Chapter 7 of 18 · 196408 words · ~982 min read

Part 2

: Milling Cutters. © 1Jun45; MP16286.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; fundamentals of blueprint reading. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1944–45. 1 reel each, 16mm. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

1. Visualizing an Object. © 1Jun45; MP493.

2. Reading a Three-View Drawing. © 1Jun45; MP492.

4. Sectional Views and Projections, Finish Marks. Appl. author: Lawrence Rosenthal. © 13Mar44; MP14604.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on a broaching machine. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., 1 reel each. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Reid H. Ray.

1. Broaching an Internal Keyway. © 1Mar45; MP15809.

2. Single Ram Vertical Surface Broaching. © 1Mar45; MP15838.

3. Double Ram Vertical Surface Broaching. © 1Mar45; MP15811.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on a milling machine. Hartley Productions, c1945. 1 reel each. © Hartley Productions.

5. Milling a Template. © 1Jul45; MP16212.

6. Cutting a Short Rack. © 1Jul45; MP16213.

7. Boring Holes with Offset Boring Head. © 1Jul45; MP16214.

8. Milling a Helical Cutter. © 1Jul45; MP16215.

9. Cutting Teeth on a Worm Gear. © 1Jul45; MP16216.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on a planer. Harfilms, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, 16mm. © Harfilms, Inc.

1. Planing a Flat Surface. © 1Apr45; MP547.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on a planer. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Reid H. Ray.

2. Planing a Dovetail Slide. © 1Mar45; MP15810.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the center-type grinder. Emerson Yorke Studio, for the U. S. Office of Education, c1944. 1 reel each, sd. © Emerson Yorke Studio.

Appl. authors: H. M. Huffman, Samuel A. Datlowe.

1. Grinding a Plain Pin: pt. 1, The Grinding Wheel. © 21Apr44; MP14755.

2. Grinding a Plain Pin: pt. 2, Grinding Operations. © 21Apr44; MP14756.

3. Grinding a Slender Shaft with Back Rest. © 21Apr44; MP14757.

4. Plunge Cut Grinding. © 21Apr44; MP14758.

5. Grinding a Taper. © 21Apr44; MP14759.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the centerless grinding machine. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1944. 3 reels each. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Lawrence M. Rosenthal.

1. Thrufeed Grinding a Straight Pin: pt. 1. © 20Jun44; MP15405.

2. Thrufeed Grinding a Straight Pin: pt. 2. © 20Jun44; MP15406.

3. Infeed Grinding Shouldered Work. © 20Jun44; MP15407.

4. Infeed Grinding a Shaft of Two Diameters. © 20Jun44; MP15408.

5. Endfeed Grinding a Tapered Pin. © 20Jun44; MP15409.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the cutter grinder. Emerson Yorke Studio, c1943. 2 reels each, sd. © Emerson Yorke Studio.

Appl. authors: S. A. Datlowe, H. M. Huffman.

1. Sharpening a Side Milling Cutter. © 25Nov43; MP14308.

2. Sharpening a Plain Helical Milling Cutter. © 25Nov43; MP14309.

3. Sharpening a Shell End Mill. © 25Nov43; MP14310.

4. Sharpening an Angular Cutter. © 25Nov43; MP14311.

5. Sharpening a Form Relieved Cutter. © 25Nov43; MP14312.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the drill press (radial drill). © Emerson Yorke Studio.

Appl. author: Emerson Yorke.

4. Drilling and Tapping Cast Steel. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 17Dec41; MU11922.

5. Drilling to a Layout and Spotfacing Cast Iron. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 17Dec41; MU11923.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the engine lathe. sd. © Atlas Educational Film Co.

Appl. author: John G. Curtis.

8. Cutting an Internal Acme Thread. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 31Dec43; MU14348.

9. Cutting an Internal Taper Pipe Thread. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14587.

10. Turning Work Held on a Fixture. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14588.

11. Boring to Close Tolerances. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14589.

12. Machining Work Held in a Chuck. © title, descr, & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14590.

13. Turning Work Held on a Mandrel. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14591.

14. Using a Steady Rest. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 31Dec43; MU14349.

15. Using a Follower Rest. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 31Dec43; MU14350.

16. Using a Boring Bar Between Centers. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 13Mar44; MU14592.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the gear hobbing machine. Emerson Yorke Studios, c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © Emerson Yorke Studios.

1. Hobbing a Spur Gear: pt. 1, Setting Up the Change Gears. © 1Jun45; MP471.

2. Hobbing a Spur Gear; pt. 2, Setting Up and Hobbing the Work. © 1Jun45; MP472.

3. Hobbing a Square Tooth Spline Shaft. © 1Jun45; MP473.

4. Hobbing a Worm Gear—Infeed Method. © 1Jun45; MP474.

5. Hobbing a Helical Gear, Two Cuts—Non-differential Method. © 1Jun45; MP475.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the horizontal boring mill. Escar Motion Picture Service, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © Escar Motion Picture Service, Inc.

1. Setup for Face Milling With a Fixture. © 1Nov45; MP507.

2. Face Milling With a Fixture. © 1Dec45; MP372.

3. Contour Face Milling. © 1Dec45; MP373.

4. Setup for Rough Line-Boring. © 1Dec45; MP374.

5. Rough Line-Boring. © 1Nov45; MP508.

6. Drilling, Tapping, Stub-Boring, and Reaming. © 1Dec45; MP375.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the internal grinder. Emerson Yorke Studio, c1944. 1 reel each, sd. © Emerson Yorke Studio.

Appl. author: Samuel A. Datlowe.

1. Grinding a Straight Hole. © 26May44; MP14874.

2. Grinding a Deep Hole. © 26May44; MP14875.

3. Grinding and Facing a Blind Hole. © 26May44; MP14876.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the lathe. Distributed by the Federal Security Agency and U. S. Office of Education, c1942. 1 reel each, sd. © West Coast Sound Studios, Inc.

Appl. author: Alleyne W. Manchee.

6. Turning a Taper with the Tail Stock Set Over. © 26Sep42; MP12887.

7. Cutting an External Acme Thread. © 26Sep42; MP12888.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the metal cutting band saw. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1944. 3 reels each. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Reid H. Ray.

1. Sawing an Internal Irregular Shape. © 12Oct44; MP15383.

2. Filing an Internal Irregular Shape. © 12Oct44; MP15384.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the sensitive drill. Distributed by Federal Security Agency and U. S. Office of Education, c1942. 1 reel, sd. © West Coast Sound Studios, Inc.

Appl. author: Alleyne W. Manchee.

1. Drilling a Hole in a Pin. © 26Sep42; MP12891.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the shaper. © Emerson Yorke Studio.

Appl. author: Emerson Yorke.

1. Cutting a Keyway on End of a Finished Shaft. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 17Dec41; MU11919.

2. Machining a Cast Iron Rectangular Block. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 17Dec41; MU11920.

3. Machining a Tool Steel V Block. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 17Dec41; MU11921.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the surface grinder. Worcester Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel each. © Worcester Film Corp.

1. Grinding a Parallel Bar: pt. 1, Setting Up the Machine. © 1Aug45; MP16485.

2. Grinding A Parallel Bar: pt. 2, Grinding Operations. © 1Aug45; MP16486.

3. Grinding a Template. © 1Aug45; MP16487.

4. Grinding a V Block. © 1Aug45; MP16488.

5. Grinding Thin Discs. © 1Aug45; MP16489.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the turret lathe. Atlas Educational Film Co., c1945. 1 reel each. © Atlas Educational Film Co.

1. Setting Up Bar Mechanism and Roller Turner. 1Jun45; MP16125.

2. Setting Up Multiple Roller Turner and Turning a Taper. © 1Jun45; MP16126.

3. Necking and Threading by Use of Attachment and by Die Head. © 1Jun45; MP16127.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the turret lathe. Industrial Film Guild, c1945. 1 reel. © Industrial Film Guild.

4. Setting Up and Matching Bar Stock. © 1Jun45; MP368.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the turret lathe. Escar Motion Picture Service, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each. © Escar Motion Pictures Service, Inc.

The Turret Lathe—An Introduction. © 1Dec45; MP369.

Chuck Work: pt. 1, Setting Up Hexagon Turret Tools. © 1Dec45; MP370.

Chuck Work; pt. 2, Setting Up Tools for Combined Cuts. © 1Dec45; MP371.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the vertical drill. Distributed by the Federal Security Agency and U. S. Office of Education, c1942. 1 reel each, sd. © West Coast Sound Studios, Inc.

Appl. author: Alleyne W. Manchee.

1. Locating Holes, Drilling and Tapping in Cast Iron. © 26Sep42; MP12889.

2. Countersinking, Counterboring and Spot Facing. © 26Sep42; MP12890.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; operations on the vertical milling machine. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1943–44. 1 reel each. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Lawrence M. Rosenthal.

1. Using a Shell End Mill. © 20Dec43; MP14489.

2. Cutting a Dovetail Taper Slide. © 9Feb44; MP14490.

3. Cutting a Round End Keyway. © 9Feb44; MP14491.

4. Milling a Helical Groove. © 20Dec43; MP14492.

5. Milling a Circular T-Slot. © 20Dec43; MP14493.

MACHINE SHOP WORK; precision measurement. Ray-Bell Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. © Ray-Bell Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Reid H. Ray.

8. Gage Blocks and Accessories. © 1Mar45; MP15813.

MACHINE TRANSCRIPTION. United States Navy. sd., 16mm. © De Frenes & Co.

Appl. authors: George W. Chapman, H. Bauernschmidt.

Machine operation. © title & descr., 15Nov43; 8 prints, 27Oct43; MU14138.

Transcription Technique. © title & descr., 15Nov43; 3 prints, 27Oct43; MU14137.

LES MACHINES ELEMENTAIRES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "Simple Machines."

Summary: Shows the basic features of simple machines—the lever, the inclined plane, the wedge, the pulley, and the screw—and demonstrates their application to modern complex machines. Animated drawings clarify abstract mechanical principles.

Credits: Collaborator, H. Horton Sheldon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Sep48; MP3381.

MACKINAC ISLAND. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 864 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographer, Virgil Miller. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Feb44; MP421.

MCLEOD'S FOLLY. SEE Johnny Come Lately.

MACNAMARA'S BAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar41; MP10882.

MACNAMARA'S BAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11733.

THE MACOMBER AFFAIR. Award Productions, Inc., c1947. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Adapted from "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber" a story by Ernest Hemingway.

Credits: Producers, Benedict Bogeaus, Casey Robinson; director, Zoltan Korda; screenplay, Casey Robinson, Seymour Bennett; adaptation, Seymour Bennett, Frank Arnold; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editors, George Feld, Jack Wheeler.

Cast: Gregory Peck, Joan Bennett, Robert Preston, Reginald Denny, Jean Gillie.

© Award Productions, Inc.; 21Mar47; LP1014.

MAD ABOUT HER BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Mar46; MP305.

MAD ABOUT MOONSHINE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 19 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Feb41; LP10273.

THE MAD DOCTOR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George Arthur; director, Tim Whelan; screenplay, Howard J. Green; photographer, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec40; LP10261.

THE MAD DOCTOR OF MARKET STREET. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Malvern; director, Joseph Lewis; original screenplay, Al Martin; photography, Jerry Ash; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec41; LP10885.

THE MAD GHOUL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, James Hogan; original story, Hans Kraly; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg, Paul Gangelin; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Oct43; LP12316.

THE MAD HATTER. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 653 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Director, Sid Marcus; animation, Art Davis, Herb Rothwill; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 7Nov40; LP10030.

THE MAD HATTER. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Webb Smith.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 27Nov47; MP2901.

THE MAD MAESTRO. Loew's Inc. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 703 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Dec39; MP10178.

THE MAD MARTINDALES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,824 ft., sd. Based upon a play by Wesley Towner, from a play by Ludwig Hirschfeld and Edmund Wolf.

Credits: Director, Alfred E. Werker; screenplay, Francis Edwards Faragoh; music direction, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15May42; LP11339.

MAD MEN OF EUROPE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels, sd. From the play by Guy du Maurier.

Credits: Director, Albert de Courville; screen adaptation, Ian Hay, Edward Knoblock, Dennis Wheatley; music director, Louis Levy; photography, Mutz Greenbaum, Harry Harris; editor, Lister Laurance.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27May40; LP9670.

THE MAD MONSTER. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

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

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 7May42; LP11286.

MADAME BOVARY. Loew's Inc., c1949. 114 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Gustave Flaubert's novel. An MGM picture.

Summary: A period drama introduced by a re-enactment of Flaubert's trial in 1857, at which the author defends his realistic novel about an unfaithful, greedy woman.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Vincente Minnelli; screenplay, Robert Ardrey; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Ferris Webster.

Cast: James Mason, Jennifer Jones, Van Heflin, Louis Jourdan, Christopher Kent.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Jul49; LP2461.

MADAME CURIE. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the book by Eve Curie.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, Paul Osborn, Paul H. Rameau; narrator, James Hilton; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec43; LP12429.

MADAME SPY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Marshall Grant; director, Roy William Neill; original story, Clarence Upson Young; screenplay, Lynn Riggs, Clarence Upson Young; photography, George Robinson; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Jul42; LP11481.

MADEMOISELLE DOCTEUR. SEE Under Secret Orders.

MADEMOISELLE FIFI. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 69 min., sd. Based on stories of Guy de Maupassant.

Credits: Producer, Val Lewton; director, Robert Wise; screenplay, Josef Mischel, Peter Ruric; music, Werner Heymann; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, J. R. Whittredge.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Aug44; LP12791.

MLLE FIFI. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Guy de Maupassant.

Summary: A drama about the German occupation of France in 1870, and a Prussian officer, nicknamed Mlle Fifi, who attempts to overcome the resistance of the villagers.

Credits: Screenplay, Stanley Rubin.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc,; 7Feb49; LP2164.

MADERO OF MEXICO. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 979 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story, Brainerd Duffield; screenplay, Doane Hoag, Brainerd Duffield; music score, Sol Kaplan.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec42; LP11738.

MADHATTAN ISLAND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, I. Klein.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jun47; LP1076.

MADMAN'S HOLIDAY. SEE Crack Up.

MADONNA OF THE DESERT. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The story of a young girl who plans to steal a jewelled madonna.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, George Blair; original story, Frank Wisbar; screenplay, Albert DeMond; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Donald Barry, Don Castle, Sheldon Leonard.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Feb48; LP1505.

MADONNA OF THE SEVEN MOONS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 10 reels, sd. A Gainsborough picture. From the novel by Margery Lawrence.

Credits: Producer, R. J. Minney, director, Arthur Crabtree; screenplay, Roland Pertwee; photographer. Jack Cox.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Jan46; LP88.

THE MADONNA'S SECRET. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, William Thiele; original screenplay, Bradbury Foote, William Thiele; music score, Joseph Dubin; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Jan46; LP370.

MAESTROS OF THE COMICS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 145)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; director, Carl S. Clancy; narrator, Arthur Hale.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5Dec45; MP46.

MAGAZINE MODEL. SEE Variety Views, no. 129.

THE MAGIC ALPHABET. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 992 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Jack Tourneur; original story and screenplay, Robert Lopez; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Oct42; LP11649.

THE MAGIC BOW. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Gainsborough picture. Based on the novel by Manuel Komroff.

Summary: A picture based on the life of the composer, Nicolò Paganini. Includes musical compositions of Beethoven and Tartini as well as those of Paganini. Setting is Italy during the Napoleonic period.

Credits: Producer, R. J. Minney; director, Bernard Knowles; screenplay, Roland Pertwee; music director, Louis Levy; incidental score, Henry Geehl; film editor, Alfred Roome.

Cast: Stewart Granger, Phyllis Calvert, Jean Kent, Dennis Price, Cecil Parker.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 11Dec47; LP1673.

THE MAGIC CARPET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Nov42; MP13096.

THE MAGIC FLUKE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Fox and Crow Cartoon)

Credits: Executive producer, Steve Bosustow; director, John Hubley; story, Sol Barzman; music, Del Castillo; animation, Bob Cannon, Willis Pyle, Rudy Larriva, Pat Matthews.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Mar49; LP2192.

MAGIC IN THE AIR. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 21Jan42; 110 prints, 15Jan42; MU12054.

MAGIC IN THE KITCHEN. c1946. 1 reel, 16mm.

Appl. author: Herbert Kerkow.

© Chr. Hansen's Laboratory, Inc.; 1Nov46; MP1541.

MAGIC IS THE MOONLIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16103.

MAGIC MINERAL. SEE Variety Views, no. 153.

MAGIC OF MAGNOLIAS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Jan42; MP12090.

THE MAGIC OF STEAM; the steam turbine. Presented by Allis Chalmers Mfg. Co. 2 reels each, b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Allis Chalmers Mfg. Co,; title & descr., 15Oct42; 121 prints, 14Oct42; MU12942.

MAGIC OF YOUTH. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd., color. (Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Paul Douglas; music score, L. de Francesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31Aug45; MP86.

MAGIC ON A STICK. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 855 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Cyril Endfield; original story and screenplay, Charles Larson; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Oct45; LP13621.

THE MAGIC PENCIL. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Volney White; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15Nov40; MP10622.

THE MAGIC SHELL. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 16May41; MP11158.

MAGIC STRENGTH. Screen Gems, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Phantasy)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Dun Roman.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 4Feb44; LP12496.

MAGIC TOWN. Robert Riskin Productions, Inc., c1947. 103 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Robert Riskin and Joseph Krumgold.

Credits: Produced and written by Robert Riskin; director, William A. Wellman; music score, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editors, Sherman Todd, Richard G. Wray.

Cast: James Stewart, Jane Wyman, Kent Smith, Ned Sparks, Wallace Ford.

© Robert Riskin Productions, Inc.; 26Sep47; LP1255.

MAGICALULU. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Apr45; LP13357.

MAGNESIUM, METAL FROM THE SEA. Presented by the Dow Chemical Co. 3 reels, b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Dow Chemical Co.; title & descr., 24Mar44; 20 prints, 25Mar44; MU14653.

MAGNESIUM, METAL FROM THE SEA. SEE This is Magnesium.

THE MAGNET. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 5)

Summary: Pat shows his puppet, Pirro, how a magnet works.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

©Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2342.

MAGNETISM. Coronet, c1947. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, N. E. Bingham.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 14Mar47; MP2507.

MAGNETS. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 12 min. With A Teacher's Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Oct46; MP1255.

MAGNETS AND MAGNETISM. De Forest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 feet, b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics. Reel lesson 3)

Summary: Explains the basic principles of magnetism as an aid to the understanding of the operation of the various magnetic applications in electronic devices.

© De Forest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP3896.

THE MAGNIFICENT AMBERSONS. c1942. 88 min., sd. A Mercury production. From the novel by Booth Tarkington.

Credits: Screenplay, production and direction, Orson Welles; music, Bernard Herrmann; photographer, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Robert Wise.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 7Jul42; LP11485.

MAGNIFICENT DOLL. Hallmark Productions, Inc., c1946. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Jack H. Skirball-Bruce Manning production.

Credits: Producer, Jack H. Skirball; director, Frank Borzage; original story and screenplay, Irving Stone; music, H. J. Salter; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Ted J. Kent.

Cast: Ginger Rogers, David Niven, Burgess Meredith.

© Hallmark Productions, Inc.; 9Dec46; LP757.

THE MAGNIFICENT DOPE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,500 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; original story, Joseph Schrank; screenplay, George Seaton; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Jun42; LP11476.

THE MAGNIFICENT ROGUE. Republic Pictures Corp., c1946. 74 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Wm. J. O'Sullivan; director, Albert S. Rogell; original story, Gerald Drayson Adams, Richard Sokolove; screenplay, Dane Lussier; adaptation, Sherman L. Lowe; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Warren Douglas, Gerald Mohr, Stephanie Bachelor, Adele Mara.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Dec46; LP746.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jun43; MP13641.

THE MAID. Charles W. Wilmert, c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Illustrates the value of "The Maid," a device designed to hold bedding in place.

© Charles W. Wilmert; 14Apr49; MP4066.

A MAID MADE MAD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,410 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Monty Collins.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Mar43; LP11972.

MAID TROUBLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; direction and screenplay, Harry Edwards; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec45; LP126.

MAIL DOG. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Jerry Hathcock, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 6May47; LP1371.

MAIL TROUBLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Lloyd French; story, George Jeske, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Mark Robson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Sep42; LP11725.

THE MAILMAN. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Paul R. Hanna, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jan47; MP1578.

MAILMAN BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Nov42; MP13108.

MAILMAN OF SNAKE RIVER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5May44; MP15267.

LA MAIN DU DIABLE (THE DEVIL'S HAND). c1946. 8 reels, sd., 35mm. First published Paris, France, date unknown. English titles.

Credits: Producer, Maurice Tourneur; scenario, Jean-Paul Le Chanois; music, Roger Dumas.

Appl. author: Maurice Tourneur Films.

© Distinguished Films, Inc.; 12Aug46; LP636.

MAIN STREET AFTER DARK. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 6 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Bresler; director, Edward Cahn; original story, John C. Higgins; screenplay, Karl Kamb, John C. Higgins; music score, George Bassman; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov44; LP13019.

THE MAIN STREET KID. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a radio play by Caryl Coleman.

Summary: A small-town printer with an interest in mental telepathy makes use of his hobby to help his daughter and her sweetheart.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; screenplay, Jerry Sackheim; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Al Pearce, Janet Martin, Alan Mowbray, Adele Mara, Arlene Harris.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7Jan48; LP1482.

MAIN STREET LAWYER, c1939. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. Based on original story by Harry Hamilton.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Dudley Murphy; screenplay, Joseph Krumgold; adaptation, Devery Freeman; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, William Morgan.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 3Nov39; LP9327.

MAIN STREET ON THE MARCH! Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1,768 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story and screenplay, Karl Kamb; narrator, John Nesbitt; music score, David Snell; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jan42; LP11039.

MAIN STREET TODAY. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story and screenplay, Karl Kamb, Julian Harmon; narrator, John Nesbitt; music score, David Raksin; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Mar44; LP258.

MAIN STREET. U. S. A.—1942. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 4.

MAINE SAIL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: Vacation highlights in Maine including scenes of Boothbay Harbor, old churches at Wiscasset, a clambake at Kennebunk Beach, and sailing at Penobscot Bay.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; directed and written by Tom Cummiskey; narrator, George C. Putnam; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13May49; MP4424.

MAINTAIN THE RIGHT. Loew's Inc., with the cooperation of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, c1940. 950 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Directors, Joe Newman, Willard Van Der Veer; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler, Jerry Hoffman; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Jan40; LP9468.

MAINTAINING CLASSROOM DISCIPLINE. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1947. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Teacher Education Series, film 3)

Summary: By contrasting different methods of handling the same class, the film explores techniques for maintaining discipline and stimulating the interest of students. Prepared to accompany the textbook, "Student Teaching," by Dr. Raleigh Schorling.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.: 17Dec47; MP2674.

MAISIE GETS HER MAN. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the characters created by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, Roy Del Ruth; original story, Betty Reinhardt, Ethel Hill; screenplay, Betty Reinhardt, Mary C. McCall, Jr.; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 26May42; LP11380.

MAISIE GOES TO RENO. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the characters created by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Harry Beaumont; original story, Harry Ruby, James O'Hanlon; screenplay, Mary C. McCall, Jr.; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Jul44; LP179.

MAISIE WAS A LADY. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, Edwin L. Marin; original story, Betty Reinhardt, Myles Connolly; screenplay, Betty Reinhardt, Mary C. McCall, Jr.; music score, David Snell; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Jan41; LP10165.

MAJESTY OF YELLOWSTONE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A pictorial study of Yellowstone National Park, with emphasis on the work of the Rangers of the National Park Service.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, George Carson Putnam; music, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 14Aug48; MP3421.

THE MAJOR AND THE MINOR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd. Suggested by a play by Edward Childs Carpenter from a story by Fannie Kilbourne.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Hornblow, Jr.; director, Billy Wilder; written by Charles Brackett, Billy Wilder; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Oct42; LP11652.

MAJOR BARBARA. Released by United Artists, c1941. Presented by Gabriel Pascal. 13 reels, sd. By George Bernard Shaw.

Credits: Producer and director, Gabriel Pascal; scenario and dialogue, George Bernard Shaw; music, William Walton; music director, Muir Mathieson; cameraman, Ronald Neame; film editor, Charles Frend.

© Gabriel Pascal Productions, Ltd.; 15Feb41; LP10553.

MAKA LA PUA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14444.

MAKE BELIEVE BALLROOM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 79 min., sd., b&w, 35 mm. Based on the Al Jarvis and Martin Block radio programs of the same title.

Summary: An all-star comedy about a "Musical Mystery Contest."

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Joseph Santley; story, Albert Duffy; screenplay, Albert Duffy, Karen DeWolf; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Jerome Courtland, Ruth Warrick, Ron Randell, Virginia Welles, Al Jarvis.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26May49; LP2303.

MAKE MINE FREEDOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Summary: In this cartoon, the basic freedoms enjoyed in America are enumerated, and citizens are warned against adoption of Utopian schemes that may cost the nation its liberty.

Credits: Music composition and arrangement, Scott Bradley, Paul J. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Apr48; LP1607.

MAKE MINE LAUGHS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A vaudeville revue which presents a series of comedy and musical acts including sequences clipped from old RKO features and shorts.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Richard O. Fleischer; Leon Errol sequence written and directed by Hal Yates; music director, Constantin Bakaleinikoff; film editors, Robert Swink, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Ray Bolger, Anne Shirley, Dennis Day, Joan Davis, Jack Haley.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10Aug49; LP2497.

MAKE MINE MONICA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Credits: Directed and written by Justin Herman; editor, Robert Blauvelt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Jan49; LP2065.

MAKE MINE MUSIC. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 75 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Production supervision, Joe Grant; directors, Jack Kinney, Clyde Geronimi, Hamilton Luske, Bob Cormack, Josh Meador; story, Homer Brightman; animation, Les Clark, George Rowley; music director, Charles Wolcott.

Cast: Nelson Eddy, Dinah Shore, Benny Goodman, Andrews Sisters, Jerry Colonna.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Mar46; LP1380.

MAKE MY COFFEE BLACK. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Make My Coffee Black" is sung by The Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4535.

MAKE WAY FOR YOUTH. Transfilm, Inc., c1947. 23 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, Marvin Rothenberg; scenario, Basil Beyea and Burton Rowles, Jr.; narration, Melvyn Douglas.

© Transfilm, Inc.; 15Dec47; MP2552.

MAKE YOU A GOOD WIFE. SEE My Own True Love.

MAKE YOUR OWN BED; if you don't...? Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 82 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a play by Harvey J. O'Higgins and Harriet Ford.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Francis Swann, Edmund Joseph; adaptation, Richard Weil; music, H. Roemheld; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; photographer, Robert Burks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Jun44; LP12690.

MAKERS OF DESTINY. Hullinger Productions, c1947. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Edwin Ware Hullinger.

© Edwin Ware Hullinger; 15Sep47; MP2334.

MAKING A CLAY PORTRAIT. Vanguard Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Carl L. Kahn.

© Vanguard Productions; 22Jul42; MP12703.

MAKING A LITHOGRAPH. Lester H. Kohs, c1941. 1 reel.

© Lester H. Kohs; 2Jan41; MP10919.

MAKING AN INDIAN TIPI. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates that the making of a tipi is not only a practical project but also an adventure in Indian lore.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30May48; LP2230.

MAKING BOOKS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Luther H. Evans, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Nov47; MP2514.

MAKING BRICKS FOR HOUSES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The story of brick making. The film shows the processes by which shale is converted into finished bricks: preparation of raw materials; forming and cutting bricks; baking in the kiln; and shipping of the finished bricks. For primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, R. K. Hursh.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 12Dec47; MP2642.

MAKING COTTON CLOTHING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Isabel B. Wingate.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 5Aug46; MP973.

MAKING ELECTRICITY. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Describes the construction of a miniature generator and explains how electricity is generated at a large hydro-electric plant. For middle and primary grades.

Credits: Collaborator, S. Ralph Powers.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Jun49; MP4262.

MAKING GLASS FOR HOUSES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The mining and processing of the raw materials of which glass is made; the weighing, mixing, and melting of these raw materials in a glass plant; the cooling and cutting of the glass; and the glazing of windows. A teaching film for primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, F. V. Tooley.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Mar48; MP2878.

MAKING INDIAN HAND PRINTED CLOTH. c1941. 2 reels.

© Hagob K. Garmirian; 1Apr41; MP11116.

MAKING INDIAN MOCCASINS. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Ben Hunt shows the steps in making a pair of moccasins, from the selection of the hide to the first "try-on".

© Boy Scouts of America; 30May48; LP2231.

THE MAKING OF A MURAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Thomas Hart Benton, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul47; MP2192.

MAKING SHOES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with A. S. Knowles, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Script, J. Stanley McIntosh.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Jan47; MP1672.

MAKING THE GRADE. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 44 prints, 10Oct40; MU10533.

MAKING THE MOST OF SCHOOL. Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how the individual student can make the most of his school experience, and explains the purpose of rules and restrictions.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Frederick G. Neel.

© David A. Smart; 31Aug48; MP3717.

MAKING THE VARSITY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Jun47; MP2248.

MAKING WELDED PIPE LINE. Presented by the A. O. Smith Corp.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© A. O. Smith Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15348.

THE MALAY PENINSULA; people and products. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the inter-relation between native customs and European influences; depicts methods of transportation; and describes the modern industrial methods used in the production of tin, copra, rubber, rice, and tea. For geography classes in the sixth and seventh grades and for junior and senior high school classes in social studies and economics.

Credits: Collaborator, John H. Garland.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 22Apr48; MP3101.

MALAYA. Loew's Inc., c1949. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on a story by Manchester Boddy.

Summary: A reporter and a convict lead a desperate war-time mission to smuggle vital rubber out of Japanese-occupied Malaya.

Credits: Producer, Edwin H. Knopf; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, Frank Fenton; music, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Ben Lewis.

Cast: Spencer Tracy, James Stewart, Valentina Cortesa, Sydney Greenstreet, John Hodiak.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Nov49; LP2650.

THE MALE ANIMAL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 101 min., sd. From the play by James Thurber and Elliott Nugent.

Credits: Associate producer, Wolfgang Reinhardt; director, Elliott Nugent; screenplay, Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein, Stephen Morehouse Avery; film editor, Thomas Richards.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Apr42; LP11185.

MALE ORDER. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Words and music, Harold Raymond.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11725.

MALIBU BEACH PARTY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Story, Jack Miller; animation, Gil Turner.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Sep40; MP10462.

MALICE IN SLUMBERLAND. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 582 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 21)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Alec Geiss; animation, Ray Patterson; music, Ed Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 20Nov42; LP12003.

MALICE IN THE PALACE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of the Three Stooges in the Orient.

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler; film editor, Edwin Bryant.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Sep49 (in notice: 1948); LP2573.

THE MALTESE FALCON. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 100 min., sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Henry Blanke; direction and screenplay, John Huston; film editor, Thomas Richards.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Oct41; LP10777.

MAMA DON'T ALLOW IT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Jul42; MP12735.

MAMA DON'T WANT NO MUSIC. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Aug42; MP12878.

MAMA, I WANNA MAKE RHYTHM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP14433.

MAMA, I WANT A SWEETHEART. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11164.

MAMA LOVES PAPA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 61 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Frank Strayer; screenplay, Charles Roberts, Monte Brice; music, Leigh Harline; editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Aug46; LP3.

MAMAE EU QUERO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar41; MP10883.

MAMA'S BANK ACCOUNT. SEE I Remember Mama.

MAME IS ME FLAME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Nov44; MP15438.

MAMMALS OF THE COUNTRYSIDE. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Robert Snedigar.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 26Sep47; MP2575.

MAMMALS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: This film shows that moose, grizzly bears, bighorn sheep, mule deer, and other animals of the Rocky Mountains have seasonal patterns of life adapted to the four major zones of plant life found on the slopes of the mountains.

Credits: Collaborator, Colin C. Sanborn.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Sep47; MP2584.

MAMMALS OF THE WESTERN PLAINS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows animals of the western plains, such as bison, mule deer, antelopes, coyotes, and jack rabbits, and describes their struggle for survival.

Credits: Collaborator, Colin Campbell Sanborn.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Sep47; MP2587.

MAM'ZELLE BONAPARTE. Continental Film, Paris. 9 reels, sd.

© Continental Film; title, descr., & 10 prints, 3Dec47; LU1359.

MAN ABOUT TOWN. Pathe Cinema, Paris, c1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Dialogue in French, with English commentary by Maurice Chevalier. Released in France with the title "Le Silence est d'or."

Credits: Produced, directed and written by Rene Clair; English adaptation, Robert Pirosh.

Cast: Maurice Chevalier.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22Oct47; MP1363.

MAN ALIVE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 70 min., sd. Based on an original story by Jerry Cady and John Tucker Battle.

Credits: Associate producer, Theron Warth; director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Edwin Harvey Blum; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestral arrangements, Gil Grau; editor, Marvin Coil.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Oct45; LP13669.

MAN AND STEEL. 1 reel, color.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© K. Bruno Buerger; title & descr., 24Jan41; 1 set of prints, 9Jan41; MU10784.

MAN AT LARGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6,250 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Eugene Forde; original screenplay, John Larkin; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Oct41; LP10747.

A MAN BETRAYED. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, John H. Auer; original story, Jack Moffitt; screenplay, Isabel Dawn; adaptation, Tom Kilpatrick; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Jan41; LP10312.

MAN-EATER OF KUMAON. Monty Shaff Productions, Inc. Released through Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 79 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the book "Man-Eaters of Kumaon" by James Corbett.

Summary: A jungle melodrama about the stalking of a man-eating tiger that is ravaging a native Indian village at the foot of the Himalayas.

Credits: Producers, Monty Shaff, Frank P. Rosenberg; director, Byron Haskin; screenplay, Jeanne Bartlett, Lewis Meltzer; adaptation, Richard G. Hubler, Alden Nash; music, Hans J. Salter; film editor, George Arthur.

Cast: Sabu, Wendell Corey, Joanne Page, Morris Carnovsky, Argentina Brunetti.

© Monty Shaff Productions, Inc.; 17Dec48; LP2062.

MAN FROM CHEYENNE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, Winston Miller; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Jan42; LP11102.

THE MAN FROM COLORADO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 9 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A western drama in which a former Union officer of the Civil War commits a series of crimes before he is recognized as a homicidal maniac.

Credits: Producer, Jules Schermer; director, Henry Levin; original story, Borden Chase; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews, Ben Maddow; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, George Duning; film editor, Charles Nelson.

Cast: Glenn Ford, William Holden, Ellen Drew, Ray Collins, Edgar Buchanan.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20May48; LP1615.

THE MAN FROM DAKOTA. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a book by MacKinlay Kantor.

Credits: Producer, Edward Chodorov; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Laurence Stallings; music score, David Snell, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Feb40; LP9465.

THE MAN FROM DOWN UNDER. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the story by Bogart Rogers and Mark Kelly.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Wells Root, Thomas Seller; music score, David Snell; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Aug43; LP12219.

MAN FROM FRISCO. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Robert Florey; original story and adaptation, George Worthing Yates, George Carlton Brown; screenplay, Ethel Hill, Arnold Manoff; music score, Marlin Skiles; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Apr44; LP12624.

MAN FROM HEADQUARTERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Jean Yarbrough; screenplay, John Krafft, Rollo Lloyd; photographer, Mack Stengler; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23Jan42; LP11245.

THE MAN FROM MISSOURI. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; narrator, Lowell Thomas; music score, L. DeFrancesco; editor, Earl Allvine.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Jan46; MP272.

MAN FROM MONTANA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Bennett Cohen; cameraman, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Paul Landers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Aug41; LP10622.

MAN FROM MUSIC MOUNTAIN. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, Bradford Ropes, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Morton Scott; photography, William Bradford; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Sep43; LP12299.

THE MAN FROM NEW ORLEANS. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 19 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: The story of William Spratling, a New Orleans architect, who twenty years ago went to Taxco, Mexico, where he found an abandoned silver mine and revived the folk-art of jewelry-making.

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Luis Osorno Barona; screenplay, Mario Martini.

Cast: E. Breceda.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Aug48; MP3329.

MAN FROM OKLAHOMA, c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Frank McDonald; original 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, Inc.; 12Jul45; LP13378. (See also Man From Oklahoma; 2Aug45; LP13464)

MAN FROM OKLAHOMA, c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Frank McDonald; original 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.; 2Aug45; LP13464. (See also Man from Oklahoma; 12Jul45; LP13378)

MAN FROM RAINBOW VALLEY. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures, 56 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Robert Springsteen; original screenplay, Betty Burbridge; music director, Mort Glickman; photographer. Bud Thackery; film editor, Edward Mann. Magnacolor.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7May46; LP422.

THE MAN FROM TEXAS. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948, 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Bryan Foy production. Based on the stage play by E. B. Ginty.

Summary: A melodrama about a bandit of the pioneer period in the West.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Fields; director, Leigh Jason; screenplay, Joseph Fields, Jerome Chodorov; music director, Irving Friedman; music score, Earl Robinson; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: James Craig, Lynn Bari, Johnnie Johnston, Una Merkel, Wally Ford.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 6Mar48; LP1509.

THE MAN FROM THE RIO GRANDE. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, John MacBurnie; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Sep43; LP12300.

THE MAN FROM THUNDER RIVER. c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, John English; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18May43; LP12127.

THE MAN FROM TUMBLEWEEDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph H. Lewis; original screenplay, Charles Francis Royal; photography, George Meehan; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Apr40; LP9592.

MAN HUNT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 9,030 ft., sd. By Geoffrey Household.

Credits: Director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Dudley Nichols; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Jun41; LP10573.

MAN-I-CURED. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 19 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, Paul Conlon; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Sep41; LP10738.

THE MAN I LOVE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based on a novel by Maritta Wolff.

Credits: Producer, Arnold Albert; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Catherine Turney; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: Ida Lupino, Robert Alda, Andrea King, Martha Vickers, Bruce Bennett.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Jan47; LP776.

THE MAN I MARRIED. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,940 ft., sd. Based on the Liberty magazine story by Oscar Schisgall.

Credits: Director, Irving Pichel; screenplay, Oliver H. P. Garrett; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 2Aug40; LP10157.

THE MAN IN GREY. Released by Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. Presented by G.C.F. 93 min., sd. A Gainsborough picture. Based on a novel by Lady Eleanor Smith.

Credits: Producer, Edward Black; director, Leslie Arliss; screenplay, Margaret Kennedy, Leslie Arliss; music score, Cedric Mallabey; music director, Louis Levy; film editor, R. E. Dearing.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Nov45; LP23.

THE MAN IN HALF MOON STREET. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 10 reels, sd. Based on the play by Barré Lyndon.

Credits: Producer, Walter MacEwen; director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Charles Kenyon; adaptation, Garrett Fort; music score, Miklos Rozsa; photography, Henry Sharp; editor, Tom Neff.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Oct44; LP13014.

THE MAN IN THE TRUNK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,279 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Malcolm St. Clair; original screenplay, John Larkin; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Oct42; LP11674.

THE MAN KILLERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Producer, Howard Hill; written by Roger Q. Denny; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29May43; LP12069.

MAN MADE MONSTER. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd. Based on the story "The Electric Man" by H. J. Essex, Sid Schwartz and Len Golos.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph Bernhard, Jr.; director, George Waggner; screenplay, Joseph West; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 19Mar41; LP10327.

MAN OF COURAGE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, Alexis Thurn-Taxis; original story, Barton MacLane, Herman Ruby, Lew Pollack; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire, Barton MacLane, John Vlahos; music director, Lee Zahler; photography, Marcel LePicard; editor, Fred Bain.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11816.

THE MAN OF PROPERTY. SEE That Forsyte Woman.

MAN OF TIN. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 588 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 74)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Harry Love; music, Joe DeNat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Feb40; LP9431.

THE MAN ON THE FERRY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14381.

THE MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec43; MP14413.

MAN OR MOUSE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Holloway takes part in a wrestling match in order to win the daughter of a physical-culture expert.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Zion Myers.

Cast: Sterling Holloway.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jan48 (in notice: 1947); LP1504.

MAN THAT'S GROOVY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Sep43; MP13934.

MAN TO MAN. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Remington Arms Co., Inc., and Peters Cartridge Division. 36 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Instruction in salesmanship, presented from the standpoint of one man's experience.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 2Feb48; 17 prints, 4Feb48; MU2700.

THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER. Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., c1942. 112 min., sd. From the play by George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart.

Credits: Associate producers, Jack Saper, Jerry Wald; director, William Keighley; screenplay, Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein; film editor, Jack Killifer.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 24Jan42; LP11031.

THE MAN WHO CHANGED THE WORLD. Loew's Inc., c1941. 993 ft., sd., sepia. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Herman Boxer; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jul41; LP10611.

THE MAN WHO DARED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946, 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Maxwell Shane and Alex Gottlieb.

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, John Sturges; screenplay, Edward Bock; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30May46; LP382.

THE MAN WHO FORGOT GOD. c1943. 1,000 ft., 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 15Nov43; LP12395.

THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 8 reels, sd. Based on the novel by H. DeVere Stacpoole.

Credits: Producer, Lawrence Fox; director, Edward Ludwig; screenplay, Eddie Moran; music director, Charles Previn; photographer, Victor Milner; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Mar41; LP10349.

THE MAN WHO RETURNED TO LIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942, 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; story, Samuel W. Taylor; screenplay, Gordon Rigby; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Jan42; LP11011.

THE MAN WHO TALKED TOO MUCH. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 75 min., sd. From a play by Frank J. Collins.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmund Grainger; director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, Walter DeLeon, Earl Baldwin; film editor, Thomas Pratt.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Jul40; LP9748.

THE MAN WHO WALKED ALONE. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 7 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; direction and original story, Christy Cabanne; screenplay, Robert Lee Johnson; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 15Mar45; LP13577.

THE MAN WHO WOULDN'T DIE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,880 ft., sd. Based on a novel by Clayton Rawson.

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; screenplay, Arnaud d'Usseau; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1May42; LP11281.

THE MAN WHO WOULDN'T TALK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,557 ft., sd. Based upon the play "The Valiant" by Holworthy Hall and Robert M. Middlemass.

Credits: Director, David Burton; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan, Lester Ziffren, Edward Ettinger; music director, Samuel Kaylin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 2Feb40; LP9428.

THE MAN WITH NINE LIVES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Nick Grinde; story, Harold Shumate; screenplay, Karl Brown; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Apr40; LP9530.

THE MAN WITH THE WEIRD BEARD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jul46; MP898.

MAN WITH TWO LIVES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, Joseph Hoffman; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Mar42; LP11283.

THE MAN WITHIN. SEE The Smugglers.

MANAGING THE FAMILY INCOME. Presented by The Household Finance Corp.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Household Finance Corp.; title & descr., 7Apr41; 308 prints, 9Apr41; LU10375.

THE MANCHESTER MARRIAGE. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Elizabeth Gaskell.

Summary: A romance in which a widow's second husband is unnecessarily jealous of his predecessor, who is believed to have been drowned at sea.

Credits: Producer, Charles Haas; screenplay, David Ellis, Arthur Shields; editor, Jodie Copelan.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2431.

OS MANGBETU DO CONGO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, James P. Chapin.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jul46; MP893.

MANHANDLED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by L. S. Goldsmith.

Summary: A murder melodrama about a psychiatrist, his young secretary, an avaricious husband, an insurance investigator, and a ruthless private detective.

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

Cast: Dorothy Lamour, Dan Duryea, Sterling Hayden, Irene Hervey, Philip Reed.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Jun49; LP2371.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11166.

MANHATTAN ANGEL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy with musical interludes in which a young woman employed by an advertising agency persuades a choleric manufacturer to donate a building for a youth center.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Arthur Dreifuss; screenplay, Albert Derr; original story, George H. Plympton, Albert Derr; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Gloria Jean, Ross Ford, Patricia White, Thurston Hall, Alice Tyrrell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Nov48; LP2142.

MANHATTAN HEARTBEAT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,436 ft., sd. From a play by Viña Delmar and Brian Marlow, based on a novel by Viña Delmar.

Credits: Director, David Burton; screenplay, Harold Buchman, Clark Andrews, Jack Jungmeyer, Jr., Edith Skouras; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Jul40; LP9770.

MANHATTAN MEMORIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series)

Summary: Shots of people and places in New York City provide the background for several songs: "Sidewalks of New York," "Manhattan," "Strolling Thru the Park," "Take Me out to the Ball Game," and "Broadway Melody." Designed for audience participation.

Credits: Producer and director, Harold James Moore; music director, Jack Shaindlin; editor, Leonard Anderson.

Cast: The New Yorkers, Stan Freeman, Ben Mortell, Art Miller, Leon Pettingrew.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Feb48 (in notice: 1947); MP2967.

MANHUNT OF MYSTERY ISLAND. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–5; 13Jan45; LP13067, no. 6–10, 26Feb45; LP13182; no. 11–15, 11Apr45; LP13244.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Wallace A. Grissell, Yakima Canutt; original screenplay, Albert DeMond, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Alan James, Grant Nelson, Joseph Poland; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold R. Minter.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. Secret Weapon.

2. Satan's Web.

3. The Murder Machine.

4. The Lethal Chamber.

5. Mephisto's Mantrap.

6. Ocean Tomb.

7. The Death Drop.

8. Bombs Away.

9. The Fatal Flood.

10. The Sable Shroud.

11. Satan's Shadow.

12. Cauldron of Cremation.

13. Bridge to Eternity.

14. Power Dive to Doom.

15. Fatal Transformation.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15969.

MANILA CALLING. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,259 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; original screenplay, John Larkin; music directors, Cyril J. Mockridge, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Oct42; LP12083.

MANPOWER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 11 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Raoul Walsh; original screenplay, Richard Macaulay, Jerry Wald.

© Warner Bros, Pictures, Inc.; 9Aug41; LP10640.

THE MAN'S ANGLE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 837 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Roush; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Aug42; LP11522.

MAN'S BEST FRIEND. c1941. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartoon) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, J. Cosgriff; artists, Alex Lovy, Harold Mason; music, Darrell Calker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 8Oct41; MP11640.

MAN'S PEST FRIEND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Nov45; LP161.

A MAN'S WORLD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Charles Barton; story, Jack Roberts, George Bricker; screenplay, Edward T. Lowe, Jack Roberts; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Sep42; LP11603.

THE MANTRAP. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Curt Siodmak; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Apr43; LP12009.

MANTRAP. SEE Untamed.

MANUAL CUTTING A BEVEL—FREEHAND. c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: George W. Chapman.

© DeFrenes & Co.; 1Sep44; MP15288.

MANUAL CUTTING TO A SHAPE—FREEHAND GUIDED. c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: George W. Chapman.

© DeFrenes & Co.; 1Sep44; MP15285.

MANUAL CUTTING TO A LINE—FREEHAND. c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: George W. Chapman.

© DeFrenes & Co.; 1Sep44; MP15286.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15569.

MANY TANKS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner, Carl Meyer; animation, Tom Johnson, Frank Endres.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8May42; LP11361.

MAPS ARE FUN. Coronet, in collaboration with Viola Theman, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 11Nov46; MP2018.

MÁQUINAS SIMPLES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with H. Horton Sheldon, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "Simple Machines."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Mar47; MP1841.

THE MARAUDERS. Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc., c1947. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Lewis J. Rachmil; director, George Archainbaud; original screenplay, Charles Belden; music, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Fred W. Berger.

Cast: William Boyd, Andy Clyde, Rand Brooks.

© Hopalong Cassidy Productions, Inc.; 12Sep47; LP1191.

THE MARCH OF TIME. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, c1939–42. Presented by the editors of Life and the editors of Time.

2 reels each, sd. © Time, Inc.

Volume 6, 1939/40.

5. Crisis in the Pacific. © 22Dec39; MP9913.

6. The Republic of Finland, 1919–1940. © 19Jan40; MP9914.

7. The Vatican of Pius XII. © 16Feb40; MP10058.

8. Canada at War. © 4May40; MP12035.

9. America's Youth - 1940. © 12Apr40; MP10233.

10. The Philippines 1898–1946. © 10May40; MP10223.

11. The U. S. Navy 1940– © 7Jun40; MP10380.

12. Spoils of Conquest. © 2Aug40; MP10459.

13. Gateways to Panama. © 23Aug40; MP10460.

Volume 7, 1940/41.

1. On Foreign News Fronts. © 13Sep40; MP10492.

2. Britain's R. A. F. © 4Oct40; MP10508.

3. Mexico—Good Neighbor's Dilemma. © 25Oct40; MP10550.

4. Arms and the Men. © 22Nov40; MP10678.

5. Labor and Defense—1941. © 1Jan41; MP10795.

6. Uncle Sam—The Non-Belligerent. © 17Jan41; MP10809.

7. Americans All. © 14Feb41; MP10866.

8. Australia at War. © 14Mar41; MP10924.

9. Men of the F. B. I.—1941. ©11Apr41; MP11354.

10. Crisis in the Atlantic. © 9May41; MP11175.

11. China Fights Back. © 6Jun41; MP11426.

12. New England's Eight Million Yankees. © 4Jul41; MP11344.

13. Peace by Adolf Hitler. © 1Aug41; MP11434.

Volume 8, 1941/42.

1. Thumbs Up, Texas! © 29Aug41; MP11613.

2. Norway in Revolt. © 26Sep41; MP11850.

3. Sailors with Wings. © 24Oct41; MP12036.

4. Main Street, U. S. A.—1942. © 21Nov41; MP11840.

5. Our America at War. © 5Dec41; MP12037.

6. When Air Raids Strike! © 16Jan42; MP12128.

7. Far East Command. © 13Feb42; MP12399.

8. The Argentine Question. © 13Mar42; MP12381.

9. America's New Army. © 10Apr42; MP12564.

10. India in Crisis. © 8May42; MP12588.

11. India at War. © 5Jun42; MP12600.

12. Men in Washington—1942. © 3Jul42; MP12939.

13. Men of the Fleet. © 31Jul42; MP12940.

THE MARCH OF TIME. Time. Inc., c1946–49. 2 reels each, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Forum Edition) © Time, Inc.

Britain and Her Empire. © 3Sep46; MP1261.

Palestine. © 3Sep46; MP1262.

The Pacific Coast. © 3Sep46; MP1263.

The Philippine Republic. © 3Sep46; MP1264.

The Republic of Italy. © 3Sep46; MP1265.

Greece. © 3Sep46; MP1266.

Music in America. © 3Sep46; MP1267.

Life with Baby. © 3Sep46; MP1268.

The New France. © 1Mar47; MP1745.

Tomorrow's Mexico. © 1Mar47; MP1746.

THE MARCH OF TIME. Time, Inc. sd., b&w, 16mm. Forum edition. ©Time, Inc., Chicago.

Atomic Power. 1 reel. © 1Mar47; MP1747.

The F. B. I. 2 reels. © 29Aug47; MP2289.

The Rise and Fall of Nazi Germany. 2 reels. © 29Aug47; MP2290.

The American Teacher. 2 reels. © 29Aug47; MP2291.

New Frontiers of Medicine. Summary: The newest medical miracles. Reference is made to new drugs, new fields of study such as the study of the Rh blood factor, and to progress in the treatment of heart disease, cancer, and rheumatic fever.

© 1Mar48; MP2847.

Radio Broadcasting Today. Summary: An appraisal of many types of radio programs, showing a wide range in quality. The survey includes soap operas, newscasts, the Town Hall program, the music of Toscanini, and the programs of such comedians as Benny, Bergen, Hope, and Allen.

© 1Mar48; MP2848.

Turkey. Summary: The film shows Turkey as a focal point in international affairs today and traces her history from the time of the early Ottoman emperors to the administration of President Ismet Inonu.

© 1Mar48; MP2849.

Transportation in the U. S. Summary: How various types of transportation, such as airlines, buses, inland ships, U. S. merchant vessels, and railroads, have helped in the development of American culture and trade.

© 1Mar48; MP2850.

Czechoslovakia. Summary: Covers the founding of Czechoslovakia, the turbulent years between Versailles and Munich, the war years, post-war recovery, the Communist coup, and the suicide of Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk.

© 15May48; MP3043.

The Dutch Empire. Summary: Presents the postwar problem facing the Netherlands in the East Indies, where native discontent marks the breakup of one of the world's colonial empires. Shows scenes of reconstruction since the war, and the natural beauties of the islands.

© 15Aug48; MP3281.

T-Men of the Treasury Department. Summary: Shows how the six law-enforcement agencies of the Treasury Department are organized and how they work. Action sequences are included.

© 15Aug48; MP3282.

Fashion Means Business. Summary: Activities of the flourishing garment industries form the subject of this film. Guided tours of leading fashion designers' salons and of showings in New York and Paris are presented.

© 15Aug48; MP3283.

Public Relations. Summary: This film shows some of the history of public relations work in America, and analyzes its present status. Advertising and other manifestations of this phase of modern business are considered, and some of the leaders in this field are presented.

© 15Aug48; MP3284.

The White House. Summary: A tour of the rooms in the President's official residence

© 15Aug48; MP3285.

Search for Happiness. Summary: Shows that certain devices of the machine age which are intended to simplify life sometimes increase the stress and strain of modern living, and refers to behavior of the many unhappy people who seek advice from radio counsellors, newspaper columnists, and fortune tellers.

© 15Aug48; MP3286.

Volume 15, 1949.

1. On Stage. Summary: A glimpse into New York theatre life. Includes shots of Rex Harrison in "Anne of the Thousand Days" and of Charles Boyer in "Red Gloves."

© 24Feb49; MP4043.

2. Asia's New Voice. Summary: Shows how the people of India have struggled since 1947 to secure their independence from Great Britain, and presents the many problems facing the new Indian government in its attempt to weld diverse elements into a united, modern state.

© 14Feb49; MP4159.

3. Wish You Were Here. Summary: A study of the ways in which vacationing Americans spend their money.

© 14May49; MP4342.

4. Report on the Atom. Summary: A report on the atomic energy program of the United States, revealing the progress made in developing war-time weapons and peacetime uses of atomic energy in industry, agriculture, medicine, and biology.

© 25Apr49; MP4360.

5. Sweden Looks Ahead. Summary: A travelogue film of Sweden stressing the industriousness of the people and their high standards of living. Emphasizes the effect of Sweden's 135 years of neutrality upon the social and economic conditions of the country.

© 12May49; MP4361.

6. It's in the Groove. Summary: Presents the history of phonograph records, showing how records are made and what elements govern the sales of records and affect the financial status of the industry.

© 9Jun49; MP4362.

7. Stop—Heavy Traffic. Summary: Presents the national traffic problem created by an automotive age, and shows some of the solutions which have already been put into effect to alleviate the situation.

© 1Jul49; MP4516.

8. Farming Pays Off. Summary: Presents life on a farm, emphasizing the wealth of farmers during the war and post-war years; shows the mechanization of the nation's farms and the activities of the government scientists who are working to improve farm life.

© 4Aug49; MP4517.

9. Policeman's Holiday. Summary: A lieutenant of the New York City police force visits Scotland Yard in England. He is taken on a tour of the Yard, visits the Metropolitan Police Training School at Hendon, and assists an Inspector of the Yard in solving an involved highjacking and murder case.

© 2Sep49; MP4609.

10. The Fight for Better Schools. Summary: Shows how interested parents like those of Arlington County, Virginia, are able by working together to effect legislation and revitalize the public schools.

© 30Sep49; MP4620.

THE MARCH OF TIME: THE FRENCH CAMPAIGN 1944. Time, Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Time, Inc.; 10Nov44; MP15464.

MARCH ON, AMERICA. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd., color. (Service Special)

Credits: Written by Owen Crump; narration, Richard Whorf. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros, Pictures, Inc.; 26Jun42; LP11424.

MARCH ON, MARINES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the United States Marine Corps, c1940. 20 min., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; screenplay, Owen Crump. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Dec40; LP10125.

MARDI GRAS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1,746 ft., sd., color. (A Paramount Musical Parade)

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Harris; director, Hugh Bennett; story, Ben Perry; screenplay, Ben Perry, Herman Boxer; narrator, Don Wilson; music direction, Troy Sanders; editor, Arthur Schmidt. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Oct43; LP12295.

MARGIE, c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; directors, Otis Garrett, Paul Gerard Smith; original story, W. Scott Darling, Erna Lazarus; screenplay, Erna Lazarus, W. Scott Darling, Paul Gerard Smith; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Oct40; LP9957.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., 10Aug42; MP 12858.

MARGIE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8,689 ft., sd., color, 35mm. Based on stories by Ruth McKenney and Richard Bransten.

Credits: Director, Henry King; screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.; 16Oct46; LP726.

MARGIN FOR ERROR. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 6,691 ft., sd. From the stage play by Clare Booth.

Credits: Director, Otto Preminger; screenplay, Lillie Hayward; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Feb43; LP12212.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jul41; MP11422.

MARIE ELENA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. Of America, Inc.; 13Dec43; MP14271.

MARIE GREENE AND HER MERRIE MEN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Dec40; MP11088.

MARINE RAIDERS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 91 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Harold Schuster; original story, Martin Rackin, Warren Duff; screenplay, Warren Duff; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Philip Martin, Jr.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Jun44; LP12788.

MARINE ROUND-UP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Dec40; MP10660.

THE MARINES FLY HIGH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 68 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; directors, George Nicholls, Jr., Ben Stoloff; story, A. C. Edington; screenplay, Jerry Cady, A. J. Bolton; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Feb40; LP9489.

THE MARINES' HYMN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc.; 17Nov41; MP11781.

MARINES IN THE MAKING. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 832 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Herbert Polesie; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Jan43; MP13211.

MARIPOSAS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Clyde Fisher, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Butterflies."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Mar47; MP1851.

MARITIME PROVINCES OF CANADA. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14745.

MARK–18 PROJECTILE FUZE FOR THE BOMB DISPOSAL SCHOOL.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title, descr., & 4 prints. 1Oct43; MU14005.

