CHEERS FOR THE IRISH. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Lloyd Bacon; original screenplay, Richard Macaulay, Jerry Wald.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 16Mar40; LP9483.

THREE COCKEYED SAILORS. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Ealing Studios. 76 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director, Walter Forde; screenplay, Angus MacPhail, Austin Melford, John Dighton; music director, Ernest Irving; photography, Gunther Krampf; editor, Ray Pitt.

© Ealing Studios, Ltd.; 18Nov40; LP10639.

THREE DARING DAUGHTERS. Loew's Inc., c1948. 119 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: Luxurious settings in New York and aboard ship provide the background for this musical comedy. While the three adolescent daughters of a successful career woman plan a surprise visit from their divorced father, their mother secretly re-marries.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Fred M. Wilcox; original screenplay, Albert Mannheimer, Frederick Kohner, Sonya Levien, John Meehan; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

Cast: Jeanette MacDonald, Jose Iturbi, Jane Powell, Edward Arnold, Harry Davenport.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Jan48; LP1451.

THREE FACES WEST. c1940. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Bernard Vorhaus; original screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Joseph Moncure March, Samuel Ornitz; music score, Victor Young; photography, John Alton; film editor, William Morgan.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Jul40; LP9796.

THREE FOR BREAKFAST. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Nick George; animation, Bob Carlson, Volus Jones, Bill Justice, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 1Dec47; LP1973.

THREE FOX FABLES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: These fables of the fox's misadventures with the grapes, the crow, and the stork point up the moral lesson that greed does not pay. For children of the elementary grades.

Credits: Collaborator, Grace Storm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul48; MP3262.

THREE FOX FABLES. SEE

Aesop's Fox and Crane.

Fuchs Fabeln.

THREE GIRLS ABOUT TOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Leigh Jason; original screenplay, Richard Carroll; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Oct41; LP11007.

THREE GODFATHERS. Argosy Pictures Corp., c1948. 105 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the story by Peter B. Kyne.

Summary: Three robbers, fleeing from justice, find a dying mother in a covered wagon which has been abandoned in the desert. They become godfathers to her baby, and promise to return to the town from which they are fugitives. Setting, Arizona, in the late 19th century.

Credits: Producer, Merian C. Cooper; director, John Ford; screenplay, Laurence Stallings, Frank S. Nugent; music score, Richard Hageman; music arranger, Lucien Cailliet; film editor, Jack Murray.

Cast: John Wayne, Pedro Armendariz, Harry Carey, Jr., Ward Bond, Ben Johnson.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Nov48; LP1958.

THREE HEARTS FOR JULIA. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Richard Thorpe; story and screenplay, Lionel Houser; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Jan43; LP11801.

THREE-IN-ONE REVUE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Nov42; MP13097.

THREE IN THE SADDLE. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Harry Fraser; original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., 26Jul45; LP438.

THE 3"/50 CALIBER ANTI-AIRCRAFT GUN, MERCHANT MOUNT. 2–1/2 reels, sd. U. S. Navy.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 3 prints, 17Sep43; MU13941.

3 IS A FAMILY. Released through United Artists, c1944. Presented by Sol Lesser. 82 min., sd. From the stage play by Henry and Phoebe Ephron.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Edward Ludwig; screenplay, Harry Chandlee, Marjorie L. Pfaelzer; music score, Werner R. Heymann; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Robert Crandall.

© Master Productions, Inc.; 30Oct44; LP13047.

THREE LITTLE GIRLS IN BLUE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 90 min., sd., color, 35mm. From a play by Stephen Powys.

Credits: Director, Bruce Humberstone; screenplay, Valentine Davies; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: June Haver, George Montgomery, Vivian Blaine, Celeste Holm, Vera Ellen.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Sep46; LP777.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS. Erpi Classrooms Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd. With primary grade teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 3Jan39; MP14224.

THREE LITTLE KITTENS. SEE

Drei Kleine Kaetzchen.

Le Trois Petits Chatons.

THREE LITTLE PIRATES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 15 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Dec46; LP780.

THREE LITTLE SISTERS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jun42; MP12667.

THREE LITTLE SISTERS. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Joseph Santley; original story, Maurice Clark, Olive Cooper; screenplay, Olive Cooper; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Jul44; LP12754.

THREE LITTLE TWIRPS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,407 ft.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Monty Collins, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4May43; LP12027.

THREE LOAN WOLVES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Jul46; LP699.

THREE MEN FROM TEXAS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Norton S. Parker; music score, Victor Young; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Carrol Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Nov40; LP10060.

THREE MEN IN WHITE. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on characters created by Max Brand [pseud of Frederick Faust].

Credits: Director, Willis Goldbeck; original screenplay, Martin Berkeley, Harry Ruskin; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, George Hively.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Apr44; LP12671.

THE THREE MINNIES: SOTA, TONKA, AND HA HA! Impossible Pictures, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Jerky Journeys)

Credits: Produced, directed, and written by Leonard Louis Levinson; drawn by Art Heinemann; painted by Peter Alvarado, Robert Gribbroek; narration, Frank Nelson.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Apr49 (in notice: 1948); LP2243.

THE THREE MUSKETEERS. Loew's Inc., c1948. 125 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on Alexandre Dumas' classic. An MGM picture.

Summary: Set against the historical background of King Louis XIII's France, this film portrays the adventures of the three friends who vowed "One for all, and all for one."

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, George Sidney; screenplay, Robert Ardrey; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editors, Robert J. Kern, George Boemler.

Cast: Lana Turner, Gene Kelly, June Allyson, Van Heflin, Angela Lansbury.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Sep48; LP1844.

THREE OF A KIND. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, D. Ross Lederman; original screenplay, Earle Snell, Arthur Caesar; photographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Lloyd Friedgen.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 17Jun44; LP12711.

THREE ON A TICKET. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on story and characters created by Brett Halliday [pseud. of Davis Dresser].

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; screenplay, Fred Myton; music, Emil Cadkin; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Cast: Hugh Beaumont, Cheryl Walker, Paul Bryar, Ralph Dunn, Louise Currie.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures Corp.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 3Mar47; LP857.

THREE PESTS IN A MESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,396 ft., sd.

Credits: written and directed by Del Lord.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Jan45; LP13118.

THE THREE PIGS. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 20May49 (in notice: 1948); LP2355.

3–PLANE FORMATIONS. 2 reels, sd. U. S. Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics, Training Division.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7Jan43; 264 prints, 4Jan43; MU13176.

THE THREE R'S GO MODERN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A class from Tallahassee High School goes on a field trip to study an ostrich, an alligator, a porpoise, the birds in Cypress Swamp, and the fish at Wakulla Springs.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Arthur Lincer; narrator, Ed Thorgersen; music score, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Nov47; MP2621.

THREE RUSSIAN GIRLS. Released thru United Artists, c1944. Presented by R-F Productions. 80 min., sd. Based upon the photoplay "The Girl from Leningrad."

Credits: Producer, Gregor Rabinovitch; directors, Fedor Ozep, Henry Kesler; screenplay, Aben Kandel, Dan James; adaptation, Maurice Clark, Victor Trivas; music score, W. Franke Harling; film editors, S. K. Winston, Gregg Tallas.

© R-F Motion Picture Corp.; 10Jan44; LP12499.

THREE SMART GUYS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 973 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, John D. Faure.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Oct43; LP12337.

THREE SMART SAPS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,517 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Jul42; LP11548.

THREE SONS O' GUNS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 7 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Ben Stoloff; original screenplay, Fred Niblo, Jr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 2Aug41; LP10618.

THREE STRANGERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 92 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Wolfgang Reinhardt; director, Jean Negulesco; original screenplay, John Huston, Howard Koch; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; photographer, Arthur Edeson; film editor, George Amy.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb46; LP103.

THE THREE TROUBLEDOERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Jack White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Apr46; LP553.

THREE WISE FOOLS. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based upon the play by Austin Strong.

Credits: Producer, William H. Wright; director, Edward Buzzell; story, John McDermott; screenplay, John McDermott, James O'Hanlon; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jun46; LP384.

THREE'S A CROWD. c1945, Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the novel "Hasty Wedding" by Mignon G. Eberhart.

Credits: Associate producer, Walter H. Goetz; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Apr45; LP13219.

THRILL OF A ROMANCE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Richard Thorpe; original screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music adaptation and direction, Georgie Stoll; orchestration, Calvin Jackson, Joseph Nussbaum, Ted Duncan, Hugo Winterhalter, Fred Norman; film editor, George Boemler. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22May45; LP13299.

THE THRILL OF BRAZIL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Biddell; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Allen Rivkin, Harry Clork, Devery Freeman; music direction and orchestrations, Leo Arnaud.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Sep46; LP673.

THRILLS OF MUSIC. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946–49. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; editor, Dan Heiss.

Series 1, 1946/47.

1. Jerry Wald and Orchestra. © 12Sep46; MP1471.

2. Machito and Rumba Band. © 17Oct46; MP1472.

3. Les Elgart and His Orchestra. © 28Nov46; MP1473.

4. Ray McKinley and His Orchestra. © 19Dec46; MP1917.

5. Shorty Sherock and His Orchestra. © 23Jan47; MP1918.

6. Buddy Morrow and His Orchestra. © 27Feb47; MP1919.

7. George Towne and His "Talk of the Town" Orchestra. © 27Mar47; MP1893.

8. Ray Anthony and His Orchestra. © 22May47; MP2074.

Series 2, 1947/48.

1. Boyd Raeburn and His Orchestra. © 18Sep47; MP2339.

2. Claude Thornhill and His Orchestra. © 16Oct47; MP2436.

3. The Lecuona Cuban Boys. © 13Nov47; MP2540.

4. Skitch Henderson and His Orchestra. © 11Dec47; MP2736.

5. Charlie Barnet and His Orchestra. © 15Jan48; MP2737.

6. Ted Weems and His Orchestra. © 25Mar48 (in notice: 1947); MP2978.

7. Gene Krupa and His Orchestra. © 10Jun48; MP3096.

8. Tony Pastor and His Orchestra. © 2Aug48; MP3396.

Series 3, 1948/49.

1. Elliot Lawrence and His Orchestra. © 23Sep48; MP3370.

2. Ray Eberle and His Orchestra. © 4Nov48; MP3875.

3. Louis Prima and His Orchestra. © 16Dec48; MP3842.

4. Buddy Rich and His Orchestra. © 20Jan49; MP3836.

5. Charlie Spivak and His Orchestra. © 24Mar49; MP4138.

6. Frankie Carle and His Orchestra. © 21Apr49; MP4344.

Series 4, 1949.

1. Ina Ray Hutton and Her Orchestra. © 26Oct49; MP4671.

2. Miguelito Valdes and His Orchestra. © 22Sep49; MP4669.

THRILLS OF THE DEEP. SEE Variety Views, no. 105.

THRILLS OF THE SURF. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of surfing, Australia's most popular sport.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20May49; MP4164.

THRILLS OF THE SURF. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of surfing, Australia's most popular sport.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 13Jun49; MP4345.

THROUGH THE COLORADO ROCKIES. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 900 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Produced and narrated by James A. FitzPatrick; photography, Virgil Miller. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Oct43; MP14090.

THROW A SADDLE ON A STAR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music direction, Mario Silva.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Mar46; LP249.

THROWING A PARTY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 20 min. (Elsa Maxwell Comedies) From an original story by Richard Weil.

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Owen Crump, Richard Weil.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Dec40; LP10605.

THROWING IN BASEBALL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Jimmy Dykes and Hollis Thurston, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Feb47; MP1711.

THROWING THE BULL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Director and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Augustin Delgado.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Aug44; LP12775.

THRU DIFFERENT EYES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,750 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Thomas Z. Loring; original screenplay, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Jun42; LP12994.

THUMBS UP. The British War Relief Society, Inc., c1941. 3 reels, sd.

Credits: Compiler and producer, Herbert T. Edwards; script, Philo Higley; narrative, Lowell Thomas.

© The British War Relief Society, Inc.; 20Mar41; MP11243.

THUMBS UP. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story idea by Ray Golden and Henry Moritz.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Joseph Santley; original screenplay, Frank Gill, Jr.; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Thomas Richards.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Jun43; LP12124.

THUMBS UP, TEXAS. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 1.

THUNDER BIRDS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,251 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, William A. Wellman; original story, Melville Crossman; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Nov42; LP12146.

THUNDER BY PRECISION. Presented by General Mills, Inc. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 9May46; 14 prints, 13May46; MU560.

THUNDER GODS GOLD. SEE Lust for Gold.

THUNDER IN THE PINES. Lippert Productions, Inc. Released through Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1948. 61 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about two feuding lumberjacks who unite in defense of each other's rights.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Robert Edwards; original story, Jo Pagano; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel; music score, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Edward Mann.

Cast: George Reeves, Ralph Byrd, Greg McClure, Michael Whalen, Denise Darcel.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 5Dec48; LP2085.

THUNDER IN THE VALLEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 103 min., sd., color, 35mm. Originally entitled "Bob, Son of Battle." Based on the novel by Alfred Ollivant.

Summary: A story of the shepherds of the Scottish highlands and their dogs.

Credits: Producer, Robert Bassler; director, Louis King; screenplay, Jerome Cady; music director, Emil Newman; film editor, Nick De Maggio.

Cast: Lon McCallister, Peggy Ann Garner, Edmund Gwenn, Reginald Owen, Charles Irwin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Jul47; LP1815.

THUNDER MOUNTAIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Zane Grey's novel.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lew Landers; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Philip Martin.

Cast: Tim Holt, Martha Hyer, Richard Martin, Virginia Owen, Steve Brodie.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21May47; LP1072.

THUNDER OVER THE PRAIRIE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based upon a book by James L. Rubel.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Betty Burbridge; photography, Benjamin Kline; film editor, Bert Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Jul41; LP10781.

THUNDER RIVER FEUD. c1942. Presented by Monogram Pictures Corp. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Earle Snell; screenplay, Earle Snell, John Vlahos; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 10Jan42; LP11150.

THUNDER ROCK. c1944. 9 reels, sd. A Charter Film production. By Robert Ardrey.

Credits: Producer, John Boulting; director, Roy Boulting; screenplay, Jeffrey Dell, Bernard Miles; music composer and arranger, Hans May; cameraman, Jack Hildyard.

© The Warwick Amusement Corp.; 1Sep44; LP12947.

THUNDER TOWN. c1946. Presented by PRC Pictures, Inc., 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Harry Fraser; original screenplay, James Oliver; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Livingston.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 21Jun46; LP397.

THUNDERBOLT. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp. through arrangements with Carl Krueger Productions and the United States Army Air Forces, c1947. 44 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, William Wyler; introduction, James Stewart. Technicolor.

© Monogram Pictures Corp. & Karl Krueger Productions; 21Jun47; LP1155.

THUNDERBOLT HUNTERS. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Morgan W. Gibney.

© The General Electric Co.; title & descr., 3Dec42; 1c, 4Dec42; MU13144.

THUNDERHEAD. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 7,285 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Mary O'Hara.

Credits: Director, Louis King; screenplay, Dwight Cummins, Dorothy Yost; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8Feb45; LP13242.

THUNDERHOOF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 8 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In a Mexican desert, three persons endure hardships in their search for a wild horse, Thunderhoof. Rivalry of the two men for the woman in the party leads to a fight and the eventual death of one man.

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Phil Karlson; original screenplay, Hal Smith; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Preston Foster, Mary Stuart, William Bishop, Thunderhoof.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Jun48; LP1663.

THUNDERING FRONTIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, D. Ross Lederman; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Sep40; LP9899.

THUNDERING GUN SLINGERS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 15Mar44; LP427.

THUNDERING HOOFS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 60 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jan42; LP11030.

THUNDERING TRAILS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt McDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; original story, Robert Yost; screenplay, Robert Yost, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Jan43; LP11841.

THUNDERSTORMS. Walt Disney Productions. sd., b&w.

© Walt Disney Productions, title, descr., & 2 prints, 22Aug44; MU15122.

TICA TI, TICA TA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12357.

TICK, TOCK, TUCKERED. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Tom McKimson. Technicolor.

© The Vitagraph Corp.; 15May44; MP14825.

TICKLED PINKY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; story and direction, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Dec40; LP10130.

TICO TICO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jul44; MP15077.

TICO TICO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jan45; MP15570.

TIERRA MEXICANA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Wallace W. Atwood.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9Dec46; MP1394.

TIGER FANGS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Schwarz; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Arthur St. Claire; music score, Lee Zahler; film editor, George M. Merick.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 9Oct43; LP13594.

TIGER RAG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Nov43; MP14098.

TIGER TROUBLE. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Disney Goofy)

Credits: Director, Jack Kinney; story, Bill Peed; animation, Milt Kahl, John Sibley, Eric Larson, Jack Boyd; music, Paul J. Smith. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Oct44; LP13132.

THE TIGER WOMAN. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd.

Credits: Associate producer, W. J. O'Sullivan; directors, Spencer Bennet, Wallace Grissell; original screenplay, Royal Cole, Ronald Davidson, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Grant Nelson, Joseph Poland; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Heck Minter, Earl Turner.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–6, 8May44; LP12732; no. 7–12, 27Jun44; LP12733.

THE TIGER WOMAN. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on a play by John A. Dunkel.

Credits: Associate producers, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart E. McGowan; director, Philip Ford; screenplay, George Carleton Brown; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Oct45; LP13626.

TIGHT SHOES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Damon Runyon.

Credits: Producer, Jules Levy; director, Albert S. Rogell; screenplay, Leonard Spigelglass, Art Arthur; photography, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28May41; LP10489.

'TIL WE MEET AGAIN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 12 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From an original story by Robert Lord.

Credits: Director, Edmund Goulding; screenplay, Warren Duff.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Apr40; LP9561.

TILL THE CLOUDS ROLL BY. Loew's Inc., c1946. 120 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the life and music of Jerome Kern.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Richard Whorf; story, Guy Bolton; screenplay, Myles Connolly, Jean Holloway; adaptation, George Wells; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Conrad Salinger; film editor, Albert Akst. Technicolor.

Cast: June Allyson, Lucille Bremer, Judy Garland, Kathryn Grayson, Van Heflin.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Dec46; LP764.

TILL THE END OF TIME. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 105 min., sd., 35mm. Based on the novel "They Dream of Home" by Niven Busch. A Dore Schary production.

Credits: Director, Edward Dmytryk; screenplay, Allen Rivkin; music score, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Gerstad.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Jul46; LP559.

TILL THEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15224.

TILL WE MEET AGAIN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. A Frank Borzage production.

Credits: Associate producer, David Lewis; director, Frank Borzage; original play, Alfred Maury; screenplay, Lenore Coffee; music score, David Buttolph; editor, Elmo Vernon.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Aug44; LP12918.

TILLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jul45; MP16146.

TILLIE THE TOILER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on the comic strip created by Russ Westover.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sparks; director, Sidney Salkow; story, Karen DeWolf; screenplay, Karen DeWolf, Francis Martin; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Milford.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Aug41; LP10652.

TIMBER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, Christy Cabanne; original story, Larry Rhine, Ben Chapman; screenplay, Griffin Jay; photography, Jack McKenzie; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11467.

TIMBER. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 4Jan41; LP10367.

TIMBER ATHLETES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary, Justin Herman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Sep42; MP13304.

TIMBER GROWING TODAY. Southern Educational Film Production Service. Presented by the Tennessee Valley Authority. 19 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Director, Robert Wiley; written by Nicholas Cabell Read, Robert Wiley; editor, Nicholas Cabell Read.

© Southern Educational Film Production Service, Inc., title, descr., & 6 prints, 6Apr47; MU1915.

TIMBER QUEEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Edward T. Lowe; screenplay, Edward T. Lowe, Maxwell Shane; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, Howard Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Jan44; LP12507.

THE TIMBER TRAIL. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 67 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Cowboy Monte Hale discovers the identity of the person responsible for attacks on the stagecoach line and the telegraph company of a small western town.

Credits: Director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Bob Williams; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Monte Hale, Lynn Roberts, James Burke, Foy Willing, The Riders of the Purple Sage.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 21May48; LP1629.

TIMBERLAND ATHLETES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 785 ft., sd., 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Parris Emery; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; MP1087.

TIME—AND YOUR OWN HOME TOWN. March of Time, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: The production of a typical issue of Time, beginning with the wire room into which news comes from six continents, and carrying through to the printing and distribution of the magazine, with emphasis on Time's advertising policy.

© Time, Inc.; 10May48; MP3513.

TIME FOR LIVING. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., for American Institute of Laundering, c1949. 30 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A demonstration of modern laundry service.

Credits: Director, Orlando P. Lippert; narrator, Ken Nordine; film editor, Glen McGowan.

© American Institute of Laundering; 25May49; LP2489.

TIME IN THE AIR. Springer Pictures, Inc., for the United States Navy. sd., 35mm.

Appl. author: John Howard Obold.

© Springer Pictures, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 18Aug43; MU13862.

THE TIME OF THEIR LIVES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 82 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Val Burton; director, Charles Barton; original screenplay, Val Burton, Walter DeLeon, Bradford Ropes; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Aug46; LP513.

THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE. Cogney Productions, Inc., c1948. 108 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on William Saroyan's play.

Summary: A whimsical drama about an habitué of a waterfront saloon, and his adventures as he probes into the motives and aspirations of the people who frequent the place.

Credits: Producer, William Cagney; director, H. C. Potter; screenplay, Nathaniel Curtis; music, Carmen Dragon; film editors, Walter Hannemann, Truman K. Wood.

Cast: James Cagney, William Bendix, Wayne Morris, Jeanne Cagney, Broderick Crawford.

© Cagney Productions, Inc.; 27May48; LP1752.

TIME ON HIS HANDS. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1946. Presented by J. H. Hoffberg. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Narration, Frank P. Donovan; narrator, Karl Weber; editor, Nathan Cy Braunstein.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 1Jul46; MP1006.

TIME OUT FOR LESSONS. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; Screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Ralph E. Goldstein.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Dec39; LP9588.

TIME OUT FOR PLAY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd., color. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Nov45; MP350.

TIME OUT FOR RHYTHM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based upon a play by Alex Ruben.

Credits: Producer, Irving Starr; director, Sidney Salkow; story, Bert Granet; screenplay, Edmund L. Hartmann, Bert Lawrence; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Jun41; LP10846.

TIME STUDY AT JOHNS-MANVILLE. c1944. 3 reels.

Credits: Director, Roscoe R. Nicodemus; photographer, Harold Daum.

© Johns-Manville Corp.; 7Jul44; MP15042.

TIME TAKES CARE OF EVERYTHING. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov46; MP1295.

THE TIME, THE PLACE AND THE GIRL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 105 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, David Butler; original story, Leonard Lee; screenplay, Francis Swan, Agnes Christine Johnston, Lynn Starling; music, Arthur Schwartz; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; film editor, Irene Morra. Technicolor.

Cast: Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson, Janis Paige, Martha Vickers.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Dec46; LP760.

TIME TO KILL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,479 ft., sd. Based on a novel by Raymond Chandler and the character "Michael Shayne" created by Brett Halliday.

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; screenplay, Clarence Upson Young; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Dec42; LP12085.

TIMED FOR ACTION. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Frigidaire Division, General Motors Corp. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 13Feb47; 14 prints, 14Feb47; MU1654.

THE TIMID PUP. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 672 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Director, Ben Harrison; animation, Manny Gould; music, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 22Jul40; LP9813.

THE TIMID TOREADOR. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940.

Credits: Story, Melvin Millar; animation, I. Ellis.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Dec40; MP10742.

TIMING IS EVERYTHING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Mar42; MP12322.

TIN CAN CRAFT. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Ben Hunt shows how to cut, bend, and twist tin cans into serviceable cooking utensils.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30May48; LP2228.

TIN PAN ALLEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 9,000 ft., sd. Based on a story by Pamela Harris.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Nov40; LP10359.

TIN PAN ALLEY CATS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Rod Scribner; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Jul43; MP13787.

TIN PAN ALLEY TEMPOS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; orchestrations, Loyd Akridge; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Oct45; LP51.

THE TINKLE SONG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Sep41; MP11585.

THE TINTED VENUS. SEE One Touch of Venus.

TINY TERRORS OF THE TIMBERLAND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., 35mm. (Featurette)

Credits: Director, John A. Haeseler; script, Robert Cochran, Frank Kelly; narration, Ed Herlihy.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 6Jun46; LP403.

TINY WATER ANIMAL. SEE

Animais Aquáticos.

Animálculos Acuáticos.

THE TIOGA KID. Producers Releasing Corp., c1948. 54 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Texas ranger impersonates an outlaw in order to defend a woman ranch owner against a gang of rustlers.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Ed Earl Repp; music supervisor, Dick Carruth; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Roscoe Ates, Jennifer Holt, Dennis Moore, Lee Bennett.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 12Jun48; LP1670.

TI-PI-TIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jul41; MP11419.

THE TIP-OFF. Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 22Jan41; 730 prints, 21Jan41; LU10186.

TIP TOE THRU THE TULIPS WITH ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Oct44; MP15280.

TIPPING THE SCALES. General Electric Co., c1945. 1 reel, si. with 33–1/3 rpm transcription.

© General Electric Co.; 23Jul45; MP16374.

TIPS FOR TEACHERS. Presented by United States Navy. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 21Jan42; 132 prints, 15Jan42; MU12055.

TIPS ON TRIPS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 875 ft., sd., b&w. (What's Your I. Q.? no. 7) (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, Will Jason; screenplay, Jameson Brewer, Richard Landau; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Nov43; MP14177.

TIRE TROUBLE. Terrytoons, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 24Jul42; MP13966.

TIRED OF WAITING FOR YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Nov43; MP14165.

TIREMAN, SPARE MY TIRES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,665 ft.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Felix Adler; screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Jun42; LP11578.

'TIS YOU, BABE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16298.

TISH. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Founded in part on stories by Mary Roberts Rinehart.

Credits: Producer, Orville O. Dull; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Harry Ruskin; adaptation, Annalee Whitmore Jacoby, Thomas Seller; music score, David Snell; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11545.

TITO'S GUITAR. Screen Gems, Inc., c1942. 660 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 87)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Tony Riviera; animation, Howard Swift; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Oct42; LP11957.

TI-YI-YIPPEE-AYE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jun44; MP14974.

TO A NEW WORLD. Presented by Radio Corp. of America. 2–1/2 reels, b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 7 prints, 3Dec45; MU16572.

TO BE OR NOT TO BE. Released thru United Artists, c1942. Presented by Alexander Korda, 98 min., sd. An Ernst Lubitsch production.

Credits: Director, Ernst Lubitsch; original story, Melchior Lengyel; screenplay, Edwin Justus Mayer; music director, Werner Heyman; cinematographer, Rudolph Mate; film editor, Dorothy Spencer.

© Romaine Film Corp.; 27Mar42; LP11178.

TO EACH HIS OWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 12 reels, sd. From a story by Charles Brackett.

Credits: Producer, Charles Brackett; director, Mitchell Leisen; screenplay, Charles Brackett, Jacques Thery; music score, Victor Young.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul46; LP440.

TO EACH OTHER. Presented by United States Steel. 3,221 ft., sd., 35mm.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© United States Steel Corp.; title, descr., & 286 prints, 2Sep43; MU13900.

TO EACH OTHER. Presented by United States Steel. sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© United States Steel Corp.; title, descr., & 110 prints, 25Oct43; MU14069.

TO GIVE YOUR BEST. Presented by Republic Aviation. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Republic Aviation Corp.; title & descr., 28Apr44; 6 prints, 29Apr44; MU14816.

TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 11 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National Picture. From the novel by Ernest Hemingway.

Credits: Director, Howard Hawks; screenplay, Jules Furthman, William Faulkner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; photographer, Sid Hickox; film editor, Christian Nyby.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Jan45; LP13056.

TO HEIR IS HUMAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,477 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harold Godsoe; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Monty Collins.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Jan44; LP12478.

TO MARKET—TO MARKET. 2 reels, b&w, and 1/2 reel, color.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© General Outdoor Advertising Co.; title, descr., & 62 prints, 1Jun42; MU12530.

TO MY UNBORN SON. Loew's Inc., c1943. 779 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Leslie Kardos; original story and screenplay, Lewis Jacobs; music score, Max Terr, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Oct43; LP12338.

TO NEW HORIZONS. c1940. Presented by General Motors. 2 reels, color.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc., d.b.a. The Jam Handy Organization; 29Jul40; MP10402.

TO THE ENDS OF THE EARTH. Kennedy-Buchman Pictures, Inc., c1948. 109 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Plot is based on information found in the files of the U. S. Treasury Department.

Summary: This melodrama, presented with a semi-documentary technique, shows agents of the U. S. Bureau of Narcotics in pursuit of smugglers. The trail leads from San Francisco to Shanghai, Cairo, Havana, and New York. 1935 setting.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Buchman; director, Robert Stevenson; original story and screenplay, Jay Richard Kennedy; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

Cast: Dick Powell, Signe Hasso, Maylia, Ludwig Donath, Vladimir Sokoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Feb48; LP1478.

TO THE SHORES OF TRIPOLI. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 1942. 7,800 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, H. Bruce Humberstone; original story, Steve Fisher; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Apr42; LP11289.

TO THE VICTOR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about a French collaborationist, his Swedish wife, whose life is endangered by his agents, and the American black-market operator who protects her. Photographed in Paris and on the invasion beaches of Normandy.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Delmer Daves; script, Richard Brooks; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, David Buttolph; film editor, Folmar Blangsted.

Cast: Dennis Morgan, Viveca Lindfors, Victor Francen, Bruce Bennett, Dorothy Malone.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Apr48; LP1563.

TOBACCO ROAD. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,594 ft., sd. Adapted from the stage play by Jack Kirkland. Based on the novel by Erskine Caldwell.

Credits: Producers, Jack Kirkland, Harry H. Oshrin; director, John Ford; screenplay, Nunnally Johnson; music, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Mar41; LP10347.

TODAY I HANG. c1942. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp., 7 reels, sd. An M & A production.

Credits: Producers, Max Alexander, Alfred Stern; directors, George M. Merrick, Oliver Drake; original story and screenplay, Oliver Drake; music direction, Lew Porter, Johnny Lange; photographer, Eddie Linden; film editor, Charles Henkel.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 7Jan42; LP10948.

TODAY'S THE DATE. Tim Huntley, c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A film about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. First in a proposed series of 365 television films about famous people and events.

© Tim Huntley; 2Mar49; MP4339.

TOGETHER AGAIN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Virginia Van Upp; director, Charles Vidor; story, Stanley Russell, Herbert Biberman; screenplay, Virginia Van Upp, F. Hugh Herbert; music score, Werner R. Heymann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Dec44; LP13143.

TOGETHER IN THE WEATHER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Puppetoon)

Credits: Director, George Pal.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Mar46; LP329.

TOKIO JOKIO. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Don Christensen; animation, I. Ellis; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22May43; MP13603.

TOKYO JOE. Santana Pictures, Inc. Released through Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 88 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Steve Fisher.

Summary: Returning to Tokyo, an ex-army pilot becomes involved in a plot to smuggle war criminals into Japan. Filmed in Tokyo.

Credits: Producer, Robert Lord; director, Stuart Heisler; screenplay, Cyril Hume, Bertram Millhauser; adaptation, Walter Doniger; music score, George Antheil; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Alexander Knox, Florence Marly, Sessue Hayakawa, Jerome Courtland.

© Santana Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov49; LP2622.

TOKYO ROSE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Lew Landers; original story, Whitman Chambers; screenplay, Geoffrey Homes, Maxwell Shane; music score, Rudy Schrager; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Dec45; LP93.

TOLL BRIDGE TROUBLES. c1942. Presented by Columbia. 660 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 88)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Leo Salkin; animation, Lou Schmidt; music, Ed Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 27Nov42; LP11958.

TOM BROWN'S SCHOOL DAYS. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. Presented by Gene Towne. 81 min., sd. The Play's The Thing production. By Thomas Hughes.

Credits: Producers, Gene Towne, Graham Baker; director, Robert Stevenson; adaptation and screenplay, Walter Ferris, Frank Cavett, Gene Towne, Graham Baker; music score, Anthony Collins; editor, William Hamilton.

Appl. author: The Play's the Thing Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Jul40; LP9818.

TOM, DICK, AND HARRY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 86 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Garson Kanin; story and screenplay, Paul Jarrico; music score, Roy Webb; editor, John Sturges.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 17Jul41; LP10594.

TOM THUMB IN PERSON. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Person Oddity, no. 120)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Tom Shirley.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Apr43; MP13492.

TOM THUMB IN TROUBLE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Robert Cannon; music direction, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 8Jun40; MP10265.

TOM THUMB'S BROTHER. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 639 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 76)

Credits: Direction, Sid Marcus; animation, Art Davis; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Jun41; LP10827.

TOM TURK AND DAFFY. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 7 min., sd, color. (Looney Tunes)

Credit: Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Feb44; MP14480.

TOM TURKEY AND HIS HARMONICA HUMDINGERS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 665 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jun40; MP10310.

TOMBOY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William T. Lackey; director, Robert McGowan; original story and screenplay, Dorothy Reid, Marion Orth; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Apr40; LP9637.

TOMBSTONE. SEE Tombstone, the Town Too Tough To Die.

TOMBSTONE, THE TOWN TOO TOUGH TO DIE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on the book "Tombstone" by Walter Noble Burns.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, William McGann; screenplay, Albert Shelby LeVino, Edward E. Paramore; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Jun42; LP11542.

TOMMY TUCKER AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 14 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Milton Carruth.

Cast: Tommy Tucker, Don Brown, the Three Lind Brothers, Marilyn Hare, Four Two Timers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 1Apr47; LP1041.

TOMMY'S DAY. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 15 min., sd., 16mm. With a Teacher's Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Oct46; MP1313.

TOMORROW IS FOREVER. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 104 min., sd. From a novel by Gwen Bristow.

Credits: Producer, David Lewis; director, Irving Pichel; screenplay, Lenore Coffee; music, Max Steiner; film editor, Ernest Nims.

© International Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec45; LP124.

TOMORROW, THE WORLD. Released through United Artists, c1944. Presented by Lester Cowan. 85 min., sd. From the stage play by James Gow and Arnaud d'Usseau.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cowan; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Ring Lardner, Jr., Leopold Atlas; music score, Louis Applebaum; music director, Ann Ronell; film editor, Anne Bauchens.

© Lester Cowan Productions, Inc.; 29Dec44; LP13177.

TOMORROW WE LIVE. c1942. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 7 reels, sd. Atlantis Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; story and screenplay, Bert Lytton; music score, Leo Erdody; editor, Dan Milner.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 20Sep42; LP11684.

TOMORROW'S HIGHROAD. Roland Reed Productions for the Shell Oil Company.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 5 prints, 16Jul45; MU16145.

TOMORROW'S MEXICO. SEE The March of Time, 1947.

TOMORROW'S STARS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 904 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Narrative, Stanley Frank; narration, Dan Seymour; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Apr40; MP10121.

TOMORROW'S WEATHER. Edward L. A. Wagner, c1948. 38 frames, b&w, 35mm. A filmstrip for television.

Summary: Maps and drawings as well as actual scenes are used to show weather conditions in New York, Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Albany, and Boston.

© Edward L. A. Wagner; 8Apr48; MP2979.

TONIGHT AND EVERY NIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 9 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer and director, Victor Saville; screenplay, Lesser Samuels, Abem Finkel; music, Jule Styne; music director, M. W. Stoloff; orchestrations, Marlin Skiles; cameraman, Fayte M. Browne; film editor, Viola Lawrence. Technicolor.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Feb45; LP13131.

TONIGHT AT 8:30. SEE We Were Dancing.

TONIGHT IN DREAMTIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar42; MP12308.

TONIGHT WE RAID CALAIS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 6,313 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; original story, L. Willinger, Rohama Lee; screenplay, Waldo Salt.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 30Apr43; LP12195.

TONTO BASIN OUTLAWS. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 10)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Earle Snell; screen adaptation and dialogue, John Vlahos; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 10Oct41; LP10918.

TONY PASTOR AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Mar48 (in notice: 1947); MP2886.

TOO BUSY TO WORK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. 5,903 ft., sd. Based upon "The Torchbearers" by George Kelly and "Your Uncle Dudley" by Howard Lindsay and Bertrand Robinson. Based upon the "Jones Family" characters created by Katharine Kavanaugh.

Credits: Director, Otto Brower; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan, Stanley Rauh; music director, Samuel Kaylin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Nov39; LP9459.

TOO HOT TO HANDLE. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Explains the economy of the General Electric Leader Range.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4411.

TOO LATE. c1948. Sponsored by E. Hedrick, W. Tyler, and R. Hammon. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Views of China as seen through the eyes of a missionary: Hong Kong harbor, street scenes, and the elaborate ritual of a Chinese Buddhist funeral.

Credits: Producers, Earl Hedrick, Walter Tyler.

© E. Hedrick, W. Tyler, R. Hammon; 15Jun48 (in notice: 1947); MP3165.

TOO LATE FOR TEARS. Streamline Pictures, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. 99 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Roy Huggins.

Summary: A melodrama of blackmail, murder, and sudden death.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, Byron Haskin; screenplay, Roy Huggins; music, Dale Butts; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Lizabeth Scott, Don DeFore, Dan Duryea, Arthur Kennedy, Kristine Miller.

© Streamline Pictures, Inc.; 8Jul49; LP2379.

TOO MANY BLONDES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Thornton Freeland; original story, Maxwell Shane; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Louis S. Kaye; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23May41; LP10488.

TOO MANY GIRLS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 85 min., sd. From the musical play, book by George Marion, Jr., music by Richard Rodgers, lyrics by Lorenz Hart, as produced by George Abbott.

Credits: Producer & director, George Abbott; screenplay, John Twist; music director, George Bassman; orchestral arrangements, George Bassman, Gene Rose; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov40; LP10056.

TOO MANY HUSBANDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based upon the play by W. Somerset Maugham.

Credits: Director, Wesley Ruggles; screenplay, Claude Binyon; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editors, Otto Meyer, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Mar40; LP9456.

TOO MANY SAILORS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15219.

TOO MANY WINNERS. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on original characters and story by Brett Halliday [pseud. of Davis Dresser].

Credits: Producer, John Sutherland; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, John Sutherland; adaptation, Fred Myton, Scott Darling; music, Alvin Levin; film editor, Harry Reynolds.

Cast: Hugh Beaumont, Trudy Marshall.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 24May47; LP1021.

TOO MANY WOMEN. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Bernard B. Ray; story and screenplay, Eddie M. Davis; film editor, Carl Himm.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 21Jan42; LP11143.

TOO SMALL A WORLD. SEE Citizen Saint.

TOO WEAK TO WORK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Joe Stultz; animation, Jim Tyer, Abner Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar43; LP11938.

TOO YOUNG TO KNOW. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 86 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Harlan Ware.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Frederick de Cordova; screenplay, Jo Pagano; music, H. Roemheld; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; photographer, Carl Guthrie; film editor, Folmer Blangsted.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Dec45; LP13686.

TOOT THAT TRUMPET! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP11950.

TOOT THAT TRUMPET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Oct43; MP14045.

TOOTH OR CONSEQUENCES. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Cal Howard; animation, Grant Simmons, Paul Sommer; music, Darrell Calker.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 26May47; LP1009.

TOP FIGURE CHAMPS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Summary: Near Lake Placid, New York, Gus Lussi presents youthful ice skating specialists, including Bess Sundine, David Jenkins, The Grahams, Sue Morrow, Yvonne Sherman, Joe Barnum, and Dick Button.

Credits: Director and photographer, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Bill Stern.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Jun49; MP4248.

TOP MAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Milton Schwarzwald; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Ken Goldsmith; screenplay, Zachary Gold; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Sep43; LP11285.

TOP O' THE MORNING. Bing Crosby Enterprises, Inc., c1949. Released through Paramount Pictures Inc. 98 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The theft of the Blarney Stone brings an insurance investigator to a little Irish village where he helps the local police sergeant catch the thief.

Credits: Producer, Robert L. Welch; director, David Miller; written by Edmund Beloin, Richard Breen; music director, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Arthur Schmidt.

Cast: Bing Crosby, Ann Blyth, Barry Fitzgerald, Hume Cronyn, Eileen Crowe.

© Bing Crosby Enterprises, Inc.; 5Sep49; LP2572.

TOP SERGEANT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Christy Cabanne; original story, Larry Rhine, Ben Chapman; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Griffin Jay.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 2Jun42; LP11344.

TOP SERGEANT MULLIGAN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on an original idea by William West.

Credits: Director, Jean Yarbrough; screenplay, Edmond Kelso; photography, Max Stengler; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 17Oct41; LP11041.

THE TOPEKA TERROR. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Patricia Harper; screenplay, Patricia Harper, Norman S. Hall; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jan45; LP13065.

TOPPER RETURNS. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Hal Roach. 10 reels, sd. Based on the characters conceived by Thorne Smith.

Credits: Producer, Hal Roach; director, Roy Del Ruth; original screenplay, Jonathan Latimer, Gordon Douglas; music score, Werner R. Heyman; film editor, James Newcom.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 14Apr41; LP10436.

TOPS IN BURLESQUE. Quality Pictures Co., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Series 23)

Summary: Six burlesque dances.

Cast: Betty Rowland, Marie Carlett, Beverly Dawn, Chloe, Lorraine Lee.

© W. Merle Connell, Nathan Robin, d.b.a. Quality Pictures Co.; 21Jan47; MP2814.

TOPS IN THE BIG TOP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Joe Stultz, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Mar45; LP13429.

TOPSY TURKEY. Screen Gems, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Producers, Raymond Katz, Henry Binder; director, Sid Marcus; story, Cal Howard, Dave Monohan; animation, Ben Lloyd, Howard Swift, Roy Jenkins; music, Darrell Calker.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 5Feb48; LP1457.

THE TORCHBEARERS. SEE Too Busy To Work.

THE TOREADOR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Sep42; MP12936.

TORNA A SURRIENTO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13May46; MP558.

TORNADO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd. From the novel by John Guedel.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Aug43; LP12400.

TORNADO IN A BOX; the gas turbine. Presented by Allis-Chalmers. sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 13Jul45; MU16122.

A TORNADO IN THE SADDLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Charles Francis Royal; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Dec42; LP11925.

TORNADO RANGE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Eddie Dean as an agent of the U. S. Land Office brings peace to warring ranchers and homesteaders.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, William Lively; music, Dick Carruth; film editor, Joseph Gluck.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Copper, Roscoe Ates, Jennifer Holt, George Chesebro.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 21Feb48; LP1511.

TORPEDO BOAT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Aaron Gottlieb.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, John Rawlins; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr,; film editor, Billy Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Jan42; LP11144.

TORRID TEMPOS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Nov40; LP10048.

A TORRID TOREADOR. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 9Jan42; MP12554.

TORRID ZONE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, William Keighley; original screenplay, Richard Maccaulay, Jerry Wald.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24May40; LP9660.

TORTILLA FLAT. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., sepia. Based on the book by John Steinbeck.

Credits: Producer, Sam Zimbalist; director, Victor Fleming; screenplay, John Lee Mahin, Benjamin Glazer; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, James E. Newcom.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Apr42; LP11274.

TORTOISE BEATS HARE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Charles McKimson; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Mar41; MP10953.

THE TORTOISE WINS AGAIN. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 30Aug46; LP617.

TORTOISE WINS BY A HARE. Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger;. story, Warren Foster; animation, Robert McKimson; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Feb43; LP11874.

TOTSIE TANNER'S GANG IN SOCIAL CALLERS. Ken Hutchinson Production Co., c1949. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Totsie Tanner, a crippled girl, is cheered by a visit from her old gang.

Credits: Producer, Ken Hutchinson; director, H. Wesley Kenney; screenplay, Mimi Kenney.

Cast: Betty L. Upthegrove, Donald Bailey, Helen Phillips, Billy Hodapp, Bobbie Phillips.

© Kenneth Edward Hutchinson, known as Ken Hutchinson; 23Sep49; LP2681.

TOUCH AND GO. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the ease of attaching farming equipments to the Ford tractor, and the simplicity of adjusting the implement by means of the touch control lever.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 13Apr49; MU3995.

TOUCHDOWN DEMONS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Volney White; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Sep40; MP10993.

TOUCHDOWN REVIEW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Continuity, Max Klein; narrator, Bill Slater; film editor, Tom Galvin.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Dec39; MP9834.

TOUGH AS THEY COME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, William Nigh; original story, Lewis Amster, Albert Bein; screenplay, Lewis Amster, Brenda Weisberg; cameraman, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Bernard Burton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11076.

TOUGH ASSIGNMENT. Lippert Productions, Inc., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: By means of their newspaper articles, a reporter and his wife expose a gang engaged in the sale of uninspected meat.

Credits: Producer, Carl K. Hittleman; director, William Beaudine; story, Carl K. Hittleman; screenplay, Milton Luban; music, Albert Glasser; film editor, Harry Gerstad.

Cast: Don Barry, Marjorie Steele, Steve Brodie, Marc Lawrence, Iris Adrian.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2659.

TOUGH BEEF. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13234.

THE TOURNAMENT OF ROSES ANNUAL FESTIVAL, PASADENA, CALIFORNIA, 1949. Arthur H. Hart, c1949. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of the flower bedecked floats and the general street parade.

© Arthur H. Hart; 10Jan49; MP3826.

THE TOWN IN HELL'S BACKYARD. SEE The Devil's Trail.

THE TOWN WENT WILD. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd. A Roth-Green-Rouse production.

Credits: Director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Bernard Roth, Clarence Green, Russell Rouse; music director, Gerrard Carbonara; film editor, Thomas Neff.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 15Dec44; LP13008.

TOY TROUBLE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Robert Cannon; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12Apr41; MP11047.

TOYS WILL BE TOYS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, I. Klein; animation, Myron Waldman, Gordon Whittier; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Jul49; LP2413.

O TRABALHO DAS FLORES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clyde Fisher.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jun46; MP725.

TRACK AND FIELD QUIZ. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q.? no. 9)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; film editor, J. J. Durant, Jr.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Mar45; MP15836.

TRACTOR FUELS AND TRACTORS. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., for Deere and Co. 16 min., sd., b&w.

Appl. authors; Paul Nordlah, Glenn Rohrbach.

© Deere & Co.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 6Dec41; MU11868.

TRADING BLOWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Feb43; MP13281.

TRADING CENTERS OF THE PACIFIC COAST. Coronet, c1947. 1 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clifford M. Zierer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 23Oct47; MP2565.

TRADITIONS OF MEXICO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 742 ft., sd. (A Columbia Tour)

Credit: Commentator, John Martin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Apr44; MP14918.

TRAFFIC CAN BE TRAGIC FOR YOU. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Better Traffic Committee of the City of Pittsburgh. 1/2 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 16Feb47; 8 prints, 18Feb47; MU1664.

TRAFFIC IN CRIME. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, Les Selander; original story, Leslie Turner White; screenplay, David Land; music director, Mort Glickman; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14May46; LP342.

TRAFFIC WITH THE DEVIL. Loew's, Inc., in cooperation with the Associated Press and with the cooperation of the Los Angeles Police Dept. and the National Safety Council, c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Theatre of Life)

Credits: Director, Gunther V. Fritsch; written by Herbert Morgan; musical score, William Lava.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Sep46; MP1057.

A TRAGEDY AT MIDNIGHT. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Joseph Santley; original story, Hal Hudson, Sam Duncan; screenplay, Isabel Dawn; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Feb42; LP11153.

THE TRAIL BLAZERS, c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on characters, "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, George Sherman; original story, Earle Snell; screenplay, Barry Shipman; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Nov40; LP10093.

TRAIL BREAKERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary, Justin Herman; narrator, Bill Slater.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Apr44; MP14781.

TRAIL OF KIT CARSON. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, Lesley Selander; original story, Jack Natteford; screenplay, Jack Natteford, Albert DeMond; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Jul45; LP13380.

TRAIL OF TERROR. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Alfred Stern, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Oliver Drake; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 7Sep43; LP12243.

THE TRAIL OF THE BUCCANEERS. SEE Variety Views, no. 99.

TRAIL OF THE MOUNTIES. Bali Pictures, Inc., c1947. 41 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by James Oliver Curwood.

Summary: Lucky Sanderson, Canadian Mounted Police sergeant, brings to justice a group of murderers and fur thieves.

Credits: Producer, Carl K. Hittleman; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Carl K. Hittleman, Harold Klein; music score, Albert Glasser; film editor, Paul Landres.

Cast: Russell Hayden, Jennifer Holt.

© Bali Pictures, Inc.; 15Dec47; LP1462.

THE TRAIL OF THE SILVER SPURS. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (Range Busters, no. 4)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Elmer Clifton; screen adaptation, Earl Snell; music director, Frank Sanucci; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 5Jan41; LP10341.

TRAIL OF THE VIGILANTES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 8 reels.

Credits: Director, Allan Dwan; original screenplay, Harold Shumate.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Dec40; LP10120.

TRAIL OF THE YUKON. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 67 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "The Gold Hunters" by James Oliver Curwood.

Summary: A gang of bank robbers are pursued and apprehended by a Mountie and his dog. Setting, the Canadian Northwest.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, William X. Crowley; screenplay, Oliver Drake; music director, Edward Kay; editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Kirby Grant, Bill Edwards, Suzanne Dalbert, Dan Seymour, William Forrest.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 31Jul49; LP2547.

TRAIL RIDERS. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, Robert Tansey; story, Francis Kavanaugh; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 30Oct42; LP11678.

TRAIL STREET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "Golden Horizons" by William Corcoran.

Credits: Producer, Nat Holt; director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Norman Houston, Gene Lewis; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

Cast: Randolph Scott, Robert Ryan, Anne Jeffreys, George "Gabby" Hayes.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Mar47; LP920.

TRAIL TO GUNSIGHT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Vernon Keays; original story, Jay Karth; screenplay, Bennett Cohen; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Russel Schoangarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 30Aug44; LP12879.

TRAIL TO LAREDO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 5 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western film in which the Durango Kid breaks up a ring of gold smugglers.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Barry Shipman; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Jim Bannon, Virginia Maxey, Tommy Ivo.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24May48; LP1627.

TRAIL TO MEXICO. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Production, direction and original screenplay, Oliver Drake; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, James Brown; editor, Ralph Dixon.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Jul46; LP448.

TRAIL TO SAN ANTONE. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 67 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, John English; music score, Joseph Dubin; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Charles Craft.

Cast: Gene Autry, Champion, Peggy Stewart, Sterling Holloway, William Henry.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Jan47; LP841.

TRAIL TO VENGEANCE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Wallace W. Fox; original screenplay, Bob Williams; cinematographer, Maury Gertsman; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Oct45; LP13647.

TRAIL TOWN. SEE Abilene Town.

A TRAILER TRAGEDY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Sep40; LP9944.

TRAILIN' WEST. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A Western about the capture of a murderer whose confession saves an innocent man from hanging.

Credits: Produced and written by Alan LeMay; director, George Templeton; film editor, Jim Leicester.

Cast: Chill Wills, Elaine Riley, Earl Hodgins, Jack Elam, John Spelvin.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 3Oct49, MP4585.

TRAILING DANGER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton, Marshall Reed.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 29Mar47; LP908.

TRAILING DOUBLE TROUBLE. Phoenix Productions, Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd. (Range Busters) A George W. Weeks production.

Credits: Director, S. Roy Luby; original story, George Plympton; screen adaptation, Oliver Drake; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Ed Linden; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Phoenix Productions, Inc.; 25Sep40; LP10029.

TRAIL'S END. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a cowhand traps the real murderer after the police imprison an innocent man on circumstantial evidence.

Credits: Producer, Barney A. Sarecky; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Kay Morley, Douglas Evans, Zon Murray.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Apr49; LP2274.

TRAIN TO ALCATRAZ. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A group of convicts attempt to escape from the transcontinental train which is taking them to Alcatraz.

Credits: Associate producer, Lou Brock; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Donald Barry, Janet Martin, William Phipps.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Jun48; LP1711.

TRAINING FOR TROUBLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, director, and screenplay, Jules White; story, Preston Black.

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14May47; LP1078.

TRAINING POLICE HORSES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; director, Tom Cummiskey; continuity, Russ Sheilds; described by Paul Douglas; photographer, Jack Painter; editor, Lew Lehr.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Jan41; MP10800.

THE TRAITOR WITHIN. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Charles G. Booth; screenplay, Jack Townley; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Dec42; LP11793.

TRAMP, TRAMP, TRAMP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Charles Barton; story, Shannon Day, Hal Braham, Marian Grant; adaptation and screenplay, Harry Rebuas, Ned Dandy; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Mar42; LP11116.

TRANSPORTATION; bus, truck, taxi. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Aug46; MP1076.

TRANSPORTATION IN THE U. S. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

TRANSPORTATION UNLIMITED. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title & descr., 15Oct47; 6 prints, 11Oct47; MU2382.

TRANSPORTATION UNLIMITED. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 23 min., si., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the role of the Chevrolet truck in American transportation.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 2Feb48; 27 prints, 4Feb48; MU2701.

THE TRAP. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the character "Charlie Chan" created by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Miriam Kissinger; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, James Brown; editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Sidney Toler, Mantan Moreland, Victor Sen Young, Tanis Chandler, Larry Blake.

© Monogram Pictures Corp; 26Nov46; LP728.

TRAP HAPPY. Loew's Inc., c1946. 657 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Michael Lah; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Jun46; LP359.

TRAP HAPPY PORKY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Ken Harris; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Feb45; MP15655.

TRAPPED. Contemporary Productions, Inc. Released through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 79 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about a Treasury Department Secret Service agent who poses as a member of the underworld in order to trap a ring of counterfeiters.

Credits: Producer, Bryan Foy; director, Richard Fleischer; story and screenplay, Earl Felton, George Zuckerman; music, Sol Kaplan; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Alfred de Gaetano.

Cast: Lloyd Bridges, Barbara Payton, John Hoyt, James Todd, Russ Conway.

© Contemporary Productions, Inc.; 7Oct49; LP2608.

TRAPPED BY A BLONDE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (All Star Comedy)

Summary: A slapstick comedy about a camping trip.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Del Lord.

Cast: Hugh Herbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Apr49; LP2221.

TRAPPED BY BOSTON BLACKIE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the character created by Jack Boyle.

Summary: Blackie solves a mystery involving the theft of a pearl necklace.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Seymour Friedman; story, Charles Marion, Edward Bock; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

Cast: Chester Morris, Mary Currier, George E. Stone, Eddie Norris, Richard Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr48; LP1565.

LA TRAVIATA. SEE The Lost One.

TREACHERY RIDES THE TRAIL. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A Wild West drama as enacted by a juvenile cast.

Credits: Director, Charles Moore; narration, Charles Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20Mar49; MP3968.

TREASURE CHEST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16176.

TREASURE FROM THE SEA. A Walt Disney production for the Dow Chemical Company, c1946. 1 reel, color.

Credits: Ansco.

© Walt Disney Productions; 30Sep46; MP1256.

TREASURE HOUSE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 11)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 22Aug47; MP2336.

TREASURE JEST. Screen Gems, Inc., c1945. 617 ft., sd., color. (Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; animation, Volum Jones, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Sep45; LP13603.

THE TREASURE OF FRANCHARD. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Robert Louis Stevenson.

Summary: A street urchin, adopted by a bankrupt doctor, hides the treasure which the doctor finds at the Franchard Castle until the doctor, humbled and wiser, understands the true value of riches.

Credits: Producer, Stanley Rubin; director, Sobey Martin; screenplay, Edward Huebsch; music, William Lava.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 4Apr49; LP2251.

TREASURE OF MONTE CRISTO. Lippert Productions, Inc. Released through Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1949. 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A seaman who is a descendant of the Count of Monte Cristo eludes a crooked lawyer and his henchmen to find his ancestor's missing treasure. Setting: present-day San Francisco.

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg, Jack Pollexfen; music, Albert Glasser; film editor, Stanley Frazen.

Cast: Glenn Langan, Adele Jergens, Steve Brodie, Robert Jordan, Michael Whalen.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2657.

THE TREASURE OF THE SIERRA MADRE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 126 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by B. Traven.

Summary: A drama that sets forth the effect of sudden prosperity on the behavior of three penniless prospectors. Action takes place in a remote section of the Sierra Madre Range and in Tampico, Mexico, in 1920.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director and author of screenplay, John Huston; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Walter Huston, Tim Holt, Bruce Bennett.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 24Jan48; LP1439.

TREASURED BALLADS. Attwood Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Songs of America)

Summary: Presents the songs "De Ol' Ark's a-Moverin'," "Climbin' up the Mountain," and "Joshua Fit de Battle ob Jerico."

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder.

© Attwood Productions, Inc.; 15Jul49; MP4820.

TREASURES FROM TRASH. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 944 ft., sd. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, David Barclay; screenplay, David Barclay, Philip Anderson; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Jun46; LP358.

TREAT 'EM ROUGH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Marshall Grant; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Roy Chanslor, Bob Williams; cameraman, George Robinson; film editor, Maurice Wright.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5Jan42; LP10949.

TREE FOR TWO. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 670 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sam Cobean; animation, Howard Swift, Phil Duncan; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 21Jun43; LP12166.

A TREE GROWS IN BROOKLYN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 11,583 ft., sd. Adapted from the novel by Betty Smith.

Credits: Director, Elia Kazan; screenplay, Tess Slesinger, Frank Davis; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Feb45; LP13224.

A TREE OF GOD'S PLANTING. Scriptures Visualized Institute, c1944. 400 ft., 16mm. (Nature's Wonderland Series)

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 20Dec44; MP15511.

THE TREE OF LIBERTY. SEE The Howards of Virginia.

THE TREE SURGEON. Loew's Inc., c1944. 692 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Arnold Gillespie, Michael Lah, Ed Barge; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 17May44; LP226.

TREES FOR TOMORROW. Educational Film Division of Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. Presented by the American Forest Products Industries. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman, J. Gordon Wright; narrator, Harry Von Zell.

© American Forest Products Industries, Inc.; 15Oct42; MP12974.

TREES IN WATERCOLOR; anatomy and procedure. c1939. 2 reels, si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Eliot O'Hara.

© Indiana University, Bureau of Visual Instruction; 15Dec39; MP10473.

LOS TRES FANTASMAS. Sabates, S. A., c1948. 2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon used in the promotion of the detergent product, ACE.

Appl. author: Jose M. Viana.

© Sabates, S. A.; 13Sep48; MP3790.

THE TRESPASSER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, William J. O'Sullivan; director, George Blair; original story, Jerry Sackheim, Erwin Gelsey; screenplay, Jerry Gruskin; adaptation, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart E. McGowan; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Dale Evans, Warren Douglas, Janet Martin, Douglas Fowley, Adele Mara.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP1168.

TRIAL BY TRIGGER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Production and screenplay, Gordon Hollingshead; director, William McGann.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27May44; LP12670.

THE TRIAL OF DONALD DUCK. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Donald Duck Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Dan MacManus; animation, Ed Aardal, Paul Allen, Fred Kopietz, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Sep47; LP1971.

THE TRIAL OF MARY DUGAN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Bayard Veiller.

Credits: Producer, Edwin Knopf; director, Norman Z. McLeod; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Feb41; LP10259.

THE TRIAL OF MR. WOLF. Leon Schlesinger Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies, no. 9939)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Richard Bickenbach; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Apr41; MP11090.

LA TRIBU MANGBETU. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with James P. Chapin, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "A People of the Congo: the Mangbetu."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Feb47; MP1681.

TRIFLES OF IMPORTANCE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; screenplay, John Nesbitt, Robert Lopez; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Jul40; LP9837.

TRIFLES THAT WIN WARS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 976 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Harold Daniels; original story and screenplay, Harry Poppe, Jr., Edward Bock; music score, Max Terr, Nat Shilkret; film editor, John D. Faure.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Jul43; LP12178.

TRIGGER FINGERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Frank H. Young; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Harry Newmann; film editor, Fred Maguire.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 27Aug46; LP565.

TRIGGER LAW. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Vernon Keays; original screenplay, Victor Hammond; photography, Marcel LePicard.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Sep44; LP12848.

TRIGGER MAGIC. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (World of Sports)

Summary: An exhibition of pistol and skeet shooting at Palmetto Gardens in Florida.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Mar49; LP2401.

TRIGGER TRAIL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Ed Earl Repp; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Jul44; LP12881.

TRIGGERMAN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Wells Fargo detective, posing as a ranch hand, discovers the persons responsible for a payroll robbery.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Ronald Davidson; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton, Virginia Carrol, Bill Kennedy, Marshall Reed.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20Jun48; LP1697.

EL TRIGO Y EL HOMBRE. SEE Empleo de Películas en las Aulas.

TRIMMIN' THE WOMEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14460.

THE TRIP. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., color.

Credits: Technicolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 15 prints, 26Apr40; MU10217.

A TRIP THROUGH SPACE. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1949. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In an imaginary trip through the universe, representative heavenly bodies are visited, and the relationship between them is observed.

Credits: Producer and director, C. H. Williamson; narrator, John Snagge.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 25Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4035.

A TRIP TO BEDLOE ISLAND—TO SEE THE STATUE OF LIBERTY. Rudolph Brent, c1940. 1 reel.

© Rudolph Brent; 20Sep40; MP10510.

TRIP TO SPORTLAND. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade). Warner Bros.

Summary: Chilean sportsmen display their skill in the steeplechase, in a track and field program, in Huaso rodeos, and in La Cueca, the national dance.