MARK OF THE LASH. Western Adventure Productions, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1948. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which "Lash" Larue and "Fuzzy" St. John apprehend a criminal saloon-owner and establish law and order in the town of Red Rock.

Credits: Producer, Ron Ormand; director, Ray Taylor; original story, Ron Ormand, Ira Webb; script, Moree Herring; dialogue, Gloria Welsch; music director, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" La Rue, "Fuzzy" St. John, Suzi Crandall, Marshall Reed, John Cason.

© Western Adventure Productions, Inc.; 1Nov48; LP1959.

THE MARK OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd. Suggested by The Columbia Broadcasting System program entitled "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Castle; story, Cornell Woolrich; screenplay, George Bricker; music, Wilbur Hatch; film editor, Reg Browne.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Nov44; LP13122.

THE MARK OF ZORRO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 8,409 ft., sd. Based on the story "The Curse of Capistrano" by Johnston McCulley.

Credits: Director, Rouben Mamoulian; screenplay, John Taintor Foote; adaptation, Garrett Fort, Bess Meredyth; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8Nov40; LP10310.

MARK TWAIN. SEE The Adventures of Mark Twain.

MARK 28; U. S. Navy tail fuze for the Bomb Disposal School.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title, descr., & 4 prints, 30Oct43; MU14093.

MARKED FOR MURDER. Alexander-Stern, c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Holbrook Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 8Feb45; LP13560.

MARKED MEN. Producers Releasing Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sherman Scott; original story, Harold Greene; screenplay, George Bricker; music director, David Chudnow; cameraman, Jack Greenhalgh; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 28Aug40; LP9880.

MARKED TRAILS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Direction and original story, J. P. McCarthy; screenplay, J. P. McCarthy, Victor Hammond; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Mar44; LP12726.

MARKETS ARE PEOPLE. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Credits: Narrator, Mr. Fisken.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 132 prints. 21Oct40; MU10539.

THE MARQUISE. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on a work by George Sand [pseud. of Mme. Dudevant]

Summary: A drama about the love of a highborn lady and a famous actor, and of the barrier between them. Setting, France in the 18th century.

Credits: Producers, Stanley Rubin, Eugene Lourie; director, Sobie Martin; screenplay, Edith Martin; editor, Daniel Cahn.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2425.

MARRIAGE IS A PRIVATE AFFAIR. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by Judith Kelly.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, David Hertz, Lenore Coffee; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Jul44; LP186.

MARRIAGE VOWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Bill Turner, Larry Riley; animation, Myron Waldman, Gordon Whittier; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Sep49; LP2540.

MARRIED AND IN LOVE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, John Harrow; story and screenplay, S. K. Lauren; music score, Arthur Lange; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Jan40; LP9381.

MARRIED BACHELOR. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Edward Buzzell; original story, Manuel Seff; screenplay, Dore Schary; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Aug41; LP10721.

THE MARRY-GO-ROUND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Joe Stultz.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12431.

MARRY THE BOSS'S DAUGHTER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,282 ft., sd. Suggested by the story "The Boy, the Girl and the Dog" by Sandor Farago and Alexander G. Kenedi.

Credits: Director, Thornton Freeland; original screenplay, Jack Andrews; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Nov41; LP11082.

MARSHAL OF AMARILLO. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: When the Amarillo stage breaks down near Halfway House, a deserted inn, Rocky Lane, the marshal of Amarillo, finds work to do. One passenger is dead, one has disappeared, and a small fortune is reported missing.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Bob Williams; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Mildred Cole, Clayton Moore, Roy Barcroft.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jul48; LP1759.

MARSHAL OF CRIPPLE CREEK. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 58 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, Harold R. Minter.

Cast: Allan Lane, Bobby Blake, Martha Wentworth.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Jul47; LP1210.

MARSHAL OF GUNSMOKE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Vernon Keays; original screenplay, William Lively; film editor, Al Todd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 17Nov43; LP12381.

MARSHAL OF LAREDO. 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 screenplay, Bob Williams; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Sep45; LP13483.

MARSHAL OF RENO. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Wallace Grissell; original story, Anthony Coldewey, Taylor Caven; screenplay, Anthony Coldewey; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22May44; LP12700.

LOS MARTES, ORQUIDEAS (ORCHIDS, TUESDAYS). Lumiton Cinematografica, Argentina, Buenos Aires, c1941. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Direccion, Francisco Mugica; argumento y dialogos, Sixto Pondal Rios, Carlos Olivari.

© Lumiton Cinematografica, Argentina; 5Jun41; LP11308.

MARTIN BLOCK'S MUSICAL MERRY-GO-ROUND. Loew's Inc., c1948. 10 min. each, sd., b&w, 35mm. MGM pictures. © Loew's, Inc.

Credits: Producer, Herbert Moulton; director, Jack Scholl; film editor, Newell P. Kimlin.

Freddy Martin and his orchestra, with Keenan Wynn, Barclay Allen, Stuart Wade. © 4Feb48; MP2758.

Tex Beneke and his orchestra, with the Moonlight Serenaders and Garry Stevens. Featuring the music of Glenn Miller. © 23Apr48; MP2932.

Ray Noble and His Orchestra, with Buddy Clark. © 29Jun48. MP3156.

Les Brown and His Orchestra, and Virginia O'Brien. © 8Jul48; MP3417.

Frankie Carle and His Orchestra, with Marjorie Hughes. © 1Sep48; LP1793.

Tex Beneke and His Orchestra, Les Brown and His Orchestra, introducing Art Lund. © 1Sep48; MP3334.

MARTIN EDEN. SEE Adventures of Martin Eden.

THE MARTINS AND THE COYS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12052.

A MARVEL OF GASOLINE CHEMISTRY. Presented by Sun Oil.

Credits: Narrator, Lowell Thomas.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Sun Oil Co.; title & descr., 7Apr41; 143 prints, 9Apr41; MU11038.

MARY BENNETT TAKES A TRIP. c1941. Presented by Meadow Gold Dairy. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: George W. Shadwick, Jr.

© Meadow Gold (Beatrice Creamery Co.); 24Aug41; MP11560.

MARY GOES ROUND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Sep41; MP11569.

MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Oct44; MP15284.

MARY LEE. Soundies Distributing Corp of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Apr46; MP489.

MARY LOU. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An airline hostess becomes a featured singer with Frankie Carle's orchestra.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original screenplay, M. Coates Webster; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

Cast: Robert Lowery, Joan Barton, Glenda Farrell, Abigail Adams, Frank Jenks.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Jan48; LP1434.

MARYLAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 8,259 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry King; original screenplay, Ethel Hill, Jack Andrews; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp,; 19Jul40; LP10026.

MAS DINERO EN EL ORDEÑO. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Narrator, Emil Limes. Kodachrome.

Appl. author: George Mather.

© Babson Bros. Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 28Mar45; MU15753.

THE MASK OF DIIJON. c1946. Presented by PRC Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Max Alexander, Alfred Stern; director. Lew Landers; original story, Arthur St. Claire; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire, Griffin Jay.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 1Mar46; LP130.

THE MASK OF DIMITRIOS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 95 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Eric Ambler.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Jean Negulesco; screenplay, Frank Gruber; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, Frederick Richards.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Jul44; LP12724.

THE MASK OF NIPPON. c1942. Presented by United Artists. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 9Nov42; MP13043.

THE MASKED MARVEL. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Nov43; LP12459.

Credits: Associate producer, W. J. O'Sullivan; director, Spencer Bennet; original screenplay, Royal Cole, Ronald Davidson, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Grant Nelson, George Plympton, Joseph Poland; musical score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editors, Earl Turner, Wallace Grissell.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Masked Crusader.

2. Death Takes the Helm.

3. Dive to Doom.

4. Suspense at Midnight.

5. Murder Meter.

6. Exit to Eternity.

7. Doorway to Destruction.

8. Destined to Die.

9. Danger Express.

10. Suicide Sacrifice.

11. The Fatal Mistake.

12. The Man Behind the Mask.

MASKED RAIDERS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which two Texas Rangers capture a gang of masked marauders.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lesley Selander; written by Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Les Millbrook.

Cast: Tim Holt, Richard Martin, Marjorie Lord, Gary Gray, Frank Wilcox.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Sep49; LP2599.

THE MASKED RIDER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Ford Beebe; original story, Sam Robins; screenplay, Sherman Lowe, Victor I. McLeod; photography, Charles Van Enger.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Aug41; LP10633.

MASQUERADE IN MEXICO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 10 reels. Based on a story by Edwin Justus Mayer and Franz Spencer.

Credits: Production and screenplay, Karl Tunberg; director, Mitchell Leisen.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Nov45; LP111.

MASS MOUSE MEETING. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 577 ft., sd. (A Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Alec Geiss; story. Dun Roman; animation, Chick Otterstrom; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 8Jun43; LP12092.

MASSACRE. SEE Fort Apache.

MASSACRE RIVER. Windsor Pictures Corp. Released through Allied Artists, c1949. 75 min., sd., sepia, 35mm. Based on a novel by Harold Bell Wright.

Summary: A Western of post-Civil War days in which three cavalry officers, sent to subdue the Indians, become mortal enemies because of a woman. Filmed in Arizona.

Credits: Producers, Julian Lesser, Frank Melford; director, John Rawlins; screenplay, Louis Stevens; music director, Lud Gluskin; film editor, Richard Cahoon.

Cast: Guy Madison, Rory Calhoun, Carole Mathews, Cathy Downs, Johnny Sands.

© Windsor Pictures Corp.; 1Apr49; LP2412.

THE MASTER KEY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels each, sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original story. Jack Natteford, Dwight V. Babcock; screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell, George H. Plympton, Ande Lamb.

1. Trapped by Flames. © 18Apr45; LP13256.

2. Death Turns the Wheel. © 18Apr45; LP13257.

3. Ticket to Disaster. © 18Apr45; LP13258.

4. Drawbridge Danger. © 8May45; LP13262.

5. Runaway Car. © 8May45; LP13263.

6. Shot Down. © 8May45; LP13264.

7. Death on the Dial. © 28May45; LP13294.

8. Bullet Serenade. © 28May45; LP13295.

9. On Stage for Murder. © 28May45; LP13296.

10. Fatal Masquerade. © 13Jun45; LP13364.

11. Crash Curve. © 13Jun45; LP13365.

12. Lightning Underground. © 13Jun45; LP13366.

13. The Last Key. © 13Jun45; LP13367.

MASTER MINDS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: One of the Bowery Boys is rescued from a mad scientist who is engaged in thought-transference experiments.

Credits: Producer, Jan Grippo; director, Jean Yarbrough; screenplay, Charles R. Marion; music director, Edward J. Kay.

Cast: Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, William Benedict, Bennie Bartlett, David Gorcey.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20Nov49; LP2647.

MASTER OF THE CUE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 854 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 64)

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Oct40; MP10594.

THE MASTER RACE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 96 min., sd. From a story by Herbert J. Biberman. An Edward A. Golden production.

Credits: Producer, Robert Golden; director, Herbert J. Biberman; screenplay, Herbert J. Biberman, Anne Froelick, Rowland Leigh; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestra arrangements, Gil Grau; editor, Ernie Leadlay.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Oct44; LP12986.

MASTERPIECE. SEE A Gentleman at Heart.

MAT MAULERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 900 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Jun44; MP15108.

THE MATING OF MILLIE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The prim executive of a Los Angeles department store finds romance when she tries to snare a husband in order to adopt an orphan boy.

Credits: Producer, Casey Robinson; director, Henry Levin; story, Adele Comandini; screenplay, Louella MacFarlane, St. Clair McKelway; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, Werner R. Heymann; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Glenn Ford, Evelyn Keyes, Ron Randell, Willard Parker.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Mar48; LP1514.

MATRI-PHONY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,558 ft.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Monty Collins.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Jul42; LP11549.

MATT MANN'S SWIMMING TECHNIQUES FOR GIRLS. c1945. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Matt Mann.

© Esquire, Inc.; 7Dec45; MP1530.

MATTER AND ENERGY. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, E. C. Waggoner.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 18Apr47; MP2504.

A MATTER OF MANAGEMENT.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motor Sales Corp.; title & descr., 21Feb42; 132 prints, 24Feb42; MU12196.

MATTY MALNECK AND HIS ORCHESTRA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Sep40; MP10461.

MAUI CHANT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Oct43; MP14044.

MAY I HAVE THE NEXT TRANCE WITH YOU? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Apr42; MP12476.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12May41; MP11140.

MAYBE DARWIN WAS RIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd. (Broadway Brevities) Based on the life of Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom.

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original screenplay, Nat Hiken; narration, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr42; LP11210.

MAYOR OF 44TH STREET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 86 min., sd. Suggested by the Collier's Magazine article by Luther Davis and John Cleveland.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Alfred E. Green; story, Robert D. Andrews; screenplay, Lewis R. Foster, Frank Ryan; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Irene Morra.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Mar42; LP11206.

THE MAYOR'S HUSBAND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,383 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Edward Bernds, Vernon Dent.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Sep45; LP13542.

ME AND MY GIRL. SEE The Lambeth Walk.

ME FEELIN'S IS HURT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Orestes Calpini, Bob Leffingwell.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Apr40; LP9541.

ME MUSICAL NEPHEWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Jack Ward, Jack Mercer; animation, Tom Johnson, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Dec42; LP11765.

THE MEANEST MAN IN THE WORLD. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,139 ft., sd. Based on the play as produced by George M. Cohan.

Credits: Director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, George Seaton, Allan House; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Sep42; LP12084.

MEANING OF LONG DIVISION. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Two children solve problems in long division in their eighth-grade home room. Animation live action. For middle grades and high school.

Credits: Collaborator, M. L. Hartung.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 12Dec47; MP2644.

THE MEANING OF PERCENTAGE. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film explains percentages, both as fractions and as decimals, and relates the use of common percentages to social situations. For grades 5 to 7.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 30Dec47; MP2687.

MEASUREMENT. Coronet, c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A junior high school boy is shown the uses of linear, square, cubic, weight, liquid, temperature, and time measurements, and the necessity of standards of measurement.

Credits: Collaborator, Harold P. Fawcett.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 8Sep47; MP2778.

MEASUREMENT OF ELECTRICITY. Coronet, c1949. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Defines the words volt, ampere, ohm, and watt, and illustrates the physical concepts involved. For junior high grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Ira C. Davis.

© David A. Smart; 25Feb49; MP4215.

MEATLESS FLYDAY. Released by Warner Bros., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Jack Bradbury; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec43; MP14465.

MEATLESS TUESDAY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions, c1943. 7 min., color. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 29Nov43; MP14255.

O MECANISMO DA RESPIRAÇÃO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Victor Johnson.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP781.

MECHANIX ILLUSTRATED. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel each, sd. (Color Parade) © Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Written and directed by Ira Genet.

3. © 17Feb40; MP9986.

4. © 29Jun40; MP10324.

MECHANIZED RECORD FILING. Caravel Films, Inc., for the General Fireproofing Co., c1949. 28 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the outstanding features of the Super-Filer.

Appl. author: Albert F. Cook.

© The General Fireproofing Co., Caravel Films, Inc.; 1Nov49; MP4667.

A MEDAL FOR BENNY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Irving Pichel; story, John Steinbeck, Jack Wagner; screenplay, Frank Butler; music score, Victor Young; editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Apr45; LP13352.

THE MEDICAL TREATMENT AND REHABILITATION OF PATIENTS WITH SPINAL CORD INJURIES. Sponsored by Charles W. Cashman, Jr., and Donald Munro. Color, 16mm.

Summary: Depicts the treatment of patients with spinal cord injuries from the immediate post-trauma stage until the patient is discharged from the hospital.

© Charles W. Cashman, Jr., Donald Munro; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Jun48; MU3152.

THE MEDICO OF PAINTED SPRINGS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based upon the book by James L. Rubel.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lambert Hillyer; story, Wyndham Gittens; screenplay, Winston Miller, Wyndham Gittens; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Jun41; LP10762.

MEDITERRANEAN PORTS OF CALL. c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 783 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Jack Shilkret; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jan41; MP10772.

MEET BOSTON BLACKIE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based on the character created by Jack Boyle.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Cohn; director, Robert Florey; story and screenplay, Jay Dratler; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Feb41; LP10423.

MEET DOCTOR CHRISTIAN. Stephens-Lang, c1939. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 70 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Bernard Vorhaus; original story, Harvey Gates; screenplay, Ian McLellan Hunter, Ring Lardner, Jr., Harvey Gates; music score, Joseph Nussbaum; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Stephens-Lang Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 17Nov39; LP9356.

MEET JIMMIE THE CHUMP. SEE Going Places.

MEET JOHN DOE. Distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 14 reels, sd. Based on a story by Richard Connell and Robert Presnell.

Credits: Director, Frank Capra; screenplay, Robert Riskin; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

Appl. author: Robert Riskin.

© Frank Capra Productions, Inc.; 5May41; LP10453.

MEET JOHN DOUGHBOY. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Vive Risto; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Jun41; MP11341.

MEET KING JOE. John Sutherland Productions, Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates that the American working-man has a higher standard of living, more desirable working conditions, and more leisure time than the working-man anywhere else in the world.

©Harding College; 31Jan49; MP3889.

MEET KING JOE. Released by Loew's Inc., c1949. 827 ft., sd., color, 35mm. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Apr49 (in notice: 1948); LP2234.

MEET ME IN ST. LOUIS. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., color. Based on the book by Sally Benson.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Vincente Minnelli; screenplay, Irving Brecher, Fred F. Finklehoffe; music adaptation, Roger Edens; music director, Georgie Stoll; orchestrations, Conrad Salinger; film editor, Albert Akst. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Nov44; LP12965.

MEET ME ON BROADWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Burt Kelly; director, Leigh Jason; story, George Bricker; screenplay, George Bricker, Jack Henley.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Jan46; LP59.

MEET ME TONIGHT IN DREAMLAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec46; MP1461.

MEET MISS BOBBY SOCKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Glenn Tryon; original screenplay, Muriel Roy Bolton; music director, Marlin Skiles; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Oct44; LP13123.

MEET MR. MISCHIEF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Edward Bernds.

Cast: Harry Von Zell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Jan47; LP994.

MEET THE CHAMPS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Grantland Rice Sportlight)

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Oct41; MP11634.

MEET THE CHUMP. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, Edward Cline; original story, Hal Hudson, Otis Garrett; screenplay, Alex Gottlieb.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10191.

MEET THE FLEET. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the United States Navy, c1940. 20 min., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Owen Crump. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Dec40; LP10242.

MEET THE MISSUS. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. (The Higgins Family)

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Mal St. Clair; original screenplay, Val Burton, Ewart Adamson, Taylor Cavan; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Nov40; LP10222.

MEET THE PEOPLE. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Suggested by a story by Sol and Ben Barzman and Louis Lantz.

Credits: Producer, E. Y. Harburg; director, Charles Riesner; screenplay, S. M. Herzig, Fred Saidy; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Wally Heglin, Conrad Salinger, Hugo Winterhalter, John Watson; film editor, Alexander Troffey.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Mar44; LP175.

MEET THE STARS. c1940–41. 1 reel each, sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer and director, Harriet Parsons; cameraman, Bob Tobey.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc. Volume 1.

1. Chinese Garden Festival. © 24Dec40; MP10834.

2. Baby Stars. © 24Jan41; MP10917.

3. Variety Reel. © 24Feb41; MP11058.

4. Los Angeles Examiner Benefit. © 24Mar41; MP11059.

5. Hollywood Visits the Navy. © 24Apr41; MP11248.

6. Stars at Play. © 24May41; MP11366.

7. Meet Roy Rogers. © 24Jun41; MP11559.

8. Stars Past and Present. © 24Jul41; MP11481.

MEET THE STEWARTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Elizabeth Dunn.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sparks; director, Alfred E. Green; screenplay, Karen DeWolf; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27May42; LP11329.

MEET THE TIGER. SEE The Saint Meets the Tiger.

MEET THE WILDCAT. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Arthur Lubin; original screenplay, Alex Gottlieb; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 17Oct40; LP9986.

MEET YOUR FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 15 min., sd., 16mm. With A Teacher's Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 10Dec46; MP1395.

MEETIN' TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10May43; MP13549.

MEETING THE WORLD. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Lawrence K. Frank.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Oct46; MP1289.

MEINE FRAU TERESA (MY WIFE TERESA). b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Tobis Klangfilm.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 8Dec48; LU788.

MEINE TANTE, DEINE TANTE (MY AUNT, YOUR AUNT), b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: UFA.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 12 prints, 8Dec46; LU769.

MELLOW DRAMAS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 10)

Summary: Tragic episodes clipped from early silent films provide comedy in this short.

Credits: Producer, Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; editor, Isaac Kleinerman.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 8Jul49; MP4446.

MELODIES OLD AND NEW. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 997 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; film editor, Joe Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Dec41; LP11376.

MELODIES REBORN. Attwood Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Songs of America)

Summary: Presents the songs "Steal Away to Jesus" and "In dat Great Gittin' up Mornin'."

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder.

© Attwood Productions, Inc.; 2Dec49; MP4772.

MELODIOUS SKETCHES. Attwood Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Songs of America)

Summary: Presents the songs "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child," and "I'm Tormented in de Flame."

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder.

© Attwood Productions, Inc.; 7Oct49; MP4649.

MELODY AND MOONLIGHT. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Joseph Santley; original story, David Silverstein; screenplay, Bradford Ropes; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Oct40; LP10077.

MELODY FOR THREE. c1941. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 67 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Lee Loeb, Walter Ferris; music, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Stephens-Lang Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Mar41; LP10474.

MELODY GARDEN. 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, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar44; LP12597.

MELODY LANE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Bernard Feins; screenplay, Hugh Wedlock, Jr., Howard Snyder, Morton Grant; adaptation, George Rony; cameraman, Jerry Ash; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Dec41; LP10891.

MELODY MAESTRO. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen.

Cast: Skinnay Ennis, Carmene, Monty Kelly, Mildred Law.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Dec46; LP741.

MELODY OF YOUTH. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, LeRoy Prinz.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jan47; MP1732.

MELODY PARADE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original screenplay, Tim Ryan, Charles R. Marion; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Jul43; LP12207.

MELODY PARADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Apr46; MP518.

MELODY PARADE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; music director, H. J. Salter; film editor, Ace Herman.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov44; LP12977.

MELODY RANCH. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Joseph Santley; original screenplay, Jack Moffitt, F. Hugh Herbert, Bradford Ropes, Betty Burbridge; music director, Raoul Kraushaar; photographer, Joseph August; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Nov40; LP10092.

MELODY STAMPEDE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Nov45; LP18.

MELODY TAKES A HOLIDAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14086.

MELODY TIME. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Musical Featurette, no. 1)

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Jack Scholl; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Nov46; MP1794.

MELODY TIME. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 75 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Using live action and animated cartoons, the film tells seven stories: "Once Upon a Wintertime," a sleighing adventure of bygone days; "Bumble Boogie," the reactions of a bee to a piano rendition of "The Flight of the Bumblebee;" "Johnny Appleseed," the semi-legendary tale of a pioneer benefactor; "Little Toot," the

## activities of a small tugboat in New York Harbor; "Trees," a cartoon

fantasy based on Joyce Kilmer's poem; "Blame It on the Samba," in which Donald Duck and José Carioca cavort to Brazilian rhythms; and "Pecos Bill," a folk tale of the western plains.

Credits: Production supervisor, Ben Sharpsteen; cartoon directors, Clyde Geronimi, Wilfred Jackson, Hamilton Luske, Jack Kinney; story, Winston Hibler, Harry Reeves, Ken Anderson [and others]; directing animators, Eric Larson, Ward Kimball [and others]; musical directors, Eliot Daniel, Ken Darby; film editors, Donald Halliday, Thomas Scott.

Cast: Roy Rogers, Trigger, Dennis Day, the Andrews Sisters, Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians, Freddy Martin, Ethel Smith.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Apr48; LP1721.

MÉMOIRES D'UN MÉDECIN. SEE Black Magic.

MEMORIES OF AUSTRALIA. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 893 ft., sd., color. (A Miniature)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Hone Glendinning; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Jun43; MP13760.

MEMORIES OF COLUMBUS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Painter. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Aug45; MP448.

MEMORIES OF EUROPE. c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 776 ft., sd., color.

Credits: Produced and narrated by James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographers, Winton Hoch, Ray Fernstrom. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun41; MP11368.

MEMORIES OF SHAKESPEARE. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1949. 30 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The story of the life of Shakespeare presented with scenes of the actual places where he lived and worked.

Credits: Producer, Edwin J. Fancey; commentary, John Snagge; photographer, Cecil H. Williamson.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 25Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4037.

MEMORY TRICKS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 795 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original idea, Harry Kahne; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Mar41; LP10381.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jan45; MP15596.

MEN AGAINST THE SKY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 76 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, John Twist; screenplay, Nathanael West; music director, Frank Tours; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Sep40; LP9885.

MEN AND MACHINES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (The World Today)

Summary: Shows that the invention and use of modern machines have made life easier and happier for mankind. The film describes the cotton gin, the locomotive, and the steamboat; the machinery used in the mining of coal and in the production of steel ingots; and machinery used in the manufacture of drugs, electric appliances, synthetic rubber, and rayon and nylon products.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; script, Robert H. Hertzberg; narrator, Hugh James; editor, John Oser.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Nov47; MP3155.

MEN AND MONEY. Jam Handy Organization. Presented by The Research Department of Household Finance Corp. 3 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Household Finance Corp.; title, descr., & 220 prints, 4Mar40; MU10015.

MEN FOR THE FLEET. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; narrator, Paul Douglas; music score, L. de Francesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; editor, Jack Darrock.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jan42; MP15443.

MEN I'D LIKE TO HIRE. Presented by Chevrolet.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 165 prints, 4Mar40; LU9460.

MEN IN HER DIARY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd. From an original story by Kerry Shaw.

Credits: Director, Charles Barton; screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Elwood Ullman; adaptation, Lester Cole; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Sep45; LP13482.

THE MEN IN HER LIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel "Ballerina" by Lady Eleanor Smith.

Credits: Producer and director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Frederick Kohner, Michael Wilson, Paul Trivers; continuity, Barbara Keon; music director, David Raksin; film editor, Francis D. Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Nov41; LP11014.

MEN IN WASHINGTON—1942. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 12.

MEN MAKE STEEL; prologue, sd., color.

Credits: Technicolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© United States Steel Corp.; title & descr., 16Dec40; 100 prints, 21Dec40; MU10685.

MEN OF BOYS TOWN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, Norman Taurog; original screenplay, James Kevin McGuinness; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Mar41; LP10317.

MEN OF LIGHTSHIP "61". Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1,748 ft., sd.

Credits: Script, Hugh Gray; music, Richard Addinsell; score, Ken Cameron; camera, Jonah Jones; editor, S. McAllister.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Mar41; LP10417.

MEN OF MEDICINE. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16387.

MEN OF SAN QUENTIN. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Martin Mooney, Max King; director, William Beaudine; original story, Martin Mooney; screenplay, Ernest Booth; film editor, Dan Milner.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 12May42; LP11287.

MEN OF TEXAS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, George Waggner; director, Ray Enright; original screenplay, Harold Shumate; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Jul42; LP11452.

MEN OF THE F. B. I. SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 9.

MEN OF THE FLEET. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 13.

MEN OF THE SEA. Released by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 5 reels, sd. A G. H. W. production.

Credits: Director, Norman Walker; story, Manning Haynes; scenario, Harold Simpson; continuity, Phyllis Crocker; music director, Albert Cazabon; photographer, Eric Cross; editor, Sam Simmonds.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 30Apr44; LP12625.

MEN OF THE SHOOTING STARS. RKO Pathe, Inc., with the cooperation of the United States Air Force, c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 4)

Summary: Explains the basic principles in the construction of jet planes, and displays them in action. Shows a final checkup of the Shooting Star for a flight from Andrews Field to New York.

Credits: Producer, Burton Benjamin; director and photographer, Howard Winner; narrator, Arthur Hannes; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Isaac Kleinerman.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 21Jan49; MP4041.

MEN OF THE SKY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the United States Army Air Forces, c1942. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; written and narrated by Owen Crump. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 31Jul42; LP11494.

MEN OF THE TIMBERLAND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, John Rawlins; original story, Paul Jarrico; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel, Griffin Jay; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Jun41; LP10510.

MEN OF THE U. S. NAVY. Time, Inc., c1942. 3 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 19Aug42; MP13782.

MEN OF TOMORROW. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Saul Elkins; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Dec45; MP1025.

MEN OF WEST POINT. Movietone. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Continuity, Dave Cooper; narrator, Hugh James; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photography, Jack Painter.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Jul42; MP422.

MEN ON HER MIND. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Alfred Stern; director, Wallace W. Fox; original screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 2Dec44; LP13584.

MEN WANTED. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 min., sd., color. (The Color Parade)

Credits: Written and directed by Ira Genet; commentator, John Deering.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Mar40; MP10062.

MEN WITHOUT SOULS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Nick Grinde; original story, Harvey Gates; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews, Joseph Carole; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Mar40; LP9461.

MEN, WOMEN, AND MOTION. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. Presented by Albert Mitchell. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series)

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

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Mar48; MP2875.

MEN WORKING TOGETHER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 992 ft., sd. (Victory Short)

Credits: Narration, William M. Nelson; narrator, Walter E. Sickles; photography, James L. Baker.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Jul43; MP14315.

MENACE OF THE RISING SUN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; script, Henry C. Bate, Allan F. Kitchel, Jr.; narrator, Graham McNamee.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Apr42; LP11193.

MERCHANT CONVOY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 956 ft., sd. (A Columbia Panoramic) Adapted from a British Government film "Merchant Seaman."

Credits: Director, J. B. Holmes; commentator, Howard St. John; photographer, N. E. Fowle; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jun43; MP13682.

MERCHANT SEAMAN. SEE Merchant Convoy.

MERCY ISLAND. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. From the novel by Theodore Pratt.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, William Morgan; screenplay, Malcolm Stuart Boylan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Oct41; LP10794.

MERIDA AND CAMPECHE. c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 751 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Nov45; MP16549.

MERMAIDS ON PARADE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Oct43; MP14080.

MERMAID'S PARADISE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 865 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, William Kelly.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Dec45; MP384.

MERRILY WE SING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series, no. 2)

Credits: Director, Harold James Moore.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Apr46; MP458.

MERRY ANDREW. SEE The Jones Family in Young As You Feel.

MERRY CHRISTMAS. Ambassador Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: At the palace of Augarten in Vienna, the Vienna Choir Boys make preparations for Christmas and join in singing carols.

Credits: Producer, Eugen Sharin; director and screenplay, Leopold Halnisch; story, Stephen Vas.

© Ambassador Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4372.

MERRY-GO-ROUNDUP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc.; 15Dec41; MP11938.

MERRY MADCAPS. 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, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Mar42; LP11112.

THE MERRY MONAHANS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; director, Charles Lamont; original screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Jul44; LP12878.

THE MERRY MOUSE CAFE. Screen Gems, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Phantasy, no. 13)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Lou Lilly.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 14Sep41; LP10883.

MERTON OF THE MOVIES. Loew's Inc., c1947. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the novel by Harry Leon Wilson and the play by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly.

Credits: Producer, Albert Lewis; director, Robert Alton; screenplay, George Wells, Lou Breslow; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

Cast: Red Skelton, Virginia O'Brien, Gloria Grahame, Leon Ames, Alan Mowbray.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Jul47; LP1103.

MESS PRODUCTION. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Aug45; LP13637.

A MESSAGE TO WOMEN. Hugh Harman Productions, Inc., c1945. 1,750 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Richard C. Kahn. Technicolor.

© Hugh Harman Productions, Inc.; 18Dec45; MP1.

METAL CRAFT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Forest Grant.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 14Jun39; MP9822.

METAL CRAFT. SEE

Arte Metálica.

Metalisteria.

THE METAL WORKING LATHE. Burton Holmes Films, Inc. for South Bend Lathe Works, c1941. 1 reel, sd. Based on the handbook "How To Run a Lathe."

Appl. authors: John J. O'Brien, Russel E. Frushour.

© South Bend Lathe Works; 15Aug41; MP11540.

METALISTERIA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Forest Grant, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Metal Craft."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 26Feb47; MP1763.

METROPOLITAN TRANSIT AUTHORITY. Joseph Dephoure Studio, c1948. 1 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An "MTA" film commercial.

Appl. author: Joseph Dephoure.

© Joseph Dephoure Studio; 7Sep48; MP3395.

MEUBELMAKERS. SEE Furniture Craftsmen.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15May44; MP14838.

MEXICAN CHILDREN. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1938. 1 reel, sd. With primary grade teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 2Dec38; MP14206.

MEXICAN HAT DANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11036.

MEXICAN HAYRIDE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Dorothy and Herbert Fields.

Summary: A slapstick comedy about the misadventures which follow when a fugitive from American justice is selected, by mistake, as the hero of Amigo Americano week in Mexico.

Credits: Producer, Robert Arthur; director, Charles T. Barton; screenplay, Oscar Brodney, John Grant; music arranged and conducted by Walter Scharf; film editor, Frank Grose.

Cast: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Virginia Grey, Luba Malina, John Hubbard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec48; LP2079.

MEXICAN JOY RIDE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, Dave Monahan.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 30Nov47; MP2538.

THE MEXICAN JUMPING BEAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18May42; MP12576.

MEXICAN JUMPING BEANS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd., (Hollywood Novelty)

Credits: Director, Eddie M. Davis; written by DeLeon Anthony; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Dec40; MP10653.

MEXICAN MAJESTY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Aug44; MP15192.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16450.

MEXICAN POLICE ON PARADE, c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 801 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Wilfrid Cline. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Feb43; MP13279.

MEXICAN SEA SPORTS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Luis Osorno Barona; narrator, Knox Manning; photographer, Luis Osorno Barona. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Jun45; MP16015.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 67 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Joseph A. Fields; screenplay, Joseph A. Fields, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Jan40; LP9358.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE AT SEA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 73 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, Jerry Cady, Charles E. Roberts; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 1Jan42; LP11057.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE OUT WEST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 76 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Charles E. Roberts; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, Jack Townley; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Nov40; LP10065.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE SEES A GHOST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 70 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, Monte Brice; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28May42; LP11390.

THE MEXICAN SPITFIRE'S BABY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 69 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, Jerry Cady, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Bakaleinikoff; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Sep41; LP10773.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE'S BLESSED EVENT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 63 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Charles E. Roberts; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, Dane Lussier; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Jul43; LP12245.

MEXICAN SPITFIRE'S ELEPHANT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Charles E. Roberts, Leslie Goodwins; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Sep42; LP11640.

MEXICAN SPORTLAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Luis Osorno Barona; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14900.

MEXICANA. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Alfred Santell; original screenplay, Frank Gill, Jr.; music, Gabriel Ruiz; music director, Walter Scharf; orchestral arrangements; Joseph Dubin; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Oct45; LP13533.

MÉXICO—ARTES POPULARES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with M. D. C. Crawford, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Arts and Crafts of Mexico."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jan47; MP1632.

MEXICO—GOOD NEIGHBOR'S DILEMMA. SEE March of Time, v. 7, no. 3.

MEXICO RURAL—NIÑOS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators: Ernest Horn, Arthur I. Gates, Celeste C. Pearson.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Dec46; MP1420.

MI ESPAÑA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP16362.

MI LINDA AMOR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13978.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr41; MP11053.

MICHAEL O'HALLORAN. Windsor Pictures Corp., c1948. 79 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by Gene Stratton-Porter.

Summary: A story about a young girl who is crippled by fear and cured by love.

Credits: Producers, Julian Lesser, Frank Melford; director, John Rawlins; screenplay, Erna Lazarus; music director, Lud Gluskin; editor, Merrill White.

Cast: Scotty Beckett, Allene Roberts, Tommy Cook, Isabel Jewell, Charles Arnt.

© Windsor Pictures Corp.; 8Aug48; LP1841.

MICHAEL SHAYNE, PRIVATE DETECTIVE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6,870 ft., sd. Based on a novel by Brett Halliday.

Credits: Director, Eugene Forde; screenplay, Stanley Rauh, Manning O'Connor; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Jan41; LP10206.

MICHIGAN KID. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 69 min., sd., color, 35mm. Suggested by Rex Beach's story.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Ray Taylor; story and screenplay, Roy Chanslor; music, Hans J. Salter; film editor, Paul Landres. Technicolor.

Cast: Jon Hall, Victor McLaglen, Rita Johnson, Andy Devine.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Feb47; LP877.

MICHIGAN SKI-DADDLE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color, (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, Blumenthal and Heilner; director, Andre de La Varre; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Dec45; MP178.

MICKEY. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. Presented by David W. Siegel. 87 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Bryan Foy production. Based on the novel "Clementine" by Peggy Goodin.

Summary: A musical comedy in which the principal character is a fifteen-year-old tomboy. Small town setting.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Muriel Roy Bolton, Agnes Christine Johnston; music director, Irving Friedman; music score, Marlin Skiles; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: Lois Butler, Bill Goodwin, Irene Hervey, John Sutton, Rose Hobart.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 23Jun48; LP1741.

MICKEY AND THE SEAL. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Mickey Mouse Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Nick George, Milt Schaffer; animation, Phil Duncan, George Nicholas, Hugh Fraser, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18Aug48; LP1982.

MICKEY DOWN UNDER. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Mickey Mouse Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, MacDonald MacPherson, Jack Huber; animation, Marvin Woodward, Gerry Hathcock, George Kreisl, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 23Jul47; LP1545.

MICKEY'S BIRTHDAY PARTY. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse)

© Walt Disney Productions; 10Oct41; LP10958.

MICKEY'S DELAYED DATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35 mm. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Art Scott; animation, Jerry Hathcock, George Kreisl, George Nicholas, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 24Apr47; LP1372.

MICROMOTION ANALYSIS FILM, B 100. c1948. 3 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A time and motion study of assembling bolts and washers, burring angle plates, soldering wire, and folding packing papers.

© Ralph Mosser Barnes; 10Feb48; MP2776.

MICRO-PHONIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,533 ft., sd.

Credits: Directed and written by Edward Bernds.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Oct45; LP13553.

THE MICROSCOPE AND ITS USE. Centron Corp., Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 16 mm.

Summary: Shows the use and care of the microscope. For beginning students of science in junior and senior high school classes.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 31Dec48; MP3671.

MICROSPOOK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (All Star Comedy)

Summary: A slapstick comedy in which a masked man, a real gorilla, a stage gorilla, sheet-shrouded ghosts, and a group of radio performers are together in a haunted house.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; directed and written by Edward Bernds; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Harry Von Zell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Jun49; LP2386.

THE MIDDLE STATES. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1942. 1 reel.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP14227.

MIDNIGHT LIMITED. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, T. R. Williams; director, Howard Bretherton, original screenplay, Harrison Carter, C. B. Williams; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 14Mar40; LP9578.

MIDNIGHT MANHUNT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William C. Thomas; original screenplay, David Lang; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Jun45; LP13423.

MIDNIGHT MELODIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; music director, H. J. Salter; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Ace Herman.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 14Jun44; LP12747.

MIDNIGHT SERENADE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 19 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Harry Grey; director, Alvin Ganzer; original screenplay, Peter R. Brooke, Don Churchill Cameron; music score, Joseph J. Lilley; editor, Everett Douglas.

Cast: Peggy Lee, Richard Webb, Paul Lees.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Nov47; LP1344.

THE MIDNIGHT SNACK. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 819 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jul41; LP10630.

MIDSHIPMEN TRAINING. Sound Masters. Inc. for the Training Film Branch, Photographic Section, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. 2 reels.

Appl. author: J. F. Clemenger.

© Sound Masters, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 4Mar44; MP14569.

THE MIGHTY COLUMBIA RIVER. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clifford M. Zierer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 12Jun47; MP2497.

MIGHTY HUNTERS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Story, Dave Monahan; animation, Ken Harris.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Jan40; MP9938.

MIGHTY JOE YOUNG. Arko, Inc. Released by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A fantastic melodrama about a gorilla that comes to Hollywood to perform in a night club.

Credits: Producers, John Ford, Merian C. Cooper; director, Ernest B. Schoedsack; original story, Merian C. Cooper; screenplay, Ruth Rose; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music score, Roy Webb; film editor, Ted Cheesman.

Cast: Joseph Young, Terry Moore, Ben Johnson, Robert Armstrong, Frank McHugh.

© Arko, Inc.; 13Jul49; LP2464.

MIGHTY LAK A GOAT. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 888 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Herbert Glazer; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Oct42; LP11665.

THE MIGHTY MCGURK. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Nat Perrin; director, John Waters; original screenplay, William R. Lipman, Grant Garrett, Harry Clork; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Oct46; LP645.

MIGHTY MANHATTAN, NEW YORK'S WONDER CITY. Loew's Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A tour of New York City, including scenes of the shopping area, public buildings, churches, Rockefeller Center, Broadway, and Central Park.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; director, James H. Smith; music score, Lesley Kirk; photographer, Paul Rogalli.

© Loew's Inc.; 5May49; MP4628.

MIGHTY MARLIN. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 10)

Summary: Kip Farrington, salt water editor of "Field and Stream," and his wife fish for marlin in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director and photographer, Howard Winner; written by Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Red Barber; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Harold Oteri.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 3Jun49; MP4386.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE HEP CAT. Terrytoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 6Dec46; LP884.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE KILKENNY CATS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 27Apr45; LP13454.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE MAGICIAN. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 27Apr48; LP1641.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE PIRATES. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12Jan45; LP13465.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE TWO BARBERS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 1Sep44; LP12934.

MIGHTY MOUSE AND THE WOLF. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Jul45; LP13448.

MIGHTY MOUSE AT THE CIRCUS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 17Nov44; LP13240.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN A COLD ROMANCE. Terrytoons, Inc. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Jun49; LP2444.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN A DATE FOR DINNER. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 29Aug47; LP1261.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN A FIGHT TO THE FINISH. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Nov47; LP1447.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN ALADDIN'S LAMP. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 28Mar47; LP1059.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN CRYING WOLF. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Jan47; LP941.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN ELIZA ON THE ICE. Terrytoons, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 23Jun44; LP12940.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN GYPSY LIFE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 3Aug45; LP13447.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN KRAKATOA. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Dec45; LP153.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN LAZY LITTLE BEAVER. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 26Dec47 (in notice: 1948); LP1613.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN LOVE'S LABOR WON. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15Oct48; LP2064.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN MY OLD KENTUCKY HOME. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 29Mar46; LP439.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN RAIDING THE RAIDERS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terry-Toon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terry-Toons, Inc.; 9Mar45; LP13453.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN SVENGALI'S CAT. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 18Jan46; LP218.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN SWISS CHEESE FAMILY ROBINSON. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 19Dec47; LP1602.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE CATNIP GANG. Terrytoons, Inc. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Jul49; LP2704.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE CRACKPOT KING. Terrytoons, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15Nov46; LP814.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE DEAD END CATS. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Feb47; LP953.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE ELECTRONIC MOUSE TRAP. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 6Sep46; LP618.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE FEUDIN' HILLBILLIES. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 23Jun48; LP1893.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE FIRST SNOW. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Oct47; LP1459.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE GREEN LINE. Terrytoons, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color, (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 7Jul44; LP13048.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE JAIL BREAK. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Sep46; LP613.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE JOHNSTOWN FLOOD. 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.; 28Jun46; LP615.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE MYSTERIOUS STRANGER. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 21Dec48; LP2207.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE PERILS OF PEARL PUREHEART. Terrytoons, Inc. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Nov49; LP2698.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE PORT OF MISSING MICE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 2Feb45; LP13438.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE SILVER STREAK. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 8Jun45; LP13654.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE SKY IS FALLING. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 25Apr47; LP1184.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE SULTAN'S BIRTHDAY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 13Sep44; LP12833.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE TROJAN HORSE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 26Jul46; LP616.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE WICKED WOLF. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 8Mar46; LP532.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THE WITCH'S CAT. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15Sep48; LP1875.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN THROWING THE BULL. Terrytoons, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 3May46; LP752.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN TRIPLE TROUBLE. Terrytoons, Inc. Released through Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 30Sep48; LP2631.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN WINNING THE WEST. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 16Aug46; LP635.

MIGHTY MOUSE IN WOLF! WOLF! Terrytoons, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 2Jun44; LP13049.

MIGHTY MOUSE MEETS BAD BAD BILL BUNION. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 9Nov45; LP94.

MIGHTY MOUSE MEETS DEADEYE DICK. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 30May47; LP1203.

MIGHTY MOUSE MEETS JEKYLL AND HYDE CAT. Terrytoons, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 28Apr44; LP12694.

THE MIGHTY NAVY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner, Ted Pierce; animation, Seymour Kneitel, Abner Matthews.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Nov41; LP10819.

MIGHTY NIAGARA. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 865 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Jan43; MP13213.

MIGHTY TIMBER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series)

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

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Jun48; MP3497.

THE MILD WEST. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Larry Riley.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Aug47; LP1173.

MILDRED DILLING. Artists' Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

© Artists' Films, Inc.; 1Nov40; MP12437.

MILDRED PIERCE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 111 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based on the novel by James M. Cain.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Ranald MacDougall; music, Max Steiner; photographer, Ernest Haller; film editor, David Weisbart.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Dec45; LP73.

MILITARY ACADEMY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, D. Ross Lederman; story, Richard English; screenplay, Karl Brown, David Silverstein; film editor, Gene Milford.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Jul40; LP9756.

MILK. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 14Mar46; MP332.

THE MILKY WAIF. Loew's Inc., c1946. 680 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer cartoon.

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

© Loew's Inc.; 3May46; LP304.

THE MILKY WAY. Diversey Corp. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: William D. West.

© Diversey Corp.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 28Aug42; MU12797.

THE MILKY WAY. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 728 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun40; MP10446.

MILLENIUM JUMP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Aug46; MP1128.

THE MILLERSON CASE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the radio program "Crime Doctor," by Max Marcin.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, George Archainbaud; story, Gordon Rigby, Carlton Sand; screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

Cast: Warner Baxter, Nancy Saunders, Clem Bevans, Griff Barnett, Paul Guilfoyle.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29May47; LP1049.

MILLIE'S DAUGHTER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Donald Henderson Clarke.

Credits: Producer, William Bloom; director, Sidney Salkow; adaptation and screenplay, Edward Huebsch; music score, Arthur Morton; film editor, Aaron Stell.

Cast: Gladys George, Gay Nelson, Paul Campbell, Ruth Donnelly.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Mar47; LP911.

THE MILLING MACHINE. Caravel Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Joseph Rothman.

© Caravel Films, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 18Oct41; MU11675.

MILLING MACHINE OPERATION. Film Productions Co., c1941. 2 reels.

Appl. author: Roy Arthur Clapp.

© Film Productions Co.; 1Sep41; MP11609.

MILLION DOLLAR BABY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 11 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Leonard Spigelgass.

Credits: Director, Curtis Bernhardt; screenplay, Casey Robinson, Richard Macaulay, Jerry Wald.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 31May41; LP10492.

THE MILLION DOLLAR CAT. Loew's Inc., c1944. 658 ft., sd., color. (An M.G.M. Tom and Jerry Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, Bill Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Irven Spence, Ken Muse, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Apr44; LP12683.

MILLION DOLLAR KID. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, Wallace Fox; story and screenplay, Frank H. Young; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28Dec43; LP12456.

MILLION DOLLAR PARTNER.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 6 prints, 24Feb45; MU15876.

MILLION DOLLAR WEEKEND. Masque Productions. Released by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama involving embezzlement, an alleged murder, blackmail, and robbery. Much of the action takes place aboard a plane flying between Hawaii and San Francisco. Includes song routines.

Credits: Producer, Matty Kemp; director, Gene Raymond; original story, Matty Kemp, Gene Raymond; screenplay, Charles S. Belden; music, Phil Ohman; orchestrations, Howard Jackson.

Cast: Gene Raymond, Stephanie Paull, Francis Lederer, Robert Warwick, Patricia Shay.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 20Nov48; LP1937.

THE MILLION POUND BANK NOTE. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Samuel Langhorne Clemens.

Summary: In London in 1895, two brothers make a singular bet which changes the fortunes of a young American stranger.

Credits: Produced and written by Louis Lantz; director, Charles Haas; editor, Daniel Cahn.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2427.

MILLIONAIRE PLAYBOY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Bert Granet; screenplay, Bert Granet, Charles E. Roberts; music score, Paul Sawtelle; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Mar40; LP9490.

MILLIONAIRES IN PRISON. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Ray McCarey; story, Martin Mooney; screenplay, Lynn Root, Frank Fenton; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jul40; LP9816.

MILLIONS OF MASTERPIECES. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 902 ft., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the quality control in manufacturing and assembling processes that insures the exact duplication of the Chevrolet pilot model.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 8 prints, 31May49; MU4173.

THE MILLS OF GOD. SEE Live Today for Tomorrow.

THE MIND OF MR. REEDER. SEE The Mysterious Mr. Reeder.

MIND OVER MOUSE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Charles E. Roberts; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Edgar Kennedy, Florence Lake, Dot Farley, Jack Rice.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Nov47; LP1361.

MINDIN' MY BUSINESS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12049.

A MINER AFFAIR. Columbia Pictures Corp. c1945. 1,744 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Clyde Bruckman; screenplay, Jack White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Oct45; LP13539.

MINESWEEPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Edward T. Lowe, Maxwell Shane; photography, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Nov43; LP12472.

THE MINISTRY OF FEAR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Graham Greene.

Credits: Producer, Seton I. Miller; director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Seton I. Miller; music score, Victor Young; editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Oct44; LP13063.

MINNESOTA, LAND OF PLENTY. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 894 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Feb42; MP12579.

MINNIE FROM TRINIDAD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Dec42; MP13149.

MINNIE, MY MOUNTAIN MOOCHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jun43; MP13650.

MINNIE THE MERMAID. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12171.

MINNIE THE MOOCHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Feb42; MP12178.

MINSTREL DAYS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Director, Bobby Connolly; Original screenplay, Owen Crump; narrations, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 16Sep41; LP10692.

MINSTREL MAN. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; director, Joseph H. Lewis; original story, Martin Mooney, Raymond L. Schrock; screenplay, Irwin R. Franklyn, Pierre Gendron; music score, Ferde Grofe; music director, Leo Erdody.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 30Jun44; LP428.

MINSTREL MANIA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series)

Summary: A musical short which features the old minstrel favorites: "Little Liza Jane," "Carry Me Back to Old Virginny," and "Golden Slippers." Designed for audience participation.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Jan49; MP3848.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14649.

THE MINT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 962 ft., sd. (The Washington Parade, s. 3, no. 1)

Credits: Narrative by Gordon Auchincloss; commentary, Basil Ruysdael; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Nov40; MP10593.

THE MINUTE WALTZ. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14914.

MIRACLE AT LOURDES. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 980 ft., sd. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Henry K. Dunn; screenplay, Howard Dimsdale; music score, David Snell; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Dec39; LP9586.

A MIRACLE CAN HAPPEN. SEE On Our Merry Way.

MIRACLE IN A CORNFIELD. Loew's Inc., c1947. 22 min., sd., color, 35mm. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) An MGM picture.

Summary: A story of the volcano that erupted in a cornfield at Paricutin, 200 miles from Mexico City.

Credits: Written and narrated by John Nesbitt; music score, Rudolph G. Kopp; film editor, Newell P. Kimlin.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Dec47; LP1396.

THE MIRACLE KID. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, John T. Coyle; director, William Beaudine; original story from an idea by Henry Sucher; screenplay, Gerald D. Adams, Henry Sucher, John T. Coyle; music director, Clarence Wheeler; film editor, Guy V. Thayer, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 27Oct41; LP10822.

THE MIRACLE MACHINE OF THE AGE. J. C. Hickman through the cooperation of the Portland Stenotype School. 12 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the operation of the stenograph machine and shows the varied opportunities that are available in business and industry to the stenograph operator.

Credits: Producer, J. C. Hickman; commentary, Art Kirkham.

© J. C. Hickman; title, descr., & 2c, 12Apr49; MU3974.

MIRACLE MAKERS. c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Narration, Owen Crump.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP276.

MIRACLE MAKERS. Presented by Frigidaire and General Motors. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Frigidaire Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 291 prints, 10Oct40; MU10532.

MIRACLE MAKERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Narration, Owen Crump; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Dec41; MP12482.

THE MIRACLE OF CHRISTMAS. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the necessity of continuing throughout the year the good will which prevails during the Christmas season.

Credits: Author, Donn Marvin; narration, Jesse W. Stitt.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 14Dec48; LP2352.

THE MIRACLE OF HYDRO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. in cooperation with the Bonneville Power Administration, U. S. Department of the Interior, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Truman Tallèy; director, Gunther Fritsch; continuity, Russ Sheilds; narrator, Lowell Thomas.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 14Mar41; MP11072.

THE MIRACLE OF MORGAN'S CREEK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Written and directed by Preston Sturges; music score, Leo Shuken, Charles Bradshaw; editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jan44; LP12498.

THE MIRACLE OF SOUND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w. (Romance of Celluloid)

Credits: Music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor. Jack Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Oct40; MP10617.

THE MIRACLE OF THE BELLS. Jesse L. Lasky Productions, Inc., c1948. 120 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An RKO Radio picture. Based on the novel by Russell Jarney.

Summary: The events that follow the death of a young Hollywood actress whose body is taken to a drab Pennsylvania mining town for burial.

Credits: Producers, Jesse L. Lasky, Walter MacEwen; director, Irving Pichel; screenplay, Ben Hecht, Quentin Reynolds; music score, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Elmo Williams.

Cast: Fred MacMurray, Valli, Frank Sinatra, Lee J. Cobb, Veronika Pataky.

© Jesse L. Lasky Productions, Inc.; 16Mar48; LP1605.

MIRACLE ON MULBERRY STREET. Cinecraft Productions, Inc. for Seiberling Rubber Co., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The neighbors on Mulberry Street see a demonstration of the Safety features and wearing qualities of the Seiberling "Sealed Air" Tube.

Credits: Director, Ray Culley; story, Frank Siedel.

© Cinecraft Productions, Inc.; 11Feb49; MP3812.

MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story by Valentine Davies.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, George Seaton; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: Maureen O'Hara, John Payne, Edmund Gwenn.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Jun47; LP1101.

MIRACULOUS JOURNEY. Sigmund Neufeld Pictures, Inc., c1948. Presented by Film Classics, Inc. 83 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: An adventure story about an assorted group of airplane passengers who are forced down in the heart of an African jungle.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Holbrook Todd.

Cast: Rory Calhoun, Audrey Long, Virginia Grey, George Cleveland.

© Sigmund Neufeld Pictures, Inc.; 20Sep48; LP1848.

MIRANDA, Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. 80 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Peter Blackmore.

Summary: A doctor's happy marriage is threatened by a flirtatious mermaid who persuades him to take her into his London home.

Credits: Producers, Sydney Box, Betty E. Box; director, Ken Annakin; screenplay, Peter Blackmore; music, Temple Abady; editor, Gordon Hales.

Cast: Glynis Johns, Googie Withers, Griffith Jones, John McCallum, Margaret Rutherford.

© Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd.; 14Apr48; LP2538.

MIRROR OF SUB-MARINE LIFE. SEE Variety Views, no. 120.

MISBEHAVING HUSBANDS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jed Buell; director, William Beaudine; original story, Cea Sabin; screenplay, Vernon Smith, Claire Parrish; film editor, Robert Crandall.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 13Dec40; LP10164.

LES MISÉRABLES. SEE The Bishop's Experiment.

MISS ANNIE ROONEY. Released thru United Artists, c1942. Presented by Edward Small. 85 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Small; director, Edwin L. Marin; original screenplay, George Bruce; music director, Edward Paul; film editor, Fred Feitshans, Jr.

© Edward Small Productions, Inc.; 10Jun42; LP11382.

MISS BISHOP. SEE Cheers for Miss Bishop.

MISS GRANT TAKES RICHMOND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A farce about a naive business school graduate who is hired as a front for a bookie's supposed real estate office.

Credits: Producer, S. Sylvan Simon; director, Lloyd Bacon; story, Everett Freeman; screenplay, Nat Perrin, Devery Freeman, Frank Tashlin; music score, Heinz Roemheld; music director, Morris Stoloff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Lucille Ball, William Holden, Jimmy Gleason, Frank McHugh, Janis Carter.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Sep49; LP2517.

MISS IN A MESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (All Star Comedy)

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; screenplay, Jules White; film editor, Edwin Bryant.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Jan49; LP2067.

MISS JOHNSON PHONED AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Oct41; MP11648.

MISS LIBERTY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Nov43; MP14245.

MISS MINK OF 1949. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 69 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy about the adventures of a mink coat which becomes the center of contention after it is won in a radio contest.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, Glenn Tryon; written by Arnold Belgard; music score, Mahlon Merrick; film editor, William Claxton.

Cast: Jimmy Lydon, Lois Collier, Richard Lane, Barbara Brown, Paul Guilfoyle.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Feb49 (in notice: 1948); LP2250.

MISS POLLY. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Hal Roach. 4 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Fred Guiol; screenplay, Eugene Conrad, Edward E. Seabrook; adaptation, Dorothy White; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 13Nov41; LP10841.

MISS SUSIE SLAGLE'S. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 87 min., sd. From a novel by Augusta Tucker.

Credits: Associate producer, John Houseman; director, John Berry; screenplay, Anne Froelick, Hugo Butler; adaptation, Anne Froelick, Adrian Scott; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Mar46; LP139.

MISS TATLOCK'S MILLIONS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 101 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Suggested by a play by Jacques Deval.

Summary: A farce in which a Hollywood stunt man feigns insanity in order to impersonate a missing heir to millions and foil the schemes of his avaricious relatives.

Credits: Producer, Charles Brackett; director, Richard Haydn; screenplay, Charles Brackett, Richard L. Breen; music score, Victor Young; editor, Everett Douglas.

Cast: John Lund, Wanda Hendrix, Barry Fitzgerald, Monty Woolley, Ilka Chase.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Nov48; LP1932.

MISS V. FROM MOSCOW. c1942. 7 reels, sd. An M. & H. production.

Credits: Producer, George M. Merrick; director, Albert Herman; original story and screenplay, Arthur St. Clair, Sherman Lowe; music director, Lee Zahler; editor, W. L. Brown.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 4Nov42; LP11681.

MISS YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Apr42; MP12402.

THE MISSING CORPSE. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd. From a story by Harry O. Hoyt.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; director, Albert Herman; screenplay, Ray Schrock; music, Karl Hajos; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 6Jun45; LP13657.

THE MISSING JUROR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Oscar Boetticher, Jr.; story, Leon Abrams, Richard Hill Wilkinson; screenplay, Charles O'Neal; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Nov44; LP13094.

THE MISSING LADY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Joe Kaufman; director, Phil Karlson; original screenplay, George Callahan; cameraman, William Sickner; film editor, Ace Herman.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20Jul46; LP490.

MISSING PEOPLE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels. From a story by Edgar Wallace.

Credits: Director, Jack Raymond; screenplay, Lydia Hayward.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Aug40; LP9860.

MISSING TEN DAYS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd. An Irving Asher production. Based on the novel "The Disappearance of Roger Tremayne" by Bruce Graeme.

Credits: Associate producer, Jerome J. Jackson; director, Tim Whelan; screen adaptation, John Meehan, Jr., James Curtis; music score, Nickolas Rosza; photographer, Otto Kanturek; film editor, Hugh Stewart.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Feb41; LP10431.

MISSION TO MOSCOW. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 123 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the book by Joseph E. Davies.

Credits: Producer, Robert Buckner; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Howard Koch; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Bernard Kaun; film editor, Owen Marks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22May43; LP12064.

THE MISSION TRAIL. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 895 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographer, John William Boyle. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Apr46; MP420.

MISSISSIPPI FLYER. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Mississippi Flyer" is sung by The Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp,; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4539.

MISSISSIPPI GAMBLER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Malvern; director, John Rawlins; original story, Al Martin, Marion Orth; screenplay, Al Martin, Roy Chanslor; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11092.

MISSISSIPPI HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Feb49; MP3871.

MISSISSIPPI RHYTHM. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical melodrama in which a land agent outwits a group of gamblers and aids the citizens in incorporating the town.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Derwin Abrahams; screenplay, Gretchen Darling; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Jimmie Davis, Lee "Lasses" White, James Flavin, Veda Ann Borg, Sue England.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 29May49; LP2406.

MISSISSIPPI SWING. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 7Feb41; MP10870.

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

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Sep46; MP1173.

A MISSOURI OUTLAW. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Doris Schroeder, Jack Lait, Jr.; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Nov41; LP10859.

MR. ACE. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by Benedict Bogeaus. 82 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Benedict Bogeaus; director, Edwin L. Marin; original story and screenplay, Fred Finklehoffe; music score, Heinz Roemheld; cinematographer, Karl Struss; film editor, James Smith.

© Tivoli Productions, Inc.; 2Aug46; LP570.

MR. ADAM'S BOMB. Sepia Productions, Inc. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy short about a young girl's coming-out party.

Credits: Produced and written by Eddie Green.

Cast: Eddie Green.

© Sepia Productions, Inc.; title & descr., 27Apr49; 3 prints, 11Apr49; LU2253.

MR. AND MRS. CUGAT. SEE Are Husbands Necessary?

MR. AND MRS. NORTH. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. From the play by Owen Davis, based on the stories by Richard and Frances Lockridge.

Credits: Producer, Irving Asher; director, Robert B. Sinclair; screenplay, S. K. Lauren; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Dec41; LP11017.

MR. AND MRS. SMITH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 95 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Alfred Hitchcock; story and screenplay, Norman Krasna; music score, Edward Ward; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Jan41; LP10597.

MR. ANGEL COMES ABOARD. SEE Johnny Angel.

MR. BELVEDERE GOES TO COLLEGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the character created by Gwen Davenport in the novel "Belvedere."

Summary: In order to collect a prize, a celebrated middle-aged author enrolls in college and, in his own acidulous fashion, proves that his claim to genius is well-founded.

Credits: Producer, Samuel G. Engel; director, Elliott Nugent; written by Richard Sale, Mary Loos, Mary McCall, Jr.; music, Alfred Newman; film editor, Harmon Jones.

Cast: Clifton Webb, Shirley Temple, Tom Drake, Alan Young, Jessie Royce Landis.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31Mar49; LP2451.

MISTER BIG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Virginia Rooks; screenplay, Jack Pollexfen, Dorothy Bennett; music, Buddy Pepper, Inez James; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, George Robinson.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28May43; LP12075.

MR. BLABBERMOUTH! Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 2 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an editorial in the Los Angeles Daily News by Manchester Boddy.

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; screenplay, Walter Selden; narrator, John Nesbitt; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Aug42; MP12786.

MR. BLANDINGS BUILDS HIS DREAM HOUSE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., released by Selznick Releasing Organization, c1948. Presented by Dore Schary. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Eric Hodgins.

Summary: A New Yorker and his wife endure the hostility of nature and the eccentricities of contractors and builders when they build a suburban home in Connecticut.

Credits: Produced and written for the screen by Norman Panama and Melvin Frank; director, H. C. Potter; music score, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Harry Marker.

Cast: Cary Grant, Myrna Loy, Melvyn Douglas, Reginald Denny, Sharyn Moffett.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Mar48; LP1655.

MR. BUG GOES TO TOWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Max Fleischer; director, Dave Fleischer; original story, Dave Fleischer, Dan Gordon, Ted Pierce, Isidore Sparber, and others; animation, Orestes Calpini, James Davis, Nicholas Tafuri, and others; music and lyrics, Hoagy Carmichael, Frank Loesser, Sammy Timberg; atmospheric music, Leigh Harline; photography, Charles Schettler. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Dec41; LP11074.

MR. CELEBRITY. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Martin Mooney; director, William Beaudine; original story, Martin Mooney, Charles Samuels; screenplay, Martin Mooney; film editor, Robert Crandall.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 8Oct41; LP10911.

MR. CHIMP AT CONEY ISLAND. SEE Variety Views, no. 137.

MR. CHIMP AT HOME. SEE Variety Views, no. 154.

MR. CHIMP GOES SOUTH. SEE Variety Views, no. 133.

MR. CHIMP GOES TO TOWN. SEE Variety Views, no. 119.

MR. CHIMP ON VACATION. SEE Variety Views, no. 157.

MR. CHIMP RAISES CAIN. SEE Variety Views, no. 127.

MR. CHIMP TO THE RESCUE. SEE Variety Views, no. 155.

MR. CLYDE GOES TO BROADWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Feb40; LP9419.

MR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the radio program created by Phillips H. Lord.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Robert B. Sinclair; story, Sidney Marshall; screenplay, Ian McLellan Hunter; adaptation, Ben Markson; music score, Herschel Gilbert; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

Cast: Dennis O'Keefe, Adolphe Menjou, Marguerite Chapman, Michael O'Shea.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Feb47; LP835.

MR. DISTRICT ATTORNEY. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on the Phillips H. Lord radio program.

Credits: Associate producer, Leonard Fields; director, William Morgan; original screenplay, Karl Brown, Malcolm Stuart Boylan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Mar41; LP10430.

MR. DUCK STEPS OUT. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 4Apr40; LP9633.

MR. DYNAMITE. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Marshall Grant; director, Jack Rawlins; original story and screenplay, Stanley Crea Rubin; music director, Charles Previn; photography, John Boyle; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Mar41; LP10306.

MR. ELEPHANT GOES TO TOWN. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 673 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody no. 68)

Credits: Director, Art Davis; animation, Sid Marcus. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Sep40; LP9918.

MR. EMMANUEL. Two Cities Films, London. Released through United Artists, c1945. 10 reels, sd. A G.C.F. film. From the novel by Louis Golding.

Credits: Producer, William Sistron; director, Harold French; screenplay, Louis Golding, Gordon Wellesley; music, Mischa Spoliansky; cameraman, Gus Drisse; editor, Alan Jaggs.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 19Jan45; LP13302.

MR. FORE BY FORE. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 623 ft., sd., color. (Phantasy, no. 38)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, John McLeish; animation, Jim Armstrong, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 4Aug44; LP12769.

MR. GROUNDLING TAKES THE AIR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A man taking his first plane ride learns about the safety and convenience of air travel.

Credits: Directed and written by Justine Herman; editor, Robert Blauvelt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Dec48; LP1994.

MR. H. C. BONFIG, VICE PRESIDENT AND DIRECTOR OF SALES. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Zenith Radio Corp. 2,768 feet, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Mr. Bonfig gives a history of the Zenith Company, and outlines the policies for the current year.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 18 prints, 15Nov48; MU3531.

MR. HEX. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 63 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jan Grippo; director, William Beaudine; original story, Jan Grippo; screenplay, Cyril Endfield.

Cast: Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall, Bobby Jordan, Billy Benedict, David Gorcey.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Dec46; LP749.

MR. JACKSON FROM JACKSONVILLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jun45; MP15996.

MR. LUCKY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 100 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, David Hempstead; story, Milton Holmes; screenplay, Milton Holmes, Adrian Scott; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28May43; LP12109.

MR. MOOCHER. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 692 ft., sd., color. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sid Marcus; animation, Chic Otterstrom, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc,; 11Sep44; LP12818.

MR. MOUSE TAKES A TRIP. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse production)

© Walt Disney Productions; 10Oct40; LP10109.

MR. MUGGS RIDES AGAIN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, Harvey H. Gates; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Ira Morgan; film editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 4Jun45; LP13693.

MR. MUGGS STEPS OUT. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, William Beaudine; original story and screenplay, William X. Crowley, Beryl Sachs; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 29Oct43; LP12341.

MR. NOISY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, Edward Bernds; story, John Gray.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Mar46; LP518.

MR. PEABODY AND THE MERMAID. Inter-John, Inc. Released by Universal-International, c1948. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "Peabody's Mermaid" by Guy and Constance Jones.

Summary: A farce about the disruptions in the life of a middle-aged Bostonian who catches a mermaid while fishing in the Caribbean.

Credits: Producer and author of screenplay, Nunnally Johnson; director, Irving Pichel; music, Robert Emmett Dolan; film editor, Marjorie Fowler.

Cast: William Powell, Ann Blyth, Irene Hervey, Andrea King, Clinton Sundberg.

© Inter-John, Inc.; 20Aug48; LP1920.

MR. PERRIN AND MR. TRAILL. Two Cities Films, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949, 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Hugh Walpole.

Summary: A conflict between a traditionalist school master and a young progressive teacher is complicated by a girl and a sadistic headmaster.

Credits: Producer, Alexander Galperson; director, Lawrence Huntington; screenplay, L. A. G. Strong; music, Alan Gray; music director, Muir Mathieson; film editor, Ralph Kempler.

Cast: David Farrar, Greta Gynt, Marius Goring, Raymond Huntley, Edward Chapman.

© Two Cities Films, Ltd.; 7Jan48; LP2533.

MR. RECKLESS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A carefree itinerant oil worker, the girl he jilted, and the man who won her on the rebound are the leading characters in this melodrama of the oil fields.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Milton Raison; music score, Harry Lubin; film editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: William Eythe, Barbara Britton, Walter Catlett, Minna Gombell, Lloyd Corrigan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar48; LP1532.

MR. SKEFFINGTON. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., 1944. 146 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Elizabeth.

Credits: Production and screenplay, Philip G. Epstein, Julius J. Epstein; director, Vincent Sherman; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; photographer, Ernest Haller; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Aug44; LP12774.

MR. SMITH IS PROUD. Presented by E. I. du Pont, Fabrikoid Division (Tontine)

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., Inc.; title, descr., & 110 prints, 1Jun42; MU12528.

MR. SMUG. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 974 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, William Castle; story and screenplay, Howard J. Green; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Jan43; LP12361.

MR. SOFT TOUCH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 12 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A drama about a gambler who takes refuge from a mob of gangsters in a settlement house, where he learns the importance of helping the underprivileged.

Credits: Producer, Milton Holmes; directors, Henry Levin, Gordon Douglas; story, Milton Holmes; screenplay, Orin Jannings; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, Heinz Roemheld; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Glenn Ford, Evelyn Keyes, John Ireland, Beulah Bondi, Percy Kilbride.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Jun49; LP2311.

MR. STRAUSS TAKES A WALK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8May42; LP11284.

MISTER V. United Artists Corp., c1941. Presented by Edward Small. 60 min., sd. Based on an original story by A. C. MacDonell and Wolfgang Wilhelm.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Howard; screenplay, Anatole De Grunwald; scenario, Anatole De Grunwald, Roland Pertwee; music, John Greenwood; music director, Muir Mathieson; cameraman, Jack Hildyard; film editor, Douglas Myers.

© United Artists Corp.; 15Dec41; LP11151.

MR. WHITNEY HAD A NOTION. Loew's Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Summary: How Eli Whitney's development of the idea of mass production changed the world.

Credits: Producer, Herbert Moulton; director, Gerald Mayer; written and narrated by John Nesbitt; music director, Rudolph G. Kopp; film editor, Newell P. Kimlin.

Cast: Lloyd Bridges, Erville Alderson, Howard J. Negley, Harry Hayden, Mitchell Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 4May49; LP2326.

MR. WINKLE GOES TO WAR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd. From the novel by Theodore Pratt.

Credits: Producer, Jack Moss; director, Alfred E. Green; screenplay, Waldo Salt, George Corey, Louis Solomon; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Aug44; LP13026.

MR. WISE GUY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, William Nigh; original story, Martin Mooney; screenplay, Sam Robins, Harvey Gates, Jack Henley; music directors, Lange & Porter; photography, Art Reed; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20Feb42; LP11335.

MR. WRIGHT GOES WRONG. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Zion Meyers.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Aug46; LP602.

MR. X BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jun45; MP15995.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Mar43; MP13335.

MISTLETOE. 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; MP1774.

MRS. GOLF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 144)

Summary: Pictures of Babe Didrikson showing the techniques which have helped her to win seventeen consecutive golf tournaments.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Jan49; MP3953.

MRS. JONES' REST FARM. Terrytoons, Inc. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12Oct49; LP2628.

MRS. LADY BUG. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 728 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Dec40; MP10769.

MRS. LOWELL THOMAS—FUR FARMER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 128)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Feb44; MP14560.

MRS. MIKE. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. Presented by Nassour Studio in association with Huntington Hartford. 99 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Benedic and Nancy Freedman's novel.

Summary: A young Boston girl accompanies her Mountie husband to the Canadian Northwest Territory, where she discovers both the cruelty and beauty of life in the wilderness.

Credits: Producer, Edward Gross; director, Louis King; screenplay, Alfred Lewis Levitt, De Witt Bodeen; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

© Regal Films, Inc.; 23Dec49; LP2694.

MRS. MINIVER. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 14 reels, sd., b&w. A William Wyler production. Based on the book by Jan Struther.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, William Wyler; screenplay, Arthur Wimperis, George Froeschel, James Hilton, Claudine West; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 15May42; LP11367.

MRS. PARKINGTON. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by Louis Bromfield.

Credits: Producer, Leon Gordon; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, Robert Thoeren, Polly James; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Oct44; LP12932.

MRS. WIGGS OF THE CABBAGE PATCH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Alice Hegan Rice and the play by Anne Crawford Flexner.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Doris Anderson, William Slavens McNutt, Jane Storm; photographer, Leo Tover; film editor, Anne Bauchens.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Oct42; LP11716.

MRS. YANKEE DOODLE. 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; MP12009.

MITCHELL AYRES AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; continuity, Justin Herman; photographer, William Kelly.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Jan43; MP13221.

THE MITE MAKES RIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948, 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoons)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, I. Klein; animation, Steve Muffatti, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Oct48; LP1888.

MITT ME TONIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Felix Adler; screenplay, Felix Adler, Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Nov41; LP10833.

MOB TOWN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, William Nigh; original screenplay, Brenda Weisberg, Walter Doniger; cameraman, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Sep41; LP10693.

MOBY DICK'S HOME TOWN. SEE Variety Views, no. 96.

A MODEL IS BORN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Summary: A beginner in the modeling profession is introduced to its glamour and its pitfalls by a veteran model, with help from George Hurrell and Harry Conover.

Credits: Director and writer, Justin Herman; film editor, Robert Blauvelt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.: 28May48; LP1646.

MODEL SCHOOL. Continental Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, J. Rey Palmer; narration, Don Forbes.

© Continental Pictures, Inc.; 12Nov40; MP10813.

MODEL WIFE. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 9 reels.

Credits: Production, direction and original story, Leigh Jason; screenplay, Charles Kaufman, Horace Jackson, Grant Garrett; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Norbert Brodine; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Apr41; LP10389.

MODELS ON PARADE. Soundies Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc.; 30Dec46; MP1778. (See also Models on Parade; 10Mar47; MP1913)

MODELS ON PARADE. Soundies Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Films, Inc.; 10Mar47; MP1913. (See also Models on Parade; 30Dec46; MP1778)

MODERN BUSINESS MACHINES. Teaching Aids Exchange, c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A demonstration of the operation and a description of the features of various business machines, such as the electromatic typewriter and the new Chinese 5,400–character typewriter.

© Teaching Aids Exchange; 1Oct48; MP3787.

MODERN DESIGN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp., of America, Inc.; 19Jan42; MP12087.

MODERN GUATEMALA CITY. c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 764 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16324.

MODERN HAWAII. Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A view of Hawaii, with emphasis on the industries and commerce of the island territory.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Clyde Kohn.

© David A. Smart; 27Oct48; MP3726.

THE MODERN HIGHWAY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; described by Paul Douglas; photographer, Jack Kuhne; editor, Lew Lehr.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31Jan41; MP10801.

THE MODERN LITHOGRAPHER. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 25Apr40; MP10341.

THE MODERN MARINER. Presented by Chevrolet. Color.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 28Oct40; 60 prints, 30Oct40; MU10590.

MODERN MEXICO CITY, c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 871 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Wilfrid Cline. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Oct42; MP12960.

MODERN NEW ORLEANS. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 729 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.; 2May40; MP10239.

THE MODERN OIL—BURNHAM "TESTED" MOTOR OIL. Calumet Refining Co.

Credits: Narrator, John Weigel.

© Albert J. Smith & Lyle W. Munson, title, descr., & 11 prints, 11Sep40; MU10458.

MODERN OIL WELL CEMENTING. Presented by International Cementers, Inc. 1,450 ft., b&w, 16mm.

Application author: E. P. Hollywood.

© International Cementers, Inc.; title, descr., & 17 prints, 2Dec47; MU2511.

MODERN PHOTO-ENGRAVING. Presented by Kodak. sd., color.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 23 prints, 7Dec45; MU16591.

MODERN POULTRY FARMING IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA. American Economic Committee for Palestine, Inc., with the cooperation of the Jewish Agricultural Society, Inc. 1,600 ft., b&w.

Summary: A film designed to show to the poultrymen of Israel the poultry farming equipment and practices developed in recent years in southern California.

Credits: Supervision and titles by Jacob M. Maze.

© American Economic Committee for Palestine, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 23Sep49; MU4518.

MODERN POULTRY HUSBANDRY. American Economic Committee for Palestine, Inc., c1947. 3 reels, si., b&w, 16mm. Adapted from "The American Poultry Industry As Applied to Palestine" by Simon Bornstein.

Credits: Director, Louis Novins; script, Jerome Gottler.

© American Economic Committee for Palestine, Inc.; 3Jan47; MP1790.

MODERN QUALITY CONTROL. Johns-Manville Corp. color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, E. A. Reynolds and R. E. Wareham.

© Johns-Manville Corp.; title, descr., & 11 prints, 22Dec47; MU2554.

MODERN VIKINGS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Jan43; MP13178.

THE MODERN WAY. Presented by Bayer-Semesan Co. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Bayer-Semesan Co.; title & descr., 22Jun40; 154 prints, 24Jun40; MU10300.

MOITLE FROM TOIDY TOID AND TOID. 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.; 3Nov46; MP1269.

MOJAVE FIREBRAND. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Spencer Bennet; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp,; 31Jan44; LP12524.

MOKEY. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on stories by Jennie Harris Oliver.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, Wells Root; screenplay, Wells Root, Jan Fortune; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Mar42; LP11251.

MOLECULAIRE THEORIE VAN MATERIE. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 7Jun46; MP842.

MOLECULAR THEORY OF MATTER. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Greek.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 7Jun46; MP845.

MOLEKULÁRNÍ TEORIE HMOTY. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 22Jun46; MP835.

MOLEKYLARTEORIEN. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 5Jun46; MP846.

MOLLY AND ME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 6,400 ft., sd. From a novel by Frances Marion.

Credits: Director, Lewis Seiler; screenplay, Leonard Praskins; adaptation, Roger Burford; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22Mar45; LP13331.

MOLLY CURES A COWBOY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 19 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Jean W. Yarbrough; story, Oliver Drake, Gilbert Wright; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9559.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jul41; MP11329.

MOM AND DAD. Hygienic Productions, c1944. 111 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A drama designed to strengthen the case for including courses in sex education in the curricula of public schools.

Credits: Producers, J. S. Jossey, Kroger Babb; director, William Beaudine; original story, Kroger Babb, Mildred Horn; screen story, Mildred Horn; music score, Eddie Kay.

Cast: Hardie Albright, Lois Austin, George Eldridge, June Carlson, Jimmy Clark.

Appl. author: Mildred A. Horn.

© Hygienic Productions, Inc.; 28Nov44; LP1522.

MOMENTS OF CHARM OF 1941. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Roush; photographer, William Steiner, Jr.; film editor, Robert Blauvelt. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Sep40; MP10471.

MOMMY LOVES PUPPY. c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Willard Bowsky, Jim Davis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Nov40; LP10086.

MONEY AND THE WOMAN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the story by James F. Cain.

Credits: Associate producer, William Jacobs; director, William K. Howard; screenplay, Robert Presnell; film editor, Frank Magee.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 17Aug40; LP9844.

MONEY AT WORK. Time, Inc., c1946. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Time, Inc.; 25Oct46; MP1333.

MONEY MADNESS. Film Classics, Inc., c1948. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A drama in which the principal character, a thief and murderer, wagers his life against $200,000, and loses.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Steward; original story, Al Martin; music director, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook Todd.

Cast: Hugh Beaumont, Frances Rafferty, Harlan Warde, Cecil Weston, Ida Moore.

© Film Classics, Inc.; 1Apr48; LP1577.

MONEY MAKING MILKING. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Narrator, George Mather. Kodachrome.

© Babson Bros. Co.; title, descry. & 2 prints, 28Mar45; MU15752.

MONEY SQUAWKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Mar40; LP9507.

MONEY TO BURN. c1939. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Gus Meins; original story, Jack Townley, Taylor Caven; screenplay, Jack Townley; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, William Morgan.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Dec39; LP9420.

MONKEY BUSINESS.

Appl. author: Theodore Henkel.

© Jean Goldkette; title, descr., & 4 prints, 10Feb41; MU10892.

MONKEY BUSINESSMEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Direction, story and screenplay, Edward Bernds.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Jun46; LP827.

MONKEY DOODLE DANDIES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. in cooperation with the St. Louis Zoological Garden, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Lew Lehr's Dribble Puss Parade)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Lew Lehr; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Dec42; MP13299.

MONKEY-TONE NEWS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Lew Lehr's Dribble-Puss Parade)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Jan47; LP944.

MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 10 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Booth Tarkington.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Melvin Frank, Norman Panama; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Aug46; LP563.

MONSIEUR VERDOUX. Chaplin Studios, Inc., c1947. 124 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, author of original story, and composer of music, Charles Chaplin; film editor, Willard Nico.

Cast: Charles Chaplin, Martha Raye.

© Chaplin Studios, Inc.; 24Oct47; LP1256.

MONSIEUR VINCENT. E.D.I.C.-Union Generale Cinematographique, Paris. Released in the U. S. by Lopert Films, Inc., c1948. 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. In French with English titles.

Summary: A realistic drama about the struggle of Vincent de Paul to combat the wretched conditions which existed among impoverished people in seventeenth-century France.

Credits: Producer, Georges Maurer; director, Maurice Cloche; original story and screenplay, Jean Bernard-Luc and Jean Anouilh; music, Jacques Grunenwald.

Cast: Pierre Fresnay, Aime Clariond, Jean Debucourt, Lise Delamare, Germaine Dermoz.

© Lopert Films, Inc.; 1Sep48; LP2378.

THE MONSTER AND THE APE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 2 reels each, sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Sherman Lowe, Royal K. Cole.

1. The Mechanical Terror. © 20Apr45; LP13399.

2. The Edge of Doom. © 27Apr45; LP13408.

3. Flames of Fate. © 4May45; LP13400.

4. The Fatal Search. © 11May45; LP13401.

5. Rocks of Doom. © 18May45; LP13402.

6. A Fiend in Disguise. © 25May45; LP13403.

7. A Scream in the Night. © 2Jun45; LP13409.

8. Death in the Dark. © 9Jun45; LP13410.

9. The Secret Tunnel. © 16Jun45; LP13411.

10. Forty Thousand Volts. © 23Jun45; LP13412.

11. The Mad Professor. © 30Jun45; LP13413.

12. Shadows of Destiny. © 7Jul45; LP13414.

13. The Gorilla At Large. © 14Jul45; LP13415.

14. His Last Flight. © 21Jul45; LP13416.

15. Justice Triumphs. © 28Jul45; LP13417.

THE MONSTER MAKER. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story, Lawrence Williams; screenplay, Pierre Gendron, Martin Mooney; music score, Albert Glasser; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 15Apr44; LP13611.

MONSTERS OF THE DEEP. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Written by Bob Edge; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec41; LP11170.

MONTANA PLAINS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14380.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Dec44; MP15461.

MONTE CARLO NIGHT. Rainbow Pictures, Inc., c1949. 3 min., si., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Presents information about Monte Carlo Night, a plan for increasing attendance at theaters.

Appl. author: Carl William Molter.

© Carl William Molter, d.b.a. Molter Advertising Co.; 9Nov49; MP4714.

MONUMENTAL UTAH. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 798 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Charles Boyle. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jul44; MP430.

THE MOON. SEE La Lune.

THE MOON AND SIXPENCE. Released thru United Artists, c1942. Presented by David L. Loew-Albert Lewin, Inc. 78 min., sd. By W. Somerset Maugham.

Credits: Producer, David L. Loew; adapted and directed by Albert Lewin; music score, Dmitri Tiomkin; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

© David L. Loew-Albert Lewin, Inc.; 29Sep42; LP11753.

THE MOON IS DOWN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 8,100 ft., sd. From the novel by John Steinbeck.

Credits: Director, Irving Pichel; written for the screen by Nunnally Johnson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 26Feb43; LP12417.

THE MOON OF MANAKOORA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16449.

MOON OVER BURMA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Wilson Collison.

Credits: Director, Louis King; screenplay, Frank Wead, W. P. Lipscomb, Harry Clork; photography, William Mellor; film editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Oct40; LP9994.

MOON OVER HER SHOULDER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. c1941. 6,000 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Alfred Werker; original story, Helen Vreeland Smith, Eve Golden; screenplay, Walter Bullock; music direction, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Oct41; LP10838.

MOON OVER LAS VEGAS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Jean Yarbrough; story, George Jeske, Clyde Bruckman; music director, Don E. George; cameraman, Jerry Ash; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Mar44; LP12579.

MOON OVER MIAMI. 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; MP1563.

MOON OVER MIAMI. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,225 ft., sd. From a play by Stephen Powys.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Vincent Lawrence, Brown Holmes; adaptation, George Seaton, Lynn Starling; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Jul41; LP10759.

MOON OVER MONTANA. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Direction and original story, Oliver Drake; screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Harry Neumann; editor, Ace Herman.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 17Feb46; LP150.

MOONLIGHT (CLAIR DE LUNE). Released through United Artists, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (David L. Loew Musicolor Short) Based on "Clair de Lune" by Claude Debussy.

Credits: Assistant producer, Alan Stensvold. Cinecolor.

© Musicolor, Inc.; 29Aug47 (in notice: 1946); MP2931.

MOONLIGHT AND CACTUS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Frank Gross; director, Edward F. Cline; original screenplay, Eugen Conrad, Paul Gerard Smith; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 17Nov43; LP12380.

MOONLIGHT BECOMES YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Nov42; MP13112.

MOONLIGHT COCKTAIL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11May42; MP12539.

MOONLIGHT COCKTAIL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Jun42; MP12655.

MOONLIGHT IN HAVANA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Anthony Mann; original screenplay, Oscar Brodney; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Sep42; LP11623.

MOONLIGHT IN HAWAII. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Eve Greene; screenplay, Morton Grant, James Gow, Erna Lazarus; music, Gene De Paul; photography, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 1Aug41; LP10621.

MOONLIGHT IN VERMONT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard W. Burton; director, Edward Lilley; original screenplay, Eugene Conrad; photography, Jerry Ash; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Dec43; LP12422.

MOONLIGHT MASQUERADE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by John H. Auer.

Credits: Associate producer and director, John H. Auer; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; music director, Cy Feuer; orchestration, Gene Rose; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Jun42; LP11509.

MOONLIGHT MASQUERADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12169.

MOONLIGHT MELODIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22Oct46; LP651.

MOONRISE. Chas. K. Feldman Group Productions. Released by Republic Pictures Corp., c1948. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Theodore Strauss.

Summary: A drama about a convicted murderer's son who kills one of his persecutors and flees in a futile attempt to escape reality.

Credits: Producer, Charles Haas; director, Frank Borzage; screenplay, Charles Haas; music, William Lava; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Dane Clark, Gail Russell, Ethel Barrymore, Allyn Joslyn, Rex Ingram.

© Chas. K. Feldman Group Productions; 9Sep48; LP1852.

MOONTIDE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 8,570 ft., sd. From the novel by Willard Robertson.

Credits: Director, Archie Mayo; screenplay, John O'Hara; music, Cyril J. Mockridge, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29May42; LP11336.

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

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Apr46; MP540.

MOPEY DOPE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,501 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Del Lord, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20May44; LP12677.

MOPPING UP. Terrytoons, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Aug43; MP14812.

MORE ABOUT NOSTRADAMUS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 987 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Carey Wilson; director, David Miller; original story, Carl Ward Dudley, Franco Bruno-Averardi; screenplay, Carl Ward Dudley; music score, C. Bakaleinikoff, Eugene Zador; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Dec40; LP10294.

MORE THAN MACHINES. Presented by Micromatic Hone Corp. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Micromatic Hone Corp.; title, descr., & 66 prints, 22May43; MU13600.

THE MORE THE MERRIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, George Stevens; story, Robert Russel, Frank Ross; screenplay, Robert Russel, Frank Ross, Richard Flournoy, Lewis R. Foster; music, Leigh Harline; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Apr43; LP11979.

MORE TRIFLES OF IMPORTANCE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 975 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; screenplay, Samuel H. Chain; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Mar41; LP10383.

MORE USABLE HEAT PER POUND OF COAL. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, c1945. 2 reels, sd.

© Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company; 19Mar45; MP335.

THE MORGUE IS ALWAYS OPEN. SEE A Scream in the Dark.

MORMON TRAILS. 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.; 20Aug43; MP14845.

MORNING CARE. Presented by The Bureau of Aeronautics for the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. sd.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title & descr., 26Jun43; 2 prints, 17Jul43; MU13770.

MORON THAN OFF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946, 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, Jules White; story, Preston Black.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Nov46; LP973.

LA MORT DU CYGNE. SEE The Unfinished Dance.

THE MORTAL STORM. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the book by Phyllis Bottome.

Credits: Director, Frank Borzage; screenplay, Claudine West, Andersen Ellis, George Froeschel; music score, Edward Kane; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Jun40; LP9722.

MORTGAGE ON LIFE. SEE A Woman's Secret.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16071.

THE MOSQUITO. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon) (Aesops Fable)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 29Jun45; LP13466.

THE MOSQUITO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the life cycles of the common and the malaria mosquitoes; depicts methods of exterminating larvae and adult mosquitoes. A teaching film for intermediate grades, high schools, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, E. Laurence Palmer.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Nov47; MP2636.

MOSS ROSE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the novel by Joseph Shearing [pseud. of Gabrielle Margaret Vert Campbell]

Credits: Director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Jules Furthman, Tom Reed; adaptation, Niven Busch; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: Peggy Cummins, Victor Mature, Ethel Barrymore, Vincent Price.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8Jun47; LP1102.

THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME. SEE A Game of Death.

MOTHER GOOSE ACTION BOOK. Color, 16mm.

© Robert D. Grant and Henry L. Porter; title, descr., & 1c, 28Aug42; MU12804.

MOTHER GOOSE ON THE LOOSE. c1942. Presented by Universal Pictures. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz "Cartune")

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 25Mar42; MP12328.

MOTHER GOOSE PRESENTS HUMPTY DUMPTY. Raymond F. Harryhausen, c1946. 50 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© Raymond F. Harryhausen; 1Aug46; LP483.

MOTHER GOOSE PRESENTS LITTLE MISS MUFFET. Raymond F. Harryhausen, c1946. 50 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© Raymond F Harryhausen; 1Aug46; LP484.

MOTHER GOOSE PRESENTS OLD MOTHER HUBBARD. Raymond F. Harryhausen, c1946. 100 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© Raymond F. Harryhausen; 1Nov46; LP714.

MOTHER GOOSE PRESENTS THE QUEEN OF HEARTS. Raymond F. Harryhausen, c1946. 100 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© Raymond F. Harryhausen; 1Nov46; LP713.

MOTHER GOOSE PRESENTS THE STORY BOOK REVIEW. c1946. 75 ft., color, 16mm. Used as a prologue and epilogue to tie together "Little Miss Muffet, "Old Mother Hubbard," "The Queen of Hearts," and "Humpty Dumpty."

© Raymond F. Harryhausen; 17Dec46; LP881.

MOTHER HUBBA-HUBBA HUBBARD. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody, no. 126)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Cal Howard; animation, Roy Jenkins, Chic Atterstrom; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 26May47; LP1008.

MOTHER-IN-LAW'S DAY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 18 min., sd.

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

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 7Dec45; LP140.

MOTHER IS A FRESHMAN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 83 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by Raphael Blau.

Summary: A youthful widow joins her teen-aged daughter at college, where the two become rivals in the pursuit of an English professor.

Credits: Producer, Walter Morosco; director, Lloyd Bacon; screenplay, Mary Loos, Richard Sale; music director, Alfred Newman; film editor, William Reynolds.

Cast: Loretta Young, Van Johnson, Rudy Vallee, Barbara Lawrence, Robert Arthur.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8Mar49; LP2259.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Sep41; MP11591.

MOTHER OF PRESIDENTS. SEE Variety Views, no. 117.

MOTHER WORE TIGHTS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 107 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the book by Miriam Young.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: Betty Grable, Dan Dailey, Mona Freeman, Connie Marshall, Vanessa Brown.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Aug47; LP1263.

MOTION PICTURE GUIDE FOR IMPROVING 8MM AND 16MM MOVIES, c1948. 374 ft. in 16mm and 187 ft. in 8mm, si., b&w.

Summary: Shows common errors in the production of amateur movies, such as faulty handling of the exposure meter, the lighting, the continuity, the editing, and the projection.

© C. W. Production Co.; 15Jan48; MP2670.

MOTION PICTURES WITH THE EASTMAN HIGH-SPEED CAMERA TYPE III. Eastman Kodak Co., si., b&w & color, 16mm.

Appl. author: John Mihal, Jr.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 7 prints, 15Jan47; MU1516.

MOTOR MANIACS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 18 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Production and story, George Bilson; director, Wallace Grissell; screenplay, Russ Green; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jul46; LP572.

MOTORCYCLE STUNTING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Nov40; MP10591.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Dec41; MP11936.

MOUNTAIN FIGHTERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Army, c1943. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; screenplay, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Lou Marcelle. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Sep43; LP12264.

THE MOUNTAIN FLOWER. Walter Lantz Productions, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

© Walter Lantz Productions; 25Apr49 (in notice: 1948); LP2354.

MOUNTAIN MOONLIGHT. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Nick Grinde; original story, Arthur Vernon Jones; screenplay, John Krafft, Mauri Grashin, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

©Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Jul41; LP10660.

MOUNTAIN RHYTHM. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures, 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Ray Harris; screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Richard Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Jan43; LP11792.

MOUNTAIN SUMMER. SEE Going Places.

MOURNING BECOMES ELECTRA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 175 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Eugene O'Neill.

Summary: Illicit love, twisted emotions, and insanity are the motivating forces in this tragedy; suicide and murder, its main events; the socially prominent Mannon family, the principal characters. The setting is Massachusetts in the post-Civil War period.

Credits: Producer and director, Dudley Nichols, in association with The Theatre Guild, Inc.; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Richard Hageman; orchestra arrangements, Lucien Cailliet; film editors, Roland Gross, Chandler House.

Cast: Rosalind Russell, Michael Redgrave, Raymond Massey, Katina Paxinou, Leo Genn.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Nov47; LP1583.

MOUSE CLEANING. Loew's Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Ray Patterson; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Nov48; LP1993.

THE MOUSE COMES TO DINNER. Loew's Inc., c1945. 677 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Apr45; LP13287.

MOUSE IN MANHATTAN. Loew's Inc., c1945. 749 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ed Barge; music director, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jul45; LP13393.

A MOUSE IN THE HOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Richard Bickenbach, Don Patterson; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Aug47; LP1230.

MOUSE MEETS LION. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 615 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 8)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Barry Love, Louie Lilly; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 1Nov40; LP10021.

MOUSE MENACE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, George Hill. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Nov46; MP1372.

THE MOUSE-MERIZED CAT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Sep46; MP1225.

THE MOUSE OF TOMORROW. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Terry-Toons. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Paul Terry Colortoon) (Terrytoon)

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

© Terry-Toons, Inc.; 16Oct42; MP13297.

MOUSE TRAPPERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (Walter Lantz Color Cartoon)

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Jan41; MP10757.

MOUSE TROUBLE. Loew's Inc., c1944. 679 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon.

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ken Muse, Pete Burness; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Dec44; LP13083.

MOUSE WRECKERS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Lloyd Vaughan, Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Ben Washam.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Apr49 (in notice: 1947); MP4016.

MOUSIE COME HOME. c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony)

Credits: Producer, Walter Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Pat Matthews, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Walter Lantz Productions & Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Feb46; MP351.

MOVE IT OVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14379.

MOVIE MAGIC. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 909 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 11)

Credits: Producer, Willard Van Der Veer; commentary, Eugene Francis.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1May41; MP11304.

MOVIE MEMORIES. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 5)

Summary: Movie memories of the films of yesterday: "The Failure, or Don't Marry a Horse Lover (or a Horse)," "The Regiment's Dog, or Massacre Near the 17th Tee," "The Death Train, or Bessie Rides the Rails."

Credits: Producer, Burton Benjamin; narrator, André Baruch; editor, Isaac Kleinerman.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 18Feb49; MP3979.

MOVIELAND MAGIC. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945, 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, James Kern.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Dec45; MP281.

MOVIES ARE ADVENTURE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. in cooperation with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, c1949. Presented by members of the motion picture industry. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows how motion pictures transport moviegoers into a world of adventure and romance.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Jan49 (in notice: 1948); MP4058.

MOVIETONE NEWS. Movietonews, Inc., c1939–49. 1 reel each unless otherwise indicated, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Movietonews, Inc.

Volume 22, 1939/40.

22. © 24Nov39; MP9860.

23. © 26Nov39; MP9861.

24. © 28Nov39; MP9862.

25. © 1Dec39; MP9863.

26. © 6Dec39; MP9864.

27. © 8Dec39; MP9871.

28. © 13Dec39; MP9872.

29. © 15Dec39; MP9873.

30. © 20Dec39; MP9874.

31. © 22Dec39; MP9955.

32. © 27Dec39; MP9956.

33. © 29Dec39; MP9957.

34. © 3Jan40; MP9958.

35. © 5Jan40; MP9959.

36. © 12Jan40; MP9960.

37. © 17Jan40; MP9961.

38. © 24Jan40; MP10017.

39. © 26Jan40; MP10018.

40. © 31Jan40; MP10019.

41. © 2Feb40; MP10020.

42. © 7Feb40; MP10021.

43. © 9Feb40; MP10022.

44. © 14Feb40; MP10023.

45. © 15Feb40; MP10053.

46. © 17Feb40; MP10054.

47. © 20Feb40; MP10055.

48. © 22Feb40; MP10056.

49. © 27Feb40; MP10057.

50. © 29Feb40; MP10087.

51. © 5Mar40; MP10088.

52. © 7Mar40; MP10089.

53. © 12Mar40; MP10090.

54. © 14Mar40; MP10091.

55. © 19Mar40; MP10092.

56. © 21Mar40; MP10131.

57. © 26Mar40; MP10132.

58. © 28Mar40; MP10159.

59. © 2Apr40; MP10160.

60. © 4Apr40; MP10161.

61. © 9Apr40; MP10162.

62. © 11Apr40; MP10187.

63. © 16Apr40; MP10188.

64. © 18Apr40; MP10196.

65. © 23Apr40; MP10197.

66. © 25Apr40; MP10198.

67. © 30Apr40; MP10267.

68. © 2May40; MP10268.

69. © 7May40; MP10269.

70. © 9May40; MP10270.

71. © 14May40; MP10271.

72. © 16May40; MP10272.

73. © 21May40; MP10294.

74. © 23May40; MP10295.

75. © 28May40; MP10302.

76. © 30May40; MP10303.

77. © 4Jun40; MP10304.

78. © 6Jun40; MP10305.

79. © 11Jun40; MP10326.

80. © 13Jun40; MP10327.

81. © 18Jun40; MP10328.

82. © 20Jun40; MP10346.

83. © 25Jun40; MP10347.

84. © 27Jun40; MP10389.

85. © 2Jul40; MP10390.

86. © 4Jul40; MP10391.

87. © 9Jul40; MP10392.

88. © 11Jul40; MP10417.

89. © 16Jul40; MP10418.

90. © 18Jul40; MP10419.

91. © 23Jul40; MP10420.

92. © 25Jul40; MP10421.

93. © 30Jul40; MP10440.

94. © 1Aug40; MP10441.

95. © 6Aug40; MP10442.

96. © 8Aug40; MP10443.

97. © 13Aug40; MP10465.

98. © 15Aug40; MP10466.

99. © 20Aug40; MP10467.

100. © 22Aug40; MP10468

101. © 26Aug40; MP10497

102. © 29Aug40; MP10498

103. © 3Sep40; MP10499.

104. © 5Sep40; MP10500.

Volume 23, 1940/41.

1. © 10Sep40; MP10518.

2. © 12Sep40; MP10519.

3. © 17Sep40; MP10520.

4. © 19Sep40; MP10521.

5. © 24Sep40; MP10522.

6. © 26Sep40; MP10582.

7. © 1Oct40; MP10583.

8. © 3Oct40; MP10584.

9. © 8Oct40; MP10585.

10. © 10Oct40; MP10601.

11. © 15Oct40; MP10602.

12. © 17Oct40; MP10603.

13. © 22Oct40; MP10623.

14. © 24Oct40; MP10624.

15. © 29Oct40; MP10625.

16. © 31Oct40; MP10626.

17. © 5Nov40; MP10627.

18. © 7Nov40; MP10637.

19. © 12Nov40; MP10638.

20. © 14Nov40; MP10670.

21. © 19Nov40; MP10671.

22. © 21Nov40; MP10672.

23. © 26Nov40; MP10673.

24. © 28Nov40; MP10702.

25. © 3Dec40; MP10703.

26. © 5Dec40; MP10704.

27. © 10Dec40; MP10705.

26. © 12Dec40; MP10775.

29. © 17Dec40; MP10776.

30. © 19Dec40; MP10779.

31. © 24Dec40; MP10780.

32. © 26Dec40; MP10781.

33. © 31Dec40; MP10782.

34. © 2Jan41; MP10783.

35. © 7Jan41; MP10786.

36. © 9Jan41; MP10787.

37. © 14Jan41; MP10819.

38. © 16Jan41; MP10820.

39. © 21Jan41; MP10821.

40. © 23Jan41; MP10856.

41. © 28Jan41; MP10857.

42. © 30Jan40; MP10858.

43. © 4Feb41; MP10895.

44. © 6Feb41; MP10896.

45. © 11Feb41; MP10897.

46. © 13Feb41; MP10898.

47. © 18Feb41; MP10927.

48. © 20Feb41; MP10928.

49. © 25Feb41; MP10929.

50. © 27Feb41; MP10995.

51. © 4Mar41; MP10996.

52. © 6Mar41; MP11041.

53. © 11Mar41; MP11042.

54. © 13Mar41; MP11043.

55. © 18Mar41; MP11044.

56. © 20Mar41; MP11045.

57. © 25Mar41; MP11060.

58. © 27Mar41; MP11061.

59. © 1Apr41; MP11101.

60. © 3Apr41; MP11102.

61. © 8Apr41; MP11103.

62. © 10Apr41; MP11104.

63. © 15Apr41; MP11105.

64. © 17Apr41; MP11150.

65. © 22Apr41; MP11151.

66. © 24Apr41; MP11152.

67. © 29Apr41; MP11153.

68. © 1May41; MP11200.

69. © 6May41; MP11201.

70. © 8May41; MP11202.

71. © 13May41; MP11203.

72. © 15May41; MP11244.

73. © 20May41; MP11245.

74. © 22May41; MP11246.

75. © 27May41; MP11247.

76. © 29May41; MP11257.

77. © 3Jun41; MP11258.

78. © 5Jun41; MP11287.

79. © 10Jun41; MP11288.

80. © 12Jun41; MP11289.

81. © 17Jun41; MP11308.

82. © 19Jun41; MP11309.

83. © 24Jun41; MP11326.

84. © 26Jun41; MP11327.

85. © 1Jul41; MP11412.

86. © 3Jul41; MP11413.

87. © 8Jul41; MP11414.

88. © 10Jul41; MP11415.

89. © 15Jul41; MP11416.

90. © 17Jul41; MP12465.

91. © 22Jul41; MP12466.

92. © 24Jul41; MP11512.

93. © 29Jul41; MP11513.

94. © 31Jul41; MP11514.

95. © 5Aug41; MP11515.

96. © 7Aug41; MP11516.

97. © 12Aug41; MP11517.

98. © 14Aug41; MP11552.

99. © 19Aug41; MP11553.

100. © 21Aug41; MP11554.

101. © 26Aug41; MP11555.

102. © 28Aug41; MP11564.

103. © 2Sep41; MP11598.

104. © 4Sep41; MP11599.

Volume 24, 1941/42.

1. © 9Sep41; MP11600.

2. © 11Sep41; MP11601.

3. © 16Sep41; MP11667.

4. © 18Sep41; MP11668.

5. © 23Sep41; MP11669.

6. © 25Sep41; MP11670.

7. © 30Sep41; MP11671.

8. © 2Oct41; MP11672.

9. © 7Oct41; MP11720.

10. © 9Oct41: MP11721.

11. © 14Oct41; MP11722.

12. © 16Oct41; MP11723.

13. © 23Oct41; MP11755.

14. © 28Oct41; MP11756.

15. © 30Oct41; MP11757.

16. © 4Nov41; MP11758.

17. © 6Nov41; MP11828.

18. © 11Nov41; MP11829.

19. © 13Nov41; MP11830.

20. © 18Nov41; MP11831.

21. © 18Nov41; MP11903.

22. © 20Nov41; MP11904.

23. © 25Nov41; MP11905.

24. © 27Nov41; MP11906.

25. © 2Dec41; MP11907.

26. © 4Dec41; MP12023.

27. © 9Dec41; MP12024.

28. © 11Dec41; MP12025.

29. © 16Dec41; MP12026.

30. © 18Dec41; MP12027.

31. © 23Dec41; MP12028.

32. © 25Dec41; MP12029.

33. © 30Dec41; MP12188.

34. © 1Jan42; MP12189.

35. © 6Jan42; MP12190.

36. © 8Jan42; MP12191.

37. © 13Jan42; MP12192.

38. © 15Jan42; MP12193.

39. © 20Jan42; MP12235.

40. © 22Jan42; MP12236.

41. © 27Jan42; MP12242.

42. © 29Jan42; MP12243.

43. © 3Feb42; MP12244.

44. © 5Feb42; MP12245.

45. © 10Feb42; MP12266.

46. © 12Feb42; MP12267.

47. © 17Feb42; MP12268.

48. © 19Feb42; MP12269.

49. © 24Feb42; MP12291.

50. © 26Feb42; MP12292.

51. © 3Mar42; MP12293.

52. © 5Mar42; MP12325.

53. © 10Mar42; MP12326.

54. © 12Mar42; MP12327.

55. © 17Mar42; MP12358.

56. © 19Mar42; MP12359.

57. © 24Mar42; MP12360.

58. © 26Mar42; MP12395.

59. © 31Mar42; MP12396.

60. © 31Mar42; MP12428.

61. © 2Apr42; MP12429.

62. © 9Apr42; MP12453.

63. © 14Apr42; MP12454.

64. © 16Apr42; MP12455.

65. © 21Apr42; MP12456.

66. © 23Apr42; MP12501.

67. © 28Apr42; MP12502.

68. © 30Apr42; MP12515.

69. © 5May42; MP12516.

70. © 7May42; MP12517.

71. © 12May42; MP12560.

72. © 14May42; MP12561.

73. © 19May42; MP12562.

74. © 21May42; MP12563.

75. © 26May42; MP12581.

76. © 28May42; MP12582.

77. © 2Jun42; MP12623.

78. © 4Jun42; MP12624.

79. © 9Jun42; MP12661.

80. © 11Jun42; MP12662.

81. © 16Jun42; MP12663.

82. © 18Jun42; MP12698.

83. © 23Jun42; MP12699.

84. © 25Jun42; MP12700.

85. © 30Jun42; MP12701.

86. © 2Jul42; MP12748.

87. © 7Jul42; MP12749.

88. © 9Jul42; MP12750.

89. © 14Jul42; MP12751.

90. © 16Jul42; MP12752.

91. © 21Jul42; MP12753.

92. © 23Jul42; MP12754.

93. © 28Jul42; MP12775.

94. © 30Jul42; MP12776.

95. © 4Aug42; MP12777.

96. © 6Aug42; MP12788.

97. © 11Aug42; MP12811.

98. © 13Aug42; MP12812.

99. © 18Aug42; MP12860.

100. © 20Aug42; MP12861.

101. © 25Aug42; MP12862.

102. © 27Aug42; MP12863.

103. © 1Sep42; MP12864.

104. © 3Sep42; MP12865.

Volume 25, 1942/43.

1. © 8Sep42; MP12866.

2. © 10Sep42; MP12954.

3. © 15Sep42; MP12955.

4. © 17Sep42; MP12956.

5. © 22Sep42; MP12957.

6. © 24Sep42; MP12977.

7. © 29Sep42; MP12978.

8. © 1Oct42; MP12979.

9. © 6Oct42; MP12990.

10. © 8Oct42; MP12991.

11. © 13Oct42; MP12992.

12. © 15Oct42; MP13047.

13. © 20Oct42; MP13048.

14. © 22Oct42; MP13049.

15. © 27Oct42; MP13133.

16. © 29Oct42; MP13134.

17. © 3Nov42; MP13135.

18. © 5Nov42; MP13136.

19. © 10Nov42; MP13137.

20. © 12Nov42; MP13182.

21. © 17Nov42; MP13183.

22. © 19Nov42; MP13184.

23. © 24Nov42; MP13185.

24. © 26Nov42; MP13186.

25. © 1Dec42; MP13187.

26. © 3Dec42; MP13188.

27. © 8Dec42; MP13206.

28. © 10Dec42; MP13207.

29. © 15Dec42; MP13208.

30. © 17Dec42; MP13209.

31. © 22Dec42; MP13249.

32. © 24Dec42; MP13250.

33. © 29Dec42; MP13251.

34. © 31Dec42; MP13252.

35. © 5Jan43; MP13253.

36. © 7Jan43; MP13254.

37. © 12Jan43; MP13255.

38. © 14Jan43; MP13290.

39. © 19Jan43; MP13291.

40. © 21Jan43; MP13292.

41. © 26Jan43; MP13293.

42. © 28Jan43; MP13294.

43. © 28Jan43; MP13324.

44. © 2Feb43; MP13325.

45. © 4Feb43; MP13326.

46. © 9Feb43; MP13327.

47. © 11Feb43; MP13342.

48. © 16Feb43; MP13343.

49. © 18Feb43; MP13344.

50. © 23Feb43; MP13438.

51. © 25Feb43; MP13439.

52. © 2Mar43; MP13440.

53. © 4Mar43; MP13441.

54. © 9Mar43; MP13442.

55. © 11Mar43; MP13443.

56. © 16Mar43; MP13444.

57. © 18Mar43; MP13827.

58. © 23Mar43; MP13515.

59. © 25Mar43; MP13516.

60. © 30Mar43; MP13517.

61. © 1Apr43; MP13518.

62. © 6Apr43; MP13519.

63. © 8Apr43; MP13538.

64. © 13Apr43; MP13539.

65. © 15Apr43; MP13551.

66. © 20Apr43; MP13552.

67. © 22Apr43; MP13553.

68. © 27Apr43; MP13608.

69. © 29Apr43; MP13609.

70. © 4May43; MP13610.

71. © 6May43; MP13635.

72. © 11May43; MP13636.

73. © 13May43; MP13689.

74. © 18May43; MP13690.

75. © 20May43; MP13691.

76. © 25May43; MP13692.

77. © 27May43; MP13693.

78. © 1Jun43; MP13696.

79. © 3Jun43; MP13735.

80. © 8Jun43; MP13736.

81. © 10Jun43; MP13737.

82. © 15Jun43; MP13738.

83. © 17Jun43; MP13796.

84. © 22Jun43; MP13797.

85. © 24Jun43; MP13798.

86. © 29Jun43; MP13799.

87. © 1Jul43; MP13840.

88. © 6Jul43; MP13841.

89. © 8Jul43; MP13842.

90. © 13Jul43; MP13871.

91. © 15Jul43; MP13872.

92. © 20Jul43; MP13873.

93. © 22Jul43; MP13880.

94. © 27Jul43; MP13881.

95. © 29Jul43; MP13882.

96. © 3Aug43; MP13896.

97. © 5Aug43; MP13897.

98. © 10Aug43; MP13898.

99. © 12Aug43; MP13923.

100. © 17Aug43; MP13924.

101. © 19Aug43; MP13925.

102. © 24Aug43; MP14007.

103. © 26Aug43; MP14008.

104. © 31Aug43; MP14009.

Volume 26, 1943/44.

1. © 2Sep43; MP14010.

2. © 7Sep43; MP14048.

3. © 9Sep43; MP14049.

4. © 14Sep43; MP14050.

5. © 16Sep43; MP14102.

6. © 21Sep43; MP14103.

7. © 23Sep43; MP14114.

8. © 28Sep43; MP14115.

9. © 30Sep43; MP14116.

10. © 5Oct43; MP14117.

11. © 7Oct43; MP14143.

12. © 12Oct43; MP14144.

13. © 14Oct43; MP14145.

14. © 19Oct43; MP14146.

15. © 21Oct43; MP14147.

16. © 26Oct43; MP14148.

17. © 28Oct43; MP14287.

18. © 2Nov43; MP14288.

19. © 4Nov43; MP14289.

20. © 9Nov43; MP14290.

21. © 11Nov43; MP14291.

22. © 16Nov43; MP14292.

23. © 18Nov43; MP14353.

24. © 23Nov43; MP14354.

25. © 25Nov43; MP14355.

26. © 30Nov43; MP14356.

27. © 2Dec43; MP14357.

28. © 7Dec43; MP14358.

29. © 9Dec43; MP14359.

30. © 14Dec43; MP14399.

31. © 16Dec43; MP14400.

32. © 21Dec43; MP14401.

33. © 23Dec43; MP14439.

34. © 28Dec43; MP14440.

35. © 30Dec43; MP14441.

36. © 4Jan44; MP14470.

37. © 6Jan44; MP14471.

38. © 11Jan44; MP14472.

39. © 13Jan44; MP14473.

40. © 17Jan44; MP14474.

41. © 19Jan44; MP14549.

42. © 24Jan44; MP14550.

43. © 26Jan44; MP14551.

44. © 31Jan44; MP14552.

45. © 2Feb44; MP14553.

46. © 7Feb44; MP14593.

47. © 10Feb44; MP14594.

48. © 14Feb44; MP14595.

49. © 17Feb44; MP14596.

50. © 21Feb44; MP14597.

51. © 24Feb44; MP14690.

52. © 28Feb44; MP14691.

53. © 2Mar44; MP14692.

54. © 6Mar44; MP14693.

55. © 9Mar44; MP14694.

56. © 13Mar44; MP14721.

57. © 16Mar44; MP14722.

58. © 20Mar44; MP14723.

59. © 23Mar44; MP14777.

60. © 27Mar44; MP14778.

61. © 30Mar44; MP14779.

62. © 3Apr44; MP14780.

63. © 6Apr44; MP14850.

64. © 10Apr44; MP14851.

65. © 13Apr44; MP14852.

66. © 17Apr44; MP14853.

67. © 20Apr44; MP14854.

68. © 24Apr44; MP14855.

69. © 27Apr44; MP14856.

70. © 1May44; MP14894.

71. © 4May44; MP14895.

72. © 8May44; MP14896.

73. © 11May44; MP15002.

74. © 15May44; MP15003.

75. © 18May44; MP15004.

76. © 22May44; MP15005.

77. © 25May44; MP15006.

78. © 29May44; MP15007.

79. © 1Jun44; MP15010.

80. 2 reels. © 6Jun44; MP15011.

81. © 8Jun44; MP15012.

82. © 12Jun44; MP15013.

83. © 15Jun44; MP15131.

84. © 19Jun44; MP15132.

85. © 22Jun44; MP15133.

86. © 26Jun44; MP15134.

87. © 29Jun44; MP15135.

88. © 3Jul44; MP15136.

89. © 6Jul44; MP15137.

90. © 10Jul44; MP15187.

91. © 13Jul44; MP15188.

92. © 17Jul44; MP15189.

93. © 20Jul44; MP15190.