Credits: Script, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Jan48; MP2797.

TRIP TO THE MOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Apr46; MP444.

TRIPLE EXPOSURE. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: James Card.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 28Nov47; MU2483.

TRIPLE JUSTICE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, David Howard; story, Arnold Belgard, Jack Roberts; screenplay, Arthur V. Jones, Morton Grant; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc; 20Sep40; LP10052.

TRIPLE THREAT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. Filmed with the cooperation of the National Football League. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shots of professional football stars in action add interest to this story of the rivalry between two college football stars who join a professional league.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Jean Yarbrough; original screenplay, Joseph Carole, Don Martin; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Richard Crane, Gloria Henry, Mary Stuart, John Litel, Pat Phelan.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Sep48; LP1814.

TRIPLE TROUBLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Harry D'Arcy; screenplay, George Jeske, Monty Collins; film editor, Ernie Leadlay.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Sep44; LP13168.

TRITON OIL. United productions of America for the Union Oil Co. of California, c1948. 13 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An explanation of benefits to be derived from the use of Triton Oil. Animation and live action.

© Union Oil Co. of California; 1Jan48; MP2760.

TRIUMPH WITHOUT DRUMS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 991 ft., sd., sepia. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Joe Newman; original story and screenplay, Julian Harmon; music, Lennie Hayton, Leon Raab; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Oct41; LP11018.

TROCADERO. Republic Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Walter Colmes; director, William Nigh; original story, Charles F. Chaplin, Garret Holmes; screenplay, Allen Gale; music director, Jay Chernis; photographer, Jackson Rose; film editor, Robert Crandall.

Appl. author: Walter Colmes.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Feb44; LP12544.

LE TROIS PETITS CHATONS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "Three Little Kittens."

Summary: Traces the growth and development of three kittens from early dependence on their mother to final independence.

Credits: Collaborators, Arthur I. Gates, Ernest Horn, Celeste C. Peardon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Sep48; MP3384.

TROLLING FOR STRIKES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Arthur Lincer. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Dec44; MP16209.

TROMBONE TROUBLE. Walt Disney Productions, c1944. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 4Jan44; LP12636.

TROPICAL HARMONY. SEE Variety Views, no. 165.

TROPICAL KISS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Mar43; MP13312.

TROPICAL MASQUERADE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Parade Featurette)

Summary: A musical short with a Mexican setting. A young girl falls in love with the man who has been masquerading as her fiance.

Credits: Producer, Harry Grey; director, Alvin Ganzer; original screenplay, Jack Roberts; music director, Irvin Talbot; music score, Van Cleave; film editor, Tom McAdoo.

Cast: Tito Guizar, Sally Rawlinson, Martin Garralaga, Ray Teal, Inesita.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Aug48; LP1743.

TROPICAL MOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Feb45; MP15608.

TROPICAL SPORTLAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, Blumenthal, Heilner; director, Andre DeLaVarre; narrator, Art Gilmore. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov43; MP14120.

TROPICANA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1637.

TROTTING KINGS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 990 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 82)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Sep42; MP13466.

TROUBLE AT THE BEACH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Aug42; MP12877.

TROUBLE CHASERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, Lew Landers; original story and screenplay, George Plympton, Ande Lamb; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Ira Morgan; film editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 16May45; LP13692.

TROUBLE IN STORE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec39; LP10719.

TROUBLE MAKERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Two of the Bowery Boys, proprietors of a sidewalk telescope, sight a murder in a nearby hotel and attempt to locate the criminal.

Credits: Producer, Jan Grippo; director, Reginald LeBorg; original story, Gerald Schnitzer; screenplay, Edmond Seward, Tim Ryan, Gerald Schnitzer; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, William Austin.

Cast: Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Gabriel Dell, Helen Parrish, Lionel Stander.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Dec48; LP2029.

TROUBLE OR NOTHING. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; direction and original screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Jan46; LP125.

TROUBLE PREFERRED. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 63 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which two rookie policewomen investigate an alleged attempt at suicide and reunite a family.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, James Tinling; written by Arnold Belgard; music score, Lucien Cailliet; film editor, Roy Livingston.

Cast: Peggy Knudsen, Lynne Roberts, Charles Russell, Paul Langton, Marcia Mae Jones.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Nov48; LP2094.

TROUBLE SPOT OF THE EAST. SEE Variety Views, no. 111.

THE TROUBLE WITH HUSBANDS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Nov40; LP10037.

THE TROUBLE WITH ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16585.

THE TROUBLE WITH WOMEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 81 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Ruth McKenney and Richard Bransten.

Credits: Producer, Harry Tugend; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Arthur Sheekman; music score, Victor Young, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, William Shea.

Cast: Ray Milland, Teresa Wright, Brian Donlevy.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jun47; LP1075.

TRUANT OFFICER DONALD. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 23Apr41; LP10595.

THE TRUCE HURTS. Loew's Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Jul48 (in notice: 1947); LP1836.

TRUCK BUSTERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 58 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original screenplay, Robert E. Kent, Raymond L. Schrock; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Feb43; LP11845.

THE TRUCK FARMER. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: J. F. Rosborough.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 2Jun39; MP9821.

THE TRUCK OF MY DREAMS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1,789 feet, color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the features of the 1949 Chevrolet truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 9 prints, 31May49; MU4172.

TRUCK ROADEO. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. in cooperation with the Motor Transport Association of Connecticut, Inc., c1949. 22 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Competing truck drivers demonstrate their skill in the annual Truck Roadeo conducted by the Motor Transport Association of Connecticut.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 1Jan49; MP3928.

THE TRUCK THAT FLEW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (George Pal Puppetoon) Based on the book by Dudley Morris.

Credits: Director, George Pal.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Aug43; LP12174.

A TRUCKLOAD OF TROUBLE. Terrytoons, Inc. Released through Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 25Oct49; LP2691.

TRUE TO LIFE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Jones; director, George Marshall; story, Ben Barzman, Bess Taffel, Sol Barzman; screenplay, Don Hartman, Harry Tugend; music direction, Victor Young; editor, LeRoy Stone.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Aug43; LP12408.

TRUE TO THE ARMY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Edward Hope and a play by Howard Lindsay.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Al Rogell; screenplay, Art Arthur, Bradford Ropes; adaptation, Edmund Hartmann, Val Burton; photographer, Daniel Fapp; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Mar42; LP11300.

TRUMPET SERENADE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Milton Schwarz.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Jun42; LP11406.

THE TRUTH ABOUT MURDER. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 63 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Hilda Gordon, Eric Taylor; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr46; LP380.

THE TRUTH GAME. SEE Free and Easy.

TRY AND CATCH ME! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Narrator, Red Barber.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Feb47; LP828.

TUBBY THE TUBA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Puppetoon)

Credits: Producer and director, George Pal; narrator, Victor Jory.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Jul47; LP1110.

LA TUBERCULOSE PULMONAIRE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, Edmond R. Long, C. Howard Marcy, Charles H. Reynolds.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Aug46; MP1037.

TUBERCULOSIS. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Chinese.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 30May46; MP950.

TUBERCULOSIS. Walt Disney Productions, c1945. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm. (Health for the Americas)

Summary: The symptoms and treatment of tuberculosis.

© Walt Disney Productions; 13Aug45; MP2724.

TUCKER'S PEOPLE. SEE Force of Evil.

TUCSON. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy with music, which deals with college life at the University of Arizona and the intercollegiate rodeo held annually at Tucson.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, William Claxton; written by Arnold Belgard; music score, Darrell Calker; film editor, Frank A. Baldridge.

Cast: Jimmy Lydon, Penny Edwards, Charles Russell, Joe Sawyer, Deanna Wayne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Mar49 (in notice: 1948); LP2330.

TUCSON RAIDERS. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Spencer Bennet; original story, Jack O'Donnell; screenplay, Anthony Coldewey; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 3May44; LP12653.

TUGBOAT ANNIE SAILS AGAIN. Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based upon characters created by Norman Reilly Raine.

Credits: Director, Lewis Seiler; original screenplay, Walter DeLeon; music, Max Steiner.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 26Oct40; LP10006.

TUGBOAT MICKEY. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel.

© Walt Disney Productions; 8Mar40; LP9555.

TUGBOATS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film explains the uses of tugboats and shows the "Thomas E. Moran" at work in a large harbor. It pulls a freighter out of the harbor and helps the "Queen Elizabeth" to dock. A teaching film for primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, Alvina Treut.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Nov47; MP2635.

TULIPS SHALL GROW. c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. George Pal Productions, Inc.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jun42; LP11440.

TULSA. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 90 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A drama depicting the struggle of the cattleman against the fast-growing oil industry in Oklahoma in the 1920's.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, Stuart Heisler; screenplay, Frank Nugent, Curtis Kenyon; suggested by a story by Richard Wormser; music, Frank Skinner; music conductor, Charles Previn; orchestrations, David Tamkin; editor, Terrell Morse.

Cast: Susan Hayward, Robert Preston, Pedro Armendariz, Lloyd Gough, Chill Wills.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 13Apr49 (in notice: 1948); LP2305.

THE TULSA KID. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Oliver Drake, Anthony Coldeway; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, John MacBurnie; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Aug40; LP9889.

TUMBANDO CANA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16134.

TUMBLE BUGS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14May43; MP13606.

TUMBLEDOWN RANCH IN ARIZONA. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 6)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Milton Raison; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 20Apr41; LP10514.

TUMBLEWEED TEMPOS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Sep46; LP599.

TUMBLEWEED TRAIL. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Emmett Tansey; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Karl Hajos; film editor, Hugh Winn.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 28Oct46; LP687.

TUMBLEWEED TRAIL. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 19Jun42; LP11401.

TUMBLING FOR PHYSICAL FITNESS. 4 reels, sd. U. S. Navy.

Appl. authors: Samuel F. Harby, Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 4 prints, 8Apr43; MU13447.

TUMBLING TUMBLEWEEDS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Apr45; MP15890.

TUNA CLIPPER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: To help pay a friend's gambling debt a teen-aged boy accepts work on a Portuguese fishing boat. Filmed off the coast of Southern California.

Credits: Producer, Linsley Parson; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, W. Scott Darling; music score, Eddie Kay; photographer, William Sickner; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Roddy McDowall, Elena Verdugo, Roland Winters, Rick Vallin, Dickie Moore.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 10Apr49; LP2276.

THE TUNE OF LUNA PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Sep46; MP1164.

TUNE TIME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Feb42; LP11095.

TUNING. DeForest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 feet, b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics Reel, lesson 12)

Summary: The basic actions of tuned circuits are explained, and their applications in radio, television, and other electronic circuits are demonstrated.

© DeForest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP4332.

TURKEY. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

TURKEY IN THE STRAW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Sep42; MP13035.

THE TURKISH JERK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Nov41; MP11766.

TURN OUT THE LIGHTS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Feb41; MP11097.

TURNABOUT. Released through United Artists, c1940. Presented by Hal Roach. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Thorne Smith.

Credits: Director, Hal Roach; screenplay, Mickell Novak, Berne Giler, John McClain; music score, Arthur Morton; editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 21May40; LP9659.

TURNING WORK OF TWO DIAMETERS. Presented by the U. S. Office of Education. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 18Aug41; 176 prints, 24Jul41; MU11463.

THE TUTTLES OF TAHITI. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 91 min., sd. From the novel "No More Gas" by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Charles Vidor; screenplay, S. Lewis Meltzer, Robert Carson; adaptation, James Hilton; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Mar42; LP11224.

TUXEDO JUNCTION. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart McGowan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Dec41; LP10989.

TUXEDO JUNCTION. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13229.

TWAS LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1557.

TWEED ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13193.

TWEETIE PIE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: I. Freleng.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 21May47; MP2055.

TWELFTH STREET RAG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb41; MP10851.

TWELFTH STREET RAG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Aug43; MP13887.

TWELVE O'CLOCK AND ALL AIN'T WELL. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 25Jul41; MP11433.

TWENTY FIGHTING MEN. Presented by the Ralston Purina Co. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Ralston Purina Co.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 88 prints, 5Jul43; MU14002.

20 MULE TEAM. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., sepia. Based on a story by Robert C. DuSoe and Owen Atkinson.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, Cyril Hume, E. E. Paramore, Richard Maibaum; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Apr40; LP9631.

21 DAYS TOGETHER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels. Based on John Galsworthy's story "The First and the Last."

Credits: Director, Basil Dean; scenario, Basil Dean, Graham Greene.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Apr40; LP9594.

$21.00 A DAY ONCE A MONTH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb42; MP12212.

$21 A DAY (ONCE A MONTH). Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Swing Symphony)

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, L. E. Elliott; musical arrangement, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 25Nov41; MP11838.

THE 26 OLD CHARACTERS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by W. A. Sheaffer Pen Co. 2–1/2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 13Feb47; 23 prints, 14Feb47; MU1655.

20,000 MEN A YEAR. Cosmopolitan, c1939. Presented by Twentieth Century-Fox. 7,656 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Alfred E. Green; original story, Frank Wead; screenplay, Lou Breslow, Owen Francis; music director, Samuel Kaylin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Oct39; LP9365.

TWENTY YEARS OF ACADEMY AWARDS. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, c1948. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Scenes from the Academy award pictures, from the time of the first award in 1928 through 1947. Oscar tells the story.

Credits: Narrator, Carey Wilson.

© Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences; 2Apr48; MP3073.

TWICE BLESSED. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Arthur L. Field; director, Harry Beaumont; screenplay, Ethel Hill; music director, David Snell; music arrangements, Earl Brent; orchestration, Wally Heglin; film editor, Douglass Biggs.

© Loew's Inc.; 29May45; LP13335.

TWILIGHT ON THE PRAIRIE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Warren Wilson; director, Jean Yarbrough; original story, Warren Wilson; screenplay, Clyde Bruckman; photographer, Jerry Ash; film editor, Fred R. Feitshans, Jr.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 14Jun44; LP12742.

TWILIGHT ON THE RIO GRANDE. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart E. McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Gene Autry, Champion, Jr., Sterling Holloway, Adele Mara, the Cass County Boys.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP975.

TWILIGHT ON THE TRAIL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney, Ellen Corby, Cecile Kramer; photographer, Russell Harlan; editor, Fred Feitshans, Jr.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Dec41; LP10863.

TWIN BEDS. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Edward Small. 83 min., sd. Based on the play by Margaret Mayo and Salisbury Field.

Credits: Associate producer, Stanley Logan; director, Tim Whelan; screenplay, Curtis Kenyon, Kenneth Earl, E. Edwin Moran; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; film editor, Francis D. Lyon.

© Edward Small Productions, Inc.; 6Apr42; LP11196.

TWIN HUSBANDS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 18 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; direction and screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Philip Martin, Jr.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10May46; LP379.

TWIN SOMBREROS. SEE Gunfighters.

TWINCUPLETS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd. (Radio Flash, no. 4)

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Arthur Ripley; story, Arthur V. Jones; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Apr40; LP9543.

TWINKLETOES GETS THE BIRD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner; animation, David Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Mar41; LP10325.

TWINKLETOES IN HAT STUFF. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Carl Meyer; animation, Myron Waldman, Sam Stimson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Aug41; LP10959.

TWINKLETOES—WHERE HE GOES NOBODY KNOWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story. Cal Howard.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jun41; LP10561.

TWINS ARE INDIVIDUALS: FROM INFANCY TO ADOLESCENCE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Arnold Gesell and the Clinic of Child Development, Yale University, c1946. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 21Nov46; MP1588.

TWIRLS AND GIRLS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr45; MP15846.

TWISTED ROAD. SEE They Live by Night.

TWISTS AND TURNS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Mar46; MP255.

TWO BLONDES AND A REDHEAD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Arthur Dreifuss; story, Harry Rebuas; screenplay, Victor McLeod, Jameson Brewer; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Jean Porter, Jimmy Lloyd, June Preisser, Judy Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Oct47; LP1253.

TWO-FACED WOMAN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Suggested by a play by Ludwig Fulda.

Credits: Producer, Gottfried Reinhardt; director, George Cukor; original screenplay, S. N. Behrman, Salka Viertel, George Oppenheimer; music score, Bronislau Kaper; orchestrations, Leo Arnaud; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Oct41; LP10853.

TWO-FACED WOMAN. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Suggested by a play by Ludwig Fulda.

Credits: Producer, Gottfried Reinhardt; director, George Cukor; original screenplay, S. N. Behrman, Salka Viertel, George Oppenheimer; music score, Bronislau Kaper; orchestrations, Leo Arnaud; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Jan42; LP10987.

TWO-FISTED JUSTICE. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, Robert Tansey; story, William L. Nolte; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 11Dec42; LP11751.

TWO-FISTED STRANGER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 5 reels.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; story, Peter Whitehead, Robert Lee Johnson; screenplay, Robert Lee Johnson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30May46; LP373.

TWO FOR THE MONEY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Lloyd French; screenplay, Ben Roberts, Berne Giler; film editor, George Crone.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Sep42; LP11638.

TWO FOR THE ZOO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Pinto Colvig; animation, James Culhane, Alfred Eugster.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10268.

TWO GIRLS AND A SAILOR. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Richard Thorpe; original story and screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 5May44; LP12649.

TWO GIRLS ON BROADWAY. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a story by Edmund Goulding.

Credits: Producer, Jack Cummings; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Joseph Fields, Jerome Chodorov; music director, Georgie Stoll; musical arrangements, Walter Ruik; orchestration, Leo Arnaud, George Bassman; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Apr40; LP9584.

TWO GOPHERS FROM TEXAS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, Lloyd Turner, William Scott; animation, Emery Hawkins, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Dec47; MP3015.

TWO GUITARS AND DARK EYES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11570.

TWO GUITARS IN JIVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Aug42; MP12848.

TWO GUN RUSTY. c1944. 1 reel, sd. George Pal Productions, Inc.

Credits: Director, George Pal.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Oct44; LP12984.

TWO GUN SHERIFF. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Sherman; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Apr41; LP10484.

TWO GUYS FROM MILWAUKEE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 90 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, David Butler; original screenplay, Charles Hoffman, I.A.L. Diamond; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangement, Leonid Raab; film editor, Irene Morra.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 17Aug46; LP495.

TWO GUYS FROM TEXAS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 86 min., sd., color, 35mm. Suggested by a play by Robert Sloane and Louis Pelletier.

Summary: Two vaudeville troupers are stranded on a dude ranch. A comedy-Western, with music, animated cartoons, and split-scenes.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, David Butler; screenplay, I.A.L. Diamond, Allen Boretz; cartoon sequences directed by I. Freleng; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; film editor, Irene Morra.

Cast: Dennis Morgan, Jack Carson, Dorothy Malone, Penny Edwards, Forrest Tucker.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 4Sep48; LP1905.

TWO HEARTS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41; MP11215.

TWO IN A TAXI. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Irving Briskin; director, Robert Florey; original screenplay, Howard J. Green, Morton Thompson, Malvin Wald; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Jul41; LP10651.

TWO JILLS AND A JACK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Apr47; LP946.

TWO LATINS FROM MANHATTAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Charles Barton; original screenplay, Albert Duffy; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Oct41; LP11134.

TWO LOCAL YOKELS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,595 ft., sd.

Credits: Produced and directed by Jules; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Mar45; LP13363.

TWO-MAN SUBMARINE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story, Bob Williams; screenplay, Griffin Jay, Leslie T. White; adaptation, Leslie T. White; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Mar44; LP12802.

TWO MILLION ROOMS. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week magazine, c1946. 16 mins., sd., 35mm. (This is America, no. 6)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Harry W. Smith; written by Jerry Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Clare Grundman; editor, David Cooper.

Appl. author: Pathe News, Inc.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 5Apr46; MP685.

THE TWO MRS. CARROLLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 99 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A First National picture. From the stage play by Martin Vale [pseud. of Marguerite Veiller].

Credits: Producer, Mark Hellinger; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Thomas Job; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; film editor, Frederick Richards.

Cast: Humphrey Bogart, Barbara Stanwyck, Alexis Smith, Nigel Bruce.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24May47; LP1020.

TWO NUTS IN A RUT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of Dick and Gus at Palm Springs.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Feb48; LP1475.

TWO O'CLOCK COURAGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 66 min., sd. Based on the story by Gelett Burgess.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Anthony Mann; screenplay, Robert E. Kent; music, Roy Webb; editor, Philip Martin, Jr.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Apr45; LP13342.

TWO OF A KIND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Mar40; MP10071.

TWO-OF-A-KIND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3May43; MP13536.

TWO PAIR OF SHOES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar42; MP12385.

TWO SAPLINGS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,574 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Edwood Ullman, Monty Collins; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Mar43; LP12104.

TWO SENORITAS FROM CHICAGO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Steven Vas.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Frank Woodruff; screenplay, Stanley Rubin, Maurice Tombragel; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27May43; LP12067.

TWO SISTERS FROM BOSTON. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. A Henry Koster production.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Henry Koster; original screenplay, Myles Connolly; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Douglass Biggs.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Feb46; LP127.

TWO SMART PEOPLE. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Wheelwright; director, Jules Dassin; story, Ralph Wheelwright, Allan Kenward; screenplay, Ethel Hill, Leslie Charteris; music score, George Bassman; film editor, Chester W. Schaeffer.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Apr46; LP230.

TWO THOROUGHBREDS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1939. 62 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Jack Hively; story, Joseph A. Fields; screenplay, Joseph A. Fields, Jerry Cady; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Dec39; LP9345.

TWO TICKETS TO LONDON. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Roy William Neill.

Credits: Producer and director, Edwin L. Marin; screenplay, Tom Reed; music score, Frank Skinner; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, Milton Krasner; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Jun43; LP12098.

TWO WEEKS TO LIVE. c1943. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 76 min., sd. A Jack William Votion production.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Malcolm St. Clair; original screenplay, Michael L. Simmons, Roswell Rogers; music director, Lud Gluskin; editor, Duncan Mansfield.

© Jack Wm. Votion Productions, Inc.; 6Mar43; LP11896.

TWO YANKS IN TRINIDAD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Bischoff; director, Gregory Ratoff; story, Sy Bartlett; screenplay, Sy Bartlett, Richard Carroll, Harry Segall; photography, Philip Tannura; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Mar42; LP11109.

TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 10 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Richard Henry Dana, Jr.

Credits: Producer, Seton I. Miller; director, John Farrow; screenplay, Seton I. Miller, George Bruce; music score, Victor Young.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Nov46; LP678.

TWO'S A COUPLE. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., color.

Credits: Cinecolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 40 prints, 21Oct40; MU10541.

TYCOON. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 130 min., sd., color, 35mm. Adapted from the novel by C. E. Scoggins.

Summary: An engineer building a railroad tunnel through the Andes faces difficulties in his construction job and in his courtship of the boss's daughter.

Credits: Producer, Stephen Ames; director, Richard Wallace; screenplay, Borden Chase, John Twist; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestral arrangements, Gil Grau; film editor, Frank Doyle.

Cast: John Wayne, Laraine Day, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Judith Anderson, James Gleason.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Dec47; LP1393.

TYING APPLES ON A LILAC TREE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11030.

TYING BUCKTAIL FLIES.

Appl. author: Charles McKinley Wetzel.

© DuPont Fish & Game Assn.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 4Apr47; MU1892.

TYPE G–1 AUTOMATIC PILOT. c1945. 3 reels, U. S. Navy.

Appl. author: Raphael G. Wolff.

© Raphael G. Wolff Studios; 28Mar45; MP16538.

TYPE SPEAKS! Loucks & Norling Studios, in collaboration with G. M. Basford Co., for American Type Founders Sales Corp., c1948. 25 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The production of foundry type and its uses in modern publishing and art work are shown in this documentary film.

Credits: Narrator, Ben Grauer.

© American Type Founders Sales Corp.; 20Apr48; MP3251.

TYPHOON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd., color. Based on story by Steve Fisher.

Credits: Director, Louis King; screenplay, Allen Rivkin; photography, William Mellor; film editor, Alma Macrorie. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17May40; LP9644.

TYRONE SHAPIRO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Oct41; MP11649.

U

U-BOAT PRISONER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd. From the story by Archie Gibbs.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Jul44; LP13023.

U-PIK-M. P. M. Productions. si., b&w, 35mm.

© Eugene Marcus; title & descr., 13May47; 4 prints, 26Apr47; MU2005.

THE U. S. A. BY DAY AND THE R. A. F. BY NIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Jan45; MP15559.

THE UGLY DINO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, Bill Nolan, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Jun40; LP9728.

THE UNBEARABLE BEAR. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Robert Cannon; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 1May43; MP13528.

UNCERTAIN GLORY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 102 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From an original story by Joe May and Laszlo Vadnay.

Credits: Producer, Robert Buckner; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Laszlo Vadnay, Max Brand; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, George Amy.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29Apr44; LP12619.

UNCIVIL WAR BIRDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Mar46; LP554.

UNCLE JOEY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 18Apr41; MP11157.

UNCLE JOEY COMES TO TOWN. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 19Sep41; MP11625.

UNCLE SAM—THE NON-BELLIGERENT, SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 6.

UNCLE TOM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Feb45; MP15605.

UNCLE TOM'S CABAÑA. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Walter Clinton, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair, Robert Bentley; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun47; LP1098.

UNCONQUERED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 147 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by Neil H. Swanson.

Summary: A romantic comedy of the year 1763, with scenes laid in the forests near Fort Pitt. A traitor incites the Indians to massacre, and a spirited bond slave is rescued from the Indians by a homespun hero.

Credits: Producer and director, Cecil B. DeMille; screenplay, Charles Bennett, Fredric M. Frank, Jesse Lasky, Jr.; music score, Victor Young; editor, Anne Bauchens.

Cast: Gary Cooper, Paulette Goddard, Howard Da Silva, Boris Karloff, Cecil Kellaway.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Oct47; LP1539.

UNCONSCIOUS MOTIVATION. Lester F. Beck, c1949. 30 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A scientific film which demonstrates how unconscious motives can influence our thoughts, feelings, and actions. Shows standard psychological techniques used to detect the presence of repressed ideas lying beyond conscious reach, and illustrates the benefits to mental health that come from the discovery and release of such unconscious repressions.

© Lester F. Beck; 4Nov49; MP4744.

UNCRATING AND ASSEMBLY OF THE P–47 THUNDERBOLT AIRPLANE. Presented by Republic Aircraft. 4 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization.

© Republic Aviation Corp.; title & descr., 18Jun43; 253 prints, 17Jun43; MU13662.

THE UNCULTURED VULTURE. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Cal Howard; animation, Ben Lloyd, Chick Otterstrom; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 6Feb47; LP952.

UNDER AGE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Cohn; director, Edward Dmytryk; story, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr41; LP10447.

UNDER ARIZONA SKIES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by John McCarthy.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Harry Neuman; film editor, Fred Maguire.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Apr46; LP224.

UNDER CALIFORNIA STARS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 70 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Roy Roger's horse, Trigger, is stolen by a band of horse thieves. A musical Western.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, William Witney; original story, Paul Gangelin; screenplay, Sloan Nibley, Paul Gangelin; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Roy Rogers, Jane Frazee, Andy Devine, Bob Nolan, The Sons of the Pioneers.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Feb48; LP1592.

UNDER CAPRICORN. Transatlantic Pictures Corp. Released through Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 117 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by Helen Simpson.

Summary: A psychological drama about the sufferings of a titled Irishwoman who marries a stable groom, is ostracized by society, and nearly poisoned by her housekeeper. Setting, Australia, in the 1830's.

Credits: Producer and director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, James Bridie; adaptation, Hume Cronyn; music score, Richard Addinsell; music director, Louis Levy; film editor, A. S. Bates.

Cast: Ingrid Bergman, Joseph Cotten, Michael Wilding, Margaret Leighton, Cecil Parker.

© Transatlantic Pictures Corp.; 8Oct49; LP2604.

UNDER COLORADO SKIES. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 65 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A young medical student from Texas, wrongly accused of robbery and murder, captures the gang responsible for the crimes.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, R. G. Springsteen; screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Monte Hale, Adrian Booth, Foy Willing, the Riders of the Purple Sage.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Nov47; LP1385.

UNDER FIESTA STARS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Karl Brown.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Frank McDonald; screenplay, Karl Brown, Eliot Gibbons; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Aug41; LP10709.

UNDER NEVADA SKIES. c1946. 69 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, Frank McDonald; original story, M. Coates Webster; screenplay, Paul Gangelin, J. Benton Cheney; music score, Dale Butts; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jul46; LP505.

UNDER SECRET ORDERS. Guaranteed Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd. Based on the story "Mademoiselle Docteur" by George Neveux and I. Cube.

Credits: Director, Edmund Greville; adaptation, R. Bernaur; music, Harold May; photography, Alfred Black; editing, Ray Pitt.

© Guaranteed Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Feb43; LP11895.

UNDER TEXAS SKIES. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, George Sherman; original story, Anthony Coldewey; screenplay, Anthony Coldewey, Betty Burbridge; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Sep40; LP9970.

UNDER THE BAMBOO TREE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Mar46; MP304.

UNDER THE BANANA TREE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Mar46; MP424.

UNDER THE SHEDDING CHESTNUT TREE. c1942. Presented by Columbia. 728 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 17)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; animation, Volus Jones; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Feb42; LP11073.

UNDER THE SPREADING BLACKSMITH SHOP. c1942. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Story, Ben Hardaway, L. T. Elliott; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 6Jan42; MP12018.

UNDER THE TONTO RIM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel of the same title by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lew Landers; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

Cast: Tim Holt, Nan Leslie, Richard Martin.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jun47; LP1145.

UNDER THE WILLOW TREE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R.C.M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Dec46; MP1366.

UNDER WATER FIREARMS. Alonzo Rodrick Eastman, c1949. 12 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A demonstration of under water firearms.

© N. B. Defender (legal name: Alonzo Rodrick Eastman); 27Jul49; MP4703.

UNDER WATER SPEAR FISHING. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Frederick J. McEvoy; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec45; MP569.

UNDER WESTERN SKIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Warren Wilson; director, Jean Yarbrough; original story, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Stanley Roberts, Clyde Bruckman; music director, Frank Skinner; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Jan45; LP13300.

UNDER WHITE SAILS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary, Justin Herman; narrated by Ray Morgan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Feb47; MP1738.

UNDERCOVER. Ealing Studios, Ltd., c1943. 9 reels, sd. Based on an original story by George Slocombe.

Credits: Director, Sergei Nolbandov; screenplay, John Dighton, M. Danischewsky.

© Ealing Studios, Ltd.; 27Jul43; LP12438.

UNDERCOVER MAISIE. Loew's Inc., c1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the character created by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Harry Beaumont; story and screenplay, Thelma Robinson; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ben Lewis.

Cast: Ann Sothern, Barry Nelson, Mark Daniels, Leon Ames.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Feb47; LP863.

UNDERCOVER MAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a Treasury Agent, while gathering evidence for income tax evasion charges against a gang leader, solves some murders and apprehends a gangster.

Credits: Producer, Robert Rossen; director, Joseph H. Lewis; script, Sidney Boehm; film editor, Al Clark.

Cast: Glenn Ford, Nina Foch, James Whitmore, Barry Kelley.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Mar49; LP2161.

UNDERCOVER MAN. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Paramount. 6,128 ft., sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music direction, Irvin Talbot; photography, Russell Harlan; editor, Carrol Lewis.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 10Dec42; LP11752.

THE UNDERCOVER WOMAN. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on a play script by Sylvia G. L. Dannett.

Credits: Associate producer, Rudolph E. Abel; director, Thomas Carr; screenplay, Jerry Sackheim, Sherman L. Lowe; adaptation, Robert Metzler; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Mar46; LP214.

UNDERCURRENT. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Thelma Strabel.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Vincente Minelli; screenplay, Edward Chodorov; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Oct46; LP630.

THE UNDERDOG. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Max Alexander; director, William Nigh; original story, Lawrence E. Taylor, Malvin Wald; screenplay, Ben Lithman; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Robert Cline; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 17Oct43; LP492.

UNDERGROUND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Vincent Sherman; story, Edwin Justus Mayer, Oliver H. P. Garrett; screenplay, Charles Grayson.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 5Jul41; LP10568.

UNDERGROUND AGENT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Michael Gordon; story and screenplay, J. Robert Bren, Gladys Atwater; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Dec42; LP11712.

UNDERGROUND GUERRILLAS. c1944. 9 reels, sd. An Ealing Studios production. Based on an original story by George Slocombe.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director, Sergei Nolbandov; screenplay, John Dighton, M. Danischewsky; music, Fredric Austin; music director, Ernest Irving; cameraman, W. Cooper; editor, Eileen Boland.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18May44; LP12738.

UNDERGROUND RUSTLERS. c1941. Presented by Monogram Pictures. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, John Rathmell; screenplay, Bud Tuttle, Elizabeth Beecher; adaptation and dialogue, John Vlahos; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 21Nov41; LP10926.

UNDERTOW. Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A reformed racketeer is framed for a murder by his fiance and an old schoolfriend. Setting: Chicago.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Dietrich; director, William Castle; story, Arthur T. Horman; screenplay, Arthur T. Horman, Lee Loeb; music director, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

Cast: Scott Brady, John Russell, Dorothy Hart, Peggy Dow, Bruce Bennett.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2695.

THE UNDYING MONSTER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,600 ft., sd. From the novel by Jessie Douglas Kerruish.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; screenplay, Lillie Hayward, Michel Jacoby; music, Emil Newman, David Raksin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Nov42; LP11985.

UNEXPECTED GUEST. Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc., c1947. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Lewis J. Rachmil; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Ande Lamb; music, David Chudnow; film editor, Fred W. Berger.

Cast: William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Rand Brooks, Una O'Connor, John Parrish.

© Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc.; 28Mar47; LP898.

UNEXPECTED RICHES. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 994 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Herbert Glazer; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Dec42; LP11730.

UNEXPECTED UNCLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 66 min., sd. From the novel by Eric Hatch.

Credits: Producer, Tay Garnett; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Delmer Daves, Noel Langley; music director, Anthony Collins; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Sep41; LP10774.

THE UNFAITHFUL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 109 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A First National Picture.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Vincent Sherman; original screenplay, David Goodis, James Gunn; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Alan Crosland, Jr.

Cast: Ann Sheridan, Lew Ayres, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 5Jul47; LP1097.

UNFAITHFULLY YOURS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A satirical farce about a British symphony orchestra conductor who suspects his wife of infidelity.

Credits: Produced, directed, and written by Preston Sturges; music director, Alfred Newman; editor, Robert Fritch.

Cast: Rex Harrison, Linda Darnell, Barbara Lawrence, Rudy Vallee, Kurt Kreuger.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Nov48; LP2117.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by United States Steel Corp. 10 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The story of Jim Robbins' return to the U. S. Steel Corporation at the close of the war, and his part in the Corporation's multi-million dollar construction and modernization program.

Credits: Narrator, George Hicks.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 16 prints, 16Aug48; MU3225.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for United States Steel Corp. 36 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The story of a young veteran who returns to his job at the United States Steel Corporation after the war, and of the peacetime accomplishments of his company.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 17 prints, 15May48; MU3003.

UNFINISHED BUSINESS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 11 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Gregory LaCava; screenplay, Eugene Thackrey; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Joseph Valentine; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Aug41; LP10683.

THE UNFINISHED DANCE. Loew's Inc., c1947. 101 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the story "La Mort du cygne" by Paul Morand.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Henry Koster; screenplay, Myles Connolly; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Douglass Biggs.

Cast: Margaret O'Brien, Cyd Charisse, Karin Booth, Danny Thomas.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Jul47; LP1157.

UNHOLY PARTNERS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. A Mervyn LeRoy production.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, Mervyn Le Roy; screenplay, Earl Baldwin, Bartlett Cormack, Lesser Samuels; music score, David Snell; musical arrangements, Lennie Hayton; orchestrations, Wally Heglin; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Oct41; LP10856.

THE UNINVITED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 10 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Dorothy Macardle.

Credits: Associate producer, Charles Brackett; director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Dodie Smith, Frank Partos; music score, Victor Young; editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Jan44; LP12566.

THE UNINVITED BLONDE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Myrna Dell, Steven Flagg, Marc Logan.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Nov48; LP1929.

THE UNINVITED PEST. Loew's Inc., c1943. 684 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jul43; LP12138.

THE UNITED STATES ARMY AIR FORCE BAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Melody Master)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Oct42; MP12930.

THE UNITED STATES ARMY BAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Melody Master)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 13May43; MP13566.

U. S. ARMY NOSE FUZE 137li—MARK–103 FOR THE BOMB DISPOSAL SCHOOL.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Sep43; MU13903.

UNITED STATES COAST GUARD BAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with the U. S. Coast Guard, c1944. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Bobby Connolly.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Apr44; MP14752.

UNITED STATES MARINES ON REVIEW. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Marine Corps, c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Director, Dave Gould; screenplay, Marion Mack.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct44; LP12915.

UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE CADET BASIC SCHOOL BAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with the Training Organization, War Shipping Administration, c1944. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Bobby Connolly.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Feb44; MP14455.

UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY; West Point. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (The Washington Parade, series 3, no. 2)

Credits: Narrative by Gordon Auchincloss; commentary, Basil Ruysdael; photographer, Irving Browning; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Nov40; MP10835.

UNITED STATES NAVAL ACADEMY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 905 ft., sd. (Washington Parade, s. 3, no. 3)

Credits: Narrative, William Nelson; narrator, Basil Ruysdael; music arranger, Jack Schaindlin; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Jan41; MP10911.

THE UNITED STATES NAVY BAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Melody Master)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 25Jan43; MP13217.

U. S. N. FUZE 137lh—MARK–219 FOR BOMB DISPOSAL SCHOOL.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Sep43; MU13902.

THE U. S. NAVY 1940. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 11.

U. S. NAVY WEFT IDENTIFICATION. sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; title, descr., & 64 prints, 6Dec43; MU14256.

U. S. TREASURY, BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 962 ft., sd. (The Washington Parade)

Credits: Narrative, Prosper Buranelli; narrator, Basil Ruysdael; photography, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Jan40; MP9858.

UNITED WE STAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; script, Prosper Buranelli; narrator, Lowell Thomas; music, Louis de Francesco; editor, Earl Allvine.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Jul42; MP15411.

UNIVERSAL NEWSREEL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1939–47. 1 reel each unless otherwise indicated, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Volume 11, 1939.

823. © 14Nov39; MP9842.

824. © 16Nov39; MP9843.

825. © 21Nov39; MP9844.

826. © 23Nov39; MP9845.

827. © 28Nov39; MP9850.

828. © 30Nov39; MP9851.

829. © 5Dec39; MP9878.

830. © 7Dec39; MP9879.

831. © 12Dec39; MP9932.

832. © 14Dec39; MP9933.

833. © 19Dec39; MP9934.

834. © 21Dec39; MP9935.

835. © 26Dec39; MP9947.

836. © 28Dec39; MP9948.

Volume 12, 1940.

837. © 2Jan40; MP9978.

838. © 4Jan40; MP9979.

839. © 9Jan40; MP9980.

840. © 11Jan40; MP9981.

841. © 16Jan40; MP9987.

842. © 18Jan40; MP9988.

843. © 23Jan40; MP9997.

844. © 25Jan40; MP9998.

845. © 30Jan40; MP10026.

846. © 1Feb40; MP10027.

847. © 6Feb40; MP10040.

848. © 8Feb40; MP10041.

849. © 13Feb40; MP10060.

850. © 15Feb40; MP10061.

851. © 20Feb40; MP10072.

852. © 24Feb40; MP10073.

853. © 27Feb40; MP10085.

854. © 29Feb40; MP10086.

855. © 5Mar40; MP10100.

856. © 7Mar40; MP10101.

857. © 12Mar40; MP10119.

858. © 14Mar40; MP10120.

859. © 19Mar40; MP10133.

860. © 21Mar40; MP10134.

861. © 26Mar40; MP10173.

862. © 28Mar40; MP10174.

863. © 2Apr40; MP10189.

864. © 4Apr40; MP10190.

865. © 9Apr40; MP10199.

866. © 11Apr40; MP10200.

867. © 16Apr40; MP10220.

868. © 18Apr40; MP10221.

869. © 23Apr40; MP10255.

870. © 25Apr40; MP10256.

871. © 30Apr40; MP10260.

872. © 2May40; MP10261.

873. © 7May40; MP10273.

874. © 9May40; MP10274.

875. © 14May40; MP10289.

876. © 16May40; MP10290.

877. © 20May40; MP10307.

878. © 22May40; MP10308.

879. © 28May40; MP10348.

880. © 30May40; MP10349.

881. © 4Jun40; MP10350.

882. © 6Jun40; MP10351.

883. © 11Jun40; MP10361.

884. © 13Jun40; MP10362.

885. © 18Jun40; MP10383.

886. © 20Jun40; MP10384.

887. © 25Jun40; MP10396.

888. © 27Jun40; MP10397.

889. © 2Jul40; MP10408.

890. © 4Jul40; MP10409.

891. © 9Jul40; MP10410.

892. © 11Jul40; MP10411.

893. © 16Jul40; MP10423.

894. © 18Jul40; MP10424.

895. © 23Jul40; MP10435.

896. © 25Jul40; MP10436.

897. © 30Jul40; MP10447.

898. © 1Aug40; MP10448.

899. © 6Aug40; MP10456.

900. © 8Aug40; MP10457.

901. © 13Aug40; MP10469.

902. © 15Aug40; MP10470.

903. © 20Aug40; MP10483.

904. © 22Aug40; MP10484.

905. © 27Aug40; MP10506.

906. © 29Aug40; MP10507.

907. © 3Sep40; MP10512.

908. © 5Sep40; MP10513.

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910. © 12Sep40; MP10530.

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916. © 3Oct40; MP10596.

917. © 8Oct40; MP10607.

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919. © 15Oct40; MP10618.

920. © 17Oct40; MP10619.

921. © 22Oct40; MP10632.

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924. © 31Oct40; MP10658.

925. © 5Nov40; MP10668.

926. © 7Nov40; MP10669.

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929. © 19Nov40; MP10712.

930. © 21Nov40; MP10713.

931. © 26Nov40; MP10714.

932. © 28Nov40; MP10715.

933. © 3Dec40; MP10749.

934. © 5Dec40; MP10750.

935. © 10Dec40; MP10767.

936. © 12Dec40; MP10768.

937. © 17Dec40; MP10777.

938. © 19Dec40; MP10778.

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940. © 26Dec40; MP10794.

Volume 13, 1940/41.

941. © 31Dec40; MP10816.

942. © 2Jan41; MP10817.

943. © 7Jan41; MP10841.

944. © 9Jan41; MP10842.

945. © 14Jan41; MP10886.

946. © 16Jan41; MP10887.

947. © 21Jan41; MP10888.

948. © 23Jan41; MP10889.

949. © 28Jan41; MP10915.

950. © 30Jan41; MP10916.

951. © 4Feb41; MP10938.

952. © 6Feb41; MP10939.

953. © 11Feb41; MP10956.

954. © 13Feb41; MP10957.

955. © 18Feb41; MP10988.

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957. © 25Feb41; MP10999.

958. © 27Feb41; MP11000.

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960. © 6Mar41; MP11049.

961. © 11Mar41; MP11082.

962. © 13Mar41; MP11083.

963. © 18Mar41; MP11084.

964. © 20Mar41; MP11085.

965. © 25Mar41; MP11107.

966. © 27Mar41; MP11108.

967. © 1Apr41; MP11132.

968. © 3Apr41; MP11133.

969. © 8Apr41; MP11148.

970. © 10Apr41; MP11149.

971. © 15Apr41; MP11173.

972. © 17Apr41; MP11174.

973. © 22Apr41; MP11187.

974. © 24Apr41; MP11188.

975. © 29Apr41; MP11204.

976. © 1May41; MP11205.

977. © 6May41; MP11230.

978. © 8May41; MP11231.

979. © 13May41; MP11254.

980. © 15May41; MP11255.

981. © 20May41; MP11290.

982. © 22May41; MP11291.

983. © 27May41; MP11294.

984. © 29May41; MP11295.

985. © 3Jun41; MP11313.

986. © 5Jun41; MP11314.

987. © 10Jun41; MP11355.

988. © 12Jun41; MP11356.

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990. © 19Jun41; MP11361.

991. © 24Jun41; MP11373.

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993. © 1Jul41; MP11427.

994. © 3Jul41; MP11428.

995. © 8Jul41; MP11438.

996. © 10Jul41; MP11439.

997. © 15Jul41; MP11492.

998. © 17Jul41; MP11493.

999. © 22Jul41; MP11510.

1000. © 24Jul41; MP11511.

Volume 14, 1941/42.

1. © 29Jul41; MP11520.

2. © 31Jul41: MP11521.

3. © 5Aug41; MP11538.

4. © 7Aug41; MP11539.

5. © 12Aug41; MP11580.

6. © 14Aug41; MP11581.

7. © 19Aug41; MP11582.

8. © 21Aug41; MP11583.

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11. © 2Sep41; MP11638.

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14. ©11Sep41; MP11654.

15. © 16Sep41; MP11692.

16. © 18Sep41; MP11693.

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18. © 25Sep41; MP11703.

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20. © 2Oct41; MP11740.

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26. © 23Oct41; MP11833.

27. © 28Oct41; MP11857.

28. © 30Oct41; MP11858.

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30. © 6Nov41; MP11879.

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32. © 13Nov41; MP11927.

33. © 18Nov41; MP11944.

34. © 20Nov41; MP11945.

35. © 25Nov41; MP11978.

36. © 27Nov41; MP11979.

37. © 2Dec41; MP12011.

38. © 4Dec41; MP12012.

39. © 9Dec41; MP12043.

40. © 11Dec41; MP12044.

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42. © 18Dec41; MP12125.

43. © 23Dec41; MP12126.

44. © 25Dec41; MP12127.

45. © 30Dec41; MP12203.

46. © 2Jan42; MP12204.

47. © 6Jan42; MP12205.

Volume 15, 1942/43.

48. © 8Jan42; MP12206.

49. © 13Jan42; MP12207.

50. © 15Jan42; MP12208.

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52. © 22Jan42; MP12232.

53. © 27Jan42; MP12255.

54. © 28Jan42; MP12256.

55. © 3Feb42; MP12257.

56. © 5Feb42; MP12258.

57. © 10Feb42; MP12271.

58. © 12Feb42; MP12272.

59. © 17Feb42; MP12311.

60. © 19Feb42; MP12312.

61. © 24Feb42; MP12335.

62. © 26Feb42; MP12336.

63. © 3Mar42; MP12376.

64. © 5Mar42; MP12377.

65. © 10Mar42; MP12390.

66. © 12Mar42; MP12391.

67. © 17Mar42; MP12409.

68. © 19Mar42; MP12410.

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70. © 26Mar42; MP12469.

71. © 31Mar42; MP12470.

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73. © 7Apr42; MP12508.

74. © 9Apr42; MP12509.

75. © 14Apr42; MP12510.

76. © 16Apr42; MP12511.

77. © 21Apr42; MP12537.

78. © 23Apr42; MP12538.

79. © 28Apr42; MP12558.

80. © 30Apr42; MP12559.

81. © 5May42; MP12584.

82. © 7May42; MP12585.

83. © 12May42; MP12639.

84. © 14May42; MP12640.

85. © 19May42; MP12641.

86. © 21May42; MP12642.

87. © 26May42; MP12645.

88. © 28May42; MP12646.

89. © 2Jun42; MP12659.

90. © 4Jun42; MP12660.

91. © 9Jun42; MP12692.

92. © 11Jun42; MP12693.

93. © 16Jun42; MP12694.

94. © 18Jun42; MP12695.

95. © 23Jun42; MP12707.

96. © 25Jun42; MP12708.

97. © 30Jun42; MP12731.

98. © 2Jul42; MP12732.

99. © 7Jul42; MP12755.

100. © 9Jul42; MP12756.

101. © 14Jul42; MP12773.

102. © 16Jul42; MP12774.

103. © 21Jul42; MP12791.

104. © 23Jul42; MP12792.

105. © 28Jul42; MP12808.

106. © 30Jul42; MP12809.

107. © 4Aug42; MP12832.

108. © 6Aug42; MP12833.

109. © 11Aug42; MP12836.

110. © 13Aug42; MP12837.

111. © 18Aug42; MP12943.

112. © 20Aug42; MP12944.

113. © 25Aug42; MP12945.

114. © 27Aug42; MP12946.

115. © 1Sep42; MP12947.

116. © 3Sep42; MP12948.

117. © 8Sep42; MP12994.

118. © 10Sep42; MP12995.

119. © 15Sep42; MP12996.

120. © 17Sep42; MP12997.

121. © 22Sep42; MP12998.

122. © 24Sep42; MP12999.

123. © 29Sep42; MP13000.

124. © 1Oct42; MP13001.

125. © 6Oct42; MP13056.

126. © 8Oct42; MP13057.

127. © 13Oct42; MP13058.

128. © 15Oct42; MP13059.

129. © 20Oct42; MP13060.

130. © 22Oct42; MP13061.

131. © 27Oct42; MP13139.

132. © 29Oct42; MP13140.

133. © 3Nov42; MP13141.

134. © 5Nov42; MP13142.

135. © 10Nov42; MP13256.

136. © 12Nov42; MP13257.

137. © 17Nov42; MP13258.

138. © 19Nov42; MP13259.

139. © 24Nov42; MP13260.

140. © 26Nov42; MP13261.

141. © 1Dec42; MP13262.

142. © 3Dec42; MP13263.

143. © 8Dec42; MP13264.

144. © 10Dec42; MP13265.

145. © 15Dec42; MP13328.

146. © 17Dec42; MP13329.

147. © 22Dec42; MP13330.

148. © 24Dec42; MP13331.

149. © 29Dec42; MP13353.

150. © 31Dec42; MP13354.

151. © 5Jan43; MP13355.

152. © 7Jan43; MP13356.

153. © 12Jan43; MP13357.

154. © 14Jan43; MP13358.

Volume 16, 1943/44.

155. © 19Jan43; MP13554.

156. © 21Jan43; MP13555.

157. © 26Jan43; MP13556.

158. © 28Jan43; MP13557.

159. © 2Feb43; MP13558.

160. © 4Feb43; MP13559.

161. © 9Feb43; MP13560.

162. © 11Feb43; MP13561.

163. © 16Feb43; MP13562.

164. © 18Feb43; MP13563.

165. © 23Feb43; MP13564.

166. © 25Feb43; MP13565.

167. © 2Mar43; MP13567.

168. © 4Mar43; MP13568.

169. © 9Mar43; MP13569.

170. © 11Mar43; MP13570.

171. © 16Mar43; MP13571.

172. © 18Mar43; MP13572.

173. © 23Mar43; MP13593.

174. © 25Mar43; MP13594.

175. © 30Mar43; MP13595.

176. © 1Apr43; MP13596.

177. © 6Apr43; MP13597.

178. © 8Apr43; MP13598.

179. © 13Apr43; MP13604.

180. © 15Apr43; MP13605.

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183. © 27Apr43; MP13631.

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186. © 6May43; MP13647.

187. © 11May43; MP13660.

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189. © 18May43; MP13694.

190. © 21May43; MP13695.

191. © 25May43; MP13708.

192. © 27May43; MP13709.

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194. © 3Jun43; MP13720.

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203. © 6Jul43; MP13846.

204. © 8Jul43; MP13847.

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206. © 15Jul43; MP13875.

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212. © 5Aug43; MP13916.

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219. © 31Aug43; MP13957.

220. © 2Sep43; MP13958.

221. © 7Sep43; MP13995.

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225. © 21Sep43; MP14051.

226. © 23Sep43; MP14052.

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229. © 5Oct43; MP14108.

230. © 7Oct43; MP14109.

231. © 12Oct43; MP14110.

232. © 14Oct43; MP14111.

233. © 19Oct43; MP14149.

234. © 21Oct43; MP14150.

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236. © 28Oct43; MP14152.

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253. © 28Dec43; MP14507.

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Volume 17, 1944/45.

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257. © 11Jan44; MP14511.

258. © 13Jan44; MP14512.

259. © 18Jan44; MP14513.

260. © 20Jan44; MP14514.

261. © 25Jan44; MP14619.

262. © 27Jan44; MP14620.

263. © 1Feb44; MP14621.

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265. © 8Feb44; MP14623.

266. © 10Feb44; MP14624.

267. © 15Feb44; MP14625.

268. © 17Feb44; MP14626.

269. © 22Feb44; MP14627.

270. © 24Feb44; MP14628.

271. © 29Feb44; MP14629.

272. © 2Mar44; MP14630.

273. © 7Mar44; MP14709.

274. © 9Mar44; MP14710.

275. © 13Mar44; MP14713.

276. © 16Mar44; MP14714.

277. © 21Mar44; MP14715.

278. © 23Mar44; MP14716.

279. © 28Mar44; MP14711.

280. © 30Mar44; MP14712.

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284. © 13Apr44; MP14795.

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293. © 16May44; MP15043.

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296. © 25May44; MP15046.

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298. © 1Jun44; MP15048.

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300. 2 reels. © 8Jun44; MP15050.

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302. © 15Jun44; MP15052.

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306. © 29Jun44; MP15056.

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316. © 3Aug44; MP15176.

317. © 8Aug44; MP15177.

318. © 10Aug44; MP15178.

319. © 15Aug44; MP15179.

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330. © 21Sep44; MP15262.

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332. © 28Sep44; MP15319.

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335. © 10Oct44; MP15330.

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340. © 26Oct44; MP15544.

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342. © 2Nov44; MP15546.

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349. © 28Nov44; MP15553.

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Volume 18, 1945/46.

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361. © 9Jan45; MP15699.

362. © 11Jan45; MP15700.

363. © 16Jan45; MP15701.

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370. © 8Feb45; MP15708.

371. © 13Feb45; MP15709.

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374. © 22Feb45; MP15712.

375. © 27Feb45; MP15784.

376. © 1Mar45; MP15785.

377. © 6Mar45; MP15786.

378. © 8Mar45; MP15787.

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380. © 15Mar45; MP15789.

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385. © 3Apr45; MP15930.

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388. © 12Apr45; MP15935.

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390. © 19Apr45; MP15937.

391. © 24Apr45; MP15955.

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396. © 10May45; MP16013.

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421. © 7Aug45; MP16306.

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423. © 14Aug45; MP16325.

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425. © 21Aug45; MP16327.

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427. © 28Aug45; MP16329.

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430. © 6Sep45; MP16413.

431. © 11Sep45; MP16414.

432. © 13Sep45; MP16415.

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434. © 20Sep45; MP16417.

435. © 25Sep45; MP16418.

436. © 27Sep45; MP16419.

437. © 2Oct45; MP16420.

438. © 4Oct45; MP16552.

439. © 9Oct45; MP16553.

440. © 11Oct45; MP16554.

441. © 16Oct45; MP16555.

442. © 18Oct45; MP16556.

443. © 23Oct45; MP16557.

444. © 25Oct45; MP16558.

445. © 30Oct45; MP16559.

446. © 1Nov45; MP16550.

447. © 6Nov45; MP16551.

448. Nov. 8, 1945. Truman opens Labor Conference. [Scenes] Inside conquered Japan. Non-stop [flight] from Japan. Navy ties the Irish.

© 8Nov45; MP47.

449. Nov. 13, 1945. Labor-Management seek agreement. Bond sales zooming. Army unveils "Little David" [largest calibre mortar]. Berlin prepares for winter. Reason for Thanksgiving [turkeys]. [Denmark] honor[s] King Christian.

© 13Nov45; MP48.

450. Nov. 15, 1945. Nation honors war dead. Army swamps Notre Dame. Atom bomb conference. Show 3–wheeled auto. Navy 33, Michigan 7. President's new yacht [U.S.S. Williamsburg]. [British Jet plane] set[s] new air speed mark.

© 15Nov45; MP49.

451. Nov. 20, 1945; Open Pearl Harbor inquiry. Attlee addresses Congress. Military leader [Eisenhower] welcomed. Thousands await vision [religious visitation]. GI chorus on the Rhine. Home town welcomes [Vice Admiral Frederick C.] Sherman. British aid German kids. Twin Cities hail Halsey.

© 20Nov45; MP50.

452. Nov. 22, 1945. American Legion convenes. Clothes go to college [apparel design at U.C.L.A.]. Surplus planes junked. Flattops on parade. War hero [ex-Private Thomas E. Atkins] given farm. Army overwhelms Penn. Reveal mechanical brain [M. I. T. calculating machine]. Alabama smothers Vanderbilt.

© 22Nov45; MP51.

453. Nov. 27, 1645. Yamashita trial draws to close. Young vets join Legion. Japs clean up in Tokyo. B–29 sets new air record. Push-button hospital bed. Shriners clown for charity.

© 27Nov45; MP52.

454. Nov. 29, 1945. President decorates Marshall. Admiral Halsey retires. Japanese shipped home. Santa captures Philadelphia. F. D. R.'s stamps on sale. Indiana trips Purdue, 26–0. Christmas is on the way, kids. Irish rally beats Tulane.

© 29Nov45; MP75.

455. Dec. 4, 1945. Nazi face allied justice. German spies executed. Hang murderers of fliers. Hirohito admits war lost. Riding high with Joe, (GI) [rodeo]. Get out and get under [parade of 1896–1910 automobiles].

© 4Dec45; MP76.

456. Dec. 6, 1945. The Army sinks Navy. [Major General Leslie R. Groves and others] discuss atom control. One hundred and fifty years of marriage [three sisters celebrate golden weddings]. Belgians hail Churchill. Georgia trips Tech.

© 6Dec45; MP77.

457. Dec. 11, 1645. Nuremberg sidelights. Blast Nazi plant. Children die in bus. GI's home on big "E" [carrier Enterprise]. U. S. to Paris in 16 hours. "Unity," asks NAM head. Basketball season on.

© 11Dec45; MP78.

458. Dec. 13, 1945. Across U. S. in five hours [bomber, Mixmaster], Christmas in the air. Dead Nisei honored. "Ike" takes over. Plea for war hungry. Redskins take title [football].

© 13Dec45; MP79.

459. Dec. 18, 1945. Jap atom gun destroyed. Five stars for Halsey. Nazi subs destroyed. President is host. Nazi general [Dostler] executed. Handbag fashions. Two millionth GI homeward bound.

© 18Dec45; MP80.

460. Dec. 20, 1945. Rescue ship [USS Saturnia] brings GI's. New York hails Halsey. Motorized glider. Pilotless aircraft. Japs leave China. Rams win grid title.

© 20Dec45; MP81.

461. Dec. 25, 1945. Wasp [U. S. carrier] now Atlantic ferry. Navy spurs loan drive. Shoes for the South. Pre-built aluminum houses. Give 'im the one-two [Madison Square Boys' Clubs]. Natives [of French Indo-China] stage water festival. Montreal tops in hockey.

© 25Dec45; MP82.

482. Dec. 27, 1945. New Year greetings. Trailers for vet students. Ski water ballet. Koreans thank Yanks. Atom and Eve [girl-student experiments]. Students flour blitz. In the basket [ball game].

© 27Dec45; MP83.

463. Jan. 2, 1946. Pay tribute to [General] Patton. Yamashita trial ends. Traffic stymies servicemen [at] New York, Seattle, west coast. Destroy Jap planes [at order of General MacArthur]. Seaborne jet plane.

© 2Jan46; MP125.

Volume 19, 1946/47.

464. Jan. 3, 1946. Pope names cardinals. [Canadian Ambassador] honor[s] film makers. Fashions for spring. Ski jumpers take off. [Jack Benny] behind the hate ball. Spectacle on ice [Sonja Henie and company].

© 3Jan46; MP126.

465. Jan. 8, 1646. The President's message. Floods rage in Northwest. Admiral Halsey is initiated. Tournament of Roses. Merry Mummers; Orange Bowl thriller.

© 8Jan46; MP165. 466. Jan. 10, 1946. General Marshall in China. Housing speed-up. Sociability in Japan. Fast count for [GI] Joe. Thrills in Vienna. Fighting Tigers back. Jap prisoners leave U. S. Ski hero [Torger Tokle] honored. Paratroop triplets.

© 10Jan46; MP166.

467. Jan. 15, 1946. Telegraph walkout. Tot's murder shocks U. S. Kaiser makes labor deal. Fire levels post exchange. Sinbad, the dog hero [of the Coast Guard]. Honor war loan head [Ted Gamble]. [Byron] Nelson does it again.

© 15Jan46; MP167.

468. Jan. 17, 1946. GI victory parade. Helicopter records broken. "Wild Bill" [Donovan] decorated. Veterans demonstrate. Canada honors Ike [Eisenhower]. Plane skiing.

© 17Jan46; MP168.

469. Jan. 22, 1946. UNO opens sessions. Demobilization plans. Admiral Kimmel testifies. Fishing sweepstakes. Flashing blades. British rail crash.

© 22Jan46; MP312.

470. Jan. 24, 1946. Churchill in Florida. March of Dimes. Stassen heads [National] Brotherhood [week]. Rebuilding Warsaw. End of the Rainbow Club. Donkey-shines. Amateur sluggers. Tiger triplets.

© 24Jan46; MP313.

471. Jan. 29, 1946. Atom bomb tests. End of U. S. isolation. Marshall mediates. Aid for martyred Cassino. Wainwright's new command. Dimes set fashion. Ski jump champs.

© 29Jan46; MP314.