94. © 24Jul44; MP15191.

95. © 27Jul44; MP15203.

96. © 31Jul44; MP15204.

97. © 3Aug44; MP15205.

98. © 7Aug44; MP15206.

99. © 10Aug44; MP15207.

100. © 14Aug44; MP15208.

101. © 17Aug44; MP15240.

102. © 21Aug44; MP15243.

103. © 24Aug44; MP15242.

104. © 28Aug44; MP15241.

Volume 27, 1944/45.

1. © 31Aug44; MP15294.

2. © 4Sep44; MP15295.

3. © 7Sep44; MP15296.

4. © 11Sep44; MP15297.

5. © 14Sep44; MP15298.

6. © 18Sep44; MP15365.

7. © 21Sep44; MP15366.

8. © 25Sep44; MP15367.

9. © 28Sep44; MP15368.

10. © 2Oct44; MP15369.

11. © 5Oct44; MP15370.

12. © 9Oct44; MP15371.

13. © 12Oct44; MP15432.

14. © 16Oct44; MP15433.

15. © 19Oct44; MP15444.

16. © 23Oct44; MP15445.

17. © 26Oct44; MP15477.

18. © 30Oct44; MP15478.

19. © 2Nov44; MP15479.

20. © 6Nov44; MP15480.

21. © 9Nov44; MP15481.

22. © 13Nov44; MP15484.

23. © 16Nov44; MP15485.

24. © 20Nov44; MP15486.

25. © 23Nov44; MP15499.

26. © 27Nov44; MP15500.

27. © 30Nov44; MP15518.

28. © 4Dec44; MP15519.

29. © 7Dec44; MP15520.

30. © 11Dec44; MP15521.

31. © 13Dec44; MP15581.

32. © 18Dec44; MP15582.

33. © 20Dec44; MP15583.

34. © 22Dec44; MP15584.

35. © 27Dec44; MP15585.

36. © 29Dec44; MP15612.

37. © 4Jan45; MP15613.

38. © 8Jan45; MP15614.

39. © 11Jan45; MP15615.

40. © 15Jan45; MP15616.

41. © 18Jan45; MP15617.

42. © 22Jan45; MP15618.

43. © 26Jan45; MP15647.

44. © 30Jan45; MP15648.

45. © 2Feb45; MP15649.

46. © 6Feb45; MP15742.

47. © 9Feb45; MP15743.

48. © 13Feb45; MP15744.

49. © 16Feb45; MP15745.

50. © 20Feb45; MP15761.

51. © 23Feb45; MP15762.

52. © 27Feb45; MP15763.

53. © 2Mar45; MP15764.

54. © 6Mar45; MP15765.

55. © 9Mar45; MP15766.

56. © 13Mar45; MP15791.

57. © 16Mar45; MP15792.

58. © 20Mar45; MP15868.

59. © 23Mar45; MP15869.

60. © 27Mar45; MP15870.

61. © 30Mar45; MP15871.

62. © 3Apr45; MP15892.

63. © 6Apr45; MP15914.

64. © 10Apr45; MP15915.

65. © 13Apr45; MP15916.

66. © 17Apr45; MP15917.

67. © 20Apr45; MP15962.

68. © 24Apr45; MP15963.

69. © 27Apr45; MP15964.

70. © 1May45; MP15965.

71. © 4May45; MP16000.

72. © 8May45; MP16001.

73. © 11May45; MP16002.

74. © 15May45; MP16003.

75. © 18May45; MP16031.

76. © 21May45; MP16032.

77. © 25May45; MP16053.

78. © 29May45; MP16054.

79. © 1Jun45; MP16055.

80. © 5Jun45; MP16109.

81. © 8Jun45; MP16110.

82. © 12Jun45; MP16111.

83. © 15Jun45; MP16112.

84. © 19Jun45; MP16184.

85. © 22Jun45; MP16185.

86. © 26Jun45; MP16156.

87. © 29Jun45; MP16157.

88. © 3Jul45; MP16158.

89. © 6Jul45; MP16186.

90. © 10Jul45; MP16187.

91. © 13Jul45; MP16192.

92. © 17Jul45; MP16193.

93. © 20Jul45; MP16194.

94. © 24Jul45; MP16195.

95. © 27Jul45; MP16218.

96. © 31Jul45; MP16219.

97. © 3Aug45; MP16220.

98. © 7Aug45; MP16221.

99. © 10Aug45; MP16235.

100. © 14Aug45; MP16236.

101. © 17Aug45; MP16288.

102. © 21Aug45; MP16289.

103. © 24Aug45; MP16290.

104. © 28Aug45; MP16296.

Volume 28, 1945/46.

1. © 31Aug45; MP16371.

2. © 4Sep45; MP16372.

3. © 7Sep45; MP16373.

4. © 11Sep45; MP16403.

5. © 14Sep45; MP16404.

6. © 18Sep45; MP16405.

7. © 21Sep45; MP16408.

8. © 25Sep45; MP16409.

9. © 28Sep45; MP16467.

10. © 2Oct45; MP16468.

11. © 5Oct45; MP16480.

12. © 9Oct45; MP16481.

13. © 12Oct45; MP16482.

14. © 16Oct45; MP16483.

15. © 19Oct45; MP16527.

16. © 23Oct45; MP16528.

17. © 26Oct45; MP16529.

18. © 30Oct45; MP16530.

19. © 2Nov45; MP16546.

20. © 6Nov45; MP16547.

21. © 9Nov45; MP16548.

22. © 13Nov45; MP16579.

23. © 16Nov45; MP16580.

24. © 20Nov45; MP16581.

25. © 23Nov45; MP16596.

26. Nov. 27, 1945. Admiral Halsey says good-by to 3rd Fleet. Reports from Germany: refugees on the move; super generals in prison. News of the nation: new military plane tested [P–28 Twin Mustang]; flat-tops bring GI's home. Family of 10 treks cross country for reunion with veteran. The nation gets into its holiday spirit: New York [and] Hollywood. Football highlights: Indiana-Purdue; Southern California, Oregon State; Pennsylvania-Cornell.

© 27Nov45; MP24.

27. Nov. 30, 1945. Nuremberg trial of Nazi war criminals. Hirohito reports to his ancestors, "So sorry, please." Popular actor Tyrone Power back from war. Huge Tinker Field dedicated in honor of Midway hero. One hundred and five thousand fans see Melbourne Cup race classic. Lew Lehr shows how not to wrap Christmas packages.

© 30Nov45; MP25.

28. Dec. 4, 1945. Senate committee hears General Groves on atomic bomb. Season's worst storm lashes New England. Churchill receives mighty ovation on visit to Belgium. Three happy sisters celebrate triple golden wedding. Alabama swamps Mississippi State by 55 to 13 score. Southern California beats U.C.L.A. to gain Rose Bowl bid. Army-Navy football classic.

© 4Dec45; MP26.

29. Dec. 7, 1945. The Nuremberg trial. Remains of Farben munitions plant in Germany razed. Movie industry honored for war work. Unusual pictures of rescue at sea by helicopter. Champions of health [National 4–H Club]. National campaign opens for largest U. S. cancer center. Sports: basketball—Fort Wayne Zollners—Collegiate All-stars; bowling—Roxyettes.

© 7Dec45; MP27.

30. Dec. 12, 1945. Four billion dollar loan to Britain signed at Capital. General Eisenhower takes office as Chief of Staff. U. S. Catholics open food drive to help war-needy people. Nisei hero honored posthumously by General Stillwell. Heel and toe artists pace to a record. Wild finish marks championship high school football.

© 12Dec45; MP28.

31. Dec. 14, 1945. World events: Nazi U-boats in last dive; Yanks destroy Jap cyclotrons; Hirohito opens Jap Diet; sale of Nazi junk in London. Names in the news: Secretary Byrnes, ex-Secretary Morgenthau, Miguel Aleman, Admiral Halsey. Sports: Australian tennis; Whirlaway a proud papa. Jittery jive in Australia.

© 14Dec45; MP63.

32. Dec. 18, 1945. Names in the news: Admiral King, Admiral Nimitz, General Marshall, Admiral Halsey. Rescue ship saves homecoming vets stranded at sea. Movie executives pledge support to March of Dimes. Jap repatriates say a reluctant good-bye to China. Aviation progress: powered glider, pilotless plane, the Bat plane. Cleveland wins pro grid title in Ice Bowl classic.

© 18Dec45; MP64.

33. Dec. 20, 1945. News of the nation: Wasp [carrier] brings GI's home; fatal train wreck; President honors heroes. Here's Canada's idea for solving home shortage—aluminum. Volcano erupts in New Zealand. Stone age football. Sports: skiing in high Cascades; canoe racing in Cambodia; atom weight championship.

© 20Dec45; MP73.

34. Dec. 21, 1945. 1945 year of victory, newsreel review of greatest news year in history: Allied invasions; Yalta Conference; death of F.D.R., Truman becomes President; Iwo Jima; MacArthur [returns to Philippines]; Eisenhower in London, Paris and U. S.; Atlee succeeds Churchill; end of conflict [Japan's surrender]; San Francisco, United Nations Conference. In war's wake [trials of war criminals]. Most spectacular pictures in 1945 [B–25 hits Empire State Building; British demonstrate V–2 rocket bomb; American and British ships explode]. Cutest story of the year [GI's adopt Chinese waif]. Best newsreel laughs of 1945 [Mrs. Truman christens a bomber; Mayor LaGuardia reads funnies over the radio].

© 21Dec45; MP121.

35. Dec. 26, 1945. President Truman delivers a holiday message to nation. General Patton dies of injuries in auto accident. General Yamashita sentenced to hang in Manila trial. Hollywood spotlight [premiere of "Leave Her to Heaven"]. Summer season sports start in Australia. Children of many countries give you season's greetings.

© 26Dec45; MP122.

36. Dec. 27, 1945. Pope Pius names four Americans to be cardinals. [Archbishops Spellman, Stritch, Mooney, and Glennon]. Sports highlights of 1945.

© 27Dec45; MP123.

37. Jan. 3, 1946. President Truman appeals to public on reconversion. World events: Byrnes home from Moscow; Patton laid to rest; seven saved in mine disaster; bomb in Croydon removed; LaGuardia leaves office, Halsey serenaded by admirals in New York club frolic. Pasadena Parade of Roses led by Admiral Halsey. Lew Lehr hails the New Year. Mummers have their day of fun in Philadelphia. Football thrills from nation's Bowl games: Rose Bowl, Cotton Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Orange Bowl.

© 3Jan46; MP142.

38. Jan. 8, 1946. World events: General Marshall in China; General Homma on trial; U. S. troops in Tokyo. Veteran and wife find rooms with Governor of Ohio. 'Teen age bathing girls now get in the Florida swim; Sports: Blanchard wins trophy; motorcycle racing in Vienna; train to skiers' heaven; bobsledding.

© 8Jan46; MP143.

39. Jan. 11, 1946. General Marshall mediates end of China's civil war. General Arnold awarded medal by President Truman. Mrs. Truman opens March of Dimes drive at Capital. Terrific fire razes Army warehouse in Yokohama. Chief of nation's war bond drives honored in New York. Our Australian reporter falls for wild rodeo. Sports: golf, skiing, boxing.

© 11Jan46; MP152.

40. Jan. 15, 1946. New York hails 82nd Airborne Division in victory march. News flashes: Eisenhower in Canada; helicopter sets records; British planes sink U-boats. Winston Churchill arrives in U. S. for a "quiet" vacation. General Doolittle dedicates airport at New Orleans. Fireman, save my chee-ild! In Texas, girls go to rescue! Sports: auto racing, water ski thrill.

© 15Jan46; MP153.

41. Jan. 18, 1946. UNO, mankind's hope for peace, opens in London. Eisenhower replies to GI demand "We want to go home." Admiral Kimmel gives his version of Pearl Harbor. Death sentence for GI [Joseph Hicswa] in Japan stirs nation. General Herbert is honored for war services. Sports: Miami [ten thousand dollar fishing tourney]; New York [Silver Skates carnival].

© 18Jan46; MP183.

42. Jan. 22, 1946. Steel strike hits the nation, causes industrial crisis. Stassen urges all Americans to build world brotherhood. Dramatic scenes of rescue by air in Burma jungle. President Truman and selective service officials honored. Churchill starts Miami vacation with "10 word" interview. Movietone visits turf champions Down Under [Australia].

© 22Jan46; MP184.

43. Jan. 25, 1946. Byrnes pledges U. S. will work for the success of UNO. General Marshall arranges signing of peace in China. News of the nation: mighty battleships for atom bomb test; General Short testifies at Pearl Harbor inquiry; General Wainwright takes new command; first land based plane for U. S. Navy patrol; hero chaplain [Father O'Callahan] honored by President Truman. March of Dimes fashion show. Ski jumping stars "bite the snow" at Cary, Illinois, meet. Cute Florida Kiddies don't "walk in the sun"—they fly!

© 25Jan46; MP210.

44. Jan. 29, 1946. Film reports of news events; meat crisis averted as U. S. runs plants; UNO delegates hear soldier's viewpoint; graveyard of German Navy in Kiel Harbor; mighty carrier "FDR" on shakedown Cruise; Homma of Bataan on trial in Manila for Jap atrocity. War's wake brings tragedy of internal strife to Indo-China. Mass enrollment of veterans into American Legion. British wives of GI's sail for America to join hubbies. Sports: sled dog race, water show for GI's, class for mermaids.

© 29Jan46; MP211.

45. Feb. 1, 1946. Problem of atomic energy given to UNO commission. Army scientists reach the moon with radar. Gouin becomes French President; picks his Cabinet. President Truman leads March of Dimes tribute to F.D.R. Personalities in the news: John L. Lewis, General Donovan; Gene Tierney. Summer sports in Australia.

© 1Feb46; MP212.

46. Feb. 5, 1946. World events: transport plane sets record [giant T.W.A. Constellation]; Churchill goes visiting; 21 killed in plane crash; Chinese Army off to Manchuria; British wives of GI's come to U. S. Meet Smoky, hero dog who saved master from drowning. Fashions for skiing. Florida stages biggest show of Brahman cattle. Sports: speed skating, snowshoe racing, Millrose games.

© 5Feb46; MP213.

47. Feb. 8, 1946. Foreign affairs: Korea, Brazil, Palestine, Egypt. General Witsell sworn in as Army Adjutant General. Cute Badgett quads of Texas cut cake for seventh birthday. News of film stars [Tyrone Power and Annabella]. Sports: table tennis, gliding thrills, aquabelles.

© 8Feb46; MP214.

48. Feb. 11, 1946. Japanese shipped home from China—minus glory. Army demonstrates mechanical "snake" to clear land mines. Florida underwater sponge fishermen reap rich harvest. Paris looks gay again—night life is in full swing. Film stars honored for outstanding performances [Peggy Ann Garner and Ingrid Bergman]. Water sports in Australia.

© 11Feb46; MP268.

49. Feb. 15, 1946. Cardinals-elect fly to Rome for elevation by Pope. U. S. justices make plea for American brotherhood drive. Something new in automobiles—the "Bobbi Kar." Philadelphia pays hero's tribute to Admiral Nimitz. Flash! Queen of Chicago lens aces wins by photo flash! Sports: basketball upset [New York University-Notre Dame]; horse racing on ice; championship dog show.

© 15Feb46; MP269.

50. Feb. 19, 1946. Steel strike settled. Chester Bowles asks public help against inflation. New cardinals visit Eire and France on way to Rome. Dionne Quintuplets quite grown up at Canadian carnival. Hollywood stars help inaugurate new air service. Native town gives African GI big welcome home. Sports: baseball, keeping fit, sand-sailing, ski meet.

© 19Feb46; MP270.

51. Feb. 21, 1946. Canadian expedition "invades" Arctic in Army maneuver. New cardinals meet in Rome for rites of elevation. News flashes: banquet for UNO members; U. S. UNO delegates return; woman of the year [Dr. Lise Meitner]; Greek war heroes in New York; new passenger giant [Douglas DC–6], Sports: fistic fireworks, bobsled racing, diving high jinks.

© 21Feb46; MP288.

52. Feb. 26, 1946. Pope creates 32 cardinals. Texas holds gala centennial celebration. Thousands parade in St. Paul Victory Carnival Festival.

© 26Feb46; MP289.

53. Mar. 1, 1946. Personalities in the news: Chiang Kai-Shek hailed in Shanghai; Mrs. Roosevelt confers with President Truman; Winston Churchill receives degree in Miami. Looking for a house? Here's a machine that pours 'em! Fashions. Life can be crazy in balmy Florida—gin rummy helps. Sports: roller skating, wrestling.

© 1Mar46; MP327.

54. Mar. 5, 1946. Hirohito startles his subjects; goes democratic on tour. News of the nation: Truman food committee; houses for veterans. President Truman asks your support for the Red Cross. Brilliant fireworks display provided by surplus ammunition. Sports: baseball training, ski jumping. Carnival on ice in St. Paul. Versatile bears perform, starring Rosie, "the Verce."

© 5Mar46; MP328.

55. Mar. 8. 1946. Churchill urges U. S.-British ties for world peace. Truman addresses Council of Churches on trip to Columbus. U. S. cardinals welcomed back from Rome. Snowbound deer saved from starving. Sports: boxing, ski jumping. Baseball news [Training of Washington, Detroit and Chicago].

© 8Mar46; MP347.

56. Mar. 12, 1946. Preparations made for A-bomb tests off Bikini atoll. President Truman says British loan is good business. Empress of Japan follows Hirohito's democratic ways. Hollywood spotlight [Oscars for 1945 film bests]. Introducing a seven-year-old prodigy of boogie-woogie. Texas fete brings out new crop of chin whiskers. Sports: Santa Anita, Florida, Canada. Baseball news.

© 12Mar46; MP348.

57. Mar. 15, 1946. Manchurian city [Mukden] during crisis of Red occupation. General Motors strike settled after 113 days. A Pacific island is born, erupting out of the sea. Holiday carnivals recapture gaiety of peacetime. Ravaging cougars captured alive in mountain hunt. Spring fashions. Sports from Down Under [Australia]. Baseball news.

© 15Mar46; MP401.

58. Mar. 19, 1946. Peron elected President of Argentina. Churchill in New York again calls for U. S.-British ties. Cardinal Glennon goes to his final resting place. UNRRA food for hungry of Europe; cattle for Greece; Italian children fed. Surplus Army guns stored in plastic "spider webs." Wearers of green march their best on St. Patrick's Day. Sport flashes: bowling, billiards, baseball.

© 19Mar46; MP402.

59. Mar. 22, 1946. Prime Minister King of Canada accuses Reds in spy case. Flashes of action: new Navy Mars seaplane goes into Pacific service; Alpine snow avalanche buries French village; surplus gunpowder destroyed by U. S. Army; obsolete bombs exploded. Personalities in world events: Trygve Lie in U. S. for UNO meeting; General Smith new Ambassador to Russia; Leon Blum on a special mission for France; Winston Churchill ends visit to U. S. Sports: steeplechase; basketball.

© 22Mar46; MP450.

60. Mar. 26, 1946. UNO meets in New York. Truman outlines program in talk to Democrats. Operation Frostbite [USS Midway in Arctic waters to test flying equipment in icy weather]. Most sensational murder trial in French history [Dr. Marcel Petiot]. Names in the news: Herbert Hoover, Princess Elizabeth, film stars honored for war services [Linda Darnell and Charles Boyer]. When spring comes to Chicago, look what happens.

© 26Mar46; MP451.

61. Mar. 29, 1946. Crisis in UNO; Soviet delegate walks out over Iran question. Oklahoma A. & M. wins basketball title in New York classic.

© 29Mar46; MP452.

62. Apr. 2, 1946. World battle for freedom from want: Stassen urges aid to Europe; La Guardia heads UNRRA. Russian officer arrested by FBI on spy charges. News flashes: new British air giant [Tudor II]; spectacular fire in Canada. Navy reveals biggest aircraft rocket "Tiny Tim." Milwaukee makes plans for 1948 centennial. Will Rogers, Jr. rides father's horse at rodeo. Meet young Raymond, a strong man at four months of age. Water sports: yacht race, sea cowboys. New York State income tax.

© 2Apr46; MP453.

63. Apr. 5, 1946. United Nations Council vote ends on Iran question. Tidal waves caused by undersea quakes wreak vast havoc. Erupting volcano in Japan threatens to wipe out towns. Goering testifies on Nazi killings at Nuremberg trial. New rocket soars 43–1/2 miles in stratosphere. Water sports: Gulf of Mexico; Cypress Gardens.

© 5Apr46; MP504.

64. Apr. 9, 1946. Truman explains foreign policy in Army Day speech. World events: Chinese troops enter Mukden; Rumania celebrates Red Army Day. News of the nation: UN delegates look for new home; Arizona graveyard for U. S. war planes. Patton Hall dedicated at Fort Riley. Spring hat fashions. Four hundred thousand see British Grand National Steeplechase. Herman Keiser's 282 wins Masters' Golf [Tournament] in Augusta classic.

© 9Apr46; MP505.

65. Apr. 12, 1946. League of Nations in final assembly; UN carries on. U. S. Navy destroys captured Jap subs in target practice. Canadian gold rush creates Klondike at Yellowknife. News of the nation; St. Louis, convention of American Theaters Association; Annapolis, Middies of U. S. Naval Academy march in review. Fashions for a rainy day. In the animal world [tame deer and spaniel family]. Daring surf riders and summer sports season in Australia.

© 12Apr46; MP520.

66. Apr. 16, 1946. Roosevelt home is dedicated as national shrine. Germany today: cotton from America; steel mills open; black market roundup. Names in the news: Canada greets new Governor General, Viscount Alexander of Tunis; Cardinal Gilroy hailed at Sydney. Aviation news [Navy puts pontoons on seagoing blimp]. Ladies, how would you like to have this man in your home? Sports: skiing, boxing.

© 16Apr46; MP521.

67. Apr, 19, 1946, MacArthur urges United Nations to renounce war. Imperial family of Japan poses for newsreels. Trouble in Trieste creates another crisis in Europe. Eight-year-old victim emphasizes need for cancer fund. GI families sail for Europe to join hubbies. Looking for a car? How about these ritzy models? Baseball season opens.

© 19Apr46; MP549.

68. Apr. 23, 1946. Elections in Japan the democratic way under MacArthur. Appeal to America to save starving millions abroad. "Big Mo" visits Greece on good will cruise in Mediterranean. Spectacular fires in the East cause heavy damage. General Eisenhower visits birthplace on trip to Texas. Greek runner here seeking U. S. aid wins Boston marathon. Peacetime Easter brings out throngs and holiday finery.

© 23Apr46; MP550.

69. Apr. 26, 1946. President Truman sees spectacular fleet maneuvers. Action flashes in the news of aviation: airliner crashes into house in North Hollywood; airborne lifeboat; balloonists thrill Paris; personalities out of the past: "General" Coxey of Coxey's army in 1894; Jim Jeffries, heavyweight title winner in 1899. Australian cowboys take rodeo spills like U. S. brothers. Hollywood spotlight [fashions]. Story of the three little bears in big debut at the zoo.

© 26Apr46, MP570.

70. Apr. 30, 1946. Big Four meeting in Paris to map peace treaties. Worst train wreck in recent history takes many lives. News flashes: Presidential vacation cruise; giant Flying Wing bomber [Northrop XB–35]; Navy Operation Mothballs [500 inactive warships sprayed and painted]. Religion [68 priests ordained in Paris], LaGuardia appeals to wheat farmers to help feed world. Sports: French auto race; Penn Relays.

© 30Apr46; MP571.

71. May 3, 1946. Captured pictures show how Nazi V–2 rocket was born. News flashes here and abroad: explosion wrecks warship [USS Solar unloading ammunition off New Jersey]; sunken Jap silver salvaged; gifts from Tibet; tribute to India's Army. Names in the news: Admiral Hewitt decorated in Italy; Somerset Maugham presents novel to Library of Congress. New York slum area razed for world's biggest housing project. Blessed events are no novelty in this family of 17 children. Sports: French bicycle race, soccer in England.

© 3May46; MP597.

72. May 7, 1946. Alcatraz convicts foiled in prison break attempt. American Mother of 1946 is first Negro so honored. Apple-blossom time festivals. Dignified citizens of Penguin Island settle a problem. Louis and Conn sign for heavyweight title bout. The Kentucky Derby [Assault wins].

© 7May46; MP598.

73. May 10, 1946. World events: Russia, Switzerland, France, Japan. American wheat for the hungry world. News flashes: Coal mine fire in Australia; policewomen for Tokyo; new propeller for ships. Spring brings out animals in pups—they wanna fight.

© 10May46; MP665.

74. May 14, 1946. V–2 rocket soars 75 miles up in U. S. Army test. Truman warns: The world cannot survive an atomic war. Tojo and 27 Japs on trial in Tokyo for war crimes. Raids on Shanghai black market in GI goods. World's largest dam [Grand Coulee, in Washington] is a highway for grazing sheep. Sports: college rowing regatta, Assault wins Preakness.

© 14May46; MP666.

75. May 17, 1946. Hoover reports to President on world famine. Foreign events: De Gaulle pays homage at Clemenceau's grave; Churchill receives ovation on visit to Holland. Movie industry collection fund for Red Cross [in Washington, D. C. and Hollywood, California]. Action flashes in the news: Nazi poison gas dumped into ocean; iceberg patrol in the Atlantic; fountains of Versailles. Sports: tennis, bike race, trotting.

© 17May46; MP667.

76. May 21, 1946. Army plane crashes into Wall Street skyscraper in fog. Secretary Byrnes reports failure of Paris parley. Foreign affairs; Humbert II is the new King of Italy; Allies mark VE-Day in Berlin; Churchill tours Holland. European refugees of war seek new life in America. Carnival time in Holland, Michigan. Gold miner hits one hundred thousand dollar jackpot in small bills. Ship-shape Florida beauties hold sail regatta over sand.

© 21May46; MP668.

77. May 24, 1946. Operation Crossroads: U. S. Army and Navy ready for atomic bomb test at Bikini. Strike paralyzes railroad traffic throughout nation. Eisenhower visits China and Japan in tour of Far East. Evangeline Booth is honored for her service to humanity.

© 24May46; MP669.

78. May 28, 1946. President Truman takes firm action to end rail strike. Coal strike again imperils nation as truce ends. President Truman keeps date with wounded vets. San Antonio battles polio peril with barrage of DDT. Louis and Conn train for heavyweight title fight.

© 28May46; MP670.

79. May 31, 1946. Coal strike settled. News of the nation: floods hit Eastern states; U. S. grants loan to France; 8th fleet ends maneuvers; homecoming from Guam. Names in the news: Sergeant Martin Maher leaves West Point after fifty years; Booker T. Washington honored as educator; Henry Ford, fifty years an auto maker. Inflation in Paris. Baseball news. Mr. and Mrs. George N. Davis, with 20 children go in for family life in a big way here.

© 31May46; MP695.

80. June 4, 1946. General Eisenhower has message for U. S. on D-day anniversary. Foreign events: Rome demonstrations; justice in Prague. News of the nation: Margaret Truman graduated; New York police outing for kids; floods rage in Pennsylvania; hospitality for UN. Cameragraphs [of Choco Indian tribe]. Sports: horse racing.

© 4Jun46; MP710.

81. June 7, 1946. Names in the news: Fred M. Vinson as new Chief Justice and John W. Snyder as new Secretary of the Treasury. Fifty-eight dead, hundreds injured in tragic Chicago hotel fire. News flashes from abroad: new Jap cabinet; Rome gives thanks. Graduation day at West Point and Annapolis. Personalities: General H. H. Arnold retires as Army Air Forces commander. Ancient gas buggies chug again in auto jubilee at Detroit. Crowds see display of winning form at Devon horse show. Peace, it's wonderful! Lucky sweepstakes winners are back.

© 7Jun46; MP850.

82. June 11, 1946. Britain celebrates Victory Day with mammoth parade. U. S. Army recovers stolen German crown jewels. General Chiang Kai-Shek moves government back to Nanking. Forty thousand men attend Holy Name salute to war veterans. Floating dormitory solves vet problem at Marietta College. Millions of roses used in Portland's festival parade. Aviation news: airborne tactics; push button plane; ejector seat. Crowd of 150,000 sees 50–1 shot win the English Derby.

© 11Jun46; MP851.

83. June 14, 1946. On trial for murder: Nazis face justice for massacre of U. S. war prisoners in Battle of the Bulge. News flashes of action: new Navy rocket devices; oil refinery fire in Indiana. Operation Crossroads. Old Jap industry of pearl culture back in operation. Silly seals swim with or without water in pool. Animals and men tangle in wildest of jumpin' rodeos at Livermore, California.

© 14Jun46; MP852.

84. June 18, 1946. World events: atomic bomb control plan; Paris meeting of Big Four; inauguration of Peron [at Buenos Aires]. Aviation [moving the world's greatest airplane]. Fashions for summer. Mangrum captures U. S. open golf title in three-way play-off. Lew Lehr launches some big splashes in diving meet.

© 18Jun46; MP853.

85. June 21, 1946. Soviet offers own atom-bomb plan, upholding veto. News flashes: tornado hits U. S. and Canada; couple faces gem theft trial; Monarchists riot in Rome; Republicans hail new regime. Movie news: Hollywood stars attend premiere of "Smoky." Sports: tennis, boxing. Miss Atlantic City [Betty Jones] chosen in beauty pageant preview.

© 21Jun46; MP863.

86. June 26, 1946. Vinson sworn in as nation's thirteenth Chief Justice. Foreign affairs: France, Austria, India, Mexico. "Flying stovepipe" reaches speed of 1,500 miles an hour. Cambridge church services recall colonial days. Fashions for the beach. Sports: rowing regatta, sheep dog trials, college track meet, St. Louis zoo chimps stage a real Wild West riding show.

© 26Jun46; MP864.

67. June 28, 1946. Gromyko's three vetoes mark UN session on Spanish issue. News of the nation: fire razes [New York] ferry terminal; John W. Snyder sworn in as Secretary of the Treasury. Flying Wing's first flight. Starvation stalks tragic Chinese in civil war. Film flashes from abroad: France, Belgium, Japan. Entire Gloucester fishing fleet is blessed in port. Doggy St. Bernards fly to compete in show of champions. Couple starts life of ups and downs on merry-go-round.

© 28Jun46; MP865.

88. July 2, 1946. Zero hour at Bikini. President Truman explains his veto of the OPA bill. Des Moines thrilled by colorful Iowa centennial parade. Sports: yacht race, women's golf.

© 2Jul46; MP881.

89. July 3, 1946. News reports here and abroad: V–2 rocket test on New Mexican desert; [500 Japanese American troops] return from war; reunion in Japan. UNRRA brings food to the starving people of China. Plucky girl swims 15 miles to safety in yachting tragedy. Sports: turf thriller, royal horse show. Here's how they beat the heat in Chicago—how're you doing?

© 3Jul46; MP882.

90. July 9, 1946. Operation Crossroads: fourth atomic bomb exploded at Bikini in awesome test; bomb away; effects of the blast.

© 9Jul46; MP883.

91. July 12, 1946. Mother Cabrini is canonized as first U. S. saint. News reports from abroad: India, China. Fashions in hats. Huge throngs hail gala premiere of "Centennial Summer." Sports: tennis, golf, horseracing, baseball.

© 12Jul46; MP911.

92. July 16, 1946. A nation is born: Philippines receive independence from U. S.—a pledge kept. Foreign affairs: Secretary Byrnes home; loan to Britain signed; turmoil in Trieste. Paris is back to normal in many ways. Thrills and spills in the world of sports.

© 16Jul46; MP1011.

93. July 19, 1946. Secretary Byrnes reports on Paris peace parleys. Siam stunned by the mysterious death of its young King. Film flashes from Europe. Postmaster General's daughter christens destroyer in Maine. French cycle fans get around in the "cwaziest" ways. Sports.

© 19Jul46; MP1012.

94. July 23, 1946. News flashes: war heroes honored; gas explosion at Onset, Massachusetts; the Phantom, Navy's jet fighter plane. U. S. helps fight food famine. Movie news—"Centennial Summer." Fashions in hats. Lew Lehr goes a-visiting in his world of pets. Sports: bathing beauties, boxing in Bangkok, Diaper Derby.

© 23Jul46; MP1013.

95. July 26, 1946. Mme. Sun Yat-Sen stirs storm in China politics. News flashes: housing shortage; Hollywood honors stars of "Anna and the King of Siam"; air routes of the post-war world. Children's fashions. Shriners parade 15,000 strong in San Francisco. Sports: Atlantic City race track; gliding; Wacs go fishing in Gulf of Mexico. Lew Lehr and other chimps pose for Paris sculptor.

© 26Jul46; MP1015.

96. July 30, 1946. Terrorists bomb Jerusalem hotel in Palestine crisis. News of the nation: Paris Peace Conference; revival of OPA. Bernard Shaw, now ninety, grants typical Shavian interview. Lew Lehr referees the battle of the bathing beauties. Sports: national open water ski championships; All-American golf tournament.

© 30Jul46; MP1016.

97. Aug. 2, 1946. Paris Conference meets for signing of peace treaties. News events from abroad: pageant in Moscow; curfew in Jerusalem; evacuation of Germans. Film flashes: Cesar Romero and Tyrone Power attend aviation show; Tom Cummisky crowns Potato Queen. Ferry-boat disaster in Missouri. Children of Vienna find "real" drama in Punch and Judy. Hare and hounds chase is thrilling sport in Australia.

© 2Aug46; MP1017.

98. Aug. 6, 1946. The amazing spectacle at Bikini: remarkable films of man's fifth atomic bomb exploding in underwater test.

© 6Aug46; MP1018.

99. Aug. 9, 1946. First look inside the home of the atomic bomb. Political sidelights: Truman's vote; Slaughter is defeated; GI's win in Athens, Tennessee. News flashes: earthquake in West Indies; gambling ship off California coast; weed killer (2, 4–D) in Canadian wheat field. Parents see double in this family of four sets of twins. Sports: sailboat regatta, bullfighting.

© 9Aug46; MP1020.

100. Aug. 13, 1946. Film reports from abroad: Palestine—[riots in] Tel Aviv; Brazil [visited by] General Eisenhower; Germany—U-boat pens; Manila—clearing Philippine Harbor; Antwerp, Belgium—300th anniversary of Peter Paul Rubens. News of the nation: Washington—Truman signs terminal leave bill; Moses Lake—[tons of] mashed potatoes crushed by steam roller; Hollywood premiere of "Anna and the King of Siam"; Wildwood—baby parade. The Hambletonian trotting classic won by favorite. Folks, you must meet Herman the monkey, an all-around star.

© 13Aug46; MP1021.

101. Aug. 16, 1946. U. S. British ship dispute 4–1/2 million dollar prize of the sea. World affairs: Paris; Palestine. Aviation [U. S. Army tests XB–36]. President Truman goes for a walk—and he is brisk. Sports: 20–mile aquaplane race; form shows in this contest; motorboat regatta.

© 16Aug46; MP1068.

102. Aug. 20, 1946. Jewish extremists sentenced; Haifa scene of tension. Italians, Yugoslavs in conflict over treaty for Italy: Paris, Moscow, Italy. News flashes: President on vacation; Churchill as Lord Warden; Miss Texas of 1946 chosen. Lew Lehr discovers pigs can swim—he's going in for a dip. Sports: speedboat championship; helicopter to judge racing; Soap-box Derby bicycle championships.

© 20Aug46; MP1069.

103. Aug. 23, 1946. Admiral Blandy reports on Bikini atom tests. News flashes: Admiral Halsey in Chile; sports model sea plane; glacier mountain climbing. Ocean-flying models display fashions over Atlantic. Mama lion in Paris zoo shows off her new babies. Sports: baseball, billiards, swim meet.

© 23Aug46; MP1080.

104. Aug. 27, 1946. Yugoslav crisis eased by release of American fliers. Prosecutors sum up against Nazi gang at Nuremberg. Personalities in the news: President Truman takes a swim; Aga Khan weighed in diamonds; Pope Pius goes for a rest. Alpine thrills: school for mountain guides; air exploit in the Alps. Sports: football, diving.

© 27Aug46; MP1081.

Volume 29, 1946/47.

1. Aug. 30, 1946. Refugees barred from Palestine land at Cyprus. UN Security Council opens new session; U. S.—Soviet clash. Personalities in world news: King George of Greece awaits call to return; Monty of "Alamein" on visit to Canada; President Truman fishes, has no luck. Cameragraphs [thrills of whaling filmed off the Chilean coast]. Sports: tennis, football. Youngest set has its day: cutest threesomes; 1946 baby champion.

© 30Aug46; MP1098.

2. Sept. 3, 1946. Halsey speaks out on the freedom of the seas. Army demonstrates "ejection seat" for saving pilot's lives. News flashes: Nisei heroes home; ocean wanders. Hollywood fashions. Sports: rodeo, golf, hunt. Canadian girls go streamline.

© 3Sep46; MP1099.

3. Sept. 6, 1946. Trouble spots of the world. Yugoslavia, Greece, the Mediterranean, Palestine. Eisenhower speaks to the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Thrilled thousands watch national air races at Cleveland. Sports: auto racing, ice skating. Jitterbug frolic at Harvest Moon Ball in New York.

© 6Sep46; MP1119.

4. Sept. 10, 1946. Secretary Byrnes makes declaration of U. S. policy on Germany. Constant conflict marks deportation of Jews to Cyprus. Seaports of entire nation tied up by shipping strike. Two-year-old baby is sole survivor of airliner tragedy. Sports: tennis, polo. California girl wins crown of Miss America.

© 10Sep46; MP1120.

5. Sept. 13, 1946. London Conference seeks solution for Palestine problem. Monty of Alamein welcomed here on first visit to U. S. Religion: Lourdes pilgrimage. Aviation [safety harness tested]. Fashions for Brazil. Hint for hot-heads: man takes air trip in cake of ice. Sports: model plane meet, boomerang throwers.

© 13Sep46; MP1146.

6. Sept. 17, 1946, News reports from Europe: Reception at Versailles; Nazi gang in last plea; more trouble in Trieste; destroying Siegfried Line. Film flashes: giant C–54 catches fire, modernistic baptism. Sports: rodeo spills; Salmon Derby; water baby [three year-old David Hughes].

© 17Sep46; MP1202.

7. Sept. 20, 1946. Secretary Wallace sees President and says "no more speeches." Action flashes of world news: aftermath at Bikini; "squatters" in London; P–84 flies 611 m.p.h.; 1–1/2 million dollar [Australian] wool blaze. Movie stars make goodwill air tour of Latin America. Lehr finds new fishing angle. Spills and thrills at horse jumping meet in Australia.

© 20Sep46; MP1203.

8. Sept. 24, 1946. Heroic rescue of 18 from plane crash in Newfoundland. President Truman fires Wallace from Cabinet. Personalities in the news: Marshall Montgomery, General Clark, Archbishop of Canterbury. Berlin rebuilds slowly from ruins of war. Celebrations honor American history at Hartford, Connecticut. All-golden horses vie in spectacular show in Missouri. Football is here; West Point, Pittsburgh, Baltimore.

© 24Sep46; MP1204.

9. Sept. 27, 1946. America buries five fliers shot down over Yugoslavia. Religion: Pope Pius XII blesses Italian Boy Scouts; Catholics attend Holy Hour in Chicago. Foreign events: China teems [with activity]; reclaiming flooded lands. Greece prepares [for return of King]. Canadian fishermen catch record haul of giant salmon. U. S. launches first flying post office to speed the mails. Sports: boat racing, rodeo thriller.

© 27Sep46; MP1219.

10. Oct. 1, 1946. Allied court finds Nazi gang guilty at Nuremberg. Stalin leads Soviet big-wigs at funeral of President Kalinin. British speed flyer killed in jet plane trying for record. Fred Allen has his say at banquet to honor Variety Club. New bathing suits are made of wood. The pigskin parade: West Point; Washington; Champaign. California voters are urged to go to polls in November.

© 1Oct46; MP1220.

11. Oct. 4, 1946. Navy plane breaks world's non-stop distance record. Greece gives King George ovation on return from exile. U. S. Navy explodes 500,000 pounds of TNT in Idaho test. Movie executive [Barney Balaban] is honored for charity work. Australian wool auction provides some wild bidding. Sports: women's amateur golf; roller-skating spectacle.

© 4Oct46; MP1221.

12. Oct. 8, 1946. Nazi leaders hear death sentences as war trial ends. Sports: the World Series. Football: New York; Los Angeles; Austin.

© 8Oct46; MP1222.

13. Oct. 11, 1946. Secretary Byrnes in Paris speaks on Stalin's "no war" statement. U. S. Army B–29 flies over top of world, Honolulu to Cairo. Names in the news: Paul H. Griffith, Chief Justice Vinson, W. Averell Harriman, Jack L. Warner, General Eisenhower. National cotton-picking contest held in Arkansas. Film flashes: farmers battle ducks; Red Cross aids Chinese. Sports: World Series; football.

© 11Oct46; MP1280.

14. Oct. 15, 1946. President Truman lifts controls on meat prices. News reports from abroad: SS Queen Elizabeth; demonstration in Trieste. General Stilwell, hero of Burma, dies in California. Vast throng sees colorful "Veiled Prophet" parade. Hollywood stars seek arbitration in movie strike. The pigskin parade: Ann Arbor, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Los Angeles.

© 15Oct46; MP1284.

15. Oct. 18, 1946. Peace Conference in Paris ended; Byrnes returns. Windsors in England together—first time since abdication. Record salmon run battles Canadian rapids to spawn. Navy reveals new electric catapult ["Electro-pult"] to launch planes. Meat on the table; livestock rolls to market again. Cardinals win world series.

© 18Oct46; MP1300.

16. Oct. 22, 1946. U. S. Navy reveals wartime secrets on anniversary. "Queen Elizabeth" makes first trip as luxury liner. News flashes from abroad: Greek demonstrations; General Eisenhower tries his golf in Scotland. Football highlights: Army vs. Columbia; Tennessee vs. Alabama; Texas vs. Arkansas; U.C.L.A. vs. California.

© 22Oct46; MP1301.

17. Oct. 25, 1946. President Truman opens UN General Assembly in New York. Sports: hockey season; riding the rapids; girl acrobats. Trap for baboons in zoo is big flop; they're too smart.

© 25Oct46; MP1323.

18. Oct. 29, 1946. News flashes: Navy displays [helicopter]; notables sail [on the Elizabeth]; hunting buffalo [at Elk Island, Canada]. Lounging fashions. New Zealand woman has slippery hobby—she tames eels. Football highlights: Philadelphia, Los Angeles, New York, Iowa City.

© 29Oct46; MP1324.

19. Nov. 1, 1946. U. S., Soviet debate disarmament in UN Assembly. End of maritime strike starts flow of goods. "Winnie" Churchill has laugh with 8th Army veterans. Fighting corvettes of wartime turned into luxury liners. Sports flashes: thirteen year-old Samson [Jimmy Garvin]; fishing paradise [in Australia]; motorcycle speed [in Austria].

© 1Nov46; MP1339.

20. Nov. 5, 1946. Big Four foreign ministers meet in New York. Names in the news: President Truman; U. S. movie stars [in England]; Darryl Zanuck. Aviation: antiaircraft training; planes crash [in Navy tests]. Union craftsmen display skill in St. Louis show. June Haver hailed as Rock Island's Cinderella girl. Football highlights: Baltimore, Evanston, Athens.

© 5Nov46; MP1340.

21. Nov. 8, 1946. Election landslide gives Republicans Congress control. Hindu-Moslem feud flares in violence throughout India: Nehru attacked; Ghandi in Calcutta. Palestine crisis increases with new outbreaks: terrorists bomb [Jerusalem depot]; refugees transferred. Cashier [William Arthur Nickel] arrested; faces charges in $750,000 swindle. Movie stars hailed at royal command film performance. Canadian pulp logs sent down river in record drive.

© 8Nov46; MP1356.

22. Nov. 11, 1946. Remarkable films of new V–2 rocket tests by U. S. Army. News flashes: Molotov at White House; Armistice Day ceremonies; Admiral Byrd honored; Windsors arrive in U. S.; British models visit here. Something new in autos; you can fly it or drive it. Game of the year: Army-Notre Dame football classic.

© 11Nov46; MP1357.

23. Nov. 15, 1946, President Truman asks cooperation of G.O.P. Congress. Hunt [for] crashed U. S. airman among Lolo tribes in China. King leads Britain in impressive rites on Armistice Day; British honor American pigeon for war feat. U. S. progress at sea and in the air: American queen of the seas; largest transport plane. Giant parade marks Armistice Day in Iola, Kansas. Sports: Melbourne Cup race; one hundred year-old golfer.

© 15Nov46; MP1358.

24. Nov. 19, 1946. Bombs are hurled in jurisdictional Hollywood strike. News and action film reports: Navy tests new torpedo; Japs get new constitution; Mrs. America 1946. Football Titans keep winning; Notre Dame vs. Northwestern; Army vs. Penn.

© 19Nov46; MP1412.

25. Nov. 22, 1946. V–2 rocket camera photographs earth from 65 miles up. U. S. in showdown with Lewis over soft coal strike. Along Broadway ["The Razor's Edge" premiere]. International week celebrated in New Orleans. Movietone's All-America [outstanding football players of 1946].

© 22Nov46; MP1413.

26. Nov. 26, 1946. John L. Lewis stands trial for contempt. Foreign affairs: British leave Egypt; new President of Chile. Arts and sciences: Roosevelt statue; sun eclipse; Canadian dam. Football climax: Notre Dame-Tulane; Yale-Harvard; U.C.L.A.-U.S.C.; Illinois-Northwestern.

© 26Nov46; MP1414.

27. Nov. 29, 1946. Famed Monte Cassino Abbey to be rebuilt out of ruins of war. Three more countries become members of United Nations. News flashes: drive-in bank; radio-controlled plow; sheep shearing; Santa Claus Lane; hand-painted bathing suits. Sports: Woodcock-Martin bout; fox hunt; skiing in Lapland.

© 29Nov46; MP1415.

28. Dec. 3, 1946. Rescue epic in air crash in the Alps. Once mighty Normandie's last mile. Army-Navy football. Seventy-eight thousand see Penn defeat Cornell in grid classic. Trippi runs wild as Georgia beats Georgia Tech. Notre Dame ends season unbeaten, downing U.S.C., 26–6.

© 3Dec46; MP1423.

29. Dec. 6, 1946. Byrd's Antarctic expedition leaves for South Pole. News of the nation: Washington [John L. Lewis fined]; Milwaukee [massed picketing and violence at Allis-Chalmers]; Wright Field [German scientists continue U. S. aviation experiments]; Chicago [4–H Club picks perfect specimens of American youth]; new President of Mexico [Miguel Aleman] sworn in. Spectacular plays of grid season's last big games. Sports: tennis in Australia; mystery game in mud.

© 6Dec46; MP1424.

30. Dec. 10, 1946. Atlanta hotel fire, worst in U. S. history, takes terrible toll. Soft coal strike called off by John L. Lewis. President Truman awards seven medals to hero soldier. World events: London, New York, Italy, Lebanon. Ready for Merry Christmas? So are Florida fish. Sports: a dog's life in Toledo; wrestling rough house.

© 10Dec46; MP1425.

31. © 13Dec46; MP1464.

32. © 17Dec46; MP1465.

33. © 20Dec46; MP1494.

34. © 24Dec46; MP1495.

35. © 27Dec46; MP1513.

36. © 31Dec46; MP1514.

37. © 3Jan47; MP1605.

38. © 7Jan47; MP1606.

39. © 10Jan47; MP1607.

40. © 14Jan47; MP1608.

41. © 17Jan47; MP1633.

42. © 21Jan47; MP1634.

43. © 24Jan47; MP1650.

44. © 28Jan47; MP1651.

45. © 31Jan47; MP1706.

46. © 4Feb47; MP1723.

47. © 7Feb47; MP1730.

48. © 11Feb47; MP1731.

49. © 14Feb47; MP1753.

50. © 18Feb47; MP1754.

51. © 21Feb47; MP1813.

52. © 25Feb47; MP1814.

53. © 28Feb47; MP1815.

54. © 4Mar47; MP1821.

55. © 7Mar47; MP1822.

56. © 11Mar47; MP1874.

57. © 14Mar47; MP1875.

58. © 18Mar47; MP1936.

59. © 21Mar47; MP1937.

60. © 25Mar47; MP1938.

61. © 29Mar47; MP1939.

62. © 1Apr47; MP1964.

63. © 4Apr47; MP1965.

64. © 8Apr47; MP1978.

65. © 11Apr47; MP1979.

66. © 15Apr47; MP2008.

67. © 18Apr47; MP2009.

68. © 22Apr47; MP2010.

69. © 25Apr47; MP2011.

70. © 29Apr47; MP2040.

71. © 2May47; MP2041.

72. © 6May47; MP2072.

73. © 9May47; MP2073.

74. © 13May47; MP2087.

75. © 16May47; MP2088.

76. © 20May47; MP2095.

77. © 23May47; MP2096.

78. © 27May47; MP2114.

79. © 29May47; MP2115.

80. © 3Jun47; MP2143.

81. © 6Jun47; MP2144.

82. © 10Jun47, MP2154.

83. © 13Jun47; MP2155.

84. © 17Jun47; MP2164.

85. © 20Jun47; MP2165.

86. © 24Jun47; MP2186.

87. © 27Jun47; MP2187.

88. © 1Jul47; MP2194.

89. © 3Jul47; MP2221.

90. © 8Jul47; MP2222.

91. © 11Jul47; MP2223.

92. © 15Jul47; MP2226.

93. © 18Jul47; MP2227.

94. © 22Jul47; MP2249.

95. © 25Jul47; MP2250.

96. © 29Jul47; MP2274.

97. © 1Aug47; MP2275.

98. © 5Aug47; MP2280.

99. © 8Aug47; MP2281.

100. © 12Aug47; MP2301.

101. © 15Aug47; MP2302.

102. © 19Aug47; MP2306.

103. © 22Aug47; MP2307.

104. © 26Aug47; MP2308.

Volume 30, 1947.

1. © 29Aug47; MP2321.

2. © 2Sep47; MP2343.

3. © 5Sep47; MP2344.

4. © 9Sep47; MP2350.

5. © 12Sep47, MP2351.

6. © 16Sep47; MP2357.

7. © 19Sep47; MP2358.

8. © 23Sep47; MP2387.

9. © 26Sep47; MP2388.

10. © 30Sep47; MP2389.

11. © 3Oct47; MP2404.

12. © 7Oct47; MP2405.

13. © 10Oct47; MP2409.

14. © 14Oct47; MP2410.

15. © 17Oct47; MP2462.

16. © 21Oct47; MP2463.

17. © 24Oct47; MP2464.

18. © 28Oct47; MP2465.

19. © 31Oct47; MP2466.

20. © 4Nov47; MP2520.

21. © 7Nov47; MP2521.

22. © 11Nov47; MP2522.

23. © 14Nov47; MP2523.

24. © 18Nov47; MP2524.

25. © 21Nov47, MP2525.

26. Nov. 25, 1947. The royal wedding [of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip]. Football: Yale-Harvard; Notre Dame-Tulane; USC-UCLA.

© 25Nov47; MP2595.

27. Nov. 28, 1947. New French Premier and Cabinet fight crisis of strikes. Action flashes from abroad: grasshoppers plague Australia; Vienna building razed. Aviation: largest land plane in world [XC–99] in test flight. Movie executives purge Hollywood of Communists. Film servicemen are decorated in mass ceremony [Darryl F. Zanuck, Ben Lyon, Lon McCallister, and others]. "City of Kansas City," first intra-Missouri streamliner. Sports: Yankees-Cleveland pro football; girl wrestlers.

© 28Nov47; MP2596.

28. Dec. 2, 1947. UN votes to divide Palestine into Arab and Jewish states. Washington headliners: President Truman visits the Freedom Train in Washington; Carl Gray is appointed head of Veterans' Administration; Samuel Goldwyn is honored for his war effort; Jesse Donaldson becomes the new U. S. Postmaster General; Robert Hannegan buys St. Louis baseball club. Royal newlyweds [Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip] spend honeymoon in the country. Tyrone Power ends goodwill air tour of 32,000 miles. Army-Navy football classic. Penn defeats Cornell.

© 2Dec47; MP2597.

29. Dec. 5, 1947. Troops and police fight Red strikers in French crisis. Turmoil marks UN partition of Palestine. Flashes of action: Canadian logging; army flights [in New Zealand and the southern Alps]. Livestock champions compete for prizes at Chicago show. European boxers put on exciting bout in Paris. 1947 football highlights.

© 5Dec47; MP2598.

30. Dec. 9, 1947. French crisis points East-West conflict on Marshall plan: Big Four parley in deadlock; Dulles confers in Paris; French Communists; Paris Express wrecked; U. S. Friendship Train. Tension mounts in Arab-Jewish situation. News of atomic development: Chicago [celebration at the University of Chicago of fifth atomic birthday]; Washington [announcement by Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Lilienthal]. Vacation fashions. Roman Catholic High School wins city grid championship [at Philadelphia]. Notre Dame ends season unbeaten, routing USC.

© 9Dec47; MP2599.

31. Dec. 12, 1947. News of the Nation: Truman opens Everglades National Park; Piper Cubs end world flight; counterfeit ring smashed. France pays final tribute to General Le Clerc, Holland children, even princesses, hail St. Nicholas. Sports: Johnny Lujack honored; Australian tennis [John Bromwich vs. Jim Brink; Colin Long and Billy Sidwell vs. Adrian Quist and Jim Brink]; French fencing; ice skating champ [Barbara Ann Scott].

© 12Dec47; MP2600.

32. Dec. 16, 1947. Soviet Russia takes drastic steps to combat inflation. Japanese Emperor sees atom-bombed city of Hiroshima. Names in the news: Admiral Nimitz retires; Admiral Denfeld succeeds Admiral Nimitz; $50,000 Damon Runyon Memorial Cancer Fund check; Mrs. George Skouras re-christens a Friendship food ship. Cardinal Spellman holds a Christmas party for New York foundlings. Cleveland Browns defeat football Yanks for title.

© 16Dec47; MP2601.

33. Dec. 19, 1947. Communist general strike in Rome fails amid scenes of riot. Last U. S. troops leave Italy. Congress passes bill for interim aid to Europe. A message [on food] from Alan Ladd and William Demarest. U. S. Army produces its own blizzards for arctic tests [at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey]. Girls, these mighty muscle men display perfect physiques [Joffre L'Heureaux wins title of Mr. Canada at Montreal]. Children of foreign diplomats wish you a Happy New Year.

© 19Dec47; MP2630.

34. Dec. 23, 1947. Secretary Marshall home [from London Conference] with report on parley failure. The world food situation: Jimmy Stewart pleads for food conservation; Friendship [Train] food in France; Secretary Anderson's food report. Aviation: XB–47 jet bomber [tested]. Reduce hidden taxes, urges Congressman Dingell. Fashions for skating. Olympic ski stars: Canadian Olympic ski training; skiing in Switzerland, in New Zealand.

© 23Dec47; MP2631.

35. Dec. 26, 1947. Highlights of 1947. World events: Legal end of war; the Marshall Plan; Indian independence; Palestine divided; British royalty on tour. News of the Nation: Hurricane in Florida, Louisiana and Mississippi; sea lions; Congressional committee probes war contracts. Aviation: Navy jet plane; Army jet bomber, the Flying Wing; Howard Hughes' Flying Boat. The feminine world. Lew Lehr's specialties. Disaster and spectacle: Texas City razed by explosions and fire; Vistula River ice jam; Iceland's Mt. Nekla erupts anew. Science: Bavarian observatory records sun in eclipse; V–2 rocket launched from "Midway."

© 26Dec47; MP2682.

36. Dec. 30, 1947, Heaviest snowfall in history of New York paralyzes city. Wallace will run for president on 3rd party ticket. News flashes: Philadelphia fire; Friendship Food Train in Paris [Drew Pearson is made a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor]; Navy jet fighter [Panther, on trial flight]. This is no place for men with cold feet [Iceberg Athletic Club goes into the water at Coney Island]. Chicago Cards beat Philadelphia for football title.

© 30Dec47; MP2683.

Volume 31, 1947/48.

1. Dec. 31, 1947. Sports thrills of 1947: Horse racing; auto racing; golf; baseball; football; fishing; winter sports; boxing; wrestling; water sports.

© 31Dec47; MP2684.

2. Jan. 6, 1948. First films made inside an atomic plant in Canada. Tojo takes stand in war crimes trial at Tokyo. Freaks of weather: Louisiana tornado; floods in France. Hail to 1948: [New Year's celebrations in New York and London]. Mummers in fancy dress strut their stuff despite rain [Philadelphia]. Pasadena hails its Tournament of Roses parade [General Bradley is Grand Marshal]. A message [on food] from John Garfield. Bowl football: Rose Bowl, Cotton Bowl, Orange Bowl, and Sugar Bowl.

© 6Jan48; MP2685.

3. Jan. 8, 1948. Truman reports to Congress on state of Union. Michael of Rumania forced by Reds to abdicate throne. Film reports of news events: Contraband for Palestine; Marines to Mediterranean; New York State bonus [for veterans]. Pasadena hails its Tournament of Roses Parade. Sports: Bear Mountain ski jumping; Golden Gloves boxing.

© 8Jan48; MP2694.

4. Jan. 13, 1948. Senate Committee hears Marshall urge his plan. News events from abroad: De Gaulle at St. Étienne; Haile Selassie; Jap pay telephone. Acrobatics on high mark All-American Air Show at Miami. Sports: Los Angeles Open Golf [Tournament]; [New England] Sled Dog race; college ski meet [at Sun Valley, Idaho]; junior ski school [at Dartmouth College].

© 13Jan48; MP2695.

5. Jan. 16, 1948. U. S. Senate probes market trading by insiders; Harold Stassen and General Graham at inquiry. News flashes: Burma independence; U. S. submarines [being reconditioned] for Turkey; Chennault weds in China. Silver Skates [races at Madison Square Garden].

© 16Jan48; MP2696.