472. Jan. 31, 1946. U. S. seizes meat plants. Security Council [UNO] opens. Carrier [Franklin D. Roosevelt] shakes down. Navy graveyard. Plane air brakes. Daffy millinery. Ship salvages. Fun in the sun.

© 31Jan46; MP315.

473. Feb. 5, 1946. Radar contacts the moon. March of Dimes hits stride. Byrnes urges A-bomb for peace. Big telescope nears completion. Gouin [is] new French President. Lewis [John L.] rejoins A. F. of L. ranks. Ex-GI strikes it rich.

© 5Feb46; MP316.

474. Feb. 7, 1946. British wives join hubbies. U. S. ships move China Army. Florida hails Brahman bull. Famous warship [Brooklyn] is retired. Snowshoe champs in gala event. Vets "take over" big hotel. Track stars shine in meet.

© 7Feb46; MP317.

475. Feb. 12, 1946. U. S. carrier [Franklin D. Roosevelt] honors Brazil. U. S. repatriates Koreans. Screen star [Ella Raines] christens big plane. Radar installed on ferryboat. Moslem leader [the Aga Khan] visits Bombay. New York-Paris air route inaugurated. New Adjutant-General [Edward F. Witsell] sworn in. Quads "doll up" on seventh birthday.

© 12Feb46; MP318.

476. Feb. 14, 1946. "Snake" clears minefield. Town protests UNO choice. UNRRA relief aids Europe. Sponge fleet back on the job. Jap troops moved from China. Sail-skating is winter thrill.

© 14Feb46; MP319.

477. Feb. 19, 1946. Tug strike ties up New York. Cardinals-elect fly to Rome. Auto goes out the window. Dog champs on review. Bobbi-car takes a bow. N. Y. U. cagers top Notre Dame. Supreme Court urges brotherhood.

© 19Feb46; MP320.

478. Feb. 21, 1946. Ship wrecked in Alaska storm. Cardinals stop off in Eire. Austrian crown jewels returned. Ready warship [Pennsylvania] for atom test. "Quints" crown carnival queen. "Giants" begin spring training. Plastic playball helps reduce. Pope Pius XII thanks UNRRA.

© 21Feb46; MP321.

479. Feb. 26, 1946. UNO delegates back in U. S. New airliner can back up. Operation Musk-ox. Floods devastate Britain. Three trains in crash. Prince weds commoner. [Golden] Gloves finals thrill fans.

© 26Feb46; MP322.

480. Feb. 28, 1946. Pope elevates cardinals. Festival hails Winter King. Lone Star [state] has centennial. Chinese hail year 4634. National AAU bobsled race. GI families back in Hawaii. Knockdown wins 100,000 dollar Derby. "Browns" begin spring training.

© 28Feb46; MP323.

481. Mar. 5, 1946. [Senator Vandenberg] urges firm foreign policy. China hails war leaders. Novel machine builds house. Who's who in the zoo. Troops go skiing in Japan. Rhythm on roller-skates.

© 5Mar46; MP324.

482. Mar. 7, 1946. President backs Red Cross; Hirohito visits his subjects. On the housing front. It's Mardi Gras time. [Hoover] urges U. S. [to] back food drive. Ice-capades fete winter. Army displays war tactics. News from [baseball] training camps.

© 7Mar46; MP325.

483. Mar. 12, 1946. Truman calls on churchmen to save world from ruin. [Winston Churchill] urges U. S.-Anglo alliance. Cardinals back from Rome. Soldier lifts a [rubber] tank. Peron leads in Argentina. Golden Glovers dish it out. On the baseball front.

© 12Mar46; MP459.

484. Mar. 14, 1946. First pictures: Pacific isle waits atom bomb. Truman backs loan to Britain. Film stars receive awards. The Santa Anita handicap. It's all done on porpoise. [Rio Grande Valley's] Charro Days fiesta held. "Red Sox" hit training stride.

© 14Mar46; MP460.

485. Mar. 19, 1946. Reds withdraw from Mukden. Churchill at F. D. R. grave. New isle appears off Japan. Panama whoops it up. Twenty-one dead in Italy ammo [ammunition] blast. Novel car is hobby oddity. Navy ship used as barracks. Man-o-War has birthday. "Indians" hit 1946 trail.

© 19Mar46; MP461.

486. Mar. 21, 1946. Churchill hailed in Manhattan. Flames gut ex-Nazi liner. Hoover to study food crisis. "Athletics" gird for season. UNRRA feeds starving kids. Bowling aces open tourney. Nylon rush is free-for-all. Woman pool champ shows how. Irish honor patron saint. Rites for Cardinal Glennon.

© 21Mar46; MP462.

487. Mar. 26, 1946. UNRRA Council plans world aid. Personalities on the capital scene. The world's largest plane. Cincinnati "Reds" all set. Five hundred tons of powder blasted. Fiesta time on the Riviera. Women get vote in Italy. Baseball "Crackers" [Southern League] all set.

© 26Mar46; MP463.

488. Mar. 28, 1946. UNO Security Council meets. [Carrier] Midway in arctic test. Truman backs two-party government. The Japs take a powder. Billiard aces thrill fans.

© 28Mar46; MP464.

489. Apr. 2, 1946. Reds bolt UNO meeting. Airborne television shown. Doughnut dunking etiquette. Jap police get Yank boss. Table tennis tournament.

© 2Apr46; MP621.

490. Apr. 4, 1946. Navy reveals giant rocket. Firemen fight three-day blaze. East All-Star cagers win. Truman signs housing bill. Trotters try out new gate. Huge snow-slide blocks pass. Auto racers cheat death. [New York] State cuts income tax.

© 4Apr46; MP622.

491. Apr. 9, 1946. Tidal wave rips Hawaii. UN Council weathers crisis. Volcano in Japan erupts. Chic new hat styles shown. First silk cargo from Japan. Britain hails film favorite [Mary Pickford]. Hoover arrives in Italy. GOP chooses new chieftain. Young Princess [Margaret Rose] takes a bow.

© 9Apr46; MP623.

492. Apr. 11, 1946. U. S. hails Army Day. Airplane graveyard. V–2 rocket "hits" New York. Army post honors General Patton. The Grand National.

© 11Apr46; MP624.

493. Apr. 16, 1946. Jap submarines sunk. Gromyko back at UN Council. Public good is exhibitor goal. League of Nations quits. Florida cypress is logged. First Lady visits polio victims. Hirohito horse in rodeo.

© 16Apr46; MP625.

494. Apr. 18, 1946. Roosevelt home is U. S. shrine. On the capital scene: new Ambassador to Britain [W. Averill Harriman]; new Envoy to Argentina [George S. Messersmith]; Reds name new U. S. Envoy [Nikolai Novikov]. French get Soviet wheat. French kayak aces race. Lens lovelies win laurels. "Canadiens" win hockey trophy.

© 18Apr46; MP626.

495. Apr. 23, 1946. "Renounce war" [says] MacArthur. GI wives go overseas. Jaloppies aid auto jubilee. Mikado as a family man. Military millinery shown. Dying boy aids cancer drive. Boatsmen shoot the rapids.

© 23Apr46; MP627.

496. Apr. 25, 1946. U. S. observes Easter. Japs vote for the first time. Tots have own style show. President [Truman] fights famine. Young Izaak Waltons shine. Five-star [MacArthur] family in Tokyo. Midget racers burn up track. "Ike" visits home town.

© 25Apr46; MP628.

497. Apr. 30, 1946. President [Truman] reviews fleet. Shelter in a jiffy. Out of the cubbyhole [bears]. French sports revival. The salmon are striking. It's "once over lightly" [sheep].

© 30Apr46; MP629.

498. May 2, 1946. Big Four discuss peace. Flying Wing bomber shown. President [Truman] takes a vacation. Spring planting in Germany. [LaGuardia] spur[s] wheat for famine areas. A Japanese tea party [Mrs. MacArthur entertains General Eichelberger]. Penn Relay thrills.

© 2May46; MP630.

499. May 7, 1946. Nazi rocket backfires. Filipinos elect Roxas. Pope honors U. S. Admiral [Hewitt]. Explosion blasts destroyer. GI dream comes true. Duce body taken from grave. Dog nurses lion cubs. Princesses [Elizabeth and Margaret Rose] at the circus. Fire laddies on parade.

© 7May46; MP631.

500. May 9, 1946. Foil Alcatraz jailbreak. Ticking bomb exploded. Co-ed lifeguards show form. It's apple-blossom time. Louis and Conn sign for bout. The Kentucky Derby.

© 9May46; MP632.

501. May 14, 1946. Allied troops in Trieste. Arctic "Musk-ox" trek ends. Something new under foot. Jap policewomen get nod. Women open bowling congress. Novel propeller tested. Hill-climbing [motorcycle] aces zoom again.

© 14May46; MP633.

502. May 16, 1946. Army tests V–2 rocket. President [Truman] lauds education. Chinese black market. Tojo goes on trial. Assault wins Preakness.

© 16May46; MP634.

503. May 21, 1946. North Atlantic ice patrol. Holiday ends in tragedy. Hoover ends famine tour. Truman greets Cardinal [Griffin]. Canada salutes May Day. Italy opens boys' town. Blind bowlers amaze fans. British aces top U. S.

© 21May46; MP736.

504. May 23, 1946. First refugees reach United States: 500,000 pledge allegiance. King Cotton holds court. Flying Tigers come clean. Sand sailing new thrill. China takes over U. S. ships. It's an old Dutch custom. Miner hits jackpot. Scouts honor war heroes.

© 23May46; MP737.

505. May 28, 1946. Operation Crossroads. Rail strike grips nation. Eisenhower in Far East. Miss Booth gets award. Rocket car hits 140 m.p.h.

© 28May46; MP738.

506. May 30, 1946. Truman action ends U. S. tie-up. Negro quadruplets born. Cocker best in dog show. Kiddies masquerade parade. Champs [Louis and Conn] gird for big bout. Governor visits studio. City gets DDT treatment.

© 30May46; MP739.

507. June 4, 1946. Coal strike ends. Floods sweep East. Animals board atom ark. Cadets hail old timer [Martin Maher, West Point employee for fifty years]. Cardinals laud food relief. Negro educator [Booker T. Washington] honored. Motorist is no dummy. Quads are Texas rangers.

© 4Jun46; MP787.

508. June 6, 1946. Indianapolis speedway race. Trumans get degrees. Eisenhower in D-day plea. Kids on police outing. Indians harvest bananas. Assault wins [turfdom's] triple crown. Santa Rosa Roundup.

© 6Jun46; MP788.

509. June 11, 1946. Military graduation: "Middies" now ensigns; cadets on parade. Damage foreshadows A-bomb test. Scores die in hotel fire. "Hap" Arnold settles down. Auto's golden jubilee. Italy joins democracies.

© 11Jun46; MP789.

510. June 13, 1946. British victory parade. Paratroops in mass drop. Jaloppies in speedrace. Crown jewels recovered. Spanish cycle aces race. Safety seat for pilot. Holy Hour celebrated. Floods in Spain. Festival of Roses [Portland, Oregon].

© 13Jun46; MP790.

511. June 18, 1946. Navy rocket tests. Jap pearl culture. Oil fire rages. Personalities in the news. Atom test nears. Bronc busters.

© 18Jun46; MP791.

512. June 20, 1946. World plan for atom bomb. Big Four ministers meet. United States [and] Canada hail peace. Peron inaugural [Buenos Aires]. Mangrum wins golf open championship. World's biggest plane. Water nymphs on skis.

© 20Jun46; MP792.

513. June 25, 1946. Tornado devastation. Japan today. Ammunition jettisoned. Our favorite pin-ups. Cow adopts orphan faun. Midget auto thrills. Beauty queens on parade. Motorcycle soccer.

© 25Jun46; MP884.

514. June 27, 1946. Austrians demand Tyrol. Mexican election nears. It's in the bag. Vinson new Chief Justice. Cornell crew wins. Magicians thrill kids. Track aces vie in [N.C.A.A.] meet.

© 27Jun46; MP885.

515. July 2, 1946. Two million dollar ferry blaze. Monster flying wing. People in the news: John W. Snyder, Fred M. Vinson, Benjamin Fairless. Secretary of War Patterson and John R. Steelman. Merry-go-round matrimony. Japan's Crown Prince. Famine stalks China.

© 2Jul46; MP886.

516. July 4, 1946. Operation Crossroads underway. Truman asks OPA support. Flower fiesta [Italy]. Cycling ups and downs [England].

© 4Jul46; MP887.

517. July 9, 1946. Army wives reach Japan. Helicopter-bus service. British "Oscars." Nisei heroes return home. Stock cars in race. New high in weddings. Yank [George Fazio] wins Canada golf [tourney]. "Old Salts" in season [Cleveland Regatta].

© 9Jul46; MP888.

518. July 11, 1946. Operation Crossroads: Superfortress, Dave's Dream, drops bomb on 73–ship flotilla. Details of various phases of atom bomb test at Bikini.

© 11Jul46; MP889.

519. July 16, 1946. First American Saint [Mother Cabrini]. Hughes survives crash. Swanee playground. Meet Jumbo. The world of sports: tennis at Wimbledon; just jousting [France]; [Jimmy McLane] sets swim mark in Cuba; cowboy get-together [Stamford, Texas].

© 16Jul46; MP914.

520. July 18, 1946. Philippines Republic [is] born. [Sahara] Desert mission. Wheelbarrow globe trip. Cricket invasion [France]. Oo! la! la! [French beauty contest]. Riggs wins tennis finals.

© 18Jul46; MP915.

521. July 23, 1946. Siam's King meets death. British bombers arrive [in U. S.]. Festival of Towers [Italy]. Truman reviews Nisei troops. Lumberjack tourney. Dirigible pioneer [Admiral C. E. Rosendahl] retires. [Hollywood] stars shine on Portland.

© 23Jul46; MP929.

522. July 25, 1946. Nine dead in gas blast. Wheat harvest underway. The Arlington Handicap. Drought grips Southwest. Siamese boxing-bam. Diaper didoes. Sailboating thrills.

© 25Jul46; MP930.

523. July 30, 1946. U. S.-Cuba sugar pact. Spanish festival. [English] royalty in the rain. Seagoing pet shop. Get hep to hoppicopter. Racing goes to the beach. Shriners at convention. [A. A. A.] race thrills [London].

© 30Jul46; MP967.

524. Aug. 1, 1946. Byrnes off to Paris. Crusade of peace. Festival of Miracles [St. Clair, France]. UNRRA chief [Fiorello LaGuardia] in Italy. Hollywood Gold Cup Race. Wild pony round-up. [Herman Barron] wins richest golf game [All-American Open].

© 1Aug46; MP968.

525. Aug. 6, 1946. Paris Peace Conference. Eleven dead in ferry crash. Huge seaplane assembled. May Day in Russia. Outboard aces race.

© 6Aug46; MP1032.

526. Aug. 8, 1946. Underwater atom blasts: Baker Day at Operation Crossroads. Jap film of Hiroshima blast.

© 8Aug46; MP1033.

527. Aug. 13, 1946. Atom bomb birthplace. Reds balk over vote plan. Gold rush-afloat [gambling ship]. Quake hits Santo Domingo. Flight of the "snowbirds" [cat-boats]. Lightning hits tanker. French gymnasts excel.

© 13Aug46; MP1043.

528. Aug. 15, 1946. The Hambletonian. U-boat pens blasted. Three thousand [Jehovah's Witnesses] in mass baptism. "Ike" [Eisenhower] hailed in Rio. Mashed spuds by the ton. Graduate China air cadets [Austin, Texas]. Catch as catch can [Red Cross camp in France].

© 15Aug46; MP1044.

529. Aug. 20, 1946. Presidential promenade [Truman]. Atlantic mixup [S.S. American Farmer in salvage argument]. Meet Miss Venus. Archers show ball players [their skill]. New air monarch [bombing plane]. Lesson in democracy. Aquatic rodeo. Brazil honors "Ike" [Eisenhower].

© 20Aug46; MP1045.

530. Aug. 22, 1946. President [Truman] on vacation. Long distance [telephone] milestone. Soap-box Derby. Honor to Churchill. Speed boat sweepstakes. Orphan's big day. Helicopter referee [for horse racing].

© 22Aug46; MP1046.

531. Aug. 27, 1946. Floods hit Midwest. Alpine climbers in action. Admiral Halsey in Chile. Throws baseball 98 m.p.h. [Bob Feller]. Navy's biggest airplane. Trout-fishing Derby. Painless dentistry. Roller Derby thrills.

© 27Aug46; MP1102.

532. Aug. 29, 1946. Nuremberg trials near end. Bermuda welcomes Truman. Novel animal circus. Students unload grain. Football season opens. Fight flood with fire. Legion victory parade.

© 29Aug46; MP1103.

533. Sept. 3, 1946. UN in new home [Lake Success, New York]. Truman goes fishing. Triple threat convention [triplets]. One-thousand stranded by Maine storm. Modern Jonahs at work [Chilean whalers]. Bulls horn in on [Spanish] fiesta. Bicycle death dive.

© 3Sep46; MP1104.

534. Sept. 5, 1946. National air races. Halsey backs "F. D. R." [carrier] cruise. Pilot ejector seat. Yugoslav air victims. Double feature parade. Gold Cup [Detroit speedboat] Race.

© 5Sep46; MP1105.

535. Sept. 10, 1946. Calcutta massacres. French fleet maneuvers. Maria Montez in Paris. Screen comics aid youth. Jumpin' jive. Film star [Phyllis Calvert] arrives [in New York]. New York infirmary to expand. Stars shine on ice. Auto race ends in death [in Atlanta].

© 10Sep46; MP1123.

536. Sept. 12, 1946. Byrnes sets firm policy for Germany. Strikes tie up U. S. ports. Puerto Rico inaugural. Miss America of 1946. United States-Mexico polo.

© 12Sep46; MP1124.

537. Sept. 17, 1946. United States greets "Monty" in Washington, D. C. Death of the sea queen [the Normandie]. The flying icicle. Venetian regatta. French swimming meet. Japs man U. S. ships. Northwest rodeo [at Ellensburg, Washington]. New Pike's Peak record.

© 17Sep46; MP1150.

538. Sept. 19, 1946. Yugo air victims coming home. World's heaviest man. Orphans of the wild. "Tom Thumb" playground. Big little swim champ [David Hughes]. Success—eggs-actly! [Betty MacDonald honored]. Amateur golfers vie. British motorcycle aces.

© 19Sep46; MP1151.

539. Sept. 24, 1946. Wallace speeches curbed. Koreans hail freedom. Spectacular train wreck. Displaced persons camp [in Upper Austria]. Jet plane tops 600 m.p.h. Hermit's views on life.

© 24Sep46; MP1205.

540. Sept. 26, 1946. Air tragedy; helicopters rescue 18 survivors. Washington, D. C. [Wallace, Commerce secretary resigns]. Paris, France [Harriman, envoy to Britain, to succeed Wallace]. Italy hails General Clark. Charity football [Chicago Bears vs. Washington Redskins].

© 26Sep46; MP1206.

541. Oct. 1, 1946. Turmoil in Bombay. [Inflation and black market in Shanghai, China]. Flying post office. Holy Name holy hour [Chicago]. Gotham hails Wild West. Mechanized madcaps.

© 1Oct46; MP1238.

542. Oct. 3, 1946. Football highlights: Notre Dame-Illinois; Army-Oklahoma; Alabama-Tulane. Funeral rites in Moscow [Mikhail Kalinin]. Truman reviews cadets. British postwar industry. Riviera festival. Movie men aid hospital.

© 3Oct46; MP1239.

543. Oct. 8, 1946. Navy plane [Truculent Turtle] sets mark. Greek king returns. Twenty-five thousand ton TNT blast [Arco, Idaho]. Strikes cripple Pittsburgh. Legionnaires parade [San Francisco]. Tiny republic [San Marino, Italy] is host. Wallace successor [W. Averell Harriman] home.

© 8Oct46; MP1240.

544. Oct. 10, 1946. Guilty, 21 Nuremberg Nazis doomed. World Series: Red Sox win opener 3–2. Football highlights: Columbia tops Navy; Ohio State trims U. S. C. U. S. honors Ted Gamble.

© 10Oct46; MP1241.

545. Oct. 15, 1946. World Series highlights: St. Louis and Boston. Byrnes denies atom threat [in Paris]. Ike in Scotland. Mexico honors Warner.

© 15Oct46; MP1327.

546. Oct. 17, 1946. Truman lifts meat controls. Film stars urge arbitration. Football thrills: Army tops Michigan; Penn routs Dartmouth; Texas defeats Oklahoma.

© 17Oct46; MP1328.

547. Oct. 22, 1946. Cards clinch World Series. Volcano menaces island [at Stromboli, Italy]. "Slingshot" for planes. Oh! My aching quarterback. Byrnes home from parley.

© 22Oct46; MP1329.

548. Oct. 24, 1946. It's Navy Day: New York hails "Queen." Low tide strands whale [at Huntington, Long Island]. Football highlights: Army crushes Columbia; Tennessee wins upset; St. Mary's rips Fordham.

© 24Oct46; MP1330.

549. Oct. 29, 1946. Truman urges U. S.—stop harping on war. Steaks on parade [at Kansas City]. Girl acrobats amazing [in Texas]. Prison rodeo [Huntsville, Texas].

© 29Oct46; MP1331.

550. Oct. 31, 1946. Army defeats Duke. Notre Dame routs Iowa. Washington tops California. Celebrities sail on "Queen." Latest Paris hair styles. Driver dont's. "Endless-belt" garage.

© 31Oct46; MP1332.

551. Nov. 5, 1946. Soviet UN proposal answered. Grid Giants claw Bears, 14–0. Alamein heroes celebrate. Hockey aces in tie game. Army "cans" vehicles. Knights Templar convene [at Houston, Texas].

© 5Nov46; MP1351.

552. Nov. 7, 1946. Big Four ministers meet [in New York]. Gala royal wedding [in England]. Truman goes home to vote. Convicts donate eyes. Football highlights: Georgia upsets Alabama; Ohio State halts Northwestern.

© 7Nov46; MP1352.

553. Nov. 12, 1946. Republican landslide. One million dollar swindle in [New York]. Record log drive on [in Canada]. Command performance [of movie stars in London]. Skiing season opens [in Chinook Pass, Washington].

© 12Nov46; MP1353.

554. Nov. 14, 1946. Grid Giants clash. Army and Notre Dame in scoreless tie. V–2 rocket boomerangs. British embassy bombed [in Rome, Italy]. Airborne automobile. Duke and Duchess arrive [in New York].

© 14Nov46; MP1354.

555. © 19Nov46; MP1452.

556. © 21Nov46; MP1453.

557. © 26Nov46; MP1486.

558. © 28Nov46; MP1487.

559. © 3Dec46; MP1450.

560. © 5Dec46; MP1451.

561. © 10Dec46; MP1488.

562. © 12Dec46; MP1489.

563. © 17Dec46; MP1490.

564. © 19Dec46; MP1491.

565. © 24Dec46; MP1521.

566. © 26Dec46; MP1522.

567. © 31Dec46; MP1523.

568. © 2Jan47; MP1524.

Volume 20, 1947.

1. © 7Jan47; MP1615.

2. © 9Jan47; MP1616.

3. © 14Jan47; MP1613.

4. © 16Jan47; MP1614.

5. © 21Jan47; MP1796.

6. © 23Jan47; MP1797.

7. © 28Jan47; MP1798.

8. © 30Jan47; MP1799.

9. © 4Feb47; MP1800.

10. © 6Feb47; MP1801.

11. © 11Feb47; MP1804.

12. © 13Feb47; MP1805.

13. © 18Feb47; MP1806.

14. © 20Feb47; MP1807.

15. © 25Feb47; MP1904.

16. © 27Feb47; MP1905.

17. © 4Mar47; MP1906.

18. © 6Mar47; MP1907.

19. © 11Mar47; MP1908.

20. © 13Mar47; MP1909.

21. © 18Mar47; MP1910.

22. © 20Mar47; MP1911.

23. © 25Mar47; MP1995.

24. © 27Mar47; MP1996.

25. © 1Apr47; MP1997.

26. © 3Apr47; MP1998.

27. © 8Apr47; MP2057.

28. © 10Apr47; MP2058.

29. © 15Apr47; MP2059.

30. © 17Apr47; MP2060.

31. © 22Apr47; MP2061.

32. © 24Apr47; MP2062.

33. © 29Apr47; MP2099.

34. © 1May47; MP2100.

35. © 6May47; MP2101.

36. © 8May47; MP2102.

37. © 13May47; MP2103.

38. © 15May47; MP2104.

39. © 20May47; MP2105.

40. © 22May47; MP2106.

41. © 27May47; MP2170.

42. © 29May47; MP2171.

43. © 3Jun47; MP2172.

44. © 5Jun47; MP2173.

45. © 10Jun47; MP2174.

46. © 12Jun47; MP2175.

47. © 17Jun47; MP2176.

48. © 19Jun47; MP2177.

49. © 24Jun47; MP2178.

50. © 26Jun47; MP2179.

51. © 1Jul47; MP2232.

For subsequent issues SEE Universal International Newsreel.

UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL NEWSREEL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947–49. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. For preceding issues SEE Universal Newsreel. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Volume 20, 1947.

52. © 3Jul47; MP2233.

53. © 8Jul47; MP2234.

54. © 10Jul47; MP2235.

55. © 15Jul47; MP2236.

56. © 17Jul47; MP2265.

57. © 22Jul47; MP2266.

58. © 24Jul47; MP2267.

59. © 29Jul47; MP2268.

60. © 31Jul47; MP2269.

61. © 5Aug47; MP2326.

62. © 7Aug47; MP2327.

63. © 12Aug47; MP2328.

64. © 14Aug47; MP2329.

65. © 19Aug47; MP2330.

66. © 21Aug47; MP2331.

67. © 26Aug47; MP2332.

68. © 28Aug47; MP2333.

69. © 2Sep47; MP2399.

70. © 4Sep47; MP2400.

71. © 9Sep47; MP2428.

72. © 11Sep47; MP2429.

73. © 16Sep47; MP2430.

74. © 18Sep47; MP2431.

75. © 23Sep47; MP2432.

76. © 25Sep47; MP2433.

77. © 25Sep47; MP2469.

78. © 30Sep47; MP2470.

79. © 3Oct47; MP2471.

80. © 7Oct47; MP2472.

81. © 9Oct47; MP2473.

82. © 14Oct47; MP2474.

83. © 16Oct47; MP2475.

84. © 21Oct47; MP2476.

85. © 24Oct47; MP2477.

86. © 28Oct47; MP2478.

87. © 30Oct47; MP2479.

88. © 4Nov47; MP2480.

89. © 6Nov47; MP2528.

90. © 11Nov47; MP2529.

91. © 13Nov47; MP2530.

92. © 18Nov47; MP2531.

93. Nov. 20, 1947. Friendship Train reaches seaboard. Reds fear our movies, says [Eric] Johnston. Footnote on furs [New York: Miss Paula Croset chosen Miss Cinderella by fur manufacturers]. Princeton beats Yale.

© 20Nov47; MP2660.

94. Nov. 25, 1947. Royal wedding; Elizabeth weds Philip at [Westminster] Abbey.

© 25Nov47; MP2661.

95. Nov. 27, 1947. Hollywood bans Reds [announcement by Eric Johnston]. News highlights: huge land plane [XC–99] flies [at] San Diego; Vienna cleans up [war-damaged Philliphof]; swamp denizens battled [by Ross Allen at] Okefenokee Swamp, Georgia; ski season underway, Mt. Rainier National Park.

© 27Nov47; MP2662.

96. Dec. 2, 1947. Army beats Navy. St. Nick has preview: [Santa Claus parade of film and radio stars in Hollywood; Toyland parade in Philadelphia]. Truman sees Freedom Train. Royal honeymooners [Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh] pose. Command performance [Robert Montgomery and other motion picture stars meet British royal family].

© 2Dec47; MP2663.

97. Dec. 4, 1947. Camera shows secret [of the fly's flight]. Eight die in Seattle [plane] crash. The Nation's healthiest [National 4–H Club Congress in Chicago]. Anzio war dead honored. Feline funsters frolic [cat show in Brooklyn]. Football extra: Southern Methodist ties Texas Christian, 19–all.

© 4Dec47; MP2664.

98. Dec. 9, 1947. Friendship food sails. Strike grips France [Paris and Lyons]. The "snake" in Germany [queues of people waiting for food and other necessities]. Spain valley flooded [along the Segura River]. Football highlights: Notre Dame routs USC; high school grid thrills [football championship game in Philadelphia].

© 9Dec47; MP2665.

99. Dec. 11, 1947. Christmas preview; "Babe" [Ruth] cheers polio kids; Dutch cheers for Santa [royal family at Christmas entertainment]. Global fliers [George Truman and Clifford Evans, Jr.] back. Counterfeit ring broken [by Secret Service in Chicago]. CCNY cagers win [game against Oregon State Beavers in Madison Square Garden]. War orphans reach U. S. Lujack receives [Heisman] trophy.

© 11Dec47; MP2666.

100. Dec. 16, 1947. Hirohito at Hiroshima. News in brief: Greeks get U. S. warships; Admiral Nimitz gets award [from President Truman; Admiral Denfield becomes Chief of Naval Operations]; twenty-one [Army personnel] die in air crash [Memphis, Tennessee]. Labrador survivors [of ATC transport] home; Browns top grid Yankees [All-American Conference football title game]; kiddies' Christmas party [Cardinal Spellman at New York Foundling Hospital party].

© 16Dec47; MP2667.

101. Dec. 18, 1947. U. S. troops quit Italy. Blizzards made to order [by engineers of the Army Signal Corps at Fort Monmouth, N. J.]. Christmas cheer from many lands [children from diplomatic corps broadcast in Washington]. Film star [Alan Ladd] urges food saving. Wrestling big-wigs battle [Primo Carnera]. Perfect physique contest [male beauty on parade at Montreal].

© 18Dec47; MP2668.

102. Dec. 23, 1947. Peace must wait; Marshall's [report of Foreign Ministers' meeting in London]. Jet bomber [Boeing XB–47] passes tests. Jap vagrants rounded up. Film star [Jimmy Stewart] in food appeal. The world of sports: basketball on ice; Golden Glovers mix it.

© 23Dec47; MP2669.

103. Dec. 25, 1947. New helicopter shown [Philadelphia]. German school crisis [housing and other problems]. French curios get laugh. Test all-metal glider [Trenton]. Collier trophy awarded [presented by President Truman to Lewis Rodert], New White House pet. Dutch woman marks 106th [birthday]. The world of sports: fists fly in hockey tilt [Providence Scarlets vs. N. Y. Metropolitans]; pro basketball thriller [N. Y. Knickerbockers vs. Boston Celtics].

© 25Dec47; MP2743.

104. Dec. 30, 1947. The blizzard of 1947 [in New York and other East Coast cities]. New Navy jet tested [fighter plane, the Grumman XF9F "Panther"]. Miss Truman meets press. The sports round-up: Cards win pro grid title; Riggs defeats Kramer [Madison Square Garden].

© 30Dec47; MP2744.

Volume 21, 1948/49.

105. Jan. 2, 1948. Tojo and company await trial [war crimes trials in Tokyo]. Maharajah's jubilee [Silver Jubilee Durbar in Jaipur]. The new look in Spain [fashions in Barcelona]. Miami train wreck. Twelve pups in record litter [Doberman Pinschers in Vancouver]. French honor film executive [Joseph H. Seidelman]. Midget car for shoppers [Los Angeles]. UCLA cagers win thriller [defeat Long Island University team in New York].

© 2Jan48; MP2745.

106. Jan. 6, 1948. South ripped by tornadoes [Cotton Valley, La.]. Tournament of Roses [General Omar Bradley is the grand marshal of Pasadena parade]. Foot-bowl highlights: Michigan wins in Rose Bowl; 13–13 tie in Cotton Bowl [Penn State and Southern Methodist]; Georgia Tech tops Kansas [in Orange Bowl]; Texas is Sugar Bowl winner.

© 6Jan48; MP2746.

107. Jan. 9, 1948. Truman opens Congress; calls for $40 tax cut. Marines to Mediterranean [sail from Morehead City, N. C.]. The world of sports: East-West grid classic [Johnny Lujack stars in Shrine charity game in San Francisco]; Norse skiers win meet [Art Tokle and others at Bear Mountain, N. Y.]; Golden Glovers battle [Brooklyn]. New York [state] bonus cheers vets.

© 9Jan48; MP2747.

108. Jan. 13, 1948. Marshall urges passage of plan [testifies before Senate Foreign Relations Committee]. French movie Reds protest [demonstrations in Paris against importation of U. S. films]. Florida fashion frills [Miami Beach]. Sun Valley [Idaho] ski thrills. Spectacular air show [Miami's 16th annual Air Maneuvers].

© 13Jan48; MP2748.

109. Jan. 15, 1948. The March of Dimes. [President Truman, Margaret Truman, and Terry Tullos, three-year old polio victim, at the White House]. Save 46 from funeral ship [survivors of the "Joseph V. Connolly" reach New York]. British airliner crash [Northolt, England]. Turks to get U. S. subs [undergoing repairs at San Francisco]. General Chennault and bride. Sweater girls of 1948 [Coral Gables, Fla]. Wrestling in high gear [Madrid, Spain].

© 15Jan48; MP2749.

110. Jan. 20, 1948. The war In Greece. "Ike" urges Europe aid [General Eisenhower in Philadelphia]. Battle fire in zero cold [Boston]. Blast rips warehouse [Chicago]. Filmland aids Dimes drive. [Governor Warren among contributors]. Death on ski jump [Jimmy Henriksen dies at Fox River Grove, Ill.].

© 20Jan48; MP2750.

111. Jan. 23, 1948. Music czar takes stand [James Petrillo appears before House Labor Committee]. Rocket car hits 1,000 m.p.h. [Muroc, Calif.]. Harmonica harmonizers [Germany]. Pin-ups in the swim [Coral Gables, Fla]. World's biggest ski school [Snoqualmie, Wash.]. Strip tease on a log [Chicago].

© 23Jan48; MP2751.

112. Jan. 27, 1948. [General Lucius D.] Clay warns of German unrest. Gandhi fast brings amity. Goodwill milk ship sails [from California]. U. S. information program backed [Senator Smith and Representative Mundt explain their bill]. Octogenarian George Mobley digs for pirate treasure [in Green Cove Springs, Fla.]. Mass Chinese wedding. Diamond aces in the rough [baseball school run by George Stirnweiss at Bartow, Fla.]. Iceboat regatta [Hamilton, Ont.].

© 27Jan48; MP2752.

113. Jan. 29, 1948. Cold wave grips East [Coast Guard cutter "Eastwind" opens passage in the Hudson River]. Leapfrog barge tested [Navy's amphibious barge]. Family of nine [sheltered] in firehouse. St. Bernards by the score [New York]. "Double Life" fashions [New York fashion show]. Ski jumpers take off [Art Tokle, Arne Ulland, and others at Dubuque, Iowa].

© 29Jan48; MP2753.

114. Feb. 3, 1948. Gandhi assassinated. Canada welcomes D. P.'s [from Europe]. Photo finish in "Maturity" [Flashco beats On Trust in Santa Anita race]. Parson sets mile record [Gilbert Dodds in Millrose Games at Madison Square Garden]. King Boreas rules again [winter carnival at St. Paul]. Disputes mark Olympics [St. Moritz].

© 3Feb48; MP2754.

115. Feb. 5, 1948. 'Chutists battle snow [Pine Camp, N. Y.]. Labrador mercy mission [for villagers of Nakkovik]. French open big dam [across Rhone River at Genissiat]. Four [Badgett quads] are now nine. Large set of setters [15 pups born in England]. Ski ace [Arne Ulland] jumps 262 feet [at Leavenworth, Wash.]. Northwest iceboat regatta [on Geneva Lake, Wis.].

© 5Feb48; MP2832.

116. Feb. 10, 1948. "Ike" [Eisenhower] sees no global war. "Para-dogs" in Arctic test. U. S. third in Olympics. Charro Days Festival [at Brownsville, Texas].

© 10Feb48; MP2833.

117. Feb. 13, 1948. It's carnival time: Mardi Gras [New Orleans]; Italy festival [Viareggio]; Carnival at Nice [France]; Pirate jamboree [Tampa, Florida]. Margaret [Truman] launches ship. Snowmen sculptors vie [Central Park in New York]. Golden Glovers clash [New York]. The Lipton Cup Race [Florida].

© 13Feb48; MP2834.

118. Feb. 17, 1948. Olympic round-up [St. Moritz, Switzerland]. "Cinderella" [Eva Sears] weds oil heir [Winthrop Rockefeller]. Dewey urges plan for peace. Ice and flood menace West. Canada refinery burns [Toronto, Ont.].

© 17Feb48; MP2835.

119. Feb. 19, 1948. U. S. marks Brotherhood Week. Ice choked rivers [Washington, D. C. and Cleveland]. Pennsylvania "quads" take bow. Youngest deportee [Neils Rebholz] leaves [for Denmark]. Golden Gloves finals [New York]. Hockey battle royal [Toronto Maple Leafs vs. New York Rangers].

© 19Feb48; MP2836.

120. Feb. 24, 1948. Truman keynotes 1948 campaign. U. S. food for China. Floods in Andalusia. Colorful Rio [de Janeiro] fiesta. The mechanical jackass [a hill-climbing machine]. Spanish billiard champion [Isidoro Ribas]. Film star [Gregory Peck] in Red Cross appeal.

© 24Feb48; MP2837.

121. Feb. 26, 1948. Palestine crisis: Lake Success [Warren Austin presents U. S. stand to the Security Council]; Jerusalem [bombs in Jewish shopping district]; at sea [Jewish refugees]. Truman tours Caribbean. Wallace and running mate [Senator Glen Taylor]. General "Ike" dons mufti.

© 26Feb48; MP2838.

122. Mar. 2, 1948. Jap black market raided. Mrs. Taft meets the press. Easter bonnets take bow. Talon wins $100,000 race [Arcadia, Calif.]

© 2Mar48; MP2839.

123. Mar. 4, 1948. The world crisis: Washington [Juraj Slavik, Czech ambassador resigns]; Lake Success [Security Council of the United Nations deliberate over partition and strife in Holy Land]. Premiere [of "Naked City"] aids heart fund. Irish top NYU cagers. Death mars ski jump [Iron Mountain, Mich.]. Spring training begins: Tampa [Cincinnati Reds]; Sarasota [Boston Red Sox].

© 4Mar48; MP2840.

124. Mar. 9, 1948. Canada winter troops in Yukon. Greeks reorganize army. China gets Jap reparations. De Valera arrives in U. S. Billiard champ [Willie Hoppe] wins again. Canada hails Barbara Ann [Scott, figure skating queen]. News from training camps: St. Petersburg [New York Yankees]; Pasadena [Chicago White Sox]; Los Angeles [Chicago Cubs].

© 9Mar48; MP2841.

125. Mar. 11, 1948. Chile claims Antarctic land. Celebs arrive on "Queen [Elizabeth"; Ex-King Michael of Roumania, Mr. and Mrs. J. Arthur Rank, Dick Button, figure-skating champion]. Records [official documents] lost in Jap fire [Tokyo]. 12 dead in plane crash [Chicago]. Hardware Easter hats [San Mateo, Calif.]. The world of sports: Connie Mack shows how [Philadelphia Athletics in West Palm Beach]; Norse skier wins meet [Arne Ulland at Snoqualmie, Wash.].

© 11Mar48; MP2867.

126. Mar. 16, 1948. Byrnes warns of Red menace [Charleston, S. C.]. [J. Arthur] Rank receives degree [from Boston University]. Film agreement signed [by Eric Johnston and Harold Wilson in London]. The world of sports: "Dem Bums" get in shape [Brooklyn Dodgers under Durocher in training at Ciudad Trujillo]; wheelchair basketball [crippled veterans from Halloran and Cushing Army hospitals play in New York]. Water skiers rush season [Olympic Club members at Seattle].

© 16Mar48; MP2868.

127. Mar. 18, 1948. The world crisis: Truman warns U. S. of Reds. UN presses Czech inquiry. A great day for the Irish [St. Patrick's Day parade on Fifth Avenue, New York].

© 18Mar48; MP3172.

128. Mar. 23, 1948. [Dodecanese] Islands returned to Greece. Scores dead in [Middle West] tornadoes. New jet fighters tested at sea [Navy's speedy FJ–1 fighters practice take-offs and landings aboard the carrier "Boxer" in the Pacific]. [Ronald] Colman wins Academy Award [for performance in "A Double Life"]. 50–to–1 shot [Sheila's Cottage] wins Grand National [steeplechase] at Aintree, England.

© 23Mar48; MP3173.

129. Mar. 25, 1948. Buzz bombs shot down in Air Forces tests. Austin flays Red tactics [at Lake Success, N. Y.]. Finns leave for Moscow [for parley]. Floods peril many states from upstate New York to Midwest. J. Arthur Rank visits White House. Snowmobiles hit 100 m.p.h. in Ontario. Golden Gloves clash in New York.

© 25Mar48; MP2958.

130. Mar. 30, 1948. Pope warns of Red menace as Easter is celebrated. [Easter throngs on 5th Avenue; Easter sunrise service at Glendale, Calif.; Easter egg hunt at Hyattsville, Md.]. U. S. ousts Hans Eisler. Lift stunt man by hair [Memphis, Tenn.]. Twenty-four dead in tornado [in Coatesville, Ind.]. Navy's rocket town [Inyokern, Calif.].

© 30Mar48; MP2959.

131. Apr. 2, 1948. U. S. hails Army Day. Cops nab Wall Street pickets. Young man of distinction [New York fashions for junior]. Churchill [at grandson's] christening. Bushman [a gorilla] has birthday [in Chicago zoo]. Oilers beat Kentucky courtmen [basketball in New York].

© 2Apr48; MP2960.

132. Apr. 8, 1948. Truman signs Europe aid bill. [Viscount Alexander, Prime Minister King and President Truman receive honorary degrees in Williamsburg, Va.]. Finns weigh Russ[ian] pact. Ike meets grandson [Eisenhower family]. Mountbatten in Burma. Waves lash Barcelona. The world of sports: one-legged skiers compete [in Austria]; French gymnasts perform.

© 8Apr48; MP2961.

133. Apr. 9, 1948. Stassen tops Wisconsin primary. Truman sees Army parade [Washington]. Paul Hoffman named to [European] Aid post [Washington]. U. S. ships visit Greece. [King Paul boards the "Rochester"]. Fifty-one dead in Jap railroad wreck [Osaka]. Bogota parley opens. Royalty greets Mrs. F. D. R. [in London]. Prince Charles [Belgium's Regent] visits capital. Birds blacken sky [near Amsterdam, Holland]. Dixie water ski tourney [Cypress Gardens, Fla.].

© 9Apr48; MP2962.

134. Apr. 13, 1948. Coal strike ends [John L. Lewis and House Speaker Martin in Washington]. U. S. troops march in Trieste. New York—Italian "protest" parade [calling for defeat of Reds in Italy]. Navy balloon rises 20 miles [over Minn.]. Sporting highlights: Harmon wins Masters golf [in Augusta, Ga.]; Navy midgets [sons of naval families] in slugfest [Annapolis]; World's crookedest race [on inland waterway, Seattle].

© 13Apr48; MP2963.

135. Apr. 15, 1948. Revolt in Bogota [scenes of rioting and bloodshed]. F. D. R. memorial unveiled [Mrs. Roosevelt in the presence of King George unveils statue in Grosvenor Square, London]. Premiere [of "Are You with It" in New York] aids bond drive. Thunderjets in maneuvers [Bangor, Maine]. Cardinal [Spellman in New York] makes appeal.

© 15Apr48; MP2964.

136. Apr. 20, 1948. The Italian election. Aftermath [of revolution] in Bogota. Ohio [River at Marietta] on flood rampage. First ERP ship sails [from Galveston]. Paris, France [Canadian ambassador distributes food and clothing]. Garden City, L. I. [food and clothing donated at the Cathedral of the Incarnation prepared for shipment to London]. White House balcony seen. Tiny tot swims underwater [11–month old Sherry Lynn Whitford in Los Angeles].

© 20Apr48; MP2965.

137. Apr. 22, 1948. 16 nations sign pact [for political and economic union of Western Europe]. U. S. subs sail for Turkey. Mass helicopter flight [Navy craft at Lakehurst, N. J.]. Variety Clubs honor [George C.] Marshall. Filmdom hospital dedicated [by Jean Hersholt, Shirley Temple and others]. The world of sports: celebs in Greenbrier golf [White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.]; 3–year-old swimmers star.

© 22Apr48; MP3079.

138. Apr. 27, 1948. News from Germany [blasting of war-damaged railway station; reconstruction work on Cologne Cathedral; soccer game in Hamburg]. Scores die in train wreck [at Cheshire, England]. Dutch hail Mrs. Roosevelt. Kiddies in "appeal" parade [in New York, for overseas aid to children]. Zany hats for men shown. Texas gets warship as shrine. The world of sports: wrestling champs get tossed [Toronto]; motorcycle mud derby [Seattle].

© 27Apr48; MP3080.

139. Apr. 29, 1948. Royal wedding anniversary [London. England's King & Queen observe 25th anniversary]. Voting in Switzerland [Canton of Appenzell]. Princess [Elizabeth] gets [Order of the] Garter. French mine explosion [Courrieres]. Divers "discover" mermaid [Santa Cruz, Calif.]. Sporting highlights: thrilling yacht regatta [Balboa, Calif.]; high-wire high-jinks [acrobats in Germany].

© 29Apr48; MP3081.

140. May 4, 1948. May Day celebrated [parades in New York, Norway, Denmark, and Japan]. "Ike" [Eisenhower] arrives at Columbia [to assume presidency]. Apple Blossom Festival [Winchester, Va.]. "Citation" wins the [Kentucky] Derby.

© 4May48; MP3082.

141. May 7, 1948. "Mothball fleet" ready [Navy vessels in storage at Bremerton, Wash.]. Truman lauds family unit [in talk at Conference on Family Life, Washington]. Princess [Juliana of Holland] in coal mine. Twister levels Texas town [McKinney]. One dead in [New York] gas blast. Fly helicopter inside building [San Francisco]. Chimps do spring cleaning [in St. Louis Zoo]. Olympic diving queens [Las Vegas, Nev.].

© 7May48; MP3083.

142. May 11, 1948. U. S. acts to prevent train strike [by seizing railroads]. Atom age "hands" shown [for handling radioactive material]. Middies "dunked" in drill [arriation dunking drill at Annapolis]. Mexico film studio burns [Aztec studio at Coyoacan]. Bridge collapse kills 22 [Forli, Italy]. Jap police arrest quack [at Ichikawa]. [Herman] Barron wins Goodall golf [New Rochelle, N. Y.].

© 11May48; MP3084.

143. May 13, 1948. Marshall denies Red talks: urges peace moves in UN. Churchill urges Europe union [in speech at The Hague]. Aid for starving children [through Overseas Aid Appeal]. New water repellent tried. Motorcycle hill climb [Tacoma, Wash.]. Mass parachute jump [82d Airborne Division in maneuvers in Kentucky].

© 13May48; MP3085.

144. May 18, 1948. Jews defend new Zion state [battle for Haifa; flag of new state unfurled in Washington; U. S. recognition of new state announced at Lake Success]. Paris hails royal couple [Princess Elizabeth and Duke of Edinburgh]. Celebs in capital golf [tournament in Washington]. Ice queen's amateur finale [Barbara Ann Scott at Toronto]. Mr. America 1948 chosen [George Eiferman of Santa Monica, Calif.]. Citation wins Preakness. Bishop of Austin [Texas] installed [Most Rev. Louis J. Reicher].

© 18May48; MP3098.

145. May 20, 1948. Jews fight for new "Israel" state. Violence in Korea voting. Swedish girl gymnasts here. Styles up in Central Park [fashions inspired by the motion picture are shown in Hollywood]. College rodeo aces thrown [at Austin, Tex.]. Dynamite lady blown up [in Birmingham, Ala.].

© 20May48; MP3174.

146. May 25, 1948. Dewey tops Stassen in Oregon [primary to name Republican convention delegates]. Truman visits boys' school [Girard College in Philadelphia]. Navy jets join the fleet [off Newport, R. I.]. New Russ envoy arrives [Deputy Foreign Minister Malik]. New Israel president [Chaim Weizmann]. Father of 25 [C. F. Warden of Dexter, Mich.] honored. Fire damages Dutch palace. Tulip time in "Holland" [Mich.]. Canine bluebloods in [Morris & Essex] show. Track stars shine in [Los Angeles] meet.

© 25May48; MP3175.

147. May 27, 1948. Marshall appeals for UN children [in address at Madison Square Garden]. Truman sees Israel president [Chaim Weizmann]. Oil well goes on rampage [in Alberta]. Sheep cross Coulee Dam. Goofy hair styles shown [in Hollywood]. Sporting highlights: Solons in baseball slugfest [Congressmen in inter-party game in Washington]. British soccer champs win [in New York].

© 27May48; MP3176.

148. June 1, 1948. Famed warship goes to grave [cruiser "Salt Lake City" torpedoed in naval maneuvers]. Oil well drilled at sea, off Louisiana. Eight die in British railway wreck. Bear cubs take first steps [in Vienna Zoo]. Drew [Pearson] draws award [as "Father of '48"]. Lacrosse thrills sports fans [Johns Hopkins-Maryland U. game in Baltimore]. Joe trains for Joe [Joe Louis and Joe Walcott prepare for title fight].

© 1Jun48; MP3177.

149. June 3, 1948. UN strives for Zion peace. Northwest hard hit by floods [scenes at Vanport, Or. and elsewhere in Pacific Northwest]. First "Marshall" aid arrives [ERP shipments in Greek and Italian ports]. Columbia honors notables [degrees given to Vandenberg, Byrnes and others]. Bumper pineapple harvest [in Puerto Rico]. German boxers in [Berlin] slugfest.

© 3Jun48; MP3178.

150. June 8, 1948. Midshipmen graduation [at U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis]. Truman on western tour. Canada Trade Fair opens [at Toronto]. [New York] cops take kids for ride. Long-shot wins the Derby ["My Love" wins British classic at Epsom Downs]. Midget [auto] racers in New York debut.

© 8Jun48; MP3179.

151. June 10, 1948. Vandenberg blasts ERP fund slash [by House of Representatives]. Truman goes sightseeing [during western tour]. West Point graduation. Four-hundred-dollar exemption for [U. S.] tourists [in Canada]. Third generation midget is two. Olympic divers in tryouts [in Los Angeles].

© 10Jun48; MP3180.

152. June 15, 1948. Plane [Air Forces' XS–1] flies faster than sound. Northwest greets Truman. Wedding of [King] Michael [of Rumania] and [Princess] Anne [of Bourbon-Parma]. New flood peril in Canada. Zoo chimps thrill the kids. Gala Golden Jubilee parade [in Greater New York anniversary]. Fans honor Babe Ruth. Citation wins triple crown [finishes first in Belmont Stakes].

© 15Jun48; MP3181.

153. June 17, 1948. Danish ship ["Copenhagen"] hits mine. French honor Yank heroes [shrine at Paris unveiled by President Auriol]. Puerto Rico raises [sugar] cane. Flying barnyard takes off [planeload of livestock leaves New York for Italy]. Rodeo aces ride 'em rough [at Livermore, Calif.]. Trick pistol shooters [at York, Pa.]. Steeplechase thrills and spills [at Temple Gwathmey Handicap, New York].

© 17Jun48; MP3287.

154. June 22, 1948. Republican convention; GOP leaders meet [in Philadelphia] to pick candidate. [Governor Green makes keynote speech]. UN guards fly to Zion [from New York]. Miss Press Photographer [Peggy Sullivan chosen in contest at Atlantic City]. New picture star ["Jane," a chimpanzee, arrives in Hollywood].

© 22Jun48; MP3288.

155. June 24, 1948. Dewey wins! New York governor sweeps GOP nomination on the third ballot at Phila[delphia] convention. Former President Hoover addresses the convention.

© 24Jun48; MP3182.

156. June 29, 1948. Governor Warren [of California] chosen by GOP to be Dewey's running mate. [Lord Louis] Mountbatten leaves India [after retiring as Governor-General]. French tire workers strike. New "invasion" of Holland [Colorado beetle attacks crops]. Telescopic ladder shown [in England]. Water skiers "join" fleet [at Newport, R. I.]. Electric surfboard tried [in Los Angeles]. German kids' soapbox derby.

© 29Jun48; MP3183.

157. July 1, 1948. Villagers hail benefactors [people of Maille, France, greet the Girard Hales of California]. [Eric] Johnston hits [British] film quota [in Washington]. Dewey and Warren confer [at Pawling, N. Y.]. Truman awards honor medals [presents Congressional medals to three World War II veterans]. Naples honors U. S. war dead. Colorful flower festival [at Genzano, Italy]. Olympic diving queens [at San Diego, Calif.].

© 1Jul48; MP3289.

158. July 6, 1948. Warship ["New Jersey"] joins mothball fleet [at Bayonne, N. J.]. U. S. Israel hero [David Marcus of New York] mourned. Prince [Akahito of Japan] visits U. S. school [in Tokyo]. $7,500,000,000 check signed [by Treasury Secretary Snyder in Washington]. Small story on a big scale [miniature auto factory in Madrid]. Kids build "junior city" [in Kansas City]. Jap swimmer [Konoshin Furahashi] sets record [in Tokyo]. Skiers beat summer heat [at Mt. Rainier, Wash.].

© 6Jul48; MP3290.

159. July 8, 1948. Allied aerial shuttle answer to Red blockage [of Berlin]. Earthquake rips Jap city [of Fukui]. President Truman honors [Simon] Bolivar [in ceremony at Bolivar, Mo. with President Gallegos of Venezuela]. Crack-ups mar auto race [in Atlanta]. Summer ski meet at Lake Placid, N. Y.

© 8Jul48; MP3291.

160. July 13, 1948. Democrats: delegates convene in Philadelphia [to nominate candidate for presidency. Senator Barkley makes keynote address]. Olympic teams are selected in track and swimming. [Trial meets held at Evanston, Ill. and Detroit].

© 13Jul48; MP3292.

161. July 15, 1948. Truman nominated; President calls for special session in acceptance speech at Philadelphia. [Barkley picked as running mate]. Racing thrills: cycle classic in Holland; [at Assen, thousands witness international motorcycle speed races]. Crashes mark "midget" debut [opening of Coliseum auto track at Los Angeles].

© 15Jul48; MP3283.

162. July 20, 1948. Hero's burial for General Pershing [at Arlington Cemetery, Va.]. Anti-Truman ticket named [Strom Thurmond and Fielding Wright chosen by States' Rights convention in Birmingham]. Mediator [Count Bernadotte] returns to Zion [from New York]. World's largest blast [lifts top of mountain, in dam construction at Bristol, Va.]. "Dummy" scores touchdown [mechanical tackling dummy in football practice at Ventura, Calif.]. [All-Dixie Air Show at Chattanooga].

© 20Jul48; MP3294.

163. July 22, 1948. The world crisis. [Aerial shuttle to Berlin; Russia refuses to negotiate dispute with West]. B–29's arrive in England. General Clay here from Berlin [returns for conference in Washington]. Top U. S. Communists seized [arrest of William Foster and others in New York]. French mark Bastille Day [in Paris]. [General Lewis B.] Hershey explains new draft. Turks get U. S. submarines. Farmer Brown's "magic cell" [demonstrated at Middleboro, Mass.]. [Tiger kittens arrive at Bronx Zoo].

© 22Jul48; MP3295.

164. July 27, 1948. [General Lucius] Clay sees no war over Berlin. Progressives name [Henry] Wallace [in Philadelphia convention]. One-hundred-eighty-passenger plane [Lockheed Constitution] spans U. S. Refugees [from Latvia] flee Reds by sea [arrive in Boston]. Pope sees war-wounded kiddies [at Vatican]. Stars greet contest winner [Abbott and Costello meet Mrs. Bessie Lawrence at Los Angeles]. Aquatennial parade [in Minneapolis]. "Shooting stars" zoom [jet planes at Washington display].

© 27Jul48; MP3296.

165. July 29, 1948. Truman asks Congress to act on anti-inflation program. Canada whalers set up shop. Argentine fights locusts. Inflation hits the Army [demonstration of pneumatic weapons]. New look at the beach [calisthenic classes at Wildwood, N. J.]. U. S. riders in Aachen win. Calgary Stampede [in Alberta] a whopper.

© 29Jul48; MP3355.

166. Aug. 3, 1948. 1,000 planes open new New York airport. 200 die in German blast [of the I. G. Farben plant]. Olympic games [London].

© 3Aug48; MP3356.

167. Aug. 5, 1948. The Olympic games; Yanks gain in track and swimming.

© 5Aug48; MP3357.

168. Aug. 10, 1948. Highlights of the Olympics. Superforts out of storage [bombers to augment expanding air force]. Puerto Rico housing boom. Beauty reaches new heights [with all contestants six feet or over].

© 10Aug48; MP3358.

169. Aug. 12, 1948. A century of friendship [between U. S. and Canada celebrated at Niagara Falls]. [Herbert] Hoover visits birthplace. Swiss mark 667th birthday. Kids on outing at [Long] Beach. Mermaid [Nancy Tribble] displays technique. Thrills from the Olympics.

© 12Aug48; MP3359.

170. Aug. 17, 1848. Nation mourns Babe Ruth. Bumper wheat harvest [in Northwest]. Latest Palestine news [Menachem Beigin returns to Irgun forces and UN truce team negotiates return of Jewish dead]. Truman host to youngsters. Kids in Soap Box Derby [Akron, Ohio]. Canoe jousting in France. Olympic heroes come home.

© 17Aug48; MP3360.

171. Aug. 19, 1948. Olympic curtain falls. Last rites for Babe Ruth. Korea hails independence. Biggest oil rush in Canada. Highest dive in the world [Sol Solomon dives 128 feet]. Lassies unlimber lovely legs.

© 19Aug48; MP3361.

172. Aug. 24, 1948. Joint defense chiefs confer. U. S. ousts Russ Consul [Jacob Lomakin]. "Axis Sally" [Mildred Gillars] home for trial. Outstanding daughters chosen [by All-American Congress]. Miss Canada is crowned. New fur styles take a bow. The world of sports: Cards top grid All-stars; hillclimb [motorcycle] aces over the top [Tacoma]; sheriffs hold own rodeo [Los Angeles].

© 24Aug48; MP3362.

173. Aug. 26, 1948. Mrs. Kasenkina blasts Reds. Highlights of spy probe [Alger Hiss and Whittaker Chambers before House Un-American

## Activities Committee]. Flames ravage [Montreal] freight yard. Africa

hails Donald O'Connor. Five-year old [Frances Roller] water skier debut.

© 26Aug48; MP3407.

174. Aug. 31, 1948. First peacetime draft begins. Red Consul sails from U. S. World Council of Churches [meets in Amsterdam]. The world of sports: Citation wins American Derby; ice stars in sparkling show [Ice Capades of 1949]; Olympic champs come home.

© 31Aug48; MP3408.

175. Sept. 2, 1948. Late films from Berlin. U. S. seizes top Red spy [J. V. Peters]. Dutch hail Queen's jubilee. Town Criers' championship [in England]. Governor Green hails youth. It's Pennsylvania week [David Selznick prepares commentary for film honoring Pennsylvania]. Army, Navy and N. D. gridders out.

© 2Sep48; MP3409.

176. Sept. 7, 1948. Shanghai fights inflation. Canadian National Exposition. "Ike" [Eisenhower] dedicates [General Rose] Hospital, Denver. Gala Belgian festival [Ommegang]. Babies have day in sun. Woodsmen, spare that toe [Spanish woodsmen compete in axe-chopping contest]. Tiny swimmer [Mary Michaels] takes bow.

© 7Sep48; MP3410.

177. Sept. 9, 1948. Politics: Truman opens campaign; Stassen replies for GOP. Juliana takes Dutch throne. A harvest of dance rhythm [Madison Square Garden]. Thrills at the Air Races [Cleveland]. Labor Day celebrated.

© 9Sep48; MP3411.

178. Sept. 14, 1948. Berlin crisis; tension rises in blockaded city. New superforts in production: Seattle [production of B–50 bombers]; Washington [top Air Force chiefs reveal rapid increases]. Pope blesses huge rally [Italian Catholic Action clubs]. Miss America of 1948 [Beatrice Shopp]. Jalopies go up in smoke [in Chicago's battle against traffic deaths]. Cowboys bite the dust [rodeo in Ellenburg, Wash.]. Gov. Duff lauds state [Pennsylvania].

© 14Sep48; MP3412.

179. Sept. 16, 1948. 200,000 pay homage to Pope. Flames rip Dutch warehouse [Amsterdam]. New luxury train [20th Century Limited] takes bow. Mrs. America of 1948 [Maria Strohmeier]. Government honors [Pennsylvania] railroad. Mathias "Youth of the Year." Gay nineties festival held [Newport, R. I.]. Giants claw Bear gridders.

© 16Sep48; MP3413.

180. Sept. 21, 1948. Count Bernadotte mourned. Truman and Dewey campaign. Jet [F–86] sets new speed mark. Marshall flies to Paris. The world of sports: Bears scalp Redskins; International Tuna contest [Wedgeport, Nova Scotia].

© 21Sep48; MP3414.

181. Sept. 23, 1948. Hurricane lashes Florida. Truman and Dewey go west. Bernadotte rites at Paris. Mexico marks independence [138th anniversary]. Movies aid Greek children. Aviation in the news: Air Force birthday; Flying Tiger Air Circus; "Parasite" plane tested [McDonnell XF–85].

© 23Sep48; MP3442.

182. Sept. 28, 1948. Truman and Dewey seek votes in California. 18,000 airmen attend reunion [Madison Square Garden]. Children pledge peace [commemorating 130 years of peace between Canada and the United States]. Football: California 21, Navy 7; Notre Dame 28, Purdue 27.

© 28Sep48; MP3443.

183. Sept. 30, 1948. Bevin warns Russia. President Truman visits Texas; Dewey hailed in Northwest. Dutch royalty at the Hague. Football: Minnesota 20, Washington 0; Tulane 21, Alabama 14.

© 30Sep48; MP3444.

184. Oct. 5, 1948. Politics: Truman and Dewey wind up extensive campaign tours. Strikes cripple Paris. Daring designs in swim suits. Gridiron highlights: Penn 26, Dartmouth 13; Michigan 14, Oregon 0; North Carolina 21, Georgia 14.

© 5Oct48; MP3445.

185. Oct. 7, 1948. The World Series; Braves win first game, 1–0; Indians tie series in 2nd, 4–1. Truman pledges fight for peace. Cuba hit hard by hurricane. Prisoners hold own rodeo [Huntsville, Texas].

© 7Oct48; MP3476.

186. Oct. 12, 1948. Indians win; Cleveland wins sixth game, 4–3, to take the World Series crown. U. S. stands firm on Berlin. Football: Army 26, Illinois 21; USC 7, Rice 0.

© 12Oct48; MP3477.

187. Oct. 14, 1948. "Ike" [Eisenhower] takes office at Columbia. Ram-jet helicopter tested [at the McDonnell plant, St. Louis]. The Dewey story [a picture round-up of New York's Governor].

© 14Oct48; MP3478.

188. Oct. 19, 1948. The Truman story [a film presentation of Harry S. Truman]. Football highlights: Penn tops Columbia, 20–14; Michigan routs Northwestern, 28–0.

© 19Oct48; MP3479.

189. Oct. 21, 1948. A salute to the Navy [on the 173rd anniversary]. Clay lauds Berlin airlift. Dewey urges unity for peace. Legion welcomes President Truman [in Miami]. Big toll in Jap floods. Duck hunting at Tule Lake. Warfare on the campus [Class Rush at Columbia University].

© 21Oct48; MP3498.

190. Oct, 26, 1948. Berlin; airlift increased as Russia vetoes parley. Red strikes peril France. 40 die in airliner crash [Prestwick, Scotland]. The pigskin parade: Army crushes Cornell, 27–6; Michigan tops Minnesota, 27–14.

© 26Oct48; MP3499.

191. Nov. 2, 1948. France acts to break coal strike. Flying lab takes off [Caldwell, N. J. Converted B–17 tests new Wright Typhoon gas-turbine engine]. Machine speeds coal mining [Colmol tested, New Lexington, O.] The trial of Ilse Koch. Dean of baseball [Connie Mack] honored. Mrs. America on air tour. Football highlights: California 21, Washington 0. Ole Miss 32, Boston College 13.

© 2Nov48; MP3546.

192. Nov. 4, 1948. U. S. welcomes 813 DP's. Marine anniversary marked [173rd birthday]. Football highlights: Notre Dame 41, Navy 7; Georgia Tech 19, Duke 7; Northwestern 21, Ohio State 7; Southern Methodist U. 21, Texas 6.

© 4Nov48; MP3547.

193. Nov. 9, 1948. Truman wins; President re-elected as Democrats win majorities in House and Senate. Fighting in Palestine. Coal minerettes "shine," England. Greece hails war heroes. "Queen Mary" overhauled. Michigan State 46, Oregon State 21 [football].

© 9Nov48; MP3548.

194. Nov. 12, 1948. Truman gets Capital ovation; leaves for Florida vacation. First inductees sworn in. Fires ravage coast town [Topanga Canyon, Calif.] The pigskin parade: Penn State topples Penn; Southern Methodist U. tops Texas A. & M.; Army crushes Stanford.

© 12Nov48; MP3549.

195. Nov. 16, 1948. French miners returning to work as Reds are beaten at the polls. Army tests new M–46 tank, Aberdeen, Md. Texas tests jet jalopy. Dutch smoking contest, Zwolle, Holland. Little Poppy Queen chosen, Montreal. The world of sports: Northwest hails ski season; Michigan routs Navy gridders.

© 16Nov48; MP3550.

196. Nov. 18, 1948. Tojo to hang for war crimes. Strike ties up New York port. Prime Minister King retires. Truman on Florida vacation. Football: Notre Dame tops Northwestern; Army overtakes Penn.

© 18Nov48; MP3551.

197. Nov. 23, 1948. Navy sinks cruiser "Pensacola" off coast of Washington. British hail new Prince [son born to Elizabeth and Philip]. Mrs. F. D. R. gets Oxford degree. Truman meets the press [at vacation headquarters, Key West, Fla.] Canada's new Prime Minister [Louis Saint Laurent is sworn in]. Western style baby contest [Las Vegas, Nevada]. Football thrills: Alabama upsets Georgia Tech.

© 23Nov48; MP3643.

198. Nov. 26, 1948. Truman sees Marshall on crisis [conference on the international situation]. Navy tests twin jet fighter [the Chance Vought XF7U]. Midwest hit by blizzard. Football highlights: Harvard beats Yale, 20–7; S.M.U. defeats Baylor, 13–6; Michigan stops Ohio State; North Carolina tops Duke.

© 26Nov48; MP3644.

199. Nov. 30, 1948. Salt harvest from the sea [Puerto Rico]. Wrist camera demonstrated [Germany]. World's smallest plane [the Wee-Bee tested in San Diego]. Beauty and the beasts [Jane Fulton arrives by plane in New York with two lion cubs]. Spectacular ice revue [Sonja Henie in Indianapolis]. French groaners mix it [wrestling exhibition in Paris].

© 30Nov48; MP3645.

200. Dec. 2, 1948. Navy battles Army to 21–21 tie. Preview for Santa Claus [thousands thrill to parades in New York, Philadelphia and Hollywood]. Father Flanagan [of Boy's Town] honored [by Variety Clubs in Omaha]. Georgia tops Georgia Tech.

© 2Dec48; MP3646.

201. Dec. 7, 1948. Suchow falls to Communists as Mme. Chiang seeks U. S. aid. Highlights in the film world: [Queen Elizabeth greets film stars in London]; [Donald O'Connor crowns "Helen of Troy" in Los Angeles beauty contest]; ["Miss Alaska" arrives in Hollywood]. New [reversible] propeller slows airplane. The "Squirrel Cage" jeep [tested at Quantico, Va.]. Penn State tops Washington State. Skiers get "jump" on season [at Cypress Gardens].

© 7Dec48; MP3647.

202. Dec. 9, 1948. Probe new micro-film spy data. Hoffman off for China visit [prior to making recommendations for possible U. S. aid]. First Lady of the army [Col. Mary Hallaren takes the oath of office]. Santa rides into Holland. U. S. C. battles Irish to draw. Wrestling free-for-all [Montreal]. School gridders in 6–6 tie [in Philadelphia].

© 9Dec48; MP3648.

203. Dec. 14, 1948. Crisis in the Far East [Nationalist troops fight encirclement on the road to Nanking]. Widen spy case probe [Sumner Welles appears before Un-American Activities Committee]. Dutch try Nazi hangmen of Amersfoort. Cuba's President [Carlo Prio] in U. S. [Truman greets Prio]. Fashions for the holidays. [Mme. Elanora Garnett in New York]. Catty style show held [7th annual Cat Show in Brooklyn].

© 14Dec48; MP3673.

204. Dec. 16, 1948. Incident in the Negeb Desert [medical supplies for Egyptian troops held up by Israel]. President Chaim Weizman visits Jerusalem. Novel [Kaman] helicopter tested [in Windsor Locks, Conn]. Aluminum shoes new fad [in Austria]. Legion chief [Perry Brown] comes home [Beaumont, Texas]. Santa holds open house in Savage, Md. Pro football thriller [Buffalo Bills vs. Baltimore Colts].

© 16Dec48; MP3674.

205. Dec. 21, 1948. Thousands lost off China; refugee ship strikes mine. United Nations adjourns [General Assembly comes to an end in Paris]. Israel prisoners returned [Jewish prisoners of the Arabs exchanged]. "Sinbad" [baby gorilla at the Chicago Lincoln Park Zoo] gets a bath. Small fry slugfest [Madison Square Boys Club, New York]. Holiday greetings: [Children of foreign diplomats send Christmas greetings. Children from the Foundling Home are guests of Cardinal Spellman].

© 21Dec48; MP3764.

206. Dec. 23, 1948. The Royal christening [of "Bonnie Prince Charlie" by the Archbishop of Canterbury]. Aviation in the news: "Kitty Hawk" enshrined [in the Smithsonian Institution, Washington]; the carrier, Rendova, rescues 33 airmen forced down in the Pacific; President Truman presents the Collier Trophy to supersonic fliers. Blizzard cripples East [New York buried under 20 inches of snow]. Pro-football finals: Eagles edge Cards, 7–0; Browns rout Bills, 49–7.

© 23Dec48; MP3765.

207. Dec. 28, 1948. Jap war criminals hang. GI's in Germany play Santa. War brides beat deadline [46 brides arrive by air in New York]. New gold [for China] from stolen coins. [Lashley] quads have their first communion. The world of sports: "The Angel" startles Spain [during a wrestling bout in Barcelona]; Marines win grid title [at College Park, Md.]

© 28Dec48; MP3766.

208. Dec. 30, 1948. Fliers await new rescue attempt on Greenland icecap. [Engineers] topple 168–foot [Shinnecock] Lighthouse [at Hampton Bays, L. I.] Guns cut up for scrap. Petrillo signs new disk pact [with manufacturers]. Truman goes for a walk [in Independence, Mo.] 86 candles for Connie Mack. College swim stars shine [at 10th annual East-West Swim Forum at Coral Gables, Fla.] Financial chaos in China. [Forty patients flown home for the holidays from Gonzales Warm Springs Foundation, in Texas.]

© 30Dec48; MP3767.

209. Jan. 4, 1949. UN debates Indonesia crisis. Flames gut Montreal store. Dutch feel scars of war. Breed new strain of [Siberian] Husky. [English] bull pup for Leathernecks. The world of sports: Basque weight-lifters vie [in Spain]; Santa Anita season opens [with California Breeder's Championship Stakes].

© 4Jan49; MP3768.

Volume 22, 1949.

210. Jan. 6, 1949. Earthquake rocks [penal colony on Maria Madre] Island, Mexico. Airlift fliers entertained [in Berlin]. Highlights of the Bowl games: The Rose Bowl [Northwestern Wildcats beat California]; the Sugar Bowl [Oklahoma beats the Tarheels]; the Cotton Bowl [Southern Methodists beat Oregon]; the Orange Bowl [Texas beats Georgia].

© 6Jan49; MP3769.

211. Jan. 11, 1949. Truman asks increased taxes in message to new Congress. [In Seattle] 11 Yale men die in crash. Scores dead in tornado [in Warren, Ark.] Tokyo raider [Rev. Mr. Deshazer returns] in peace role. Sporting highlights: [Tommy Bruen swims in a hole in the ice at Lac Des Sables, Canada]; KO's feature "Gloves" tilts [at Ridgewood Arena, Brooklyn].

© 11Jan49; MP3770.

212. Jan. 13, 1949. Marshall resigns State post; [Dean Acheson named by President to replace Marshall]. Last rites for Premier Nokrashy Pasha in Cairo. Tragedy mars air show [in Miami]. Four-year-old minister [Marjoe Gortner, performs wedding ceremony]. 18,000 Mummers parade [in Philadelphia]. Miss Press Photographer [Jean Crow] selected. Revelry marks annual [Chelsea] Arts Ball [in London]. Florida Governor inaugural [Fuller Warren takes oath as 30th governor].

© 13Jan49; MP3771.

213. Jan. 14, 1949. California shivers as Florida sizzles. France says thanks [for Friendship Train]. Destroyers come out of mothballs. Kids steal show [German children see Punch and Judy show]. Mangrum cops Los Angeles Open [golf tournament]. It's ice time [Silver Skates at Madison Square Garden].

© 14Jan49; MP3877.

214. Jan. 18, 1949. Top Reds go on trial [in New York]. The March of Dimes. Truman "joins" union. Traffic signal talks [London]. Pigeons strut [550 birds of 35 varieties at pigeon show in Montreal]. Chihuahuas on parade [in Miami]. Ski jumpers soar in [Norge Ski Club] meet. Aviation in the news [Gorgon IV, pilotless ram jet aircraft tested by Navy; Air Force's X–1 rocket plane climbs 23,000 feet in two minutes].

© 18Jan49; MP3878.

215. Jan. 20, 1949. The inauguration; Truman takes oath of office; denounces Communism in speech.

© 20Jan49; MP3879.

216. Jan. 25, 1949. Volcano in action [Paracutin in Mexico]. Acheson is sworn in [as Secretary of State]. Fights end dive for cross [in Greek church ceremony in New York]. Chamois hunting in the Alps. [Holstein] bull in a China shop [Hamilton, Ontario]. Jack Frost fleet sails [in ice regatta at Fox Lake, Ill.] Sonja [Henie] in gala ice revue.

© 25Jan49; MP3880.

217. Feb. 3, 1949. Operation Haylift [to save starving livestock of western ranges]. Italian art on display [Wildenstein Galleries]. New jet bomber [Boeing XB–47] tested. Italy sends ships to Soviet. Metallic bathing suits. Ski jump chills and spills [Dubuque, Iowa]. Water skiers over the jumps [Cypress Gardens, Fla.]

© 3Feb49; MP3881.

218. Feb. 8, 1949. Greek Reds wipe out town [Naoussa]. Dominion Parliament opens [at Ottawa]. Blizzard toll rises in West. Gas blast wrecks [Chicago] plant. March of Dimes parade. Track stars shine in meet [Millrose Games]. Learning how not to ski.

© 8Feb49; MP3882.

219. Feb. 10, 1949. U. S. hails French gift train. Soviet troops quit Korea. New sonic plane [X–4] tested. Snowmobile in Arctic debut. March of Dimes style show. Texas holds Citrus Fiesta. Spanish fly-weights mix it [Luis Romero vs. Luis de Santiago]. New U. S. ski-jump record [of 290 feet set by Sverre Kongsgaard on Olympian Hill, Wash.]

© 10Feb49; MP4191.

220. Feb. 15, 1949. Cardinal Mindszenty faces death penalty. Navy's air giant spans continent with 90 aboard. Thousands flee Nanking. Thank You train at Capital [Washington]. Rodeo rough stuff [Palm Springs]. Ice skating championships [Mid-Atlantic titles at Newburgh, N. Y.]. Joe [DiMaggio] ends hold-out.

© 15Feb49; MP4192.

221. Feb. 17, 1949. A split party [Dewey gives reasons for defeat before 900 Republicans at the Lincoln Day Dinner]. Athenagoras heads Orthodox church. Record narcotic haul [New York City]. "Fourty" years old [Badgett quads celebrate tenth birthday]. India [pays tribute to Gandhi a year after his assassination]. Leavenworth, Wash. [winning ski jump of 260 ft. made by George Thrane].

© 17Feb49; MP4193.

222. Feb. 22, 1949. Canadian chief [Prime Minister Saint Laurent] visits Truman. Winter sets the keynote [winter pageant at St. Paul]. Don't spare the strikes [57 day bowling tournament in Atlantic City]. Brotherhood Week.

© 22Feb49; MP4194.

223. Feb. 24, 1949. President reviews air might parade. Operation Snowball [82d fighter group at Manchester, N. H.]. DeGaulle sounds warning of coup. Help to China [sent from Bangor, Wash.] Make-up magic [make-up artists display skills in Holland]. Boxer is top dog [Westminster Kennel club show in New York].

© 24Feb49; MP4195.

224. Mar. 1, 1949. Final mission for flying forts [B–17's make crash landings on water to determine damage]. Margaret [Truman] is 25. Gone with dynamite [navy blimp dirigible hangar demolished scientifically at Hoama, Ja.] Honeymoon fashions. Mop-up rebellion [London char women on strike]. Governor General [Alexander] snowshoes [in Canada]. Scampering on skis [Bruno Engler at Banff].

© 1Mar49; MP4196.

225. Mar. 3, 1949. Israel inaugurates first president. Pre-Lenten levity [Mardi Gras in New Orleans]. France's merci [Thank You train arrives in Los Angeles]. Papal protest [against Communist foes of the Church who convicted Cardinal Mindzsenty]. Athletes get the gate [Ogden starting gate used at Madison Square Garden]. Soaring without wings [ski jumpers]. Magic on ice [Dick Button keeps world figure skating crown in Paris].

© 3Mar49; MP4197.

226. Mar. 8, 1949. Milestones in aviation [Caroline Mars carries 218 passengers from San Diego to Alameda; Martin Mauler takes off with 9,000 lbs. of bombs and rockets; towing winch yanks gliders off ground at 25 mph]. Volcano eruption [Mauna Loa]. U. S. envoy [Selden Chapin] returns [from Hungary]. Princess on skis [Holland's Princesses Beatrix and Irene in Austria]. 30 die in train wreck [Spain], Huskies start training [175 oarsmen vie for places on Washington State championship crew]. Ski record falls [Iron Mountain, Mich.]

© 8Mar49; MP4198.

227. Mar. 10, 1949. [B–50] bomber circles world non-stop. Cardinal [Spellman] provides own grave-diggers [during strike]. Battering rams. Clinging barnacles [removed from a whaling ship in drydock]. Negro rights get a boost [Gene Tunney and Levi Jackson are chairman and vice-chairman of Urban League's Campaign]. New Orleans celebrates [Mardi Gras]. Chapeaux madame [Paris millinery styles].

© 10Mar49; MP4199.

228. Mar. 15, 1949. Cold war victory. Portuguese re-elect President [Carmino]. Uranium discovery [Saint Sylvestre, France]. Israel approved as UN member. Gale batters Dutch coast. The Life of Riley [premiere in Cincinnati]. Pyramid [Clubs] sweep country.

© 15Mar46; MP4200.

229. Mar. 17, 1949. Odom sets non-stop air mark. Axis Sally guilty. Lewes, Del. [Cruiser Milwaukee returned from Russia]. Holland carnival. [Joe Louis retires as heavyweight champion]. Prime Minister Atlee inspects operations of Berlin air lift. President Truman receives degree from Rollins College. Rugged hats [made from carpet]. Hare and hounds [hunt in Spain].

© 17Mar49; MP4201.

230. Mar. 22, 1949. Restoration of [Temple of] Karnak [at Luxor, Egypt]. Truman vacation [Key West]. International fires [Amsterdam, Holland; South London; Bronx, New York]. Motorbike race [won by Don Evans, Daytona Beach, Fla.]. Flea weight pugs [children boxing in New York City]. Steeplechase [Cheltenham, Eng.]

© 22Mar49; MP4202.

231. Mar. 24, 1949. Atlantic Defense Pact is mapped. 67 war orphans find U. S. haven. Zionist appeal for Palestine. First Israeli ship dedicated. British clothes rationing ended. Fire destroys Army pier [Oakland, Calif.] The Irish are on the march [New York City]. Ski meet [Snoquolmie, Wash.]

© 24Mar49; MP4203.

232. Mar. 29, 1949. Cradle of atom open to public [Oak Ridge, Tenn.] Texas gets swank hotel. President Truman wins "Oscar" [for his mimicry of radio commentator]. That rocket didn't rocket [new experiment by Jene Maynor in Chicago]. Put-puts in the mud [motorcycle race in Seattle]. Hair-raising finals [San Francisco wins over Loyola at Twelfth Invitation College Basketball title].

© 29Mar49; MP4204.

233. Mar. 31, 1949. 5,000 riot in London. Conference [of the Cultural and Scientific Conference for World Peace] arouses criticism. Chinese troops train U. S. fashion. Two celebrities from England [Winston Churchill and family and J. Arthur Rank arrive in New York]. The Greeks have a word for it [American servicemen entertained by dances in Athens]. An ancient horse show [Verona]. Bike obstacle race [Spain]. Spellman appeal [for Catholic charities].

© 31Mar49; MP4205.

234. Apr. 5, 1949. Pickets protest leftist parley [of the Cultural and Scientific Conference for World Peace]. Greek independence day [celebrated in New York City]. Tornadoes kill 29 [in the south and southwest U. S.] Argentina gets new constitution. Academy awards. Grand National Steeple Chase [England].

© 5Apr49; MP4206.

235. Apr. 6, 1949. Fog dispersal [at the municipal airport, Los Angeles]. Atlantic Pact envoys arrive. Egg beater drives ship [cycloidal propellor on an Army tug]. Spring fleecing [Canada]. Oxford-Cambridge classic. Skiing in the trees [Willa Worthington at Cypress Gardens].

© 6Apr49; MP4294.

236. Apr. 7, 1949. Atlantic Pact signed. Churchill says bomb checks Reds. East-West cagers meet [Madison Square Garden]. A crooked [outboard speedboat] race [Sammamish River].

© 7Apr49; MP4295.

237. Apr. 8, 1949. 74 die in hospital tragedy [Effingham, Ill.] Final Army Day parade. Pope's anniversary [of his ordination into priesthood]. Skiing in paradise [Sun Valley, Idaho]. Kid fashions. Circus in New York.

© 8Apr49; MP4296.

238. Apr. 12, 1949. Efforts fail to save tot in well [Kathy Fiscus]. Corinth canal re-opened. U. S. envoy to Israel [James MacDonald]. Spanish victory parade [Madrid]. General Ike [Eisenhower] coordinates [problems of armed services]. Baby swimmers. Motorbike maniacs [France]. Midget maulers [Annapolis].

© 12Apr49; MP4297.

239. Apr. 15, 1949. Earthquake shakes Pacific Northwest. The Fallas of Valencia [St. Joseph's Day celebrated in Spain]. Canadian ice spectacle [Montreal Ice Carnival]. Two strikes on DiMaggio [sidelined by recurrence of heel injury]. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. makes an appeal for CARE.

© 15Apr49; MP4298.

240. Apr. 19, 1949. Easter across the nation. Puerto Rico gets a trade school. Fliers set new endurance record [for continuous flying]. Bus training [given English bus drivers]. Toronto takes third Stanley cup straight.

© 19Apr49; MP4299.

241. Apr. 22, 1949. Ukraine refugees riot against Reds. Texas City rebuilds [after explosion of two years ago]. President spurs U.S. bond drive. Egyptian exposition. Aerial hot rods. Roller derby.

© 22Apr49; MP4300.

242. Apr. 26, 1949. Chinese Reds shell British warships. New streamliner [train built in America to be sent to Spain]. Revelry unconfined [costume ball of art students in New York]. Hero's reward [96 painters paint Okinawa veteran's home in 2-1/2 minutes]. Window ledgerdemain [Betty and Benny Fox]. How not to drive. Olympia wins Wood Memorial [Jamaica].

© 26Apr49; MP4301.

243. Apr. 29, 1949. The cold war thaws out? [Russia makes overtures for abatement of cold war]. Valley of the kings [excavation of tombs of ancient kings of Egypt]. It's springtime [in Holland]. Steve Belloise wins [middleweight bout with Jean Stock].

© 29Apr49; MP4302.

244. May 3, 1949. Americans flee Shanghai trap. May Day is loyalty day [protest Communist influence in New York City]. Aqua-maniacs [Cypress Gardens]. Twists and turns [top gymnasts of colleges demonstrate]. Soccer finals [Wolverhampton vs. Leicester in England].

© 3May49; MP4303.

245. May 6, 1949. Russia agrees to lift Berlin seige. Israel anniversary. Tokyo fire. Marine review. Queen Juliana is 40. Physical education [Jersey City community demonstrates value of body conditioning]. Leo Durocher is cleared. New slants on diving.

© 6May49; MP4304.

246. May 10, 1949. Shanghai digs in for Red assault. U. S. must remain strong, says Johnson. Hoover honored [receives Humanitarian award of the International Variety clubs]. Collier's award [to Congressmen Rayburn and Vandenberg]. $5,000,000 fire [at Hollywood Park track]. Four-in-a-row [Collins quadruplets]. [Ponder, an] outsider wins [Kentucky] Derby.

© 10May49; MP4305.

247. May 13, 1949. UN admits Israel. Reds executed in Shanghai. Cotton Carnival [Memphis]. Blockade lifted [Berlin].

© 13May49; MP4306.

248. May 17, 1949. Supplies pour into Berlin by land. Holland Tunnel rent by blasts. Capot wins Preakness.

© 17May49; MP4307.

249. May 20, 1949. U. S. acclaims General Clay. Brazil's President [Gaspar Dutra] welcomed to Capital. Gloves across the sea [America and Europe in international Golden Gloves in Chicago]. President asks bond support.

© 20May49; MP4308.

250. May 24, 1949. Tornadoes kill 45. New York hails President Dutra. Air giant [Marshall Mars] carries 309. Rockabye baby [motorized crib]. Tulip time [Holland, Mich.] Mister Muscles [Jack Delinger receives title of Mister America]. Los Angeles relays.

© 24May49; MP4309.

251. May 27, 1949. Four powers meet in Paris. Reds take Shanghai. Queen of Greece cares for tots. Navy head [Francis Matthews] sworn in. Oyster trees [on coast of Puerto Rico]. Reading aids [presented by Mrs. Lewis Douglas to paralytics at London hospital]. DiMaggio still out [with heel injury]. Motor jockies [climb Blue Barrons hill, Tacoma, Wash.]

© 27May49; MP4310.

252. May 31, 1949. Lillienthal defends atom program conduct. Dutra visits TVA. New Soviet envoy sworn in [Alan Kirk]. General Clay comes home. Ali Baba's cave discovered [near Cairo]. Roller vanities [performed by U. S. skaters in Paris]. Cut in out [exhibition of horse against dogie at Breckenridge, Texas].

© 31May49; MP4311.

253. June 3, 1949. Rita [Hayworth] and Aly [Kahn] wed. Graduation day [Columbia University awards honorary degrees; color presentation at Annapolis]. Glamour mule [flies to Hollywood for Universal's new picture]. Bill Holland wins auto classic [Indianapolis].

© 3Jun49; MP3312.

254. June 7, 1949. President honors General Marshall. [Miss Chicago selected as] Miss Press Photog. Middies graduate [Annapolis]. May Day in Moscow. Derby day [England]. Golfing celebrities [Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, and government heads].

© 7Jun49; MP4313.

255. June 10, 1949. Mobs riot in Tokyo. Tribute to Franco [at opening of third assembly in Madrid]. Italian anniversary [third anniversary of Italian Republic]. Washington premiere of "Illegal Entry." West Point graduation. How not to grow old [Sammy Mason does stunt flying]. Summer not skiing.

© 10Jun49; MP4314.

256. June 14, 1949. Truman dedicates memorial stadium [Little Rock, Ark.] Dallas premiere of "Calamity Jane." Will Rogers Memorial [hospital turned over to Variety Clubs for research center for tuberculosis]. Trooping the colors [England]. Drop the handkerchief [flag retrieved from ground by plane in France]. Dr. Carey Middlecoff cops the open. Capot wins Belmont. Rodeo roughhouse [Livermore, Calif.]

© 14Jun49; MP4315.

257. June 17, 1949. Dewey endorses European help. Wanna buy a yacht? [Hitler's 3,800–ton yacht in New York harbor]. Exiled monarch [King Humbert of Italy] visits museum [Spain]. The Klan gathers [initiation into hooded order] French swim meet. June skiing [Mount Hood, Ore.] Chimp-antics.

© 17Jun49; MP4316.

258. June 21, 1949. New Army head [Gordon Gray] is sworn in. Beach treasure [machine for cleaning beaches]. Fast service [demonstrated by London waiters]. Firemen's holiday [Eindehoven, Holland]. Hot rod coppers [training at police school in England]. The Ascot [British racing classic]. Hillybilly air show.

© 21Jun49; MP4328.

259. June 24, 1949. West Pointers get paratroop briefing. Drought perils vegetable crop [in New York area]. 43 escape death in plane crash [Memphis]. Mass production poultry [Lemfoerde, Germany]. Heavy champ crowned [Ezzard Charles]. Motorcycle marathon [Isle of Man], Wimbledon tennis.

© 24Jun49; MP4329.

260. June 28, 1949. Aviation strides [the Paraplane; B–50 gets tractor tread landing gear]. Man-made lightning [in the laboratories of the General Electric Co.] Miss Atlantic City. Chinatown's baby parade [New York]. Marble champs. Riggs wins pro tennis title.

© 28Jun49; MP4330.

261. June 30, 1949. Mine sinks channel boat [three miles out of Dunkirk]. Landslide returns Liberals in Canada. Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip visit the Channel Islands. Counterfeiters nabbed [Washington]. Fiesta of Towers [Nola, Italy]. Balloon jumping [by Bob Deindorfer on Long Island]. Cops are hosts [to 7,500 orphans at Coney Island]. Water Skiing [Seattle, Wash.]

© 30Jun49; MP4420.

262. July 5, 1949. Judy Coplon guilty. Irene Dunne honored [at Notre Dame]. Happy climax to a war saga [Chinese orphan arrives in New York to join family of American GI]. Fire-proof gas tanks. Slingshot plane. Water ski ballet [Puerto Rico]. Model plane show [Andrews Air Force base]. Motorcycle races [Barcelona].

© 5Jul49; MP4426.

263. July 8, 1949. Jap prisoners of war return. Navy unveils stinger [A D Sky Raider]. Critters and cowboys. Dutch olympics. Wimbledon tennis. Timber toppers [Albany, Ore.]

© 8Jul49; MP4427.

264. July 12, 1949. Jury disagrees in Hiss trial. Madame Minister [Perle Mesta sworn in as Minister to Luxemburg]. New Senator [John Foster Dulles of New York]. Royal review [120th anniversary of the royal guard in Holland]. [Senator] Johnson asks tax cut. Italians beat U. S. soccer team 8 to 2 [New York]. Dog ball. Ladies go to the mat [Austria].

© 12Jul49; MP4428.

265. July 15, 1949. President denies slump. Air tragedies [near Bombay and Los Angeles]. Western Europe rearms. Eucharistic Congress denounces Communism [at Nancy, France]. Outboard speedsters.

© 15Jul49; MP4429.

266. July 19, 1949. Dock strike perils food for Britain. Midget test plane [one tenth size of Navy's new seaplane]. President signs Housing bill. Fire razes studio [near Munich, Germany]. Royal portrait [Prince Charles at 8 months]. Thar's gold in that gold cup [Solidarity wins $136,000 for his owners]. Horse-play [bronc busters at Calgary].

© 19Jul49; MP4430.

267. July 22, 1949. Big parades [Shriners in Chicago and Lions Clubs in New York]. Hit the silk [Air Force men shot out of plane going 550 mph]. [Navy fires rockets from seaplane tender] eighty miles up. A reply to Robeson [from Jackie Robinson]. [Leo Spitz of Universal-International host when Ralph Bunche receives award.] Air crash kills 6 [near Seattle; 13 killed near Bombay]. The bull wins [matadors in Portugal]. Rough horse play [Spain].

© 22Jul49; MP4431.

268. July 26, 1949. Atlantic Pact signed. War planes out of retirement [for use by National Guard]. Drive-in church [North Hollywood]. Doug [Fairbanks] Jr. honored [by King George for sending food packages to Europe]. [Youth of the Netherlands pay] tribute to a Queen. Aquacentennial [Minneapolis]. Water ski capers.

© 26Jul49; MP4565.

269. July 29, 1949. Atom secrets to be kept [in U. S.] [King and Queen of Denmark witness re-enactment of the Viking days]. Greek fleet maneuvers. New [luxury liner] Ile de France. Patriot's funeral [Kim Koo, "Tiger" of Korea]. Jap swim aces. Motor madness [motorcyclists in the International races in Austria]. [Bulls loosed in street and arena at Pamplona, Spain].

© 29Jul49; MP4566.

270. Aug. 2, 1949. Clark named to Supreme Court. MacGrath chosen new U. S. Attorney. Big brass [Admiral Denfeld, Generals Omar Bradley and Hoyt Vandenberg] off for Europe. [Norsemen from Denmark arrive in England on 1500th anniversary of first Viking invasion of Britain.] Now she can be taller [beauty contest]. Rain to order [Saskatchewan]. Calms and squalls [at Dutch boat races]. Ponder does it again [at the Arlington Classic].

© 2Aug49; MP4567.

271. Aug. 5, 1949. Germany today [four years after VE day]. President [Truman] greets a U. S. "president" [of the Legion Boy's Forum]. Japanese women have their day [on the anniversary of women's suffrage]. Safety first in Palestine [as land mines are removed]. ["Red" Hill goes] over [Niagara Falls] in a barrel. Can they "bear" it? [bears at Palisades Park, N. J.].

© 5Aug49; MP4568.

272. Aug. 9, 1949. Care packages go to hungry Greeks. Those oo-la-la bathing suits. It pays to be X-rayed [Indians at Cardston, Alberta]. Strato-man [Clifford Thompson, 8 feet 7 inches tall]. Gridiron clinic [Hot Springs, Ark.]. Postman's day off [walking race by French mail carriers]. Motorcycle madcaps [England].

© 9Aug49; MP4569.

273. Aug. 12, 1949. 6,000 die in Ecuador quake. Coast Guard has [159th] birthday. Philippines President [Elpidio Quirino arrives in Washington]. "That's My Baby" [premiere in Chicago]. Mangrum wins Tam O'Shanter [golf tournament]. Miss Tilly wins Hambletonian.

© 12Aug49; MP4570.

274. Aug. 16, 1949. Jet fighters land on carrier. Coldest spot in Canada [National Research Council's test laboratory]. Dutch Princesses [Beatrix and Irene] go riding. Old swimming hole—Berlin. Football makes its bow [Eagles vs. All-Stars]. Small fry rodeo riders [Post, Texas]. The Soap Box Derby.

© 16Aug49; MP4571.

275. Aug. 19, 1949. Congress probes five-percenters. Air crash survivors land [rescue ships arrive in Ireland]. Ruth Nichols and crew members fly to Windsor Locks, [Conn.] Europe strives for unity [Council of Europe at Strasburg]. Helicopters fly off carrier [during amphibious maneuvers at Quantico].

© 19Aug49; MP4572.

276. Aug. 23, 1949. "Flying saucer" found [Glen Burnie, Md.] Swiss Alpine fortress ["Maginot"]. Gar Wood's new boat [Venturi]. [Mohawk] Indians adopt Sophie Tucker. National Baseball Congress [Wichita, Kan.] Connie Mack honored. Jap swimmers star in meet [in Los Angeles].

© 23Aug49; MP4573.

277. Aug. 26, 1949. French forest fires. Earthquake aftermath [Ecuador]. Glamor on gay White Way [world premiere of "Sword in the Desert"]. Clark and McGrath sworn in. Film star [Ann Blyth] "elected" [honorary] mayor. Beauty Queens let down hair [Palisades Park, N. J.]. Death on the dirt track [International Trophy race at Silerstone, Eng.]

© 26Aug49; MP4574.

278. Aug. 30, 1949. Truman attends Legion convention. Hurricane lashes Florida. U. S. retains Davis Cup. F.D.R. great-grandchild poses. Pendleton round-up.

© 30Aug49; MP4575.

279. Sept. 1, 1949. The American Legion on parade [Philadelphia]. Vaughan and Maragon testify in Senate "five percent" probe. Coast Guard saves polio victim. The Ice Capades of 1950.

© 1Sep49; MP4576.

280. Sept. 6, 1949. Legion picks new commander [George N. Craig]. Nehru on visit to Tibet. [Woman supervises the demolition of war-scarred buildings in Berlin.] Lend-lease trolleys [from New York arrive in Vienna]. Girl baseball stars [of All-American Girls League]. Gridders [on Giants team] visit [Will Rogers Memorial] Hospital. Highboard diving maniacs.

© 6Sep49; MP4577.

281. Sept. 9, 1949. The battle of Peekskill [at meeting of concert of Paul Robeson]. British here for dollar talks. Spectacular 4–alarm fire [Philadelphia]. Beauty Queens assemble [Atlantic City]. Modern "Moby Dick" saga [off African coast]. Shirley May [France] forced to quit [channel swim]. Labor Day Parade [Princeton, Ind.]

© 9Sep49; MP4578.

282. Sept. 13, 1949. 1949 beauty queens chosen [Miss America crowned at Atlantic City, Mrs. America at Asbury Park]. New Tacoma Narrows Bridge. World's biggest airliner [Brabazon I]. Film festival at Cannes. Weight-lifting champs [Montreal]. Stunt flier [Tommy Walker] crashes plane.

© 13Sep49; MP4579.

283. Sept. 16, 1949. Money parley in Washington. Theater owners hear good news [Commerce Secretary Sawyer advocates repeal of wartime excise tax on admission to theaters]. Germany gets new Chancellor [Konrad Adenauer]. Sliding cargo decks. Millinery modes. Harvest Moon Ball [Madison Square Garden].

© 16Sep49; MP4783.

284. Sept. 20, 1949. 121 dead in cruise ship fire [Toronto]. Defense Secretary [Louis Johnson] lauds movies. Washington-Utah football. Roller Derby champions. Texas theatres aid polio fund.

© 20Sep49; MP4784.

285. Sept. 23, 1949. Romulo heads 4th UN Assembly. Britain reacts to devaluation. Fire sweeps French factory. Sweater sweepstakes. Yanks win Ryder Cup. Tuna Tourney [off Wedgeport, Nova Scotia].

© 23Sep49; MP4785.

286. Sept. 26, 1949. Nation stirred by Truman report that Russia has the atom bomb. Preview of 1950 swim suits. Football highlights: Southern California sinks Navy; Georgia Tech upsets Vanderbilt.

© 26Sep49; MP4786.

287. Sept. 30, 1949. Navy show [Defense Secretary Johnson and Joint Chiefs of Staff see impressive demonstration of air-sea power]. [House of Princeton University's psychologists.] [Units of the American fleet pay] visit to Spain. Movie pledge [for support of public good made by George Murphy]. Yogi, not Berra. Horse opera [at Madison Square Garden].

© 30Sep49; MP4787.

288. Oct. 4, 1949. 500,000 out in steel strike. Truman has a busy week [in St. Louis and Kansas City]. King's nephew [Earl of Harewood] weds. Gridiron highlights: Army routs Penn State; Michigan defeats Stanford; Notre Dame tops Washington.

© 4Oct49; MP4788.

289. Oct. 7, 1949. Air troops stage huge mock battle. Cardinal [Spellman] visits Pope. Truman asks Community Chest support. Marquess [of Milford-Haven] and his fiance. Canada tests jetliner. Sports in the swim: 9–year-old Buck Niles; tiny tot swimmers introduced by Lisa Bengston.

© 7Oct49; MP4789.

290. Oct. 11, 1949. Atlantic Pact; western nations gird for defense. Football: Army upsets Michigan; USC, Ohio State tie; Navy overcomes Duke; Oklahoma tops Texas.

© 11Oct49; MP4790.

291. Oct. 14, 1949. Congress hears service feud. Labor leader lauds U. S. movies in cold war. Columbia snowed under by Yale. Steeplechase thrills [Belmont Park, N. Y.]

© 14Oct49; MP4791.

292. Oct. 18, 1949. Top U. S. communists found guilty. Hong Kong girds against Reds. Football: Cornell crushes Yale; Notre Dame routs Tulane; California upsets USC.

© 18Oct49; MP4792.

293. Oct. 21, 1949. Yugoslavia named to Security Council. Army answers B–36 charges by Navy. [Army reveals substandard conditions under which defense personnel must exist in Alaska.] Bronc bustin' beauties [Corpus Christi, Texas]. Stanford sinks Washington.

© 21Oct49; MP4793.

294. Oct. 25, 1949. Truman dedicates United Nations home. $3,000,000 in diamonds shown. Football: Army routs Columbia; Penn "sinks" Navy; Michigan tops Minnesota.

© 25Oct49; MP4794.

295. Oct. 28, 1949. British crisis [Atlee tells Parliament that budget must be trimmed $700,000,000]. Mrs. Anderson named envoy to Denmark. [Sea lion that swam English Channel is welcomed at Hermosa Beach, Calif.] Gonzales loses in pro debut. Arkansas beats Vanderbilt in upset. [Millions of ducks and geese pass through Tule Lake, Calif., on their way south.] Grunt and groan a la Francaise [Miquet and Asserati].

© 28Oct49; MP4795.

296. Nov. 1, 1949. Warns Europe on U. S. aid. Scores hurt in train wreck [Azusa, Calif.] Goofiest hats ever seen. New York Mayor lauds movies. Football: Notre Dame sinks Navy; Ohio State tops Northwestern; California trips UCLA.

© 1Nov49; MP4796.

297. Nov. 4, 1949. Air crash [over the Washington airport] kills 55. Brush fire makes hundreds homeless [in the San Fernando Valley, California.] New Navy Chief [Admiral Forrest Sherman]. USC wins 40–28 over Washington. Duke wrecks Georgia Tech. Catch-as-catch-can [Ivon Robert vs. Fred Atkins in Montreal].

© 4Nov49; MP4812.

298. Nov. 8, 1949. Infantry in action for top brass [at Fort Benning, Ga.] Truman hailed in Saint Paul. Football: Army crushes Fordham; Wisconsin nips Northwestern; Stanford blasts USC.

© 8Nov49; MP4813.

299. Nov. 11, 1949. President Truman urges world brotherhood. Big Three meet [in Paris]. Family reunion [of war torn family in Germany]. Flames raze Liverpool dock. Football: Army edges Penn; Notre Dame routs South Carolina.

© 11Nov49; MP4814.

300. Nov. 15, 1949. Paratrooper saves buddy when chute collapses. [British frigate]. Amethyst gets welcome [when she returns from China]. [Anti-communist Berliners hear Pres. Theodor Heuss of the West German Republic.] Vice President Barkley chosen top grand-pop. Kiddie car—Paris style. Football: Boston College tops Clemson; Pro Eagles topple Rams.

© 15Nov49; MP4815.

301. Nov. 18, 1949. Airborne baby [baby of refugees from Poland born over the Atlantic]. Shah [Mohammed Reza Pahlevi of Iran] visits U. S. Negro women honor Bunche. New bomber unveiled. Putting on the dog [parade in New York]. Football: Oklahoma trounces Missouri; Oregon State upsets Michigan State.

© 18Nov49; MP4816.

302. Nov. 22, 1949. B–29 survivors [of plane crash near Bermuda] tell of ordeal. Vice President Barkley is wed. Football: California routs Stanford; Ohio State ties Michigan; Tulane upsets Virginia; Yale crushes Harvard.

© 22Nov49; MP4817.

303. Nov. 25, 1949. War games in Hawaii. Princess Margaret at first hat show. Floating down to Munich [on a log raft]. Pomp and pagentry [during a ten-day festival in India]. Understanding dog [balances small boy on his head]. Japanese Prince meets hot dog. Ski debut [Mount Hood, Ore.] Madame matador [Señorita Cintro].

© 25Nov49; MP4818.

304. Nov. 29, 1949. Christmas preview [in New York, Philadelphia, and Hollywood]. Plaque for Marshall. [Britain's military academy presents silver service to West Point.] [Stanton Griffis] new Ambassador to Argentine. Football: Notre Dame swamps Southern California; Army scuttles Navy.

© 29Nov49; MP4819.

305. Dec. 2, 1949. 28 die in [Dallas] plane crash. Death marks the ballot [in elections in Colombia]. President at ease [at Key West]. Floods and storms sweep Northwest. New sky giant [Globemaster] takes a bow. French strike fizzles. Army gets [Lambert] trophy. Water ski bugs.

© 2Dec49; MP4942.

306. Dec. 6, 1949. Water shortage menaces East. Navy's skyrocket tops 700 mph. Five die, ten hurt in French air crash. Notre Dame noses out SMU by 27 to 20. Churchill is 75. Eagles rip Giants 24–3.

© 6Dec49; MP4943.

307. Dec. 9, 1949. Atlantic pact defense parley. Globe girdling record [made by Thomas Lanphier in 4 days, 23 hours]. Bumper herring crop [British Columbia]. Strong family [Bayerjon brothers in Canada]. Leon Hart gets trophy. Louis kayoes Valentino. Oregon five beats NYU. China's president [Li Tsung Jen] arrives in New York.

© 9Dec49; MP4944.

308. Dec. 13, 1949. Air Force tests [Chase XC–123] assault transport. Historic warship [HMS Implacable] sunk. The Shah of Iran visits Hoover Dam. German gymnasts compete. Jewelry, symbol of beauty. Merry Christmas, Santa's greeting to all of you.

© 13Dec49; MP4945.

309. Dec. 16, 1949. Atomist says West can stop Red tide. 4 die, 19 hurt in plane crash [at Washington airport]. Jackie Robinson gets Carver award. Kid acrobats. Christmas cheer goes to [Labrador] outposts. New Year's greeting in many languages.

© 16Dec49; MP4946.

310. Dec. 20, 1949. Lindbergh speaks on Kitty Hawk day. Rocket soars 60 miles. President Truman plays prexy [and awards diplomas to graduates of Anti-Submarine Corps at Key West]. Air Corps graduation [Lackland Base, Texas]. Eagles keep pro-grid crown. Lumberjack grappler wins double victory.

© 20Dec49; MP4947.

311. Dec. 23, 1949. Reds release U. S. Consul Ward. Mayor Bill O'Dwyer weds Sloan Simpson in small-town ceremony. Carrier task force hits rough seas in Arctic test. British Army cadets march in traditional graduation. [Small French village posts new ordinance about cats]. Basketball thriller [Oklahoma Sooners vs. CCNY Beavers].

© 23Dec49; MP4948.

312. Dec. 27, 1949. 1949 in review. Truman inaugurated. Louis Saint-Laurent Prime Minister of Canada. The cold war: Berlin airlift; new West German state is born; Marshall Plan aid to Europe. Communism: persecution of Cardinal Mindzenty; Tito's insurrection against Moscow; loss of China to Reds; trial of top Communist leaders in U. S. Disasters: Ecuador earthquake; blizzards in Western plains; aviation disasters; steamer Noronic fire at Toronto. Weddings: Rita Hayworth and Aly Kahn; Vice President Barkley and Mrs. Hadley. The atom bomb: news that Russia has bomb; UN Assembly discusses control of bomb.

© 23Dec49; MP4949.

313. Dec. 30, 1949. Holy year begins in Rome. Japs [swarm around Russian Embassy] in protest against Reds. Angus Ward tells his story. Duke and Duchess [of Windsor] arrive. Colorful ice carnival [Hollywood Ice Revue]. First race at Santa Anita.

© 30Dec49; MP5019.

THE UNIVERSE AS SEEN TODAY THROUGH LARGEST TELESCOPES. Really Educational Motion Pictures. c1940. 4 reels.

Credits: Director, Ruroy Sibley.

© Mabel Sibley; 17Oct40; MP10525.

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FOOTBALL. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Nov47; 3 prints, 1Dec47; MU2488.

UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA BAND AND GLEE CLUB. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11530.

THE UNKNOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based on the radio program "I Love a Mystery" by Carlton E. Morse.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Henry Levin; screenplay, Malcolm Stuart Boylan, Julian Harmon; adaptation, Charles O'Neal; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Jul46; LP521.

UNKNOWN GUEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice King; director, Kurt Neumann; screenplay, Philip Yordan; cameraman, Jackson Rose; film editor, Marty Cohen.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 9Sep43; LP12244.

UNKNOWN ISLAND. Albert Joy Cohen Productions, Inc. Released through Film Classics, Inc., c1948. 78 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: An adventure story about the discovery of living prehistoric monsters on an uncharted island in the Pacific.

Credits: Producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Jack Bernhard; original story, Robert T. Shannon; screenplay, Robert T. Shannon, Jack Harvey; music, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Harry Gerstad.

Cast: Virginia Grey, Philip Reed, Richard Denning, Barton MacLane, Richard Wessel.

© Albert Jay Cohen Productions, Inc.; 1Dec48; LP2087.

THE UNKNOWN SINGER. SEE Le Chanteur Inconnu.

UNLUCKY AT GAMBLING. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Unlucky at Gambling" is sung by The Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4529.

UNLUCKY DOG. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 15 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; direction and screenplay, Ben Holmes; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Dec43; LP12440.

UNLUCKY WOMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Dec44; MP15476.

THE UNRULY HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons Inc., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Bugs Bunny Specials) (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Melvin Millar; animation, Arthur Davis; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec44; MP15740.

THE UNRULY HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Bugs Bunny Specials)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Melvin Millar; animation, Arthur Davis; music director, Car W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12Feb45; MP15619.

THE UNSEEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Ethel Lina White.

Credits: Producer, John Houseman; director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Hagar Wilde, Raymond Chandler; adaptation, Hagar Wilde, Ken Englund; music score, Ernest Roch.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Feb45; LP13217.

UNSEEN ENEMY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Marshall Grant; director, John Rawlins; original screenplay, Roy Chanslor, Stanley Rubin; photography, John Boyle; film editor, Ed Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Mar42; LP11149.

THE UNSEEN ENEMY. SEE

El Enemigo Invisible.

José Come Bem.

UNSOPHISTICATED SUE. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Written by Nat Simon, Roy Newell, Andy Razaf.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11837.

UNSURE-RUNTS. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 862 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Sid Marcus; animation, Grant Simmons, Volus Jones; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16May46; LP516.

THE UNSUSPECTED. Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc., c1947. 103 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From a story by Charlotte Armstrong.

Credits: Producer, Charles Hoffman; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Ranald MacDougall; adaptation, Bess Meredyth; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Frederick Richards.

Cast: Joan Caulfield, Claude Rains, Audrey Totter, Constance Bennett, Hurd Hatfield.

© Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc.; 11Oct47; LP1270.

UNTAMED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd., color. Based on the story "Mantrap" by Sinclair Lewis.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Frederick Hazlitt Brennan, Frank Butler; photography, Leo Tover; film editor, Stuart Gilmore. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jul40; LP9812.

THE UNTAMED BREED. Sage Western Pictures. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 74 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by Eli Colter.

Summary: A Western in which wild riding and romance follow the escape of a Brahma bull which was purchased to improve the stock in the Pecos country.

Credits: Producer, Harry Joe Brown; director, Charles Lamont; screenplay, Tom Reed; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, George Duning; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Sonny Tufts, Barbara Britton, George "Gabby" Hayes, Edgar Buchanan, William Bishop.

© Sage Western Pictures; 26Oct48; LP1898.

UNTAMED FURY. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Danches Brothers production. From Ewing Scott's story "Gaitor Bait."

Credits: Producer and director, Ewing Scott; screenplay, Taylor Caven, Paul Gerard Smith; music score and direction, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Robert Crandall.

Cast: Gaylord Pendleton, Mikel Conrad, Leigh Whipper.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 22Mar47; LP889.

UNUSUAL CRAFTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 803 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 9)

Credits: Commentary, John Martin; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Dec40; MP10861.

UNUSUAL OCCUPATIONS. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1940–49. 1 reel each, sd., 35mm. © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Writers, Gayne Whitman, Walter Anthony, George Brandt; narrator, Ken Carpenter.

L 9–3. © 19Jan40; MP9940.

L 9–4. © 22Mar40; MP10082.

L 9–5. © 31May40; MP10253.

L 9–6. © 2Aug40; MP10400.

L 0–1. © 27Sep40; MP10526.

L 0–2. © 29Nov40; MP10641.

L 0–3. © 24Jan41; MP10785.

L 0–4. © 28Mar41; MP10998.

L 0–5. © 30May41; MP11198.

L 0–6. © 1Aug41; MP11411.

L 1–1. © 3Oct41; MP11635.

L 1–2. © 12Dec41; MP11917.

L 1–3. © 27Feb42; MP12222.

L 1–4. © 15Apr42; MP12762.

L 1–5. © 26Jun42; MP12649.

L 1–6. © 26Aug42; MP12793.

L 2–1. © 9Oct42; MP12949.

L 2–2. © 4Dec42; MP13130.

L 2–3. © 12Feb43; MP13280.

L 2–4. © 30Apr43; MP13524.

L 2–5. © 9Jul43; MP13740.

L 2–6. © 17Sep43; MP14679.

L 3–1. © 17Nov43; MP14174.

L 3–2. © 7Jan44; MP14398.

L 3–3. © 3Mar44; MP14618.

L 3–4. © 5May44; MP14925.

L 3–5. © 23Jun44; MP14993.

L 3–6. © 1Sep44; MP15757.

L 4–1. © 30Oct44; MP15446.

L 4–2. © 12Jan45; MP15603.

L 4–3. © 9Mar45; MP15738.

L 4–4. © 8May45; MP15960.

L 4–5. © 13Jul45; MP16128.

L 4–6. © 14Sep45; MP16295.

L 5–1. © 9Nov45; MP576.

L 5–2. © 4Jan46; MP128.

L 5–3. © 25Feb46; MP216.

L 5–4. © 8May46; MP600.

L 5–5. © 5Jul46; MP847.

L 5–6. © 30Aug46; MP1065.

L 6–1. © 4Oct46; MP1235.

L 6–2. © 14Feb47; MP1648.

L 6–3. © 15Mar47; MP1810.

L 6–4. © 2May47; MP1991.

L 6–5. © 4Jul47; MP2163.

L 6–6. Film Tot Fairyland. © 15Sep47; MP2322.

L 7–1. Hula Magic. © 7Nov47; MP2442.

L 7–2. Bagpipe Lassies. © 2Jan48; MP2591.

L 7–3. Modern Pioneers. © 13Feb48; MP2732.

L 7–4. Nimrod Artist. © 16Apr48; MP2887.

L 7–5. Feather Finery. In the Painted Desert in northern Arizona, Navajo Indians make a symbolic sand painting requesting the gods to insure sufficient food; Robert S. Bowden creates "paintings" by piecing together small pieces of colored leathers; Billy Romano makes animals and other objects from ordinary balloons; Barbara Orr Ehrhardt makes dresses for her bridal party from turkey feathers.

© 14May48; MP3487.

L 7–6. Aerial Hot Rods. An artist paints the faces of celebrities on eggs; a skilled artisan makes small size trains for amusement parks; a man in New York City makes hats of pipe cleaners; and aircraft engineers race midget planes.

© 3Aug48; MP3350.

L 8–1. The Glass Orchestra. On the Apache Indian Reservation of Mescalero, N. M., Chief Waterfall trains the children to perform traditional tribal dances; in Nogales, Ariz., Laura McNeill makes ceramic figurines in Colonial costumes; at the Bronx Zoo, Helen Martini raises wild animals; in New York City, Billy Glass makes musical instruments out of plexiglas for his orchestra.

© 26Nov48; MP3541.

L 8–2. The Early Bird. In Taxco, Mexico, hand-wrought silver ornaments are made by native artists; in Williamsburg, Va., cabinetmaking, spinning, and wig-making are done in the manner of the 18th century; in Portsmouth, Eng., former submarine commander, G. V. Galwey, builds model ships; Billy Parker of Oklahoma flies planes of 1910 and 1912.

© 11Mar49; MP4010.

L 8–3. The Flying Dancers. Near Chicago, members of a rifle club use hand-molded bullets in their muzzle-loading rifles; in Oshkosh, Wis., Beatrice Tonnesen converts coal clinkers into works of art; in Nogales, Ariz., Ray Hulbert and his aides make bamboo reeds for musical instruments; in Oakland, Calif., elderly women go for a weekly row on Lake Merritt; at Papantla, near Veracruz, Mexico, Totonaca Indians perform a ceremonial "Flying Pole" dance.

© 11Mar49; MP3911.

L 8–4. The Fall Guy. In the patio of Casa Pereira at Mexico City, fireworks are made for holidays and fiestas; at Boulder, Colo., Oscar Crockett makes spurs from hand forged steel; at Saint Ignace, Mich., Chief "Joe Shomen" operates the only totem pole factory in the United States; Beatrice Metesh of Lockport, Ill., is the pitcher on a semi-pro baseball team of men; in a New York department store, Mike Reynolds falls down the chutes to clear the jammed packages on their way to the shipping department.

© 15Apr49; MP3982.

L 8–5. Flying Grandmother. In Sutton, England, cricket bats are made; in the swamp lands near Mexico City, reeds are gathered and woven into a variety of products; in New York City, Joseph Burger has a collection of footwear dating back to 2000 B.C.; in Philadelphia, Miss Florence Schippert sculptures models of famous dogs; near Deming, New Mexico, Mrs. Margaret Todhunter supervises her "Diamond L" ranch from her airplane.

© 3Jun49; MP4161.

L 8–6. The Sky Rider. In Mexico City, Senor Ignacio Inzunsa makes clothes for bullfighters. In Spillville, Iowa, the Bily brothers pursue the art of wood-carving. In Bell Gardens, Calif., Mrs. L. W. Morris makes miniature tapestries. Dan Moore trains bloodhounds for Arizona State Prison. Tony Le Vier, test pilot, flies P–80 Jet planes.

© 15Jul49; MP4349.

UNVEILING ALGERIA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 876 ft., sd. (A Columbia Tour)

Credits: Producer, André De La Varre; narrator, Len Sterling; music, Edward Craig.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Mar40; MP10037.

THE UNWELCOME GUEST. Loew's Inc., c1945. 663 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Michael Lah, Ed Barge, Jack Carr; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Feb45; LP13208.

THE UNWRITTEN CODE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Herman Rotsten; story, Charles Kenyon, Robert Wilmot; screenplay, Leslie T. White, Charles Kenyon; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Oct44; LP13121.

UP AND AWAY. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Div., General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 60 prints, 4Oct41; MU11695.

UP FROM THE EARTH FOR THE PEOPLE. Tomlin Film Productions, Inc., for Consumers Cooperative Association, c1948. 33 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows drilling operations in the oil fields and the refining process. A film produced to acquaint mid-western audiences with the work of their Cooperative Associations in the oil fields, and to emphasize the importance of petroleum products to farmers.

© Tomlin Film Productions, Inc.; 13Sep48; MP3311.

UP GOES MAISIE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the character created by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Harry Beaumont; story and screenplay, Thelma Robinson; music score, David Snell; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Dec45; LP27.

UP IN ARMS. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 105 min., sd., color. Suggested by the character "The Nervous Wreck" by Owen Davis.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Elliott Nugent; original screenplay, Don Hartman, Allen Boretz, Robert Pirosh; narration, Knox Manning; music director, Louis Forbes; musical numbers arranged and conducted by Ray Heindorf; film editors, Daniel Mandell, James Newcom. Technicolor.

© Avalon Productions, Inc.; 2Mar44; LP12594.

UP IN CENTRAL PARK. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the musical comedy by Sigmund Romberg, Herbert Fields, and Dorothy Fields.

Summary: An Irish immigrant and his songstress daughter become involved in Tammany Hall politics.

Credits: Producer, Karl Tunberg; director, William Seiter; screenplay, Karl Tunberg; music arranged and directed by Johnny Green; music, Sigmund Romberg; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Deanna Durbin, Dick Haymes, Vincent Price, Albert Sharpe, Tom Powers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Jun48; LP1918.

UP IN MABEL'S ROOM. Released through United Artists, c1944. Presented by Edward Small. 8 reels, sd. Based on the stage play by Otto Harbach and Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, Edward Small; director, Allan Dwan; screen adaptation, Tom Reed; music, Michael Michelet; music director, Edward Paul; film editor, Richard Heermance.

© Edward Small Productions, Inc.; 15Feb44; LP12687.

UP IN THE AIR. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay and original story, Edmund Kelso; music director, Edward Kaye; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor. Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 6Sep40; LP9926.

UP 'N' ATOM. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody, no. 128)

Credits: Director, Sid Marcus; animation, Ray Jenkins, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 10Jun47; LP1083.

UP-STANDING SITTER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Phil Delara, Manny Gould, John Carey, Charles McKimson.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Aug48; MP3259.

THE UPTURNED GLASS. Released by Universal-International, c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Sidney Box production. From an original story by John P. Monaghan.

Summary: A melodrama in which a surgeon commits murder to avenge the death of the woman he loved. An English country house provides the setting.

Credits: Producers, Sydney Box, James Mason; director, Lawrence Huntington; original story, John P. Monaghan; screenplay, John P. Monaghan, Pamela Kellino; music, Bernard Stevens; cameraman, Bernie Lewis; editor, Alan Osbiston.

Cast: James Mason, Rosamund John, Pamela Kellino, Ann Stevens, Moreland Graham.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

© Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd.; 11Dec47; LP1547.

USE AND PROCESSING OF EKTACHROME FILM. Eastman Kodak Co. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Lloyd Reber.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 9Mar47; MU1770.

THE USE OF DIGITALIS IN HEART FAILURE. Transfilm, Inc. for Wyeth, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Summary: Shows how digitalis and its glycosides act directly on the heart muscle to increase the force of its contraction; explains how to make a satisfactory choice among various preparations of the drug; and illustrates methods of giving the medicine to patients. A film for members of the medical profession.

© Wyeth, Inc.; title, descr., & 15 prints, 10Aug48; MU3263.

USE OF FORESTS. Coronet, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Describes the variety of products which are made from wood, shows how forests are used for recreation, and stresses the importance of protecting forests from fire and disease.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Thomas F. Barton.