6. Jan. 20, 1948. News of the Nation: Eisenhower in Philadelphia; Chicago gas blast; air crash in Maryland; feeding starving deer [Bear Mountain, N. Y.]; Mary Pickford in Canada. California sends shipload of milk to Europe's needy. Chimpanzees in Belgium put on artistic show. Sports: ski jumping [Fox River Grove, Ill.]; Middle Atlantic skating [Newburgh, N. Y.]; Australian yacht race.

© 20Jan48; MP2711.

7. Jan. 23, 1948. Petrillo defends Musicians' Union at [Congressional] labor inquiry. Twenty men play 400 instruments, all harmonicas [Germany]. Science: Supersonic rocket car [Muroc Air Base, Calif.]. Navy fliers test immersion suit for icy waters. Sports: N. Y. U.-Colgate basketball, skiing in [Wengen] Switzerland.

© 23Jan48; MP2712.

8. Jan. 27, 1948. Stassen-Pauley clash on "Inside" market raiding. Jerusalem today [scenes of strife between Jews and Arabs]. Gandhi ends fast; India and Pakistan accept mediation. Chinese inflation hits weddings. "Voice of America" to tell the world the truth about U. S. [the Smith-Mundt bill]. Gold rush of '49 is re-enacted on site of El Dorado. Milk ship sails [from California] with cargo for Europe's needy. Sports: Bob Feller signs up [with Cleveland]; Canadian iceboating [Hamilton, Ont.]; family of golfers [the Bauers].

© 27Jan48; MP2738.

9. Jan. 30, 1948. Millions of Hindus bathe in Ganges in holy festival. Record cold wave hits Nation, halts vital river traffic. U. S. Navy displays new amphibious barge. "Gentlemen's Agreement" named best picture of 1947 [John Garfield accepts award in behalf of Producer Darryl Zanuck]. Baby tigers learn about circus life at very early age. Sports: Skiing in Rockies [International Intercollegiate Ski Meet near Rossland, British Columbia]; ski jumping [Arne Ulland, Arthur Tokle, and others at Dubuque, Iowa]; boxing in Paris [Marcel Cerdan vs. Giovanni Manca].

© 30Jan48; MP2739.

10. Feb. 3, 1948. The world mourns Mahatma Gandhi, slain by assassin. Film highlights of world news: Pope thanks U. S. [for Friendship Train food]; Friendship food burned [Paris]; Marines sail for Mediterranean; Montreal airport clears snow. Spectacular parade opens St. Paul's winter carnival. Sports: Winter Olympics begin [St. Moritz]; Santa Anita racing; Millrose Games [Madison Square Garden].

© 3Feb48; MP2740.

11. Feb. 6, 1948. U. S., Canada join in mercy flight to frozen [village in Labrador]. [King] Leopold in Havana. French dam [on River Rhone]. Exercise Snowdrop [paratroop maneuvers at Pine Camp, N. Y.]. Four are now nine, as Badgett quads enjoy a birthday. Hollywood spotlight; "Look" awards [presented by Bob Hope to Twentieth Century-Fox for "Gentlemen's Agreement"]. Major Humphrey asks continuation of rent controls [Minneapolis]. Sports: speed skating [St. Paul]; iceboat regatta [Williams Bay, Wis.]; school for umpires [West Palm Beach, Fla.]

© 6Feb48; MP2761.

12. Feb. 10, 1948. The funeral of Gandhi at Delhi. General Eisenhower retires as U. S. Chief of Staff [administers oath to his successor, General Bradley, in presence of President Truman]. Operation Paradog uses huskies for air rescue work [U. S. Air Forces in Labrador]. Winter Olympic games [at St. Moritz]; skiing [Henri Creiller of France]; men's figure skating [Richard Button of U. S.]; women's figure skating [Barbara Ann Scott of Canada].

© 10Feb48; MP2762.

13. Feb. 13, 1948. Record cold spell. Ohio River frozen; Niagara Falls frozen. Palestine report: bomb wrecks newspaper building ["The Palestine Post"]; British blow up surplus ammunition. Truman becomes president of the Boy Scouts. Doggy bluebloods parade for prizes in New York show [Westminster Kennel Club]. New Orleans Mardi Gras [Margaret Truman among visitors]. Viareggio carnival [Italy]. Sports: St. Paul ski jump [Eugene Wilson, champion]; Lipton Cup yacht race [Miami, Fla.].

© 13Feb48; MP2763.

14. Feb. 17, 1948. Gov. Dewey raps administration's peace policy. Ohio River ice breakup. Fighting in Greece. Pope and scientists [meeting of Papal Academy of Science at Vatican]. Rockefeller wedding [Palm Beach, Fla.]. Sports from abroad: world table tennis [Wembley, England]; Cerdan boxing [Paris]; Olympic four-man bobsled [St. Moritz].

© 17Feb48; MP2764.

15. Feb. 20, 1948. Chinese troops move. De Valera out as premier [of Ireland]. Quadruplets [born] in Pennsylvania. Alien baby deported [to Denmark]. National drive for American brotherhood. Golden Gloves boxing slugfest [in New York]. Housewife [in Chicago] fasts in fight on high cost of living.

© 20Feb48; MP2779.

16. Feb. 24, 1948. President decries reactionaries as "floogie birds." U. S. food for China. Featherweight helicopter. Carnival in Rio. Films of Tokyo Rose who "entertained" G. I.'s in Pacific. Ming leads a dog's life, birthday party and all. Navy wrestling [Brooklyn Navy YMCA]. Ishpeming [Michigan] ski jumping.

© 24Feb48; MP2780.

17. Feb. 27, 1948. The tragedy of Palestine; bombing in Jerusalem; UN crisis over Palestine; Jewish illegal ship [on way to Palestine]. Czechoslovakia taken over by Communists. Truman in Caribbean. Eisenhower in civvies. Los Angeles hails Freedom Train. 15–1 longshot beats Armed and Assault in Hialeah upset.

© 27Feb48; MP2810.

18. Mar. 2, 1948. Truman in Cuba [welcomed by U. S. Navy at Guantanamo]. Belgian bed sheets [returned by U. S. Army]. French kids get U. S. food [at Billancourt]. Tokyo black market. Aviation: Navy jet fighter FJ–1 [San Diego]. Hollywood spotlight, premier of "Call Northside 777." Sports: Hialeah racing; French skiing [at Superbagneres]; kids boxing [Greenwich Village, New York]; Barbara Ann Scott [skating champion in Paris].

© 2Mar48; MP2811.

19. Mar. 5, 1948. Vandenberg urges Marshall Plan to stop another war. Religion: miracle of Assisi. Bowery derelicts get a chance to start life anew [with the aid of the Bowery Comeback Association]. Along Broadway: "Naked City" premiere [Sister Kenny, Nick Matsukas, and Ed Sullivan are present]. Baseball [spring training]. Notre Dame-NYU basketball. Iron Mountain [Michigan] ski jumping.

© 5Mar48; MP2842.

20. Mar. 9, 1948. Presidential campaign headlines: Truman announces his candidacy; MacArthur says he will run if nominated. De Gaulle at Compiègne. Barbara Ann Scott [in Montreal]. Aviation: gliding meet [in San Diego, Calif.]. Golden Gloves [tournament at Madison Square Garden]. New York Yankees training [St. Petersburg, Fla.]; Boston Braves [at Bradenton, Fla.]; Chicago Cubs [at Los Angeles]. Santa Anita Derby [won by Salmagundi].

© 9Mar48; MP2843.

21. Mar. 12, 1948. President [Conzalez Videla] of Chile visits Antarctic in claimstaking rush. Chicago-Miami plane crashes on take-off. Michael of Rumania [arrives in New York with former Queen Helen]. Jan Masaryk [suicide]. J. Arthur Rank [arrives in New York]. De Valera in New York. Alabama's governor, "Kissin' Jim" Folsom, shows talent. California [University] crew practice. Women's curling [at Wisconsin's Wauwatosa Club]. U. S. Olympic heroes home [Gretchen Frazer and Dick Button]. Barbara Ann Scott [welcomed in Ottawa by Prime Minister Mackenzie King]. Philadelphia Athletics [in Palm Beach]; Cleveland Indians [in Tucson]; St. Louis Cardinals [in St. Petersburg].

© 12Mar48; MP2844.

22. Mar. 16, 1948. Democracies move against the peril of Communism; Secretary Marshall urges calmness in crisis; ex-Secretary Byrnes says U. S. must be strong; five European nations sign defense pact [Great Britain, France, Holland, Belgium, and Luxembourg]; Pope rallies Catholics against Communism. Miners walk out to back Lewis in demand for pension. General Myers jailed. U. S. and England sign film pact [Eric Johnston and Harold Wilson]. Film executives get law degrees [J. Arthur Rank and Spyros Skouras]. Brooklyn Dodgers [at Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic]. Bowling Congress [Andy Varipapa and others in Detroit]. Winter water skiing [Seattle, Wash.].

© 16Mar48; MP2845.

23. Mar. 19, 1948. Truman asks for armed strength to stop Russia. UN to investigate Soviet seizure of Czechoslovakia. Communists stage pompous funeral for Jan Masaryk. Dramatic story of G. I. [Jack Grunden] shot by Reds in Vienna. Hundreds of U. S. tanks and trucks shipped to Turkey. "Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay!" World premier [at Sedalia, Mo.]. Irish of New York parade on sunny St. Patrick's Day. St. Louis beats NYU for invitation basketball title.

© 19Mar48; MP2895.

24. Mar. 23, 1948. Tornado takes huge toll as it sweeps through Midwest. Hollywood spotlight: Academy awards [presented to Darryl Zanuck, Elia Kazan, Loretta Young, Ronald Colman, Celeste Holm, Edmund Gwenn]. XP–87 jet fighter [Muroc, Calif.]. Jet fighter lands on carrier ["Boxer" off California coast]. Fashions: evening gowns. Forty-three star, 14 finish Grand National Steeplechase [Sheila's Cottage wins at Aintree, England]. Sweepstakes winners.

© 23Mar48; MP2896.

25. Mar. 26, 1946. UN hears charge of Soviet coup in Czechoslovakia. Secretary of Defense Forrestal asks 19 to 25 draft. War goods shipped to Russia arouses controversy in U. S. Jet fighters used in Air Force tests with buzz bombs [Eglin, Fla.]. Army plane flies entertainers to Alaskan outpost. College cowboys ride for glory in [Tucson] Arizona.

© 26Mar48; MP2897.

26. Mar. 30, 1948. The Nation observes Easter: New York City, Hollywood Bowl, Death Valley. Congress honors late [General] Billy Mitchell with special medal. Winds lash Chicago. Navy rocket tests [California]. Miami Beach hails world premier of the motion picture, "Sitting Pretty." Deep sea fishing [members of Yale University expedition at the Bay of Islands, New Zealand]. Speedboat record [Guy Lombardo at Indian Creek, Miami].

© 30Mar48; MP2898.

27. Apr. 2, 1948. Italy faces choice of dictatorship or democracy. Army aims at peace through science and strength. Tornadoes hit air depot [Tinker Field, Oklahoma City]. Schwab mansion razed [New York]. Fashions in belts. Phillips-Kentucky basketball [New York]. Jamaica racing.

© 2Apr48; MP2940.

28. Apr. 6, 1948. U. S., Britain force Reds to back down on Berlin blockade. Truman signs foreign aid bill. Mountbatten in Burma. General Spaatz retires. Drew Pearson eats his hat. Speaker of House, Joe Martin, talks on tax reduction. Governors launch Middle South Area development plan. Mrs. Roosevelt in England. Princess Ann selects trousseau. Eisenhower and grandson. Women's National A.A.U. swim meet at Daytona Beach.

© 6Apr48; MP2941.

29. Apr. 9, 1948. Stassen sweeps GOP primary in Wisconsin. Bogota conference. Italian [military] parade. Paul G. Hoffman heads ERP. Mrs. Roosevelt meets royal family [of Great Britain]. Belgian Prince Regent visits Truman. Governor Bradford signs $200,000,000 housing bill. Columbus Gallery of Fine Arts opens springtime show. This baby elephant [of Dailey Brothers Circus] decides not to be a dumb bunny. Sydney Cup [Randwick] Australia. Dixie Water Ski Meet [Cypress Gardens] Florida.

© 9Apr48; MP2942.

30. Apr. 13, 1948. Army Day in New York. Army Day in Trieste. Red demonstration in Milan. Four year old musical prodigy [Jerard Jennings]. Eye filling bathing suits. Novel eye glasses. Masters' golf tournament [Augusta]. Girls baseball league training. Outboard motorboat race.

© 13Apr48; MP2943.

31. Apr. 16, 1948. Dramatic scenes of revolution in Bogota, Colombia. Crucial election in Italy rouses world interest. London monument honors memory of Roosevelt [unveiled by Mrs. Roosevelt in the presence of the royal family and Winston Churchill]. P–84 jet fighters [Dow Field, Maine]. Cardinal Spellman makes an appeal for Catholic charities. Sports: Louis-Walcott sign up; Gold Cup regatta [Miami, Fla.]

© 16Apr48; MP2983.

32. Apr. 20, 1948. Italian people vote against Communism. Trieste demonstration [for reunion with Italy]. Bogota after revolution. Helicopter helps to build church in Grand Canyon. This school teaches grown-ups the art of baby-sitting. Yanks win baseball opener [President Truman throws first ball in Washington game]. International Golden Gloves [matches in Chicago]. Citation wins [Chesapeake Stakes at Havre de Grace].

© 20Apr48; MP2984.

33. Apr. 23, 1948. Mystery shooting of Walter Reuther, automobile union leader. Sixteen ERP nations sign [in] Paris. General De Gaulle [in] Marseilles. Film industry dedicates its new hospital [in Los Angeles; talks by Jean Hersholt and Mayor Bowron]. U. S. submarines [sent to reinforce Turkish navy]. U. S. planes reactivated [Kelly Field, Texas]. Variety Clubs hail Marshall; hear Stassen [make a speech in Miami Beach]. Dodgers-Giants baseball [New York]. Harness racing [at] Santa Anita.

© 23Apr48; MP2985.

34. Apr. 27, 1948. Bogota Conference [finds new quarters after revolution]. Churchill talks [in London]. Battleship "Texas" [now a state monument at San Jacinto, honored by Admiral Nimitz and Jesse Jones]. Testing torpedoes [California]. New York opens national appeal for needy children of world. Lew Lehr's "new look" for men. Bankers conference hears L. M. Giannini on U. S. leadership. Sports: Penn relays [Philadelphia]; British soccer [London].

© 27Apr48; MP2986.

35. Apr. 30, 1948. Britain's monarchs acclaimed on their Silver Anniversary, Windsor Castle: Order of the Garter ceremony for Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Red post-election demonstration in Milan is a fiasco. Public works: Puerto Rico dam. The feminine world: Mrs. Helen Hines, American mother of 1948; Mrs. John Cole, 27–year-old mother of 10. Sports: jockey [John Longden] sets record; auto helldrivers [Jimmy Martin's crew in Riverside, Calif.]; shooting the rapids [at Eugene, Oregon.]

© 30Apr48; MP3046.

36. May 4, 1948. Eisenhower holds press conference at Columbia University. Film flashes: New York loyalty parade; Japan Eucharistic Procession; Winchester, Virginia Apple Blossom Festival; Burned-out Laramie helped by Little Marshall Plan. Fashions in [cloth of] gold. Citation wins Kentucky Derby.

© 4May48; MP3047.

37. May 7, 1948. Republicans battle for presidential nomination. Taft-Stassen [contest] in Ohio. Dewey in Oregon. President Truman speaks about housing and family welfare. The news ticker: Long Island gas blast; tornadoes wreak havoc in St. Clair, W. Va.; General Wainwright honored by Masons; spring fever hits chimpanzees, and they clean-up. Sports: U. S. prepares for Olympics [at Penn State College]. Men gymnasts and women divers [perform].

© 7May48; MP3068.

38. May 11, 1948. Railroads seized by U. S. as strike threatens nation. News of the nation: Norman Thomas nominated [by Socialists]; Navy obstacle course [Dunking Drill preliminary to summer cruise]. Something new in baby shows: China "dolls" come to life [in Chinatown Baby Parade at San Francisco]. Mexican sweepstake winners. Sports: Goodall Golf Tournament in New York; all-Navy boxing [in San Diego, Calif.]; women wrestlers in Boston.

© 11May48; MP3069.

39. May 14, 1948. Churchill in Holland. Secretary Marshall on U. S.-Russia talks. Personalities in the news: Mr. Skouras gets $10,000 check [for United Nations Appeal for Children]. Ex-Premier [Jonas Cernius] of Lithuania [in Newark]. Reds, vets fight at New York premiere of "Iron Curtain." Airborne troops fill the skies in war maneuvers [at Camp Campbell, Ky.]. Sports: French fencing; woman jockeys; British boxing.

© 14May48; MP3087.

40. May 18, 1948. Rebirth of Jewish state of Israel marked by war: Haganah takes city of Haifa; N. Y. rally hails Jewish state. Italian president [Luigi Einaudi, congratulated by Premier de Gasperi after election]; Princess Elizabeth [of England] in Paris; President Truman makes prediction [of Democratic victory]. Gay parade hails Cotton Carnival in Memphis. Sports: Citation wins Preakness; Celebrities golf [Washington]; Olympic skaters.

© 18May48; MP3086.

41. May 21, 1948. Dewey and Stassen debate outlawing of Communism. Jewish state proclaimed at Tel Aviv. Free election held in the American zone of Korea. Flower fashions. Sports: Girl gymnasts from Sweden; Monaco auto race [the Grand Prix]; dynamite girl.

© 21May48; MP3090.

42. May 25, 1948. Dewey beats Stassen in Oregon [primary to select Republican convention delegates]. President Truman at Girard College [Philadelphia]. Father of the year [Clarkson F. Warden of Ann Arbor, Mich.]. Dutch palace burns [at The Hague]. Navy jet fighters [on carrier Saipan]. 15,000 boys stage great spectacle in Scout-O-Rama. Dutch celebration hails tulip time in Holland, Michigan. Morris and Essex Dog Show [Madison, N. J.]. Sports: Roosevelt Raceway trotting; women's auto race.

© 25May48; MP3091.

43. May 28, 1948. UN faces crisis over war in Palestine. New York rally hears appeals to help needy children [General Marshall and Chairman Spyros Skouras speak for UN's American Overseas Aid]. Princess Elizabeth at race-track in Paris. Jesse James [of Lawton, Oklahoma, claims to be former outlaw]. Canadian oil well on rampage [Leduc oil field in Alberta]. "Green Grass of Wyoming" has world premiere in [Lancaster] Ohio. Boys Town is final resting place for Father Flanagan. Hogan wins PGA Golf Tourney at St. Louis.

© 28May48; MP3142.

44. June 1, 1948. Navy sinks famed A-bomb warship "Salt Lake City." Chinese elections [at Nanking; Chiang Kai-shek elected President]. Cardinal Spellman [Eamon De Valera, and Monsignor Sheen] in Australia. New Swiss Guards for Vatican. Drew Pearson, Father of the Year [decorated by General Eisenhower]. New-born bear cubs learn about life. Sports: Chinese track meet [in Shanghai]; Louis and Walcott training [for heavyweight championship].

© 1Jun48; MP3143.

45. June 4, 1948. 100,000 homeless as Columbia River goes on rampage. Palestine: Tel Aviv bombed by air. India: Gandhi's assassin on trial. Marshall [Plan ship arrives at Genoa] Italy. President Truman observes Memorial Day [at Arlington National Cemetery]. Byrnes and Vandenberg honored at Columbia University. Indianapolis auto race [won by Mauri Rose]. German boxing [championship retained by Hein Ten Hoff].

© 4Jun48; MP3161.

46. June 8, 1948. Tension over truce brings new climax to Palestine War. President tours the Nation; speaks at Chicago; [parades with veterans in Omaha]. 410 midshipmen say farewell to Annapolis. Midget auto race [Polo Grounds, New York]. English Derby [won by My Love]. Sweepstakes ticket brings $25,000 to Bronx family [of Frank Bisconti].

© 8Jun48; MP3162.

47. June 11, 1948. Palestine truce opens the way to peace. President Truman hailed in Far West. Senator Vandenberg on ERP [before Senate Appropriations Committee]. Atlantic City, Shriners parade. West Point graduation. President Auriol visits Normandie. U. S. visitors [shopping in] Canada. U. S. Olympic divers [Marjorie Guestring, Sammy Lee, and others] display fine form at Los Angeles.

© 11Jun48; MP3163.

48. June 15, 1948. President, hailed at Los Angeles, flays Congress, and winds up tour of Nation. Italy: recently-elected President Luigi Einaudi takes command of the army. Japan: Cardinal Spellman calls on the Mikado in Tokyo. Paris [U. S. war dead honored at tomb of Napoleon]. Santa Cruz [Reba Watterson selected as California's entry in Miss America contest]. New Jersey: Miss Atlantic City title goes to Wanda Sullivan. Sports: horseracing [Tokyo]; gymnastics [Austrian Olympic candidates at Salzburg]; water skiing [Cypress Gardens, Fla.]

© 15Jun48; MP3164.

49. June 18, 1948. President hailed at Los Angeles; flays Congress. Truman winds up tour of nation. Foreign flashes: President [Einaudi] of Italy; Cardinal Spellman in Japan; U. S. memorial in Paris. Santa Cruz, California, selects entry for Miss America. New Jersey: Miss Atlantic City chosen. Sports: Nippon Derby [at Tokyo]; Austrian gymnasts [at Salzberg]; water skiing [at Cypress Gardens, Fla.].

© 18Jun48; MP3194.

50. June 22, 1948. The Republican 1948 convention in Philadelphia [arrival of delegates and candidates; General Wainwright, Speaker Joe Martin, Earl Warren, and others; Stassen and Taft headquarters; opening ceremonies; keynote address by Governor Green of Illinois]. Sports: Splashketball [at New London, Conn.]; Salinas [Calif.] rodeo.

© 22Jun48; MP3195.

51. June 25, 1948. Dewey wins! New York governor nominated by Republicans. [Speaker Martin takes over as permanent chairman; address by former president Hoover. Nominations: Senator Martin places Dewey's name in race; Bricker nominates Taft; Representative Walter Judd presents Stassen. First two ballots cast. Warren and Taft withdraw in favor of Dewey; Stassen, Martin, others withdraw to make Dewey nomination unanimous. Dewey appears and is greeted with ovation. Accepts nomination.]

© 25Jun48; MP3196.

52. June 29, 1948. [Earl] Warren nominated for vice president by the Republicans. German story: [Russian currency issued in Berlin; U. S. and British planes fly food to city during Red blockade]. Palestine: [refugee movements to and from Israel, during truce period]. Mountbatten leaves India [Governor General relinquishes post; first Hindu Governor General installed]. Miss America of 1947 weds [Barbara Walker of Memphis]. Sports: Joe Louis quits the ring [after victory over Joe Walcott]; kids' Soap Box Derby [Ellwangen, Germany].

© 29Jun48; MP3207.

53. July 2, 1948. Venezuela President [Gallegos visits Truman in Washington]. Dewey and Warren at Pawling, N. Y. Eric Johnston says British film quota is unreasonable. King Gustav [of Sweden has] ninetieth birthday. Genzano [Italy] street paved with flowers. AFL union show in Milwaukee. Tyrone Power talks to graduating class at Tampa University. Sports: women's AAU diving and swimming [at San Diego]; Olympic bike race [at Milwaukee]; kids' rodeo [at Eugene, Or.].

© 2Jul48; MP3208.

54. July 6, 1948. Latest films of East-West Berlin crisis [breakup of four-power Kommandatura; black market and currency confusion; blockade of land travel from West Germany]. Pope Pius is hailed by vast throng of workers in Rome. Secretary [of the Army] Royall tells how new draft law will work. Youngsters learn about government in own junior city [in Kansas City]. Sports: racing; Grand Prix [auto race in Monaco]; fishing; porpoise hunt [in Florida]; boxing; U. S. Olympic finals [in Boston].

© 6Jul48; MP3209.

55. July 9, 1948. Japanese city [Fukui] wiped out by earthquake. U. S. planes ease food shortage in Berlin crisis. Eisenhower greets fellow-freshmen at the Columbia University. Chinese-American bathing beauties parade for title. England: [Falkenburg aces Australia's Bromwich in] Wimbledon tennis. Bavaria: German daredevil [walks tight wire over the Bavarian Alps]. Georgia: stock car race [at Lakewood Speedway in Atlanta].

© 9Jul48; MP3219.

56. July 13, 1948. The Democratic 1948 convention in Philadelphia [delegates and leaders arrive]. Palestine: British evacuation; parley between Jews and Arabs; Jewish refugees bound for Palestine. Count Bernadotte arrives in New York. Japan: General MacArthur and General Eichelberger attend military parade.

© 13Jul48; MP3220.

57. July 16, 1948. Truman, Barkley nominated by Democrats [at the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia]. Southern group [Mississippi and Alabama] bolts the convention. Truman in violent attack on GOP.

© 16Jul48; MP3230.

58. July 20, 1948. Security Council vote forces new Palestine truce. Nation mourns General Pershing, dead at 87. "Dixiecrats" hold own convention at Birmingham. World events: Berlin situation [fleets of planes come to Templehof Airport]. Togliatti shooting [Italian Communist leader wounded after assassination attempt]. Durocher [welcomed by Giants] and Shotten [welcomed by Dodgers]. One-hundred thousand-dollar Gold Cup [Race; turf-goers join Hollywood Park to watch Shannon II, an Australian horse, win.]

© 20Jul48; MP3231.

59. July 23, 1948. East-West crisis at a climax over "battle of Berlin." General Clay arrives [in Washington] with report; American B–29's fly to England; U. S., British jets cross Atlantic; anti-Communist rally in Berlin. News flashes: Hershey [director of Selective Service] and volunteers; Lieutenant Murphy [most decorated American soldier, receives Legion of Honor in France]. Commies arrested [top leadership in American Communist Party is arraigned in New York]. Athletes [Olympic team] arrive in England. Portola trek [modern horsemen follow the trail of Spanish adventurers in California]. Sports: Olympic torch is lighted; water skiing [in Seattle]; sand skiing [in Colorado].

© 23Jul48; MP3232.

60. July 27, 1948. Third party nominates Wallace. General Clay, U. S. chief in Berlin, reports on crisis. Dewey holds conferences on foreign affairs. Giant 180–passenger transport plane [Constitution] joins U. S. Navy. Ku Klux Klan meets [in Georgia] to initiate 500 new members. Parade and frolic mark aquatennial at Minneapolis. Killer admits mass slaying [in Van West, Ohio].

© 27Jul48; MP3233.

61. July 30, 1948. President demands action by Congress in special session. Taft speaks for the Republicans. News flashes: Canadian ship on reef [off the coast of British Columbia]; pneumatic weapons; whaling off British Columbia; grasshopper plague in Argentine; Chicago celebrates railroad centennial. Sports: Sydney [Australia] dog show; skiing Australia [in New South Wales]; Del Mar [California] racing opens.

© 30Jul48; MP3240.

62. Aug. 3, 1948. World's greatest airport opened at New York. Congress probes Communist spy ring in U. S. Thousands killed and injured in German blast [at I. G. Farben chemical plant]. Broadway show [cast of "The Play's the Thing"] flies to Colorado to aid Central City fete. Olympic games [at Wembley Stadium in London].

© 3Aug48; MP3241.

63. Aug. 6, 1948. Dramatic hearings in Washington on Red spies in U. S. Dayton, Ohio: Univis Lens Company strike. Longview, Wash.: dock fire. Independence, Mo.: Truman walks and votes. U. S. athletic stars shine in London's Olympic Games.

© 6Aug48; MP3279.

64. Aug. 10, 1948. Red spy hearings [in Washington] reveal Russia got A-bomb material. England releases first pictures of its atomic plant [at Harwell]. Hollywood stars aid UN charity show in Paris. High wire walker celebrates his 82nd birthday [Ivy Baldwin of Eldorado Springs, Colo.]. Americans in clean sweep of Olympic events in London.

© 10Aug48; MP3280.

65. Aug. 13, 1948. Ex-U. S. government officials [Victor Perlo and others] deny Red espionage charges [made by Elizabeth Bentley in Washington]. Violence marks flight of Soviet teachers in New York [Samarin and Mrs. Kosenkina flee Russian control]. Olympics: marathon and relay [in London]. Trotting: Hambletonian [at Goshen, N. Y.]. Golf: Tam O'Shanter [Tournament in Chicago]. Racing: Del Mar [Los Angeles].

© 13Aug48; MP3303.

66. Aug. 17, 1948. Babe Ruth passes [in New York]. U. S. orders Russian teacher [Mrs. Kosenkina] to testify before [House] Committee [on Un-American Activities]. Operation Splash: B–29 drops lifeboat for air-sea rescue [at Mitchell Field, N. Y.]. President Truman hails Youth Month [in Washington]. Tyrone Power visits Madrid. Sports: Soap Box Derby at Akron; water skiing in Maryland.

© 17Aug48; MP3304.

67. Aug. 20, 1948. Throngs gather [at Yankee Stadium in New York] to pay homage to Babe Ruth. MacArthur visits new republic of Korea. Canadian oil well [in Alberta] goes on a rampage, floods farmland. Grandmas display charm and wit in Chicago contest. Daredevil high diver [Sol Solomon] uses little water, makes big splash [at Palisades Park, N. J.]. Great action filmed as Olympic Games close in London.

© 20Aug48; MP3305.

68. Aug. 24, 1948. Treason trials face Axis Sally and Tokyo Rose. U. S. demands recall of Russian Consul [Lomakin] in teacher case. Australia supports UN appeal for war orphans. Invasion tactics shown in landing on Virginia coast [joint Army, Navy, and Air Force operation]. Sports: all-star football; [in Chicago, College All-Stars beaten by Chicago Cardinals]; North-South football [in Cincinnati]; France-U. S. swimmers [meet in Paris]; star sailboating [at Seattle].

© 24Aug48; MP3306.

69. Aug. 27, 1948. U. S.—Soviet crisis as Russia shuts its consulates. Mrs. Kosenkina exposes Red lie. Charge of perjury faces Chambers or Hiss at Red inquiry. West guards zones in Berlin against Russian raiders. A salute to youth in sports: kids baseball [Kansas City, Kansas]; girl water star [five-year old Frances Roller]; kids boxing [Williamsburg Settlement playground in Brooklyn].

© 27Aug48; MP3315.

70. Aug. 31, 1948. World conference of churches held in Amsterdam. Nation mourns Justice Hughes. News flashes: Communists march on Berlin City Hall; 25–year-olds register in peacetime draft. Names in the news: President Truman ends vacation; John A. Costello in New York; Jacob M. Lomakin leaves Russian consul; Winston Churchill visits France; Darryl F. Zanuck in Italy. Sports: horse racing, American Derby [Citation wins]; Ice Capades of 1949.

© 31Aug48; MP3351.

71. Sept. 2, 1948. Queen Wilhelmina feted at end of 50–year reign. Chief Communist in U. S. [Alexander Stevens] identified by former Reds. World events: Greek war [against Communist insurgents]; Berlin plane crash [of American cargo plane]; [Navy] flying boat Mars [sets non-stop record]; Lourdes pilgrimage [of Americans]. Governor Green hails National Youth Month. Sports: Navy-Notre Dame football training; Eisenhower fishing. Pennsylvania week.

© 2Sep48; MP3330.

72. Sept. 7, 1948. Victor Kravchenko, who chose freedom from Soviets, tells about teacher case. World's smallest republic [Freeville, N. Y.] run by boys and girls. Automatic garage designed to solve parking problems. New Chinese money issued to combat wild inflation. National AAU long distance swim meets.

© 7Sep48; MP3331.

73. Sept. 10, 1948. Presidential campaign opens: Truman speaks in Detroit; Stassen's answer to the President. Queen Wilhelmina abdicates throne; Juliana succeeds. Dancing champions show fine form at Harvest Moon Ball. Sports: U. S. wins Davis cup; pro football for charity [Washington Redskins vs. Los Angeles Rams]; shooting rapids [of Niagara River] in barrel.

© 10Sep48; MP3332.

74. Sept. 14, 1948. Huge Berlin rally against Russians ends in violence. News flashes: Canadian oil well fire [at Leduc Field]; Governor and Mrs. Dewey register; girls hail Pope [Square of Saint Peters]. U. S. Air Force marks first anniversary. Pennsylvania Week is proclaimed by Governor Duff. Hollywood benefit circus. Miss America [Beatrice Shopp]. Sports: mountain climbing, Rocky Mountain National Park; auto hell drivers.

© 14Sep48; MP3402.

75. Sept. 17, 1948. A marked man [Mikhail Samarin] talks. East-West clashes turn Berlin into city of turmoil. Film flashes: President greets "Youth of the Year"; Miss Truman opens "first voter" drive; woman [Margaret Chase Smith] wins Senate election; ground broken in New York for UN capitol; oil tanks explode in California fire. Mrs. America [Maria Strohmeier]. Sports: Giants-Bears football; Charles-Bivins boxing; motorcycle hill climb.

© 17Sep48; MP3403.

76. Sept. 21, 1948. Presidential campaign; Truman speaks in Iowa; Dewey starts tour of West. French communist demonstration ends in riot. Assassination of Bernadotte shocks world. Marshall given humanity award by Variety Clubs. Sports: Bears-Redskins football; Pendleton Round-up; International Tuna Cup matches.

© 21Sep48; MP3404.

77. Sept. 24, 1948. Truman-Dewey Presidential campaign. UN pays homage to martyred Bernadotte. Hurricane; Atlantic-born storm lashes Florida. Coast Guard rescue [of fishing schooner by] Cutter Bibb. Paris opera ballet helps mark New York's Golden Jubilee fashion show. Variety Club award given Boston Tent. B–29 and baby jet plane. Sports: Marcel Cerdan, new middleweight champ; Capt. Walker, flying daredevil.

© 24Sep48; MP3405.

78. Sept. 28, 1948. East-West Berlin crisis turned over to United Nations. Politics: Presidential campaign tour in California, President Truman addressing Los Angeles throng; Governor Dewey at Hollywood Bowl. Air Force reunion featured by great show in New York. Community Chest parade in Kansas City hails Youth Month. Football highlights: Notre Dame-Purdue; Army-Villanova; California-Navy. Boston Braves win National League championship.

© 28Sep48; MP3406.

79. Oct. 1, 1948. East-West showdown before UN. Soviet Chiefs pay final tribute to Zhdanov. Presidential campaign: Truman sees ex-Vice President Garner in Texas; Dewey tours California, then Pacific Northwest; Warren opens GOP office in New York. Thousands witness Greek Holy Cross celebration. Fort Bragg training turns enlistees into fighting men. Sports: North Carolina-Texas football; Hell drivers, Trenton, N. J.; trotting [Delaware, Ohio].

© 1Oct48; MP3427.

80. Oct. 5, 1948. President Truman returns to Washington. Governor Dewey addresses huge crowds in Middle West. Canada: RCAF air rescue. India: Ganges River overflows. Fortunate fish get preview of 1949 swim suits. 80,000 youngsters march in Boston C.Y.O. parade. Cornerstone rites at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital. National cotton picking contest in Arkansas. Youth committee aids stricken boy from Australia [John Reid]. Cleveland-Boston play-off. Army-Lafayette football. Penn-Dartmouth football. Michigan-Oregon football.

© 5Oct48; MP3428.

81. Oct. 8, 1948. Russian action in Berlin crisis on trial at UN. Hurricane hits Cuba. Coast Guard rescue off Bahamas. Truman hailed in Philadelphia. National Youth Month marked in Philadelphia. Delta airliner [Douglas DC–6] christened by Linda Darnell. All Golden Horses display fine form at Springfield, Mo. Sports: World Series highlights, first and second games; Notre Dame-Pittsburgh football; Grand Prix auto race. Community Chest Drive, Jersey City premiere "Apartment for Peggy."

© 8Oct48; MP3436.

82. Oct. 12, 1948. [Truman greets Marshall upon his return from UN Assembly in Paris.] Churchill visits RAF. Juliana honors Wilhelmina. Japanese rulers meet press. President Truman in New Jersey. Governor Dewey in New York City. Sports: Cleveland wins World Series; Army-Illinois football.

© 12Oct48; MP3437.

83. Oct. 15, 1948. The Dewey story [a film presentation of the life of Thomas Dewey]. President Eisenhower installed at Columbia University.

© 15Oct48; MP3484.

84. Oct. 19, 1948. The Truman story [a film presentation of the life of Harry S. Truman]. The pigskin parade: Pennsylvania 20, Columbia 14; Michigan 28, Northwestern 0.

© 19Oct48; MP3485.

85. Oct. 22, 1948. President attends American Legion's Miami convention. Dewey at Herald-Tribune forum. London, [British] Commonwealth conference. Athens, Secretary Marshall in Greece. Rome, Secretary Marshall in Italy. Tokyo, MacArthur and Korean president. Washington, Clay reports on Berlin air life. "Seapower for peace" is U. S. Navy slogan on its birthday. Governor Bradford urges support of [Boston] Community Fund. 50th American Royal Exposition hailed in Kansas City. The Mirror Building is dedicated in Los Angeles. Army-Harvard football. Columbia University class rush.

© 22Oct48; MP3486.

86. Oct. 26, 1948. World events. Miners riot, France. Gwalior festival, India. Historic Wright plane returns to America. Baruch says Russia forces us to make atomic weapons. In the feminine world: Royalty at wedding, London. Youth month contest winner, New York. Football highlights: Michigan-Minnesota; Army-Cornell; Clemson-South Carolina.

© 26Oct48; MP3510.

87. Oct. 29, 1948. World Events. London: King and Queen ride to Parliament. France: French mine strikes. Florida: Operations Combine [jet bombing]. Industry: Coal mining machine. Free apartment won by veteran in Miami contest. [Irish] Sweepstakes winners. Sweater fashions. Sports: Penn-Navy football; North Carolina-L.S.U. football; roller skating derby.

© 29Oct48; MP3511.

88. Nov. 2, 1948. DPs land in New York. Pennsylvania smog. UN plan to lift Berlin blockade vetoed by Russia. Henry Morgenthau returns from tour of Israel. Tight rope walker in breath-taking act in the Alps. 80–year-old barber in Lowell, Ohio, disregards inflation. Sports: Citation wins walkover [Pimlico Special]; Notre Dame-Navy game; California-Southern California; S.M.U.-Texas football.

© 2Nov48; MP3512.

89. Nov. 5, 1948. Truman's dramatic triumph. Israeli forces battle Arabs in the Negev. Chicago: six day bike race. Canada: Gorgeous George, wrestler.

© 5Nov48; MP3535.

90. Nov. 9, 1948. Truman returns to Washington in triumph. DeGaulle victory [following elections for his party in the French Senate and the Council of the Republic]. Athenagoras heads Greek church. Men enter Army in nation's first peacetime draft. French arctic expedition. Theatre of Atoms [a laboratory established by Westinghouse at Pittsburgh]. Army-Stanford football. Penn State-Penn Football.

© 9Nov48; MP3542.

91. Nov. 12, 1948. Thunderbolt hunters; science reveals phenomenon in lightning. Flood-ruined Vanport, Oregon, is salvaged. Long Island bumper crop of potatoes buried. Fashions in furs. Michigan-Navy football. Melbourne Cup [Race, Australia] Stag hunt near Paris. Dog training: pups herd sheep [in Australia].

© 12Nov48; MP3543.

92. Nov. 16, 1948. Britain hails birth of son to Elizabeth. Tojo sentenced to die for Jap war crimes. President Truman on vacation. Dock strike paralyzes Eastern shipping. Florida citrus crop. Mrs. Patton christens tank. Mackenzie King resigns as prime minister. Football highlights: Philadelphia, Army-Penn football; South Bend, Notre Dame-Northwestern.

© 16Nov48; MP3572.

93. Nov. 19, 1948. Bikini A-bomb ship, USS Pensacola, sunk by Navy. President Truman on vacation in Florida. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt is honored in England. Ft. Bliss, Texas, centennial. Spectacular display of Australian armor. Embroidery fashions. Radio City ice skating. Australian kid acrobats. Women wrestlers. Pro basketball: Minneapolis Lakers-N. Y. Knickerbockers.

© 19Nov48; MP3573.

94. Nov. 23, 1948. The President goes back to work. Town in Kansas [Goodland] is buried by a blizzard. Mrs. Kosenkina quits hospital after 99 days. Navy jet aviation: Lockheed Constitution take-off; Navy jet fighter [Cutlass] makes test run in Maryland. Harvard-Yale football; Michigan-Ohio State football; USC-UCLA football.

© 23Nov48; MP3574.

95. Nov. 26, 1948. UN votes down Red proposal to cut armaments. 802 European DP's land at Boston. A picture a minute with new camera. The smallest plane in the world [San Diego, Calif.]. Milkman in Illinois inherits fortune from Denmark. Football highlights of 1948.

© 26Nov48; MP3594.

96. Nov. 30, 1948. Dock strike ends. Santa Claus parade [New York City]. Churchill honored [London University]. African wedding [of the King of Buganda]. Father Flanagan statue unveiled at Boys Town. Cornell upsets Penn, 23–14, to win Ivy League title. Georgia wins Orange Bowl berth, beating Georgia Tech. Army-Navy gridiron upset.

© 30Nov48; MP3595.

97. Dec. 3, 1948. Nationalists fight Chinese Reds in Suchow battle. Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek [arrives in Washington]. ERP presidential conference. Movie stars attend royal command show in London. The old and new in aviation: Wright plane returns [to U. S.]; reversible propeller. Japanese children give Nippon version of American music. Salmon fishing. Water skiing.

© 3Dec48; MP3596.

98. Dec. 8, 1948. President attends gift presentation to USS Missouri. Fog in England. French gratitude train. Truman and daughter [at the Washington Press Club]. Chambers and Hiss. WAC Colonel [Mary Hallaren, sworn into Regular Army]. 4–H Club winners. Barbara Ann Scott [arrives in New York]. Sports: Notre Dame-USC; high school championship [Philadelphia]; high school all star football [Charlotte, N. C.]; 6–man wrestling [Montreal].

© 8Dec48; MP3597.

99. Dec. 10, 1948. Western Berlin votes against Communism. [City Council selects the Social Democrat, Reuter, for Mayor.] U. S. marines land in China as Red peril grows. U. S. evacuees leave [Shanghai] China. Spy inquiry [by Committee on Un-American

## Activities] reveals papers taken from State Department. California

pays tribute to Barkley. Football player of the year [Doak Walker receives Heisman trophy in New York]. Skating Vanities of 1949 [at Chicago]. [War wounded Xmas fund. Skouras theatres join Journal American in launching drive.]

© 10Dec48; MP3638.

100. Dec. 14, 1948. President Truman presented with turkeys. Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt returns [from the United Nations meeting in Paris]. President Prio of Cuba in New York City. Russian airmen flee Iron Curtain [to American zone of Austria]. New type helicopter performs amazing acrobatics in tests [Windsor Locks, Conn.] Water show [at Palm Desert, Calif.] Citation wins at Tanforan. Spirit of Christmas [at Bethlehem and Nazareth].

© 14Dec48; MP3639.

101. Dec. 17, 1948. Thousands of lives lost in sinking of Chinese vessel. Endurance fliers [over Indio, Calif., in the air 26 days]. Airlift training in Montana. Fog fails to halt Berlin airlift. The season's greetings: Cardinal Spellman [at New York Foundling Hospital]; international greetings [from children of foreign diplomats in Washington]; underwater Santa Claus [at Marineland, Fla.] Kid's boxing [at Madison Square Boy's Club in New York]. French bike race [for the Ile de France championship].

© 17Dec48; MP3662.

102. Dec. 21, 1948. Britain's royalty at christening of Prince Charles. Aviation: Wright brothers' plane [returned to Smithsonian Institution]. Collier trophy award [Truman honors airplane builder Bell and research engineer Stack for supersonic speed]. Wrecked C–47 saved [takes off from Illinois wheat fields]. Zanuck honored [for "Gentlemen's Agreement"]. Pro football champions [Eagles vs. Cardinals, Browns vs. Bills]. Boat parade opens Fort Lauderdale fishing festival. Barbara Ann Scott along Broadway [champion on skates].

© 21Dec48; MP3663.

103. Dec. 24, 1948. Headliners of 1948: Democracy vs. Communism [Berlin airlift. Czechoslovakia falls to Reds. Masaryk a suicide]. Marshall Plan signed by President. Italian Christian Democratic Party defeats Communists. In France, Reds aim to sabotage Marshall Plan. Mrs. Kosenkina jumps from consulate window to escape Reds. Reds sweep across China. State of Israel proclaimed. Bernadotte and Ghandi murdered. India gains independence. Japanese war criminals hanged. Japan hit by earthquake. Truman elected. Elizabeth Bentley, Chambers, and Hiss [in spy scandal]. Floods in Pacific Northwest. Pershing dies at 87. Eisenhower becomes president of Columbia University. Truman honors Bell and Stack for rocket plane. Air Forces' B–36 takes off. Wilhelmina abdicates, and Juliana assumes crown. Winthrop Rockefeller marries coal miner's daughter. King George and Queen Elizabeth married 25 years. Royal baby, Prince Charles, with Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip.

© 24Dec48; MP3664.

104. Dec. 28, 1948. Rescue saga of 13 men marooned on Greenland icecap. Rome: war veterans riot [demanding increase of pensions]. Long Island: Shinnecock lighthouse [razed]. China gold rush [bank places gold on sale]. Stage and screen stars entertain wounded vets [Broadway columnist Ed Sullivan arranges show]. Petrillo signs contract for musicians. Warm Springs kids flown home for the holidays. Connie Mack celebrates 86th birthday. Swimming forum in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

© 28Dec48; MP3680.

Volume 32, 1948/49.

1. Dec. 31, 1948. Sports highlights of 1948. Sports highlights of 1948: horse racing, motor mania, golf, boxing, baseball, football, winter sports, the Olympics.

© 31Dec48; MP3732.

2. Jan. 4, 1949. Dramatic rescue of 12 fliers from Greenland icecap. Puerto Rico inaugurates first elected governor. Senator Barkley and Bob Hope [return from Germany]. Nation ushers in the new year with a bang. Picturesque parade hails Orange Bowl classic in Miami. Tournament of Roses [Pasadena]. Football: Rose Bowl; Orange Bowl; Sugar Bowl; Cotton Bowl.

© 4Jan49; MP3733.

3. Jan. 7, 1949. President asks Congress for new laws. Colorado blizzard. Arkansas tornado. Eisenhower launches Boy Scout drive. Two former kings [Duke of Windsor and King Leopold] play golf. Golden Gloves bouts thrill fans with slam-bang slugging.

© 7Jan49; MP3734.

4. Jan. 11, 1949. Marshall resigns; Acheson to head State Department. Nature on the rampage: gales lash English coast; record-breaking rain causes flood in Birmingham, Ala.; blizzard sweeps over Rocky Mountains. Women in politics [at the Women's Press Club, Washington]. Gay mummers stage picturesque parade in Philadelphia. Governor Warren inaugurated at Tallahassee. A million dollars in mink auctioned at Minneapolis. Aerial daredevils thrill crowds at Miami air show. French boxing fans see leather fly in bantamweight bout. New York photographers pick Florida girl as their Queen.

© 11Jan49; MP3780.

5. Jan. 14, 1949. News of the nation: Senate hears Acheson; California snowfall; Florida bathing-suit fashions. France expresses thanks to U. S. by Gratitude Train. German kids laugh, cry, and thrill to marionette show. Sports: St. Louis U. beats Long Island U. in basketball; Los Angeles Open Golf Tournament; Silver Skates finals at Madison Square Garden.

© 14Jan49; MP3781.

6. Jan. 18, 1949. Top U. S. Reds go on trial in New York. The March of Dimes Poster Girl visits President Truman; Mrs. Roosevelt inaugurates 1949 March of Dimes drive. Heavy snows cause great damage in western states: South Dakota town of Wall buried in 20–foot drifts; starving deer come down from mountains to be fed. Aviation: Light plane [piloted by Bill Odum] sets distance record; jet powered missile [demonstrated at Point Mugu, California]. Winter sports: Speed skating, Saratoga Springs, N. Y.; ski-jumping classic at Fox River Grove, Ill.

© 18Jan49; MP3782.

7. Jan. 21, 1949. The inauguration of President Truman: inaugural speech; inaugural parade; inaugural highlights.

© 21Jan49; MP3783.

8. Jan. 25, 1949. Rhodes: Israel and Egypt discuss peace. Israel: new nation prepares for first election. China: civil war nears end as Chiang retires. Dean Acheson becomes Secretary of State. [Archbishop] Athenagoras leaves for enthronement [as Patriarch of Eastern Orthodox Church, Istanboul]. President Truman and Petrillo. Winston Churchill paints on Riviera. New York film critics honor Olivia De Havilland. Yachting: Sydney-Hobart racing classic. Skiing dog.

© 25Jan49; MP3799.

9. Jan, 28, 1949. "Operation Haylift" feeds snowbound livestock in Utah. London: 3000–pound Nazi bomb is removed. Mexican floods. Rome: blessing animals. David Ben-Gurion wins Israel backing. Mao Tze-Tung, Chinese Red general. Tyrone Power meets De Gasperi. Aviation: huge Jet bomber XB–47. Sports: Boudreau signs up; ski jumping at Dubuque, Iowa; water skiing at Cypress Gardens.

© 28Jan49; MP3800.

10. Feb. 1, 1949. History in Israel: new state holds first election; refugees arrive from Cyprus. Canadian Parliament [opens]. Chicago: gas plant explodes. Los Angeles: March of Dimes parade. Tyrone Power weds Linda Christian in Rome ceremony. Sports: Millrose games; Santa Anita racing; French skiing.

© 1Feb49; MP3844.

11. Feb. 4, 1949. French Gratitude Train arrives in New York. Carbondale, Pa.; mine [cave-in] threatens town. New Hampshire: Wacs test clothing. Philadelphia: wind blast tunnel [to test effect of air pressure on pilots], March of Dimes fashion show. Sled dog race. Ski jumping; Sverre Kongsgaard. Comedy diving.

© 4Feb49; MP3819.

12. Feb. 8, 1949. Cardinal Spellman protests Communist trial of Hungarian Cardinal [Mindszenty], Chinese refugees flee Nanking as Reds advance. Giant 180–passenger Constitution plane flies across U. S. French Gratitude Train welcomed in Washington. Awards presented for contributions to brotherhood. Ice skating: Middle Atlantic speed races. Rodeo in Palm Springs.

© 8Feb49; MP3820.

13. Feb. 11, 1949. XB–47 jet bomber spans U. S. in less than four hours. Athenagoras, new Greek patriarch, is enthroned. Washington: Governor Dewey at Lincoln Day dinner. Italy: Mt. Cassino rebuilt. New York: $2,500,000 worth of narcotics seized. Duluth: Minnesota ski club invitational meet. Army boxing at Ft. Myer, Va. Surf carnival in Australia.

© 11Feb49; MP3872.

14. Feb. 15, 1949. America speaks on brotherhood [speeches by Dwight D. Eisenhower, James A. Farley, Henry Ford II, Paul Hoffman, and William Green]. Hitler's chancellory blown up by Reds. "Flying Wing" jet bomber crosses U. S. non-stop. William Allen White honored in Emporia. Bowling congress [meets at Atlantic City]. College ski meet at Banff, Alberta. St. Paul hails 1949 winter carnival.

© 15Feb49; MP3873.

15. Feb. 18, 1949. Truman sees great display of power by U. S. Air Force. Oil tank explosion in New Jersey. U. S. Army supplies shipped to China. Paris publishing house ransacked. New tubeless tire. Tea experts meet in New York. Hollywood spotlight: Photoplay magazine awards. New York dog show top honors go to champion boxer. French Gratitude Train arrives at Chicago. Wrestling in Paris. Mr. New York City [selected by Brooklyn YMCA].

© 18Feb49; MP3874.

16. Feb. 22, 1949. Papal consistory protests trial of Hungary Cardinal [Mindszenty]. Air Force ditches B–17 [as scientific experiment]. Navy demolishes old blimp hangar. Secretary Royall reports on tour of Pacific bases. "Down to the Sea in Ships" premiere. Helicopter herder chases marauding elk into corrals. Florida: school for umpires. Mexican sailfishing. Maine: giant bobsled.

© 22Feb49; MP3907.

17. Feb. 25, 1949. Dr. Chaim Weizmann becomes Israel's first president. Huge crowd hears Pope denounce dictatorships. Carnival time in Europe. Colorado's historic Cripple Creek train makes last run. French Gratitude Train welcomed at Los Angeles. New York: Anna Louise Strong [Pro-Communist writer given grand jury subpoena]. Germany: man in ball. Chicago: Miss Photoflash. World ice skating championships held in Paris.

© 25Feb49, MP3908.

18. Mar. 1, 1949. Hawaii's famous Mauna Loa goes into action again. U. S. naval aviation: Caroline Mars; Martin Mauler. Spectacular show put on by Fort Bragg flame throwers. Spring hat fashions. French Gratitude Train arrives at San Francisco. Sports: Santa Anita handicap; ski jumping at Iron Mountain, Mich.; gliding contest; cliff diving at Nassau.

© 1Mar49; MP3909.

19. Mar. 4, 1949. B–50, giant U. S. bomber flies around the world non-stop. Historic armistice is signed between Israel and Egypt. Brussels meeting of European union heckled by Reds. "Chicken Every Sunday" premiere in Tucson, Arizona. California [police recover loot stolen by Gerard Dennis]. New Orleans: Mardi Gras. "Snake Pit" plaque award. Baseball; New York Yankees and St. Louis Cardinals training. Smith College swimmers.

© 4Mar49; MP3910.

20. Mar. 8, 1949. Vishinsky, Gromyko promoted in Red cabinet change. President Truman on vacation [Key West, Fla.]. Security Council admits Israel to UN. U. S. and Canadian spies [Valentin Gubitchev, Judith Coplon, and Sam Carr and his wife]. Swedish freighter runs aground off Holland. Get-rich-quick (?) fad sweeps nation in Pyramid Clubs. Washington Senators, Boston Braves, Cleveland Indians training. Pro basketball: Lakers and Globe Trotters. Collegiate basketball: Notre Dame-NYU.

© 8Mar49; MP3945.

21. Mar. 11, 1949. Odom flies 5,010 miles non-stop in light plane. Axis Sally [Mildred Gillars] convicted. B & O train robbers. President Truman receives honorary degree [Doctor of Laws at Rollins College in Florida]. Special film award is presented for "The Snake Pit." Don't throw away your old carpets: wear 'em as hats. Joe Louis turns in his gloves for a desk. Brooklyn Dodgers start baseball training. Detroit Tigers get in shape. Chariot racing revived in Rome.

© 11Mar49; MP3946.

22. Mar. 15, 1949. Coal miners quit as Lewis orders two-week holiday. Tokyo: new Japanese police force marks 1st anniversary. Rome: blessing cars. Scientists restore fabulous Egyptian temple of Karnak. Fashions from Paris. Colleges run "Mother Is a Freshman" beauty contests. Banished ball players [Fred Martin, Max Lanier] sue major leagues. Philadelphia Athletics get into form. Pittsburgh Pirates train in California. Chicago Cubs get in shape at Los Angeles. Canoe bogganing at Bridgton, Maine. Boys boxing [Boys Athletic League of New York].

© 15Mar49; MP3947.

23. Mar. 18, 1949. Sons and daughters of Erin parade on St. Patrick's Day [New York City]. Truman plays host on his vacation [at Key West]. North Atlantic Pact. Moshe Sharett arrives at New York. Russia returns the Milwaukee. Last minute rush to pay income tax. Young war orphans from Baltic lands find refuge in U. S. Navy football practice. Mutts dog race. Golden Gloves tournament of champions [Madison Square Garden].

© 18Mar49; MP3986.

24. Mar. 22, 1949. Democracies unite in North Atlantic Defense Treaty: European members discuss Pact; Secretary Acheson says Treaty is necessary; Italian Communists denounce Pact. New York: dope seizure. Tyrone Power in England. Oak Ridge [home of atomic energy] opened. $20,000,000 luxury Shamrock Hotel is opened in Houston. President Truman is given an "Oscar" by the newsreels. Invitation basketball [San Francisco vs. Loyola]. Motorcycle mud race.

© 22Mar49; MP3987.

25. Mar. 25, 1949. President talks on housing and rent control. Communists here for international peace conference. Professor Counts warns of Red infiltration. Churchill arrives in New York. Polish seamen [jump ship to remain in U. S.] London riots [by British fascists]. Variety Boys' Club is dedicated in Los Angeles. Evzones of Greece to celebrate their independence in U. S.

© 25Mar49; MP3988.

26. Mar. 29, 1949. Feelings run high at Red-sponsored "peace" talks in New York. Pope Pius thanks American people for their charity. Greeks celebrate independence day with parade in New York. Royal Evzones pay a call on President and Mrs. Truman. Royal Evzones visit Chicago. Hollywood spotlight: Academy Award winners. Tornado sweeps five states, taking terrific toll. Roller derby [Brooklyn]. Grand National Steeplechase [Aintree, England]. Sweepstakes winners.

© 29Mar49; MP3989.

27. Apr. 1, 1949. Greece celebrates 128th anniversary of independence. Bevin and Gromyko arrive at New York. Israeli war heroes to tour U. S. Secretary Johnson says U. S. must remain strong. "Fido" demonstration [at Los Angeles Airport] disperses fog for aviation safety. B'nai B'rith honors Spyros P. Skouras in Philadelphia. 9–year-old Italian prodigy [Roberto Bonzi] conducts Paris orchestra. Intercity Golden Gloves [Madison Square Garden]. Water skiing [by Willa Worthington at Cypress Gardens, Fla.] New Jersey handicap drive [to employ the physically handicapped].

© 1Apr49; MP4044.

28. Apr. 5, 1949. 12 nations sign Atlantic Pact in Washington. Churchill declares atom bomb saves Europe from Reds. Cerdan-Terpin fight [Empress Hall in London]. East-West basketball [Madison Square Garden]. AAU [men's indoor swimming championships at Daytona Beach, Fla.].