© David A. Smart; 7Mar49; MP4276.

USE OF PARACHUTES. Presented by the United States Navy. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Jun46; 13 prints, 1Jul46; MU758.

THE USE OF TOOLS. Coronet, c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Script, Mary Greer.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 29Oct41; MP1544.

USE YOUR IMAGINATION. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15575.

USEFUL KNOTS. U. S. Navy.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 6Feb42; 121 prints, 2Feb42; MU12154.

USING A STEADY REST WHEN BORING.

Appl. author: John G. Curtis.

© Atlas Educational Film Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 5Jun44; MU14911.

USING THE BANK. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film shows how an individual is served by his bank. He makes use of savings and checking accounts, of the bank's loan department, and of its facilities for supplying change. Live action and animation. For upper elementary grades, junior high school, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborators, John H. Lewis, John R. Clark.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Nov47; MP2637.

USING THE CLASSROOM FILM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Oct45; MP16445.

USING THE CLASSROOM FILM. SEE

Empleo de Peliculas en las Aulas.

Der Film in der Klasse.

De Film in het Schoollokaal.

Skolfilmen Användning.

Utilisation du Film en Classe.

O USO DO FILMO PARA AS CLASSES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Aug46; MP1070.

UTAH. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Gilbert Wright and Betty Burbridge.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, John English; screenplay, Jack Townley, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; orchestrations, Dale Butts; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Mar45; LP13188.

UTAH KID. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Vernon Keays; screenplay, Victor Hammond; photography, Harry Neuman; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp., 26Aug44; LP12843.

UTILISATION DU FILM CLASSE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A French version of "Using the Classroom Film" which introduces "The Wheat Farmer" as a film text.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Feb47; MP1756.

UTOPIA OF DEATH. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 908 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Oct40; MP10606.

V

V-MAIL FROM A FEMALE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Dec43; MP14320.

V MEN AND V WOMEN. c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Arthur Hoerl.

© Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co.; 29Jan42; MP13225.

VACATION; two weeks a year. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (The World Today)

Summary: American citizens of all ages take a vacation. The children go to camp. Families enjoy swimming, fishing, golf, horseback riding. They stay at a dude ranch, and take trips to Canada, Bermuda, and Coney Island.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; script, Luigi Creatore; narrator, Nelson Case; music, L. DeFrancesco; editors, John Oser, Lawrence Katz.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Nov47; MP3154.

VACATION DAYS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original screenplay, Hal Collins; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Freddie Stewart, June Preisser, Frankie Darro.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Jan47; LP839.

VACATION FROM MARRIAGE. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer London Film Productions, Ltd., England, c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer and director, Alexander Korda; screenplay, Clemence Dane, Anthony Pelissier; composer, Clifton Parker; photographer, Georges Perinal; editor, E. B. Jarvis.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Nov45; LP13705.

VACATION IN RENO. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 60 min., sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Charles Kerr.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Goodwins; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, Arthur Ross; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Oct46; LP691.

VACATION MAGIC. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Sports Review)

Summary: Sports which are popular in Jamaica: sailboat racing, horse racing, shooting the rapids of Jamaica's Rio Grande, and rounding up White Indian cattle. Includes scenes of Montego Bay and Blue Hole.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 26Sep47; MP2622.

VACATION SAFETY. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1940. 976 ft. (Safety Series)

Appl. author: C. E. Turner.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 20May40; MP10336.

VACATION TIME IN FLORIDA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; described by Ed Thorgersen; photographer, Jack Painter. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Aug40; MP10453.

THE VACUUM CLEANER. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 8)

Summary: Pat shows his puppet, Pirro, how the vacuum cleaner works.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2339.

VACUUM TUBES. SEE El Bulbo al Vacío.

VAGABOND LOAFERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy in which the Three Stooges are plumbers.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; written by Elwood Ullman.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Oct49; LP2601.

VAGINAL HYSTERECTOMY. Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan, c1944. 1 reel.

© Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan; 28Dec44; MP15505.

THE VALIANT. SEE The Man Who Wouldn't Talk.

VALIANT HOMBRE. Inter-American Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists Corp., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the Cisco Kid character created by O. Henry [pseud. of William Sydney Porter].

Summary: A Western in which the Cisco Kid and Pancho become involved in murder when they attempt to locate the missing owner of a stolen dog.

Credits: Producer, Philip N. Krasne; director, Wallace Fox; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music composer and director, Albert Glasser; film editor, Martin Cohen.

Cast: Duncan Renaldo, Leo Carrillo, John Litel, Barbara Billingsley, Stanley Andrews.

© Inter-American Productions, Inc.; 21Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2479.

VALIANT VENEZUELA. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 778 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston, C. Bakaleinikoff; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov39; MP10128.

THE VALLEY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 min., sd. (The Color Parade)

Credits: Directed and written by Ira Genet; commentator, John Deering.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Jul40; MP10354.

VALLEY OF BLOSSOMS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Leon C. Shelly; music score, L. de Francesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Sep42; MP15403.

THE VALLEY OF DECISION. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by Marcia Davenport.

Credits: Producer, Edwin H. Knopf; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, John Meehan, Sonya Levien; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr45; LP13232.

VALLEY OF FEAR. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 54 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Roy Livingston.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Feb47; LP909.

VALLEY OF HUNTED MEN. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original idea by Charles Tedford. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; screenplay, Albert Demond, Morton Grant; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, Bud Thackery; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Nov42; LP11733.

THE VALLEY OF 10,000 SMOKES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. 1 reel, sd. (Father Hubbard's Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; narrators, Father Hubbard, Lowell Thomas.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Nov39; MP10025.

VALLEY OF THE SUN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 79 min., sd. Based on the story by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Graham Baker; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Horace McCoy; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 30Jan42; LP11056.

VALLEY OF THE SUN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Mar46; MP356.

VALLEY OF THE ZOMBIES. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producers, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; director, Philip Ford; original story, Royal K. Cole, Sherman L. Lowe; screenplay, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Mar46; LP310.

THE VALLEY OF VANISHING MEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942–43. 2 reels each, sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, Spencer G. Bennett; original screenplay, Harry Fraser, Lewis Clay, George Gray.

1. Trouble in Canyon City. © 17Dec42; LP11774.

2. The Mystery of Ghost Town. © 24Dec42; LP11775.

3. Danger Walks by Night. © 31Dec42; LP11776.

4. Hillside Horror. © 7Jan43; LP11777.

5. Guns in the Night. © 15Jan43; LP11831.

6. The Bottomless Well. © 22Jan43; LP11832.

7. The Man in the Gold Mask. © 29Jan43; LP11833.

8. When the Devil Drives. © 5Feb43; LP11855.

9. The Traitor's Shroud. © 12Feb43; LP11856.

10. Death Strikes at Seven. © 12Feb43; LP11857.

11. Satan in the Saddle. © 26Feb43; LP11902.

12. The Mine of Missing Men. © 5Mar43; LP11903.

13. Danger on Dome Rock. © 8Mar43; LP11904.

14. The Door that has no Key. © 10Mar43; LP11905.

15. Empire's End. © 12Mar43; LP11906.

VALLEY OF VENGEANCE. P.R.C. Pictures, c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 15May44; LP12647.

VAMOOSE. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Vamoose" is sung by The Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4530.

VAMOS A GOZAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Aug43; MP13816.

THE VAMPIRE'S GHOST. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Rudolph E. Abel; director, Lesley Selander; original story, Leigh Brackett; screenplay, John K. Butler, Leigh Brackett; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographers, Bud Thackery, Robert Pittack; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17May45; LP13353.

VANISHED TRACES. SEE Verwehte Spuren.

THE VANISHING PRIVATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 5Aug42; LP11595.

THE VANISHING VIRGINIAN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. A Frank Borzage production. Based on the book by Rebecca Yancey Williams.

Credits: Producer, Edwin Knopf; director, Frank Borzage; screenplay, Jan Fortune; music director, Lennie Hayton; music score, David Snell; film editor, James E. Newcom.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec41; LP11403.

VARGA AND HIS BEAUTIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 131)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Larry Elliott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Apr44; MP14800.

VARIETY GIRL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical comedy which depicts the adventures of two young girls seeking screen careers in Hollywood. The story is based on the incident which started the Variety Clubs movement.

Credits: Producer, Daniel Dare; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Edmund Hartmann, Frank Tashlin, Robert Welch, Monte Brice; music score and direction, Joseph J. Lilley; special orchestral arrangements, Van Cleave; editor, LeRoy Stone.

Cast: Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Gary Cooper, Olga San Juan, Billy De Wolfe.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Aug47; LP1601.

VARIETY TIME. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Includes sequences taken from a 1911 Biograph release, "Two Paths," in addition to clippings from other old films.

Summary: A vaudeville show which presents a series of comedy and musical acts.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; written by Leo Soloman, Joseph Quillan, Hal Law, Hal Yates; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editors, Les Millbrook, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Jack Paar, Edgar Kennedy, Leon Errol, Frankie Carle, Pat Rooney.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3Sep48; LP1861.

VARIETY VIEWS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941–45. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. For preceding issues SEE Going Places. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead.

94. Isles of Fate. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 30Jul41; MP11372.

95. Garden Spot of the North. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 31Jul41; MP11383.

96. Moby Dick's Home Town. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 31Jul41; MP11384.

97. Northern Neighbors. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 2Oct41; MP11614.

98. George Washington, Country Gentleman. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 23Sep41; MP11578.

99. The Trail of the Buccaneers. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 23Sep41; MP11579.

100. Annapolis Salutes the Navy. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 3Dec41; MP11859.

101. Keys to Adventure. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 5Dec41; MP11863.

102. Peaceful Quebec at War. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 3Dec41; MP11860.

103. Sports in the Rockies. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 13Mar42; MP12329.

104. Flashing Blades. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 24Feb42; MP12247.

105. Thrills of the Deep. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 26Feb42; MP12220.

106. Sky Pastures. Narrator, Graham McNamee. © 3Mar42; MP12237.

107. Call of the Sea. Narrator, Bob Shepard. © 19May42; MP12500.

108. Wings for Freedom. Narrator, Edward Herlihy. © 9Jun42; MP12583.

109. Antarctic Outpost. Narrator, Fred Handrich. © 1Jun42; MP12551.

110. Crater City. Narrator, John S. Martin. © 26Jun42; MP12632.

111. Trouble Spot of the East. Narrator, Basil Ruysdael. © 21Aug42; MP12790.

112. Canadian Patrol. Narrator, Larry Elliott. © 15Sep42; MP12842.

113. Western Whoopee. Narrator, Howard Petrie. © 25Aug42; MP12796.

114. Spirit of Democracy. Narrator, Charles Wood. © 21Sep42; MP12843.

115. The New Era in India. Narrator, Irving McDonald. © 23Oct42; MP12987.

116. Winter Sports Jamboree. Narrator, Bob Stanton. © 10Feb43; MP13267.

117. Mother of Presidents. Narrator, John Patrick Costello. © 10Feb43; MP13266.

118. Hungry India. Narrator, Robert Denton. © 11Feb43; MP13268.

119. Mr. Chimp Goes to Town. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 15Apr43; MP13491.

120. Mirror of Sub-Marine Life. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 22Apr43; MP13540.

121. Confusion in India. Narrator, Albert A. Grobe. © 22Apr43; MP13541.

122. Who's Next? Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 28Jul43; MP13807.

123. Any Chickens Today. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 14Jul43; MP13764.

124. The Amazing Metropolis. Narrator, Albert A. Grobe. © 31Dec43; MP14364.

125. Yukon Outpost. Narrator, Hugh James. © 29Jul43; MP13830.

126. 1–A Dogs. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 30Sep43; MP14016.

127. Mr. Chimp Raises Cain. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 12Nov43; MP14154.

128. Wings in Record Time. Narrator, Albert A. Grobe. © 31Dec43; MP14363.

129. Magazine Model. Narrator, Gertrude Warner. © 4Feb44; MP14556.

130. Animal Tricks. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 4Feb44; MP14559.

131. Hobo News. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 18Apr44; MP14796.

132. Fraud by Mail. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 18Apr44; MP14797.

133. Mr. Chimp Goes South. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 18Apr44; MP14799.

134. Bear Mountain Game. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 29Jun44; MP15062.

135. From Spruce to Bomber. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 7Aug44; MP15256.

136. Dogs for Show. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 27Oct44; MP15542.

137. Mr. Chimp at Coney Island. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 6Dec44; MP15487.

138. White Treasure. Narrator, Al Grobe. © 7Dec44; MP15488.

139. Your National Gallery. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 12Dec44; MP15541.

140. Wingmen of Tomorrow. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 14Jun45; MP16095.

141. Bear Facts. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 5Dec45; MP45.

142. Village of the Past. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 7Sep45; MP16313.

143. Victory Bound. Narrator, Albert A. Grobe. © 7Sep45; MP124.

144. Go North. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 28Sep45; MP743.

145. Queer Birds. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 28Sep45; MP744.

146. Doctor of Paintings. Narrator, Albert A. Grobe. © 9Oct45; MP16424.

147. Grave Laughter. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 9Oct45; MP16425.

148. Jungle Capers. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 29Nov45; MP16578.

149. Dog Tale. Narrator, Jack Costello. © 21Mar46; MP309.

150. Chimp on the loose. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 21Mar46; MP311.

151. Script Teas. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 21Mar46; MP310.

152. Dog of the Seven Seas. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 6Jun46; MP740.

153. Magic Mineral. Narrator, Albert Grobe. © 12Jun46; MP825.

154. Mr. Chimp at Home. Narrator, Ed Herlihy. © 12Jun46; MP826.

155. Mr. Chimp to the Rescue. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 23Aug46; MP1030.

156. Operation Holiday. Narrator, Albert Grobe. © 11Sep46; MP1101.

157. Mr. Chimp on Vacation. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 23Aug46; MP1031.

158. Pelican Pranks. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 18Feb47; MP1884.

159. Rhumba Holiday. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 18Feb47; MP1885.

160. Wild West Chimp. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 18Feb47; MP1886.

161. Chimp Aviator. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 16Feb48; MP2966.

162. Play and Plenty. Narrator, Bob Sherry. © 31Jul47; MP2224.

163. Bronco Babes. Narrator, Philip Stahl. © 27May47; MP2128.

164. Patio Museum. Narrator, Henry Gladstone. © 27May47; MP2129.

165. Tropical Harmony. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 31Jul47; MP2225.

166. Brooklyn, U. S. A. Narrator, Ted De Corsia. © 31Jul47; MP2231.

167. Copa Carnival. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 23Jun48; MP3500.

168. Brooklyn Makes Capital. Narrator, Ted De Corsia. © 16Feb48; MP2968.

169. Canada Calls. Narrators, Ben Grauer, Court Benson. © 23Nov48; MP3554.

170. Whatta Built. Narrator, Ann Thomas. © 23Jun48; MP3519.

171. Gaucho Fiesta. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 23Jun48; MP3518.

172. Paris on the Plata. Narrator, Ben Grauer. © 23Jun48; MP3552.

173. Call of the Canyon. Narrator, Kenneth Banghart. © 23Nov48; MP3672.

175. Inch by Inch. Producer, Edmund L. Dorfman; narrator. Bob Stanton. © 15Mar49; MP4056.

176. Just a Little North. Narrators, Court Benson, Jim Boles. © 15Mar49; MP4054.

177. They Went That-A-Way. Narrator, Tom Shirley. © 15Mar49 (in notice: 1948); MP4057.

178. Dynasty of Wonders. Narrator, Kenneth Banghart. © 15Mar49; MP4055.

VARSITY VANITIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Larry Ceballos; story, Larry Rhine, Ben Chapman; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Jul40; LP9807.

THE VATICAN OF PIUS XII. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 7.

THE VATICAN OF POPE PIUS XII. Time, Inc., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Revised version.

Summary: Pictures the pomp and ceremony of religious life in the Vatican, the physical capital of a great spiritual empire which is defying Communism.

© Time, Inc.; 15Oct48; MP3677.

VAUDEVILLE DAYS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Director, Leroy Prinz; original screenplay, George Beatty; music, M. K. Jerome, Jack Scholl.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Sep43; LP12279.

VAUDEVILLE REVUE. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros.

Credits: Narration, Saul Elkins; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 31Mar47; MP1931.

VEGETATIVE PLANT PROPAGATION, Eastman Kodak Co., c1941. In 2 reels.

Appl. author: Walter Bennett.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; 16Dec41; reel 1, MP11992; reel 2, MP11993.

A VELOCIDADE DAS REAÇÕES QUÍMICAS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, Hermann I. Schlesinger, Warren C. Johnson.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jun46; MP729.

THE VELVET FLEECE. SEE Larceny

THE VELVET TOUCH. Independent Artists, Ltd., c1948. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: When Valerie Stanton, an actress, strikes her bullying producer a single blow with a metal statuette, he falls dead at her feet. Thereafter, Valerie's tortured conscience gives her no peace, and she confesses to the police in the moment of her greatest triumph.

Credits: Producer, Frederick Brisson; director, John Gage; story, William Mercer, Annabel Ross; screenplay, Leo Rosten; adaptation, Walter Reilly; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music score, Leigh Harline; film editor, Chandler House.

Cast: Rosalind Russell, Leo Genn, Claire Trevor, Sydney Greenstreet, Leon Ames.

© Independent Artists, Ltd.; 4Aug48; LP1762.

VENDETTA. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 978 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Joe Newman; screenplay, De Vallon Scott; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Jul42; LP11547.

VENGEANCE OF THE WEST. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Jack Townley.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Luci Ward; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Sep42; LP11941.

DIE VERDAUUNG DER NAHRUNG. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. German version of "Digestion of Foods."

Summary: Explains the processes of digestion in the mouth, stomach, and small intestine; shows the chemical reactions of various digestive juices on foods; and with animated drawings portrays the absorption of digestive products into the bloodstream. For high school, college, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborators, A. J. Carlson, H. G. Swann.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Aug49; MP4617.

THE VERDICT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 86 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Israel Zangwill.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Don Siegel; screenplay, Peter Milne; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; photographer, Ernest Haller; film editor, Thomas Reilly.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Nov46; LP680.

VERSPREIDING VAN WARMTE-ENERGIE. SEE Distributing Heat Energy.

VERTICAL BUTT WELD PROCEDURE. Clark A. Dunn, c1942. 1 reel. (Welding Technique Series)

© Clark A. Dunn; 28Mar42; MP12416.

VERWEHTE SPUREN (Vanished Traces) sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Tobis Zeigt.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc,; title & descr., 8Dec46; 8 prints, 19Dec46; LU720.

THE VERY THOUGHT OF YOU. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. c1944. 99 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Delmer Daves; original story, Lionel Wiggam; screenplay, Alvah Bessie, Delmer Daves; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leo Arnaud; photographer, Bert Glennon; film editor, Alan Crosland, Jr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Nov44; LP12946.

VERY WARM FOR MAY. SEE Broadway Rhythm.

A VERY YOUNG LADY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941, 7,129 ft., sd. From a play by Ladislas Fodor.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; screenplay, Ladislas Fodor, Elaine Ryan; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Jun41; LP10572.

VESPERS IN VIENNA. SEE The Red Danube.

THE VICIOUS CIRCLE. W. Lee Wilder Productions. Released by United Artists Corp., c1948. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play "The Burning Bush," by Heinz Herald and Geza Herczeg, adapted by Noel Langley.

Summary: Five Jewish citizens of Hungary are falsely accused of murder by a Hungarian nobleman. Thomas Masaryk, the Czech patriot, rallies public opinion to their support. Based on an incident that occurred 60 years ago.

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder; screenplay, Guy Endore, Heinz Herald; music director, Paul Dessau; film editor, Asa Boyd Clark.

Cast: Conrad Nagel, Fritz Kortner, Reinhold Schunzel, Philip Van Zandt, Lyle Talbot.

© William Wilder; 3Sep48; LP1825.

THE VICTORIA DOCKS AT 8. SEE White Tie and Tails.

VICTORY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on novel by Joseph Conrad.

Credits: Producer, Anthony Veiller; director, John Cromwell; screenplay, John L. Balderston; photographer, Leo Tover; film director, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Jan41; LP10190.

VICTORY BOUND. SEE Variety Views, no. 143.

VICTORY IN THE AIR. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Narrator, Lowell Thomas.

Appl. author: Audio Productions, Inc.

© Curtiss-Wright Corp.; title, descr, & 4 prints, 16May42; MU12486.

VICTORY IS OUR BUSINESS. Presented by Frigidaire. 11 min., sd. First 5–1/2 min. of footage was cut from original GM film.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© General Motors, Public Relations; title, descr., & 99 prints, 18Jul42; MU12674.

VICTORY QUIZ. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 855 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q.?)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler, Julian Harmon; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Apr42; MP12626.

VICTORY THROUGH AIR POWER. Released through United Artists, c1943. Presented by Walt Disney. 6,132 ft., sd., color. A Walt Disney production.

Credits: Story adaptation, T. Hee, Erdman Penner, William Cottrell, and others; narrator, Art Baker; animation, John Lounsbery, Hugh Fraser, George Rowley, and others; music, Edward Plumb, Paul J. Smith, Oliver Wallace; film editor, Jack Dennis. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 24Jun43; MP13981.

VICTORY VEHICLES. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Goof)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jun43; LP12271.

VICTORY VITTLES. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 954 ft., sd., color, (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Sep42; LP11599.

LA VIDA EN EL REINO ANIMAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Melvin Brodshaug, Madeline Bittman, and Harvard Film Service, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Animal Life."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 15Feb47; MP1714.

A VIDA RURAL NO MÉXICO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Wallace W. Atwood, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "People of Mexico."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Feb47; MP1719.

THE VIENNESE CHARMER. SEE Four Jacks and a Jill.

VIGIL IN THE NIGHT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 96 min., sd. From the novel by A. J. Cronin.

Credits: Producer and director, George Stevens; screenplay, Fred Guiol, P. J. Wolfson, Rowland Leigh; music, Alfred Newman; editor, Henry Berman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 9Feb40; LP9480.

THE VIGILANTE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the "Vigilante" adventure feature in Action Comics magazine.

© National Comics Publications, Inc.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, George H. Plympton, Lewis Clay, Arthur Hoerl.

Cast: Ralph Byrd, George Offerman, Jr.

1. The Vigilante Rides Again. © 22May47; LP1265.

2. Mystery of the White Horses. © 29May47; LP1266.

3. Double Peril. © 5Jun47; LP1268.

4. Desperate Flight. © 12Jun47; LP1280.

5. In the Gorilla's Cage. © 19Jun47; LP1286.

6. Battling the Unknown. © 26Jun47; LP1297.

7. Midnight Rendezvous. © 3Jul47; LP1321.

8. Blasted to Eternity. © 10Jul47; LP1332.

9. The Fatal Flood. © 17Jul47; LP1346.

10. Danger Ahead. © 24Jul47; LP1365.

11. X–1 Closes In. © 31Jul47; LP1366.

12. Death Rides the Rails. © 7Aug47; LP1387.

13. The Trap that Failed. © 15Aug47; LP1405.

14. Closing In. © 22Aug47; LP1419.

15. The Secret of the Skyroom. © 29Aug47; LP1429.

VIGILANTES OF BOOMTOWN. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947, 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Fred Harman's "Red Ryder" comic strip.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Cast: Allan Lane, Bobby Blake, Martha Wentworth, Roscoe Karns.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Jan47; LP870.

VIGILANTES OF DODGE CITY. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA comic, "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, Wallace Grissell; original story, Norman S. Hall; screenplay, Norman S. Hall, Anthony Coldewey; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Oct44; LP13000.

THE VIGILANTES RETURN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 67 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Roy Chanslor; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Paul Landres.

Cast: Jon Hall, Margaret Lindsay, Paula Drew, Andy Devine.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Aug47; LP1169.

THE VIGILANTES RIDE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Ed Earl Repp; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Dec43; LP12477.

VILLAGE BARN DANCE. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Jan40; LP9433.

THE VILLAGE FIRE BRIGADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Jun46; MP709.

A VILLAGE IN INDIA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (Fascinating Journeys)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director, John Hanau; narrator, Frank Gallop; photographer, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Jan41; MP10812.

VILLAGE OF THE PAST. SEE Variety Views, no. 142.

THE VILLAGE SMITHY. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 25Sep41; LP10944.

VILLAGE STOREKEEPER. Frank Donovan Associates, c1946. 2 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Frank R. Donovan.

© Frank Donovan Associates; 23Dec46; MP1549.

THE VILLAIN STILL PURSUED HER. Franklin-Blank Productions, Inc., c1940. 67 min., sd. An RKO Radio picture.

Credits: Producer, Harold B. Franklin; director, Edward Cline; screenplay, Elbert Franklin; music director, Frank Tours; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Franklin-Blank Productions, Inc.; 4Oct40; LP10044.

VINE STREET BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Mar43; MP13420.

VINE, WOMEN AND SONG. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 2,048 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, B. K. Blake; story and screenplay, Ralph Morris, Harold Greene; music director, Jack Shaindlin; photographer, Jack Etra; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Sep45; LP13541.

VIOLENCE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producers, Bernhard, Brandt; director, Jack Bernhard; original story and screenplay, Stanley Rubin, Louis Lantz.

Cast: Nancy Coleman, Michael O'Shea, Emory Parnell.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Apr47; LP940.

VIRGINIA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 12 reels, sd., color. Based on a story by Edward H. Griffith and Virginia Van Upp.

Credits: Producer and director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Virginia Van Upp; music score, Victor Young; editor, Eda Warren. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Feb41; LP10269.

VIRGINIA CITY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 12 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; original screenplay, Robert Buckner; music, Max Steiner.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Mar40; LP9495.

VIRGINIA, GEORGIA, AND CAROLINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Feb42; MP12228.

THE VIRGINIAN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 90 min., sd., color. Based on the novel by Owen Wister and the play by Kirk La Shelle and Owen Wister.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Stuart Gilmore; screenplay, Frances Goodrich, Albert Hackett, Edward E. Paramore, Jr.; adaptation, Howard Estabrook; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; editor, Everett Douglass. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Jan46; LP316.

A VISIT TO IRELAND. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows country and city life in Ireland, including scenes from the life of a typical family in Dublin.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Seamus O'Duilearga.

© David A. Smart; 28Sep48; MP3704.

A VISIT WITH COWBOYS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A city boy visits an Arizona cattle ranch and learns about modern ranching methods. For primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, J. Frank Dobie.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 5Oct49; MP4630.

A VISIT WITH MR. J. C. PENNY; the man with a thousand partners. Presented by J. C. Penny Co., Inc. 3 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© J. C. Penny Co., Inc.; title & descr., 9Sep43; 35 prints, 8Sep43; MU13912.

VISITING ST. LOUIS. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 787 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, Virgil Miller. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Jan44; MP14935.

VISITING VERA CRUZ. c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 874 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Mar46; MP287.

VISITING VIRGINIA. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; director, James H. Smith; music score, Nat Finston.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Oct47; MP2450.

VITAMIN "A" IN HUMAN NUTRITION. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., for Mead Johnson and Co., c1948. 37 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Dr. E. V. McCollum lectures on Vitamin A, emphasizing the importance of this vitamin in infant feeding.

© Mead Johnson & Co.; 15Jun48; MP3217.

VITAMIN B_{1}. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1940, 1015 ft. (Food Series)

Appl. authors: Kenneth R. Edwards and Marjorie F. Ellis.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 18Sep40; MP10710.

VITAMIN D. Eastman Kodak Co., c1941. 972 ft. (Food Series)

Appl. authors: Marjorie F. Ellis and Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; 11Sep41; MP11994.

THE VITAMIN G-MAN. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 592 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 23)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; directors, Paul Sommer, John Hubley; story, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Jim Armstrong; music, Ed Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 5Feb43; LP11975.

VITAMIN HAY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, color.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Aug41; MP11482.

VITAMIN "U" FOR ME. Featurettes, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Music and lyrics, Harold Raymond, Louis Herscher, Anne Avila.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12158.

VIVA CISCO KID. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,315 ft., sd. Suggested by the character created by William Sydney Porter (O. Henry).

Credits: Director, Norman Foster; screenplay, Samuel G. Engel, Hal Long; music director, Samuel Kaylin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Apr40; LP9842.

VIVA MEXICO. c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 788 ft., sd., color. (A Miniature)

Credits: Director, Louis Lewyn; narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographer, Wilfrid M. Cline.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Nov41; MP11886.

LA VIVIENDA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc., in collaboration with Wallace W. Atwood, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Shelter."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc; 27Jan47; MP1891.

THE VOICE IN THE NIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd. From the story "Freedom Radio" Wolfgang Wilhelm and George Campbell.

Credits: Director, Anthony Asquith; story, Louis Golding, Gordon Wellesley; screenplay, Jeffery Dell, Basil Woon, A. DeGrunwald; scenario, Roland Pertwee, Bridget Boland; music, Nicholas Brodszky; photography, Bernard Knowles; editor, Reginald Beck.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20May41; LP10645.

VOICE IN THE WIND. Released through United Artists, c1943. Presented by Arthur Ripley and Rudolph Monter. 86 min., sd.

Credits: Producers, Rudolph Monter, Arthur Ripley; direction and original story, Arthur Ripley; screenplay, Frederick Torberg; music score, Michel Michelet; music director, Yascha Paii; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Arthur Ripley-Rudolph Monter Productions; 14Dec43; LP12511.

A VOICE IS BORN: THE STORY OF NIKLOS GAFNI. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: While studying medicine in Hungary in 1943, Niklos Gafni is taken prisoner by the Nazis. He secretly studies voice and upon liberation achieves success as a singer in New York City.

Credits: Directed and written by George Blake; narrator, Victor Jory.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jan48; LP1416.

VOICE OF THE DEEP. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. 1,375 feet, color, 16mm.

Summary: An underwater microphone, developed by the Navy during the war for purposes of coastal defense, reveals that fish are capable of producing a variety of sounds ranging all the way from cluckings to shrill whistles. Closing scenes emphasize the reality of the world of the spirit, which is no less real than the hidden "voice of the deep."

Credits: Producer, Irwin A. Moon.

© The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago; title & descr., 2Aug48; 6 prints, 28Jun48; MU3218.

THE VOICE OF THE TURTLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 103 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play of the same title by John van Druten.

Summary: A romantic comedy about a young actress and a soldier who enjoys a week-end pass in New York.

Credits: Producer, Charles Hoffman; director, Irving Rapper; screenplay, John van Druten; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

Cast: Ronald Reagan, Eleanor Parker, Eve Arden, Wayne Morris, Kent Smith.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Oct47; LP1477.

VOICE OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System program entitled "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Castle; story, Allan Rader; screenplay, Wilfrid H. Pettitt, William Castle; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Oct45; LP13672.

VOICE OF VICTORY. Presented by The Hallicrafters Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Hallicrafters Co.; title & descr., 28Apr44; 28 prints, 29Apr44; MU14619.

THE VOICE THAT THRILLED THE WORLD. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Nov43; MP14106.

A VOLCANO IS BORN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. de Francesco; photography, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Dec43; MP14787.

THE VOLGA BOATMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jul41; MP11423.

VOLGA BOATMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Nov43; MP14167.

VOLLEY BALL FOR BOYS. c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. authors: Lloyd Miller, Frank Overton.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 26Jun41; MP1528.

VOLLEY-OOP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; narrator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Jun47; MP2216.

THE VOLUNTEER WORKER. c1940. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Walt Disney.

© Walt Disney Productions; 26Aug40; LP9882.

VOODOO MAN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, William Beaudine; original story and screenplay, Robert Charles; photography, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Jan44; LP12466.

VOYAGE TO RECOVERY. Roland Reed Productions for the Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy Training Film Branch. Color.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 7 prints, 16Jul45; MU16144.

VRONSKY AND BABIN. Artists' Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

© Artists' Films, Inc.; no. 1, 4Nov40; MP12438; no. 2, 12Aug41; MP12441.

VULCÕES EM ACÃO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Carey Croneis.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Jun46; MP721.

W

WABASH BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Jun46; MP650.

WABASH CANNON BALL. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R. C. M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec46; MP1408.

WABBIT TWOUBLE. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies, no. 413) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Sid Sutherland; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec41; MP12015.

WACKY BLACKOUT. c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Sid Sutherland; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 11Jul42; MP12658.

WACKY BYE BABY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune).

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgrift; animation, Les Kline, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 16Jul48; MP3267.

WACKY QUACKY. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Cal Howard.

© Screen Gems, Inc., 20Mar47; LP964.

THE WACKY WEED. c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Laverne Harding, Grim Natwick; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 26Sep46; MP1125.

WACKY WIGWAMS. c1942. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 734 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 82)

Credits: Director, Alec Geiss; animation, Volus Jones; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 22Feb42; LP11084.

WACKY WILD LIFE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Story, Dave Monahan; animation, Virgil Ross.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Nov40; MP10598.

THE WACKY WORM. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Jun41; MP11252.

WADERS OF THE DEEP. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 6 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 6)

Summary: Shows various water sports at Waikiki Beach, at Wakulla Springs, Fla., and at Silver Springs, Fla.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; narrator, Andre Baruch; editor, Harold Oteri.

© RKO Pathe. Inc.; 11Feb49; MP4067.

WAGON HEELS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc. c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert Clampett; story, Warren Foster; animation, Emanuel Gould; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Oct45; MP16382.

WAGON TRACKS WEST. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, William Lively; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Jul43; LP12163.

WAGON TRAIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Edward Killy; story, Bernard McConville; screenplay, Morton Grant; music score, Paul Sawtell; editors, Frederic Knudtson, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Oct40; LP10053.

WAGON WHEELS WEST. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original story, William Jacobs; screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov43; LP12360.

WAGON WHEELS WESTWARD. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA Comic, "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer; Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original story, Gerald Geraghty; screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Cor.; 11Dec45; LP44.

THE WAGONS ROLL AT NIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 9 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Suggested by a story by Francis Wallace.

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Fred Niblo, Jr., Barry Trivers.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Apr41; LP10429.

WAGONS WESTWARD. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Joseph Moncure March, Harrison Jacobs; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jun40; LP9739.

WAGS TO RICHES. Loew's Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM Cartoon.

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Jack Cosgriff, Rich Hogan; animation, Michael Lah, Grant Simmons, Walter Clinton, Bob Cannon; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2457.

WAIKIKI MELODY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Irving A. Applebaum.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jul45; LP13487.

WAIT 'TILL THE SUN SHINES, NELLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11869.

WAIT 'TILL THE SUN SHINES, NELLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Apr43; MP13506.

WAITIN' FOR THE TRAIN TO COME IN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16586.

WAITING. Presented by Frigidaire Division of General Motors Corp. 4 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 25Apr46; MU498.

WAITING FOR BABY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Roush; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10210.

WAITING FOR THE ROBERT E. LEE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Oct41; MP11710.

WAKE ISLAND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels sd.

Credits: Director, John Farrow; original story, U. S. Marine Corps; screenplay, W. R. Burnett, Frank Butler; photographer, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, LeRoy Stone.

© Paramount Pictures Inc,; 25Sep42; LP11606.

WAKE OF THE RED WITCH. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Garland Roark.

Summary: A sea adventure in which a ship's captain and a prosperous trader are rivals in the pursuit of gold, pearls, and women. Setting, the Dutch East Indies in the 1860's.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmund Grainger; director, Edward Ludwig; screenplay, Harry Brown, Kenneth Gamet; music, Nathan Scott; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: John Wayne, Gail Russell, Gig Young, Adele Mara, Luther Adler.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Feb49; LP2138.

WAKE UP AND DREAM. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 92 min., sd., color, 35mm. From the novel "The Enchanted Voyage" by Robert Nathan.

Credits: Director, Lloyd Bacon; screenplay, Elick Moll; music director, Emil Newman.

Cast: June Haver, John Payne, Charlotte Greenwood, Connie Marshall, John Ireland.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Nov46; LP825.

WALDO'S LAST STAND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Oct40; LP10010.

WALK A CROOKED MILE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An Edward Small production. Based on a story by Bertram Millhauser.

Summary: With semi-documentary technique, this melodrama shows how agents of the F. B. I. and Scotland Yard track down and apprehend Russian spies. Actual scenes of San Francisco, Los Angeles, and the Lakeview Nuclear Research Laboratory.

Credits: Producer, Grant Whytock; director, Gordon Douglas; screenplay, George Bruce; narration, Reed Hadley; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, James E. Newcom.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Dennis O'Keefe, Louise Allbritton, Carl Esmond, Onslow Stevens.

© Columbia Pictures Corp; 15Sep48; LP1934.

WALKIN' BY THE RIVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Sep41; MP11545.

THE WALKING HILLS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949, 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western about a search for gold hidden in a wagon train buried in the sand dunes. Filmed in Death Valley National Park.

Credits: Producer, Harry Joe Brown; director, John Sturges; story and screenplay, Alan LeMay; music score, Arthur Morton, music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

Cast: Randolph Scott, Ella Raines, William Bishop, Edgar Buchanan, Arthur Kennedy.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Feb49; LP2149.

THE WALKING MACHINE. American Foot Care Institute, Inc., c1949. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents the essentials of foot care—foot hygiene, the selection of footwear, treatment by podiatrists.

Credits: Script, P. J. McLarney; narrator, Albert Grobe; editor, Rosemarie Hickson.

© American Foot Care Institute, Inc.; 25May49; MP4327.

WALKING ON AIR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jun41; MP11273.

WALKING WITH MY HONEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16180.

WALKY TALKY HAWKY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster, Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Aug46; MP1056.

WALL STREET BLUES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 17 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; story, Les Goodwins, George Jeske; screenplay, Russ Green, George Bilson; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Jul46; LP703.

THE WALLFLOWER. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 556 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 9)

Credits: Story, Ben Harrison; animation, Manny Gould; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 24May41; LP10479.

WALLFLOWER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Reginald Denham and Mary Orr.

Summary: A comedy, in which two stepsisters of college age become rivals for the affections of the same young man.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Frederick de Cordova; screenplay, Phoebe Ephron, Henry Ephron; music, Edward Hollander; film editor, Folmar Blangsted.

Cast: Joyce Reynolds, Robert Hutton, Janis Paige, Edward Arnold, Barbara Brown.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc,; 12Jun48; LP1659.

THE WALLS CAME TUMBLING DOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 9 reels, sd., Based upon the novel by Jo Eisinger.

Credits; Producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Lothar Mendes; screenplay, Wilfrid H. Pettitt; music score. Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Jun46; LP509.

THE WALLS KEEP TALKING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr42; MP12422.

THE WALLS OF JERICHO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Paul Wellman.

Summary: A study of life in a small-town, featuring a man's struggle for political success while racked by unhappy personal conflicts. Setting, Kansas, in 1908.

Credits: Producer, Lamar Trotti; director, John M. Stahl; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, Cyril Mockridge, music director, Lionel Newman; orchestra arrangements, Herbert Spencer, Maurice de Packh; film editor, James B. Clark.

Cast: Cornel Wilde, Linda Darnell, Anne Baxter, Kirk Douglas, Ann Dvorak.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Aug48; LP2031.

THE WALTZ. Folke Robert Espling, c1942. 1 reel.

© Folke Robert Espling; 10Feb42; MP12163.

WALTZ A LA ACCORDION. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1396.

WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 67 min., sd. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; directors, Edward Killy, Wallace Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, J. R. Whittredge.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13668.

WANDERERS OF THE DESERT. World Window, Inc., London, c1938. Distributed by United Artists. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 5)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director and film editor, Hans Nieter; commentator, Niel Arden; music, Ludwig Brav; photography, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© World Window, Inc.; 1Nov38; MP10034.

WANDERERS OF THE WEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Tansey; director, Robert F. Hill; original story, Robert Emmett; photography, Jack Young; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Jun41; LP10707.

WANDERING HERE AND THERE. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 795 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Dec44; MP486.

WANDERING THROUGH WALES. Loew's Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: A photographic study of the Welsh countryside, including historic shrines and quaint villages in mountain and pastoral settings.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston.

© Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; 13Oct48; MP3418.

WANTED FOR MURDER. c1946. Presented by Excelsior Film Productions, Ltd. 10 reels, sd., 35mm. From the stage play by Percy Robinson and Terence de Marney.

Credits: Producer, Marcel Hellman; director, Lawrence Huntington; screenplay, Emeric Pressburger, Rodney Ackland; scenario, Percy Robinson, Terence de Marney; music, Mischa Spoliansky; cameraman, R. Franckie; editor, E. B. Jarvis.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Nov46; LP727.

THE WAR AGAINST MRS. HADLEY. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Irving Asher; director, Harold S. Bucquet; original screenplay, George Oppenheimer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Aug42; LP11536.

WAR CAME TO AMERICA. Army Pictorial Service, c1948. Released by American Film Services, Inc. 58 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A documentary film which shows the early history of the United States, American life of the 1920's and 1930's, and the important national and international events which led to United States' participation in World War II.

Credits: Narrator, Walter Huston; editor, Frank Capra.

© American Film Services, Inc.; 11Oct48; MP3532.

WAR CLOUDS IN THE PACIFIC. Loew's Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Dec41; MP12839.

WAR DANCE FOR WOODEN INDIANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Aug41; MP11458.

WAR DOGS. Loew's Inc., c1943. 627 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Jack Zander; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Sep43; MP14244.

WAR DOGS. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Ande Lamb.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; screenplay, John Vlahos; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 9Oct42; LP11655.

WAR FOR MEN'S MINDS. c1943. Presented by United Artists. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 25Aug43; MP13974.

WAR IN THE DESERT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Herman Blumenfeld; narrator, Quentin Reynolds.

© Twentieth Century Fox-Film Corp.; 18Jul41; MP11489.

WAR OF THE WILDCATS. SEE In Old Oklahoma.

WAR ON THE SEAS. Time, Inc., c1943. 1 reel. U. S. Navy.

© Time, Inc.; 2Nov43; MP14260.

WAR SURGERY UP FRONT. William Carmel Roberts. 15 min., si., color, 16mm.

Summary: Actual photographs of surgery and medical treatments at the 74th Field Hospital, which was constructed on Okinawa Shima during the campaign in 1945.

© William Carmel Roberts; title, descr., & 8 prints, 18Aug48; MU3236.

WAR TASK; assignment for the Weirton Steel Co. Presented by Weirton Steel Co.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 10 prints, 3Dec45; MU16570.

THE WARM FRONT. Walt Disney Productions. sd., color.

© Walt Disney Productions, title, descr. 2 prints, 22Aug44; MU15127.

WARNER PATHE NEWS. Warner News, Inc., c1948–49. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Warner News, Inc.

Volume 20, 1948–49.

16. Oct. 14, 1948. World series; first and second games. 23 rescued in Bahamas air crash. Air lift pilots aid Berlin kids. People in the news: President Truman, John Foster Dulles, Sir Stafford Cripps. United Nations news [highlights of Paris meeting]. Great American: John Adams, Oct. 19, 1735.

© 14Oct48; MP3520.

17. Oct. 18, 1948. Cleveland wins series; Fifth and sixth games. Football: Southern California-Rice; Northwestern-Minnesota. Churchill, "Don't give up atom bomb." People in the news: Candidate Truman, Candidate Dewey, Secretary Marshall.

© 18Oct48; MP3521.

18. Oct, 21, 1948. The Dewey story [a special feature on the coming election]. Columbia University installs Eisenhower. '49ers crush Colts in pro thriller.

© 21Oct48; MP3522.

19. Oct. 25, 1948. The Truman story, 2d of two special features of the coming election. General Clay visits Ruhr. Michigan swamps Northwestern.

© 25Oct48; MP3537.

20. Oct. 28, 1948. People in the news: General Clay, Thomas E. Dewey, Secretary Marshall, General MacArthur and Korean President Rhee. American Legion captures Miami. French country fashions. Sports: California whips Oregon State; Gallic grunts and groans [Pierre and Gaston wrestle in Paris]. Great American: Theodore Roosevelt, Oct. 27, 1858.

© 28Oct48; MP3523.

21. Nov. 1, 1948. Troops subdue rioting [French] miners. First D. P.'s sail for U. S. People in the News: President Truman, S. Perry Brown, Catherine Rickert. Dude ranch fashions. Aerial acrobat stunts over Italy. Football: Army-Cornell; Michigan-Minnesota.

© 1Nov48; MP3524.

22. Nov. 4, 1948. Troops, miners in pitched battle [in France]. Operation Combine. People in the news: Mrs. Roosevelt, Denmark's King and Queen, England's King and Queen, Paul Hoffman. The Navy's new look. Assembly line grocery store. Sports: Eagles vs. Bears; Roller Derby. Great American: Daniel Boone, Nov. 2, 1734.

© 4Nov48; MP3525.

23. Nov. 8, 1948. Mystery fog kills twenty. First D. P.'s reach America. Exclusive report from German Ruhr. Football: California-U.S.C.; Northwestern-Ohio State. Morgenthau in Palestine. New Harvest by helicopter. Life on rope half mile up. Charm school turns out PHD's.

© 8Nov48; MP3526.

24. Nov. 11, 1948. Truman wins! Warner Pathe news records the most stunning political upset in U. S. history as the Democrats win Senate, House, and White House.

© 11Nov48; MP3538.

25. Nov. 15, 1948. Colorado fashions [skiing and swimming styles shown at Colorado Springs]. Washington hails Truman and Barkley. First inductees find it's a "new" Army. Air lift delivers new "secret weapon" [a Shmoo, a toy animal entitling each child to ten pounds of lard]. Sports: Penn State vs. Penn; Army vs. Stanford; National Horse Show [at Madison Square Garden].

© 15Nov48; MP3539.

26. Nov. 18, 1948. West opens new airlift base [in French sector of Berlin]. People in the news: Danny Kaye in wax at Mme. Tussaudes' in London; Dr. Paul Muller, Swiss chemist, wins Nobel prize for medicine; Mrs. Roosevelt receives degree at the University of Lyon. The [new] General Patton tank [at Aberdeen]. Giant magnet is most attractive [used in Columbia University's new cyclotron]. Maulers vs. Terrors [in biggest battle of the small fry season]. Ski season starts [at Mount Rainier National Park]. Miami goes to the dogs [dog racing season].

© 18Nov48; MP3610.

27. Nov. 22, 1948. A prince is born [at Buckingham Palace]. Tojo sentenced for war crimes. Reds in Berlin mark Soviet anniversary. President Truman and Vice President-Elect Barkley confer in Key West. The Red Dean of Canterbury arrives in New York. Field Marshall Montgomery meets with the West's Military Governors. Football: Notre Dame vs. Northwestern; SMU vs. Arkansas. Italian smoke-eaters drill [firemen in Rome]. Florida "peaches" and grapefruit.

© 22Nov48; MP3611.

28. Nov. 25, 1948. The Truman family [relaxes in Florida]. Louis St. Laurent becomes Canada's Prime Minister. Defense Secretary [pays a whirlwind visit to Berlin]. Browns beat Forty-Niners. Disaster rides miniature rails [train built by amateur movie makers]. Paris fashions [glove styles]. Variety Club cheers polio victims. Thanksgiving—underwater [in Florida].

© 25Nov48; MP3612.

29. Nov. 29, 1948. People in the news: [The Trumans return to Washington; Truman Welcomes Secretary Marshall home from Europe; Mrs. Kasenkina leaves hospital; Salvador Dali studies Rome's ruins]. Aviation news [Navy's ZF7U–1 "Flying Wing"; the giant Constitution]. Berlin GI's take lessons in Russian. Small fry fashions from France. Baby bedlam in Florida [with four-month-old chimp]. Football: [Michigan-Ohio State; North Carolina-Duke].

© 29Nov48; MP3876.

30. Dec. 2, 1948. UN news: [East and West clash in Paris over outlawing of atom bomb]. Red fliers [who fled Russia are interviewed in Austria]. Levi Jackson [first Negro captain of the Yale football team]. Santa Claus [stops off in Canada]. The latest in cameras: the smallest camera; the fastest camera. The "Wee-Bee" [the world's smallest piloted plane, makes test run in California]. Tropical ice harvest [salt harvested in Puerto Rico]. Pitt upsets Penn State.

© 2Dec48; MP3661.

31. Dec. 6, 1948. Army-Navy game of the year. [President Truman among spectators at Philadelphia as Navy ties score]. Cornell upsets Penn. Tulane swamps LSU. Nation-wide news: Santa Claus arrives; Variety Clubs honor Boys' Town Founder [unveil a statue of Father Flanagan].

© 6Dec48; MP3650.

32. Dec. 9, 1948. Battle for Suchow [Nationalists abandon city]. Key elections split Berlin. Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek arrives in U. S. to seek aid for China. Former Queen Wilhelmina plants trees. President Truman and Secretary Marshall meet with America's European recovery experts in Washington. The "Kitty Hawk" comes home [to Smithsonian Institute]. The two-way [brake] propeller. Browns beat '49ers. Water skiing at Cypress Gardens, Fla.

© 9Dec48; MP3651.

33. Dec. 13, 1948. The Collier's All-America [football team selected by top college coaches. Washington press corps honors capitol's outstanding fathers and daughters, including Harry Truman and daughter Margaret. WAC director Colonel Mary Hallaren becomes first woman officer sworn into the regular Army. Whittaker Chambers reveals microfilms said to be top-secret State Department documents. The people of France thank America for the Friendship Train.] London's worst fog. Livestock championship [49th International Livestock Exposition at Chicago].

© 13Dec48; MP3652.

34. Dec. 16, 1948. Reds routed in Berlin elections. Americans flee Red tide in China. [U. S. marines sail into Tsingtao. President Truman welcomes Cuba's President Prio. Barkley and Warren meet in Los Angeles. Doak Walker is named year's outstanding football player.] Unusual automobiles [the Phibian and two-in-one car from Italy]. T-men nab passer of "near perfect" bills [in Baltimore]. Wild geese. Great American: Clara Barton.

© 16Dec48; MP3653.

35. Dec. 20, 1948. Christmas, 1948. The Boys' Choir of New York's St. Thomas Church sings "Silent Night." In Europe, Japan, Canada, and Mexico cameramen record Christmas spirit of Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men. Citation still winning in California [Tanforan Handicap]. Bills vs. Colts [for AAC's eastern championship].

© 20Dec48; MP3654.

36. Dec. 23, 1948. Florida fashions. 2,900 Chinese die in sea tragedy. UN ends Paris session. Americas investigate Costa Rica invasion. [Cardinal Spellman gives party for] kids at Christmas. Endurance flyers. Great events: Washington crosses the Delaware, Dec. 25, 1776.

© 23Dec48; MP3736.

37. Dec. 27, 1948. First pictures of royal baby [Prince Charles of Edinburgh]. 33 saved in Pacific rescue. People in the news: [Alger Hiss indicted for perjury; General De Gaulle outlines program; Barbara Ann Scott makes professional debut in New York]. Year's biggest snow blankets East coast. America remembers Kitty Hawk flight. Football: Browns-Bills; Eagles-Cards.

© 27Dec48; MP3816.

38. Dec. 30, 1948. Airlift Christmas [Christmas gifts for Berlin children]. People in the news: [President Truman promotes Colonel Landry; General Bradley honored by chief of Italy's General Staff; Italy's President Einaudi pays official visit to Vatican; Madame Schiaparelli shows hat creations]. Teen-age fashions. [Miniature] clockwork community [displayed in San Francisco]. Marines vs. soldiers [interservice football].

© 30Dec48; MP3817.

39. Jan. 3, 1949. Race to rescue airmen on icecap. Berlin keeps warm [during blockade]. Shanghai gold rush. Truman at home. Paris ski fashions. [Michelangelo's] "David" comes to U. S. Aussies a-weigh [weight-lifting championship].

© 3Jan49; MP3818.

40. Jan. 6, 1949. News of 1948 in review.

© 6Jan49; MP3861.

41. Jan. 10, 1949. Bowl games: Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Cotton Bowl. 81st Congress opens. Rescued airmen arrive in New York. "Airlift follies" for Berlin GI's. Puerto Rico installs 1st elected governor.

© 10Jan49; MP3862.

42. Jan. 13, 1949. President reports to 81st Congress. Tornado levels Arkansas town. Royalty [Edward VIII of England and Leopold III of Belgium] on the Riviera. Germans ask for world citizenship. Ships in the news: [Queen Mary repaired in England; German liner, New York, raised at Kiel]. Boxing: Golden Gloves. Great American: Alexander Hamilton.

© 13Jan49; MP3863.

43. Jan. 17, 1949. Marshall resigns; Acheson named Secretary of State. Miami air show. Strange news from abroad [hobble skirts in Paris; London plumber atop a Piccadilly statue]. People in the news: [Egypt pays tribute to assassinated Premier Nokrashy Pasha; Yoshihisa Kuzu freed as General MacArthur grants amnesty to 19; barbecue follows inauguration of Florida's governor, Fuller Warren]. Photographers pick a queen [Jeanne Crow].

© 17Jan49; MP3864.

44. Jan. 20, 1949. Senate hears Dean Acheson. Caronia ends maiden voyage. Snow blankets California. France sends U. S. "Gratitude Train". Moppet melodrama [refugee children in Germany see first puppet show]. Sports [25th Silver Skates races in New York; basketball team of St. Louis University vs. Long Island University]. Great American: John Hancock.

© 20Jan49; MP3865.

45. Jan. 24, 1949. Air news [Air Force's XF–11 climbs at three miles a minute; Navy's Ram-jet Robot sets record; Bill Odom sets new mark]. Reds go on trial [Federal Court in New York]. [Planes] rescue starving cattle. Paris hats for 1949. "Miss March of Dimes". Bitsy bow-bows [Mexican chihuahua show in Miami]. Norge ski meet.

© 24Jan49; MP3866.

46. Jan. 27, 1949. The inauguration of President Truman. Includes pre-inauguration festivities, scenes from the inauguration of Wilson, Coolidge, Hoover, and Franklin Roosevelt, the inaugural parade, and the President's address.

© 27Jan49; MP4104.

47. Jan. 31, 1949. People in the news: Dean Acheson sworn in as Secretary of State; French Foreign Minister Schumann honored at London reception; Paris hails Winston Churchill; Mildred Gillars [Axis Sally] starts trial for treason. The [Italian] car that flies. New York critics make film awards. Diamond fashions. Ice sports: [International Championships for iceboats at Fox Lake, Ill; Sonja Henie in ice revue in New York].

© 31Jan49; MP4023.

48. Feb. 3, 1949. Overseas news: in Berlin, West installs anti-Red government and coal is located under the city; in Monte Carlo, Monacan army has ceremonial review; in Marseilles, construction begins on skyscraper on stilts. Koala bear sanctuary [Australia]. United States-Canada pulp project opens. Bathing suits of metal. Sports: baseball [Rip Sewell's Florida baseball school; Lou Boudreau signs two-year contract]; water ski jumpers [Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Great American: Thomas Alva Edison.

© 3Feb49; MP4024.

49. Feb, 7, 1949. Report from Israel. Clipper survives mid-air crash. Three-mile parade spurs March of Dimes [Los Angeles]. Parliament opens in Canada. Sports: [Millrose Games; Down Hill Ski Championships in the French Alps; Santa Anita Maturity].

© 7Feb49; MP4025.

50. Feb. 10, 1949. New York hails "Gratitude Train." Fashions in color. A U. S. soldier is buried at home [in Japan]. 19 nations map unity in Asia. Sports: [Marcel Choisnet sets gliding record in French Alps; trotting races; skiers at Mount Blanc, France, compete for European ski jumping crown]. Great Americans quiz: Benjamin Franklin.

© 10Feb49; MP4026.

51. Feb. 14, 1949. "Gratitude Train" starts historic U. S. journey. People in the news: Norway's Foreign Minister Lange arrives in America; two escaped Russian fliers arrive in Washington; General MacArthur welcomes Secretary Royall in Tokyo; National Conference of Christians and Jews honors Irene Dunne and Ned Depinet. Last days of Nanking. Biggest airliner [92–ton Constitution] hops continent. Sports: rodeo championship [Palm Springs, Calif.]

© 14Feb49; MP4027.

52. Feb. 17, 1949. Nation protests Mindszenty sentence. People in the news: General Eisenhower, on leave of absence from Columbia University, is welcomed in Washington; Mrs. Truman sees new portraits of husband and daughter; General Marshall returns to Washington; Chinese nationalist government transfers Japanese prisoners of war; Governor Dewey gives his version of Republican defeat. Paris gloves. A special feature [an incident in life of George Washington, in observance of National Brotherhood Week]. Sports: ski jumping [Leavenworth, Wash., and Duluth, Minn.]

© 17Feb49; MP4028.

53. Feb. 21, 1949. Washington welcomes Canadian Premier [Louis St. Laurent]. Hitler's chancellory blown up by Russians. Kids' pet show [Madison Square Garden]. Flying Wing sets record. School days in the pyramids [Step Pyramid is classroom for Cairo University students]. Sports: [in New York, Holland's Slykhuis captures Baxter Mile; American Bowling Congress opens in Atlantic City; St. Paul's Winter Carnival]. A special feature [in cooperation with the American Heart Association].

© 21Feb49; MP4029.

54. Feb. 24, 1949. Greatest air show [at Andrews Field, Md., to show Congress where Air Force money goes]. New tire: no tube, no blowout. People in the news: Holland's Prince Bernhard and daughters vacation in Swiss Alps; Berlin's Mayor Reuter goes to Paris; General De Gaulle's RPF Party holds convention [in Lille]. Gratitude Train speeds west. Sports: [slow motion pictures of Fanny Blankers-Koen; Westminster Kennel Club Show in New York]. Great Americans quiz: Daniel Webster.

© 24Feb49; MP4030.

55. Feb. 28, 1949. Israel's new government meets for first time. Overseas news: [London charwomen request raise; in Berlin, Western Allies tighten their counter-blockade against Russians; workmen get the city of Viareggio, Italy, ready for carnival]. Navy blasts giant hangar [Houma, La.]. Pets in the news: [pet sparrow in Los Angeles; flea actors in Paris; uncooked rooster, chef's specialty in Tours, Paris. Sports: surf board riders off Mokopuu Point in Hawaii; motorcycle on skis at Liberty, N. Y.; winter games in Czechoslovakia].

© 28Feb49; MP431.

56. Mar. 3, 1949. Israeli president inaugurated. Reds deport Anna Strong as spy. Fritz Kuhn freed by German court. Chicago photogs pick a queen. West Coast hails Gratitude Train. Pope denounces Mindszenty trial. Santa Anita derby. World's bobsled titles. Ski jumping championships.

© 3Mar49; MP4094.

57. Mar. 7, 1949. Berlin: giant parade marks Red Army Day. Labor Party wins key British election. Mauna Loa volcano on the rampage. POW's freed in Holy Land truce. Air news: Caroline Mars sets passenger mark, 222 mph; the Navy Mauler, a flying arsenal. Nassau: cliff diving in the Bahamas. Fort Myer, Va.: Army's world boxing championships. Iron Mountain, Mich.: five record leaps in one ski meet. Santa Anita handicap. San Francisco: "Merci train" arrives.

© 7Mar49; MP4095.

58. Mar. 10, 1949. B–50 flies around the world, non-stop. Reds fail to stop Churchill speech. Army convicts 5 in Germany spy ring. DP's cross U. S. on long voyage home. Mardi Gras merriment reigns supreme. French beach styles have a new twist. Bavaria: western zone ski championships. Do you remember?—Styles of 1927.

© 10Mar49; MP4096.

59. Mar. 14, 1949. UN Security Council votes on Israel. Blockaded Reds quit U. S. zone. Netherlands: dramatic pictures of rescue at sea. New York: FBI arrests Red spy suspects. Washington: Johnson takes over from Secretary Forrestal. Tokyo: another Red flyer deserts to U. S. zone. Winnipeg, Man.: Canadian university honors Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt. New York: press fetes Marshall and Acheson, Washington: 75–passenger stratocruiser christened. Boston Braves hit spring training trail. World champion Indians open '49 season. West's best slug it out in Golden Gloves.

© 14Mar49; MP4097.

60. Mar. 17, 1949. Views of the airlift to Berlin. Axis Sally found guilty of treason. Train robbers captured in gun battle. Bill Odom sets flivver plane record. Rollins College honors President Truman. Ice breaks, floods threaten midwest. Brazilian bark visits Golden Gate. Russia returns lend-lease cruiser. U.S.S. Tarawa heads for moth balls. Joe Louis gets himself a new job. Whitefish, Mont.: the downhill skiing championships. Great American quiz: Daniel Boone.

© 17Mar49; MP4098.

61. Mar. 21, 1949. U. S. parades armed might in Germany. Truman and Vinson relax in the [Florida] sun. Egypt restores fabulous Karnak temple. New Jap police force marches on review. Brownsville, Tex.: two nations hail film premiere. Parisian lives as though today were 1800. Paris spring fashions. New York: kids battle for boxing crowns. Australia: dramatic wild horse roundup. Daytona Beach, Fla.: national motorcycle championship race. Pittsburgh Pirates start training.

© 21Mar49; MP4099.

62. Mar. 24, 1949. $1,000,000 Oakland pier fire. Eight Atlantic Pact nations meet. S.S. Haifa enters Israel-U. 5. service. Cruiser leased to Russia rejoins Navy. "Orphan airlift" flies 67 to new homes. British workers start U. S. study tour. Navy vet builds push-button paradise. American judo girl rolls her own. "Hobby horses" star in colorful derby. Great American quiz: Stephen Decatur.