© 5Apr49; MP4045.

29. Apr. 8, 1949. Army Day parade [Washington, D. C.] UN assembly meets. Bank fugitive [Richard Crowe] caught. Hope diamond sold. Rome: Pope Pius XII celebrates his golden anniversary. London: the lights go on again in England. College professor [George Keller] makes a hobby of training "killers" [tiger, lion, jaguar, panther]. Fashions for tall girls. Pee Wee Golf [Tournament at Dubsdread Country Club in Orlando, Fla.]

© 8Apr49; MP4046.

30. Apr. 12, 1949, U. S. parades power here and abroad on Army Day: New York, Trieste, Germany. California: girl killed in well. Florida: chiefs of staff meet. Greece: King Paul and Queen Frederica [celebrate the opening of the Canal of Corinth]. New York: the Big Top comes to the big town. Golf: Masters Tournament [Augusta, Ga.] Navy kids boxing [Annapolis]. Kid swimmer [23 month old Dennis McShane].

© 12Apr49; MP4047.

31. Apr. 15, 1949. U. S. Northwest hit by worst earthquake. Delaware Bay: tankerfreighter crash. South Carolina: women marines. Italy: Way of the Cross re-enacted. Chaim Weizmann arrives [in U. S.] Dwight Taylor, boy scientist. Acrobatic dog. California rodeo.

© 15Apr49; MP4076.

32. Apr. 19, 1949. The nation observes Easter: Hollywood Bowl; New York City. Nation ponders strangeness of "crying statue." U. S. answers Russia's Atlantic Pact blast. Dr. Bunche returns from Palestine. Missouri River shortened for flood control. Dancing champions crowned in Paris. Bill Barris and Dick Riedel break endurance record [of 726 hours in the air]. President Truman opens the baseball season.

© 19Apr49; MP4077.

33. Apr. 22, 1949. The President has a busy day in Washington. Chinese Red troops cross the Yangtz on way to Nanking. Doolittle's raiders, who bombed Tokyo, mark anniversary. Deep sea fishermen go after big tarpon in Mexican meet. Eire: new Irish republic proclaimed. Germany: anti-Red parade ends in riot. Japan: Nipponese take to square dancing. Egyptian fair. Circus entertains crippled children of Warm Springs.

© 22Apr49; MP4078.

34. Apr. 26, 1949. Communist advance to south imperils Nationalist China. London: Commonwealth premiers [received by King George], New York: war orphans [arrive from Europe]. Puerto Rico sugar crop. Washington: Dr. and Mrs. Weizmann and Mr. and Mrs. Truman. Mother of eight seeks new husband. Brother and sister do stunts outside 13th floor window. Speed skating [at Colorado Springs]. Hell drivers [at Los Angeles Coliseum].

© 26Apr49; MP4079.

35. Apr. 29, 1949. Victory for airlift; Reds move to end Berlin blockade. Washington: Secretary Royall resigns. California: endurance fliers [land after six weeks in the sky]. New York: Christopher Society awards. Hollywood: Richard Widmark hand imprint in cement. Texas: Mrs. E. A. Gillis, mother of year. Greece: King Paul and Queen Frederica visit Kalavrita. Egypt excavates buried treasure of ancient kings. Swimming-diving, National AAU meet. Shooting rapids on McKenzie River.

© 29Apr49; MP4141.

36. May 3, 1949. Last of evacuees flee Shanghai as the Reds close in. New York: Loyalty Day parade. Virginia: Queen Shenandoah crowned at Apple Blossom fete. Berlin: new gambling casino opens. Washington, D. C.: Georgetown University president [Hunter Guthrie]. Aviation: Able Mable, a Martin bomber. Track meet: the Penn Relays. AAU gymnasts [Chicago]. Ski clowns at Cypress Gardens.

© 3May49; MP4142.

37. May 6, 1949. Russia agrees to end Berlin blockade: New York; Big Four meeting; Berlin, barge canal dispute; at Grafenwöhr, Gen. Clay bids good-bye to his troops. New York Jews hail Israel's first anniversary. Mme. Pandit is India's first ambassador to U. S. Colonel Demarest. The incident of Leo Durocher. Sydney horse show. Motorcycle hill climbers [East Lewiston, Idaho].

© 6May49; MP4143.

38. May 10, 1949. Triplets expected, quadruplets born, parents pleased. Secretary of Defense [Johnson] praises men of Berlin airlift. Surrounded Shanghai barricades itself against Reds. Princess Margaret vacations in Italy. Variety Club honors Herbert Hoover. Hollywood Park track destroyed by fire. The Kentucky Derby.

© 10May49; MP4144.

39. May 12, 1949. Israel becomes 59th member of United Nations. Berlin hails end of Red blockade. Shanghai witnesses public execution of Chinese Reds. Washington: bond wagon christened. New York: Dr. Bunche honored. Quantico: Marine maneuvers. Memphis: Cotton Carnival. Canadian Golden Gloves. Girls baseball training [West Baden, Ind.]

© 12May49; MP4154.

40. May 17, 1949. Blasts and fire damage N. Y.-N. J. Holland Tunnel. Blockade of Berlin is lifted. Truman honors "women of achievement" [voted by the Women's Press Club of Washington]. "I Am an American Day" [Central Park, New York City], Barkley salutes Israel. "It Happens Every Spring" premiere. Aviation: Truculent Turtle flight. Goodall golf [New Rochelle, N. Y.]. The Preakness.

© 17May49; MP4153.

41. May 20, 1949. General Clay comes home from Berlin. Truman opens "Opportunity" Bond drive. Another Roosevelt enters politics [Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr.]. Pope Pius proclaims new saint [Jeanne de Lestonnac]. President Dutra of Brazil arrives in U. S. "It Happens Every Spring" premiere [at Ann Arbor, Mich.]. Barkley salutes Israel [at Madison Square Garden]. U. S. Air Force tests inflated building for radar work. Water sports: Florida introduces the skim boat [at Cypress Gardens]; Wellesley Sophs win crew race.

© 20May49; MP4211.

42. May 24, 1949. Foreign ministers of the "Big Four" meet in Paris. Rioting in Berlin over rail strike against the Reds. Floods, tornadoes strike in central and western U. S. Mechanical crib [automatic "night nurse" rocks the cradle]. New jet fighter F–90 [ground-tested at Burbank, Calif.]. Giant flying boat [at Alameda, Calif.] Tulip time in Holland, Mich. Water festival [Saginaw, Mich., has new water system]. Sports: P.A.L. boxing [tournament]; Mr. America [contest]; Los Angeles relays [at Coliseum].

© 24May49; MP4212.

43. May 27, 1949. "Big Four" discuss German problems at Paris meeting. The nation pays final tribute to Secretary Forrestal. Airborne maneuvers at Fort Bragg, N. C. Greek Queen visits war orphan camps. Canada starts big spring log drive. South Sea preacher arrives [Seventh Day Adventist missionary]. Oysters do grow on trees down in Puerto Rico. First outdoor art fair held at Columbus [Ohio]. Sports: Navy boxing [at Alameda, Calif.]; girl water skier [Willa Worthington].

© 27May49; MP4213.

44. May 31, 1949. Atomic Energy Commission is investigated. A.F.L. holds union industries show in Cleveland. Rita Hayworth weds Aly Khan in France. Latest in trailers for vacation [trailer display at Crystal Lake, Ill.]. High temperature test for supersonic pilots. Winston Churchill in Glasgow.

© 31May49; MP4214.

45. June 3, 1949. Eisenhower awards Columbia degrees to old comrades [Generals Lucius Clay and Omar Bradley]. England frees Eisler. Alger Hiss on trial. Hirohito visits Nagasaki. Annapolis color girl. The wedding of Rita and Aly. Terrific spills at Indianapolis 500–mile race.

© 3Jun49; MP4333.

46. June 7, 1949. Marshall honored by 16 countries of ECA plan. Annapolis graduation. Moscow parade. Tokyo stock exchange is re-opened. Photographers beauty queen. Celebrities golf [Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and government officials]. English Derby. Sweepstakes winner.

© 7Jun49; MP4334.

47. June 10, 1949. West Point graduation. California: How not to fly [stunt aviator Sammy Mason]. Virginia: Navy hell week [for demolition teams]. Kentucky: Trappist monks centennial. Berlin railroad strike. Nagasaki [celebrates 400th anniversary of introduction of Christianity to Japan by] St. Francis Xavier. Summer skiing. Tuna fishing.

© 10Jun49; MP4335.

48. June 14, 1949. President Truman attends reunion of war buddies. Will Rogers Memorial Hospital [taken over by Variety Clubs]. New rescue boat [tried by Coast Guard]. Beautiful blonde contest. Milk festival [Harvard, Ill.] London: trooping of colors. France: French stunt flying. Australian storm. U. S. Open Golf. Belmont Stakes.

© 14Jun49; MP4336.

49. June 17, 1949. Trieste voters prefer Italy over Reds. Hitler's yacht. Stratosphere balloons. Ku Klux Klan on the march. Fan fashions. Wrestler learns about bear hugs the hard way. St. Louis chimps prove monkeys "ain't so cwazy."

© 17Jun49; MP4337.

50. June 21, 1949. Chambers vs. Hiss in dramatic New York Red spy trial. Paris: De Gaulle at General Le Clerc ceremonies. South Africa gold mining. London gets all dressed up for Ascot racing. Girl channel swimmer [Shirley May France] Dynamite man [Leo Simon].

© 21Jun49; MP4338.

51. June 24, 1949. Big Four come to terms; German-Austrian decisions made at Paris talks. New York: 1 pound portable iron lung. Indo-China: Ex-Emperor Bao Dai. Colorado: Governors' conference. Boxing: Charles-Walcott fight. Wimbledon tennis. Indian canoe race.

© 24Jun49; MP4351.

52. June 28, 1949. The heat is on [scenes of people on the Eastern Seaboard seeking relief from the heat]. New Jersey: oil refinery fire. Flash flood at St. Petersburg, W. Va. Governor Warren weds. Masonic parade, Florala, Ala. Seattle: tractor-type landing gear. Marines summer training at Little Creek, Va. Wales: quad families. Miss Atlantic City. Equipoise Mile at Arlington Park, Chicago. New Zealand skiing.

© 28Jun49; MP4352.

53. July 1, 1949. Washington: counterfeiters seized. English channel: Princess Astrid sinks. Ceremony of the walking towers at Nola, Italy. New York: PAL outing for orphans. Santa Monica: St. John's hospital [breaks ground for new wing]. 74–year-old man held on charges of swindling women. Fashions for coeds. Rapids boat race on Arkansas River. Water ski capers.

© 1Jul49; MP4353.

54. July 5, 1949. Judith Coplon found guilty in spy trial. Irene Dunne honored with the Catholic Laetare medal. Chinese war orphan [arrives in New York]. Australian floods. Wimbledon tennis. Night water skiing.

© 5Jul49; MP4354.

55. July 8, 1949. Western Union Fleet maneuvers [British, French, Dutch, and Belgian ships]. General Patton memorial statue [Tilly, France]. Jap war prisoners return from Russia. U. S. Navy displays Douglas Skyraider. California co-ed wins beauty crown as "Miss Chinatown." Central City hails opening of Gala 1949 festival. Wimbledon tennis. Henley regatta. Summer ski jump [Lake Placid].

© 8Jul49; MP4368.

56. July 12, 1949. Hiss trial ends. Snyder in London. Mrs. Perle Mesta sworn in [as Minister to Luxembourg]. Senator Johnson [speaks] on movie taxes. Strange stone-age race discovered in New Guinea. Battery to Coney swim [by Shirley May France]. Night trotting [Roosevelt Raceway, Westbury, L. I.] Dog soccer.

© 12Jul49; MP4369.

57. July 15, 1949. Two air disasters cause fearful loss of life in India and California. The President says U. S. can prevent a depression. Bathing suit fashions. All Star baseball [Ebbets Field, Brooklyn].

© 15Jul49; MP4390.

58. July 19, 1949. President Truman signs housing bill, opening new era. West Virginia: chiefs of staff meeting. Connecticut: Navy rescue bell. Virginia: Navy ROTC training. London: 2,500–pound dud bomb near hospital. Munich: studio fire. England's bonnie Prince Charles at 8 months.

© 19Jul49; MP4391.

59. July 22, 1949. Truman at Shriners Diamond Jubilee [in Chicago]. Seattle plane crash. Ile de France [returns to the tourist trade]. Chicago glue plant fire. Switzerland: Czech tennis players [Vladimir Cernik and Jaroslav Drobny]. Washington: Jackie Robinson [testifies before the Un-American Activities Committee]. "You're My Everything" premiere [in Hollywood]. Science: Seat ejector bail out [tested at San Rafael, Calif.]; Cosmic ray rockets [tested by the Navy].

© 22Jul49; MP4440.

60. July 26, 1949. Atlantic Treaty signed by Truman; arms fight looms. 50,000th D.P. arrives [in Boston]. Anniversary: Israel "V" Day [celebrated in Tel Aviv]. The blue Danube [is re-opened to travel]. Earl of Harewood [is engaged to Marion Stein]. Clifton Webb in Rome. Frog jumping jamboree [at Boys' Club, in Worcester, Mass.] Paris swimming meet [in Tourelle Pool]. [Coaltown wins] Arlington Handicap.

© 26Jul49; MP4441.

61. July 29, 1949. Australian flood ruin [outside Sydney]. Ile de France arrives [in New York]. Hirohito sees swim meet [in Tokyo]. Log drive in Idaho [on the Clearwater River]. Grandmother beauty contest [in Chicago]. Amputees baseball [at New York's Polo Grounds]. Lesnevich-Charles training [in New Jersey]. Del Mar racing [Bolero wins the Inaugural Handicap]. International motorbike race in Vienna. Summer ski jump [at Guilford, N. H.]

© 29Jul49; MP442.

62. Aug. 2, 1949. Acheson denies arms to Europe will start war. Churchill in Italy. New Viking "invasion" [on the Kentish coast]. New Jersey: freak mid-air crash. Canada: rain maker [Donald Johnston comes to the aid of farmers]. New York: tall girl beauty contest. Water sports: snowbird yachts [in New Port Harbor, Calif.]; two-year-old diver [Dennis McShane]; water ski show [in Cypress Gardens].

© 2Aug49; MP4443.

63. Aug. 5, 1949. Marshall advises a strong front against Russia. Truman meets [American Legion] Boys' Forum. [Douglas] Fairbanks and CARE. Nation pays tribute to Herbert Hoover on 75th birthday. Shirley May France [prepares to swim the English Channel]. Mr. Ideal Man [Sonny Myers]. Cheer leaders' school [Sam Houston College, in Texas].

© 5Aug49; MP4444.

64. Aug. 9, 1949. Pin-point bombing supplies Alpine observatories [with necessary provisions]. R.O.T.C. cadets [at Fort Eustis, Va.] Indian "landlords" [receive annual payment from Canadian government]. Tallest man [Clifford Thompson]. Aviation science [jet planes tested]. French horse show [in Paris]. New Zealand deep sea fishing. Aqua glamour [diving exhibition by Olympic performer, Helen Crlenkovich, in Hollywood]. World premiere of "Slattery's Hurricane," in Miami, Fla.

© 9Aug49; MP4445.

65. Aug. 12, 1949. Earthquake devastates many towns in Ecuador. Forest fire in Montana. Philippine President [Elpidio Quirino] in Washington. President Truman signs National Security Bill. U. S. Coast Guard celebrates its 159th anniversary. Sports: Tam-O'Shanter golf [Lloyd Mangrum wins first prize]; the Hambletonian [is won by Miss Tilly].

© 12Aug49; MP4455.

66. Aug. 16, 1949. Vice President Alben Barkley is honored by his home town, Paducah, Ky. Berlin kids' holiday. Aviation: Overhead cable used as runway [near Baltimore]; Operation Foil [joint American-British bombers test England's defenses]; carrier-based jet fighters [tested]. Sports: All-star football [in Chicago]; Soap-box Derby [at Akron, Ohio]; Junior Rodeo [at Post, Texas].

© 16Aug49; MP4456.

67. Aug. 19, 1949. Twelve nations discuss age-old plan for a united Europe. Helicopter maneuvers [at Quantico, Va.] Bradley, Collins [at swearing-in ceremony]; Johnson [attends meeting of Armed Forces Policy Council]. Mayor O'Dwyer [attends inauguration of Harry Brandt as president of the Independent Theatre Owners Association]. Miss America [Bebe Shopp on the French Riviera]. New Yorkers see movie premiere in the clouds. Sports: Tournament of Saracens [in Arezzo, Italy]; Sheriff's Rodeo [in the Los Angeles Coliseum].

© 19Aug49; MP4457.

68. Aug. 23, 1949. Gar Wood's boat [the twin-hulled Venturi]. Disabled vets convention [in Cleveland]. Motion Picture Appreciation Week [celebrated in Little Rock, Ark.] Fortifications in Swiss Alps [revealed as Switzerland celebrates its 658th year as an independent nation]. Amphibious maneuvers [at Little Creek, Va.]. Bernarr MacFadden [at Dansville, N. Y.]. National A.A.U. Swimming [Meet at Memorial Coliseum Pool, Los Angeles]. Connie Mack honored [in New York]. Baseball Congress [Semi-Pro Tournament at Wichita, Kan.].

© 23Aug49; MP4458.

69. Aug. 26, 1949. Forest fires in France. Ecuador 'quake reconstruction. President Truman signs North Atlantic treaty. Tom Clark sworn in as Supreme Court Justice. Harold McGrath sworn in as Attorney General. Asbury Park baby parade. Campbell's speedboat [Bluebird aims to surpass record]. National Doubles tennis finals. Auto race in Britain. Women's AAU swimming [San Antonio, Texas].

© 26Aug49; MP4553.

70. Aug. 30, 1949. Truman addresses American Legion in Philadelphia. Terrific hurricane rips Florida with 162–mile winds. [Paul Hoffman] head of ECA tours Europe. F.D.R.'s great grandchild [Nicholas Delano Seagraves]. Firemen of Italy [give demonstration of climbing perpendicular buildings]. Davis Cup singles. Little League baseball [Hammonton, N. J., vs. Pensacola, Fla.]

© 30Aug49; MP4554.

71. Sept. 2, 1949. Washington five-percent hearing. Legionaires on parade [Philadelphia]. $4,000,000 grocery fire in San Francisco. Coast Guard wins battle over polio in epic of the sea. Skating spectacle of the 1950 Ice Capades. Women swimmers in three-mile test [Clemonton Lake Park, N. J.]. New York Giants train at Saranac Lake. Helldrivers [Middleboro, Mass.]

© 2Sep49; MP4555.

72. Sept. 6, 1949. New Legion Commander [George Craig, of Indiana]. GAR's final encampment [at Indianapolis]. F. D. Roosevelt, Jr., takes a bride. Greek King sees successful assault on guerrillas. Naples fiesta. Football training. Vacation schooner.

© 6Sep49; MP4843.

73. Sept. 9, 1949. International economics [discussed at State Department in Washington]. President Truman on tour [to the Allegheny County Fair]. Fatal crash marks National Air Races at Cleveland. Miss America, spectacle of beauty. If you see double, blame it on this twin convention [Huntington Beach, Calif.]. Labor Day parade at Princeton, Indiana. National tennis. Canadian 15 mile swim. Shirley May France [English Channel swimmer].

© 9Sep49; MP4588.

74. Sept. 13, 1949. Tacoma rebuilds ill-fated bridge "Gallopin' Gertie." Supersonic jet speed features British air show. Mrs. America; Miss America. Brother-sister diving act [Kathy and Bubber Tongay]. Table tennis wizardry.

© 13Sep49; MP4589.

75. Sept. 16, 1949. New German President [Theodor Heuss]. Hapsburg wedding. Theatre men hear [Charles] Sawyer. Rocket probes cosmic ray. Boilermakers get new home [Kansas City]. Variety Club hat auction. Harvest Moon Ball. Science is K.O.'d in wild-punching Australian bout.

© 16Sep49; MP4590.

76. Sept. 20, 1949. Canadian steamer burns at dock; 200 killed and injured. New Supreme Court Justice [Sherman Minton]. Greek Premier [Tsaldaris] arrives for UN. Secretary Johnson lauds movies. Theatres of Texas collect $170,000 for polio fund. Swimming family [Mercers swim from Manhattan to Coney Island]. Roller Derby. Polo championship. Football training [Univ. of Miami].

© 20Sep49; MP4591.

77. Sept. 23, 1949. Romulo elected president as UN Assembly opens. Barkley on U. S. reclamation. Labor parade in Athens. Sweater girl of 1949. Introducing "Satan's Angel," veteran paradog. Weight lifting in Paris. Yacht racing [Ocean City, N. J.]. Danish gymnasts.

© 23Sep49; MP4623.

78. Sept. 27, 1949. Does Russia possess the atom bomb? President Truman announces that an "atomic explosion" occurred in Soviet Union. It's still swim time in California. Los Angeles: University of Southern California defeats Navy. South Bend: Notre Dame trims Indiana.

© 27Sep49; MP4624.

79. Sept. 30, 1949. Truman signs trade bill. Greek Holy Cross celebration [Asbury Park, N. J.] Report from film council [made by George Murphy]. Kansas honors Randolph Scott. Navy sea-air exercises. Pennsylvania Week. Fashions in velvet. Rodeo at Madison Square Garden. Army-Davidson football. Yogi acrobatics.

© 30Sep49; MP4625.

80. Oct. 4, 1949. Steel strike. [George] Marshall new Red Cross head. Truman at Boyle dinner in Kansas City. New York: veterans yield souvenir guns. London: Harewood-Stein wedding. Tyler, Texas, rose festival. Tank maneuvers at Fort Bragg. Yanks and Dodgers win pennants. Dartmouth-Penn football. Tulane-Georgia Tech football. Pennsylvania Week.

© 4Oct49; MP4626.

81. Oct. 7, 1949. UN building flag raising. Truman on Community Chest drive. Child of the year [Natalie Wood]. First jetliner in America. Truman sees paratroops at Ft. Bragg. Queen of the mermaids [at Weekiwachee Springs, Fla.] The World Series.

© 7Oct49; MP4672.

82. Oct. 11, 1949. Yankees win World Series. North Atlantic defense parley. Operation Bulldog [airmen test England's ability to repel an air attack]. Spellman visits Pope Pius. Football highlights: Southern California-Ohio State; Texas-Oklahoma; Army-Michigan.

© 11Oct49; MP4673.

83. Oct. 14, 1949. The Navy fires its broadside during Capital hearing. Washington: [Premier] Nehru [of India] arrives. Arizona: endurance flyers. Minnesota: Irving Brown talks [on popularity of American films abroad]. All Golden Horse Show [at Springfield, Mo.] Princess Elizabeth's horse. Prison rodeo [Texas State Prison].

© 14Oct49; MP4674.

84. Oct. 18, 1949. Eleven top U. S. Reds guilty after record trial. [Premier] Nehru before U. S. Congress. Jeanne Crain in cement [at Grauman's Chinese Theatre]. Holy Name Holy Hour. The pigskin parade: Notre Dame-Tulane; Yale-Cornell; California-Southern California.

© 18Oct49; MP4675.

85. Oct. 21, 1949. Navy-Air Force feud reaches climax at Congress hearing. Fireworks attend UN Council vote on Yugoslavia. Lumber ship afire at sea. Nehru honored at Columbia University. MacArthur host to General Collins. Lowell Thomas arrives [in New York]. Mr. Canada. All girl rodeo [Corpus Christi, Tex.]. Texas-Arkansas football.

© 21Oct49; MP4711.

86. Oct. 25, 1949. Truman attends UN cornerstone rite in New York. U. S. communists start five-year prison terms. Nehru at Wellesley. Barkley hailed at Florida University. 2000–year-old scrolls found [Book of Isaiah presented at a ceremony at the Library of Congress]. Football highlights: Penn 28, Navy 7; Michigan 14, Minnesota 7.

© 25Oct49; MP4712.

87. Oct. 28, 1949. Record flight by British jet. Tucson-Greece affiliation [Greek Foreign Minister Constantine Tzaldaris is a visitor to Tucson, Ariz.]. Lady Godiva memorial [unveiling ceremony at Coventry, England]. Nehru addresses Parliament of Canada. How to get rich quick [Sweepstake winners]. Pro tennis [Richard Gonzales and Jack Kramer]. Water skiing [Cypress Gardens, Fla.]

© 28Oct49; MP4713.

88. Nov. 1, 1949. 100,000th displaced person lands in U. S. Mrs. Eugenia Anderson sworn in as Ambassador to Denmark. Columbia University class rush. ECA report by Eric Johnston. Vice President Barkley engaged. Drama of the Yukon—gold strike or hoax? New York Variety Club is acclaimed by Mayor O'Dwyer. The pigskin parade: Ohio State rips Northwestern; California stops UCLA; Alabama nips Georgia; Notre Dame sinks Navy.

© 1Nov49; MP4760.

89. Nov. 4, 1949. Nation's worst civil air crash kills 55 over Washington. Admiral Sherman sworn in. Israeli housing for refugees. Greece marks "no" day [anniversary of ultimatum to Axis in 1940]. National Horse Show [Madison Square Garden, New York]. Wrestling in Canada.

© 4Nov49; MP4761.

90. Nov. 8, 1949. Armistice Day 1949—let there be peace. President Truman visits Twin Cities. Football highlights: Stanford upsets Southern California; Notre Dame tops Michigan State; Army routs Fordham.

© 8Nov49; MP4762.

91. Nov. 11, 1949. Coal mine strike is called off temporarily. Barkley named grandfather of the year. Tyrone Powers come home. Hero paratrooper [Marvin O. Smith] is decorated for mid-air rescue. This young French driver has a way with Paris traffic. New York elections won by Lehman and O'Dwyer. Ohio State—Pittsburgh football. Death at the races [Rex Mays killed at Del Mar Race Track]. Florida State University circus classes.

© 11Nov49; MP4763.

92. Nov. 15, 1949. Truman asks for world-wide end of prejudice. 40,000 children find parents [Children's Search Service of the German Red Cross]. Gregory Peck Europe-bound. French duelists "satisfy honor." The pigskin parade: Army-Penn; Notre Dame-North Carolina; Vanderbilt-Tulane; Maryland-Boston.

© 15Nov49; MP4764.

93. Nov. 18, 1949. We give thanks: Americans hail blessings of a free nation. Submarine fires guided missile. New jet bomber XB–51. George H. Lanier Hospital opened at Langdale, Ala. Powder Bowl football game [at Ohio University] Porpoise-ing [Silver Springs, Fla.] Oklahoma-Missouri football.

© 18Nov49; MP4805.

94. Nov. 22, 1949. Nation stunned by tragic B–29 air disasters [near Stockton, Calif., and Bermuda]. Hollywood stars appear at Royal Command show [in London]. Barkley takes a wife—and has "no comment." Alabama ceremony marks first housing loan in U. S. Football highlights: California-Stanford; Ohio State-Michigan; Yale-Harvard; Notre Dame-Iowa.

© 22Nov49; MP4806.

95. Nov. 25, 1949. Pacific Ocean: ship breaks in two [near Seattle]. New York: farm exchange youths return. France: stag hunt. Tokyo: horse show. Football: star players and plays of 1949.

© 25Nov49; MP4807.

96. Nov. 29, 1949. Santa Claus parade opens Hollywood holiday season. Montgomery meets U. S. Defense Chiefs. Henry Morganthau opens UJA appeal. Stanton Griffis calls on Peron. Broadway pays final tribute to Bill Robinson. Football classics: Army-Navy; Cornell-Penn; Notre Dame-Southern California.

© 29Nov49; MP4808.

97. Dec. 2, 1949. New York-Mexico airliner crashes in Dallas; 28 die. Army's new cargo plane, Globemaster. The Trumans in Florida. Secretary Chapman is sworn in. Canada searches vast arctic area for lost priest. Billiard champ [Edward Horemans] does tricks. First hours of a thoroughbred [at Alton Lodge, New Zealand].

© 2Dec49; MP4850.

98. Dec. 6, 1949. Vice President [Barkley] brings "harmony" to Democrats [at dinner in New York]. India passes new constitution. Canadian bridge is all-aluminum [in Quebec, over the Saguenay River]. Douglas Skyrocket. Notre Dame-SMU football. Ski-aquatics in Florida. High school football [North Catholic vs. Simon Gratz in Philadelphia].

© 6Dec49; MP4851.

96. Dec. 9, 1949. Congress probes A-bomb material shipped to Russia. Greater New York faces desperate water shortage. Santa Lew Lehr finds what kids want for Xmas. Football player of the year [Leon Hart]. Will Joe Louis come back?

© 9Dec49; MP4852.

100. Dec. 13, 1949. Floods in Italy. The Implacable [old British frigate sails her last mile]. Mrs. Anderson, first U. S. lady ambassador. Princess Elizabeth goes dancing. Crochet champion displays winning needlecraft. [Cannon Mountain] wonderland for skiers. Champion figure skater [Aja Vrzanova]. Surfboard sirens.

© 13Dec49; MP4853.

101. Dec. 16, 1949. The story of Christmas; the nativity; old world traditions; new world festivities; the spirit of Christmas; peace on earth.

© 16Dec49; MP4915.

102. Dec. 20, 1949. Lindbergh hailed for service to aviation in U. S. New Greek Archbishop [Michael]. Movie stars in cement [Ann Baxter and Gregory Peck]. Hollywood goes to New Orleans [to produce "Outbreak"]. Haiti's World's Fair. Vyvyan Donner's fashions: Ceil Chapman gowns, Dali jewelry. Dog racing [in Miami]. Rodeo in Australia.

© 20Dec49; MP4916.

103. Dec. 23, 1949. Angus Ward leaves Red China. Mayor O'Dwyer weds in Florida. Grand Coulee Dam gets "face lifted." U. S. carrier [Siboney] braves winter storm in North Atlantic. Ice carnival at Vancouver. Dog circus [in Paris].

© 23Dec49; MP4917.

104. Dec. 27, 1949. Newsreel history of 1949. Spectacle and drama: earthquakes in Ecuador and Seattle; Mauna Loa, Hawaii's volcano; rescue of 12 airmen on Greenland. World affairs: Berlin airlift; Greece triumph over Communism; Truman's announcement Russia has atom bomb; North Atlantic treaty; China gives up fight against Communism; trial of 11 top Communists in America. Aviation: 500 mile-an-hour flying wing; 600 mile-an-hour jet bomber; daring Batman; 750 mile-an-hour supersonic skyrocket. Personalities: Miss and Mrs. America prize winners; Rita Hayworth-Aly Kahn wedding; Barkley-Hadley wedding; President Truman's impersonation of commentator.

© 27Dec49; MP4982.

Volume 33, 1949.

1. Dec. 30, 1949. The Pope opens 1950 holy year in the Vatican. Truman at home for holiday. Christmas fire destroys town [of Hyndman, Pa.]. Windsors arrive for U. S. visit. New Greek Archbishop [asks aid to secure the return of abducted Greek children]. Warm Springs kids are flown home for holidays. Along Broadway: "Prince of Foxes" premiere.

© 30Dec49; MP4983.

MOVING AWEIGH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Story, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Sep44; LP13013.

MOVING WITH MOVIES. Contemporary Films, c1941. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Alvin J. Gordon.

© Alvin J. Gordon, d.b.a. Contemporary Films; 5Feb41; MP10973.

THE MOZART STORY. Patrician Pictures, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1948. 94 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Based upon the composer's life in the courts of eighteenth century Europe.

Credits: Producer, Abraham Haimson; director, Frank Wisbar; written by Richard Billinger; music arrangements, Alois Melichar; film editor, Axel Hubert.

Cast: Winnie Markus, Irene V. Mayendorf, Walter Janssen, Anni Rosar, Carol Forman.

© Patrician Pictures, Inc.; 2Sep48; LP1847.

MUCH ADO ABOUT MUTTON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Joe Stultz, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jul47; LP1151.

MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Mar40; MP10067.

MUG TOWN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Ray Taylor; original story, Charles Grayson; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg, Lewis Amster, Harold Tarshis, Harry Sucher; photography, Jack McKenzie; film editor, Ed Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Sep42; LP11634.

MULTI-ENGINE PLANE NAVIGATION. Presented by the United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics. sd., 16mm. Pt. 1, 2 reels. Pt. 2, 1 reel.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr. each. 8Jul43; pt. 1, 209 prints, 5Jul43; MU14000; pt. 2, 39 prints, 5Jul43; MU14001.

THE MUMMY'S CURSE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Leslie Goodwins; original story and adaptation, Leon Abrams, Dwight V. Babcock; screenplay, Bernard Schubert; film editor, Fred Feitshans.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12973.

MUMMY'S DUMMIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of the Three Stooges in Egypt.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; film editor, Henry DeMond.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Nov48; LP1908.

THE MUMMY'S FOOT. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on a story by Theophile Gautier.

Summary: An adventure in which a young New York playwright meets a three thousand-year-old Egyptian Princess.

Credits: Producer, Louis Lantz; director, Sobey Martin; screenplay, Stanley Rubin.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 22Feb49; LP2176.

THE MUMMY'S GHOST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, Reginald Le Borg; screenplay, Griffin Jay, Henry Sucher, Brenda Weisberg; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12421.

THE MUMMY'S HAND. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, Christy Cabanne; original story, Griffin Jay; screenplay, Griffin Jay, Maxwell Shane; photography, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Phil Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Aug40; LP9854.

THE MUMMY'S TOMB. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Pivar; director, Harold Young; original story, Neil P. Varnick; screenplay, Griffin Jay, Henry Sucher; photographer, George Robinson; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 19Aug42; LP11529.

MUNCHAUSEN. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: UFA Filmkunst.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title & descr., 5Dec46; 7 prints, 2Nov45; LU696.

MURDER AMONG FRIENDS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,500 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Ray McCarey; original screenplay, John Larkin; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Feb41; LP10396.

MURDER BY INVITATION. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Bricker; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Jun41; LP10924.

MURDER, HE SAYS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 9 reels, sd. A George Marshall production.

Credits: Producer, E. D. Leshin; director, George Marshall; story, Jack Moffitt; screenplay, Lou Breslow; editor, LeRoy Stone.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Apr45; LP13306.

MURDER IN THE AIR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 6 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Lewis Seiler; original screenplay, Raymond Schrock.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 17Apr40; LP9676.

MURDER IN THE BIG HOUSE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 59 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based upon an idea by Jerry Chodorov.

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; film editor, Terry Morse.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Apr42; LP11198.

MURDER IN THE BLUE ROOM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Erich Philippi.

Credits: Associate producer, Frank Gross; director, Leslie Goodwins; screenplay, I.A.L. Diamond, Stanley Davis; music director, Sam Freed, Jr.; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12968.

MURDER IN THE MUSIC HALL. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Herman Millakowsky; director, John English; original story, Arnold Phillips, Maria Matray; screenplay, Frances Hyland, Laszlo Gorog; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Feb46; LP213.

MURDER IN TIMES SQUARE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Lew Landers; story, Stuart Palmer; screenplay, Paul Gangelin; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Mar43; LP11918.

MURDER IN TRINIDAD. SEE Caribbean Mystery.

MURDER IS MY BUSINESS. c1946. Presented by PRC Pictures. 7 reels, sd., 35mm. Based upon original characters and story by Brett Halliday.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; screenplay, Fred Myton; music director, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 18Jun46; LP385.

MURDER MY SWEET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 95 min., sd. Based on the novel "Farewell My Lovely" by Raymond Chandler.

Credits: Producer, Adrian Scott; director, Edward Dmytryk; screenplay, John Paxton; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Joseph Noriega.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Mar45; LP13166.

MURDER ON THE WATERFRONT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 49 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the play by Ralph Spenser Zink.

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

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 25Sep43; LP12284.

MURDER OVER NEW YORK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 5,720 ft., sd. Based on the character "Charlie Chan" created by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Director, Harry Lachman; original screenplay, Lester Ziffren; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Dec40; LP10207.

MUSCLE BEACH. Strick Film Co, 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short about the seashore in the summer time.

Credits: Author, Joseph Strick.

© Strick Film Co.; title & descr., 25Jan49; 2 prints, 29Nov48; MU3759.

MUSCLE MAULERS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Lew Lehr's Dribble-Puss Parade)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31May46; MP1022.

MUSCLES AND THE LADY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 10)

Summary: At Boca Raton, Fla., national women's golf champion Louise Suggs and Frank Stranahan, a leading amateur, play an exhibition golf match.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; script, Burton Benjamin; narrator, Red Barber; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Harold Oteri.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 28May48; MP3187.

THE MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. Herbert Kerkow, Inc., c1947. Presented by United States Information Service. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Editor, Stanley Cypher; writer, Frank Beckwith.

© Herbert Kerkow, Inc.; 26Nov47; MP2519.

MUSEUM PIECE NO. 13. SEE Secret Beyond the Door.

MUSIC A LA KING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Maurice Wright.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Jun41; LP10523.

MUSIC FOR AMERICANS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. Presented by The Chicago Tribune, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Morgan W. Gibney.

© The Chicago Tribune; title & descr., 8Jul43; 1c, 10Jul43; MU13722.

MUSIC FOR MILLIONS. c1944. 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, George Stoll; orchestration, Joseph Nussbaum, Ted Duncan, Calvin Jackson; film editor, Douglas Biggs.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec44; LP13052.

MUSIC IN AMERICA. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

MUSIC IN MANHATTAN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 81 min., sd.

Credits: Director, John H. Auer; story, Maurice Tombragel, Hal Smith, Jack Scholl; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestral arrangements, Gene Rose; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Aug44; LP13004.

MUSIC IN MY HEART. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1939. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Irving Starr; director, Joseph Santley; original story and screenplay, James Edward Grant; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Dec39; LP9306.

MUSIC IN THE MORGAN MANNER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 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.; 10Mar41; LP10311.

THE MUSIC MAN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical about the reconciliation of two feuding brothers who unknowingly collaborate on a successful musical comedy.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Jason; original screenplay, Sam Mintz; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, William Austin.

Cast: Phil Brito, Freddie Stewart, June Preisser, Noel Neill, Alan Hale, Jr.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Sep48; LP1878.

MUSIC OF THE AMERICAS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters Bands)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Jack Scholl.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec45; MP94.

THE MUSIC SHOP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Apr45; MP15884.

THE MUSICAL BANDIT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; direction and story, Charles Robert; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Jun41; LP10559.

A MUSICAL JOKE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Mar43; MP13346.

MUSICAL MASTERPIECES. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 912 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sam Baerwitz; director, Merrill Pye; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Apr46; LP277.

MUSICAL MEMORIES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., 35mm. (Melody Master Band)

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Jun46; MP824.

MUSICAL MEXICO. Released by Warner Bros., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Producer, Louis Lewyn; director, Jack Scholl.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 11Apr45; MP15835.

MUSICAL MIRACLE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Cast: Patti Clayton, Paul Whiteman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Mar48; LP1520.

MUSICAL MOMENTS FROM CHOPIN. Walter Lantz Productions, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Miniatures)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Laverne Harding, Les Kline; music, Darrell Calker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., and Walter Lantz Productions; 1Apr47; MP2098.

MUSICAL MOMENTS WITH THE RAMSEYERS. Scriptures Visualized Institute, c1943. 600 ft., sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Rev. and Mrs. S. E. Ramseyer.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 15Nov43; MP14282.

MUSICAL MOVIE MEMORIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17May43; MP13587.

MUSICAL MOVIELAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, LeRoy Prinz; words and music, M. K. Jerome, Jack Scholl. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Oct44; LP12863.

MUSICAL NOVELTIES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Melody Master Bands)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Oct45; MP16429.

MUSICAL SHIPMATES. The Vitaphone Corp., in cooperation with the United States Navy, c1946. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Director, William Clemens.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 1Mar46; LP135.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Dec44; MP15475.

MUSICAL VARIETIES. Distributed by Amusement Research Corp., c1946. 5,000 ft., sd., 16mm.

Credits: Directors, Gene Russell and Bill Hayes.

© Amusement Research Corp.; 3Sep46; MP1347.

MUSICALULU. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Little Lulu Cartoon)

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Oct46; LP801.

THE MUTINEERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which the captain of a freighter outwits a gang of counterfeiters who seize control of the ship in mid-ocean.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Jean Yarbrough; original story, Dan Gordon; screenplay, Ben Bengal, Joseph Carole; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Jon Hall, Adele Jergens, George Reeves, Noel Cravat, Don C. Harvey.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Apr49; LP2241.

MUTINY IN THE ARCTIC. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, John Rawlins; original story, Paul Huston; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel, Victor McLeod.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Apr41; LP10419.

MUTINY IN THE COUNTY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Arthur V. Jones, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3May40; LP9611.

A MUTT IN A RUT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; animation, Dave Tendlar, Tom Golden; story, Carl Meyer, Jack Mercer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Jun49; LP2322.

MUTT 'N BONES. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 667 ft., sd. (A Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Paul Sommer; story, Eddie Seward; animation, Chick Otterstrom, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 25Aug44; LP13313.

MY AUNT, YOUR AUNT. SEE Meine Tante, Deine Tante.

MY BABY JUST CARES FOR ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Apr44; MP14704.

MY BABY KNOWS BEST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP54.

MY BABY SAID YES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16314.

MY BEST GAL. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Anthony Mann; original story, Richard Brooks; screenplay, Olive Cooper, Earl Felton; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Feb44; LP12533.

MY BLUE HEAVEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Mar45; MP15735.

MY BOTTLE IS DRY. c1946. Presented by Soundies. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Oct46; MP1246.

MY BOY JOHNNY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12May44; LP12693.

MY BOY JOHNNY. Terrytoons, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12May44; MP14905.

MY BROTHER JACK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP15222.

MY BROTHER JONATHAN. Associated British Pictures Corp., Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. through Allied Artists Productions, Inc., c1949. 103 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel of the same title by Francis Brett Young.

Summary: A drama about the self sacrifice of a struggling young doctor in an English coal-mining district.

Credits: Producer, Warwick Ward; director, Harold French; screenplay, Leslie L. Landau, Adrian Alington; film editor, Charles Hassee.

Cast: Michael Denison, Dulcie Gray, Ronald Howard, Stephan Murray, Mary Clare.

© Allied Artists Productions, Inc.; 15Apr49; LP2282.

MY BROTHER TALKS TO HORSES. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, Fred Zinnemann; story and screenplay, Morton Thompson; music score, Rudolph G. Kopp; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Oct46; LP653.

MY BROTHER'S KEEPER. Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., London, c1947. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. 86 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A crime melodrama about a relentless manhunt for a ruthless criminal and his unwilling partner, a terrified young first-offender.

Credits: Producer, Antony Darnborough; director, Alfred Roome; story, Maurice Wiltshire; screenplay, Frank Harvey, Jr.; music, Clifton Parker; music director, John Hollingsworth; editor, Esmond Seal.

Cast: Jack Warner, Jane Hylton, George Cole, David Tomlinson, Bill Owen.

© Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd.; 3Dec47 (in notice: 1948); LP2537.

MY BUDDY. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Steve Sekely; original story, Prescott Chaplin; screenplay, Arnold Manoff; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Sep44; LP12874.

MY BUDDY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Nov43; MP14249.

MY BUNNY LIES OVER THE SEA. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Ben Washam, Lloyd Vaughan.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 10Dec48; MP3609.

MY CHICKASHAY GAL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16453.

MY DAD'S COMPANY. Presented by Detroit Edison Company. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 25Apr46; MU497.

MY DARLING CLEMENTINE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Sep42; MP12938.

MY DARLING CLEMENTINE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the book "Wyatt Earp, Frontier Marshal" by Stuart N. Lake.

Credits: Director, John Ford; story, Sam Hellman; screenplay, Samuel G. Engle, Winston Miller; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: Henry Fonda, Linda Darnell, Victor Mature, Cathy Downs, Walter Brennan.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Oct46; LP755.

MY DEAR SECRETARY. Cardinal Pictures, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1948. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A farce about a fiction writer, his domestic difficulties and his secretaries.

Credits: Producer, Leo C. Popkin; directed and written by Charles Martin; music score, Heinz Roemheld; film editor, Arthur H. Nadel.

Cast: Laraine Day, Kirk Douglas, Keenan Wynn, Helen Walker, Rudy Vallee.

© Cardinal Pictures, Inc.; 5Nov48; LP1899.

MY DOG RUSTY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 67 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on characters created by Al Martin.

Summary: A little boy learns a bitter lesson when his deceit causes his father to lose a city election.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; story, William B. Sackheim, Brenda Weisberg; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, John Litel, Ann Doran, Mona Barrie, Flame.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Mar48; LP1598.

MY DOG SHEP. Golden Gate Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, William B. David; director, Ford Beebe; original screenplay, Ford Beebe.

Cast: Lanney Rees, Tom Neal, William Farnum.

© Screen Guild Productions, Inc.; 15Dec46; LP759.

MY DREAM IS YOURS. Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc. Released through Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 101 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A rags-to-riches musical comedy in which a talent agent transforms an unknown singer into a radio star.

Credits: Producer and director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz, Dane Lussier; adaptation, Allan Rivkin, Laura Kerr; music, Harry Warren; music director, Ray Heindorf; film editor, Folmar Blangsted.

Cast: Jack Carson, Doris Day, Lee Bowman, Adolphe Menjou, Eve Arden.

© Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc.; 19Apr49; LP2288.

MY DREAMS ARE GETTING BETTER ALL THE TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16075.

MY FAVORITE BLONDE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Sidney Lanfield; story, Melvin Frank, Norman Panama; screenplay, Don Hartman, Frank Butler; music score, David Buttolph; photography, William Mellor; film editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Mar42; LP11269.

MY FAVORITE BRUNETTE. Hope Enterprises, Inc., c1947. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Daniel Dare; director, Elliott Nugent; original screenplay, Edmund Beloin, Jack Rose; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

Cast: Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Peter Lorre, Lon Chaney.

© Hope Enterprises, Inc.; 20Mar47; LP899.

MY FAVORITE DUCK. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Rudolph Larriva; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Jan43; MP13197.

MY FAVORITE SONG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4May42; MP12498.

MY FAVORITE SPY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 86 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Harold Lloyd; director, Tay Garnett; original story, M. Coates Webster; screenplay, Sig Herzig, William Bowers; music, James Van Heusen; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music score, Roy Webb; music arrangements, George Duning; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Apr42; LP11414.

MY FAVORITE WIFE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 88 min., sd. A Leo McCarey production.

Credits: Director, Garson Kanin; original story, Bella and Samuel Spewack, Leo McCarey; written for the screen by Bella and Samuel Spewack; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Robert Wise.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 17May40; LP9879.

MY FRATERNITY PIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Aug41; MP11447.

MY FRIEND FLICKA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 7,970 ft., sd. From the novel by Mary O'Hara.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; screenplay, Lillie Hayward; adaptation, Francis Edwards Faragoh; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp.; 23Apr43; LP12022.

MY FRIEND IRMA. Wallis-Hazen, Inc. Released through Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 103 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the Columbia Broadcasting System radio program created by Cy Howard.

Summary: A comedy about a well-meaning girl whose natural stupidity keeps her roommate and friends in a constant state of turmoil.

Credits: Producer, Hal B. Wallis; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Cy Howard, Parke Levy; music, Roy Webb; editor, LeRoy Stone.

Cast: Diana Lynn, John Lund, Don DeFore, Marie Wilson, Dean Martin.

© Wallis-Hazen, Inc.; 19Jul49; LP2396.

MY GAL LOVES MUSIC. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer-director, Edward Lilley; original story, Patricia Harper; screenplay, Eugene Conrad; adaptation, Edward Dein; cameraman, Hal Mohr; film editor, Russel Shoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12981.

MY GAL SAL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10905.

MY GAL SAL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 9,223 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, Seton I. Miller, Darrell Ware, Karl Tunberg; music direction, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 8May42; LP11381.

MY GIRL LOVES A SAILOR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Aug43; MP13812.

MY GIRL TISA. United States Pictures, Inc., c1948. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on "Ever the Beginning" a play by Lucille S. Prumbs and Sara B. Smith.

Summary: A drama concerned with the hopes and struggles of Tisa, and with the ambitions and earnest patriotism of other immigrants living on New York's East Side in the early 20th century.

Credits: Producer, Milton Sperling; director, Elliott Nugent; screenplay, Allen Boretz; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, Max Steiner; film editor, Christian Nyby.

Cast: Lilli Palmer, Sam Wanamaker, Akim Tamiroff, Alan Hale, Hugo Haas.

© United States Pictures, Inc.; 7Feb48; LP1461.

MY GREAT, GREAT GRANDFATHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Aug42; MP12876.

MY HEART BELONGS TO DADDY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, Robert Siodmak; original screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert; photographer, Daniel Fapp; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Feb43; LP11879.

MY HEART TELLS ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Apr44; MP14684.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Feb44; MP14547.

MY KINGDOM FOR A COOK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, P. J. Wolfson; director, Richard Wallace; story, Lili Hatvany, Andrew Solt; screenplay, Harold Goldman, Andrew Solt, Joseph Hoffman, Jack Henley; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Oct43; LP12368.

MY LIFE AND HARD TIMES. SEE Rise and Shine.

MY LIFE WITH CAROLINE. United Producers, c1941. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 81 min., sd. From the play by Louis Verneuil and Georges Berr.

Credits: Producer and director, Lewis Milestone; screenplay, John Van Druten, Arnold Belgard; music score, Werner Heymann; editor, Henry Berman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Aug41; LP10636.

MY LITTLE CHICKADEE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 10 reels.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Cline; original screenplay, Mae West, W. C. Fields.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Feb40; LP9425.

MY LITTLE COUSIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25May42; MP12592.

MY LITTLE GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11035.

MY LITTLE GRASS SHACK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec41; MP11996.

MY LOST HORIZON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11034.

MY LOVE CAME BACK. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Walter Reisch.

Credits: Director, Kurt Bernhardt; screenplay, Ivan Goff, Robert Buckner, Earl Baldwin.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Jul40; LP9778.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11737.

MY MAN JASPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (George Pal Puppetoon)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Dec45; LP6.

MY, MY, AIN'T THAT SOMETHIN'! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Oct44; MP15363.

MY NAME IS JULIA ROSS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 65 min., sd. From the book "The Woman in Red" by Anthony Gilbert.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Joseph H. Lewis; screenplay, Muriel Roy Bolton; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Henry Batista.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Nov45; LP13706.

MY NEW GOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP812.

MY OLD FLAME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Sep42; MP12935.

MY OLD TOWN. Loew's Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) An MGM picture.

Summary: The happy, peaceful life of a small town in the early 20th century is contrasted with life in the same town today.

Credits: Written and narrated by John Nesbitt; music director, David Snell; film editor, Newell P. Kimlin.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jan48; LP1479.

MY OWN TRUE LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on "Make You a Good Wife" by Yolanda Foldes.

Summary: A drama about a London widower and his wounded veteran-son who fall in love with the same girl.

Credits: Producer, Val Lewton; director, Compton Bennett; screenplay, Theodore Strauss, Josef Mischel; adaptation, Arthur Kober; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Leroy Stone.

Cast: Phyllis Calvert, Melvyn Douglas, Wanda Hendrix, Philip Friend, Binnie Barnes.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Feb49; LP2112.

MY OWN UNITED STATES. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 19 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A panoramic view of the American scene from coast to coast.

Credits: Written and edited by De Leon Anthony; narrator, Truman Bradley; music, William Lava.

© The Vitaphone Corporation; 18Oct48; MP3431.

MY PAL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 22 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (My Pal, no. 1)

Credits: Produced and written by George Bilson; director, Lew Landers; music, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, Sharyn Moffett.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Oct47; LP1290.

MY PAL TRIGGER. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Paul Gangelin; screenplay, Jack Townley, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; orchestral arrangements, Dale Butts; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Jun46; LP353.

MY PAL WOLF. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 75 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Adrian Scott; director, Alfred Werker; original story, Frederick Hazlitt Brennan; screenplay, Lillie Hayward, Leonard Praskins, John Paxton; music, Werner R. Heymann; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Oct44; LP12911.

MY PIN UP GUY. 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.; 3Nov46; MP1272.

MY POP, MY POP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Arnold Gillespie, Abner Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Oct40; LP9995.

MY REPUTATION. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 94 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the novel "Instruct My Sorrows" by Clare Jaynes.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Curtis Bernhardt; screenplay, Catherine Turney; music, Max Steiner; photographer, James Wong Howe; film editor, David Weisbart.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Jan46; LP85.

MY REVERIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Oct43; MP14033.

MY SHAWL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Apr42; MP12460.

MY SILENT LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Credits: Directed and written by Justin Herman; editor, Robert Blauvelt.

Cast: Jane Pickens, Parker Fennelly.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Apr49; LP2240.

MY SISTER AND I. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Dec43; MP14268.

MY SISTER EILEEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 10 reels, sd. Based upon the play by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov, adapted from the stories by Ruth McKenney.

Credits: Producer, Max Gordon; director, Alexander Hall; screenplay, Joseph Fields, Jerome Chodorov; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Sep42; LP11602.

MY SON IS GUILTY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1939. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Charles Barton; story, Karl Brown; screenplay, Harry Shumate, Joseph Carole; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Dec39; LP9307.

MY SON, MY SON! Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Edward Small. 116 min., sd. From the novel by Howard Spring.

Credits: Producer, Edward Small; director, Charles Vidor; screenplay, Lenore Coffee; music, Edward Ward; photography, Harry Stradling; film editor, Fred R. Feitshans, Jr.

© Edward Small Productions, Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9498.

MY SON, THE HERO. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Peter R. Van Duinen; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; original screenplay, Doris Malloy, Edgar G. Ulmer; music score, Leo Erdody; editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 23Mar43; LP11933.

MY SWEET ELOISE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Aug42; MP12821.

MY TOMATO. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 669 ft., sd., b&w. (A Robert Benchley Miniature)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Dec43; LP12501.

MY WIFE TERESA. SEE Meine Frau Teresa.

MY WIFE'S AN ANGEL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 2,062 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, B. K. Blake; story, George Blake; music director, Jack Shaindlin; photographer, George Webber; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Jun43; LP12105.

MY WILD IRISH ROSE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 101 min., sd., color, 35mm. A First National picture. Based on Rita Olcott's book "Song in His Heart."

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, David Butler; screenplay, Peter Milne; music composed and adapted by Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Irene Morra.

Cast: Dennis Morgan, Andrea King, Alan Hale, George Tobias, George O'Brien.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec47; LP1364.

MY WUBBA DOLLY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jun44; MP14991.

MYSTERIOUS CEYLON. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A camera tour of Ceylon, showing the crafts of the villagers, agricultural activities, the gem mines, a Ceylonese wedding, native ceremonies of the devil dancers and fire walkers, and large tea estates.

Credits: Written by Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley; editor, Everett Dodd.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Jan49; MP3735.

THE MYSTERIOUS DESPERADO. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a trio of scheming land sharks are brought to justice. Setting, early California.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lesley Selander; written by Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Les Millbrook.

Cast: Richard Martin, Edward Norris, Movita Castaneda, Frank Wilcox, William Tannen.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Aug49; LP2525.

THE MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 57 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Ben Stoloff; original screenplay, Richard Weil; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Mar43; LP11898.

MYSTERIOUS DOCTOR SATAN. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Dec40; no. 1–5, LP10224, no. 6–10, LP10244; no. 11–15, LP10305.

Credits: Associate producer, Hiram S. Brown, Jr.; directors, William Witney, John English; original screenplay, Franklyn Adreon, Ronald Davidson, Norman S. Hall, Joseph Poland, Sol Shor; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editors, Edward Todd, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. Return of the Copperhead.

2. Thirteen Steps.

3. Undersea Tomb.

4. The Human Bomb.

5. Doctor Satan's Man of Steel.

6. Double Cross.

7. The Monster Strikes.

8. Highway of Death.

9. Double Jeopardy.

10. Bridge of Peril.

11. Death Closes In.

12. Crack-up.

13. Disguised.

14. The Flaming Coffin.

15. Doctor Satan Strikes.

MYSTERIOUS INTRUDER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Castle; story and screenplay, Eric Taylor; music, Wilbur Hatch; music direction, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Apr46; LP251.

THE MYSTERIOUS MR. M. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels, each, 35mm. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Lewis D. Collins, Vernon Keays; original story, Joseph F. Poland, Paul Huston, Barry Shipman.

1. When Clocks Chime Death. © 1Aug46; LP485.

2. Danger Downward. © 1Aug46; LP486.

3. Flood of Flames. © 1Aug46; LP487.

4. The Double Trap. © 1Aug46; LP488.

5. Highway Execution. © 28Aug46; LP539.

6. Heavier than Water. © 28Aug46; LP540.

7. Strange Collision. © 28Aug46; LP541.

8. When Friend Kills Friend. © 28Aug46; LP542.

9. Parachute Peril. © 6Sep46; LP581.

10. The Human Time-Bomb. © 6Sep46; LP582.

11. The Key to Murder. © 6Sep46; LP583.

12. High-Line Smash-Up. © 6Sep46; LP584.

13. The Real Mr. M. © 6Sep46; LP585.

THE MYSTERIOUS MR. REEDER. Monogram Pictures Corp.; c1940. 6 reels. Based on the story "The Mind of Mr. Reeder" by Edgar Wallace.

Credits: Producer, Charles Q. Steel; director, Jack Raymond; scenario, Brian Edgar Wallace, Marjorie Gaffney, Michael Hogan.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Apr40; LP9622.

THE MYSTERIOUS MR. VALENTINE. c1946. 56 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Milton Raison; music, Mort Glickman; photographer, Alfred Keller; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Sep46; LP594.

THE MYSTERIOUS PICTURE. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on an adventure in "La Légende d'Ulenspiegel" by Charles de Coster.

Summary: Impersonating a famous artist, Thyl Ulenspiegel paints a portrait that is visible only to those who are truly noble in spirit. Setting, Flanders in the 16th century.

Credits: Producer, Louis Lantz; director, Charles Haas; screenplay, Bess Taffel; editor, Edward Mann.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2426.

THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sherman Scott; original screenplay, Steve Braxton; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© PRC Pictures. Inc.; 20Nov43; LP13613.