© 24Mar49; MP4100.

63. Mar. 28, 1949. Acheson praises Atlantic Pact. France mourns General Giraud. Hirohito opens Japanese Parliament. British fleet in Mediterranean war games, Truman honors press; press honors Truman. Foreign press picks best films of 1948. Seattle: motorcycle racing in the mud. New York: basketball; national invitation finals. Do you remember?—Treaty of Versailles. Nation hails $20,000,000 [Houston] Texas hotel.

© 28Mar49; MP4105.

64. Mar. 31, 1949. Churchill arrives in U. S. Shostakovitch and Reds in New York for conference. In the news: French Army Chief of Staff; Lord Mayor of Berlin; Greek King's Honor Guard. Allies ban Soviet money in Berlin. Canada trains paratroops for Arctic. Lavish evening gowns from France. Racing: French thoroughbreds in action [at Chantilly]. New York: eastern college finals in basketball.

© 31Mar49; MP4106.

65. Apr. 4, 1949. Filmdom gives Oscars for 1948's best. 66–1 shot wins Grand National. Washington: Churchill visits wartime U. S. colleagues, Argentina celebrates new constitution. Fleet Admiral Leahy, retiring, decorated. Teenaged girl heroine gets a dream house. Johnson sworn in as Defense Secretary. Seattle: intercollegiate basketball championship. New York: meet the sweepstakes winners.

© 4Apr49; MP4107.

66. Apr, 7, 1949. Europe's top diplomats here; Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin; Premier Paul-Henri Spaak; Gromyko here for UN Assembly. Annual French tidal wave arrives on time. Spring is sheer beauty to sheep ranchers. Vacation fashions in the Bahamas. Golden Gloves: East-West finals. Paris: world's toughest sport—Rugby football. Cypress Gardens, Fla.: women's champ is a water-ski wizard. Great Americans quiz: Robert E. Peary. Bing Crosby asks help for cancer drive.

© 7Apr49; MP4108.

67. Apr. 11, 1949. Atlantic Pact signed. Churchill [speaks] on Russia [at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston]. Daytona Beach, Fla.: National AAU swim championships. New York: All-star basketball; East nips West.

© 11Apr49; MP4109.

68. Apr. 14, 1949. UN General Assembly opens [Flushing Meadow, N. Y.]. In color: Hawaiian fashions. Pope celebrates 50th year as a priest. FBI catches $880,000 runaway banker. Armed Forces parade on "Army Day." The lights go on again in London. Four-alarm tenement fire in Harlem. Downhill skiing; Harriman Cup races, Boston; National AAU boxing championships.

© 14Apr49; MP4381.

69. Apr. 18, 1949. The tragedy of Kathy Fiscus. Church explodes; 6 dead, 47 hurt. Key West, Fla.: U. S. joint chiefs of staff meet. Burbank, Calif.: France honors Harry M. Warner. Britain's Bevin sails for home. Ex-Reds fete Greek King and Queen. Clay reviews U. S. might in Germany. Sydney, Australia: an Easter feature; rock-a-bye rabbit. A dog plays the pinball machines. Sam Snead wins Masters Golf crown. Annapolis: Navy kids set pace in boxing classic.

© 18Apr49; MP4110.

70. Apr. 21, 1949. Quake rocks Northwest. Truman marks fourth year as president. Israeli President arrives in U. S. Delaware Bay: ships burn after collision in fog. Norway launches new liner in Holland. Paris introduces the "hobo handbag." Rome: blindfolded boxers dance in the dark. Hemlines are up on Dior's newest look. Europe's kids say thanks for CARE.

© 21Apr49; MP4111.

71. Apr. 25, 1949. Flivver fliers smash world endurance mark. Easter 1949: sunrise service in the Hollywood Bowl; GI's and Germans attend first joint rites [in Berlin]; record crowds jam the Easter parade [in New York City]. Do you remember?—1890's Easter parade. Liberty Bend, Mo.: engineers move mighty Missouri River. Ex-Premier Reynaud arrives in U. S. Syracuse "miracle" draws big crowds. New York: Palestine mediator home to report. San Juan, P. R.: world's largest trade school opens. Pitcher Truman opens baseball season.

© 25Apr49; MP4112.

72. Apr. 28, 1949. The Irish Republic is born. Secretary Hull leaves the hospital. Yankee Stadium: plaque unveiled to immortal "Babe." Egypt's royalty opens "world's fair." New bill keeps aid flowing to Europe. Truman lauds bond drive "forty-niners." Square dance craze sweeps Japan. Berlin: 1383–flight day sets airlift record. Newhall, Calif.: flying jalopies in race thriller. Great American quiz: James Madison.

© 28Apr49; MP4113.

73. May 2, 1949. Shelled British ships reach Shanghai. The Trumans are hosts to the Weizmanns. Acheson asks for one and one-half billion dollars for arms for Europe. King George meets Dominion premiers. Shirley Temple celebrates 21st birthday. Acrobats defy death 13 floors over city. New Brunswick, N. J.: 96 men paint a house in two and one-half minutes. Gruelling Paris-Roubaix bicycle race. Los Angeles: "hell drivers" star in thrill show. Derby favorite wins Wood Memorial.

© 2May49; MP4114.

74. May 5, 1949. Atlantic Pact before Senate. Texas housewife named mother of the year. Kalavrites, Greece: Greek King and Queen visit martyred town. New York: Diplomats discuss ending Berlin blockade. Fullerton, Calif.: Endurance fliers end 6 weeks in the air. He should have stood in bed! National AAU women's swim meet. Australia: They ax for it; chopper championships.

© 5May49; MP4382.

75. May 9, 1949. Evacuation of Shanghai. Steve Early returns to public life. Frankfurt: Allied governors of Germany meet. Princess Margaret Rose goes on vacation. Winchester, Va.: Shenandoah Apple Blossom Festival. Former DP's build useful lives in U. S. National AAU gymnastic championships. Daredevils afloat; water ski maniacs. Do you remember?—New York World's Fair. Loyalty marchers outstrip Reds on May Day. Chicago to shine in "forty-nine."

© 9May49; MP4383.

76. May 12, 1949. Four powers agree to lift Berlin blockade. India's ambassador arrives. Dewey off on European tour. Academy winner Jane Wyman sails. Weizmann starts back to Israel. Kansas City, Mo.: "Opportunity bond drive" gets big start. Israel's first anniversary hailed in U. S. Jap firemen put out big Tokyo blaze. 500 yachts in Pacific "shakedown" race. Durocher, cleared, is back in uniform. Miami Beach: fancy new twists to fancy diving.

© 12May49; MP4597.

77. May 16, 1949. 16–to–1 shot [Ponder] wins Kentucky Derby thriller. Shanghai under siege. Amazing pictures of Mt. Vesuvius' crater. Princess Margaret goes sailing at Capri. The Collins quads. Variety Clubs honor Herbert Hoover. Fire razes $5,000,000 Hollywood park. Wenatchee apple blossom festival.

© 16May49; MP4598.

78. May 19, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted. Israel wins United Nations membership. Parades in Israel mark first anniversary. General Ike [Eisenhower] back on duty [in Washington] after illness. UN mediator for Palestine honored. Mahatma Gandhi's son arrives in U. S. Secretary Snyder's daughter aids bond drive. Miami: model art students go to work. Quantico, Va.: Marines in air-ground maneuvers. Great American quiz: Grover Cleveland. Memphis Cotton Carnival.

© 19May49; MP4599.

79. May 23, 1949. Holland Tunnel blast. Berlin hails the end of the blockade. Dewey in Europe on vacation. Washington: Press Club honors women of the year. Hirohito and Empress hail Jap anniversary. The Vatican's Swiss guard takes its oath. Seals find haven on remote Pacific Isle. Paris: burlap becomes latest cloth for milady. Daring gown makes Paris a "whistle stop". Capot wins Preakness in photo-finish.

© 23May49; MP4600.

80. May 26, 1949. General Clay gets hero's welcome. Washington: President of Brazil in U. S. McCloy named U. S. boss in Germany. F.D.R., Jr., elected to Congress. Clear record snows from Pacific peaks. Thousands of sheep cross Grand Coulee. Washington: Newsboys turn opportunity bond salesmen. Independence, Mo.: 'Forty-niners parade opens bond drive. Geneva: Swiss acrobat becomes steeple-chaser. Cypress Gardens, Fla.: latest in sport thrills—skim boats. International Golden Gloves boxing. Great American quiz: James Lawrence.

© 26May49; MP4601.

81. May 30, 1949. Strikers riot against Reds in Berlin. Paris: Big Four foreign ministers meet. Air Force latest is needle-nosed F–90. 308 passengers fly on one plane. Bermuda: these spring hats are really flowery. Push-button special: good night nurse. P.A.L. boxing championships. Fanny Blankers-Koen in U. S. debut.

© 30May49; MP4602.

82. June 2, 1949. Forestal buried at Arlington. Big Four ministers open Paris talks. Fort Bragg, N. C.: exercise Tarheel—assault by air. Queen Fredericka visits Greek orphans. Queen Juliana helps rebuild Rotterdam. Pretty and practical outdoor fashions. DiMaggio tests heel—it still hurts. All-Navy boxing championships. Great American quiz: Theodore Roosevelt.

© 2Jun49; MP4603.

83. June 6, 1949. Nation honors U. S. dads: mediator Bunche is father of year; greatgrandad has family of 108; seven times a father in 3–1/2 years. Los Angeles: man survives 240 degrees in "hotbox" test. Wales: helicopter crash. Crystal Lake, Ill.; first look at tomorrow's trailers. Boston, Mass.; canine campus; every dog a gentleman. Michigan State coeds sponsor push-car thriller. Oklahoma A & M, the roughest rodeo of them all.

© 6Jun49; MP4604.

84. June 9, 1949. 500–mile auto race classic at Indianapolis. Sam Snead wins PGA crown. Nagasaki: Hirohito visits A-bombed city. Alger Hiss Perjury trial opens. Rita [Hayworth] and Aly [Khan] are married. King George honors Welsh guard. General Clay retires from Army. D-day newsmen to retrace invasion. British film awards. Styles go slats-happy.

© 9Jun49; MP4605.

85. June 13, 1949. 16 nations honor Marshall. English Derby photo finish. Star-studded golf match [National Celebrities Golf Tournament at Washington]. DP's—then and now. Margaret Truman is bridesmaid. Kensington, Eng.: new honor for Winston Churchill. English lords hear Danny Kaye. Atlantic City: Miss National Press Photog. Toronto: Canada opens international trade fair.

© 13Jun49; MP4606.

86. June 16, 1949. West Point on parade. National Motorcycle Championship [Richmond, Va.] $1,000,000 fire razes Havana waterfront. Normandy: D-day plus five years. Rockford, Ill.: spills mark summer ski meet. Nagasaki: Christian rites held in Japan. Bermuda: latest honeymoon fashions. Big Bear Lake, Calif.: here's how not to fly. Great events quiz: Bunker Hill.

© 16Jun49; MP4651.

87. June 20, 1949. Truman [makes address at Little Rock, Ark., and says] "We have turned the tide." Capot wins Belmont Stakes. Middlecoff wins National Open. London: King and Princess "troop the color." Baltimore harbor: test of fastest lifeboat rescue rig. New York City: national sewing contest winners. Saranac Lake, N. Y.: Variety Clubs take over hospital. Australia shows champion sheet.

© 20Jun49; MP4652.

88. June 23, 1949. West wins in Trieste elections. F.D.R., Jr., takes oath in Congress. Frankie Frisch takes over the Chicago Cubs. Jap crown prince takes up tennis. Manus Island, million dollar junk pile. Latest in hat fashion, kid's style. Rye Beach, N.Y.: pick national "Swim for health" queen. Miami: trouble a-bruin; bear wrestling. Bridgehampton, N. Y.: sports car road racing. Great cities of America: San Francisco.

© 23Jun49; MP4653.

89. June 27, 1949. Tense Paris hears De Gaulle. Gordon Gray sworn in as Army Secretary. Detroit: world's largest American flag unfurled. Australia: happily married for seventy-two years. Kid artists show their stuff in London. Ludlow, Mass.: New England's tallest chimney blasted. Chantilly Castle, France, backdrop for fashion. Los Angeles: machine age catches up with beach combers. Martinsburg, W. Va.: airplane acrobats stunt to defy death. Washington: mammoth mat match mangles many maulers.

© 27Jun49; MP4654.

90. June 30, 1949. Big Four talks end; Acheson home. Germany: poultry city—5,000 babies born each day. Paris designers run wild on bike fashions. Mrs. Mesta named Minister to Luxembourg. Bao-Dai returns to be Emperor of Viet-Nam, Indo-China. Comedian Milton Berle goes to Hollywood. Charles whips Walcott for Louis' crown. Bellingham, Wash.: Indians race war canoes for world title. Crack-up champions in circus of thrills.

© 30Jun49; MP4655.

91. July 4, 1949. Poughkeepsie Regatta. Tennis: Riggs vs. Budge. Governor of Florida marries a California girl. Ex-GI weds the Kaiser's granddaughter. China dolls compete in kids' beauty show. Asbury Park, N. J.: National Marbles Championships. Pittsfield, Mass.: man-made lightning—15,000,000 volts. Round-world plane can land anywhere, too. Marlton, N. J.: new paraplane comes almost straight down. Do you remember?—Blizzard of 1947.

© 4Jul49; MP4656.

92. July 7, 1949. Canadian Liberals sweep key election. T-men seize $100,000 in bogus bills. Shelton, Conn.: home, sweet cave; underground house. Cotton mill town springs up in Sahara. 10,000 at square dance in Central Park. Paris: thrill-packed finish marks the Grand Prix. Japan's no. 1 swimmer breaks world mark. Czechoslovakia: canoes battle big rapids in 100–mile race. Great American quiz: Custer's last stand.

© 7Jul49; MP4657.

93. July 11, 1949. Judith Coplon is guilty. Katonah, N. Y.: rubber-band catapult makes yard an airport. Australia ravaged by worst floods. Notre Dame University honors Irene Dunne. A Chinese orphan's Cinderella story. Baseball star faces girl who shot him. Behind the newsreel camera. Tie triumph; four-in-hand fashions. Puerto Rico: spectacular water-skiing by torchlight.

© 11Jul49; MP4658.

94. July 14, 1949. MacArthur reviews biggest parade [in Tokyo]. Schroeder wins at Wimbledon. Jap war prisoners home from Russian camps. European Union stages first fleet maneuvers. Housing problem: Congress moves. General Patton is honored by France. Tokyo Rose goes on trial for treason. Chicago: Paul Bunyan comes back at railroad fair. San Francisco Chinatown's beauties. Detroit: Gold Cup speedboat racing classic. Lake Placid: sun-baked ski jumpers.

© 14Jul49; MP4691.

95. July 18, 1949. Jury fails to decide on Hiss; Chambers speaks. London: troops called in dock strike. Danny Kaye safe in air accident. Israel: Rebury Jews killed by Nazis. Senator Johnson asks movie tax cut. New York: girl warms up for Channel swim. Lady wrestlers waltz in Vienna. Los Angeles: Machine Age restaurant.

© 18Jul49; MP4692.

96. July 21, 1949. All-star Baseball [National Leaguers vs. American Leaguers at Brooklyn]. Air crashes kill 79 [near Bombay, India, and Los Angeles], "No depression"—Truman. First combined fleet maneuvers off Europe. Freeport, L. I.: speedboat "soapbox derby." Cowboy fashions for kids.

© 21Jul49; MP4693.

97. July 25, 1949. Bonnie Prince Charlie poses with his parents. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.: U. S. chiefs of staff take a "vacation." President signs biggest housing bill. Los Angeles: Italy honors Harry M. Warner. Benthoscope—diving bell on wheels. Navy's newest for submarine rescues. Paris lights up for Bastille Day. Spectacular fire razes Munich studio. Four-year-old is a real water skeezix. Hollywood Gold Cup, world's richest race. Westbury, N. Y.: photo finish in national pacing derby.

© 25Jul49; MP4694.

98. July 28, 1949. Jackie Robinson answers Paul Robeson. New York: 15,000 Lions parade down Fifth Avenue. Chicago: 15,000 Shriners parade, hear Truman. Ejector seat "shoots" pilot from plane. Ernie Pyle is buried in Hawaii. Seattle: plane hits houses; seven killed. Navy fires new rockets 65 miles up. Hot fashions; summer furs from Paris. Atlantic City: spectacular and gala aquashow.

© 28Jul49; MP4695.

99. Aug. 1, 1949. Truman signs Atlantic Pact. Newfoundland opens its new parliament. Parade marks Israel's first Army Day. Royal garden party at Buckingham Palace. Vienna zoo: international monkey business. International honeymoon at Niagara Falls. Great cities of America: Chicago. Minneapolis; Aquatennial; aquabatic aquabelles. Navy fliers practice football at sea. Martin Lagood, Md.: national water ski championships.

© 1Aug49; MP4696.

100. Aug. 4, 1949. Private Rodger Young is buried at home. Churchill opens Tory election campaign. Bernard Baruch comes home from England. Gary Cooper made "governor" of Montana. New "Ile de France" ends maiden voyage. France: month-long, 3,000–mile bike race. San Antonio, Tex.: Mayors race in soap box derby. Vienna: international motorcycle championships.

© 4Aug49; MP4697.

101. Aug. 8, 1949. Navy plane hits airliner [near Fort Dix, N. J.] Acheson asks arms for Europe. Germany: U. S. chiefs of staff map defense. Truman appoints Clark and McGrath. Dallas: one-year-old high diving star. Helicopter serves flagpole sitter. Dog and duck in summer romance. Beauty contest for tall girls only. Italian hairdressers go wild. Chicago: railroad hat is strangest of year. Ponder takes Arlington Classic. Great Americans: John Paul Jones.

© 8Aug49; MP4698.

102. Aug. 11, 1949. Marshall speaks on the cold war. Exclusive films of spectacular fire [in San Francisco]. Honor heroes of Berlin airlift. Hill shoots Niagara's rapids. Washington: "Boy State" takes over government. Hoover marks his 74th birthday. Fashions for white collar girls. Pooches on parade in Miami.

© 11Aug49; MP4907.

103. Aug. 15, 1949. Philippine president on way to see Truman. Eight feet seven, he's world's tallest man. Want-ad romances climaxes in double wedding. Britain's "Comet," world's first jet airliner. Sicily: fisherman in thrilling tuna treasure hunt. Cardston, Alta.: treaty money; Canada pays off the Indians. Hollywood: new coast business opens with a splash. Norwalk, Conn.: outboard races turn into bank-up classic.

© 15Aug49; MP4908.

104. Aug, 18, 1949. Ecuador earthquake. President signs bill to unify armed forces. U. S. Ambassador to China is called home. Philippines President addresses Congress. Herbert Hoover hailed on 75th birthday. Coast Guard celebrates its 159th birthday. Mangrum edges Snead in All-American golf. Miss Tilly, outsider, wins Hambletonian. Do you remember?—Corbett-Courtenay fight.

© 18Aug49; MP4765.

Volume 21, 1949.

1. Aug. 22, 1949. First free German elections. Five nations test Britain's air defenses. Ottawa: Canadian lab; baby, it's cold inside. Ocean City, N. J.: sleepiest baby parade in modern history. Ruins provide swimming hole for Berlin kids. Germany: International auto championship races. Red Bank, N. J.: National Sweepstakes Speed Boat Regatta. Akron: All-American Soap Box Derby.

© 22Aug49; MP4766.

2. Aug. 25, 1949. Congress probes five-percenters. Council of Europe meets in Strasbourg. Bridges pickets in Hawaii dock strike. Barton sets depth record 4,500 feet down. Bradley becomes head of joint staff chiefs. Collins sworn in as Army Chief of Staff. Navy, Marines in mass helicopter maneuver. Washington: airmen fly donkeys in weird baseball game. Los Angeles sheriff's championship rodeo.

© 25Aug49; MP4767.

3. Aug. 29, 1949. Bernarr Macfadden marks 81st birthday with parachute jump. British jet refuels in mid-air. Double-hulled ship can't rock or roll. Style prediction: fur flurry in California. Baseball hails Connie Mack. Cuban forced back in English Channel swim. Horse-jumping record set in Netherlands. Japanese set world marks in AAU swim.

© 29Aug49; MP4768.

4. Sept. 1, 1949. Rescue Ecuador 'quake victims. "Father of Zionism" reburied in Israel. Miami: Navy's "hurricane hunters" in action. Vast forest fires raging in France. Wedding bells; couple married under water. National AAU women's swimming meet. Reno, Nev.: ancient autos in mountain race thriller. Miami: cops on parade; motorcycle miracles.

© 1Sep49; MP4769.

5. Sept. 5, 1949. Hurricane lashes Florida. Philadelphia: American Legion meets; hears Truman. Austrian POW's back from Russia. Roughest rodeo, the Pendleton round-up. Westwood Village, Calif.: girls' rifle team practices—underwater. Davis Cup: Aussies win doubles thriller. Williamsport, Pa.: "Little League" baseball world series.

© 5Sep49; MP4770.

6. Sept. 8, 1949. General Vaughan takes the stand in five-percent hearings. American Legion on parade in Philadelphia. Multimillion-dollar fire in San Francisco. Aid rushed to polio victim in mid-ocean. Atlantic City: curtain going up; Ice Capades of 1950. Westbury, N. Y.: outsider wins $50,000 trotting classic.

© 8Sep49; MP4771.

7. Sept. 12, 1949. Grand Army of the Republic [meets in Indianapolis for] the last encampment. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., weds in New York. Gary Cooper honored by the Navy. World War II Vet heads American Legion. Bevin and Cripps sail for U. S. talks. Kids visit Santa's workshop. Are fashions going back to the twenties? Football: Eastern All-Stars vs. Giants.

© 12Sep49; MP4774.

8. Sept. 15, 1949. Crazed veteran kills 13 [in Camden, N. J.] Cleveland: national air races; Odom in fatal crash. Washington: U. S., Britain, Canada open dollar talks. Atlantic City: nation's prettiest in Miss America parade. Shirley May loses game fight vs. Channel. Gonzales wins national tennis crown.

© 15Sep49; MP4775.

9. Sept. 19, 1949. Meet Miss and Mrs. America. Titusville, Pa.; first U. S. oil well pumps again. A new German republic is born. Canadian Army shows off its firepower. Tacoma, Wash.: rebuild famous "Galloping Gertie" bridge. Do you remember—Tacomas bridge disaster. Aqua toddlers; tiny tots go high diving. Hybla Valley Airport, Va.: plane crashes wall in air thrill circus.

© 19Sep49; MP4776.

10. Sept. 22, 1949. Navy's newest rocket [Viking II]. Washington: International monetary conference meets. Western Germany elects first president. Theatre owners of America meet in Hollywood. Vienna: news for kids—world's smallest horse. Hamburg: news for the jaded—"The witch's kettle!" Rug-cutters jitter at Harvest Moon Ball. Out on a limb: world's prettiest legs. First Paris fall fashions. Historic America: Williamsburg, Va.

© 22Sep49; MP4909.

11. Sept. 26, 1949. Toronto ship fire. Vishinsky arrives for UN General Assembly. Atlantic Pact Council meets in Washington. Theatre owners hear Secretary Johnson. Glittering jewel fashions from France. Westbury, N. Y.: International championships in polo. Whole family tackles long New York Harbor swim. Spills galore mark championship roller derby.

© 26Sep49; MP4910.

12. Sept. 29, 1949. College football kickoff: [Santa Clara vs. California Golden Bears]. UN Assembly meets; Romulo named president. Air Force dedicates the McGuire Air Force Base. Barbara Hutton back in U. S. after illness. "Task Force" twin premiere in two oceans. Meet Miss National Sweater Girl of 1949. Golden Gate swimming classic. Germany: daredevil acrobats, 6,000 feet up.

© 29Sep49; MP4978.

13. Oct. 3, 1949. Russia's atomic explosion rocks the western world. Homecoming clambake greets Shirley May France. Polesitting fan gives up; sets record. It's already 1950 in California bathing fashions. Behind the newsreel camera: the Empire State. Football: Michigan vs. Michigan State; Stanford vs. Harvard.

© 3Oct49; MP4911.

14. Oct. 6, 1949. Defense chiefs go to sea [to observe Navy's carrier-based air power]. San Francisco: world leaders of the Episcopal church meet. "World citizen" Davis jailed in Paris. Miami University, Fla.: new angles on the campus. Ultra modern garage ends parking problems. Princeton, N. J.: scientists build "house of illusions." The creed of the U. S. motion picture industry. Italy: Kids' band, Hot-Tot Quintetto. Germany: Yogis show new twists. Rodeo: New York goes to the broncs.

©6Oct49; MP4912.

15. Oct. 10, 1949. Baseball's excitingest finish [Brooklyn Dodgers vs. Phillies; Yankees honor Joe DiMaggio]. Reds [in Germany] release 2 vacationing U. S. students. Truman spends 2 hectic days in Missouri. Steel strike begins as 200,000 walk out. London: royal wedding; King's nephew weds commoner. Footwear fashions. Football: Pittsburgh upsets powerful Northwestern; Penn whips Dartmouth.

© 10Oct49; MP4979.

16. Oct. 13, 1949. World series: first and second games. UN flag raised over new skyscraper home. Fort Bragg, N. C.: airborne army goes on parade. President opens Community Chest drive. Bathing beauty contest under water. Confederate veterans hold 59th reunion.

© 13Oct49; MP4913.

17. Oct. 17, 1949. Yanks win World series. Washington: North Atlantic Council chiefs meet. Cardinal Spellman visits the Pope. Daring Arab horsemen in desert festival. French styles for dinner, by Dior. Football: Army upsets mighty Michigan; Southern California and Ohio State tie.

© 17Oct49; MP4914.

18. Oct. 20, 1949. Germany: Reds create East-Zone state; Allies parade might. Nehru of India visits the United States. Greta Garbo comes home, flees photographers. Blissful bus-full; family of 18 goes west. AFL meets; leaders cite U. S. films. Marineland, Fla.: porpoises with purposes—fish high jump. Seal sets English Channel swim record. Colorado river outboard marathon.

© 20Oct49; MP4924.

19. Oct. 24, 1949. U. S. Red leaders convicted. Chinese Reds in Shanghai victory parade. Britain girds for Reds siege in Hong Kong. "Americans in Paris" fashions. Great American quiz: Clara Barton. Football: Cornell overpowers Yale; Notre Dame pulverizes Tulane; California nips Southern California.

© 24Oct49; MP4925.

20. Oct. 27, 1949. Top U. S. brass speaks out in service wrangle. Another royal Briton to wed a Mrs. Simpson. U. S. wedding bells ring for Sarah Churchill. Winston Churchill can still dish it out. Vishinsky storms as UN picks Yugoslavia. San Francisco ball teams on tour in Japan. Pro football: Bears whip Eagles.

© 27Oct49; MP4926.

21. Oct. 31, 1949. Truman and world leaders hail new UN home. Children's party for UN's 4th birthday. Puppy auction. Greek kids make own shoes from UN leather. Diamond fashion show. Great cities of America: Philadelphia. Football: Army outflanks Columbia; Michigan upsets Minnesota; Pennsylvania scuttles Navy.

© 31Oct49; MP4927.

22. Nov. 3, 1949. Pro tennis: Kramer vs. Gonzales. Danes welcome first U. S. woman ambassador. America's top envoys in Paris for talks. New French honors for Jack L. Warner. Girl quads born to Canadian family. Aviation sensation: channel wing airplane. Aaronsburg, Pa., marks 150 years of brotherhood. Modern glass house brings outdoors indoors. Stars model chinchilla furs. Pro football: Yankees whip Forty-Niners.

© 3Nov49; MP4928.

23. Nov. 7, 1949. Football highlights: Notre Dame vs. Navy; SMU vs. Texas; California vs. UCLA. 100,000th displaced person arrives in U. S. Hawaii's $100,000,000 dock strike ends. Bidault forms cabinet to end French crisis. Eric Johnston reports on Marshall Plan trip. West Coast grandma makes news with dolls. East Coast grandma makes news with a piano. Capot whips Coaltown in the Pimlico Special.

© 7Nov49; MP4929.

24. Nov. 10, 1949, 55 die in mid-air crash [at Washington National Airport]. Sherman in, Denfeld out as Navy Chief. Spectacular fire sweeps California hills. Brooklyn boy [Danny Kaye] makes good. National horseshow highlights. Pro football: Rams nip Bears in thriller.

© 10Nov49; MP4930.

25. Nov. 14, 1949. Football highlights: Army vs. Fordham; Notre Dame vs. Michigan State; Stanford vs. USC. Big freighter goes on rocks near Seattle. ECA chief asks Europe to end trade barriers. Weizmann Institute dedicated in Israel. Admiral Sherman on deck as brass sees Army show. Meet "Droopert" the screw driver.

© 14Nov49; MP4931.

26. Nov. 17, 1949. Democrats win New York elections; Truman's happy. Vishinsky plays host at embassy party. "Veep" Barkley named "Grandfather of year." Churchill attends grandchild's christening. John L. Lewis calls the mine strike off. HMS Amethyst comes home to hero's welcome. Hawaii celebrates Aloha Week festival. Pro football: Eagles overwhelm Rams. Kids football: Maulers whip Avengers.

© 17Nov49; MP4932.

27. Nov. 21, 1949. Football highlights: Notre Dame vs. North Carolina; Army vs. Penn; Ohio State vs. Illinois; Dartmouth vs. Cornell. President helps plan Brotherhood Week, 1950. Boxer Marcel Cerdan is buried in Casablanca. Cow "milks" Canadians to aid UN children. Duel settles an affair of honor in Paris.

© 21Nov49; MP4933.

28. Nov. 24, 1949. Navy rocket launched from sub. Acheson home from Big Three meeting. Iran's Shah arrives for state visit. Negro women honor Bunche and Mme. Pandit. Air Force unveils a XB–51, a 3–jet bomber. Airlines unveil a surprise: an air-born baby. Kids' winter fashions go to the zoo. New York: celebrities' art show. Silver Springs, Fla.: new sport that they do on porpoise boards. Pro football: Browns battle Bills to tie.

© 24Nov49; MP4934.

29. Nov. 28, 1949. B–29's in land and sea crashes [Stockton, Calif. and the Atlantic] Vice President Barkley takes a wife. Viscount Montgomery arrives for a visit. Jimmy Roosevelt enters California Governor race. Film stars at royal command performance. Football: Ohio State vs. Michigan; California vs. Stanford; North Carolina vs. Duke; Tulane vs. Virginia.

© 28Nov49; MP4935.

30. Dec. 1, 1949. [Football Yankees meet the Cleveland Browns]. Huntington, Ind.; razzle dazzle basketball queens. Jackie Robinson named most valuable player. General Ike [Eisenhower] at freedom rites at Valley Forge. General MacArthur greets Secretary Snyder in Japan. Military parade marks Turkish independence. Yakima, Wash.: world championship apple packing contest. England pets go to church on "Animal Sunday." Dog acrobat makes a wow of a bow. Even the cows wear stylish hats in Paris.

© 1Dec49; MP4980.

31. Dec. 5, 1949. Football: Army vs. Navy; Cornell vs. Penn; Notre Dame vs. Southern California. Peron welcomes new U. S. envoy Griffis. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas goes on trial. Princess Elizabeth visits Philip at Malta. Lilienthal resigns as Atomic Energy head. Santa Claus on parade [in New York, Philadelphia and Hollywood].

© 5Dec49; MP4936.

32. Dec. 8, 1949. 28 dead in Dallas air crash. Truman on vacation in Key West. Tiny Monaco hails its new monarch. Lewis orders miners back 3 days a week. Montgomery urges Western unity against Reds. Camp Lee, Va.: Wacs and packs on bivouac. Memo from Hollywood: mail early for Xmas. Army team wins the Lambert trophy. Pro football: Eagles vs. Steelers. Kids football classic: Half Pint Bowl [in Washington].

© 8Dec49; MP4937.

33. Dec. 12, 1949. Navy jet [Douglas Skyrocket] flies faster than sound. Winston Churchill hale and hearty at 75. Montgomery leaves the U. S. Vice President and Mrs. Barkley at $100 Democrat dinner. Wife awaits flier held by China Reds. Airmen start new gold rush of forty-nine. France: wheel of progress—the umbrella bicycle. Italy: cycle of inventions—the lie-down bike. SMU gives Notre Dame its closest call.

© 12Dec49; MP4938.

34. Dec. 15, 1949. Inside Tito's Yugoslavia. Physician, 84, named doctor of the year. President of Nationalist China in U. S. Vishinsky wishes all a happy new year. Congress probes atom shipments to Reds. Get ready kids, Santa Claus is coming. Canada: family of muscles—6 brothers of brawn. Notre Dame's Hart wins Heisman trophy. Cardinals nip Rams in pro grid thriller.

© 15Dec49; MP4939.

35. Dec. 19, 1949. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas jailed for fraud. Judge Medina on vacation in Bermuda. Shah of Iran visits great Hoover Dam. Doolittle raider now preaches in Japan. Jerusalem Jews in mass oath to Israel. HMS Implacable sent to the bottom. Australian farmers battles flying foxes. New assault transport is "flying LST." New gadget makes tough parking easy. Holiday fashion highlights from France. Historic America: Sutter's Mill.

© 19Dec49; MP4940.

36. Dec. 22, 1949. Christmas 1949; a stirring film record of the holiday spirit everywhere in the world. Browns beat '49ers for pro championship. Fogbound airliner falls into Potomac near Washington.

© 22Dec49; MP4958.

38. Dec. 29, 1949. China Reds free Angus Ward. Mayor O'Dwyer wed to Sloan Simpson. France: jet-propelled helicopter. Startling ski fashions from France. Navy task force tackles the Arctic. Hawaii takes to the surf en masse. Basketball: NYU whips California; LIU smothers USC.

© 29Dec49; MP4960.

See also RKO Pathe News.

WARRIORS OF ANOTHER WORLD: a drama of insects and spiders.

© Richard Lambson Cassell; title, descr., & 14 prints, 25Oct43; MU14073.

WASHINGTON IRVING. Emerson Film Corp. Released by Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Traces Washington Irving's early life in New York as a lawyer and writer; describes his travels and life abroad, highlighting the incidents which influenced the writing of his best-known literary works. For junior and senior high school and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Leon Howard.

© Emerson Film Corp.; 27Sep49; MP4733.

WASHINGTON MELODRAMA. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a play by L. du Rocher Macpherson.

Credits: Producer, Edgar Selwyn; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Marion Parsonnet, Roy Chanslor; music score, David Snell; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Apr41; LP10433.

WASHINGTON—THE SHRINE OF AMERICAN PATRIOTISM. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Narrator, Alois Havrilla.

© The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co.; 15Jan40; MP9883.

WASTAGE OF HUMAN RESOURCES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16 mm.

Summary: This film deals with human beings as resources of the nation, and shows such causes of wastage as accidents, disease, neglect, and maltreatment. For junior and senior high schools and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Lawrence K. Frank.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 12Dec47; MP2643.

WATCH ON THE RHINE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 114 min., sd. A Hal B. Wallis production. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stage play by Lillian Hellman.

Credits: Director, Herman Shumlin; screenplay, Dashiell Hammett; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Sep43; LP12239.

WATCH OUT! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13May46; MP556.

WATCH THAT QUOTATION. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the importance of accuracy in the use of oral and written quotations. For children in intermediate and junior high grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, J. Paul Leonard.

© David A. Smart; 12Jul49; MP4495.

WATCH THE BIRDIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Aug42; MP12883.

THE WATCHDOG. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. (A Terrytoon) (Aesop's Fable)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13617.

THE WATCHDOG. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Oct39; MP10068.

THE WATCHMAN TAKES A WIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1,461 ft.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Feb41; LP10282.

WATER AS NATURE MEANT IT TO BE. c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. authors: William Rogers, Louis Rogers, John A. Stewart.

© Modern Home Improvement, Inc.; 14Feb47; MP1809.

WATER BABIES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, Blumenthal, Heilner; director, Andre de La Varre. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Jun45; MP16016.

WATER BATTLERS. Universal Pictures Co. Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series)

Credits: Producer, Harry A. Kapit; director, Benjamin R. Parker; editor, Lewis D. Pollack.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Nov48; MP3556.

WATER BIRDS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15990.

WATER BUGS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 917 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.: 28Aug41; LP10743.

THE WATER CYCLE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with S. Ralph Powers, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1671.

WATER CYCLE. SEE Le Cycle de l'Eau.

WATER—FRIEND OR ENEMY. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 6Apr43; MP13620.

WATER IN THE AIR. Radford Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A city boy visits the farm and discovers how water is drawn up from the earth. Simple kitchen experiments explain evaporation, condensation, and what causes water in the air to return to the earth as rain. An elementary science film.

© Radford Pictures Inc.; 1Mar49; MP4834.

WATER POWER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with George T. Renner, Jr., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w. 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Waterkrag."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul46; MP1871.

WATER SPEED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Summary: Presents outstanding men and women swimmers—Jackie Levine and Walter Riss, free style champions; Nancy Merki Lees, Keith Carter, and Joe Verdeur, butterfly breast stroke champions; and Maureen O'Brien and Alan Stack, back stroke champions.

Credits: Producer, Jack Eaton; narrator, Ted Husing; music, Harry D. Glass.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Oct49; MP4659.

WATER SPORTS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; commentator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15Nov41; MP11745.

WATER TRIX. Loew's Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Charles T. Trego photographs daring water sports from his helicopter.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director and photographer, Charles T. Trego; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Oct49 (in notice: 1948); MP4709.

WATER WISDOM. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 826 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credit: Film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec43; MP14420.

WATER WIZARDS. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Underwater formation swimming and other water sports are shown at Wickiwachee Springs, Florida.

Credits: Written by Saul Elkins; narrator, Art Gilmore; editor, Rex Steele.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 3Aug49; MP4380.

WATER WONDERLAND. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Famous resorts in Southern California provide the settings for the water sports that are highlighted in this film.

Credits: Director, Virgil E. Ellsworth; written by Charles Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 4Mar49; MP3964.

WATER WORKS FOR US. Young America Films, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the basic principle of water pressure and shows the many ways in which water works for us. For elementary school science classes.

Credits: Advisers, Gerald S. Craig, Helen Warrin.

Appl. author: Leonard Peck.

© Leonard Peck Productions; 15Mar49; MP4063.

WATERCOLOR TECHNIQUE. c1939. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Eliot O'Hara.

© Indiana University, Bureau of Visual Instruction; 15Dec39; MP10474.

WATERFRONT. c1944. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 7 reels, sd. An Alexander-Stern production.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Steve Sekely; original screenplay, Martin Mooney, Irwin R. Franklyn; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 27May44; LP12668.

WATERFRONT AT MIDNIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a New York police officer brings to justice the leader of a gang of waterfront thieves.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Bernard Girard; music score, Harry Lubin; film editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: William Gargan, Mary Beth Hughes, Richard Travis, Richard Crane, Cheryl Walker.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Jun48; LP1693.

WATERKRAG. SEE Water Power.

WATERLOO BRIDGE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. A Mervyn LeRoy production. Based on the play by Robert E. Sherwood.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, S. N. Behrman, Hans Rameau, George Froeschel; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 15May40; LP9661.

WATERLOO ROAD. Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., London., c1945. Released in the U. S. by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. A J. Arthur Rank presentation. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A semi-documentary drama which probes the domestic problems that arise in wartime as a result of loneliness and difficult living conditions. Setting, London during World War II.

Credits: Producer, Edward Black; directed and written by Sidney Gilliat; story, Val Valentine; music director, Louis Levy; editor, Alfred Roome.

Cast: John Mills, Stewart Granger, Alastair Sim, Joy Shelton, Alison Leggatt.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 7Feb45; LP2249.

WATTS EXPLOSION TESTS.

Appl. author: Wendell M. Dillon.

© Watts Regulator Co.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 29Apr40; MU10164.

THE WATUSSI OF AFRICA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: George Herzog.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 21Nov39; MP9870.

DIE WATUSSI VAN AFRIKA. SEE A Giant People.

WAVE-A-STICK BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jun42; MP12668.

A WAVE, A WAC AND A MARINE. Biltmore Productions, c1944. 8 reels, sd. An Edward Sherman production.

Credits: Producer, Sebastian Cristillo; director, Phil Karlstein; original story, Lillian Planer, Dick Hyland; screenplay, Hal Fimberg; music director, Freddie Rich; photography, Maury Gertsman; film editor, William Zeigler.

© Monogram Pictures Corp., 26Aug44; LP12837.

WAY BACK WHEN A NAG WAS ONLY A HORSE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph Stultz; animation, Myron Waldman, George Moreno.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Mar40; LP9475.

WAY BACK WHEN A NIGHT CLUB WAS A STICK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, David Tendlar, Edwain Rehberg.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar40; LP9628.

WAY BACK WHEN A RAZZBERRY WAS A FRUIT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordan; animation, James Culhane, Alfred Eugster.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jul40; LP9808.

WAY BACK WHEN A TRIANGLE HAD ITS POINTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, David Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jan40; LP9566.

WAY BACK WHEN WOMEN HAD THEIR WEIGH; Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Thomas Johnson, Harold Walker.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Sep40; LP9979.

WAY DOWN YONDER IN NEW ORLEANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11870.

WAY DOWN YONDER IN THE CORN. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 659 ft., sd., color. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sam Cobean; animation, Phil Duncan, Basil Davidovich; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 25Nov43; LP12766.

A WAY IN THE WILDERNESS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 950 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Fred Zinnemann; screenplay, Herman Boxer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9845.

THE WAY OF ALL FLESH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Lajos Biro and Jules Furthman.

Credits: Associate producer, Eugene Zukor; director, Louis King; screenplay, Lenore Coffee; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul40; LP9760.

THE WAY OF ALL PESTS. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 655 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 74)

Credits: Direction, Art Davis; animation, Sid Marcus; music, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 1May41; LP10516.

THE WAY OF PEACE. East-West Studio for the Wartburg Press, c1947. 18 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Written and directed by Frank Tashlin; narration, Lew Ayres.

Appl. authors: H. K. Rasbach, Frank Tashlin.

© Wartburg Press; 23Apr47; MP1980.

WAY OF THE PADRES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: Shows the present day appearance of the country traversed by the friars of the old missions: Mt. Whitney and its mountain trails, Death Valley, Imperial Valley, and Palm Springs with its rodeo grounds and western pageantry. The municipal buildings of Los Angeles and Hollywood, the homes of the stars, the 20th Century-Fox lot, the radio studios, and Grauman's Chinese Theatre, are viewed from a blimp. In the heart of the mission country, the Rancheros Visitadores, in traditional costumes, line up for the blessing of the Franciscan friars.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. De Francesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Sep48; MP3657.

THE WAY TO HEAVEN. C. O. Baptista Films, c1946. 700 ft., sd., b&w, 16mm.

© C.O. Baptista Films, sole owner of Scriptures Visualized Institute; 1Nov46; MP1320.

WAYS TO GOOD HABITS. Coronet, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Illustrates that recognition of bad habits and continued effort to correct them is necessary in building good habits.

Credits: Educational collaborator, William E. Young.

© David A. Smart; 15Feb49; MP4235.

WE ARE AMERICANS TOO; Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14082.

WE CAN LIVE ON LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Aug41; MP11375.

WE CAN MAKE SUCH BEAUTIFUL MUSIC TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10908.

WE DID IT. 16 mm.

Appl. author: W. D. Mattison.

© General Cable Corp.; title, descr., & 3 prints; 21Sep46; MU1106.

WE DID IT BEFORE AND WE'LL DO IT AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12350.

WE DISCOVER FRACTIONS. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Introduces the idea of dividing a unit into equal parts, equips the student with appropriate symbols for the idea, and by example shows the division of concrete units (e.g. boards, apples, and pies) into fractions. For the intermediate grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Harold P. Fawcett.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 2Jan48; MP3689.

WE DISCOVER THE DICTIONARY. Coronet in collaboration with Viola Theman, c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 22Mar46; MP2025.

WE DO IT BECAUSE-. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 918 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; original story, Harry Poppe, Jr.; screenplay, Douglas Foster, Harry Poppe, Jr.; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Feb42; MP12545.

WE GO FAST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,790 ft., sd. Based on the story by Doug Welch.

Credits: Director, William McGann; screen story, Thomas Lennon, Adrian Scott; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Sep41; LP10733.

WE GO TO SCHOOL. Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the activities of typical seven-year-old school children in the classroom and on the playground.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Frederick G. Neel.

© David A. Smart; 3Aug48; MP3718.

WE GO TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Jun41; MP11238.

WE MAKE A FIRE. Radford Pictures Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A father and his three children go on a picnic and learn how to build a fire, how to make it burn, and how to extinguish it. An elementary science film.

© Radford Pictures Inc.; 15Dec48; MP4833.

WE MAKE BUTTER. Scenograph Film Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Two small children join their mother in the milk-room and learn how to make butter. For primary grades.

Appl. author: Grace Peticlere.

© Seenograph Film Co., Inc.; 3Feb49; MP4629.

WE MAKE MUSIC. SEE Wir Machen Musik.

WE MUST HAVE MUSIC. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w. (A Romance of Celluloid)

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec41; LP10954.

WE PITCHED A BOOGIE WOOGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Mar46; MP353.

WE REFUSE TO DIE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William C. Thomas; director, William H. Pine; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; editor, Howard A. Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Oct42; LP11661.

WE THE CATS SHALL HEP YA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16589.

WE VISIT THE SEASHORE. Young America Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: This educational film for primary school children shows the

## activities of a young boy and girl during a typical day at the

beach.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 30Dec48; MP3743.

WE WERE DANCING. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based in part on "Tonight at 8:30" by Noel Coward.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Claudine West, Hans Rameau, George Froeschel; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Feb42; LP11370.

WE WERE STRANGERS. Horizon Pictures. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on an episode in the novel "Rough Sketch," by Robert Sylvester.

Summary: A group of underground revolutionists organize in order to overthrow the tyrannical leaders of the Machado government in Cuba in the early 1930's.

Credits: Producer, S. P. Eagle; director, John Huston; screenplay, Peter Viertel, John Huston; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, George Antheil; film editor, Al Clark.

Cast: Jennifer Jones, John Garfield, Pedro Armendariz, Gilbert Roland, Ramon Novarro.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2May49; LP2310.

WE WHO ARE YOUNG. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzahl; director, Harold S. Bucquet; original screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Howard O'Neill.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Jul40; LP9811.

WE WORK FOR VICTORY AND WE PLAN FOR PEACE. Allis Chalmers. 2 reels.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Allis Chalmers Co.; title & descr., 10Oct42; 161 prints, 9Oct42; MU12907.

THE WEAKLY REPORTER. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Ben Washam. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24May44; MP14647.

WEAPONS FOR VICTORY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7May43; MP14907.

THE WEATHER. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With a guide.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP14205.

THE WEATHER. SEE Le Temps.

WEATHER AND RADAR—A TEAM FOR ACTION. Presented by U. S. Office of Scientific Research and Development. 25 min., sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 20Apr46; 14 prints, 22Apr46; MU479.

WEATHER AT A GLANCE. 47 feet, b&w, 8mm.

Summary: Varying weather conditions in Maryland and in other states. A map giving comparative temperatures in different cities of the United States is shown.

© John Schneider III, title & descr., 4Jan49; 1c, 14Dec48; MU3642.

THE WEATHER GIRL. Edward C. Gruber. 200 ft., 16mm.

Summary: A television commercial, with twelve different weather forecasts to be used with advertisements of the sponsor's products.

© Edward C. Gruber; title, descr., & 4 prints, 28Feb49; MU3821.

WEAVING HOMESPUN. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (American Folkway Series)

Summary: Traces the steps in cloth-making—shearing of sheep, washing and carding of wool, spinning the thread, winding the skeins, dressing the loom, and weaving a piece of cloth.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4557.

THE WEB. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Harry Kurnitz.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Bresler; director, Michael Gordon; screenplay, William Bowers, Bertram Millhauser; music, Hans J. Salter; orchestral arrangements, David Tamkin; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

Cast: Ella Raines, Edmond O'Brien, William Bendix, Vincent Price.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Jun47; LP1085.

WEB OF DANGER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, David Lang, Milton M. Raison; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, William Thompson.

Cast: Adele Mara, Bill Kennedy, Damian O'Flynn, Richard Loo.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP974.

WEDDED BLISS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,529 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Sep44; LP12819.

WEDDED BLITZ. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Henry James; story, Lew Lipton, Arthur Ripley; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Mar42; LP11422.

WEDDING BELLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp., 9Oct47; LP1301.

WEDDING BELTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, David Tendlar, Stephen Muffati.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul40; LP9761.

WEDDING BILLS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 885 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Roy Mack; original story and screenplay, E. Maurice Adler.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Dec40; LP10116.

A WEDDING IN BIKANER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; photography, John W. Boyle; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Aug42; MP13298.

WEDDING WORRIES. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Dec41; LP11345.

WEDDING YELLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities) Adapted from a Mack Sennett comedy.

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr42; LP11209.

WEDLOCK DEADLOCK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A young couple's honeymoon is interrupted by an unwelcome visit from the bride's relatives.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story, Clyde Bruckman; screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1404.

WEDLOCK DEADLOCK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In this comedy, a honeymooning couple find their bliss threatened by the intrusions of greedy relatives. Friends posing as maniacs drive out the unwelcome group.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; screenplay, Elwood Ullman; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Joe DeRita.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1724.

WEDNESDAY'S CHILD. SEE Child of Divorce.

WEDTIME STORIES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; story, Jean Yarbrough, Jack Townley; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec43; LP12793.

A WEE BIT OF SCOTCH. Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Mario Castegnaro; written and directed by Roy Mack; music director, Lud Gluskin; photography, Ralph Hammeras.

© Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp.; 26Oct41; MP12010.

A WEE BIT OF SCOTLAND. Loew's Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick Traveltalk) An MGM picture.

Summary: Shows many points of interest in Scotland, including scenes of the City of Perth, Inverness, Loch Ness, the Battlefield of Culloden, Glencoe, fields of heather, and the town of Saint Andrews.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographers, Virgil Miller, S. D. Onions.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Nov49 (in notice: 1947); MP4756.

THE WEE COOPER O'FIFE. Bil Baird's Marionettes, sd.

Appl. author: William Britton Baird.

Credits: Writer, William Britton Baird; scored by George Steiner.

© Bil Baird's Marionettes; title, descr., & 2 prints, 4Jun47; MU2090.

THE WEE MEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytle; story, Ewald Ludwig, I. Klein, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug47; LP1149.

WEEK-END AT THE WALDORF. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w. A Robert Z. Leonard production. Suggested by a play by Vicki Baum.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Hornblow, Jr.; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Sam and Bella Spewack; adaptation, Guy Bolton; music direction and incidental score, Johnny Green; orchestration, Ted Duncan; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jul45; LP13442.

A WEEKEND AT WHITE SULPHUR. Time, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Sketches the historical background of the Greenbrier Hotel at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, and includes scenes of guests spending a week-end at the hotel in 1948.

© Time, Inc.; 3Sep48; MP3846.

WEEKEND FOR THREE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Tay Garnett; director, Irving Reis; story, Budd Schulberg; screenplay, Dorothy Parker, Alan Campbell; music, Roy Webb; music director, A. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc,; 23Oct41; LP10868.

WEEKEND IN BERMUDA. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Archer Winsten.

© Pan American World Airways; title, descr., & 2 prints, 20Oct45; MU16435.

WEEK-END IN HAVANA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,461 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; original screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Oct41; LP10792.

WEEK-END PASS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Warren Wilson; director, Jean Yarbrough; original story, Warren Wilson; screenplay, Clyde Bruckman; music director, Don George.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Feb44; LP12506.

WEIGHT EVENTS; shot, discus, javelin and hammer. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Amateur Athletic Union, Lawson Robertson, Dean Cromwell, and Brutus Hamilton, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Gewigstoot."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Jun46; MP1672.

WEIGHT EVENTS. SEE Pesas: Tiro, Disco, Jabalina, Martillo.

WEIRD WOMAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. (An Inner Sanctum Mystery) From the novel by Fritz Leiber, Jr.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Reginald Le Borg; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg; adaptation, W. Scott Darling; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 10Mar44; LP12575.

WEISSE TRAUME (WHITE DREAMS) b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Wien Film.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 22Dec46; LU725.

WELCOME DANGER. Harold Lloyd Corp., c1929. 12 reels.

Credits: Director, Clyde Bruckman; story, Felix Adler, Lex Neal, Clyde Bruckman; dialogue, Paul Gerard Smith.

© Harold Lloyd Corp.; 20Oct29; LP13476. (See also Welcome Danger; 20Oct29; LP777)

WELCOME DANGER. Paramount Famous Lasky Corp., c1929. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Clyde Bruckman; story, Felix Adler, Lex Neal, Clyde Bruckman; dialogue, Paul Gerard Smith.

© Paramount Famous Lasky Corp.; 20Oct29; LP777. (See also Welcome Danger; 20Oct29; LP13476)

WELCOME LITTLE STRANGER. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox, c1941. Presented by Terry-Toons. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terry-Toon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terry-Toons, Inc.; 3Oct41; MP12518.

WELCOME STRANGER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 107 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Elliott Nugent; story, Frank Butler; adaptation, Arthur Sheekman, N. Richard Nash; screenplay, Arthur Sheekman; editor, Everett Douglas; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan.

Cast: Bing Crosby, Joan Caulfield, Barry Fitzgerald.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9May47; LP1172.

WELL ALL RIGHT! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Sep42; MP12985.

THE WELL GROOMED BRIDE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 75 min., sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Robert Russell.

Credits: Producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Claude Binyon, Robert Russell; music score, Roy Webb; editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Feb46; LP327.

WELL OILED. Walter Lantz Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune) A Universal picture.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animators, Les Kline, Pat Mathews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions and Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 19Jun47; MP2217.

WE'LL REST AT THE END OF THE TRAIL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Sep43; MP13929.

WELL-ROWED HARVARD. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; music score, L. De Francesco; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 14Aug42; MP13301.

WE'LL SLAP THE JAPS (RIGHT INTO THE LAPS OF THE NAZIS). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jan42; MP11988.

WELLS FARGO DAYS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd., color. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, Mack V. Wright; story and dialogue, Stuart N. Lake; commentator, Art Baker. Cinecolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Apr44; LP12621.

WEN DIE GOTTER LIEBEN (WHOM THE GODS LOVE). A Wien Film presented by Austria Film, Vienna. c1942. 12 reels, b&w, 35mm. A film relating to the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, from a novel by R. Billinger and Ed Strzygowski.

Credits: Director, Karl Hartl; scenario, Eduard von Borsody.

© Casino Film Exchange, Inc.; 15Sep42; LP1081.

THE WENCH (LA BAGARRE) Georges Legrand Productions, France. c1948. Released in the U. S. through Spalter International Pictures, Inc., 1949. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The voluptuous affairs of a young cocotte who bedevils a wealthy farmer into making her his heiress.

Credits: Producer, Georges Legrand; director, Henri Calef; music, Joseph Kosma.

Cast: Maria Casares, Roger Piguat, Jean Murat, Jean Brochard, Orane Demazis.

© Spalter International Pictures, Inc.; 6Nov48; LP2238.

WE'RE ALL AMERICANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jul41; MP11352.

WE'RE IN THE HONEY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Mar48; LP1517.

WE'RE ON OUR WAY TO RIO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story. Jack Mercer, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Apr44; LP12681.

WE'RE STEPPING OUT TONIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16302.

WE'RE THE COUPLE IN THE CASTLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12170.

HET WERK VAN DE ATMOSFEER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP799.

DIE WERK VAN DIE NIERE. SEE The Work of the Kidneys.

THE WEST INDIES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel. (Caribbean Region, 1)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Jun44; MP15912.

WEST INDIES. SEE Las Antillas.

WEST OF ABILENE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Ralph Ceder; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jun40; LP9754.

WEST OF DODGE CITY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Bert Horswell; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Nancy Saunders, Mustard and Gravy.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Mar47; LP930.

WEST OF ELDORADO. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a bandit is killed when he robs a stagecoach, and his henchmen captured when they search for the stolen money.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Reno Browne, Teddy Infuhr, Milburn Moranti.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Jun49; LP2415.

WEST OF LARAMIE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 23 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western about homesteading in Wyoming.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; adapted from the screenplay by Bennett Cohn; music arrangement, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, E. Curtis.

Cast: "Tex" Williams, "Smokey" Rogers, Patricia Alphin, "Deuce" Spriggens, Patricia Hall.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar49; LP2364.

WEST OF PINTO BASIN. Phoenix Productions, Inc., c1940, 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 3)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Elmer Clifton; screen adaptation, Earl Snell; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Ed Linden; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Phoenix Productions, Inc.; 1Oct40; LP10158.

WEST OF SONORA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western in which the Durango Kid brings to a happy conclusion the feud between the grandfathers of an eight-year-old orphan girl.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Barry Shipman; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Steve Darrell, George Chesebro, Anita Castle.

© Columbia Picture Corp.; 25Mar48; LP1530.

WEST OF TEXAS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Alfred Stern, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Oliver Drake; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 16May43; LP12060.

WEST OF THE ALAMO. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Glenn Cook; director, Oliver Drake; original screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 27Mar46; LP238.

WEST OF THE LAW. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Howard P. Bretherton; original screenplay, Jess Bowers; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Oct42; LP11656.

WEST OF THE PECOS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 66 min., sd. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Edward Killy; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Jun45; LP13341.

WEST OF THE RIO GRANDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; story and screenplay, Betty Burbridge; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Arthur Martinelli; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jun44; LP12719.

WEST OF THE ROCKIES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevity)

Credits: Director, Bobby Connolly; screenplay, Hal Yates.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29Nov41; LP10852.

WEST OF TOMBSTONE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Maurice Geraghty; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jan42; LP11351.

WEST POINT ON THE HUDSON. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 811 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Jan42; MP12488.

WEST POINT WIDOW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on story by Anne Wormser.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Hans Kraly; editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Jun41; LP10549.

THE WEST SIDE KID. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Sherman; screenplay, Albert Beich, Anthony Coldeway; music director, Morton Scott; photographer. Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Aug43; LP12257.

WEST TO GLORY. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Elmer Clifton, Robert B. Churchill; orchestration, Walter Greene; film editor, Joseph Gluck.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Flash, Roscoe Ates, Dolores Castle, Gregg Barton.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 22Apr47; LP951.

WESTBOUND STAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Spencer Gordon Bennett; story, John Foster; screenplay, Robert Emmett; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Jan40; LP9312.

WESTERN APPROACHES. English Films, Inc., c1945. 7 reels. Title subsequently changed to "The Raider."

Credits: Direction and script, Pat Jackson; continuity, Phil Ross.

© English Films, Inc.; 1Mar45; LP157.

WESTERN COWGIRL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 123)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Bill Hightower.

© Universal Pictures, Co., Inc.; 25Jun43; MP13707.

WESTERN CYCLONE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Patricia Harper; music, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 10May43; LP12055.

WESTERN DAZE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Madcap Models UO–1)

Credits: Story, Vic McLeod, Norm Blackburn.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Jan41; LP10189.

WESTERN HERITAGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A band of outlaws makes use of a forged Spanish land grant in an effort to deprive ranchers of their land.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Wallace A. Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Desmond Marquette.

Cast: Tim Holt, Nan Leslie, Richard Martin.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Feb48; LP1495.

WESTERN MAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Feb42; LP11265.

WESTERN MELODIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13677.

WESTERN RENEGADES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The U. S. marshal upsets the Laren gang's plot to acquire a rich rancher's estate.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Riley Hill, Jane Adams, Steve Clark.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Oct49; LP2645.

WESTERN RHYTHMS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc; 3May43; MP13535.

WESTERN UNION. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,450 ft., sd. By Zane Grey.

Credits: Director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Robert Carson; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Feb41; LP10385.

WESTERN WHOOPEE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Tex Williams and his orchestra. Patricia Alphin, Smokey Rogers, Judy Clark, Jimmie Dodd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Jun48; MP3491.

WESTERN WHOOPEE. SEE Variety Views, no. 113.

WESTERN WONDERLAND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 831 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, series 4, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, André De La Varre; music director, Jack Schaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Feb41; MP11167.

THE WESTERNER. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 10 reels, sd. From the story by Stuart N. Lake.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, William Wyler; screenplay, Jo Swerling, Niven Busch; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; cinematography, Gregg Toland; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 7Oct40; LP9962.

WESTWARD BOUND. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Dec43; LP12402.

WESTWARD HO. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; original story, Morton Grant; screenplay, Morton Grant, Doris Schroeder; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Apr42; LP11318.

WESTWARD HO-HUM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Clem Beauchamp; story, Clem Beauchamp, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Sep41; LP10750.

THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 22Oct41. MP14197.

THE WESTWARD TRAIL. Producers Releasing Corp., Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western in which Eddie Dean, as a representative of the U. S. Marshal, prevents a band of outlaws from stealing a young girl's ranch.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Arthur Allan Miller; music, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Copper, Roscoe Ates, Phyllis Planchard, Eileen Hardin.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 25Oct47; LP1526.

WET BLANKET POLICY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Heck Allen; animation, Les Kline, Ken O'Brien.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 20Aug48; MP3475.

WET PAINT. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Roy Williams; animation, Don Towsley, Bill Justice, Hal King, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18Mar46; LP1125.