MYSTERY AT SPANISH HACIENDA. SEE The Laramie Trail.

MYSTERY BROADCAST. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7Oct43; LP12326.

MYSTERY IN MEXICO. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A crime melodrama with the setting in present-day Mexico City. An insurance investigator and a young woman, whose brother is suspected of stealing a diamond pendant, discover the identity of the thief.

Credits: Producer, Sid Rogell; director, Robert Wise; story, Muriel Roy Bolton; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: William Lundigan, Jacqueline White, Ricardo Cortez, Tony Barrett, Jacqueline Dalya.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Jun48; LP1728.

MYSTERY IN THE MOONLIGHT. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Jul48; LP1805.

MYSTERY MAN. Released by United Artists, c1944. Presented by Harry Sherman Productions. 58 min., sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Irvin Talbot; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Fred W. Berger.

Appl. author: United Artists Corp.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 31May44; LP12710.

MYSTERY OF MARIE ROGET. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Malvern; director, Phil Rosen; screenplay, Michel Jacoby; cameraman, Woody Bredell; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11094.

MYSTERY OF THE RIVER BOAT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; c1944. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original story and adaptation, Ande Lamb; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel.

1. The Tragic Crash. © 5Oct44; LP12888.

2. The Phantom Killer. © 5Oct44; LP12889.

3. The Flaming Inferno. © 26Oct44; LP13041.

4. The Brink of Doom. © 26Oct44; LP13042.

5. The Highway of Peril. © 26Oct44; LP13043.

6. The Fatal Plunge. © 26Oct44; LP13044.

7. The Toll of the Storm. © 26Oct44; LP13045.

8. The Break in the Levee. © 24Nov44; LP13108.

9. Trapped in the Quicksands. © 24Nov44; LP13109.

10. Flaming Havoc. © 24Nov44; LP13110.

11. Electrocuted. © 24Nov44; LP13111.

12. Risking Death. © 24Nov44; LP13112.

13. The Boomerang. © 24Nov44; LP13113.

THE MYSTERY OF THE 13TH GUEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd. From the Armitage Trail novel "The 13th Guest."

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, Charles R. Marion, Tim Ryan, Arthur Hoerl; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Sep43; LP12388.

MYSTERY SEA RAIDER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Robert Grant.

Credits: Producer, Eugene Zukor; director, Edward Dmytryk; screenplay, Edward E. Paramore, Jr.; photography, Harry Fischbeck; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Aug40; LP9840.

MYSTERY SHIP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story, Alex Gottlieb; screenplay, David Silverstein, Houston Branch; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Sep41; LP10761.

MYSTIC INDIA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Hugh James; music score, L. de Francesco; photographer, John W. Boyle; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 12Sep44; MP15193.

MYSTO FOX. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 632 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sid Marcus; animation, Chick Otterstrom, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 18Aug46; LP641.

N

NABONGA (GORILLA). PRC Pictures, Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

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

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 30Jan44; LP12467.

THE NADOCKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jan42; MP12149.

NAELLOPE, HEKKIESLOPE EN AFLOSLOPE. SEE Dashes, Hurdles, and Relays.

THE NAKED CITY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From a story by Malvin Wald.

Summary: A picture about New York City and its people, photographed on actual settings. The work of the New York Homicide Department in locating a murderer furnishes material for the plot.

Credits: Producer, Mark Hellinger; director, Jules Dassin; screenplay, Albert Maltz, Malvin Wald; music supervisor, Milton Schwarzwald; music, Miklos Rozsa, Frank Skinner; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

Cast: Barry Fitzgerald, Howard Duff, Dorothy Hart, Don Taylor, Ted De Corsia.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 24Mar48; LP1575.

THE NAME WAS SMITH. Featurettes. Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12677.

NANCY. SEE School Daze.

NANOOK OF THE NORTH. Revillon Frères, c1922., 50 min., si., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Filmed on the eastern shores of Hudson Bay, this documentary shows the Eskimo's ceaseless struggle for survival.

Credits: Directed, written, and photographed by Robert J. Flaherty.

© Revillon Frères; 30Jun22; LP1964.

NARANA OF THE NORTH. SEE Arctic Manhunt.

NASTY QUACKS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Story, Warren Foster; animation, I. Ellis; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec45; MP330.

A NATION DANCES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Introduction by Erskine Caldwell.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 25Sep43; LP12282.

A NATION IS BORN. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1947. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 3)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, David Griffin; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Ken Smith; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 10Jan47; MP1901.

A NATION ON SKIS. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. Warner Bros. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade)

Summary: Features skiing in Norway, with scenes of an Easter skiing party for all ages, and exhibitions at the Holmenkollen jump.

Credits: Director and photographer, Douglas Sinclair; narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Dec48; MP3870.

THE NATIONAL BARN DANCE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd. Based on the national radio program of the same name.

Credits: Producer, Walter MacEwen; director, Hugh Bennett; original screenplay, Lee Loeb, Hal Fimberg; music director, Irvin Talbot; editor, Everett Douglas.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Sep44; LP12937.

NATIONAL SOCIALIST ACTIVITIES, U.S.A., 1937–1939. 100 ft., b&w, 8mm.

© Joseph Schadl; title, descr., & 7 prints, 15Jul47; MU2189.

NATIONAL VELVET. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., color. A Clarence Brown production. Based on the novel by Enid Bagnold.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; screenplay, Theodore Reeves, Helen Deutsch; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Dec44; LP13036.

THE NATION'S CAPITAL. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16388.

A NATION'S MEAT. c1942. 27 min., sd., 16mm.

Credits: Narration, William Adams.

Appl. author: John McDonald.

© Industrial Patents Corp.; 1Dec42; MP13245.

NATIVE LAND. 105 min., sd. Based on the material of the United States Senate Civil Liberties Committee and other public documents.

Credits: Directors, Leo Hurwitz, Paul Strand; story and screen treatment, David Wolff, Leo Hurwitz, Paul Strand; narrator and singer, Paul Robeson; commentary, David Wolff; music, Marc Blitzstein; editor, Leo Hurwitz.

Appl. authors: David Wolff, Paul Strand, Leo Hurwitz.

© Frontier Films, Inc.; title & descr., 13Feb42; 2 prints, 16Feb42; MU12162.

NATURAL RESOURCES OF THE PACIFIC COAST. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clifford M. Zierer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 7Feb47; MP2566.

LA NATURALEZA PROTEGE A LOS ANIMALES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "How Nature Protects Animals."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Feb47; MP1685.

THE NATURE OF COLOR. Coronet, In collaboration with Ira M. Freeman, c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 7Jul46; MP2024.

THE NATURE OF ENERGY. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An introduction to the study of energy, explaining the concept of kinetic, potential, chemical, heat, electrical, and nuclear energy. For high school students.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Paul E. Kambly.

© David A. Smart; 11Aug49; MP4498.

THE NATURE OF LIGHT. Coronet, c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Defines light, explains the science of optics, and demonstrates how light is utilized. For high school students.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Ira M. Freeman.

© David A. Smart; 16Jul48; MP3715.

THE NATURE OF SOUND. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Using simple experiments and an oscilloscope, a young man explains to a boy of 12 the characteristics of sound. The study of sound begun in this film is continued in "The Sound of Music."

Credits: Collaborator, Ira M. Freeman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 18Feb48; MP3105.

NATURE'S ATOM BOMB. General Film Productions Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (The Answer Man Series, no. 2)

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

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Oct46; MP1156.

NATURE'S NURSERY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 894 ft., sd. (Paramount Paragraphics)

Credits: Director, John Haeseler; written by Justin Herman; narrator, Will Geer; editor, Leslie Roush.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Oct40; MP19523.

A NATUREZA PROTEGE OS ANIMAIS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul46; MP932.

NAUGHTY BUT MICE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Bill Turner, Larry Reilly.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Oct47; LP1243.

NAUGHTY NANETTE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1,516 ft., sd., color. Based on a story by Carolyn Pratt. (A Paramount Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer and director, George B. Templeton; screenplay, Carolyn Pratt, Franz Rosenwald; music director, Harry Simeone; editor, Helene Turner. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Dec45; LP147.

THE NAUGHTY NINETIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 10Jun40; LP9692.

THE NAUGHTY NINETIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Edmund L. Hartmann, John Grant; director, Jean Yarbrough; original screenplay, Edmund L. Hartmann, John Grant, Edmund Joseph, Hal Fimberg; music director, Edgar Fairchild; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jun45; LP13337.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16069.

THE NAUTCH GIRL FROM CUBA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26May41; MP11180.

NAUTICAL BUT NICE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Screenplay, Jack Scholl.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Dec44; LP13007.

NAUTICAL BUT NICE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Screenplay, Jack Scholl.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Sep45; LP13468.

NAVAHO INDIAN HEALING CEREMONY. Color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Harry G. Steele, Sr.

© U. S. Electrical Motors, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Aug43; MU13818.

NAVAHO KID. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Harry Fraser; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Jack Greenhalgh; film editor, Roy Livingston.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 8Dec45; LP13700.

NAVAJO CHILDREN. SEE

As Crianças Navajas.

Niños Navajos.

Tasco, the Navajo.

THE NAVAJO INDIAN. Coronet, c1945. Made through the courtesy of U. S. Dept. of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Supervisor, Alfred Whiting; educational author, Wendell W. Wright.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 26Jul45; MP1543.

NAVAJO INDIANE. SEE Navajo Indians.

NAVAJO INDIANS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Clark Wissler, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Navajo Indiane."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Jun46; MP1865.

NAVAJO INDIANS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Clark Wissler.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Mar39; MP9818.

NAVAJO INDIANS. SEE

Os Índios Navajos.

Los Navajos.

NAVAJO PEOPLE. SEE Tasco, the Navajo.

THE NAVAJO TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Howard Bretherton; story, Jess Bowers; screenplay, Frank H. Young; cameraman, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Arthur H. Bell.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Dec44; LP13097.

NAVAJO TRAIL RAIDERS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949, 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A western in which Rocky Lane rids the town of a gang of outlaws.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, R. G. Springsteen; written by M. Coates Webster; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Robert Emmett Keane, Barbara Bestar, Hal Landon.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Oct49; LP2565.

LOS NAVAJOS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Clark Wissler, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Navajo Indians."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Feb47; MP1716.

NAVAL ACADEMY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Robert James Cosgriff.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, David Silverstein, Gordon Rigby; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22May41; LP10653.

NAVAL AIR STATION AND ITS WORK.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 5 prints, 24Feb45; MU15874.

THE NAVAL AIRCRAFT FACTORY. Time, Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

© Time, Inc.; 10May43; MP13831.

NAVAL DISCIPLINE. Time, Inc., c1943. 1 reel.

© Time, Inc.; 2Nov43; MP14259.

THE NAVAL GUN AT OKINAWA. Presented by the United States Navy. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Jun46; 14 prints, 1Jul46; MU916.

THE NAVY ASHORE. Time, Inc., c1943. 2 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 10May43; MP13783.

NAVY BLUES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 108 min., sd. From a story by Arthur T. Horman.

Credits: Associate producers, Jerry Wald, Jack Saper; director, Lloyd Bacon; screenplay, Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay, Arthur T. Horman, Sam Perrin; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 13Sep41; LP10688.

THE NAVY COMES THROUGH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 82 min., sd. Based on the story "Pay to Learn" by Borden Chase.

Credits: Producer, Islin Auster; director, A. Edward Sutherland; screenplay, Roy Chanslor, Aeneas MacKenzie; adaptation, Earl Baldwin, John Twist; music score, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Oct42; LP11717.

NAVY CREW CHAMPIONS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 134)

Summary: Midshipmen from the U.S. Naval Academy training for the Poughkeepsie Regatta, and the race that made the Navy crew the national champions.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Dec47; MP2735.

NAVY MEN OF MEDICINE. Time, Inc., c1943. 2 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 23Feb43; MP13784.

NAVY NURSE. The Vitaphone Corp., in cooperation with U. S. Navy, c1945. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshed; director, D. Ross Lederman.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Mar45; LP13174.

THE NAVY PLAN FOR NATIONAL SECURITY. Presented by the U. S. Navy. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 9May46; 14 prints, 13May46; MU562.

THE NAVY WAY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Maxwell Shane; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; editor, Howard Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Feb44; LP12614.

NAVY YARD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Oct43; MP14075.

NAZI AGENT. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon an idea by Lothar Mendes.

Credits: Producer, Irving Asher; director, Jules Dassin; screenplay, Paul Gangelin, John Meehan, Jr.; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Jan42; LP11350.

NAZTY NUISANCE. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Glenn Tryon; screenplay, Earle Snell, Clarence Marks; music score, Edward Ward; cinematographer, Robert Pittack; film editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Dec42; LP12324.

NEARLY EIGHTEEN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original story, Margaret Englander; screenplay, George Sayre; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1Oct43; LP12289.

'NEATH BROOKLYN BRIDGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, Wallace Fox; original story and screenplay, Harvey Gates; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 16Oct42; LP11645.

'NEATH CANADIAN SKIES. Distributed by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1946. Presented by Golden Gate Pictures, Inc. 5 reels, sd., 35mm. By James Oliver Curwood.

Credits: Producer, William B. David; director, B. Reeves Eason; screenplay, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Carl Hoefle; cinematographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Roy Livingston.

© Golden Gate Pictures, Inc.; 15Sep46; LP536.

NECK AND NECK. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Techcolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 15May42; MP12489.

NEIGHBOR PESTS. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

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.; 26Feb47; LP931.

NEIGHBOR TO THE NORTH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 13 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemakers)

Summary: In this semi-documentary film, a Canadian and an American discuss the need for better trade relations between their countries. The Canadian explains that a serious dollar shortage in his country can be relieved through more American tourist trade and increased American purchases from Canada.

Credits: Producer, Albert J. Richard; director, Gene Martel; script, Stuart Legg.

Cast: Ralph Forbes, Walter Abel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Jul48; LP1737.

NEIGHBORS IN THE NIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Summary: Shows how neighbors in a small community work together in the volunteer fire company.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Jul49; MP4365.

NELLIE BLY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Apr43; MP13502.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Mar44; MP14600.

NEPTUNE'S DAUGHTER. Loew's Inc., c1949. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A musical comedy about a bathing suit queen, her not-too-bright sister, a masseur, and a South American polo star.

Credits: Producer, Jack Cummings; director, Edward Buzzell; screenplay, Dorothy Kingsley; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

Cast: Esther Williams, Red Skelton, Ricardo Montalban, Betty Garrett, Keenan Wynn.

© Loew's Inc.; 11May49; LP2324.

NEPTUNE'S DAUGHTERS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

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

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Nov42; MP15410.

NEPTUNE'S PLAYGROUND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sports Review)

Summary: An underwater aquacade including views of table tennis, baseball, and acrobatic stunts all being performed completely under water.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Ed Thorgersen; music score, L. De Francesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Nov48; MP4145.

NERVOUS SHAKEDOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

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

Cast: Hugh Herbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8May47; LP990.

THE NERVOUS WRECK. SEE Up in Arms.

NET MARVELS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Summary: Experts play ping-pong.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Mar48; MP2973.

NEUROSIS AND ALCOHOL. Jules H. Masserman. 24 min.

© Jules H. Masserman; title, descr., & 2 prints, 23Mar44; MU14646.

NEVADA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 62 min., sd. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Edward Killy; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Dec44; LP13170.

NEVADA CITY. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, James Webb; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 20Jun41; LP10536.

NEVER A DULL MOMENT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Edward Lilley; original story, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Mel Ronson, Stanley Roberts; cameraman, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Oct43; LP12314.

NEVER GIVE A SUCKER AN EVEN BREAK. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward Cline; original story, Otis Criblecoblis; screenplay, John T. Neville, Prescott Chaplin; cameraman, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Oct41; LP10770.

NEVER SAY GOODBYE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 97 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, James V. Kern; original story, Ben and Norma Barzman; screenplay, I.A.L. Diamond, James V. Kern; adaptation, Lewis R. Foster; music, Fredrick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; photographer, Arthur Edeson; film editor, Folmer Blangsted.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Oct46; LP667.

NEVER SAY YES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15512.

NEVER TOO OLD TO SWING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Nov45; MP16544.

NEVER WATER A LILLY WITH WINE. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Jane Cavanaugh, Nat Simon.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 20Oct41; MP11726.

NEW ENGLAND. Time, Inc., c1944. 2 reels. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Dec44; MP15982.

NEW ENGLAND BALIKCILARI. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Wallace W. Atwood.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Jul46; MP988.

NEW ENGLAND FISHERMAN. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Arabic.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul46; MP987.

NEW ENGLAND'S EIGHT MILLION YANKEES. SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 12.

THE NEW ERA IN INDIA. SEE Variety Views, no. 115.

NEW FOUNDRY HORIZON. 42 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film shows a typical foundry before and after the installation of mechanical conveying equipment, and describes the work of the engineers who plan and execute the change. Photographed at the plant of the Moline Malleable Iron Company in St. Charles, Illinois.

Appl. author: Bruce L. Simpson.

© National Engineering Co.; title & descr., 26Dec47; 2 prints, 12Mar48; MU2777.

THE NEW FRANCE. SEE The March of Time, 1947.

NEW FRONTIERS OF MEDICINE. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

NEW HAMPSHIRE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 992 ft., sd. (A Columbia Tour, Series 3, no. 4)

Credits: Written and directed by Emerson Yorke; narration, Alois Havrilla; original music score, Solita Palmer; orchestral direction, Jack Shilkret.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Feb40; MP9966.

NEW HORIZONS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940, 1 reel.

Credits: Written and directed by Ira Genet; commentator, John Deering.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Jan40; MP9963.

NEW MOON. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the operetta: book and lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein, 2nd, Frank Mandel, and Laurence Schwab; music by Sigmund Romberg.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Jacques Deval, Robert Arthur; music director, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun40; LP9721.

THE NEW NEIGHBOR.

Credits: Director, Lee Burgess.

© Willard Pictures, Inc.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 6Aug46; MU917.

THE NEW NEIGHBOR. Willard Pictures, Inc., for the International Motion Picture Division O. I. C. Dept. of State. Distributed by the U. S. Information Service, c1946. Presented by United Films. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Lee Burgess.

© Willard Pictures, Inc.; 1Aug46; MP1212.

NEW ORLEANS. Majestic Productions, Inc., c1947. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From an original story by Elliot Paul and Herbert J. Biberman.

Credits: Producer, Jules Levey; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Elliot Paul, Dick Irving Hyland; music director, Nat W. Finston.

Cast: Arturo De Cordova, Dorothy Patrick, Marjorie Lord, Irene Rich.

© Majestic Productions, Inc.; 18Apr47; LP999.

NEW ORLEANS BLUES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Josef Berne; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Norman A. Cerf.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Nov43; LP12383.

NEW ORLEANS MELODIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16072.

THE NEW PUPIL. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 993 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Ralph E. Goldstein.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Apr40; LP9607.

NEW SOLDIERS ARE TOUGH. c1942. Presented by United Artists. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 17Jul42; MP12690.

THE NEW SOUTH. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16389.

THE NEW SPIRIT. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 21Jan42; MP16207.

THE NEW TOBACCOLAND, U.S.A. Pictorial Research, Inc., c1947. 3 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Louis de Rochemont; director, Philippe de Lacy; narrator, John Stuart Martin; music director, Jack Shaindlin; music, Morris Mamorsky; film editors, John McManus, David Ahlers.

© Pictorial Research, Inc.; 1Jul47; MP2193.

NEW VOICES. Cinecraft Productions, Inc., c1949. Presented by the Cleveland Hearing and Speech Center. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the steps taken in the diagnosis of cancer of the larynx, pre-operative treatment, the operation to remove the larynx, and instruction in the Cleveland Hearing and Speech Center on the use of the esophageal voice, which enables the patient to return to normal living within a month after the operation.

Credits: Directed and written by Robert W. Chapin; narrator, William Mayer.

© The Cleveland Hearing & Speech Center; 24Mar49; MP4005.

A NEW WAY TO BETTER SLEEP. c1946. 1 reel, 16mm.

Appl. author: Herbert Kerkow.

© Simmons Co.; 5Jul46; MP1213.

NEW WAYS IN FARMING. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16390.

NEW WINE. Released by United Artists, c1941. Presented by Gloria Pictures. 83 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, William Sekely; director, Reinhold Schunzel; original screenplay, Howard Estabrook, Nicholas Jory; music, Franz Schubert; music director, Arthur Gutmann; film editor, James E. Smith.

© Gloria Pictures Corp.; 16Jul41; LP10598.

NEW YORK PARADE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (New York Parade, series 1, no. 1)

Credits: Producers, Ben K. Blake, André de la Varre; story, William Nelson, George Blake; narrator, Hugh James; music score, Jack Shaindlin; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Dec40; MP10846.

NEW YORK TOWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Jo Swerling.

Credits: Producer, Anthony Veiller; director, Charles Vidor; screenplay, Lewis Meltzer; photographer, Charles Schoenbaum; film editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Oct41; LP10811.

NEW YORK'S FINEST. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 972 ft., sd. (Panoramics, no. 3.)

Credits: Commentator, Ernest Chappell; music director, Jack Schaindlin; photography, Charles Harten, William Kelly; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Nov41; MP12070.

NEWCASTLE DISEASE. American Cyanamid Co., c1948. 17 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Describes the symptoms and treatment of Newcastle Disease in poultry, and discusses a preventive measure in the form of a modified live virus vaccine. For farmers and veterinarians.

© American Cyanamid Co.; 16Aug48; MP3297.

NEWHAVEN-DIEPPE. SEE Temptation Harbor.

THE NEWLYWEDS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy about the difficulties which arise when a bride poses as a single woman in order to get a job in the office where her husband is employed.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; directed and written by Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Robert Neil, Suzi Crandall, Paul Maxey, Vivien Oakland, Tanis Chandler.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Aug49; LP2494.

NEWS EVENTS OF YOUR FAVORITE YEAR—1926. Stuart Productions, Inc., c1948. 13 min., sd., b&w, 16mm & 35mm.

Summary: People, places and events representative of the year 1926. The film shows 33 prominent personalities of the year, including Gene Tunney, Calvin Coolidge, Richard E. Byrd, Queen Marie of Roumania, Will Rogers, and Helen Wills; fashions of the time; the Florida hurricane; a popular cartoon entitled "Felix, the Cat;" and a speakeasy.

Appl. authors: Charles Miller, John W. Stuart.

© Stuart Productions, Inc.; 28Feb48; MP3042.

NEWS HOUNDS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jan Grippo; director, William Beaudine; original story, Edmond Seward, Tim Ryan, George Cappy; screenplay, Edmond Seward, Tim Ryan; music director, Edward Kay.

Cast: Leo Gorcey, Huntz Hall.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Jul47; LP1153.

NEWS ODDITIES. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 571 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 5)

Credits: Story, Harry Love; animation, Allen Rose; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Mar40; MP10184.

NEWS OF THE DAY. Released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, c1939–49. 1 reel each unless otherwise indicated, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Hearst Metrotone News, Inc.

Volume 11, 1939/40.

221. © 28Nov39; MP9835.

222. © 30Nov39; MP9836.

223. © 5Dec39; MP9837.

224. © 7Dec39; MP9838.

225. © 12Dec39; MP9855.

226. © 14Dec39; MP9856.

227. © 19Dec39; MP9880.

228. © 21Dec39; MP9881.

229. © 26Dec39; MP9916.

230. © 28Dec39; MP9917.

231. © 2Jan40; MP9836.

232. © 4Jan40; MP9937.

233. © 9Jan40; MP9944.

234. © 11Jan40; MP9945.

235. © 16Jan40; MP9964.

236. © 18Jan40; MP9965.

237. © 23Jan40; MP9983.

238. © 25Jan40; MP9984.

239. © 30Jan40; MP9994.

240. © 1Feb40; MP9995.

241. © 6Feb40; MP10012.

242. © 8Feb40; MP10013.

243. © 13Feb40; MP10031.

244. © 15Feb40; MP10032.

245. © 20Feb40; MP10048.

246. © 22Feb40; MP10049.

247. © 27Feb40; MP10065.

248. © 29Feb40; MP10066.

249. © 5Mar40; MP10077.

250. © 7Mar40; MP10078.

251. © 12Mar40; MP10093.

252. © 14Mar40; MP10094.

253. © 19Mar40; MP10108.

254. © 21Mar40; MP10109.

255. © 26Mar40; MP10122.

256. © 28Mar40; MP10123.

257. © 2Apr40; MP10139.

258. © 4Apr40; MP10140.

259. © 9Apr40; MP10180.

260. © 11Apr40; MP10181.

261. © 16Apr40; MP10191.

262. © 18Apr40; MP10192.

263. © 23Apr40; MP10208.

264. © 25Apr40; MP10209.

265. © 30Apr40; MP10230.

266. © 2May40; MP10231.

267. © 7May40; MP10236.

268. © 9May40; MP10237.

269. © 14May40; MP10262.

270. © 16May40; MP10263.

271. © 21May40; MP10277.

272. © 23May40; MP10278.

273. © 28May40; MP10297.

274. © 30May40; MP10298.

275. © 4Jun40; MP10311.

276. © 6Jun40; MP10312.

277. © 11Jun40; MP10320.

278. © 13Jun40; MP10321.

279. © 18Jun40; MP10344.

280. © 20Jun40; MP10345.

281. © 25Jun40; MP10356.

282. © 27Jun40; MP10357.

283. © 2Jul40; MP10387.

284. © 4Jul40; MP10388.

285. © 9Jul40; MP10398.

286. © 11Jul40; MP10399.

287. © 16Jul40; MP10406.

288. © 18Jul40; MP10407.

289. © 23Jul40; MP10415.

290. © 25Jul40; MP10416.

291. © 30Jul40; MP10429.

292. © 1Aug40; MP10430.

293. © 6Aug40; MP10437.

294. © 8Aug40; MP10438.

295. © 13Aug40; MP10451.

296. © 15Aug40; MP10452.

297. © 20Aug40; MP10463.

298. © 22Aug40; MP10464.

299. © 27Aug40; MP10476.

300. © 29Aug40; MP10477.

301. © 3Sep40; MP10485.

302. © 5Sep40; MP10486.

303. © 10Sep40; MP10495.

Volume 12, 1940/41.

200. © 12Sep40; MP10496.

201. © 17Sep40; MP10515.

202. © 19Sep40; MP10516.

203. © 24Sep40; MP10527.

204. © 26Sep40; MP10528.

205. © 1Oct40; MP10546.

206. © 3Oct40; MP10547.

207. © 8Oct40; MP10578.

208. © 10Oct40; MP10579.

209. © 15Oct40; MP10599.

210. © 17Oct40; MP10600.

211. © 22Oct40; MP10609.

212. © 24Oct40; MP10610.

213. © 29Oct40; MP10620.

214. © 31Oct40; MP10621.

215. © 5Nov40; MP10635.

216. © 7Nov40, MP10636.

217. © 12Nov40; MP10655.

218. © 14Nov40; MP10656.

219. © 19Nov40; MP10666.

220. © 21Nov40; MP10667.

221. © 26Nov40; MP10680.

222. © 28Nov40; MP10681.

223. © 3Dec40; MP10700.

224. © 5Dec40; MP10701.

225. © 10Dec40; MP10740.

226. © 12Dec40; MP10741.

227. © 17Dec40; MP10754.

228. © 19Dec40; MP10755.

229. © 24Dec40; MP10765.

230. © 26Dec40; MP10766.

231. © 31Dec40; MP10773.

232. © 2Jan41; MP10774.

233. © 7Jan41; MP10796.

234. © 9Jan41; MP10797.

235. © 14Jan41; MP10841.

236. © 16Jan41; MP10815.

237. © 21Jan41; MP10839.

238. © 23Jan41; MP1040.

239. © 28Jan41; MP10862.

240. © 30Jan41; MP10863.

241. © 4Feb41; MP10874.

242. © 6Feb41; MP10875.

243. © 11Feb41; MP10913.

244. © 13Feb41; MP10914.

245. © 18Feb41; MP10922.

246. © 20Feb41; MP10923.

247. © 25Feb41; MP10954.

248. © 27Feb41; MP10955.

249. © 4Mar41; MP10986.

250. © 6Mar41: MP10987.

251. © 11Mar41; MP11027.

252. © 13Mar41; MP11028.

253. © 17Mar41; MP11063.

254. © 19Mar41; MP11064.

255. © 25Mar41; MP11067.

256. © 27Mar41; MP11068.

257. © 1Apr41; MP11091.

258. © 3Apr41; MP11092.

259. © 8Apr41; MP11109.

260. © 10Apr41; MP11110.

261. © 15Apr41; MP11130.

262. © 17Apr41; MP11131.

263. © 22Apr41; MP11146.

264. © 24Apr41; MP11147.

265. © 29Apr41; MP11171.

266. © 1May41; MP11172.

267. © 6May41; MP11185.

268. © 8May41; MP11186.

269. © 15May41; MP11208.

270. © 17May41; MP11209.

271. © 22May41; MP11228.

272. © 24May41; MP11229.

273. © 27May41; MP11260.

274. © 29May41; MP11261.

275. © 3Jun41; MP11285.

276. © 5Jun41; MP11286.

277. © 10Jun41; MP11305.

278. © 12Jun41; MP11306.

279. © 17Jun41; MP11336.

280. © 19Jun41; MP11337.

281. © 24Jun41; MP11342.

282. © 26Jun41; MP11343.

283. © 1Jul41; MP11358.

284. © 3Jul41; MP11359.

285. © 8Jul41; MP11385.

286. © 10Jul41; MP11386.

287. © 15Jul41; MP11430.

288. © 17Jul41; MP11431.

289. © 22Jul41; MP11440.

290. © 24Jul41; MP11441.

291. © 29Jul41; MP11479.

292. © 31Jul41; MP11480.

293. © 6Aug41; MP11498.

294. © 8Aug41; MP11499.

295. © 12Aug41; MP11508.

296. © 14Aug41; MP11509.

297. © 19Aug41; MP11524.

298. © 21Aug41; MP11525.

299. © 26Aug41; MP11576.

300. © 28Aug41; MP11577.

301. © 2Sep41; MP11596.

302. © 4Sep41; MP11597.

303. © 9Sep41; MP11636.

Volume 13, 1941/42.

200. © 11Sep41; MP11637.

201. © 16Sep41; MP11642.

202. © 18Sep41; MP11643.

203. © 23Sep41; MP11665.

204. © 25Sep41; MP11666.

205. © 30Sep41; MP11688.

206. © 2Oct41; MP11689.

207. © 7Oct41; MP11704.

208. © 9Oct41; MP11705.

209. © 14Oct41; MP11741.

210. © 16Oct41; MP11742.

211. © 21Oct41; MP11743.

212. © 23Oct41; MP11744.

213. © 28Oct41; MP11782.

214. © 30Oct41; MP11783.

215. © 4Nov41; MP11847.

216. © 6Nov41; MP11848.

217. © 11Nov41; MP11866.

218. © 13Nov41; MP11867.

219. © 18Nov41; MP11901.

220. © 20Nov41; MP11902.

221. © 25Nov41; MP11942.

222. © 27Nov41; MP11943.

223. © 2Dec41; MP11975.

224. © 4Dec41; MP11976.

225. © 9Dec41; MP12016.

226. © 11Dec41; MP12017.

227. © 16Dec41; MP12021.

228. © 18Dec41; MP12022.

229. © 23Dec41; MP12039.

230. © 25Dec41; MP12040.

231. © 30Dec41; MP12076.

232. © 1Jan42; MP12077.

233. © 6Jan42; MP12182.

234. © 8Jan42; MP12183.

235. © 13Jan42; MP12184.

236. © 15Jan42; MP12185.

237. © 20Jan42; MP12186.

238. © 22Jan42; MP12187.

239. © 27Jan42; MP12200.

240. © 29Jan42; MP12201.

241. © 3Feb42; MP12218.

242. © 5Feb42; MP12219.

243. © 10Feb42; MP12248.

244. © 12Feb42; MP12249.

245. © 17Feb42; MP12264.

246. © 19Feb42; MP12265.

247. © 24Feb42; MP12289.

248. © 26Feb42; MP12290.

249. © 3Mar42; MP12318.

250. © 5Mar42; MP12319.

251. © 10Mar42; MP12348.

252. © 12Mar42; MP12349.

253. © 17Mar42; MP12379.

254. © 19Mar42; MP12380.

255. © 24Mar42; MP12392.

256. © 26Mar42; MP12393.

257. © 31Mar42; MP12413.

258. © 2Apr42; MP12414.

259. © 7Apr42; MP12426.

260. © 9Apr42; MP12427.

261. © 14Apr42; MP12472.

262. © 16Apr42; MP12473.

263. © 21Apr42; MP12484.

264. © 23Apr42; MP12485.

265. © 28Apr42; MP12506.

266. © 30Apr42; MP12507.

267. © 5May42; MP12523.

268. © 7May42; MP12524.

269. © 12May42; MP12552.

270. © 14May42; MP12553.

271. © 19May42; MP12568.

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273. © 26May42; MP12590.

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275. © 2Jun42; MP12629.

276. © 4Jun42; MP12630.

277. © 9Jun42; MP12650.

278. © 11Jun42; MP12651.

279. © 16Jun42; MP12665.

280. © 18Jun42; MP12666.

281. © 23Jun42; MP12696.

282. © 25Jun42; MP12697.

283. © 30Jun42; MP12705.

284. © 2Jul42; MP12706.

285. © 7Jul42; MP12727.

286. © 9Jul42; MP12728.

287. © 14Jul42; MP12743.

288. © 16Jul42; MP12744.

289. © 21Jul42; MP12763.

290. © 23Jul42; MP12764.

291. © 28Jul42; MP12794.

292. © 30Jul42; MP12795.

293. © 3Aug42; MP12805.

294. © 6Aug42; MP12806.

295. © 12Aug42; MP12825.

296. © 14Aug42; MP12826.

297. © 19Aug42; MP12834.

298. © 21Aug42; MP12835.

299. © 26Aug42; MP12840.

300. © 28Aug42; MP12841.

301. © 2Sep42; MP12845.

302. © 4Sep42; MP12846.

303. © 9Sep42; MP12873.

Volume 14, 1942/43.

200. © 11Sep42; MP12874.

201. © 16Sep42; MP12950.

202. © 18Sep42; MP12951.

203. © 23Sep42; MP12952.

204. © 25Sep42; MP12953.

205. © 30Sep42; MP12975.

206. © 2Oct42; MP12976.

207. © 7Oct42; MP13002.

208. © 9Oct42; MP13003.

209. © 14Oct42; MP13004.

210. © 16Oct42; MP13005.

211. © 21Oct42; MP13021.

212. © 23Oct42; MP13022.

213. © 28Oct42; MP13044.

214. © 30Oct42; MP13045.

215. © 4Nov42; MP13046.

216. © 6Nov42; MP13062.

217. © 11Nov42; MP13063.

218. © 13Nov42; MP13110.

219. © 18Nov42; MP13111.

220. © 20Nov42; MP13132.

221. © 25Nov42; MP13161.

222. © 27Nov42; MP13162.

223. © 2Dec42; MP13165.

224. © 4Dec42; MP13166.

225. © 9Dec42; MP13167.

226. © 11Dec42; MP13168.

227. © 16Dec42; MP13180.

228. © 18Dec42; MP13181.

229. © 23Dec42; MP13204.

230. © 25Dec42; MP13205.

231. © 30Dec42; MP13219.

232. © 1Jan43; MP13220.

233. © 6Jan43; MP13238.

234. © 8Jan43; MP13239.

235. © 13Jan43; MP13247.

236. © 15Jan43; MP13248.

237. © 20Jan43; MP13277.

238. © 22Jan43; MP13278.

239. © 27Jan43; MP13295.

240. © 29Jan43; MP13296.

241. © 3Feb43; MP13307.

242. © 5Feb43; MP13308.

243. © 10Feb43; MP13320.

244. © 12Feb43; MP13321.

245. © 17Feb43; MP13359.

246. © 19Feb43; MP13360.

247. © 24Feb43; MP13413.

248. © 26Feb43; MP13414.

249. © 3Mar43; MP13415.

250. © 5Mar43; MP13416.

251. © 10Mar43; MP13430.

252. © 12Mar43; MP13431.

253. © 17Mar43; MP13451.

254. © 19Mar43; MP13452.

255. © 24Mar43; MP13496.

256. © 26Mar43; MP13497.

257. © 31Mar43; MP13498.

258. © 2Apr43; MP13499.

259. © 7Apr43; MP13525.

260. © 9Apr43; MP13526.

261. © 14Apr43; MP13542.

262. © 16Apr43; MP13543.

263. © 21Apr43; MP13585.

264. © 23Apr43; MP13586.

265. © 28Apr43; MP13617.

266. © 30Apr43; MP13618.

267. © 5May43; MP13629.

268. © 7May43; MP13630.

269. © 12May43; MP13633.

270. © 14May43; MP13634.

271. © 19May43; MP13658.

272. © 21May43; MP13659.

273. © 26May43; MP13683.

274. © 28May43; MP13684.

275. © 2Jun43; MP13724.

276. © 4Jun43; MP13725.

277. © 9Jun43; MP13726.

278. © 11Jun43; MP13727.

279. © 16Jun43; MP13762.

280. © 18Jun43; MP13763.

281. © 23Jun43; MP13805.

282. © 25Jun43; MP13806.

283. © 30Jun43; MP13821.

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285. © 7Jul43; MP13823.

286. © 9Jul43; MP13824.

287. © 14Jul43; MP13838.

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289. © 21Jul43; MP13849.

290. © 23Jul43; MP13850.

291. © 28Jul43; MP13878.

292. © 30Jul43; MP13879.

293. © 4Aug43; MP13894.

294. © 6Aug43; MP13895.

295. © 11Aug43; MP13905.

296. © 13Aug43; MP13906.

297. © 18Aug43; MP13913.

298. © 20Aug43; MP13914.

299. © 25Aug43; MP13955.

300. © 27Aug43; MP13956.

301. © 1Sep43; MP13984.

302. © 3Sep43; MP13985.

Volume 15, 1943/44.

200. © 10Sep43; MP14066.

201. © 15Sep43; MP14067.

202. © 17Sep43; MP14068.

203. © 22Sep43; MP14046.

204. © 24Sep43; MP14047.

205. © 29Sep43; MP14091.

206. © 1Oct43; MP14092.

207. © 6Oct43; MP14112.

208. © 8Oct43; MP14113.

209. © 13Oct43; MP14121.

210. © 15Oct43; MP14122.

211. © 19Oct43; MP14141.

212. © 22Oct43; MP14142.

213. © 27Oct43; MP14182.

214. © 29Oct43; MP14183.

215. © 3Nov43; MP14242.

216. © 5Nov43; MP14243.

217. © 10Nov43; MP14262.

218. © 12Nov43; MP14263.

219. © 17Nov43; MP14285.

220. © 19Nov43; MP14286.

221. © 24Nov43; MP14299.

222. © 26Nov43; MP14300.

223. © 1Dec43; MP14351.

224. © 3Dec43; MP14352.

225. © 8Dec43; MP14345.

226. © 10Dec43; MP14346.

227. © 15Dec43; MP14394.

228. © 17Dec43; MP14394.

229. © 22Dec43; MP14418.

230. © 24Dec43; MP14419.

231. © 29Dec43; MP14426.

232. © 31Dec43; MP14427.

233. © 5Jan44; MP14450.

234. © 7Jan44; MP14451.

235. © 12Jan44; MP14466.

236. © 14Jan44; MP14467.

237. © 19Jan44; MP14481.

238. © 21Jan44; MP14482.

239. © 26Jan44; MP14494.

240. © 28Jan44; MP14495.

241. © 2Feb44; MP14541.

242. © 4Feb44; MP14542.

243. © 9Feb44; MP14572.

244. © 11Feb44; MP14573.

245. © 16Feb44; MP14585.

246. © 18Feb44; MP14586.

247. © 23Feb44; MP14613.

248. © 25Feb44; MP14614.

249. © 1Mar44; MP14657.

250. © 3Mar44; MP14658.

251. © 8Mar44. MP14682.

252. © 10Mar44; MP14683.

253. © 15Mar44; MP14698.

254. © 17Mar44; MP14699.

255. © 22Mar44; MP14739.

256. © 24Mar44; MP14724.

257. © 29Mar44; MP14782.

258. © 31Mar44; MP14783.

259. © 5Apr44; MP14784.

260. © 7Apr44; MP14785.

261. © 12Apr44; MP14830.

262. © 14Apr44; MP14831.

263. © 19Apr44; MP14832.

264. © 21Apr44; MP14833.

265. © 26Apr44; MP14841.

266. © 28Apr44; MP14842.

267. © 3May44; MP14887.

268. © 5May44; MP14888.

269. © 10May44; MP14898.

270. © 12May44; MP14899.

271. © 17May44; MP14933.

272. © 19May44; MP14934.

273. © 24May44; MP14962.

274. © 26May44; MP14963.

275. © 31May44; MP14971.

276. © 2Jun44; MP14972.

277. © 7Jun44; MP14981.

278. 2 reels. © 9Jun44; MP14982.

279. © 13Jun44; MP14994.

280. © 16Jun44; MP14995.

281. © 21Jun44; MP15020.

282. © 23Jun44; MP15021.

283. © 28Jun44; MP15064.

284. © 30Jun44; MP15065.

285. © 5Jul44; MP15066.

286. © 7Jul44; MP15067.

287. © 12Jul44; MP15087.

288. © 14Jul44; MP15088.

289. © 19Jul44; MP15104.

290. © 21Jul44; MP15105.

291. © 26Jul44; MP15159.

292. © 28Jul44; MP15160.

293. © 2Aug44; MP15161.

294. © 4Aug44; MP15162.

295. © 9Aug44; MP15183.

296. © 11Aug44; MP15184.

297. © 16Aug44; MP15185.

298. © 18Aug44; MP15186.

299. © 23Aug44; MP15210.

300. © 25Aug44; MP15211.

301. © 30Aug44; MP15212.

302. © 1Sep44; MP15213.

303. © 6Sep44; MP15246.

Volume 16, 1944/45.

200. © 8Sep44; MP15245.

201. © 13Sep44; MP15314.

202. © 15Sep44; MP15315.

203. © 20Sep44; MP15316.

204. © 22Sep44; MP15317.

205. © 27Sep44; MP15334.

206. © 29Sep44; MP15335.

207. © 4Oct44; MP15354.

208. © 5Oct44; MP15355.

209. © 11Oct44; MP15380.

210. © 13Oct44; MP15381.

211. © 18Oct44; MP15449.

212. © 20Oct44; MP15450.

213. © 25Oct44; MP15451.

214. © 27Oct44; MP15452.

215. © 1Nov44; MP15453.

216. © 3Nov44; MP15454.

217. © 8Nov44; MP15455.

218. © 10Nov44; MP15456.

219. © 15Nov44; MP15469.

220. © 17Nov44; MP15470.

221. © 21Nov44; MP15522.

222. © 24Nov44; MP15523.

223. © 29Nov44; MP15524.

224. © 1Dec44; MP15525.

225. © 6Dec44; MP15528.

226. © 8Dec44; MP15529.

227. © 13Dec44; MP15620.

228. © 15Dec44; MP15621.

229. © 20Dec44; MP15622.

230. © 22Dec44; MP15623.

231. © 27Dec44; MP15624.

232. © 29Dec44; MP15625.

233. © 3Jan45; MP15626.

234. © 5Jan45; MP15627.

235. © 10Jan45; MP15628.

236. © 12Jan45; MP15629.

237. © 17Jan45; MP15793.

238. © 19Jan45; MP15794.

239. © 24Jan45; MP15795.

240. © 26Jan45; MP15796.

241. © 31Jan45; MP15797.

242. © 2Feb45; MP15799.

243. © 7Feb45; MP15799.

244. © 9Feb45; MP15800.

245. © 14Feb45; MP15801.

246. © 16Feb45; MP15802.

247. © 20Feb45; MP15803.

248. © 23Feb45; MP15804.

249. © 28Feb45; MP15805.

250. © 2Mar45; MP15806.

251. © 7Mar45; MP15807.

252. © 9Mar45; MP15899.

253. © 14Mar45; MP15900.

254. © 16Mar45; MP15901.

255. © 21Mar45; MP15902.

256. © 23Mar45; MP15903.

257. © 28Mar45; MP15904.

258. © 30Mar45; MP15905.

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260. © 6Apr45; MP15907.

261. © 11Apr45; MP16064.

262. © 13Apr45; MP16065.

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264. © 20Apr45; MP16067.

265. © 25Apr45; MP16068.

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271. © 16May45; MP16087.

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273. © 23May45; MP16089.

274. © 25May45; MP16090.

275. © 30May45; MP16091.

276. © 1Jun45; MP16092.

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278. © 7Jun45; MP16248.

279. © 13Jun45; MP16249.

280. © 15Jun45; MP16250.

281. © 20Jun45; MP16251.

282. © 22Jun45; MP16252.

283. © 27Jun45; MP16253.

284. © 29Jun45; MP16254.

285. © 4Jul45; MP16255.

286. © 6Jul45; MP16256.

287. © 11Jul45; MP16237.

288. © 13Jul45; MP16238.

289. © 18Jul45; MP16239.

290. © 20Jul45; MP16240.

291. © 25Jul45; MP16241.

292. © 27Jul45; MP16242.

293. © 1Aug45; MP16243.

294. © 3Aug45; MP16244.

295. © 8Aug45; MP16245.

296. © 10Aug45; MP16246.

297. © 15Aug45; MP16276.

298, special. © 15Aug45; MP16277.

299. © 22Aug45; MP16293.

300. © 24Aug45; MP16294.

301. © 29Aug45; MP16322.

302. © 31Aug45; MP16323.

303. © 4Sep45; MP16369.

Volume 17, 1945/46.

200. © 6Sep45; MP16370.

201. © 12Sep45; MP16380.

202. © 14Sep45; MP16381.

203. © 19Sep45; MP16406.

204. © 21Sep45; MP16407.

205. © 26Sep45; MP16431.

206. © 28Sep45. MP16432.

207. © 2Oct45; MP16476.

208. © 4Oct45; MP16477.

209. © 9Oct45: MP16478.

210. © 11Oct45; MP16479.

211. © 17Oct45; MP16539.

212. © 19Oct45; MP16540.

213. © 24Oct45; MP16541.

214. © 26Oct45; MP16542.

215. © 31Oct45; MP16593.

216. © 2Nov45; MP16594.

217. © 7Nov45; MP16598.

218. © 9Nov45; MP16599.

219. © 14Nov45; MP16600.

220. © 16Nov45; MP16601.

221. Nov. 21, 1945. Washington drama. Atom bomb agreement. Congress hears Attlee. Pearl Harbor inquiry. Eisenhower's warning. Tojo awaits doom. Blast Jap weapons. British mercy aids children in Berlin. GI song on the Rhine.

© 21Nov45; MP65.

222. Nov. 23, 1945. Pearl Harbor revelations. Fathers and sons in first post-war Legion conclave. First trip of carrier "FDR". Dame Fashion invades the halls of learning [U.C.L.A. school of costume design]. Army's touchdown parade described by Bill Stern. Uclans upset St. Mary's. Texas beats T.C.U. Indiana blanks Pitt.

© 23Nov45; MP66.

223. Nov. 28, 1945. Legion hails Nimitz and Eisenhower. Jap atrocities exposed at war criminal trial. Superfort sets new non-stop flight mark. Bill Stern selects All-American stars.

© 28Nov45; MP67.

224. Nov. 30, 1945. Admiral Halsey bids good-by to Navy. President Truman honors General Marshall. First films of new marvel of the air. Germany's generals now meek as lambs. Santa Claus welcomed from coast to coast. Football roundup: Indiana wins "Big 10" crown; Michigan beats Ohio State 7–3; Weirdest gridiron play of the year [California].

© 30Nov45; MP68.

225. Dec 5, 1945. Nazis on trial in court drama. Jap Emperor gives ancestors bad news. Ancient autos re-run race of 50 years ago. GI rodeo in Japan.

© 5Dec45; MP69.

226. Dec. 7, 1945. Army-Navy grid classic. Trojans win Rose Bowl test. Churchill back in Belgium gets tremendous ovation. New England storm havoc. [Wellesley] College girls help Santa.

© 7Dec45; MP70.

227. Dec. 12, 1945. Latest films of Nuremberg trial. Yanks in Germany blow up I. I. G. Farben munitions plant. School bus plunges into lake bringing death to 15 children. Film industry honored by U. S. for war work. [Famed harpist entertains at Walter Reed]. The nation's healthiest [4–H Club awards]. "Frogs" reveal war secret [underwater demolition].

© 12Dec45; MP71.

228. Dec. 14, 1945. Eisenhower warns nation of crisis. Warships hit at Pearl Harbor home after Pacific victories. Jap-American killed in battle honored by General Stilwell. Three and three-fourths billion-dollar loan to Britain. Farewell serenade to La Guardia. Geisha girls dance for Yanks. Washington Redskins win eastern pro grid crown. Philadelphia high school [football] title tilt.

© 14Dec45; MP72.

229. Dec. 18, 1945. Nazi general [Dostler] executed. U. S. wrecks Jap atom smasher. Nazi U-boats take last dive. British sink submarines. Personalities in the news: Halsey gets fifth star; Morgenthau decorated. Hitler knick-knacks are sold in London. Indian gift for Truman. Castle for Eisenhower. Two millionth Yank starts home. GI's at Alpine ski school.

© 18Dec45; MP157.

230. Dec. 21, 1945. Atrocity films at Nuremberg trial. Homeward-bound GI's rescued. Personalities in the news spotlight: General George C. Marshall, Admiral Chester Nimitz, President Truman. New York pays tribute to Admiral Halsey. Film Chiefs support the March of Dimes. New air weapon for U. S. revealed. Cleveland Rams win pro grid championship.

© 21Dec45; MP158.

231. Dec. 26, 1945. Winter's worst blizzard hits eastern seaboard. P-T boats once expendable ride again for victory loan. Queen Elizabeth urges girls to guard peace. Shanghai bids Japs "good riddance." [Indo-Chinese] War canoes race for King. East Side kids battle it out boxing. New bathing suits and auto tires are related.

© 26Dec45; MP159.

232. Dec. 27, 1945. 1945–46, the year that changed the world: birth of the Atomic Age; Big Three meeting at Yalta; passing of Roosevelt; Allies roll back Nazis; capitulation of Germany; MacArthur keeps vow; Yanks take Jap Island; Hiroshima atom-bombed; final surrender of Japs; the dawn of world peace. [These and other events] show humanity at the crossroads.

© 27Dec45; MP160.

233. Jan. 2, 1946. War crimes drama; death for Yamashita. Nation mourns General Patton. Traffic bottleneck keeps army of GI's from home; San Francisco, Seattle, New York. Sports revival in France.

© 2Jan46; MP161.

234. Jan. 4, 1946. Four Americans named cardinals. Japs petition MacArthur to spare Yamashita's life. French clean up Nazi mines. Back to normalcy in Nice. Canada honors film industry. Tom Thumb wedding. Florida diving season opens.

© 4Jan46; MP162.

235. Jan. 9, 1946. Truman asks public aid. "Bull" Halsey rides again. La Guardia out as mayor. Philadelphia Mummers' parade. First post-war Rose tourney. Bowl game grid thrills: Pasadena, New Orleans, Miami, Dallas.

© 9Jan46; MP163.

236. Jan. 11, 1946. Famed paratroopers home with triplets as mascots. General Marshall in China to bring civil war to end. U. S. warships brave Atlantic gales to bring GI's home. Bathing beauts and suits in 1946 fashion preview. Sport topics of the day: Vienna motorbike marathon; New England ski trains; first winter tourney [Torger Tokle Memorial meet at Bear Mountain].

© 11Jan46; MP164.

237. Jan. 16, 1946. Atom bomb vs. warships. First Lady opens March of Dimes. Japs help Yanks fight fire [in Yokohama]. Personalities in the news: General Arnold decorated; Marshall ends China war. Coast Guard seadog, Sinbad, home from world travels. Yes, John Bull has bananas. Sport topics of the day; Nelson wins Los Angeles open; Alpine Yanks.

© 16Jan46; MP235.

238. Jan. 18, 1946. Millions hail GI victory parade. Churchill in U. S., cheerful as ever. Homesick Yanks protest delays in demobilization. Nazis sail for home without jubilation. Last of U-boat pack gets final K. O. Helicopters set new world records.

© 18Jan46; MP236.

239. Jan. 23, 1946. UNO conference in London. GI's protests overseas answered by Eisenhower. Admiral Kimmel testifies at Pearl Harbor Inquiry. News from the strike front: meat industry tie-up; Truman steps into steel row. France celebrates fiftieth birthday of the cinema.

© 23Jan46; MP237.

240. Jan. 25, 1946. Nation's Draft Board officers honored by President Truman. Seven hundred and fifty thousand workers walk out in nationwide steel strike. Red leaders hail Stalin. March of Dimes begins. Tolerance week to open. Winston Churchill in gay mood gives interview to newsreels. M.G.M. films win popularity polls. Hialeah racing opens.

© 25Jan46; MP238.

241. Jan. 30, 1946. Byrnes pledges all-out aid by U. S. for United Nations. Marshall wins truce in China's civil war. Pearl Harbor Army chief [Short] blames War Department. President honors U. S. Navy chaplain [Father O'Callahan]. Captured Nazi warship here. March of Dimes fashion Parade. Sports topics of the day: "snobirds" in flight; jeep steeplechase in Paris; exercise for Junior.

© 30Jan46; MP239.

242. Feb. 1, 1946. Across U. S. in 4 hours, 13 minutes. Bevin pledges Britain's aid for world peace. Turmoil in Indo-China. U. S. seizure of plants ends the meat strike. GI war brides and babies set sail for new world. Alligator school. Sledding goes to the dogs. Hardware hats.

© 1Feb46; MP240.

243. Feb. 6, 1946. Radar contacts the moon. De Gaulle quits in French crisis. John L. Lewis rejoins A. F. L ending 10–year labor feud. President and movie stars in March of Dimes climax. Glamour school New York style.

© 6Feb46; MP291.

244. Feb. 8, 1946. GI war brides and babies arrive. Air liner [T. W. A. Constellation] with 52 aboard sets new trans-U. S. mark. A new Chinese Army. Winter sport fashions. Churchill at races, wins on a hunch. Millrose track classic. Wild west roundup in Florida. National ice-skating meet.

© 8Feb46; MP292.

245. Feb. 13, 1946. Brazil hails new President. Tense days in the Holy land. American ships take Koreans home from slavery in Japan. U. S. Army piles up vast surpluses in Europe. New U. S. Adjutant General [Witzell]. Radar in new peacetime job guiding ferryboat in fog. New spirit in Europe.

© 13Feb46; MP293.

246. Feb. 15, 1946. New "explosive snakes" used by Army to clear land mines. Yanks speed Jap exodus out of the lost empire. Film stars receive magazine awards. New York tied up by tugboat strike. New York murder focuses attention on U. S. juvenile crime wave. Sponge divers make big haul as season opens in Florida. Spirit of gay Paree revives.

© 15Feb46; MP294.

247. Feb. 20, 1946. New York blackout. New cardinals fly to Rome. Supreme Court justices in plea for brotherhood. Quaker City acclaims Nimitz. Meet Miss Photoflash. New canine champs.

© 20Feb46; MP295.

248. Feb. 22, 1946. Four hundred and eighty-five rescued in shipwreck. Steel chief [Benjamin Fairless] welcomes strike's end. Battleship [Pennsylvania] stripped for atom blast. More GI war brides arrive. New honors for Greer Garson. Ireland hails new cardinals. Bill Stern's sports thrills; skiing in French spotlight; baseball giants start swinging; plastic balloonatics. Dionne quints in winter carnival.

© 22Feb46; MP296.

249. Feb. 27, 1946. UNO winds up first session [scenes in London and New York]. U. S. cardinals in Rome. Topics of the day: Swedish prince weds; the [British] housewife speaks. Sport headlines: ski thrills. World's newest skyliner [Douglas DC–6]. Introducing women of the year [Dr. Lise Meitner and others].

© 27Feb46; MP523.

250. Mar. 1, 1946. Pope Pius elevates new cardinals. Headline news briefs: Eisenhower visits wounded GI's; Uncle Sam cuts Navy. Sport topics of the day: Shanghai Rickshaw Derby; toboggans at Lake Placid. St. Paul hails winter carnival. Texas celebrates statehood centennial.

© 1Mar46; MP524.

251. Mar. 6, 1946. General Homma doomed to die. Churchill reveals success secret [receives honorary degree]. Vandenberg reports on Russia and UNO. China hails General Chiang. Movie news briefs. Science sets hat fashions.

© 6Mar46; MP525.

252. Mar. 8, 1946. Hirohito sheds his "divinity." Hoover backs Truman fight to aid starving overseas. Good news for war veterans as housing project opens. War surplus [ammunition] blown up. Mickey Rooney home. Sports topics of the day: winter carnival; the baseball roundup [at] Daytona Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Miami Beach, Catalina [and] San Bernardino.

© 8Mar46; MP526.

253. Mar. 13, 1946. Churchill warns U. S. of danger. Anti-Soviet demonstration in China. "Religion vital," says Truman. Argentina's ballot battle as Peron faces vote test. Mardi Gras in New Orleans. Sport topics of the day: skiing [and] baseball.

© 13Mar46; MP527.

254. Mar. 15, 1946. Rendezvous with death [preparations for atom bomb tests]. Jap Empress out of hiding. Number 1 G-man [J. Edgar Hoover] honored. Churchill in Richmond. Truman urges British loan. Dionne quints at school. Sport topics of the day [at] Santa Anita, Canada, Sarasota [and] St. Petersburg.

© 15Mar46; MP528.

255. Mar. 20, 1946. World crisis [scenes at Mukden, Washington and Hyde Park]. Volcanic isle rises in Pacific. Europe revives gay carnivals to dispel gloom of world. Auto strike ends. Sports topics of the day: Louis-Conn fight preview; Cleveland Indians limber up.

© 20Mar46; MP529.