WE'VE NEVER BEEN LICKED. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, John Rawlins; original story, Norman Reilly Raine; screenplay, Norman Reilly Raine, Nick Grinde.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Aug43; LP12198.

WHAM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Sep43; MP13937.

WHAT A BLONDE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 71 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Leslie Goodwins; original story, Oscar Brodney; screenplay, Charles Roberts; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Jan45; LP13167.

WHAT A DIFFERENCE A DAY MAKES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Apr46; MP396.

WHAT A LITTLE SNEEZE WILL DO. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Jan41; MP10925.

WHAT A LOVELY AFTERNOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp, of America, Inc.; 9Sep46; MP1161.

WHAT A MAN! Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Barney A. Sarecky; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, William N. Crowley, Beryl Sachs; photography, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Carl Himm.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 3Jan44; LP12488.

WHAT A MESS. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the modern conveniences of a General Electric Combination Refrigerator with an automatic defroster.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4410.

WHAT A PICNIC. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945, 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Sep45; MP16377.

WHAT A THRILL. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Girl meets boy who is driving a new Oldsmobile with luxurious interior, Hydra-matic drive, and floorboard uncluttered by clutch pedal.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 5 prints, 10May48; MU3000.

WHAT A THRILL TO TAKE THE WHEEL OF A SMART NEW OLDSMOBILE! Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Nov47; 3 prints, 1Dec47; MU2490.

WHAT A WOMAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 10 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Erik Charell.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, Therese Lewis, Barry Trivers; music score, John Leipold; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Dec43; LP12415.

WHAT ABOUT DADDY? Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 909 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Feb42; LP11369.

WHAT DO YOU DO IN THE INFANTRY? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14650.

WHAT D'YA HEAR FROM YOUR HEART? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP11951.

WHAT D'YA KNOW. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty. What's Your I.Q.? No. 14) An MGM picture.

Credits: Produced and narrated by Pete Smith; screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Sep47; LP1231.

WHAT GOOD AM I WITHOUT YOU. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec46; MP1411.

WHAT GOOD IS HIS LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Apr43; MP13503.

WHAT HAPPENS AT NIGHT. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 30May41; MP11324.

WHAT HAS THE LADY GOT? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jun43; MP13651.

WHAT I WANT NEXT. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture. Based on material appearing in Science Illustrated Magazine.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

Cast: Dave O'Brien.

© Loew's Inc.; 31Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2097.

WHAT IS A CONTRACT? Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A study covering the basic elements of contracts and the types and uses of contracts. For senior high schools and colleges.

Credits: Collaborator, Dwight A. Pomeroy.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 17May48; MP3115.

WHAT IS A CORPORATION? Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the three principal types of business ownership—single proprietorship, partnership, and corporation—and shows the advantages and disadvantages of each type. For high school and college students, and adults.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Raymond E. Glos.

© David A. Smart; 17Jun49; MP4222.

WHAT IS A MAP? Teaching Films, Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Writer, Hall; editor, Stenius.

© Teaching Films, Inc.; 16May47; MP2134.

WHAT IS BUSINESS? Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w. 16mm.

Summary: Production, distribution, and service are shown as the three major phases of business activity, and related to the life of the average American family. For junior and senior high schools.

Credits: Collaborator, Paul L. Salsgiver.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 25Mar48; MP3109.

WHAT IS CLOTH? Coronet. c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates simple home tests for the recognition of basic materials; shows the three basic weaves and the characteristics of finished textiles; and establishes a basis for a more detailed course of study on textiles. For classes in home economics.

Credits: Collaborator, Florence M. King.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 11Mar48; MP3108.

WHAT IS FOUR? Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 15 min. (Primary Arithmetic Series) With Teachers' Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Mar46; MP381.

WHAT IS MONEY? Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Paul L. Salsgiver.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 26Jun47; MP2498.

WHAT IS SCIENCE? Coronet, c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains that science is knowledge of the world about us. Two children, curious about common phenomena, conduct simple experiments and find their answers by using the scientific method: by observing experimenting, drawing conclusions, and testing the results. For intermediate and junior high school pupils.

Credits: Educational collaborator, N. E. Bingham.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Oct47; MP3690.

WHAT IT TAKES TO MAKE A STAR. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Movietone's Feminine World)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director Vyvyan Donner; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. deFrancesco; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 6Jul45; MP16287.

WHAT MAKES A FINE WATCH FINE? Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Hamilton Watch Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 16May47; 25 prints, 20May47; MU2033.

WHAT MAKES DAFFY DUCK? Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, William Scott, Lloyd Turner; animation, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Feb48; MP2755.

WHAT MAKES DAY AND NIGHT. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Feb47; MP1658.

WHAT MAKES LIZZY DIZZY? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,536 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Philip L. Leslie; screenplay, Ewart Adamson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Mar42; LP11168.

WHAT MAKES RAIN. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 10 min., 16mm.

Credits: Advisor, Gerald S. Craig.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 31Dec46; MP1591.

WHAT MAKES THINGS FLOAT? Key Productions, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Two small boys go fishing and experiment to find out what makes things float. Laboratory experiments show that objects will float if they are no heavier than the amount of water they displace.

© Key Productions, Inc.; 1Dec49; MP4849.

WHAT NEXT, CORPORAL HARGROVE? Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the characters created by Marion Hargrove.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Richard Thorpe; story and screenplay, Harry Kurnitz; music score, David Snell; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Nov45; LP10.

WHAT, NO CIGARETTES? RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, George Bilson, Felix Adler; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Jul45; LP13684.

WHAT PRICE FLEADOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; animation, Walter Clinton, Robert Bentley, Gil Turner; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Mar48; LP1508.

WHAT SHALL I WEAR? 2 reels, sd. Research Dept. of Household Finance.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Household Finance Corp.; title, descr., & 132 prints; 20Mar41; MU10952.

WHAT THE COUNTRY NEEDS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar41; MP10884.

WHAT THE RED LILLY MEANS TO YOU. Eli Lilly & Co., c1942. 2 reels.

Appl. author: James L. McDowell, Jr.

© Eli Lilly & Co.; 30Jan42; MP12394.

WHAT THIS COUNTRY NEEDS IS MORE LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jul41; MP11330.

WHAT TO DO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4May42; MP12493.

WHAT TO DO BEFORE TAKING OFF. Presented by United States Navy, Naval Air Operational Training Command. 1 reel, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 99 prints, 5Jul43; MU14003.

WHAT TO DO IN A GAS ATTACK. Filmedia Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Sherman Price.

© Filmedia Corp.; 15Oct42; MP13310.

WHAT TO DO IN A GAS ATTACK. Filmedia Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. New version.

Appl. author: Sherman Price.

© Filmedia Corp.; 1May43; MP13710.

WHAT WE ARE FIGHTING FOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (America Speaks Featurette)

Credits: Associate producer. Will Cowan; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Paul Huston; music director, H. J. Salter; film editor, Alvin Todd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May43; MP13550.

WHATCHA KNOW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Aug43; MP13815.

WHATCHA KNOW, JOE? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10981.

WHAT'S BREWIN' BRUIN? Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese; animation, Phil Monroe, Ken Harris, Lloyd Vaughan, Ben Washam; music director, Carl Stalling.

©The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec47; MP2852.

WHAT'S BUZZIN' BUZZARD. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 751 ft., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; animation, Ed Love, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec43; MP14425.

WHAT'S BUZZIN' COUSIN? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Aben Kandel.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Charles Barton; screenplay, Harry Sauber; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Jul43; LP12132.

WHAT'S COOKIN? c1941. Presented by Universal 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, L. E. Elliott; artists, Alex Lovy, Lester Kline; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc, & Walter Lantz Productions; 27Oct41; MP11701.

WHAT'S COOKIN'. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Cline; Original story, Edgar Allan Woolf; screenplay, Jerry Cady, Stanley Roberts; adaptation, Haworth Bromley.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11079.

WHAT'S COOKIN', DOC? The Vitaphone Corp., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Sasanoff; animation, Bob McKimson; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jan44; MP14442.

WHAT'S HATCHIN'? Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Scenes of a poultry-farm school on Long Island. The film shows eggs hatching in a large incubator, and traces the embryonic development of a chick.

Credits: Director, Alan Wilder; script, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Feb48; MP2756.

WHAT'S LACROSSE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary, Justin Herman; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Aug41; MP11468.

WHAT'S THE MATADOR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,483 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Jack White; screenplay, Jack White, Saul Ward.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Mar42; LP11123.

WHAT'S YOUR I. Q.? Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 727 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Music, William Axt, Lee Zahler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Feb40; MP10064.

WHAT'S YOUR I. Q.? Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 782 ft., sd. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q., no. 2)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jun40; MP10322.

WHATSOEVER YE SHALL ASK. SEE Sons of God.

WHATTA BUILT. SEE Variety Views, no 170.

THE WHEAT FARMER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Arabic.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. Inc.; 18Jul46; MP986.

WHEEL SENSE. Transfilm, Inc., c1949. 21 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The story of Torpedo Jones, an Indianapolis race driver, who tells young drivers the dangers of reckless driving and teaches them proper driving procedures. Designed for use in high school driver-training classes.

Credits: Producer, Walter Lowendahl; director, Marvin Rothenberg; written by Burton Rowles, Jr.; editor, Robert Klaeger.

© The Studebaker Corp.; 18Jan49; MP4187.

WHEELS ACROSS INDIA. c1940. 5,385 ft.

Appl. author: Armand Dennis.

© Dennis-Roosevelt Expeditions, Inc.; 16Sep40; MP11065.

WHEELS OF FATE. SEE Dawn on the Great Divide.

WHEN A GIRL'S BEAUTIFUL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Frank McDonald; story, Henry K. Moritz; screenplay, Brenda Weisbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Sep47; LP1199.

WHEN A GYPSY MAKES HIS VIOLIN CRY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jul41; MP11333.

WHEN AIR RAIDS STRIKE. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 6.

WHEN ARE WE GOING TO LAND ABROAD? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11May42; MP12544.

WHEN ASIA SPEAKS. Released through United Artists, c1944. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 17Nov44; MP15587.

WHEN AUNT MINNIE PLAYS THE MINUET IN G. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16173.

WHEN BOBBY GOES TO SCHOOL. 800 ft., sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Arthur Hawley Parmelee.

© American Academy of Pediatrics, Inc.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 26Apr40; MU10136.

WHEN BOBBY GOES TO SCHOOL. SEE

Cuando Bobby Va a la Escuela.

Quando Boby Vai para a Escola.

WHEN FIRE BOMBS FALL. Time, Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

© Time, Inc.; 9Jul42; MP13820.

WHEN G. I. JOHNNY COMES HOME. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Jack Ward, Bill Turner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Feb45; MP15933.

WHEN GOOD FELLOWS GET TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13228.

WHEN HITLER KICKS THE BUCKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Oct43; MP14025.

WHEN I GROW TOO OLD TO DREAM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10909.

WHEN I GROW UP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Apr44; MP14729.

WHEN IRISH EYES ARE SMILIN'. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Feb42; MP12215.

WHEN IRISH EYES ARE SMILING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Oct41; MP11662.

WHEN IT RAINS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec43; MP14410.

WHEN IT'S SLEEPYTIME DOWN SOUTH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Feb46; MP244.

WHEN IT'S SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jul41; MP11348.

WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13980.

WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Charles Lamont; original screenplay, Oscar Brodney, Dorothy Bennett; music, Ted Cain; photographer, George Robinson; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Nov42; LP11696.

WHEN KNIGHTS WERE BOLD. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Volney White; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 21Mar41; MP10971.

WHEN LADIES MEET. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Rachel Crothers.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, S. K. Lauren, Anita Loos; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Aug41; LP10713.

WHEN MY BABY SMILES AT ME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 98 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the play "Burlesque" by George Manker Watters.

Summary: This musical of backstage life is about the marital vicissitudes of an alcoholic comedian.

Credits: Producer, George Jessel; director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; adaptation, Elizabeth Reinhardt; music director, Alfred Newman; editor, Barbara McLean.

Cast: Betty Grable, Dan Dailey, Jack Oakie, June Havoc, Richard Arlen.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Nov48; LP2130.

WHEN MY SUGAR WALKS DOWN THE STREET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18May42; MP12578.

WHEN PADDY MCGINTY PLAYS THE HARP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Warren Murray.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Sep41; MP11632.

WHEN STRANGERS MARRY. Monogram Pictures Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice King; director, William Castle; original screenplay, Philip Yordan, Dennis J. Cooper; photography, Ira Morgan; film editor, Martin Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 19Aug44; LP12838.

WHEN THE BLOOM IS ON THE SAGE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16177.

WHEN THE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10982.

WHEN THE DALTONS RODE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on the book by Emmett Dalton and Jack Jungmeyer, Sr.

Credits: Director, George Marshall; original screenplay, Harold Shumate; photography, Hal Mohr; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 2Aug40; LP9829.

WHEN THE LIGHTS GO ON AGAIN. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; director, William K. Howard; original story, Frank Craven; screenplay, Milton Lazarus; music score, W. Franke Harling; music supervision, David Chudnow; film editor, Donn Hayes.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct44; LP13593.

WHEN THE ROSES BLOOM AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun42; MP12633.

WHEN THE WIFE'S AWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, Edward Bernds; story, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Feb46; LP193.

WHEN WIFIE'S AWAY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, George Jeske, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10272.

WHEN WINTER CALLS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Ed Thorgersen; music score, L. de Francesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Dec42; MP15402.

WHEN YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R. C. M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Nov46; MP1311.

WHEN YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Sep44; MP15167.

WHEN YOU WERE SWEET SIXTEEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Apr46; MP519.

WHEN YOUR HEAD'S IN THE CLOUDS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

Cast: Johnny Thompson, Marian Kerrigan.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1702.

WHERE ARE YOUR CHILDREN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, William Nigh; original story, Hilary Lynn; screenplay, Hilary Lynn, George Wallace Sayre; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Jan44; LP12448.

WHERE CACTUS GROWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credit: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar44; MP14665.

WHERE DID YOU GET THAT GIRL? c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate Producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Arthur Lubin; original story. Jay Dratler; screenplay, Jay Dratler, Paul Franklin, Stanley Crea Rubin; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Dec40; LP10134.

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 7,000 ft., sd. From a story by Morrie Ryskind and Sig Herzig.

Credits: Director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Morrie Ryskind; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29May45; LP13389.

WHERE HAS MY LITTLE DOG GONE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar42; MP12384.

WHERE IS THE CHICKEN IN THE CHICKEN CHOW MEIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16107.

WHERE THE EAGLE FLIES. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Richfield Oil Corp. of New York. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 24Mar47; 27 prints, 23Mar47; MU1819.

WHERE THE MOUNTAINS MEET THE SKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Dec42; MP13126.

WHERE THE MOUNTAINS MEET THE SKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr45; MP15781.

WHERE THE NORTH BEGINS. Bali Pictures, Inc., c1947. 41 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by James Oliver Curwood.

Summary: Sergeant Lucky Sanderson, as member of the Canadian Mounted Police, brings to justice a band of whiskey traders.

Credits: Producer, Carl K. Hittleman; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Leslie Schwabacher; screenplay, Elizabeth Burbridge; music score, Albert Glasser; film editor, Paul Landres.

Cast: Russell Hayden, Jennifer Holt.

© Bali Pictures, Inc.; 13Dec47; LP1487.

WHERE THE PEST BEGINS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,580 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Edward Bernds, Russell Malmgren.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Oct45; LP13543.

WHERE THE SWEET MAMAS GROW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11734.

WHERE THERE'S LIFE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 75 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Melville Shavelson.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Allen Boretz, Melville Shavelson; music director, Irvin Talbot; editor, Archie Marshek.

Cast: Bob Hope, Signe Hasso, William Bendix, George Coulouris, Harry von Zell.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Nov47; LP1313.

WHERE TIME STANDS STILL. c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 806 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Sep45; MP16379.

WHERE TRAILS END. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1May42; LP11325.

WHERE TURF MEETS SURF. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 986 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Producer, Louis Lewyn; director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Marion Mack; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Dec49; LP9587.

WHERE WERE YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Nov43; MP14248.

WHERE WILL YOU HIDE? Audiographic Institute, c1948. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon which shows what the horrors of a third World War might be, and sets forth the premise that there will be no refuge from danger in an atomic war.

© Audiographic Institute; 11Jun48; MP3234.

WHEREVER THERE'S ME, THERE'S YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Oct46; MP1198.

WHEREEVER YOU GO. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 4 prints, 21Apr47; MU1948.

WHEREVER YOU GO, MIDO GOES. Presented by Mido Watch Company of America, Inc. A John Sutherland production.

Credits: Supervised by St. Georges and Keyes, Inc.

© Mido Watch Company of America, Inc.; title, descr., & 11 prints, 9Dec47; MU2536.

WHICH IS WITCH. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Ken Champion, Virgil Ross, Arthur Davis, Gerry Chiniquy.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Dec49 (in notice: 1948); MP4839.

A WHIFF OF HELIOTROPE. SEE A Gentleman After Dark.

WHIPLASH. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A prizefighter, after a series of battles in and out of the ring, retires from boxing and becomes a painter.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Lew Seiler; original story, Kenneth Earl; screenplay, Maurice Geraghty, Harriet Frank, Jr.; adaptation, Gordon Kahn; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Frank Magee.

Cast: Dane Clark, Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden, Jeffrey Lynn.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc,; 15Jan49; LP2089.

WHIPS AND TRICKS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Apr45; MP15686.

WHIRLWIND RAIDERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The Durango Kid brings to justice the corrupt State Police force that has temporarily replaced the Texas Rangers.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Vernon Keays; original screenplay, Norman Hall.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Fred Sears, Philip Morris.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr48; LP1561.

WHISPERING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jul46; MP905.

WHISPERING CITY. Quebec Productions Corp., Montreal, c1947. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Marton; director, Fedor Ozep; original story, George Zuckerman, Michael Lennox; screenplay, Rian James, Leonard Lee; music composed by Morris C. Davis; musical direction and arrangements, Jean Deslauriers; film editors, Douglas Bagier, Richard J. Jarvis.

Cast: Helmut Dantine, Mary Anderson, Paul Lukas, John Pratt, Joy LaFleur.

Appl. author: Eagle Lion Films, Inc.

© Quebec Productions Corp.; 15Nov47; LP1358.

WHISPERING FOOTSTEPS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, George Blair; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Gertrude Walker; screenplay, Gertrude Walker, Dane Lussier; music direction, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Nov43; LP12412.

WHISPERING GHOSTS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,745 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Alfred Werker; original story, Philip MacDonald; screenplay, Lou Breslow; music direction, Emil Newman, Leigh Harline.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22May42; LP11340.

THE WHISPERING SKULL. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Elmer Clifton; original screenplay, Harry Frazer; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Hugh Winn.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 29Dec44; LP13565.

WHISPERING SMITH. Paramount Pictures Inc. c1949. 88 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a novel by Frank H. Spearman.

Summary: A Western in which a soft-spoken railroad agent outshoots a gang of train-robbers. Setting, the frontier country of 1890.

Credits: Associate producer, Mel Epstein; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Frank Butler, Karl Kamb; music score, Adolph Deutsch; editor, Archie Marshek.

Cast: Alan Ladd, Robert Preston, Brenda Marshall, Donald Crisp, William Demarest.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Feb49; LP2128.

WHISPERS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 941 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; original story and screenplay, Herman Boxer; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Feb41; LP10326.

WHISTLE IN THE NIGHT. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 10)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Philip Reisman, Jr.; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 25Jul47; MP2288.

WHISTLE STOP. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by Nero Films. 83 min., sd. From an original novel by Maritta M. Wolff.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Leonide Moguy; written for the screen by Philip Yordan; cinematographer, Russell Metty; film editor, Gregg Tallas.

© Nero Productions, Inc.; 25Jan46; LP75.

THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd. Suggested by The Columbia Broadcasting System program.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Castle; story, J. Donald Wilson; screenplay, Eric Taylor; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Mar44; LP12806.

THE WHISTLER. SEE

The Mark of the Whistler.

Power of the Whistler.

The Return of the Whistler.

The Secret of the Whistler.

The Thirteenth Hour.

The Voice of the Whistler.

THE WHISTLER AND HIS DOG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10983.

THE WHISTLER'S MOTHER-IN-LAW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar42; MP12340.

WHISTLING IN BROOKLYN. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Nat Perrin; music score, George Bassman; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Sep43; LP12334.

WHISTLING IN DIXIE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Nat Perrin; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Sep42; LP11619.

WHISTLING IN THE DARK. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Laurence Gross and Edward Childs Carpenter.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Robert MacGunigle, Harry Clork, Albert Mannhaimer; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Aug41; LP10670.

WHITE BLOSSOMS OF TAH-NI. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Aug44; MP15151.

WHITE CARGO. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. From the stage play by Leon Gordon; based on the novel "Hell's Playground" by Ida Vera Simonton.

Credits: Producer, Victor Saville; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, Leon Gordon; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Sep42; LP11668.

THE WHITE CLIFFS. SEE The White Cliffs of Dover.

THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w. A Clarence Brown production. Based on the poem "The White Cliffs" by Alice Duer Miller.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Clarence Brown; screenplay, Claudine West, Jan Lustig, George Froeschel; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Apr44; LP12695.

THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb42; MP12209.

WHITE DREAMS. SEE Weisse Traume.

WHITE EAGLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels) © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director: James W. Horne; story, Fred Myton; screenplay. Arch Heath, Morgan B. Cox, John Cutting, Lawrence E. Taylor.

Cast: Buck Jones, Chief Yowlachie, James Craven, Dorothy Fay.

1. Flaming Tepees. © 4Jan41; LP10215.

2. The Jail Delivery. © 11Jan41; LP10240.

3. The Dive into Quicksands. © 18Jan41; LP10255.

4. The Warning Death Knife. © 25Jan41; LP10264.

5. Treachery at the Stockade. © 1Feb41; LP10283.

6. The Gun-Cane Murder. © 8Feb41; LP10290.

7. The Revealing Blotter. © 15Feb41; LP10315.

8. Bird-Calls of Deliverance. © 22Feb41; LP10332.

9. The Fake Telegram. © 1Mar41; LP10352.

10. Mystic Dots and Dashes. © 8Mar41; LP10374.

11. The Ear at the Window. © 15Mar41; LP10378.

12. The Massacre Invitation. © 22Mar41; LP10408.

13. The Framed-Up Showdown. © 29Mar41; LP10422.

14. The Fake Army General. © 5Apr41; LP10446.

15. Treachery Downed. © 12Apr41; LP10460.

THE WHITE GORILLA. Louis Weiss, c1945. 6 reels, sd. From a story by Monro Talbot.

Credits: Director, H. L. Fraser.

© Louis Weiss; 12Jul45; LP13381.

WHITE HEAT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 114 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The bloody career of a paranoiac gangleader is finally ended by Treasury Department agents, who use the most modern scientific detection methods.

Credits: Producer, Louis F. Edelman; director, Raoul Walsh; story, Virginia Kellogg; screenplay, Ivan Goff, Ben Roberts; music, Max Steiner; orchestral arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Edmond O'Brien, Margaret Wycherly, Steve Cochran.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2638.

WHITE HOUSE. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week magazine, c1946. 19 min., sd,. 35mm. (This is America, no. 12)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director and photographer, Harry W. Smith; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Dudley Hale.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 20Sep46; MP1390.

THE WHITE HOUSE. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

WHITE LADY. SEE Isle of Missing Men.

WHITE MAGIC.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc., d.b.a. The Jam Handy Organization; title, descr., & 649 prints, 20Jul40; MU10358.

WHITE PONGO. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; music director, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 10Aug45; LP13598.

WHITE RHAPSODY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russel Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4May45; MP15918.

WHITE SAILS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with Walter A. Futter, c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Commentator, Owen Crump.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov41; MP11730.

WHITE SAVAGE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd., color with b&w sequences.

Credits: Producer, George Waggner; director, Arthur Lubin; original story, Peter Milne; screenplay, Richard Brooks; photography, William Snyder, Lester White; film editor, Russell Schoengarth. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Apr43; LP12021.

WHITE TIE AND TAILS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 9 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on "The Victoria Docks at 8" by Rufus King and Charles Beahan.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Charles T. Barton; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc; 19Sep46; LP586.

WHITE TREASURE. SEE Variety Views, no. 138.

WHO CALLS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar42; MP12304.

WHO DONE IT? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of the Three Stooges as detectives.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; direction and screenplay, Edward Bernds; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Mar49; LP2153.

WHO DONE IT? Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Erle C. Kenton; original story, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Stanley Roberts, Edmund Joseph, John Grant; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Oct42; LP11741.

WHO DUNIT TO WHO. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1338.

WHO DUNNIT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Aug44; MP15115.

WHO GETS THE CREDIT? Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the purpose and policies of small-loan companies.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© National Consumer Finance Association; 17Jan49; LP2122.

WHO IS GUILTY? Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels. Based on the play "I Killed the Count" by Alec Coppel.

Credits: Producer, I. Goldsmith; director, Fred Zelnik; screenplay, Laurence Huntington, Alec Coppel.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Sep40; LP9934.

WHO IS HOPE SCHUYLER? Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,159 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Stephen Ransome.

Credits: Director, Thomas Z. Loring; screenplay, Arnaud d'Usseau; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Apr42; LP11241.

WHO KILLED AUNT MAGGIE? Presented by Republic Pictures, c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Medora Field.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Stuart Palmer; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1Nov40; LP10076.

WHO KILLED DOC ROBBIN. Hal Roach Studios, Inc., c1948. 50 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy, with most of the action taking place in an abandoned dwelling. After a scientist disappears in a blast that wrecks a house on his estate, a group of children help to place responsibility for the disaster.

Credits: Producer, Robert F. McGowan; director, Bernard Carr; screenplay, Maurice Geraghty, Dorothy Reid; music director, Heinz Roemheld; film editor, Arthur Seid.

Cast: Virginia Grey, Don Castle, George Zucco, Whitford Kane, Claire Dubrey.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Apr48; LP1756.

WHO KILLED WHO? Loew's Inc., c1943. 715 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun43; LP12143.

WHO MAKES WORDS? Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how new words come into a language. They may be borrowed from another language, invented to meet new needs or formed by changing the spelling or meaning of existing words. A classroom film for junior high pupils.

Credits: Collaborator, Viola Theman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 5Apr48; MP3275.

WHO THREW THE OVERALLS IN MISTRESS MURPHY'S CHOWDER? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Oct41; MP11646.

WHO THREW THE TURTLE IN MRS. MURPHY'S GIRDLE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1337.

WHO THREW THE WHISKEY IN THE WELL? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP115.

A WHOLE BUNCH OF SOMETHING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Nov43; MP14126.

THE WHOLE WAY. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division of General Motors Corp. 20 min., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title & descr., 20Apr46; 12 prints, 22Apr46; MU482.

WHOM THE GODS LOVE. SEE Wen die Gotter Lieben.

WHOOZIT. Dorland, Inc., c1948. 1 min. each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Dorland, Inc.

Summary: Spot ads for A. S. Beck men's shoes.

Appl. authors: Mark Lawrence, Howard G. Barnes.

Series A.

1. © 6Oct48; MP3774.

2. © 6Oct48; MP3775.

3. © 19Nov48; MP3776.

4. © 26Nov48; MP3777.

5. © 12Nov48; MP3778.

6. © 5NOV48; MP3779.

WHO'S A DUMMY? RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Clem Beauchamp, George Jeske; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Nov41; LP10908.

WHO'S BEEN EATING MY PORRIDGE? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14652.

WHO'S COOKIN' WHO? c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm, (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Woody Woodpecker Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walter Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Grim Natwick; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Walter Lantz Productions & Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13May46; MP912.

WHO'S DELINQUENT? RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 13)

Summary: Shows that lack of recreational facilities and crowded schools contribute to juvenile delinquency in a typical American town, and calls for community action.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Edward Montagne; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 15Oct48; MP3658.

WHO'S GUILTY? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945–46. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Directors, Howard Bretherton, Wallace Grissell; original screenplay, Ande Lamb, George Plympton.

1. Avenging Visitor. © 13Dec45; LP107.

2. The Unknown Strikes, © 20Dec45; LP108.

3. Held for Murder. © 27Dec45; LP109.

4. A Killer at Bay. © 3Jan46; LP110.

5. Human Bait. © 10Jan46; LP112.

6. The Plunge of Doom. © 17Jan46; LP118.

7. A Date with Fate. © 24Jan46; LP141.

8. Invisible Hands. © 31Jan46; LP148.

9. Fate's Vengeance. © 7Feb46; LP164.

10. The Unknown Killer. © 14Feb46; LP187.

11. Riding to Oblivion. © 21Feb46; LP217.

12. The Tank of Terror. © 28Feb46; LP225.

13. White Terror. © 7Mar46; LP242.

14. A Cry in the Night. © 14Mar46; LP273.

15. The Guilty One. © 21Mar46; LP289.

WHO'S HUGH? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,466 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Monty Collins, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Nov43; LP12375.

WHO'S NEXT. SEE Variety Views, no. 122.

WHO'S SUPERSTITIOUS? Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 933 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Douglas Foster, Richard Landau; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Apr43; MP13514.

WHO'S WHO IN THE ZOO. Released by Warner Bros., c1942. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, John Carey; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Mar42; MP12334.

WHO'S YEHOODI? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr43; MP13433.

WHO'S ZOO IN HOLLYWOOD. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 668 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 78)

Credits: Director, Art Davis; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Oct41; MP12066.

WHY DADDY? Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 929 ft., sd. (A Robert Benchley Miniature)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Robert Benchley; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 17May44; LP12682.

WHY DID I FALL FOR ABNER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16136.

WHY DID I KISS THAT GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16448.

WHY DON'T WE DO THIS MORE OFTEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov41; MP11753.

WHY DON'TCHA KISS ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Mar46; MP358.

WHY DREAM OF LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Sep46; MP1162.

WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Sax; director, William Berke; original story, Fanya Foss Lawrence; screenplay, Fanya Foss Lawrence, Bradford Ropes; music director, Walter Green; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 5Nov45; LP13590.

WHY IS IT? Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Pete encounters some of life's minor annoyances—the alarm clock that doesn't go off, the broken shoe string, and the pests in the public library.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

Cast: Dave O'Brien.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Sep48; LP1820.

WHY KICK. c1942. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Castleman De Tolly Chesley.

© Atlantic Refining Co.; 1Apr42; MP12433.

WHY PLAY LEAP FROG? John Sutherland Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the relationship between wages and prices, and concludes that only with increased productivity can wages outstrip prices. An animated cartoon.

© Harding College; 1Mar49; MP4165.

WHY PUNCTUATE. Centron Corp., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film illustrates how good punctuation is essential in writing, and summarizes basic rules for use of the most important punctuation marks. For junior-senior high school English classes.

Credits: Adviser, Hardy R. Finch.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 20Nov48; MP3591.

WHY RADIO WORKS. 3 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© National Association of Broadcasters; title & descr., 18Mar44; 11 prints, 21Mar44; MU14617.

WHY STUDY FOREIGN LANGUAGES? Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates that the study of foreign languages contributes to the enjoyment of travel, the success of commerce, the appreciation of literature, and the understanding of people both at home and abroad. For high school, college, and adult groups.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Henry Grattan Doyle.

© Davie A. Smart; 17Aug49; MP4499.

WHY THOMAS WAS DISCHARGED. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Production, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on a story by George Arnold.

Summary: After courting two heiresses unsuccessfully, a pair of fortune-hunting young blades are chagrinned when their valet marries a rich wife. Setting, a sea-side resort in the gay nineties.

Credits: Producer, Stanley Rubin; director, Sobey Martin; screenplay, Millard Kaufmann; editor, Jodie Copelan.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2417.

THE WICKED LADY. Released by Universal-International, c1946. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 11 reels, sd., 35mm. A Gainsborough Picture. From the novel "The Life and Death of the Wicked Lady Skelton" by Magdalen King-Hall.

Credits: Producer, R. J. Minney; direction and screenplay, Leslie Arliss; music director, Louis Levy; editor, Terence Fisher.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Nov46; LP683.

A WICKY, WACKY ROMANCE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib; Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 17Nov49; MP10434.

WIDE OPEN SPACES. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, MacDonald MacPherson, Jack Huber; animation, Don Towsley, Paul Allen, Emery Hawkins, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 24Apr47; LP1375.

WIDE OPEN TOWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Harrison Jacobs, J. Benton Cheney; music direction, Irvin Talbot, John Leipold; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Carroll Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Aug41; LP10667.

WIFE DECOY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Apr45; LP13361.

THE WIFE OF MONTE CRISTO. c1946. 8 reels, sd. PRC Productions, Inc. Suggested by the novel by Alexandre Dumas.

Credits: Director, Edgar G. Ulmer; adaptation, Franz Rosenwald, Edgar G. Ulmer.

App. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 18Jun46; LP387.

THE WIFE OF THE MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Aug41; MP11476.

THE WIFE TAKES A FLYER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, B. P. Schulberg; director, Richard Wallace; story, Gina Kaus; screenplay, Gina Kaus, Jay Dratler; music, Werner R. Heymann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr42; LP11216.

WIFE TAMES WOLF. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director and author of screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Eddie Kane.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Mar47; LP996.

WIFE TO SPARE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

Cast: Andy Clyde.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Nov47; LP1318.

WIFE WANTED. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 8 reels, sd., 35mm. Suggested by the novel by Robert Callahan.

Credits: Producers, Jeffrey Bernerd, Kay Francis; director, Phil Karlson; screenplay, Caryl Coleman, Sidney Sutherland; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, Harry Newmann.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 14Oct46; LP639.

WIGGLES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Oct44; MP15360.

WIGWAM WHOOPEE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, I. Klein, Jack Mercer; animation, Tom Johnson, William Henning.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Feb48; LP1525.

WILBUR THE LION. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Puppetoon) Story based on an idea by William E. Molett.

Credits: Director, George Pal; screenplay, Jack Miller.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Apr47; LP956.

WILD AND WOODY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists, c1948. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Heck Allen; animation, Ed Love, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 31Dec48; MP3742.

WILD AND WOOLFY. Loew's Inc., c1945. 698 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Ed Love, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair, Walt Clinton; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Sep45; LP13535.

THE WILD AND WOOZY WEST. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 666 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 16)

Credits: Direction and animation, Allen Rose, Lou Lilly; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Apr42; LP11207.

WILD BEAUTY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Wallace W. Fox; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Paul Sawtell; cinematographer, Maury Gertsman; film editor, D. Patrick Kelly.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc,; 21Aug46; LP512.

WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES. Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., c1942. 82 min., sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmond Grainger; director, Ray Enright; original screenplay, Charles Grayson, Paul Gerard Smith, Raymond Schrock; music, Howard Jackson; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 31Jan42; LP11085.

WILD BOAR HUNT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties) (Bow and Arrow Adventures)

Credits: Written by De Leon Anthony; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec40; MP11025.

WILD CALENDAR. SEE Caught.

WILD COUNTRY. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Arthur E. Orloff; orchestration, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Flash, Roscoe Ates, Peggy Wynne, Douglas Fowley.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 7Jan47; LP778.

THE WILD FRONTIER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Albert DeMond; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Black Jack, Jack Holt, Eddy Waller.

© Republic Pictures Corps; 13Nov47; LP1327.

WILD GEESE CALLING. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941, 7,100 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Stewart Edward White.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; screenplay, Horace McCoy; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Aug41; LP10881.

A WILD HARE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Virgil Ross; music direction, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jul40; MP10385.

WILD HARVEST. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Houston Branch.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, John Monks, Jr.; music score, Hugo Friedhofer; editor, George Tomasini.

Cast: Alan Ladd, Dorothy Lamour, Robert Preston.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Sep47; LP1227.

WILD HONEY. Loew's Inc., c1942. 758 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Story, Henry Allen; animation, Michael Lah, Rudy Zamora, Don Williams; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Nov42; LP11700.

WILD HORSE MESA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Zane Grey's novel.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Wallace A. Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Desmond Marquette.

Cast: Tim Holt, Nan Leslie, Richard Martin, Richard Powers, Jason Robards.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Nov47; LP1334.

WILD HORSE PHANTOM. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, George Milton; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 28Oct44; LP13564.

WILD HORSE RANGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Harry S. Webb; director, Raymond K. Johnson; story, Tom Gibson; screenplay, Carl Krusada; music directors, Lange & Porter; photography, Edward A. Kull, William Hyer; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jun40; LP9727.

WILD HORSE ROUNDUP. SEE Northwestern Stampede.

WILD HORSE RUSTLERS. c1943. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Steve Braxton; music, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 10Feb43; LP530.

WILD HORSE STAMPEDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Tansey; director, Alan James; original story, Frances Kavanaugh; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 16Apr43; LP11990.

WILD HORSES. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 713 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Screenplay, Jameson Brewer, Irwin Braun; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Apr43; MP13494.

THE WILD MAN OF BORNEO. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Marc Connelly and Herman J. Mankiewicz.

Credits: Director, Robert B. Sinclair; screenplay, Waldo Salt, John McClain; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10218.

WILD TURKEY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 4Apr47; MP2030.

WILD WEST. c1946. Presented by PRC Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Emmett Tansey; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Karl Hajos; orchestral arrangements, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn. Cinecolor.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 1Dec46; LP712.

WILD WEST CHIMP. SEE Variety Views, no. 160.

WILDCAT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original story, North Bigbee; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Richard Murphy; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Aug42; LP11670.

WILDCAT BUS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Frank Woodruff; story and screenplay, Lou Lusty; editor, George Crone.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Aug40; LP9900.

THE WILDCAT OF TUCSON. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec40; LP10208.

WILDFIRE. SEE Red Canyon.

WILEING AWAY THE TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Mar43; MP13421.

WILFUL WILLIE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 26Jun42; MP14668.

WILL IT HAPPEN AGAIN. American Film Producers, c1948. Presented by Navy Club of the United States, Rockford, Illinois. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A picture designed to show the personal degradation of the Nazi leaders and the decadence of their regime. The last reel emphasizes the need for military preparation in the United States. Made from captured German film.

© American Film Producers; 15May48; LP1622.

WILL YA BE MY DARLIN'. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R.C.M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov46; MP1293.

A WILLIAM DAMON CHALK TALK. William Damon Productions, c1946. 1 reel, si., 16mm.

© William Damon Productions, William T. Damon, sole owner; 10Sep46; MP1207.

WILLIAM TELL OVERTURE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Sep44; MP15168.

WILLIE AND THE MOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 986 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; original story and screenplay, Julian Hochfelder; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 19May41; LP10519.

WILLIE, THE WINDOW WASHER. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author; Roy Mack.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12684.

WILLIE WILLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Feb43; MP13243.

WILLIE, WILLIE, WILL YA? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11081.

WILLOUGHBY'S MAGIC HAT. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 659 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 25)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; animation, Phil Duncan, Howard Swift; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Apr43; LP11959.

WILSON. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 13,861 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry King; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Aug44; LP12861.

WIMMIN HADN'T OUGHTA DRIVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell.

© Paramount Pictures Inc,; 16Aug40; LP9850.

WIMMIN IS A MYSKERY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Willard Bowsky, Joseph D'Igalo.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Jun40; MP10268.

WIND, CURVES, AND TRAP DOOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. Presented by Albert Mitchell. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series, no. 1–B)

Credits: Producer, Harry A. Kapit; director, Benjamin R. Parker; film editor, Charles R. Senf.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Feb48; MP3072.

THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS. SEE The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad.

THE WINDBLOWN HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Charles McKimson, Phil DeLara, Manny Gould, John Carey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Aug49 (in notice: 1948); MP4505.

THE WINDOW. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" by Cornell Woolrich.

Summary: A drama of terror. When an imaginative boy gives an eye-witness account of a murder, no one believes him except the murderers, who decide to kill him. Filmed in a tenement district in New York.

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Ted Tetzlaff; screenplay, Mel Dinelli; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Frederic Knudtson. Cast: Bobby Driscoll, Barbara Hale, Arthur Kennedy, Paul Stewart, Ruth Roman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10May49; LP2327.

WINDOW CLEANERS. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 22Aug40; LP9936.

WINDOW-SHOPPING. 300 feet.

Summary: A presentation of outstanding window displays by such stores as Gimbel's, Saks', and Best's in New York City.

Appl. author: Samuel Momrod Lewton.

© Teletime, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 18Aug48; MU3229.

WINDOW SHOPPING NEWSREEL, no. 1. 400 ft.

Summary: A television film program designed to show and describe fashionable apparel displayed in the shop windows of New York.

© Richard Barron; title, descr., & 4 prints, 31Aug48; MU3266.

WINDOW WASHERMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Mar46; MP284.

WINDS AND THEIR CAUSES. Coronet, c1948. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: When his gasoline-powered model airplane crashes over a bare field, Pete becomes interested in winds and obtains information from personal observation, from books, and from an aviator.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Walter A. Thurber.

© David A. Smart; 14Dec48; MP3723.

WING AND A PRAYER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 9,223 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry Hathaway; story and screenplay, Jerome Cady; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Jul44; LP13125.

THE WINGED SCOURGE. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Jan43; MP13619.

WINGED TARGETS, Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credit: Commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Jan44; MP14478.

WINGED VICTORY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 15 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Cukor; screenplay, Moss Hart; music, David Rose.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Dec44; LP13061.

WINGMEN OF TOMORROW. SEE Variety Views, no. 140.

WINGS AND THE WOMAN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 91 min., sd. A Herbert Wilcox production. By Viscount Castleross.

Credits: Associate producer, Victor Hanbury; director, Herbert Wilcox; scenario and screenplay, Miles Malleson; music score, William Alwyn; photography, Mutz Greenbaum; editor, Geoffrey Foot.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Sep42; LP11639.

WINGS FOR FREEDOM. SEE Variety Views, no. 108.

WINGS FOR THE FLEDGLING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942, 913 ft. (Victory Short, no. 1)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; continuity, George Blake; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Dec42; MP14316.

WINGS IN RECORD TIME. SEE Variety Views, no. 128.

WINGS OF COURAGE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 149)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narration, Alois Havrilla.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Mar46; MP307.

WINGS OF DEFENSE. Movietone. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Continuity, Russ Sheilds; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. De Francesco; photography. Jack Kuhne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Apr42; MP12397.

WINGS OF STEEL; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with the United States Army Air Corps, c1941. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Owen Crump. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Apr41; LP10379.

WINGS OF THE WIND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947, 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Summary: Sand-sailing on the beach; water-skiing in Florida; skate-sailing and iceboating in Wisconsin: and flying in a glider, supported by the "wings of the wind."

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Jul47; MP2624.

WINGS OVER LATIN AMERICA. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Archer Winsten.

© Pan American World Airways; title, descr., & 2 prints, 20Oct45; MU16434.

WINGS OVER THE PACIFIC. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, J. Bernard; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Wallace Sayre; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21May43; LP12066.

WINGS TO NEW YORK. Charles D. Beeland for Pan American World Airways, Atlantic Division. 1,145 feet, sd.

Summary: Arriving in New York by Pan American's Flying Clipper a visitor sees many things of interest in the Wonder City.

© Pan American Airways, Inc.; title & descr., 16Feb49; 2 prints, 21Dec48; MU3795.

WINKY THE WATCHMAN, c1945. 1 reel.

© Hugh Harman Productions, Inc,; 31Oct45; LP13656.

WINNER TAKE ALL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A prizefight melodrama in which Joe Palooka makes a cross-country tour and wins the big fight.

Credits: Producer, Hal E. Chester; director, Reginald LeBorg; screenplay, Stanley Rubin; music director, Edward J. Kay.

Cast: Joe Kirkwood, Elyse Knox, William Frawley, Stanley Clements, John Shelton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Sep48; LP1951.

WINNER TAKE BOSCO. Cinepuppet Productions, Inc. 500 ft., color, 16mm. (Bosco, Ciné Pup)

Summary: Bosco performs the three good deeds necessary to enter Dog-Heaven.

Credits: Authors, Buell Fuller, John Fuller, Julian R. Seide.

© Julian R. Seide, Cinepuppet Productions, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Nov48; MU3451.

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Featuring races from the time of Man O' War to the present, this semi-documentary film shows the life of a race horse, its training, its failures, and its triumphs.

Credits: Producer, Richard K. Polimer; director, Felix E. Feist; screenplay, Harold J. Green.

Cast: Jean Willes, Morgan Garley, Johnny Longden, Bob Howard, William Gould.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21May48; LP1860.

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producers, Heilner, Blumenthal; director, Andre DeLaVarre; narration, Roger Q. Denny. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 7Jun44; LP12688.

WINNERS OF THE WEST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ford Beebe, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, George H. Plympton, Basil Dickey, Charles R. Condon.

Cast: Dick Foran, Anne Nagel, James Craig, Tom Fadden, Harry Woods.

1. Redskins Ride Again! © 30Apr40; LP9598.

2. The Wreck at Red River Gorge! © 30Apr40; LP9599.

3. The Bridge of Disaster! © 30Apr49; LP9600.

4. Trapped by Redskins! © 16May40; LP9643.

5. Death Strikes the Trail! © 22May40; LP9655.

6. A Leap For Life! © 22May40; LP9656.

7. Thundering Terror! © 6Jun40; LP9685.

8. The Flaming Arsenal! © 6Jun40; LP9686.

9. Sacrificed by Savages! © 11Jun40; LP9698.

10. Under Crashing Timbers. © 19Jun40; LP9718.

11. Bullets in the Dark. © 19Jun40; LP9719.

12. The Battle of Blackhawk. © 25Jun40; LP9735.

13. Barricades Blasted. © 10Jul40; LP9758.

WINNING BASKETBALL. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd. (Sportscope, no. 6)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Jerry Brondfield; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Harold Anderson; photographer, Anthony Caputo; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 25Jan46; MP249.

THE WINSLOW BOY. London Film Productions, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through London Film Productions, Inc., 1949. 117 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Terence Rattigan.

Summary: Belief in the innocence of his naval-cadet son, who is accused of stealing and expelled from school, leads a father to a full-scaled fight for justice, which culminates in a triumphant

## action against the Crown.

Credits: Producer, Anatole de Grunwald; director, Anthony Asquith; screenplay, Terence Rattigan, Anatole de Grunwald; music, William Alwyn; editor, Gerald Turney Smith.

Cast: Robert Donat, Margaret Leighton, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Marie Lohr, Neil North.

© London Film Productions, Inc.; 23Sep48; LP2578.

WINTER CAPERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Summary: Hannes Schmid and George Von Birgelen demonstrate their skill in skiing and skating.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; photographer, Jack Etra; editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Oct49; MP4640.

WINTER DRAWS ON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Mar48; LP1518.

WINTER HOLIDAY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp; 27Sep46; MP1963.

WINTER IN ESKIMO LAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Father Hubbard's Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; narrators, Father Hubbard, Lowell Thomas; music score, L. De Francesco; editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Jul41; MP11311.

WINTER MEETING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 104 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Ethel Vance [pseud. of Grace Zaring Stone].

Summary: A romantic drama about the thwarted love of a poetess and a war hero. New England setting.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Bretaigne Windust; screen play, Catherine Turney; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, Max Steiner; orchestra arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: Bette Davis, Janis Paige, James Davis, John Hoyt, Florence Bates.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., 24Apr48; LP1580.

WINTER ON THE FARM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A classroom film for primary and middle grades, showing how Joan and Jerry spend the winter months on the farm.

Credits: Collaborator, E. Laurence Palmer.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9Jul48; MP3261.

WINTER PARADISE, Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 907 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 84)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Dec42; MP13460.

WINTER SPORTS JAMBOREE. SEE Variety Views, no. 116.

WINTER STORAGE. Walt Disney Productions. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm, (Donald Duck Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Bill Berg, Nick George; music, Oliver Wallace; animation, Bob Carlson, Bill Justice, Volus Jones, Jack Boyd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Jun48; LP2351.

WINTER THRILLS AND SPILLS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Feb46; MP190.

WINTER WONDERLAND. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Fred Schiller.

Credits: Associate producers, Walter Colmes, Henry Sokal; director, Bernard Vorhaus; screenplay, Peter Goldbaum, David Chandler, Arthur Marx, Gertrude Purcell; music, Paul Dessau; film editor, Robert Jahns.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Charles Drake, Roman Bohnen, Eric Blore.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP904.

WINTER WONDERLAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16590.

WINTERTIME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 7,416 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; story, Arthur Kober; screenplay, E. Edwin Moran, Jack Jevne, Lynn Starling; music direction, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Sep43; LP12454.

WIR MACHEN MUSIK (We Make Music) sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Terra Filmkunst.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 22Dec46; LU724.

THE WISE CHOICE. Wilding Picture Productions for the Dearborn Motors Corp., c1948. 24 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The merits of the Ford tractor are presented to a farm boy and his uncle.

Appl. author: Joseph H. Mayne.

© Dearborn Motors Corp,; 15Apr48; LP1624.

THE WISE LITTLE WOODCHOPPER. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., For the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After the animals of the forest offer him a cart of Coca-Cola, the woodchopper spares the big tree which is their home. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 25Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2610.

WISE MAN SAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP108.

THE WISE OLD OWL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11297.

WISE OWL. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 678 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 71)

Credits: Director, U. B. Iwerks; music, Eddie Kilfeather; music director, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 5Dec40; LP10265.

WISE QUACKERS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Manuel Perez, Gerry Chiniquy, Pete Burness, Ken Champion, Virgil Ross.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec48; MP3737.

THE WISE QUACKING DUCK. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Phil Monroe; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12May43; MP13584.

WISH YOU WERE HERE. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 3.

THE WISTFUL WIDOW OF WAGON GAP. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy which satirizes Westerns. A huckster, unjustly convicted of murder, is reprieved by an old Montana law which makes it mandatory for him to be responsible for the murdered man's wife, children, and debts.

Credits: Producer, Robert Arthur; director, Charles T. Barton; original story, D. D. Beauchamp, William Bowers; screenplay, Robert Lees, Frederic I. Rinaldo, John Grant; music, Walter Schumann; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Frank Gross.

Cast: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Marjorie Main, Audrey Young, George Cleveland.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & C S Co.; 31Oct47; LP1919.

WITH A TWIST OF THE WRIST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11301.

WITH ROD AND GUN IN CANADA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, Blumenthal de La Varre; director, Van Campen Heilner; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec45; MP278.

WITH ROD AND REEL ON ANTICOSTI ISLAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Producer, Pam Blumenthal; director, Van Campen Heilner. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15May43; MP13573.

WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows that Ford tractors with the Dearborn Motors lift-type tandem disc harrows are fast, convenient, and inexpensive for the farmer to operate.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 13Apr49; MU4002.

WITH THESE WEAPONS. Willard Pictures, c1939. Presented by the National Anti-Syphilis Committee of the American Social Hygiene Association. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Russell S. Bushnell; script, Robert T. Furman; narration, David Ross.

© American Social Hygiene Assn., Inc.; 14Dec39; MP9875.

WITHIN THESE WALLS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 6,406 ft., sd. From a story by Coles Trapnell and James B. Fisher.

Credits: Director, Bruce Humberstone; screenplay, Eugene Ling, Wanda Tuchock; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Jun45; LP13450.

WITHOUT HONOR. Strand Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A domestic melodrama in which a man, obsessed with jealous hatred for his brother's wife, becomes involved with a supposed murder, a disappearing corpse, and an attempted suicide.

Credits: Producers, Robert and Raymond Hakim; director, Irving Pichel; original screenplay, James Poe; music, Max Steiner; film editor, Gregg Tallas.

Cast: Laraine Day, Dane Clark, Franchot Tone, Agnes Moorehead, Bruce Bennett.

© Strand Productions, Inc.; 21Oct49; LP2581.

WITHOUT LOVE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Philip Barry.

Credits: Producer, Lawrence Weingarten; director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Mar45; LP13205.

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS. Released by RKO Radio, c1946. Presented by Jesse L. Lasky and Walter MacEwen. 107 min., sd., 35mm. From the novel by Jane Allen and Mae Livingston.

Credits: Producer, Jesse L. Lasky; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, Andrew Solt; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Jesse L. Lasky Productions, Inc.; 3Jun46; LP433.

THE WITNESS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Rousch; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Mar42; LP11162.

THE WIZARD OF ARTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug41; MP11437.

WIZARD OF AUTOS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 124)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; script, Frank Kelly; narrator, Larry Elliott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13997.

WIZARD OF THE FAIRWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (World of Sports, no. 83)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Nov42; MP13459.

WOLF CHASES PIGS. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 664 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 18)

Credits: Frank Taslin; Bob Wickersham, Leo Salkin, John Hubley, Paul Sommer, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Apr42; LP11462.

THE WOLF HUNTERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on James Oliver Curwood's novel.

Summary: A Mountie, aided by his dog, proves that a local trader is responsible for both a fur-thievery plot and several murders.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Oscar Boetticher; screenplay, W. Scott Darling; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Kirby Grant, Jan Clayton, Chinook (dog), Edward Norris, Helen Parrish.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Oct49; LP2666.

WOLF IN SHEIK'S CLOTHING. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon) Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Larry Riley, I. Klein; animation, Tom Johnson, George Rufle.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Jul48; LP1740.

WOLF IN THIEF'S CLOTHING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,658 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Jack White; film editor, Charles Hochberg.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Feb43; LP12118.

THE WOLF MAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Waggner; original screenplay, Curt Siodmak; photography, Joseph Valentine; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Dec41; LP10910.

WOLF OF NEW YORK. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, William McGann; original story, Leslie T. White, Arnold Belgard; screenplay, Gordon Kahn, Lionell Houser; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Jan40; LP9434.

THE WOLF'S PARDON. (Terrytoons) Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 5Dec47; LP1538.

A WOLF'S TALE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 27Oct44; LP13330.

WOLVES OF THE RANGE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Joe O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 18Jun43; LP12099.

THE WOMAN FROM TANGIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An American dancer, who is traveling by boat to Gibraltar, stops in Tangier, where she becomes involved in theft and murder.

Credits: Producer, Martin Mooney; director, Harold Daniels; original screenplay, Irwin Franklyn; music director, Paul Donnelly; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Adele Jergens, Stephen Dunne, Michael Duane, Denis Green, Ian MacDonald.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Dec47; LP1435.

THE WOMAN IN GREEN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the "Sherlock Holmes" characters created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Director, Roy William Neill; original screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; music director, Mark Levant; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jul45; LP13455.

THE WOMAN IN RED. SEE My Name Is Julia Ross.

WOMAN IN THE HALL. Wessex Film Productions, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel of the same title by G. B. Stern.

Summary: An unscrupulous mother who has supported herself and her two daughters by mulcting unsuspecting philanthropists, acknowledges her responsibility for her young daughter's warped sense of honesty when the girl is brought to trial for stealing.

Credits: Producer, Ian Dalrymple; director, Jack Lee; screenplay, Ian Dalrymple, G. B. Stern, Jack Lee; music, Temple Abady; film editor, John Krish.

Cast: Ursula Jeans, Jean Simmons, Cecil Parker, Jill Raymond, Edward Underdown.

© Independent Producers, Ltd.; 10Mar48; LP2356.

THE WOMAN IN THE HOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 988 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story, John Nesbitt; screenplay, Warner Law; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Apr42; LP11313.

THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW. c1944. Presented by International Pictures, Inc., 99 min., sd. From a novel by J. H. Wallis.

Credits: Produced and written for the screen by Nunnally Johnson; music score, Arthur Lange; film editor, Marjorie Johnson.

© The Christie Corp.; 11Oct44; LP12883.

THE WOMAN IN WHITE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 109 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Wilkie Collins.

Summary: In this melodrama, two unscrupulous men seek to steal the fortune of an heiress. The plot is complicated by the existence of an insane "double" of the young woman. Setting, a village near London in the 1850's.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Stephen Morehouse Avery; music score, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

Cast: Alexis Smith, Eleanor Parker, Sydney Greenstreet, Gig Young, Agnes Moorehead.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15May48; LP1609.

THE WOMAN OF THE TOWN. Released thru United Artists Corp., c1943. Presented by Harry Sherman. 89 min., sd. From an original story by Norman Houston.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Aeneas MacKenzie; music score, Miklos Rozsa; music direction, Irvin Talbot; film editor, Carrol Lewis.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 20Dec43; LP12490.

WOMAN OF THE YEAR. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. A George Stevens' Production.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, George Stevens; original screenplay, Ring Lardner, Jr., Michael Kanin; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jan42; LP11036.

THE WOMAN ON THE BEACH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "None So Blind" by Mitchell Wilson.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Price; director, Jean Renoir; screenplay, Frank Davis, Jean Renoir; adaptation, Michael Hogan; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Hannis Eisler; film editors, Roland Gross, Lyle Boyer.

Cast: Joan Bennett, Robert Ryan, Charles Bickford.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3Jun47; LP1073.

WOMAN SPEAKS. Film Studios of Chicago, c1945–47. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Hans August Spanuth, d.b.a. Film Studios of Chicago.

Credits: Narration, Virginia Gregg, Ann Tobin.

Volume 1, 1945/47.

1. © 2Dec45; MP246.

2. © 2Dec45; MP247.

3. © 1Nov46; MP1384.

4. © 1Dec46; MP1385.

5. © 28Feb47; MP1825.

6. © 28Feb47; MP1826.

WOMAN WHO CAME BACK. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures, 68 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Colmes; story, John Kafka; screenplay, Dennis Cooper, Lee Willis; music score, Edward Plumb; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Henry Sharp; film editor, John Link.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Nov45; LP13677.

A WOMAN'S FACE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. From the play "Il Etait Une Fois" by Francis de Croisset.

Credits: Producer, Victor Saville; director, George Cukor; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart, Elliot Paul; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May41; LP10462.

A WOMAN'S SECRET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Dore Schary presentation. Based on the novel "Mortgage on Life" by Vicki Baum.

Summary: A mystery melodrama in which an innocent ex-singer confesses to the shooting of her successful protégée.

Credits: Produced and written by Herman J. Mankiewicz; director, Nicholas Ray; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Sherman Todd.

Cast: Maureen O'Hara, Melvyn Douglas, Gloria Grahame, Bill Williams, Victor Jory.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 9Mar49; LP2213.

A WOMAN'S VENGEANCE. Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story, "The Gioconda Smile," by Aldous Huxley.

Summary: Domestic hatred, extra-marital intrigue, and murder in an upper class English home.

Credits: Producer and director, Zoltan Korda; screenplay, Aldous Huxley; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Jack Wheeler.

Cast: Charles Boyer, Ann Blyth, Jessica Tandy, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Mildred Natwick.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Mar48; LP1648.

WOMEN ARE NO ANGELS. SEE Frauen Sind Keine Engel.

WOMEN AT WAR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Army, c1943. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Oct43; LP12302.

WOMEN IN BLUE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Vyvyan Donner; described by Hugh James; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jul43; MP14822.

WOMEN IN BONDAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Herman Millakowsky; director, Steve Sekely; original story, Frank Bentick Wisbar; screenplay, Houston Branch; photographer, Mack Stengler.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Nov43; LP12390.

WOMEN IN HIDING. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Joe Newman; original screenplay, Howard Dimsdale; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9779.

WOMEN IN PHOTOGRAPHY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Cinescope, no. 19)

Credits: Narrator, Millicent Robin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Nov41; MP11855.

WOMEN IN SPORTS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; narrator, Knox Manning, Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Feb43; MP13288.

WOMEN IN THE NIGHT. Southern California Pictures, c1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a report issued by the United Nations Information Office.

Summary: A melodrama which has for its theme the mistreatment of white women by the German and Japanese forces in Shanghai shortly before the collapse of the Japanese government.

Credits: Producer, Louis K. Ansell; director, William Rowland.

Cast: Tala Birell, William Henry, Virginia Christine.

© Southern California Pictures; 30Dec47; LP1548.

WOMEN IN THE NIGHT. Southern California Pictures, S. A., c1947. 10 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Louis K. Ansell; director, William Rowland.

Cast: Tala Birell, William Henry, Virginia Christine.

© Southern California Pictures, S. A.; 7Oct47; LP1246.

WOMEN IN WAR. c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, John H. Auer; original screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Doris Anderson; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 3Jul40; LP9785.

WOMEN WITHOUT NAMES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. Based on a play by Ernest Booth.

Credits: Director, Robert Florey; screenplay, William R. Lipman, Horace McCoy; photography, Charles Lang; film editor, Anne Bauchens.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar40; LP9482.

WONDER HOUSE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 6)

Summary: A report on the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Shows the different departments of the Museum and the people who prepare the exhibits. Includes scenes of the Museum's expeditions, showing how giant lizards are trapped in the East Indies and how the first dinosaur eggs were discovered.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director and photographer, Larry O'Reilly; written by Dudley Hale; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 1Apr49; MP4271.

WONDER MAN. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 98 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Bruce Humberstone; original story, Arthur Sheekman; screenplay, Don Hartman, Melville Shavelson, Philip Rapp; adaptation, Jack Jevne, Eddie Moran; music director, Louis Forbes; film editor, Daniel Mandell. Technicolor.

© Beverly Productions, Inc.; 8Jun45; LP13339.

THE WONDER MINERAL. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Universal Zonolite Insulation Co. 1–1/2 reels, b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The properties of Zonolite brand vermiculite are demonstrated in a laboratory. Closing sequences show the advantages of using this material as fill-type insulation, as a plaster and concrete aggregate, and as a sound absorption material.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11May48; 36 prints, 10May48; MU2971.

THE WONDERFUL STORY OF SANTA CLAUS. Fantasy Productions, c1948. 16 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A Christmas story about Santa Claus and his helpers.

Credits: Producer and director, James Blakeley; original story, Patrick D. Dignan.

© Fantasy Productions; 6Dec48; LP2186.

WONDERS OF THE SEA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, David Cooper; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. De Francesco; photography, Bruce Cummings; editor, Jack Darrock.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Nov41; MP11844.

WOO WOO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,440 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Jan45; LP13117.

WOO WOO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec43; MP14378.

WOOD GOES TO WAR. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 915 ft., sd., color. (A FitzPatrick Miniature)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William E. Snyder. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr43; MP13513.

WOOD-PECKIN'. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Joe Stultz.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Aug43; LP12189.

THE WOODLAND SYMPHONY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After giving a concert with improvised instruments for the animals of the forest, the pixies dance around a bottle of Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 17Sep49 (in notice: 1948); LP2609.

WOODMAN SPARE THAT TREE. c1942. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 677 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 85)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Phil Duncan; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Jul42; LP11706.

THE WOODWORKER. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1940. Presented by Vocational Guidance Films, Inc. 1 reel. (Your Life Work Series)

© Arthur P. Twogood; 19Sep40; MP10752.

WOODY GROWS UP. Walter W. Bennett, c1945. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, director and narrator, Walter W. Bennett.

© Walter W. Bennett; 1Dec45; MP1577.

WOODY HERMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Eugene De Rue.

Cast: Woody Herman and his orchestra, The Modernaires, Don and Beverly, The Woodchoppers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Jun48; MP3490.

WOODY HERMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1938. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Roy Mack.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec38; MP10386.

WOODY, THE GIANT KILLER. Walter Lantz Productions, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune) A Universal Picture.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Webb Smith; animation, Verne Harding, Ed Love; music, Darrell Calker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc,; 23Jun48 (in notice: 1947); MP3493.

WOODY WOODPECKER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walter Lantz Cartoon)

Credits: Story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; artists, Alex Lovy, Ray Fahringer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 19Jun41; MP11256.

WOODY WOODPECKER IN WOODY DINES OUT. c1945. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walt Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Don William; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., and Walter Lantz Productions; 23Apr45; MP16093.

WOODY WOODPECKER THE SCREWDRIVER. Presented by Universal, c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz Production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, J. Cosgrove; music, Darrell Calker; artists, Alex Lovy, R. Somerville. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 28Aug41; MP11523.

WOOL, FROM SHEEP TO CLOTHING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Robert Homer Burns and Alexander Johnston, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Nov47; MP2515.

A WORD TO THE WISE. The Chicago Film Laboratory. Presented by The National Retailers Mutual Insurance Co., sd.

© Theodore L. Osborn, Jr.; title, descr., & 6 prints; 4Dec46; MU1359.

WORDS AND MUSIC. Loew's Inc., c1948. 119 mins., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A musical extravaganza in which a story of the lives of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart is used as a framework to display twenty-two of their best known songs.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Norman Taurog; film editors, Albert Akst, Ferris Webster; story, Guy Bolton, Jean Holloway; screenplay, Fred Finklehoffe; adaptation, Ben Feiner, Jr.; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Conrad Salinger; film editors, Albert Akst, Ferris Webster.

Cast: June Allyson, Perry Como, Judy Garland, Lena Horne, Gene Kelly.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Dec48; LP2007.

WORK MEASUREMENT FILM. c1948. 16 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Performance rating; introduction. A film designed for use in connection with a work measurement manual by Ralph Mosser Barnes.

© Ralph M. Barnes; 19May48; MP3150.

WORK MEASUREMENT FILM. Ralph M. Barnes, c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Explains the need for performance rating, and illustrates the range of working speeds among factory employees. Includes studies showing performance of miscellaneous factory operations at various rates of speed.

© Ralph M. Barnes; 29Mar49; MP4185.

THE WORK OF THE ATMOSPHERE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Greek.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP804.

THE WORK OF THE KIDNEYS. Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Anton J. Carlson, H. G. Swann, and F. J. Mullin, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Die Werk van die Niere."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul46; MP1873.

THE WORK OF THE KIDNEYS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940, 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 20Sep40; MP10696.

THE WORKING OF MAGNESIUM. Presented by The Dow Chemical Co. sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Dow Chemical Co.; title & descr. 25Feb44; 5 prints, 21Feb44; MU14515.

THE WORKING OF MAGNESIUM. SEE This Is Magnesium.

WORKING ON AIR. Presented by General Motors, Aeroproducts Division. (Little Journeys in General Motors)

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15350.

WORKING ON THE RAILROAD. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Working on the Railroad" is sung by the Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4532.

WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A memoir of Charles Dickens, presenting sequences from his novels filmed in their actual settings.

Credits: Producer, Edwin J. Fancey; director, John G. Taylor; commentary, Frederick Allen; photographer, Billie Williams; editor, Jack Wilman.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 25Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4038.

WORLD FRIENDSHIP. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1949. Presented by the Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how world friendship and understanding grows out of the camp experiences of the girls from Brazil, Canada, and the United States who are attending the camp for Girl Guides and Girl Scouts which is held in conjunction with the Conference of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts in Cooperstown, New York, in 1948.

Credits: Director, Francis Thompson; narration, Basil Beyea; narrator, Tony Kraber; music, Gene Forrell.

© Girl Scouts of the United States of America; 15Mar49; LP2254.

WORLD IN FLAMES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Albert J. Richard; written by William C. Park.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Nov40; MP10605.

WORLD JAMBOREE—1947. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 32 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A young American Scout describes the World Jamboree held in France in the summer of 1947.

© Boy Scouts of America; 15Oct48; MP4050.

THE WORLD OF 1960. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1939. 833 ft., sd. (Columbia Cinescope)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; narrator, Edgar Barrier; photographers, Don Malkames, James Lillis.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec39; MP9833.

THE WORLD OF SILENCE; OUR PROBLEM FOR TODAY. Evangelical Lutheran Institute for the Deaf. 4 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

© Evangelical Lutheran Institute for the Deaf; title, descr., & 14 prints, 23Jun47; MU2151.

THE WORLD OF SOUND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 929 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 18)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; story, William M. Nelson; narration, Milton Cross; music director, Jack Schaindlin; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Oct41; MP11854.

WORLD PREMIERE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Ted Tetzlaff; story, Earl Felton, Gordon Kahn; screenplay, Earl Felton; photographer, Dan Flapp; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Aug41; LP10678.

WORLD WITHOUT BORDERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd. (A Universal Special Featurette)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrators, Ed Herlihy, Ben Grauer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov44; LP13039.

WORLD'S HEAVY WEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP, JUNE 1948. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In the Yankee Stadium, 42,000 people see Joe Louis knock out Joe Walcott to retain the heavyweight championship.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Jun48; MP3119.

WORLD'S HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, DECEMBER, 1947. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Joe Louis successfully defends his heavyweight championship title for the 25th time, with Jersey Joe Walcott as the contender.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Dec47; MP2652.

THE WORLD'S LARGEST TELESCOPE REFLECTOR. Glenn Edgerton, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Written by Cecily Edgerton; narrator, Robert McNamara.

© Glenn Edgerton; 1Jan41; MP10808.

WORLD'S MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: ROCKY GRAZIANO VS. TONY ZALE. Coram Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Challenger Tony Zale, winning over champion Rocky Graziano, recovers the middleweight crown after scoring a third-round knockout.

Credits: Supervisor of production, J. A. Wray Kerr; film editor, Elmer J. McGovern.

© Coram Pictures Corp.; 11Jun48; MP3089.

WORLD'S MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: TONY ZALE VS. MARCEL CERDAN. Ringside Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Challenger Marcel Cerdan wins the title when Champion Tony Zale is unable to come out for the twelfth round.

© Ringside Pictures Corp.; 22Sep48; MP3314.

WORLD'S SIMPLEST DRIVING. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by the Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A woman, accompanied by her small daughter, drives easily through traffic in a new Oldsmobile which is equipped with Hydra-matic Drive.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 4 prints, 10May48; MU3029.

WORLD'S SIMPLEST WAY TO DRIVE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Nov47; 3 prints, 1Dec47; MU2492.

WORLD'S YOUNGEST AVIATOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 127)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Albert A. Grobe.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Feb44; MP14555.

THE WORM TURNS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Dec44; MP15494.

WORTELS VAN PLANTE. SEE Roots of Plants.

WOT'S ALL TH' SHOOTIN' FER. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Volney White; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 3May40; MP10282.

WOTTA KNIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Carl Meyer, I. Klein.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Oct47; LP1260.

WOULD YOU FOR A BIG RED APPLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jul44; MP15078.

WOULD'ST COULD I BUT KISS THY HAND, OH BABE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jan42; MP12148.

WRANGLER'S ROOST. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 7).

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Earle Snell; screen adaptation, John Vlahos, Robert Finkel; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 4Jun41; LP10701.

THE WRECK OF THE HESPERUS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Suggested by a story by Edward Huebsch. Title from the poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Summary: A young sea captain brings to an end the nefarious undertakings of a man who causes shipwrecks in order to profit from the salvage; Gloucester in 1830 provides the setting.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, John Hoffman; script, Aubrey Wisberg; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Willard Parker, Edgar Buchanan, Patricia White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Mar38; LP1513.

THE WRECK OF THE HESPERUS. Terrytoons Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Feb44; MP14844.

WRECK OF THE OLD '97. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Feb45; MP15607.

WRECKING CREW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Robert T. Shannon, Mauri Grashin; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Richard Murphy; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Nov42; LP11808.

WRESTLING. 700 ft.

© Stanley Willard Henson, Jr., title, descr., & 12 prints, 5Dec40; MU10644.

THE WRESTLING OCTOPUS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 872 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 78)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photography, Charles Harten, J. Burgi Contner, Jay Rescher; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Apr42; MP12648.

WRITE THAT LETTER TONIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jun45; MP15994.

WRITING BETTER BUSINESS LETTERS. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the importance of business letters, emphasizing the importance of clarity, brevity, and courtesy. For junior and senior high grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator: J. Paul Leonard.

© David A. Smart; 20Apr49; MP4277.

WYATT EARP, FRONTIER MARSHAL. SEE My Darling Clementine.

WYLIE, PHILIP. Cinderella Jones. 1946.

WYOMING. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Milten Bren; director, Richard Thorpe; original story, Jack Jevne; screenplay, Jack Jevne, Hugo Butler; music score, David Snell; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep40; LP9920.

THE WYOMING BANDIT. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which "Rocky" Lane routs murdering bandits and restores law and order.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Philip Ford; written by M. Coates Webster; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Land, Nugget Clark, Trevor Bardette, Victor Kilian, Rand Brooks.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jul49; LP2446.

WYOMING HURRICANE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Apr44; LP12782.

WYOMING WILDCAT. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, George Sherman; original story, Bennett Cohen; screenplay, Bennett Cohen, Anthony Coldeway; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, William Nobles; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Jan41; LP10250.

WYOMING. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; screenplay, Lawrence Hazard, Gerald Geraghty; music, Nathan G. Scott, Ernest Gold; music director, Cy Feuer; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: William Elliott, Vera Ralston, John Carroll, George "Gabby" Hayes, Albert Dekker.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP1165.

X

X MARKS THE SPOT. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Mauri Grashin and Robert T. Shannon.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; screenplay, Stuart Palmer, Richard Murphy; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Nov42; LP11732.

X MARKS THE SPOT. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© State of New Jersey; title & descr., 19Oct44; 5 prints, 18Oct44; MU15323.

XXX MEDICO. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 933 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; screenplay, Robert Lopez, Samuel H. Chain; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Mar40; LP9585.

XYLOPHONIA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14377.

Y

YA DARN TOOTIN' GABRIEL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar42; MP12283.

YA FINE AND HEALTHY THING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16300.

YA SURE—YA BETCHA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jun42; MP12723.

A YANK AT ETON. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Norman Taurog; original story, George Oppenheimer; screenplay, George Oppenheimer, Lionel Houser, Thomas Phipps; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Aug42; LP11535.

A YANK IN LIBYA. c1942. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 7 reels, sd. An M & H Production.

Credits: Producer, George M. Merrick; director, Albert Herman; original story and screenplay, Arthur St. Claire, Sherman Lowe; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, L. R. Brown.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 20Jul42; LP11479.

A YANK IN LONDON. c1945. 12 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Herbert Wilcox; screenplay, Maurice Cowan; scenario, Nicholas Phipps, William D. Bayles.

Appl. author: Associated British Picture Corp., Ltd.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15May45; LP620.

A YANK IN THE R. A. F. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,854 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry King; original story, Melville Crossman; screenplay, Darrell Ware, Karl Turnberg.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Oct41; LP10765.

A YANK ON THE BURMA ROAD. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, George B. Seitz; original screenplay, Gordon Kahn, Hugo Butler, David Lang; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Feb42; LP11426.

YANKEE DOODLE ANDY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1,635 ft.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Oct41; LP10836.

YANKEE DOODLE DANDY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 126 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based on the story of George M. Cohan.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; original story, Robert Buckner; screenplay, Robert Buckner, Edmund Joseph; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; film editor, George Amy.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 2Jan43; LP11830.

YANKEE DOODLE DONKEY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Oct44; LP13081.

YANKEE DOODLE JUNIOR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Oct44; MP15309.

THE YANKEE DOODLE MOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1944. 718 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Irven Spence, Pete Burness, Kenneth Muse, George Gordon; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jun44; LP283.

YANKEE DOODLE NEVER WENT TO TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec44; MP15663.

THE YANKEE DOODLE POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov41; MP11754.

YANKEE DOODLE SWING SHIFT. c1942. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Harold Mason; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 14Aug42; MP12770.

THE YANKEE DOODLER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Aug42; MP12881.

YANKEE DOODLE'S DAUGHTERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Army and Navy. c1945. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters Bands)

Credits: Producer, Louis Lewyn; director, David Gould.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Jul45; MP16163.

YANKEE FAKIR. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From a story by Mindret Lord.

Credits: Director, W. Lee Wilder; screenplay, Richard S. Conway; music director, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Joseph B. Caplan.

Cast: Douglas Fowley, Joan Woodbury, Clem Bevans, Ransom Sherman.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP903.

YANKEE SKI DOODLE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Movietone's (Sports Review)

Summary: Scenes of skiing in the New England states. Rene Revoire, Carl Acker, and Sepp Ruschp demonstrate various styles of skiing.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; directed and written by Tom Cummiskey; narrator, George C. Putnam; music score, Louis De Francesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Dec48; MP3815.

YANKS AHOY. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Hal Roach. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Fred Guiol; director, Kurt Neumann; original screenplay, Eugene Conrad, Edward E. Seabrook; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 15Oct42; LP12323.

THE YANKS ARE COMING. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, Alexis Thurn-Taxis; original story, Tony Stern, Lew Pollack, Edward E. Kaye; screen adaptation, Arthur St. Claire, Sherman Loew; music director, Lee Zahler; photography, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11819.

A YARN ABOUT YARN. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12Dec41; MP11918.

YARN AND CLOTH CONSTRUCTION. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how cloth is made: how the fibers are carded and combed; how different types of yarn, such as woolen, worsted, and multiple-ply, are spun; and how different weaves, such as plain, twill, satin, Jacquard, and dobby, are made.

Credits: Collaborator, Florence M. King.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 8Mar48; MP3116.

THE YEAR AROUND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series)

Summary: A musical short featuring "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," "In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree," "Moonlight Bay," and "Jingle Bells." Designed for audience participation.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Jan49 (in notice: 1948); MP3857.

A YEAR OF PROGRESS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 2,587 feet, b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows behind-the-scene activities of the Dearborn Motors Corporation.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title & descr., 27May49; 10 prints, 31May49; MU4174.

THE YEARLING. Loew's Inc., c1946. 134 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the novel by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Clarence Brown; screenplay, Paul Osborn; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Harold F. Kress. Technicolor.

Cast: Gregory Peck, Jane Wyman, Claude Jarman, Jr.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Dec46; LP763.

THE YEARS BETWEEN. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the general place of Scouting in the years between babyhood and manhood.

© Boy Scouts of America; 15Apr48; LP2227.

THE YEARS BETWEEN. Produced in England, released in the U. S. through Universal-International, c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 11 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. A Prestige picture. Adapted from the play by Daphne Du Maurier.

Summary: The wife of an English army officer who believes that her husband has been killed in the war, falls in love with a neighboring farmer. Her husband returns and, after a period of adjustment, wins back his wife's affection.

Credits: Producer, Sydney Box; director, Compton Bennett; music score, Ben Frankel; editor, Cordon Hales.

Cast: Michael Redgrave, Valerie Hobson, Flora Robson, James McKechnie, Dulcie Gray.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Dec47 (in notice: 1946); LP1676.

YEARS OF DECISION. American Optical Co. 33 min., sd., 16mm.

Summary: Traces the development of the American Optical Company from 1923 to 1948.

© American Optical Co.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 30Mar49; MU3943.

YEE HOO POLKA. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1398.

YELLOW CANARY. c1944. 84 min., sd. A Herbert Wilcox production. An R.K.O. Radio picture. By P. M. Bower.

Credits: Director, Herbert Wilcox; screenplay, Miles Malleson, De Witt Bodeen; music score, Clifton Parker; editor, Vera Campbell.

Appl. author: RKO Radio British Productions, Ltd.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Apr44; LP12708.

THE YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, Jack Townley; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2May44; LP12640.

YELLOW ROSE OF TEXAS. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shorty Warren and his six-piece cowboy orchestra play and sing "Yellow Rose of Texas."

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4521.

YELLOW SKY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 98 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by W. R. Burnett.

Summary: Six bank robbers take refuge in a desert ghost town, the only inhabitants of which are a girl and her gold-hoarding grandfather. Greed for the gold leads to a battle among the outlaws. Setting, Arizona in 1867.

Credits: Producer, Lamar Trotti; director, William A. Wellman; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music director, Alfred Newman; editor, Harmon Jones.

Cast: Gregory Peck, Anne Baxter, Richard Widmark, Robert Arthur, John Russell.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Dec48; LP2095.

YES, INDEED! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Nov41; MP11769.

YESTERDAY'S HEROES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 5,950 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; original story, William Brent; screenplay, Irving Cummings, Jr., William Conselman, Jr.; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Sep40; LP10205.

LES YEUX ET LES SOINS À LEUR DONNER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 8Jun46; MP800.

YODEL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jul43; MP13743.

YOKEL BOY. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Russell Rouse and the musical play by Lew Brown.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Joseph Santley; screenplay, Isabel Dawn; music director, Cy Feuer; orchestrations, Gene Rose; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Mar42; LP11319.

YOKEL DUCK MAKES GOOD. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 26Nov43; LP12920.

THE YOKE'S ON ME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,692 ft.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr44; LP12606.

YOLANDA AND THE THIEF. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., color, 35mm. Based upon a story by Jacques Thery and Ludwig Bemelmans.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Vincente Minelli; screenplay, Irving Brecher; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Conrad Salinger; film editor, George White. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Nov45; LP237.

YOO-HOO, GENERAL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,655 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, B. K. Blake; music director, Jack Schaindlin; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Mar42; LP11132.

YOSEMITE THE MAGNIFICENT. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, c1941. 748 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Apr41; MP11112.

YOU ALWAYS HURT THE ONE YOU LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Oct44; MP15313.

YOU AND YOUR FAMILY. Cowles Magazines, Inc., c1946. Presented by Association Films (Motion Picture Bureau—YMCA) and the editors of Look Magazine. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Art of Living Series, No. 1)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; director, George Blake; script, Al R. Perkins; narrator, Don Goddard.

© Cowles Magazines, Inc.; 15Feb46; MP970.

YOU AND YOUR FRIENDS. Cowles Magazines, Inc., c1946. Presented by Association Films (Motion Picture Bureau—YMCA), and the editors of Look Magazine. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Art of Living Series, no. 2)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; director, George Blake; script, A. R. Perkins; narrator, Don Goddard.

© Cowles Magazines, Inc.; 15Feb46; MP971.

YOU AND YOUR STATE; New York. Time, Inc., c1946. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Time, Inc.; 1Aug46; MP1093.

YOU AND YOUR WORK. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Illustrates how a worker's satisfaction and pride in his work depends on his attitude and approach to his job. For high school and college students and adults.

Credits: Educational collaborator, John N. Given.

© David A. Smart; 29Dec48; MP4245.

YOU APPEAL TO ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Sep41; MP11633.

YOU ARE MY LUCKY STAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13673.

YOU ARE MY RHAPSODY. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Words and music, Louis Herscher, Harold Raymond.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11727.

YOU ARE MY SUNSHINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Nov43; MP14097.

YOU BELONG TO ME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based upon the story by Dalton Trumbo.

Credits: Director, Wesley Ruggles; screenplay, Claude Binyon; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Oct41; LP11005.

YOU BELONG TO MY HEART. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16179.

YOU CALL IT MADNESS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, William D. Alexander; director, Leonard Anderson.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1638.

YOU CAME ALONG. Hal Wallis Productions, Inc., c1945. 11 reels, sd. Paramount.

Credits: Director, John Farrow; story, Robert Smith; screenplay, Robert Smith, Ayn Rand; music score, Victor Young; editor, Eda Warren.

© Hal Wallis Productions, Inc.; 4Jul45; LP13356.

YOU CAN BANK ON IT. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 5 prints, 21Apr47; MU1951.

YOU CAN BANK ON IT! Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Div., General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 60 prints, 4Oct41; MU11698.

YOU CAN BET YOUR BOOTS AND SADDLE. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Roy Mack.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12683.

YOU CAN'T BEAT THE LAW. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, Albert Beich; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Jan43; LP11782.

YOU CAN'T DO WITHOUT LOVE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Henry; director, Walter Forde; story, Peter Fraser; screenplay, Harry Irving Young, Peter Fraser; music director, Harry Bidgood.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Jul45; LP13434.

YOU CAN'T ESCAPE FOREVER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Roy Chanslor.

Credits: Producer, Mark Hellinger; director, Jo Graham; screenplay, Fred Niblo, Jr., Hector Chevigny; film editor, Frank McGee.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Oct42; LP11628.

YOU CAN'T FOOL A CAMERA. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1,020 ft., sd., b&w. (A Romance of Celluloid)

Credits: Music supervision, Nat Finston; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 31Dec40; MP11222.

YOU CAN'T FOOL A FOOL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Ewart Adamson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jul46; LP606.

YOU CAN'T FOOL ABOUT LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Sep43; MP13989.

YOU CAN'T FOOL YOUR WIFE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. c1940. 68 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Ray McCarey; story, Richard Carroll, Ray McCarey; screenplay, Jerry Cady; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24May40; LP9657.

YOU CAN'T RATION LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Walter MacEwen; director, Lester Fuller; story, Muriel Roy Bolton; screenplay, Val Burton, Hal Fimberg; music director, Irvin Talbot; editor, Tom Neff.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Feb44; LP12637.

YOU CAN'T SHOE A HORSEFLY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Myron Waldman, Sam Stimson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Aug40; LP9861.

YOU CAN'T WEIGH QUALITY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 15Oct47; 5 prints, 11Oct47; MU2383.

YOU CAN'T WIN. Loew's Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: A slapstick comedy with a domestic setting.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

Cast: Dave O'Brien.

© Loew's Inc.; 4May48; LP1801.

YOU DEAR BOY! Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,641 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Nov43; LP12342.

YOU DRIVE ME CRAZY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 17 min., sd. From a story by Al Boasberg.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, Hal Yates, Monty F. Collins; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 7Sep45; LP13632.

YOU GOTTA BE A FOOTBALL HERO. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1397.

YOU GOTTA STAY HAPPY. Rampart Productions, Inc., Released by Universal-International, c1948. 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Robert Carson.

Summary: A comedy in which a runaway bride, a trained chimpanzee, an embezzler, an amorous pair of newlyweds, and a corpse make up the cargo on a cross country flight.

Credits: Produced and written for the screen by Karl Tunberg; director, H. C. Potter; music, Daniele Amfitheatrof; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

Cast: Joan Fontaine, James Stewart, Eddie Albert, Roland Young, Willard Parker.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

© Rampart Productions, Inc.; 16Nov48; LP1944.

YOU GOTTA TALK ME INTO IT, BABY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Sep44; MP15235.

YOU HIT THE SPOT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1,726 ft., sd., color. (A Paramount Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Louis Harris; director, George B. Templeton; music director, Joseph J. Lilley; editor, Helene Turner. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Aug45; LP13470.

YOU, LOVELY YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Sep46; MP1134.

YOU MADE ME LOVE YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jan42; MP12085.

YOU MAKE THE STARS. c1941. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Myron Datry.

© Myron Datry; 17Aug41; MP11491.

YOU NAZTY SPY! Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 1,641 ft.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman, Felix Alder.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Jan40; LP9354.

YOU NEVER KNOW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov46; MP1271.

YOU OUGHT TO BE IN PICTURES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Jack Miller; animation, Herman Cohen; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20May40; MP10207.

YOU STEPPED OUT OF THE PICTURE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec45; MP185.

YOU, THE PEOPLE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Roy Rowland; original story and screenplay, Douglas Foster.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Dec40; LP10182.

[YOU, TIME, AND CANCER]. Byron, Inc. For the American Cancer Society, c1948. 17 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Illustrates the symptoms of cancer and three approved methods of treatment.

© Byron, Inc.; 31Mar48; MP2880.

YOU TOLD THE WORLD YOU LOVE ME. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shorty Warren and his six-piece cowboy orchestra play and sing "You Told the World You Love Me."

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4519.

YOU WALK BY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11120.

YOU WERE MEANT FOR ME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In this musical comedy, the love of a dance-band leader and a small-town girl survives the rigors of the depression period. Includes a rendition of Gershwin's "Concerto in F." Settings, the Middle West and New York.

Credits: Producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, Lloyd Bacon; original screenplay, Elick Moll, Valentine Davies; music director, Lionel Newman; editor, William Reynolds.

Cast: Jeanne Crain, Dan Dailey, Oscar Levant, Barbara Lawrence, Selena Royle.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jan48; LP1779.

YOU WERE NEVER DUCKIER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Ben Washam, Lloyd Vaughan.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Dec48; MP3803.

YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Louis F. Edelman; director, William A. Seiter; story, Carlos Olivari, Sixto Pondal Rios; screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano, Delmer Daves; music director, Leigh Harline; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Oct42; LP11650.

YOU WERE NEVER UGLIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,616 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Jun44; LP12678.

YOU'LL FIND OUT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 97 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, David Butler; story, David Butler, James V. Kern; screenplay, James V. Kern; music, James McHugh; music director, Roy Webb; music arranger, George Duning; editor, Irene Morra.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22Nov40; LP10334.

YOU'LL HAVE TO SWING IT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Sep42; MP13033.

YOU'LL NEVER GET RICH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Sidney Lanfield; original screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Sep41; LP10757.

YOUNG AMERICA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,500 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Louis King; original screenplay, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Cyril Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 6Feb42; LP11081.

YOUNG AMERICA FLIES. The Vitaphone Corp. in cooperation with the Civil Aeronautics Authority, c1940. 22 min. (Broadway Brevity)

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Delmer Daves.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Jul40; LP9781.

YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original screenplay, Margaretta Byers, H. W. Hanneman. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Mar43; LP11942.

YOUNG AND WILLING. Released thru United Artists, c1942. Presented by Cinema Guild. 7,494 ft., sd. A Paramount picture. From a play by Francis Swann.

Credits: Director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Virginia Van Upp; editor, Eda Warren.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 22Oct42; LP11966.

YOUNG BILL HICKOK. 1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, Norton S. Parker, Olive Cooper; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 21Oct40; LP10001.

YOUNG BUFFALO BILL. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; original story, Norman Houston; screenplay, Harrison Jacobs, Robert Yost, Gerry Geraghty; music director, Cy Feuer; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Apr40; LP9582.

YOUNG IDEAS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 5 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Jules Dassin; original screenplay, Ian McLellan Hunter, Bill Noble; music direction, David Snell; film editor, Ralph E. Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jul43; LP12192.

YOUNG PEOPLE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 7,231 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Allan Dwan; screenplay, Edwin Blum, Don Ettlinger; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 30Aug40; LP10117.

YOUNG TOM EDISON. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on material by H. Alan Dunn.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Norman Taurog; original screenplay, Bradbury Foote, Dore Schary, Hugo Butler; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Apr40; LP9573.

YOUNG WIDOW. Released through United Artists. c1946. Presented by Hunt Stromberg. 110 min., sd. Based on the book by Clarissa Fairchild Cushman.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, Edwin L. Marin; screenplay, Richard Macaulay, Margaret Buell Wilder; music score, Carmen Dragon; film editor, John M. Foley.

© Special Pictures, Inc.; 1Mar46; LP142.

THE YOUNGER BROTHERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 77 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A ficticious melodrama in which the four Younger brothers, reformed and awaiting parole in the state of Minnesota, are framed as the bandits in a bank robbery.

Credits: Producer, Saul Elkins; director, Edwin L. Marin; story, Morton Grant; screenplay, Edna Anhalt; music, William Lava; orchestrations, Charles Maxwell; film editor, Frederick Richards.

Cast: Wayne Morris, Janis Paige, Bruce Bennett, Geraldine Brooks, Robert Hutton.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Jun49 (in notice: 1948); LP2312.

THE YOUNGEST PROFESSION. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the book by Lillian Day.

Credits: Producer, B. F. Zeidman; director, Edward Buzzell; screenplay, George Oppenheimer, Charles Lederer, Leonard Spigelgass; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Mar43; LP11929.

YOUR DOG LOVES MY DOG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jun43; MP13701.

YOUR FACE IS YOUR FORTUNE. 17 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A practical demonstration of the procedure for facial make-up for a gala evening.

© Germaine Kellerman, Harold E. Brackett; title, descr., & 6 prints, 9Feb49; MU3784.

YOUR FAMILY. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Encourages the establishing of a happy home by developing an appreciation and understanding of the family as a unit and of the individual as a member of that unit. For use in the primary grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Viola Theman.

© David A. Smart; 27Oct48; MP3696.

YOUR FAMILY BUDGET. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm,

Summary: The purpose, importance, and operation of a family budget system. For school, college, and adult groups.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Mary E. Weathersby.

© David A. Smart; 31Aug49; MP4489.

YOUR FEET'S TOO BIG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Nov41; MP11776.

YOUR FEET'S TOO BIG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6May46; MP698.

YOUR HEALTH DEPARTMENT IN ACTION. Samuel P. Orleans & Associates, Inc., c1946. Presented by Samuel P. Orleans. 20 min., sd., 16mm.

Credits: Narrator, Nate Way.

Appl. author: Ross Duff Whytock.

© Samuel P. Orleans & Associates, Inc,; 20May46; MP1094.

YOUR JOB IN THE NAVY.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 16 prints; 24Feb45; MU15872.

YOUR LAST ACT. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 991 ft., sd. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) Based on an idea by Norman Rose.

Credits: Director, Fred Zinnemann; screenplay, Doane Hoag; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jul41; LP10629.

YOUR NATIONAL GALLERY. SEE Variety Views, no. 139.

YOUR PETS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, si., b&w, 8mm.

Summary: Shows children how to care for pets. Care of canaries, fish, cats, and puppies is demonstrated.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Feb48; MP3137.

YOUR RED WAGON. SEE They Live by Night.

YOUR SHIRT TAIL'S OUT. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Your Shirt Tail's Out" is sung by The Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4534.

YOUR THRIFT HABITS. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A demonstration of the benefits to be derived from a budget which includes systematic savings.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Paul L. Salsgiver.

© David A. Smart; 31Aug48; MP3727.

YOUR TOMORROW. Pictorial Research, Inc., c1947. Presented by the Insurance Company of North America Companies. 2 reels, sound, b&w, 16mm.

© Pictorial Research, Inc.; 1Aug47; MP2277.

YOUR TOMORROW IN THE MAKING TODAY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Hamilton Watch Co. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 24May47; 22 prints, 23May47; MU2063.

YOUR TOWN, U.S.A. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 740 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the Importance of heavyduty trucks in the life of a community.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 11 frames, 15Nov48; MU3530.

YOUR UNCLE DUDLEY. See Too Busy To Work.

YOUR VOICE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Describes the four phases of voice production: respiration, phonation, resonance, and articulation. Shows how proper exercises improve the voice and illustrates the use of the voice in speaking and singing. For junior and senior high school.

Credits: Collaborators, William J. Temple, Delinda Roggensack.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Nov49; MP4846.

YOU'RE A GRAND OLD FLAG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11303.

YOU'RE A LUCKY FELLOW, MR. SMITH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10984.

YOU'RE A LUCKY FELLOW, MR. SMITH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward Lilley; director, Felix Feist; original story, Oscar Brodney; screenplay, Lawrence Riley, Ben Barzman, Louis Lantz; music direction, Charles Previn; photography, Paul Ivano; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Sep43; LP12312.

YOU'RE A SAP, MR. JAP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dan Gordon; story, Jim Tyer, Carl Meyer; animation, Jim Tyer, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Aug42; LP11512.

YOU'RE A SHOT IN THE ARM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun42; MP12638.

YOU'RE DANGEROUS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP11948.

YOU'RE IN LOVE WITH EVERYONE (BUT THE ONE WHO'S IN LOVE WITH YOU). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Aug41; MP11455.

YOU'RE IN THE ARMY NOW. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 79 min., sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Lewis Seiler; original screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith, George Beatty; film editor, Frank Magee.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec41; LP10919.

YOU'RE MY EVERYTHING. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., c1949. 94 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A song-and-dance musical of the ups-and-downs of show business during the transition from silent films to the talkies in the late 1920's.

Credits: Producer, Lamar Trotti; director, Walter Lang; original story, George Jessel; screenplay, Lamar Trotti, Will Hays, Jr.; music director, Alfred Newman; film editor, J. Watson Webb, Jr.

Cast: Dan Dailey, Anne Baxter, Anne Revere, Stanley Ridges, Shari Robinson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jul49; LP2568.

YOU'RE NEXT! Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940, 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story, John Grey; screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21May40; LP9683.

YOU'RE NOT SO TOUGH. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Joe May; original story, Maxwell Aley; screenplay, Arthur T. Horman; photography, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Jun40; LP9708.

YOU'RE ON YOUR OWN. Presented by the American Red Cross. 4 reels, sd.

Appl. author: William J. Ganz Co.

© American Red Cross; title, descr., & 95 prints, 5Nov42; MU12993.

YOU'RE OUT OF LUCK. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941, 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay and original story, Edmund Kelso; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20Jan41; LP10511.

YOU'RE TELLING ME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Charles O'Neil, Duane Decker; screenplay, Frances Hyland, Brenda Weisberg; photography, Jerome Ash; film editor, Phillip Kahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11077.

YOU'RE THE ONE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Production, original story, and screenplay, Gene Markey; director, Ralph Murphy; photographer, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Feb41; LP10246.

YOU'RE THE ONE ROSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Dec43; MP14267.

YOU'RE UNFAIR TO ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12May41; MP11137.

YOURS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16133.

YOURS TRULY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; continuity, Justin Herman; photography, William J. Miller; film editor, Pyrmen L. Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Sep43; MP14681.

YOUTH AFLAME. Continental Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, J. D. Kendis; director, Elmer Clifton; story, Helen Kiely; screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Frank Sanucci; cinematographer, Jack Greenhalgh; film editor, George Merrick.

© Continental Pictures, Inc.; 10Feb45; LP13078.

YOUTH ON PARADE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Albert S. Rogell; original screenplay, George Carleton Brown; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Howard O'Neill.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Oct42; LP11632.

YOUTH ON TRIAL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Oscar Boetticher, Jr.; original screenplay, Michel Jacoby; film editor. Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jan45; LP13120.

YOUTH RUNS WILD. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 67 min., sd. Inspired by the Look Magazine picture story "Are Those Our Children."

Credits: Producer, Val Lewton; director, Mark Robson; original story, John Fante, Herbert Kline; screenplay, John Fante; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Aug44; LP12789. (See also Youth Runs Wild; 19Jul44; LP12891)

YOUTH RUNS WILD. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 67 min., sd. Inspired by the Look Magazine picture story "Are Those Our Children."

Credits: Producer, Val Lewton; director, Mark Robson; original story, John Fante, Herbert Kline; screenplay, John Fante; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Jul44; LP12891. (See also Youth Runs Wild; 19Aug44; LP12789)

YOUTH WILL BE SERVED. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,100 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Otto Brower; story, Ruth Fasken, Hilda Vincent; screenplay, Wanda Tuchock; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Nov40; LP10397.

YOU'VE GOT EVERYTHING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Aug46; MP995.

YOU'VE GOT ME GUESSING. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Words and music, Roy Newell, Nat Simon.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11728.

YOU'VE NEVER LIVED. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Feb46; MP199.

YUGOSLAVIA. c1940. 980 ft. The source of this material is Trans-Asia, Inc.

Appl. author: Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 24May40; MP10337.

YUKON FLIGHT. SEE Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Yukon Flight.

YUKON OUTPOST. SEE Variety Views, no. 125.

THE YUKON PATROL. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on Zane Grey's "King of the Royal Mounted."

Credits: Associate producer, Hiram S. Brown, Jr.; directors, William Witney, John English; original screenplay, Franklyn Adreon, Norman S. Hall, Joseph Poland, Barney A. Sarecky, Sol Shor; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editors, Edward Todd, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp,; 30Apr42; LP11411.

YUMPIN' YIMINY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, John Grey, Gill Pratt.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Mar41; LP10494.

Z

ZAMBA. Fortune Film Corporation. Released through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 72 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the story "The Girl and the Gorilla" by Maurice H. Conn.

Summary: The adventures of a small boy who is lost in the jungle and adopted by a gorilla.

Credits: Producer, Maurice H. Conn; director, William Berke; screenplay, Barbara Worth; music, Raoul Kraushaar; film editor, Martin G. Conn.

Cast: Jon Hall, June Vincent, George Cooper, Jane Nigh, Beau Bridges, N'Bonga.

© Fortune Film Corp.; 29Sep49; LP2623.

ZANZIBAR. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; original screenplay, Maurice Tombragel, Maurice Wright; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Feb40; LP9443.

ZERO GIRL. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 2Oct47; MP2423.

ZERO, THE HOUND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Story, Carl Meyer; animation, Tom Johnson, Frank Endres.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Feb41; MP11199.

ZIEGFELD FOLLIES. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Vincente Minnelli; music direction, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Conrad Salinger, Wally Heglin; film editor, Albert Akst. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Jan46; LP78.

ZIEGFELD GIRL. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 14 reels, sd, sepia.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Robert Z. Leonard; original story, William Anthony McGuire; screenplay, Marguerite Roberts, Sonya Levien; music score, Herbert Stothart; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Apr41; LP10432.

ZIG ME BABY WITH A GENTLE ZAG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar41; MP10885.

ZING! WENT THE STRINGS OF MY HEART. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Dec41; MP11913.

ZIS BOOM BAH. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, William Nigh; original story, Connie Lee, Harvey Gates; screenplay, Harvey Gates, Jack Henley; music directors, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Nov41; LP11176.

ZOMBIES ON BROADWAY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 68 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Gordon Douglas; original story, Robert Faber, Charles Newman; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; adaptation, Robert E. Kent; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Philip Martin, Jr.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20Apr45; LP13272.

HET ZONNESTELSEL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 7Jun46; MP798.

THE ZOO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A visit to the Chicago Zoological Park, showing some of the animals found there, their characteristic actions, their unique coloration, and their feeding habits. For kindergarten, primary, and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, Robert Bean.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Jan49; MP3811.

ZOOT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Aug46; MP923.

THE ZOOT CAT. Loew's Inc., c1944. 659 ft., sd., color. (A MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon.

Credits: Directors, Bill Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Ken Muse, Irven Spence, Pete Burness; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Feb44; LP220.

A ZOOT SUIT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar42; MP12303.

ZORINA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© on new matter; Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Apr45; MP15991.

ZORRO'S BLACK WHIP. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. "Zorro" character created by Johnston McCulley. © Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–6, 15Nov44; LP13001; no. 7–12, 26Dec44; LP13069.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Wallace Grissell; screenplay, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Grant Nelson, Joseph Poland; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold Minter.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Masked Avenger.

2. Tomb of Terror.

3. Mob Murder.

4. Detour to Death.

5. Take off That Mask.

6. Fatal Gold.

7. Wolf Pack.

8. The Invisible Victim.

9. Avalanche.

10. Fangs of Doom.

11. Flaming Juggernaut.

12. Trail of Tyranny.

ZORRO'S FIGHTING LEGION. c1939. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Dec39; no. 1–6. LP9407; no. 7–12, LP9437.

Credits: Associate producer, Hiram S. Brown, Jr.; directors, William Witney, John English; original screenplay, Ronald Davidson, Franklyn Adreon, Morgan Cox, Sol Shor, Barney A. Sarecky; music score, William Lava; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editors, Edward Todd, William Thompson, Bernard Loftus.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Golden God.

2. The Flaming "Z".

3. Descending Doom.

4. The Bridge of Peril.

5. The Decoy.

6. Zorro to the Rescue.

7. The Fugitive.

8. Flowing Death.

9. The Golden Arrow.

10. Mystery Wagon.

11. Face to Face.

12. Unmasked.

ZULULAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 6Jun47; MP2392.

Motion Pictures, 1940–1949

INDEX

An alphabetical list of the names of persons and organizations associated with the motion pictures listed in the main section as claimant, producing, releasing, or distributing agent, etc., or as author of the work upon which the motion picture is based. Included also are the names of persons on whose lives the motion pictures are based, or whose names appear in the titles in connection with a musical performance or athletic event. Under each name are listed the titles of the respective motion pictures, together with the year dates. After the titles of serials, the word serial, enclosed within parentheses, is given in lieu of a date. An asterisk preceding the title indicates that the name in the heading is that of the copyright claimant.

A

A. F. E. CORPORATION. Diable au Corps. 1948. *Heart of a Nation. 1943.

A. L. F. A. CINEMATOGRAFICA. Shoe-Shine. 1946.

ABBOT, ANTHONY, pseud. SEE Oursler, Fulton.

ABBOTT, C. A. Headliners. 1940.

ABBOTT, GEORGE. Beat the Band. 1947. Best Foot Forward. 1943. Boys from Syracuse. 1940. Broadway. 1942. Highway West. 1941. Kiss and Tell. 1945. Primrose Path. 1940. Snafu. 1945. Step Lively. 1944. Too Many Girls. 1940.

ABEL, ROBERT. Those Good Old Days. 1949.

ABERSON, HELEN. Dumbo. 1941.

ABRAMS, LEON. Highway West. 1941.

ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCIENCES. Let's Go to the Movies. 1948. Movies Are Adventure. 1949. *Twenty Years of Academy Awards. 1948.

ACADEMY PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Beyond Tomorrow. 1940.

ACE. Heading for Heaven. 1948.

ACHARD, MARCEL. Alibi. 1943.

## ACTION PICTURES, INC.

*God's Country. 1946. *Northwest Trail. 1945.

ADAMIC, LOUIS. Here at Home. 1943.

ADAMS, EUSTACE L. Desperate Cargo. 1941. 16 Fathoms Deep. 1948.

ADAMS, SAMUEL HOPKINS. Harvey Girls. 1945.

ADEL PRECISION PRODUCTS CORPORATION. *Basic Hydraulics. 1944. *Fluid Flow in Hydraulic Systems. 1944.

ADLER, HANS. That Night in Rio. 1941.

ADVENTURE FILMS, INC. *Invasion. 1941.

AETNA CASUALTY AND SURETY COMPANY. *Back to Life. 1948. *Check and Double Check. 1945. *Danger, Men Working. 1943. *Doubtful Dollars. 1945. *Handle with Care. 1948. *Highway Sabotage. 1942. *Ladders, Scaffolds, and Floor Openings. 1948. *Let's Be Ready. 1942. *Let's Count the Cost. 1948. *Life Lines. 1948. Live—and Let Live. 1947. No Time To Lose. 1945. Now You're Talking. 1946. *Partners in Production. 1946. *Pointers for Planters. 1943. MP13809, MP13858, MP14840. *Points for Pedlers. 1943. Ski Tips. 1948. *Truck Roadeo. 1948.

AETNA LIFE AFFILIATED COMPANIES. Aim for Safety. 1946. Back to Life. 1948. *Champions at the Wheel. 1946. Danger, Men Working. 1943. *Friend or Foe. 1946. Handle with Care. 1948. Hook, Line and Safety. 1946. Ladders, Scaffolds, and Floor Openings. 1948. Life Lines. 1948. *Live—and Let Live. 1947. *Now You're Talking. 1946. Partners n Production. 1946. Pointers for Planters. 1943. Points for Pedalers. 1943. *Safety Ahoy. 1946. *Ski Tips. 1948.

AETNA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. *Aim for Safety. 1946. *Handle with Care. 1942. *Hook, Line and Safety. 1946. *No Time To Lose. 1945.

AFFILIATED AETNA LIFE COMPANIES. *As the Twig Is Bent. 1943. *Don'ts for Diggers. 1944.

AFFILIATED PICTURES, INC. Renegade Girl. 1946.

AFFILIATED PRODUCTIONS, INC. Rolling Home. 1946.

AGAY. Amazon Quest. 1949.

AGNEW, PETER L. Secretary Takes Dictation. 1947. Secretary Transcribes. 1947. Secretary's Day. 1947.

AGRICULTURAL TECHNICIANS OF CANADA. Strips and Curves. 1947.

AHEARN, DANNY. Escape from Crime. 1942.

AIR MINISTRY. SEE Gt. Brit. Air Ministry.

AIRESEARCH MANUFACTURING COMPANY. Replacing Oil Cooler Tubes. 1944.

AISNER, ROBERT. Cross of Lorraine. 1943.

ALBERT, KATHERINE. Guest in the House. 1944.

ALCOTT, LOUISA MAY. Little Men. 1941. Little Women. 1949. Old Fashioned Girl. 1949.

ALDRICH, BESS STREETER. Cheers for Miss Bishop. 1941.

ALDRICH, C. ANDERSON. Significance of a Complete Preventive Medical Program for Children. 1945.

ALEXANDER. Hello Bill. 1946. I Want a Man. 1946. She's Crazy with the Heat. 1946. That Man of Mine. 1946.

ALEXANDER, WILLIAM. Invasion. 1941.

ALEXANDER-STERN. Arson Squad. 1945. I Accuse My Parents. 1944. Marked for Murder. 1945. Secrets of a Sorority Girl. 1946. Seven Doors to Death. 1944. Waterfront. 1944.

ALGEO, L. R. Sightseeing at Home. 1942.

ALISON, JOAN. Casablanca. 1943.

ALLEN, A. A. How Birds Feed Their Young. 1940.

ALLEN, DUFF S. Captains in His Army. 1948.

ALLEN, JANE. She Knew All the Answers. 1941. Without Reservations. 1946.

ALLEN, KENNETH. Black Rider. 1947.

ALLIANCE FILMS CORPORATION. *Black Limelight. 1938. *Hidden Menace. 1938. *Housemaster. 1936. *Just like a Woman. 1938. *One Night in Paris. 1938.

ALLIANCE PRODUCTIONS, LTD. *So Well Remembered. 1947.

ALLIANCE STUDIO. Daughter of Darkness. 1948.

ALLIED ARTISTS. Massacre River. 1949.

ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURES. *Strike It Rich. 1948.

ALLIED ARTISTS PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Babe Ruth Story. 1948. *Bad Boy. 1949. *Bad Men of Tombstone. 1948. *Black Gold. 1947. *Dude Goes West. 1948. *Gangster. 1947. *Hunted. 1947. *It Happened on Fifth Avenue. 1947. *My Brother Jonathan. 1949. *Panhandle. 1948. *Smart Woman. 1948. *Stampede. 1949.

ALLIS-CHALMERS. Tornado in a Box. 1945.

ALLIS CHALMERS MANUFACTURING COMPANY. *Magic of Steam. 1942. *Surface Condenser. 1943. *We Work for Victory and We Plan for Peace. 1942.

ALSON PRODUCTIONS, INC. Belle Starr's Daughter. 1948. Tender Years. 1947.

ALUMINUM COMPANY OF AMERICA. Dateline Tomorrow. 1946. How To Braze Aluminum. 1946. *How To Machine Aluminum. 1943. *How To Rivet Aluminum. 1943. *How To Weld Aluminum. 1942. How to Weld Aluminum. (Serial) *This Is Aluminum. 1947.

AMATEUR ATHLETIC UNION. Carreras, Saltos y Relevos. 1947. Dashes, Hurdles, and Relays. 1946. Distance Races. 1946. Jumps and Pole Vault. 1946. Pesas: Tiro, Disco, Jabalina, Martillo. 1947. Saltos con Garrocha. 1947. Weight Events. 1946.

AMATO, GIUSEPPE. Bigamist. 1943.

AMAYA, CARMEN. Spell of the Fandango. 1941.

AMBASSADOR FILMS, INC. *Egmont. 1948. *Emperor Waltz. 1948. *Kleine Nachtmusik. 1948. *Merry Christmas. 1948. *Orpheus in Hades. 1948. *Tales from the Vienna Woods. 1948.

AMBLER, ERIC. Background to Danger. 1943. Hotel Reserve. 1943, 1945. Journey into Fear. 1943. Mask of Dimitrios. 1944.

AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS. *When Bobby Goes to School. 1940.

AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION. *Safest Way. 1948.

AMERICAN BAKING INSTITUTE. Bread Trailer. 1940. Give Us This Day. 1940.

AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY. *Doctor Speaks His Mind. 1948. You, Time, and Cancer. 1948.

AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY. IDAHO DIVISION. *Life Saving Fingers. 1948.

AMERICAN CENTRAL MANUFACTURING CORPORATION. Tell It with Television. 1945.

AMERICAN CYANAMID AND CHEMICAL CORPORATION. *It Isn't Done with Mirrors. 1940.

AMERICAN CYANAMID COMPANY. *Newcastle Disease. 1948.

AMERICAN ECONOMIC COMMITTEE FOR PALESTINE, INC. *Modern Poultry Farming in Southern California. 1949. *Modern Poultry Husbandry. 1947.

AMERICAN FILM CENTER. Hidden Hunger. 1942. *Red Wagon. 1945.

AMERICAN FILM PRODUCERS. *Will It Happen Again. 1948.

AMERICAN FILM SERVICES, INC. *Australia vs. United States. 1947. *Game of Games—the Army and Navy Football Game of 1946. *1947 National Tennis Singles Championship. 1947. Technology at Mid-Century. 1949. *War Came to America. 1948.

AMERICAN FILM SERVICES, INC. (AMERICAN SPORTS FILMS) *1947 Army-Navy Football Game. 1947.

AMERICAN FOOT CARE INSTITUTE, INC. *Walking Machine. 1949.

AMERICAN FOREST PRODUCTS INDUSTRIES, INC. *Trees for Tomorrow. 1942.

AMERICAN HEART ASSOCIATION. Be Your Age. 1947.

AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF LAUNDERING. *Time for Living. 1949.

AMERICAN LEGION. *Teach Them To Drive. 1945.

AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS. SEE Red Cross. U. S. American National Red Cross.

AMERICAN OPTICAL COMPANY. *Right on the Nose. 1943. *Years of Decision. 1949.

AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION. *Athletic Injuries. 1941. *Osteopathic Mechanics. 1941. *Osteopathic Research, the Second Lumbar Lesion. 1940. *Osteopathic Therapeutics, Anterior Poliomyelitis. 1940.

AMERICAN PRODUCTIONS, INC. Delinquent Daughters. 1944. Shake Hands with Murder. 1944

AMERICAN RED CROSS. SEE Red Cross. U. S. American National Red Cross.

AMERICAN SOCIAL HYGIENE ASSOCIATION. *Con Estas Armas. 1941. *Escueta Verdad. 1946. *Health Is a Victory. 1942. *Our Job To Know. 1944. *Plain Facts. 1941. *With These Weapons. 1939.

AMERICAN SPORTS FILMS. SEE American Film Services, Inc.

AMERICAN STEEL DREDGE COMPANY, INC. WAYNE CRANE DIVISION. *Story of Wayne Crane. 1948.

AMERICAN TOBACCO COMPANY. *L.S./M.F.T. 1945. MU15864, MU16576. *Lucky Strike Means Fine Tobacco. 1942, 1944, 1947. *Lucky Strike Salesman's Movie 48–A. 1948. *Story of Lucky Strike. 1941.

AMERICAN TYPE FOUNDERS SALES CORPORATION. *Type Speaks! 1948.

AMSDEN, CONSTANCE ELIZABETH. *Animated Arithmetic for Beginners. 1949.

AMSTER (FRED) CINE-ART ANIMATION STUDIO. Star Is Born. 1947.

AMSTER (FRED) TELEVISION CARTOONS. Fantastic Journey. 1948.

AMSTER, FREDERICK ARTHUR. *Fantastic Journey. 1948. *Star Is Born. 1947.

AMUSEMENT ENTERPRISES, INC. *Lucky Stiff. 1949.

AMUSEMENT RESEARCH CORPORATION. *Musical Varieties. 1946.

ANDERSEN, HANS CHRISTIAN. Christmas Rhapsody. 1948. Red Shoes. 1948.

ANDERSON, ALEXANDER, Jr. Comic Strips of Television. 1949.

ANDERSON, EDWARD. They Live by Night. 1948.

ANDERSON, MAXWELL. Eve of St. Mark. 1944. Joan of Arc. 1948. *Journey to Jerusalem. 1941. Key Largo. 1948. Knickerbocker Holiday. 1944. Saturday's Children. 1940.

ANDREWS, JACK. Johnny Comes Flying Home. 1946. Strange Triangle. 1946.

ANDREWS, ROBERT D. Talk About a Lady. 1946.

ANDREWSON, SEVERT. Backyard Explorations. 1942. This Amazing Universe. 1942.

ANGELUS PICTURES, INC. *Summer Storm. 1944.

ANGLO-AMERICAN PRODUCTIONS, INC. Forever and a Day. 1943.

ANGUS, BERNADINE. Fog Island. 1945.

ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. *Bread Trailer. 1940. *Give Us This Day. 1940. *Something More Than Beer. 1940.

ANSTEY, F., pseud. SEE Guthrie, Thomas Anstey.

ANTLES, LEO C. *Horticultural Work Analysis and Time Study. 1943.

APAC CORPORATION. *Apache Chief. 1949.

APEX FILM CORPORATION. *Price of Freedom. 1949. *That Babies May Live. 1949. *This Is Nylon. 1949.

APPLIANCE CORPORATION OF AMERICA. *Akka Top Flow Automatic Washer. 1947.

ARC PRODUCTIONS, INC. Behind Locked Doors. 1948. In This Corner. 1948.

ARCH OF TRIUMPH, INC. *Arch of Triumph. 1948.

ARCHER, ROSELMA. Clothing for Children. 1946.

ARCHERS. I Know Where I'm Going. 1947. Life and Death of Colonel Blimp. 1945.

ARCHERS FILM PRODUCTIONS. Black Narcissus. 1948. Canterbury Tale. 1944. Red Shoes. 1948. Stairway to Heaven. 1946.

ARDEN, ELIZABETH. *Orchids to Charlie. 1941.

ARDREY, ROBERT. Thunder Rock. 1944.

AREY, CHARLES K. Fire. 1947.

ARGO FILMS, INC. Safe Exit. 1949.

ARGOSY CORPORATION. Long Voyage Home. 1940.

ARGOSY PICTURES CORPORATION. *Fort Apache. 1948. *Fugitive. 1947. *She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. 1949. Three Godfathers. 1948.

ARKANSAS LOUISIANA GAS COMPANY. *Fires Must Never Go Out. 1941.

ARKO, INC. *Mighty Joe Young. 1949.

ARLEN, MICHAEL. Appointment with Murder. 1948. Date with the Falcon. 1941. Devil's Cargo. 1948. Falcon and the Co-eds. 1943. Falcon in Danger. 1943. Falcon in Hollywood. 1944. Falcon in Mexico. 1944. Falcon out West. 1944. Falcon Strikes Back. 1943. Falcon Takes Over. 1942. Falcon's Adventure. 1947. Falcon's Alibi. 1946. Falcon's Brother. 1942. Gay Falcon. 1941. Search for Danger. 1949.

ARMITAGE, REGINALD MOXON. Lambeth Walk. 1939.

ARMOUR AND COMPANY. *Animated Hematology. 1946. *Bone Marrow. 1948. *Egg and You. 1948.

ARMSTRONG, CHARLOTTE. Unsuspected. 1947.

ARMSTRONG, HENRY. Championship Boxing Contest Between Cerefino Garcia, Champion, and Henry Armstrong, Challenger. 1940.

ARMSTRONG, PAUL. Hold That Blonde! 1945.

ARNAC, MARCEL. Steppin' in Society. 1945.

ARNOLD, GEORGE. Why Thomas Was Discharged. 1949.

ARNOLD AND JOHNSON PRODUCTIONS. *Fly Tying. 1948.

ARNOLD PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Hangmen Also Die! 1943. *It Happened Tomorrow. 1944. *Scandal in Paris. 1946. *Shanghai Gesture. 1941.

ARPI PRODUCTIONS, INC. *For You I Die. 1947. *Sofia. 1948.

ARTISTS ALLIANCE, INC. *One Touch of Venus. 1948.

ARTISTS' FILMS, INC. *Coolidge Quartet. 1940. *Emanuel Feuermann. 1940. *Igor Gorin. 1940. *Jose Iturbi. 1940. *Mildred Dilling. 1940. *Vronsky and Babin. 1940.

ASHELBE, DETECTIVE, pseud. SEE La Barthe, Henri.

ASHER, IRVING. Missing Ten Days. 1941.

ASSOCIATED BRITISH FILM DISTRIBUTORS, INC. Convoy. 1941.

ASSOCIATED BRITISH PICTURE CORPORATION, LTD. Black Limelight. 1938. Hidden Menace. 1938. Housemaster. 1938. Just like a Woman. 1938. My Brother Jonathan. 1949. One Night in Paris. 1938. Temptation Harbor. 1947. Yank in London. 1945.

ASSOCIATED LINES OF THE B. F. GOODRICH COMPANY. SEE Goodrich (B. F.) Company.

ASSOCIATED PRESS. Give Us the Earth. 1947. Going to Blazes. 1948. Heart to Heart. 1949. Traffic with the Devil. 1946.

ASTOR PICTURES CORPORATION. *Birth of a Star. 1944.

ATKINSON, ELEANOR. Challenge to Lassie. 1949.

ATKINSON, OWEN. 20 Mule Team. 1940.

ATLANTA, GA. GREATER ATLANTA COMMUNITY CHEST, INC. SEE Greater Atlanta Community Chest, Inc.

ATLANTIC PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Siren of Atlantis. 1948.

ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY. *Why Kick. 1942.

ATLANTIS PICTURES CORPORATION. Girls in Chains. 1943. Isle of Forgotten Sins. 1943. Prisoner of Japan. 1942. Tomorrow We Live. 1942.

ATLAS, DOROTHY. Desperate. 1947.

ATLAS, LEOPOLD L. Child of Divorce. 1946.

ATLAS EDUCATIONAL FILM COMPANY. *Discipline. (Serial) *Foundry Practice; Bench Molding. (Serial) *Machine Shop Work, Basic Machines. 1945. *Machine Shop Work; Operations on the Engine Lathe. (Serial) *Machine Shop Work; Operations on the Turret Lathe. (Serial) *Principal Dimensions, Reference Surfaces, and Tolerances. 1944. *Reading a Drawing of a Valve Bonnet. 1944. *Using a Steady Rest When Boring. 1944.

ATTWOOD PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Melodies Reborn. 1949. *Melodious Sketches. 1949. *Symphonic Shades. 1949. *Treasured Ballads. 1949.

ATWATER, GLADYS. El Paso. 1949.

ATWOOD, WALLACE W. Abrigo. 1947. Land of Mexico. 1939. People of Mexico. 1939. Ropa. 1947. Roupas. 1947. Vida Rural no México. 1947. Vivienda. 1947.

AUDIO PICTURES, INC. Rhapsody on Ice. 1949.

AUDIO PRODUCTIONS, INC. *Aircraft Work; Power Plant Maintenance. (Serial) Combustão Cyclone. 1942. Combustion Cyclone. 1942. Cyclone Combustion. 1942. *Diesel—Series 71—Lubrication System. 1943. *Diesel—Series 71—Mechanical Governors. 1943. *Engineering. (Serial) *Engineering; Flue Gas Analysis (Orsat Apparatus). 1945. *Engineering; Heat Treatment of Steel. (Serial) *Engineering; Materials Testing. (Serial) *Engineering; Measurement with Light Waves. 1944. *Engineering; Powder Metallurgy. (Serial) *Engineering—X-Ray Inspection. 1944. In Security, There Is Strength. 1941. *Machine Shop Work. (Serial) *Sex Hygiene. 1942. Steam for Power. 1949. Victory in the Air. 1942.

AUDIOGRAPHIC INSTITUTE. *Where Will You Hide? 1948.

AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER, INDIANA UNIVERSITY. SEE Indiana, University.

AUDIO-VISUAL LABORATORY OF TEACHERS COLLEGE, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY. SEE Columbia University. Teachers College. Audio-Visual Laboratory.

AUDIVISION LANGUAGE TEACHING SERVICE. *Spanish—First Lesson—