256. Mar. 22, 1946. Police guard Churchill in New York. Marshall reports on China. Hoover flies to Europe to survey food situation. Ships in the news: Russian tanker rescued; "Queen Elizabeth" ablaze; mystery fire sweeps [German] liner. St. Patrick's Day in Buffalo. Nylons for free. Sports topics of the day: girl pool champ [Ruth McGinnis]; "keglers" bowl 'em in [American Bowling Congress]; "Athletics" in spring training. Last rites for Cardinal Glennon.

© 22Mar46; MP530.

257. Mar. 27, 1946. Alpine avalanche buries village. UNRRA meeting in U. S. plans to fight world-wide famine. Washington spotlight: [General "Beedle" Smith], new Envoy to Russia; [Julius A. Krug], successor to Ickes; [Trygve Lie], chief of UNO; [Leon Blum], French loan negotiator. New Mars [Flying boat] in sky. Experts pick photogenic beauty. The three little bears. Sports topics of the day: Britain's national hunt; meet Mr. America ["muscle man"].

© 27Mar46; MP531.

258. Mar. 29, 1946. UNO Council in New York. "Bluebeard" [Dr. Petiot] mocks judges. U. S. carrier [Midway] invades Arctic. Truman urges united peace effort. Army reveals new weapon [selfpropelled gun]. Yanks fight typhus in Japan; Army and Navy cite M.G.M. stars; spring comes to Washington.

© 29Mar46; MP532.

259. Apr. 3, 1946. First films: UNO drama [Iran case]. Sport topics of the day described by Bill Stern: an old Spanish custom [Basque bull chase]; ping-pong champions.

© 3Apr46; MP537.

260. Apr. 5, 1946. UNO drama of vacant chair [Russia's empty place]. La Guardia hailed by UNRRA as new world relief chief. Red Navy officer seized by FBI as spy suspect. Bridge melts as Canadian fire sweeps pulp plant. Battle with an avalanche. Report from Paris: "Bluebeard" trial; spring fever [Paris carnival]. Sport topics of the day: motor bike revival; Junior's fighting again [Kips Bay Boys Club]. [New York] State lax trailer.

© 5Apr46; MP538.

261. Apr. 10, 1946. Tidal waves rip Hawaii. Famed seismologist [Rev. Joseph Lynch] shows how it happened. Jap volcano on rampage. Goering defiant at war crimes trial. Exploring unknown worlds [army rocket]. New GOP chief [Representative Reece of Tennessee]. Sport topics: water ski marathon; some fish story.

© 10Apr46; MP565.

262. Apr. 12, 1946. The Grand National. Truman urges strong Army. Mukden tense as Nationalists take over Manchurian capital. Romania hails Red Army. Graveyard of air force. Dog beauty contest.

© 12Apr46; MP566.

263. Apr. 17, 1946. Red Envoy back in UN Council. League of Nations liquidated. Jap submarines blown up. Theatre men unite. First Lady [Mrs. Truman] visits infantile victims. Nursery airliner. Hirohito's horse in rodeo. Logging in the everglades.

© 17Apr46; MP567.

264. Apr. 19, 1946. The Nation honors F. D. R. Reconversion inside Germany. Washington spotlight; new Ambassador to Argentina; Harriman transferred; Soviet sends new envoy. Monkeys from overseas. Easter fashion parade.

© 19Apr46; MP568.

265. Apr. 24, 1946. MacArthur says: "Abolish war." Democratizing Jap royalty. Young cancer sufferer sees dreams come true. Wives sail to Join Yanks overseas. Snooperscope and sniperscope. Sports topics of the day: slalom race in Lapland; Scots win soccer title. White House news of the day: President buys first poppy; reminder of famine overseas.

© 24Apr46; MP610.

266. Apr. 26, 1946. Coast-to-coast films of Easter celebration. Japan's first free elections. President Truman appeals for aid in world famine. Forest fires sweep Cape Cod. Midget cars in sport spotlight. Eisenhower acclaimed at Texas birthplace.

© 26Apr48; MP611.

267. May 1, 1946. Navy air show for President. Russia and Iran reach "agreement." Bernard Baruch makes history on park bench. Balloon era revived. Lighter side of the news: what's bruin; nylons for men only.

© 1May46; MP612.

268. May 3, 1946. Big Four in Paris Peace Conference. Farmers answer La Guardia's call to aid starving world. Justice for a war criminal. Forty-five killed in rail disaster. Army's new Flying Wing. Personalities in the news: Truman on vacation; 68 priests ordained. Penn Relay thrills.

© 3May46; MP613.

269. May 8, 1946. U. S. ammunition ship explodes at dock in New York Harbor. Army-released Nazi films revealing rocket secrets. Personalities in the news: reunion in New York; new Filipino President; durbar in New Delhi. Four Detroit sisters wed in unique church ceremony. Lion cubs adopted. Britain's football classic. Paris bike race classic.

© 8May46; MP614.

270. May 10, 1946. Battle of Alcatraz [prison mutiny]. Bill Stern reports the Kentucky Derby. American Mother of 1946 [Mrs. Emma Clement, granddaughter of Negro slave]. Collegiate mermaids. It's apple blossom time. Spring in the Northwest.

© 10May46; MP615.

271. May 15, 1946. World spotlight on elections in France and Soviet Russia. Crisis in nation's industry as coal strike reaches peak. New miracle ship propeller. How you can aid famine relief. U. S. fashions shown in Rio. Bill Stern's sport topics: cue champ in

## action; thrills in the hills.

© 15May46, MP653.

272. May 17, 1946. Spectacular rocket test. Tojo and 27 Jap militarists go on trial for war crimes. Truman sees atomic age as era of world peace. Personalities in the news; spotlight on John L. Lewis; new President of Philippines [General Manuel Roxas]. Kentucky Derby winner [Assault] repeats in Preakness. Wisconsin wins oar classic. China black market raid. Detour over Grand Coulee.

© 17May46; MP654.

273. May 22, 1946. Jap films: Pearl Harbor secrets. German poison gas fleet scuttled in North Sea. Personalities in the news: Holland hails Churchill; spotlight on De Gaulle. Red Cross drive report. Coast Guard iceberg patrol. Sport topics of the day: latest in trotting world; French bike race classic.

© 22May46; MP687.

274. May 24, 1946. Army plane rams New York skyscraper. Europe's capitals mark V-E day. Byrnes reports on Big Four conference. Arctic gold-miner hits jackpot. Nazi victims find haven in United States. Sand sailing provides sport for landlubbers. Cotton Carnival down in Dixie. It's tulip time in Holland, Michigan.

© 24May46; MP688.

275. May 29, 1946. Atom bomb drama [Operation Crossroads at Bikini Atoll]. Rail strike begins. Evangeline Booth honored by America's Variety clubs. Eisenhower in Japan.

© 29May46; MP763.

276. May 31, 1946. Truman ends rail strike. Joe Louis-Billy Conn preview of big fight. Cocker is top dog [Morris and Essex show].

© 31May46; MP764.

277. June 5, 1946. Soft coal strike ends. Hoover reports on food crisis. United Nations fight famine. U. S. loan to France. "Noah's Ark" sails with animals slated for atom bomb test. The 8th Fleet's in. Lighter side of the news described by Bill Stern. Coeds answer slur on beauty.

© 5Jun46; MP765.

278. June 7, 1946. Vengeance for Lidice and Dachau. Savage Choco Indians filmed for first time. Headline news briefs: Negro [Booker T. Washington] in Hall of Fame; little pals of the cops. President Truman for "little fellows" of America. Sports topics of the day: thrilling auto race classic; Assault wins triple [racing] crown.

© 7Jun46; MP766.

279. June 12, 1946. Fifty-nine die as fire sweeps [Chicago] hotel. Auto jubilee in Detroit. Atom bomb shadows. Personalities in the news: [British Ambassador Lord Inverchapel; former Italian King Umberto]. Romance marks graduation of midshipmen and cadets. Aviation thrills [at] Birmingham air show.

© 12Jun46; MP955.

280. June 14, 1946. Yanks in Britain's victory parade. D-day tribute to Americans overseas. Army recovers royal jewels stolen by Yanks in Germany. Chiang returns to Nanking. Featuring the Jumping Gypsies [airborne invasion maneuvers]. Boston's Holy hour. Fifty to one shot victorious in famous Epsom Derby.

© 14Jun46; MP956.

281. June 18, 1946. U. S. envoys Byrnes, Vandenberg and Connolly, off to Paris for show down on peace. Spectacular action pictures of mighty American rockets. Zero hour for cameramen on great atom bomb test. London in all-night revelry winds up victory celebration. New fashions in furs arrive with heat wave. Rodeo thrills.

© 18Jun46; MP957.

282. June 21, 1946. Baruch asks world rule of atom bomb. Big Four peace delegates meet. Peron [President of Argentina] inaugurated. Sports topics of the day: wounded GI wins golf crown; meet Mr. America [champion weight lifter].

© 21Jun46; MP958.

283. June 26, 1946. Italian Republic born amid turmoil. Tornado rips Detroit suburb. Headline news briefs: January in June; crown jewel mystery. Beauty parades going strong; pin-up girls come to life. Louis and Conn tell about big fight. U. S. tennis queens beat British.

© 26Jun46; MP959.

284. June 28, 1946. President hails new Chief Justice [Fred M. Vinson]. The world spotlight—on Mahatma Gandhi, on General De Gaulle, on Mexican election, [on] Cambridge [Massachusetts] centennial, [on] laurel festival. Starring circus monkeys. Sports topics of the day: national collegiate track; Cornell crew wins; sheep dog champs.

© 28Jun46; MP960.

285. July 3, 1946. Two million dollar fire in New York Harbor. Army's huge "Flying Wing" [Northrup XB–35] passes first test flight. Personalities in the news: moving-up day in Washington. Earl Browder home from Russia. Close-up of Jap Crown Prince. Famine in China. Fishing fleet blessed. St. Bernards take the air. French steeplechase thrills.

© 3Jul46; MP961.

286. July 4, 1946. Operation Crossroads. President asks public for aid in OPA crisis. Youth sings for heroes. Hirohito admits he's human. Sport topics of the day: South Orange, New Jersey [Davis Cup matches] Newport, Rhode Island [Bermuda yacht race]; Atlantic City, New Jersey [Kiddie-car Derby].

© 4Jul46; MP962.

287. July 10, 1946. Japanese-American heroes home from war. Reunion in Japan as wives join GI's. Congress memorial tribute to F. D. R. Noted personalities in the headlines [Pope Pius and Britain's royal family]. Rocket record in new V–2 test. Help for China's starving millions. Strange adventure of three little bears.

© 10Jul46; MP963.

288. July 12, 1946. Atom bomb special [history-making fourth atomic bomb explosion].

© 12Jul46; MP964.

289. July 17, 1946. Pope canonizes Mother Cabrini. Turmoil in China. Helicopter mailman. Personalities in the news: introducing Italy's President; Arab League Conference; Belgium honors Yanks; Howard Hughes crashes. Sports topics of the day: all-star baseball; Wimbledon tennis thrills.

© 17Jul46; MP965.

290. July 19, 1946. Philippine independence. American troops in Trieste face angry rioting mobs. President Truman signs 3–3/4 billion British loan. Midsummer madness: underwater slugfest; Bunion Derby; devil divers; midget auto classic; meet Miss Gay Paree.

© 19Jul46; MP966.

291. July 24, 1946. Byrnes reports on "peace" as Trieste riots. French hail Churchill on Bastille Day. New King takes Siam's throne shrouded in death mystery. Nation honors Nisei. Lighter side of the news: Yanks in Japan relax; cycle mania in France.

© 24Jul46; MP984.

292. July 26, 1946. Carrier [Roosevelt] tests phantom [jet-engine] plane. Wheat periled [by railroad car and storage shortage] as U. S. harvests record crop in world famine. Cattle for Greece. Churchill at Patton's grave. Cabinet wives set example [home canning]. Sport topics of the day described by Bill Stern: yacht race; Diaper Derby; boxing in Siam. Aviation world's fair.

© 26Jul46; MP985.

293. July 31, 1946. Inside Poland. China's Ambassador defends U. S. role in Orient crisis. San Francisco plays host to Shriners of the nation. Lighter side of the news: [chimpanzee poses]. Sport topics of the day: police show and beauty contest; thrilling turf duel.

© 31Jul46; MP1039.

294. Aug. 2, 1946. Jerusalem bombing. Bernard Shaw's ninetieth birthday. Byrnes sees nation united behind Paris parley aims. Peace pilgrims pray. Sports topics of the day described by Bill Stern: water ski champs; Hollywood Gold Cup Race.

© 2Aug46; MP1040.

295. Aug. 7, 1946. Paris Peace Conference. Nazi "justice" revealed at Nuremberg war trial. Stalin reviews Red might. Henry Ford's birthday. Spud capital [Aroostook, Maine] picks queen. [Howard Hughes'] sky giant almost ready. Lighter side of the news: Punch and Judy show. Strict curfew in Jerusalem imposed by British Army.

© 7Aug46; MP1041.

296. Aug. 9, 1946. Atom blast number 5 [pictures of underwater blast at Bikini Lagoon].

© 9Aug46; MP1042.

297. Aug. 14, 1946. Atom secrets revealed [behind the scenes of Manhattan Project at Oak Ridge]. Quake strikes as Dominican Republic hails anniversary. Luxury gambling ship opens 10 miles out. Citizen Truman votes. Sport thrills of the day reported by Bill Stern: yacht race [and] bull fight.

© 14Aug46; MP1108.

298. Aug. 16, 1946. V-J day—a year after. Tel Aviv under martial law in crisis in the Holy Land. Brazil acclaims Eisenhower on hemisphere defense tour. Navy clears Manila Bay. Acres of mashed potatoes. Biggest inland launching. Hambletonian Cup classic described by Bill Stern.

© 16Aug46; MP1109.

299. Aug. 21, 1946. U. S. crew ousts Britishers from 4–1/2 million dollar prize ship [the American Farmer]. Palestine builds for future in midst of growing crisis. Mr. Truman takes a walk. Eisenhower in Rio. Aquaplane rodeo thriller described by Bill Stern. Modern Venus chosen. World's biggest bomber [XB–36].

© 21Aug46; MP1110.

300. Aug. 23, 1946. Crisis mounts in Palestine. Riots and bombing in Trieste; 30 wounded in street fighting. President on vacation wears last word in yachting caps. Lighter side of the news: meet Miss Texas; Margaret O'Brien honored. Sport news of the day: Soap-box Derby; swine swim; turf judges in air.

© 23Aug46; MP1111.

301. Aug. 28, 1946. Peace in Europe threatened as Marshal Tito defies United States. Admiral Blandy reports to nation on atom bomb test. Uncle Sam's armed forces on alert in troubled world. Mountain climbing thrills. Lighter side of the news [Vincennes Zoo, near Paris]. Sport news of the day: Fireball Feller [army device measures speed of pitcher's fast ball]; roller [skate] rodeo.

© 28Aug46; MP1112.

302. Aug. 29, 1946. Yugoslavia frees Yanks. U. S. delivers ultimatum. Marshal Tito's answer. America parades might [88th Division in Italy]. Prosecution rests at Nuremberg trial. Film snapshots here and there: President Truman; Italy, Pope Pius; the Alps, French planes; Africa, the Aga Khan; Philadelphia, American Legionnaires. Bill Stern's sport news: collegians beat pros; 100 to 1 shot wins Derby.

© 29Aug46; MP1113.

303. Sept. 4, 1946. Latest films from Palestine. United Nations Council meets at new Long Island home. The President goes fishing and the big one gets away. Headline news flashes: Greek King in spotlight. Cloudburst in Maine. Lighter side of the news: Asbury Park [revives Baby Beauty Contest] Bill Stern's sports: disputed tennis play; Ben Hogan wins.

© 4Sep46; MP1154.

Volume 18, 1946/47.

200. Sept. 5, 1946. Halsey answers Red criticism. Human projectile hurled from speeding airplane. German refugees in Denmark. Lighter side of the news: [Little Sisters' Day at Roxbury, Massachusetts, Boys' Club]. Bill Stern's sports news: Primo Carnera back in ring; Tulane pigskin warm-up; 75,000 at horse opera [in Los Angeles Coliseum].

© 5Sep46; MP1155.

201. Sept. 11, 1946. Return of King from exile voted in Greek plebiscite. Drama in Yugoslavia as Tito returns bodies of U. S. fliers. UNRRA supplies [at Marseilles]. U. S. fleet in Mediterranean. New British roundup in Palestine crisis. V.F.W. parade. Harvest Moon dance champs. Death rides in motor classic [in Atlanta]. National air race thrills. Skate stars in Ice-capades.

© 11Sep46; MP1186.

202. Sept. 13, 1946. Byrnes warns U. S. won't quit. Tragic plight of refugees at the door to Palestine. "Monty" over here [on tour of U. S. and Canada]. Strike paralyzes U. S. ports. Meet Miss America 1946. Bill Stern reports nation's sports thrills: tennis championships; international polo.

© 13Sep46; MP1187.

203. Sept. 18, 1946. President welcomes "Monty" on first tour of U. S. Nazi torture camp victims in pilgrimage to Lourdes. Planes in head-on crashes but dummy pilot escapes. Adelaide Hawley reports lighter side of the news. French quadruplets; smallest auto; flying icicle.

© 18Sep46; MP1188.

204. Sept. 20, 1946. War criminals' swan song. Our martyred fliers home as Trieste tension mounts. Siegfried Line goes boom. Presenting Miss America and newest beach modes. U. S. tennis stars win Davis Cup title tilt.

© 20Sep46; MP1189.

205. Sept. 25, 1946. Wallace-Byrnes rift stirs nation. UNRRA carries on. London squatters abdicate as police nab abdicators. Religious fete revived. Koreans in liberation celebration hail U. S. Army. Olympics in Berlin described by Bill Stern. Death dodgers.

© 25Sep46; MP1258.

206. Sept. 26, 1946. Air rescue drama in trans-Atlantic plane disaster. Wallace out of Cabinet. Debut of football: Pitt vs. Illinois; the pros bow in. Something new in the sky [MGM airship].

© 26Sep46; MP1259.

207. Oct. 2, 1946. The Shanghai story; amazing films of China's "boom town." Pope blesses Boy Scouts. Holy Hour in Chicago [Holy Name Mass]. Athens ready for King. First flying post office. Sport topics of the day: thrills on wheels; President sees aqua-speedsters.

© 2Oct46; MP1304.

208. Oct. 4, 1946. Nazi gang found guilty. Fred Allen gives tips on politics. Overseas headlines: Harriman joins Byrnes in Paris; Cannes revives famed fiesta. President sees West Point gridders crush Oklahoma. Irish vs. Illinois; Alabama vs. Tulane.

© 4Oct46; MP1305.

209. Oct. 9, 1946. Legion convention; FBI Chief warns of foes within U. S. Navy plane's 11,000–mile hop sets a new world's record. Greeks welcome monarch recalled to the throne. 500,000 pounds of TNT exploded. Auto race thriller.

© 9Oct46; MP1306.

210. Oct. 11, 1946. Judgment Day for Nazi gang. World Series special. Columbia gridders sink Navy. Buckeyes whitewash Trojans.

© 11Oct46; MP1307.

211. Oct. 16, 1946. Army "Dreamboat" flies 9,500 miles. Byrnes sees "no war." Alcan Highway, new frontier. Personalities in the news: new Chief Justice [Fred M. Vinson]; Mexico honors movie maker [Jack L. Warner]. U. S. togs for China. King [of England] welcomes Eisenhower. World Series highlights. Gridiron miracle.

© 16Oct46; MP1314.

212. Oct. 18, 1946. Truman ends meat control. Queen Elizabeth starts namesake on new career [as passenger ocean liner]. Film stars ask arbitration in jurisdiction—at strike. Grid round-up by Bill Stern: Yale vs. Columbia; Army vs. Michigan; Texas vs. Oklahoma.

© 18Oct46; MP1315.

213. Oct. 24, 1946. Justice Jackson on lesson of Nazi hangings. Byrnes home from Paris makes report on peace. Unrest in Europe. De Gaulle loses at polls. Windsor home with Duchess. Sinatra wins movie poll. Plane in slingshot take-off. World Series extra.

© 24Oct46; MP1316.

214. Oct. 25, 1946. Molotov here aboard "Queen," backs peace. Top secrets revealed as U. S. hails Navy Day. Personalities in the news: General Ike, the golfer; spotlight on Franco; whale ahoy. Grid thrills of the day reported by Bill Stern: Army crushes Columbia; Tennessee upsets Alabama; Uclans beat California.

© 25Oct46; MP1317.

215. Oct. 30, 1946. United Nations special. Sport topics of the day; rapids riders; submarine basketball.

© 30Oct46; MP1343.

216. Nov. 1, 1946. Grid thrillers: Penn vs. Navy; Army vs. Duke; Rice vs. Texas. Paree's queer hair-do fashions. Headlines in the news: twin engine helicopter; college ain't what it was; Miss Liberty's birthday; featuring film notables.

© 1Nov46; MP1344.

217. © 6Nov46; MP1429.

218. © 8Nov46; MP1430.

219. © 13Nov46; MP1431.

220. © 15Nov46; MP1432.

221. © 20Nov46; MP1433.

222. © 22Nov46; MP1434.

223. © 27Nov46; MP1435.

224. © 29Nov46; MP1436.

225. © 4Dec46; MP1499.

226. © 5Dec46; MP1500.

227. © 11Dec46; MP1501.

228. © 13Dec46; MP1502.

229. © 18Dec46; MP1510.

230. © 20Dec46; MP1511.

231. © 25Dec46; MP1595.

232. © 27Dec46; MP1596.

233. © 1Jan47; MP1597.

234. © 3Jan47; MP1598.

235. © 8Jan47; MP1618.

236 © 10Jan47; MP1619.

237. © 15Jan47; MP1659.

238. © 17Jan47; MP1660.

239. © 22Jan47; MP1661.

240. © 24Jan47; MP1662.

241. © 28Jan47; MP1709.

242. © 31Jan47; MP1710.

243. © 5Feb47; MP1786.

244. © 7Feb47; MP1787.

245. © 12Feb47; MP1788.

246. © 14Feb47; MP1789.

247. © 19Feb47; MP1922.

248. © 21Feb47; MP1923.

249. © 26Feb47; MP1924.

250. © 28Feb47; MP1925.

251. © 5Mar47; MP1926.

252. © 7Mar47; MP1927.

253. © 12Mar47; MP1928.

254. © 14Mar47; MP1929.

255. © 19Mar47; MP2042.

256. © 21Mar47; MP2043.

257. © 26Mar47; MP2044.

258. © 28Mar47; MP2045.

259. © 2Apr47; MP2046.

260. © 4Apr47; MP2047.

261. © 8Apr47; MP2048.

262. © 11Apr47; MP2049.

263. © 16Apr47; MP2050.

264. © 18Apr47; MP2051.

265. © 23Apr47; MP2066.

266. © 25Apr47; MP2067.

267. © 30Apr47; MP2068.

268. © 2May47; MP2069.

269. © 7May47; MP2121.

270. © 9May47; MP2122.

271. © 14May47; MP2123.

272. © 16May47; MP2124.

273. © 21May47; MP2125.

274. © 23May47; MP2126.

275. © 28May47; MP2203.

276. © 30May47; MP2204.

277. © 4Jun47; MP2205.

278. © 6Jun47; MP2196.

279. © 11Jun47; MP2197.

280. © 13Jun47; MP2198.

281. © 18Jun47; MP2256.

282. © 20Jun47; MP2257.

283. © 25Jun47; MP2258.

284. © 27Jun47; MP2259.

285. © 2Jul47; MP2260.

286. © 4Jul47; MP2261.

287. © 9Jul47; MP2362.

288. © 11Jul47; MP2311.

289. © 16Jul47; MP2363.

290. © 18Jul47; MP2364.

291. © 23Jul47; MP2312.

292. © 25Jul47; MP2313.

293. © 30Jul47; MP2314.

294. © 1Aug47; MP2315.

295. © 6Aug47; MP2316.

296. © 8Aug47; MP2317.

297. © 13Aug47; MP2318.

298. © 14Aug47; MP2319.

299. © 20Aug47; MP2365.

300. © 22Aug47; MP2366.

301. © 27Aug47; MP2367.

302. © 29Aug47; MP2368.

303. © 3Sep47; MP2411.

Volume 19, 1947/48.

200. © 5Sep47; MP2412.

201. © 10Sep47; MP2413.

202. © 12Sep47; MP2414.

203. © 17Sep47; MP2415.

204. © 19Sep47; MP2416.

205. © 24Sep47; MP2454.

206. © 26Sep47; MP2455.

207. © 1Oct47; MP2457.

208. © 2Oct47; MP2456.

209. Oct. 6, 1947. Truman urges U. S. to save food for starving Europe. Walter Winchell vs. Vishinsky [Vishinsky slanders Americans, and Winchell says Russia fears power of a free press]. Asbestos mining boom [in Canada]. Canned salmon fishing [divers rescue sunken cargo near Seattle]. Hirohito views flood disaster [Honshu]. Musicians bolster morale of wounded war veterans.

© 6Oct47; MP2720.

210. Oct. 8, 1947. Sensational films of World Series as Yankees win. Football thrillers of the week: UCLA-Northwestern; Notre Dame-Pittsburgh; Georgia Tech-Tulane.

© 8Oct47; MP2721.

211. Oct. 15, 1947. Truman warns the nation Europe's plight desperate. De Gaulle denounces Reds. Hero dead homeward bound [from Belgium]. Yugos release captive Yanks. Nazi poison gas destroyed. Jet Flying Wing unveiled. Fastest planes test guns. Message from Jimmy Stewart [inaugurating Pennsylvania Week]. Holy Name convention [Boston]. China's "basket babies" find haven [in Shanghai mission].

© 15Oct47; MP2718.

212. Oct. 17, 1947. U. S. backs Palestine independence plan. Netherlands Queen [Wilhelmina] retires; infant Princess [Maria Christina] christened. First war dead [from the Pacific area] home. Bill Stern's grid thrillers: Yale vs. Columbia; Army vs. Illinois.

© 17Oct47; MP2719.

213. Oct. 22, 1947. Marshall [at CIO convention in Boston] calls upon labor to back U. S foreign policy. Reports from overseas: black gold rush [Germans salvage coal from harbor at Bremen]; U. S. consulate [in Jerusalem] bombed. Personalities in the news: new birth record set; [British] royal family portrait; Nimitz joins Redskins [Ottawa tribe]. Adelaide Hawley describes latest fashions for fall. Lighter side of the news: [pretzel benders marathon in Atlantic City and Frosh-Soph melee at Columbia University].

© 22Oct47; MP2604.

214. Oct. 24, 1947. Epic of "Sky Queen" has happy ending [scenes relating to the rescue of passengers from the Bermuda flying boat by U. S. Coast Guard cutter "Bibb"]. Film industry denies Red influence as hearings open [before House Committee on Un-American Activities]. Bill Stern's grid thrillers: Michigan vs. Northwestern; Southern Cal-Oregon State; Arkansas vs. Texas; Pennsylvania-Columbia.

© 24Oct47; MP2605.

215. Oct. 29, 1947. Washington's movie drama, all-star cast [Adolphe Menjou, Robert Taylor, Robert Montgomery, and Paul V. McNutt speak at Congressional inquiry into alleged Communist influences in Hollywood]. De Gaulle wins election. Fires raze U. S. forests [in 10 states on Eastern Seaboard]. Rocket opens new navy era [V–2 rocket fired from U. S. aircraft carrier "Midway"].

© 29Oct47; MP2606.

216. Oct. 31, 1947. Thrilling grid films: Columbia's amazing upset of Army; Trojans vs. Golden Bears; Quakers sink the Navy; Longhorns down Rice; Michigan-Minnesota. Nation pays tribute to first war dead home from Europe. Truman calls Congress. Fire ruins Bar Harbor.

© 31Oct47; MP2607.

217. Nov. 5, 1947. Grim tragedy stalks India: 10,000,000 refugees on move. Red issue creates furor at House movie inquiry. Brazil breaks Soviet ties. Armed services keep on alert [airborne maneuvers at Fort Benning, Georgia, and navy air defense tests in California]. Dock fire in London. [Irish] sweepstakes winner. California invades Paris with latest U. S. fashions.

© 5Nov47; MP2608.

218. Nov. 7, 1947. Super-flying boat piloted by Hughes up on first test. Communists riot in France. Bill Stern's grid thrillers: Notre Dame vs. Navy; Georgia Tech-Duke; Michigan-Illinois.

© 7Nov47; MP2609.

219. Nov. 12, 1947. Dramatic report from India [Mohammed Ali Jinnah reviews troops in Karachi, Pakistan; the Maharaja holds court at Hindu Jaipur]. Escaped Polish leader's own story. Flivver planes reach Tokyo [first round-the-world flight of light single-engine planes]. Tribute paid Will Rogers. Adelaide Hawley describes the latest co-ed fashions. Olympic ice team previews U. S. ice stars in first test.

© 12Nov47; MP2610.

220. Nov. 14, 1947. Game of the year: Irish rout Army. Georgia Tech vs. Navy. Virginia-Pennsylvania. Marshall asks [a Congressional committee headed by Senator Vandenberg for] speedy aid to save freedom in Europe. Friendship Food Train starts journey across the nation [after send-off from Governor Warren of California].

© 14Nov47; MP2611.

221. Nov. 19, 1947. Thirty-one rescued as ship sinks in raging sea [U. S. Army hospital ship "Charles A. Stafford" rescues crew of Portuguese schooner "Maria Carlota" off Newfoundland]. Hughes hearing spotlight turned on air general [Bennett Meyers]. Riding the Friendship Train as it snowballs across U. S. News of the day in brief: workhorse of the air [Pioneer transport for use on small back-country airfields]; amputees swim to health.

© 19Nov47; MP2612.

222. Nov. 21, 1947. Truman sees crisis here and abroad; bids Congress act. This is hunger [in Europe]. War flames ravage romantic Kashmir. Friendship Train hailed in Midwest. Bill Stern reports gridiron thrillers: Michigan-Wisconsin; Penn. vs. Army; Georgia Tech-Alabama.

© 21Nov47; MP2613.

223. Nov. 26, 1947. Eric Johnston denounces Reds. Friendship Food Train ends tour in triumph. Pennsylvania Friendship Special; Ohio-Indiana-New York State Special. "Silent Guest" plan launched [for aid to the hungry people of Europe]. Newark calls off battle [between the battleship "New Mexico" and the fireboat "Navy"]. 20–ton telescope lens [moved from California Tech to Palomar Observatory].

© 26Nov47; MP2614.

224. Nov. 28, 1947. The royal wedding [of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip]. Bill Stern's grid specials: USC downs UCLA; Yale-Harvard; Notre Dame-Tulane; Penn State-Pitt.

© 28Nov47; MP2615.

225. Dec. 3, 1947. [Communist] strikes paralyze France. Vienna cleans up [after dynamiting the Philipphof]. U. S. film industry ousts Communists [Eric Johnston announces suspensions]. Largest land plane test [XC–99]. General [Meyers] stripped of honors [testimony before Senate committee]. The "new look" in beach modes. Connie Mack honored.

© 3Dec47; MP2616.

226. Dec. 5, 1947. United Nations vote independent Jewish state in Palestine. Big Four meet in London [Bevin, Molotov, and General Marshall open talks on peace treaties]. News in brief: legal arson [ferryboat "Tamalpais" burned in San Francisco Bay]; wine tasters [Beaune, France]. Army-Navy classic [complete films of gridiron thriller]. Georgia Tech-Georgia. Penn vs. Cornell.

© 5Dec47; MP2617.

227. Dec. 10, 1947. Police battle Reds in Paris. Camera magic reveals secrets of flight. Latest Palestine films. Truman on vacation [in Key West]. Twenty escape plane crash [at Seattle]. Bill Stern's overseas sports [boxing in Paris].

© 10Dec47; MP2785.

228. Dec. 12, 1947. Holy war in Palestine. Red sabotage stirs France to action. New proving ground [Eniwetok] for the atom. Trolley school [in Berlin]. Friendship cargo starts overseas. Irish beat Trojans in thrilling finale. High school grid classic [Franklin Field, Philadelphia]. Tulane vs. LSU.

© 12Dec47; MP2786.

229. Dec. 17, 1947. Secret Service smashes $1,000,000 counterfeit ring. Paris mourns military hero [General Leclerc]. Midget planes circle globe. Santa hits the Netherlands. Holiday for orphans [arriving at LaGuardia Field]. Babe Ruth—Santa. Lujack wins football honor. Ski fever's in the air. Skating champ [Barbara Ann Scott] trains for Olympics.

© 17Dec47; MP2787.

230. Dec. 19, 1947. Hiroshima today; atom-bombed city hails Emperor. Greek Navy gets six U. S. gunboats. Six saved in Labrador plane crash. Friendship food for Italy. Cardinal Spellman assists Santa. Personalities in the news: Admirals Louis E. Denfeld, Chester W. Nimitz. "Pro" football title battle [Cleveland Browns vs. New York Yankees].

© 19Dec47; MP2788.

231. Dec. 24, 1947. Man-made blizzard tests Army's new arctic equipment. Embassy children send Yuletide greetings. New plastic incubator. Admiral Halsey honored. Last American troops quit Italy. Help for Europe [Interim Aid Bill]. Riots in Italy. Movie stars urge less waste.

© 24Dec47; MP2789.

232. Dec. 26, 1947. Aviation's birthday [44th anniversary]. Marshall reports on Big Four split. World's mightiest crane. France hails Friendship food cargo. A message from Jimmy Stewart [for the hungry overseas]. Sport topics of the day: Golden Gloves; Olympic ski tests; "pro" title football [Philadelphia Eagles win from Pittsburgh Steelers].

© 26Dec47; MP2790.

233. Dec. 31, 1947. 1947 newsreel digest of the year: new Congress sets keynote; Taft-Hartley bill; inflation shocks U. S.; Texas City disaster; England's royal wedding; floods, blizzards sweep Europe; Big Four stalemate; Moscow plots chaos; Rio conference; terror in Korea and China; Red strikes sweep France, Italy; Vishinsky attacks America; liberation in India; Palestine partition; Freedom and Friendship trains.

© 31Dec47; MP2791.

234. Jan. 2, 1948. First films of New York's greatest snow storm. Wallace bolts [party]. Lighter side of the news [beach modes for children]. Cardinals win "pro" [football] championship. Margaret Truman's press conference.

© 2Jan48; MP2792.

235. Jan. 7, 1948. Philippines report. Bill Stern's sport thrills of the year: World Series playoff; diving champions; year's sports heroine; Silver Skates carnival; world's fastest car; ice boating thrills; Belmont Gold Cup Race; Indianapolis Speedway classic; bobsledding stars; Babe Didrickson triumphs; horse of the year.

© 7Jan48; MP2793.

236. Jan. 9, 1948. Gridiron thrills from the nation's Bowl classics: Rose Bowl; Orange Bowl; Cotton Bowl; Sugar Bowl. First films of Canada's atom plant. Tojo on trial as Japan's no. 1 war criminal. A message from John Garfield [save food to save lives]. Gay send-off for 1948: Tournament of Roses; King Orange Jamboree; Chelsea Arts Ball.

© 9Jan48; MP2794.

237. Jan. 14, 1948. Truman reports to Congress. Marines answer call to duty. Good news for war veterans [New York State pays bonus]. Sport topics of the day: ski classic; Golden Gloves; "zoom" racing.

© 14Jan48; MP2795.

238. Jan. 16, 1948. Marshall warns: aid to Europe now or else. Overseas headlines: De Gaulle bids for power; Haile Selassie [camera studies]; Japan's "honor system" telephones. Fashions for mermaids [at Miami Beach]. Intercollegiate ski meet [Sun Valley]. Aquatic carnival [Fort Lauderdale].

© 16Jan48; MP2796.

239. Jan. 21, 1948. Heroes' ship [Army Transport "Joseph V. Connolly"] burns at sea. Crew saved [scenes at sea and of survivors' arrival in New York]. General Chennault finds romance in China. Stassen charges: capital "insiders" made millions in grain [Stassen testifies before Senate Appropriations Committee; General Wallace H. Graham answers questions]. Silver Skates thriller [Al Casale wins in New York]. Boy victim [Terry Tullos] helps President [and Margaret Truman] open March of Dimes drive.

© 21Jan48; MP2859.

240. Jan. 23, 1948. Spotlight on Eisenhower [awarded Poor Richard Club medal in Philadelphia]. $1,000,000 Boston fire. Bradley honored [receives Grand Cross of the Legion of Honor from French Ambassador Bonnet]. Milk ship for Europe [sent by Californians]. Chimps in star performance [royal circus in Brussels]. The March of Dimes [pageant in Los Angeles]. Bill Stern's sports headlines: ski daredevils [Illinois' Norge Ski Club meet]; [Middle Atlantic] title skating; zoom diving [Miami Beach].

© 23Jan48; MP2860.

241. Jan. 28, 1948. Petrillo testifies again [before House Labor Committee]. What an orchestra [German orchestra of 20 men using 400 harmonicas]. That new look in beach modes [Coral Gables, Fla.]. Bill Stern's sports topics: [rehearsal in Swiss Alps for Winter Olympics]; jet sled rides rails at 1019 miles an hour [Muroc, Calif.].

© 28Jan48; MP2861.

242. Jan. 30, 1948. Stassen vs. Pauley; the battle of Washington [speculation in high places by "insiders"]. Tense days in Holy Land. Gandhi breaks fast. Mass weddings [in China]. "Voice" for America [Smith-Mundt bill]. Ice boat regatta [Hamilton, Ontario]. Golden Gloves [New York]. Dodds wins again [the mile run at Boston].

© 30Jan48; MP2879.

243. Feb. 4, 1948. Germans demonstrate as unrest sweeps Bizonia [mass walkout in Munich]. Food for Italy [Rome]. Hindu festival [Kumbha-Mela ceremonies at Ganges River]. Tiger tamers begin spring training [Roman Proske in Florida and Mabel Stark in California]. Something new for the Navy [walking barge]. Clothes for cycling [Florida]. Babies in the swim [nine-month-old Sherry Whitford]. Championship ring battle [in Paris].

© 4Feb48; MP2862.

244. Feb. 6, 1948. World mourns Gandhi. Film story of his amazing career. More Marines embark [Norfolk, Va.]. Fur fashions [Florida]. Bill Stern's sports roundup: Millrose Games [Bill Vessie and Gil Dodds set new records]; record crowds cheer winter carnival [St. Paul]; 1948 Winter Olympics [hockey teams and bob sleds racers in Swiss Alps].

© 6Feb48; MP2863.

245. Feb. 11, 1948. Washington spotlight on the Commies [Attorney General Tom Clark and Congressman Karl Mundt testify before House Committee on Un-American Activities]. Exercise Snowdrop, Arctic test for Army [paratroopers in upstate New York]. The lighter side of the news [orangutan at New York's Bronx Zoo]. Magic brain comes to aid of science [solves complex mathematical problems]. Exiled Belgian monarch [King Leopold] finds haven in Cuba. [Bill McGowan's] school for umpires. Championship skating [George Fisher and Loraine Sabbe at St. Paul's winter carnival].

© 11Feb48; MP2864.

246. Feb. 13, 1948. Eisenhower quits Army [ceremonies for his successor, General Omar N. Bradley in presence of President Truman]. India's grieving multitudes bid farewell to Gandhi. Arctic thriller, Exercise Paradog. A new record in triplets [second set born to Mrs. Margaret Trait Walker, Syracuse, N. Y.]. Bill Stern's Olympic round-up [triumphs of Dick Button and Barbara Ann Scott]. Dodds sets record in Boston games.

© 13Feb48; MP2865.

247. Feb. 18, 1948. Today in Palestine. Arab terror defies United Nations. President [Truman] opens 1948 Red Cross Drive. Mardi Gras [Mrs. Truman and Miss Margaret Truman in New Orleans]. Viareggio [Italy] fiesta. Miss Truman launches craft named for Dad. Bill Stern's sport topics: Nations top dogs in New York show; Lipton Cup race [Miami Beach, Fla.]; championship ski jump [St. Paul's winter carnival].

© 18Feb48; MP2866.

248. Feb. 20, 1948. Cinderella romance [Winthrop Rockefeller marries Barbara Sears in Palm Beach, Fla.] Pope warns of atom bomb. Latest films of the war in Greece. Appeasement of Stalin scored by Dewey. Winter Olympics finale [U. S. wins four-man bobsled title; Canada defeats Switzerland to capture hockey crown]. Hell drivers in bang-up show [rodeo in California].

© 20Feb48; MP2923.

249. Feb. 24, 1948. Chiang's army moves against the Reds [General Fu Tso-Yi in command in North China]. Post-war twin record [three sets in two years for Mr. and Mrs. John J. Walsh of Quincy, Mass.] Strange baby case [questionable citizenship of 16–months-old Neils Rebholz]. American hails spirit of brotherhood [messages from Henry Noble McCracken and General Eisenhower]. Bill Stern's sport topics: daredevils on ice [motorcycle race in Czechoslovakia]; Golden Glovers [Coley Wallace, highlight of the matches].

© 24Feb48; MP2924.

250. Feb. 27, 1948. Democrats open Presidential battle of 1948 [President Truman and James A. Farley at Jefferson-Jackson Day Dinner]. In starving China today [Peiping]. Quintuplets for the Leos [San Francisco Zoo]. Bill Stern's sports topics: baseball's in the air [New York Giants train in Florida]. One-man helicopter. Carnival time in Rio.

© 27Feb48; MP2925.

251. Mar. 3, 1948. The Palestine tragedy: explosion rocks Jerusalem; United Nations crisis [speech by Warren R. Austin]; Haganah ship drama [Jewish refugee ship "Unafraid" picked up by British]. "New look" for General Eisenhower [in civilian clothes]. Czechoslovakia in chains [camera highlights of the country from pre-Hitler days to present].

© 3Mar48; MP2926.

252. Mar. 5, 1948. Japan battles black market [Tokyo]. Schools closed by teachers' strike [Minneapolis]. Easter prevue down in Dixie [Gracie Allen at New Orleans' Fete des Chapeaux]. Truman ends tour [Guantanamo, Cuba]. New jet plane [Navy's FJ–1]. Bill Stern's sports topics: Paris acclaims Barbara Scott; turf classic [Talon defeats On Trust in Santa Anita's $100,000 handicap race]; muscle men on parade [male beauty contest in Florida].

© 5Mar48; MP2927.

253. Mar. 10, 1948. Quick aid to Europe urged to avert war. Czech fate stirs world [Senator Arthur Vandenberg speaks for European Recovery Program; scenes in Czechoslovakia show Premier Klement Gottwald; Czech Ambassador Juraj Slavik resigns in Washington]. Everglades [Florida] wonderland explored by cameramen. King Michael reclaims throne [in Paris with Princess Anne of Bourbon-Parma]. Bill Stern's sports headlines: basketball sensation [Notre Dame defeats NYU]; Boston Red Sox get ready [at Sarasota]; Cincinnati Reds warm up for spring [Tampa]; most perilous ski jump [Iron Mountain, Michigan].

© 10Mar48; MP2928.

254. Mar. 12, 1948. De Gaulle asks U. S. arms aid to stem Red march. Canadian Army trains troops in Arctic warfare. De Valera in U. S. Truman returns to Capital. Canada hails Olympics heroine [Barbara Ann Scott in Montreal]. Gliders in record soaring contest [San Diego]. Bill Stern's sports topics: baseball's in the air [Chicago White Sox at Pasadena; New York Yankees at St. Petersburg; Detroit Tigers at Lakeland; Boston Braves at Bradenton]; track thriller [Salmagundi defeats Call Bell in Santa Anita Derby].

© 12Mar48; MP2929.

255. Mar. 17, 1948. 1949 political pot starts boiling [spotlight on Dewey, Stassen, Taft, Vandenberg, Warren, and MacArthur]. King Michael here to learn about America. Chile claims Antarctic islands [President Gabriel Gonzalez Videla at Greenwich Island]. Spectacular fires sweep Jap capital [Tokyo]. "Big Jim" makes a hit [Alabama's Governor James Folsom in New York]. Movie star honored [Esther Williams made Honorary mayor of Twentynine Palms]. Bill Stern's sports topics [University of California crews at Oakland; Arne Ulland wins U. S. National ski title at Snoqualmie, Wash.; Philadelphia Athletics at West Palm Beach. St. Louis Cardinals at St. Petersburg].

© 17Mar48; MP2933.

256. Mar. 19, 1948. World crisis mounts; Marshall asks U. S. to keep calm. [Major General Bennett E.] Meyers goes to jail. De Valera hailed [in San Francisco]. Romance of the air [Jane Froman marries pilot who saved her life]. Britain-U.S. sign film agreement. Bill Stern's sport topics: Dodgers get ready; bowling championship meet [Detroit]; wheelchair basketball [war veterans from Halloran and Cushing Hospitals].

© 19Mar48; MP2944.

257. Mar. 24, 1948. Red crisis stirs nation: Washington, D. C. [Truman demands legislation to halt advance of Red tyranny]; New York City [Truman and Governor Dewey review St. Patrick's Day parade; Truman addresses Friendly Sons of St. Patrick]; Paris, France [foreign ministers for 16 European countries prepare to share in Marshall Plan]; Vienna, Austria [American soldier shot in back by Soviet guard]; Lake Success, N. Y. [Russia must answer to Chile's charge of Russian interference in the Czech coup]; Prague, Czechoslovakia [mourn death of Foreign Minister Jan Masaryk].

© 24Mar48; MP2945.

258. Mar. 25, 1948. Thrilling films of Britain's 1948 Grand National. [Grand National] sweeps winners [in New York]. Spring tornado [in southern Illinois]. [Battleship] Texas sails to be war memorial. MacArthur boom makes hit with Japanese. Lightning jets [FJ–1] in first hops from carriers.

© 25Mar48; MP2946.

259. Mar. 31, 1948. The world spotlight: Turin, Italy [Italy and France sign three trade agreements]; Lake Success, N. Y. [Dr. Papanek, Czech U. N. delegate ousted by Communists, makes plea; Dr. Abba H. Silver reads decision of Jewish Agency for Palestine to establish provisional Jewish state]. First U. S. buzz bombs strengthen defenses. Prize pictures [of New York's press photographers]. DeValera visits Independence Hall. Golden Glovers in thrilling bouts [New York]. Basketball champs [Kentucky wins over Baylor].

© 31Mar48; MP2947.

260. Apr. 2, 1948. Red crisis stirs Italy on eve of election. Rocket Town U. S. A. [in California's Mojave desert]. John L. Lewis again makes headlines [refusing to testify before Truman's fact finding board]. Easter peace prayers echo across nation. Easter egg hunt [Hyattsville, Md.]. Bill Stern's sports topics: Paris, France [wrestling between European Champion and Canada's World Title holder]; Orlando, Florida [Washington Senators in spring workout.]

© 2Apr48; MP2948.

261. Apr. 7, 1948. John L. Lewis obeys court orders. "Lie down" strike stirs Wall Street. Pope's plea moves vast Rome audience. The nation salutes historic Army Day. Schoolhouse on wheels [in northern Ontario, Canada]. Mudder's day at the races [Paumonok Handicap at Jamaica]. Basketball thriller [Phillips Oilers win over Kentucky Wildcats].

© 7Apr48; MP2949.

262. Apr. 9, 1948. U. S. Army calls Red bluff in Berlin. Foreign aid bill signed by Truman. Navy honors Hearst, noted publisher. War veterans rally for free Palestine. Regal trousseau for Princess Anne. General Eisenhower becomes a grandpa. Championship aquatics, Olympic preview [Daytona Beach].

© 9Apr48; MP2950.

263. Apr. 14, 1948. Eisenhower in dramatic plea for strong U. S. Patriotic spectacle stirs nation's capitol [Army Day Parade]. Stassen victory livens up GOP presidential race. Paul Hoffman named head of recovery plan. The Americas unite in anti-Red front [in Bogota]. Water ski champs set new records [at Crystal Gardens, Fla.].

© 14Apr48; MP3049.

264. Apr. 16, 1948. Lewis ends coal strike as court action impends. Army Day Parades: U. S. Army marches in jittery Trieste; New York City [West Point cadets march]. Musical genius [Jerard Jennings] aged four [plays Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody]. Something new in baseball [All-American Girls' League]. Navy kids slug it out [junior boxing tournament at Annapolis].

© 16Apr48; MP3050.

265. Apr. 21, 1948. Revolt in Bogota. Britain pays tribute to memory of FDR [Roosevelt memorial dedicated in London]. Cardinal [Spellman] asks aid for the needy. Lightning speed tests for new thunderjets [at Dow Air Base, Me.] Heavyweight title bout set for June [Louis and Walcott].

© 21Apr48; MP3051.

266. Apr. 23, 1948. First films of Italy's election [defeat for the Reds]. Postscript to revolt: Bogota digs out. Ohio River flood. Flying church [Supai Indians of Grand Canyon get a new house of worship]. Royall inspects weapons [at Aberdeen, Md.]. Baseball season starts with a bang [Washington, D. C.].

© 23Apr48; MP3052.

267. Apr. 28, 1948. Union leader Reuther shot by assassin. Sixteen Marshall Plan nations tighten bond. De Gaulle invades Red stronghold [Marseilles]. Variety Clubs pay honor to Marshall [in Miami]. Triplets' convention in New Jersey's Palisades Park. U. S. submarines sent to Turkey. Navy helicopters in mass flight [near Lakehurst, New Jersey]. Film colony dedicates hospital [Hollywood].

© 28Apr48; MP3053.

268. Apr. 30, 1948. Churchill's remarkable tribute to America. Marshall "mystery" [leaves Bogota conference a week before its formal conclusion]. Children march to aid hungry overseas [Times Square]. That new look in men's hats. Olympic hopefuls in college relays. Rodeo thriller [Phoenix, Ariz.]. Mighty [battleship] "Texas" becomes a Lone Star shrine.

© 30Apr48; MP3054.

269. May. 5, 1948. All London acclaims king and queen on silver jubilee. [Sovereigns drive to St. Paul's on 25th wedding anniversary]. Reds in post-election riots in Italy. Liner [Queen] Elizabeth brings notables [former King Peter and Queen Alexandra of Yugoslavia, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, film star Margaret O'Brien]. Giant [Caonillas] dam brings hope of new era to Puerto Rico. Sports: Jockey Johnny Longden wins 3000th race in California; out door circus in Germany.

© 5May48; MP3197.

270. May 7, 1948. Palestine report: [Jews prepare to defend Holy City in Jerusalem and other points against Arab invasion]. Army bids goodbye to "Ike" [General Eisenhower gets farewell salute at Fort Myer, Va., on retirement as Chief of Staff]. May Day around the world [demonstrations and celebrations in Berlin, Paris, Tokyo, and New York]. Apple blossom time in Dixie [festival at Winchester, Va.]. Children's May Day marked in Boston. Film story of 1948 Kentucky Derby [won by Citation].

© 7May48; MP3198.

271. May 12, 1948. President sees peril in housing shortage [addresses Conference on Family Life in Washington]. Spectacular flight over China's highest peaks [by Chinese government expedition]. Flash tornado leaves wide ruin in Texas. Dewey campaigns in Far West. Fashions in lace for summer wear [shown at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art]. Lighter side of the news: [Simian Art Players of St. Louis Zoo].

© 12May48; MP3199.

272. May 14, 1948. U. S. takes over the railroads [to avert strike]. Chinatown [in San Francisco] holds first baby show. U. S. Canada hail goodwill road [new International Sunshine Highway dedicated by Viscount Alexander]. Golf classic won by [Herman] Barron [Goodall tournament at New Rochelle, N. Y.]. Lamb derby [at Willows, Calif]. Wrestling belles [in Boston].

© 14May48; MP3200.

273. May 19, 1948. Congress of Europe hails plan for union of free nations [Winston Churchill appeals for unity in addresses at The Hague and Amsterdam]. Spectacular paratroop maneuvers [of Ground and Air Forces at Camp Campbell, Ky.]. European fencing championships [Italian challenger battles French champion D'Oriola]. Girl jockeys [in Ladies' Special Handicap at Pimlico. Md.].

© 19May48; MP3201.

274. May 21, 1948. The birth of a nation: Jewish state proclaimed in Palestine [by David Ben-Gurion after Jews capture Haifa from Arabs; Chaim Weizmann elected president; Truman announces U. S. recognition of Israel; Zionist leader Abba Hillel Silver pays tribute to new state]. 25 firemen hurt in San Francisco blaze. President Truman makes an election prediction [at Young Democratic rally in Washington]. Derby winner [Citation] scores again [wins Preakness]. Those he-men are here again [Mr. America title for 1948 won by Adonis in Los Angeles]. Cotton Carnival [in Memphis] a dazzling show.

© 21May48; MP3202.

275. May 26, 1948. Israel at war [air raids at Tel Aviv, mopping up operations at Jaffa; Jewish refugees leave Cyprus internment camps, arrive at Tel Aviv]. Total eclipse gives Japs a thrill. Stassen-Dewey debate on Reds [at Portland, Or.]. Korea's first free election. Girl gymnasts from overseas [arrive on Gripsholm from Sweden].

© 26May48; MP3203.

276. May 28, 1948. Israel's first president thanks U. S. for help [Chaim Weizmann visits President Truman in Washington]. Navy's lightning jets in mass hop at sea [off Newport, R. I.]. Boy Scouts thrill New York in great jamboree. Fire sweeps Dutch palace [at The Hague]. Father of the year [Clarkson Warden of Ann Arbor, Mich.]. World's fastest human [Mel Patton in Los Angeles Relays]. Blue bloods of dogdom [Morris Essex show in N. J.]. Tulip festival [at Holland, Mich]. President Truman at Girard College [Philadelphia].

© 28May48; MP3204.

277. June 2, 1948. War zone report from Palestine [President Chaim Weizmann confers with President Truman; defenses set up near Tel Aviv, in Galilee and in Jordan valley; Count Folke Bernadotte, peace mediator, on way to Holy Land]. Science carries on amid ruins [research continues at Jackson Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Me., burned in 1947], Boys Town [Neb.] mourns Father Flanagan. Flocks [of sheep] begin summer trek [cross Grand Coulee Dam]. Golf classic [Ben Hogan wins PGA title at St. Louis].

© 2Jun48; MP3205.

278. June 4, 1948. Death at sea for a famous warrior [cruiser Salt Lake City torpedoed in naval maneuvers]. Eisenhower honors Drew Pearson [named Father of the Year for "Friendship Train" sponsorship]. Princess Elizabeth visits heroic Coventry. Vatican's Swiss Guards swear in new recruits. Snappy ideas for seagoing vacationists. Lighter side of the news: [new bear arrivals at Berlin Zoo]. Louis-Walcott get ready for the "big fight" [for heavyweight championship].

© 4Jun48; MP3206.

279. June 9, 1948. UN strives for truce to halt Palestine war. Marines sail for Europe's trouble zone. Columbia University honors statesmen [James F. Byrnes and Arthur H. Vandenberg]. Florida hails next governor [Fuller Warren]. Sports topics of the day: Berlin gets fight fever [heavyweight champion Hein ten Hoff vs. Arno Kolblin]; Indianapolis speed classic. Northwest's greatest flood [in Oregon].

© 9Jun48; MP3317.

280. June 11, 1948. President Truman's cross-country tour. Benes resigns as Reds tighten grip on Czechs. Happy day for future admirals [graduation at Annapolis]. Big fair [International Trade Fair in Toronto] boosts world trade. Palestine war news [fighting continues despite truce negotiations]. Long shot [My Love] wins English derby [at Epsom Downs]. Jackpot for sweep winner [in Bronx].

© 11Jun48; MP3319.

281. June 16, 1948. GOP convention preview [in Philadelphia]. Truman relaxes [at Sun Valley, Idaho]. West Point graduation. Normandie—4 years after. Diving stars show pre-Olympic form. Sailboat race for teen age skippers [Norfolk, Va.].

© 16Jun48; MP3320.

282. June 18, 1948. Greater New York's golden jubilee. Jerusalem battle films. Truman says Soviet blocks road to peace. King Michael weds Anne. Babe Ruth acclaimed. Citation wins triple crown [at New York's Belmont Park]. Hogan victor in National Open. Chimps put on all star show at [St. Louis Zoo].

© 18Jun48; MP3321.

283. June 23, 1948. UN mediators see peace in Palestine. Truman gets an "8 ball" [ornament for his desk at the Greater Los Angeles Press Club]. Overseas headlines: Cardinal Spellman in Tokyo; France honors American dead. The search begins for Miss America [Miss California of 1948]. Sports topics of the day: aqua-ski thriller [Cypress Gardens in Florida]; Derby day in Tokyo.

© 23Jun48; MP3322.

284. June 25, 1948. Convention special. Complete film story of GOP drama in Philadelphia. [Includes Republican leaders; Harold E. Stassen, Earl Warren, Joseph W. Martin, Jonathan Wainwright, Robert A. Taft, Thomas E. Dewey, Walter S. Hallanan, and Dwight H. Green.]

© 25Jun48; MP3318.

285. June 30, 1948. Dewey wins nomination [at the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia].

© 30Jun48; MP3323.

286. July 2, 1948. Berlin under Red siege. Rebel ship set afire in Israeli clash. The Warrens meet the Deweys. Patty Berg wins open golf title. India bids farewell to Lord Mountbatten.

© 2Jul48; MP3324.

287. July 7, 1948. U. S. planes rush to break Reds' Berlin siege. What's with Tito [as Marshal Tito is read out of the Communist Party]? Swedish king's 90th birthday. Deweys and Warrens down on the farm [at Pawling, N. Y.]. Film industry protests British discrimination. Bathing beauties take the summer spotlight. Kids kid wrestling [in Richmond, Calif.].

© 7Jul48; MP3325.

288. July 9, 1948. Pope warns labor against Red plotters. British royalty goes to the fair. Get ready for the draft [secretary of the Army Kenneth C. Royall discusses military draft]. Junior City [fresh air camp of Kansas City] teaches good citizenship. Porpoise hunt proves deep sea thriller. Grand Prix brings out latest Paris fashions.

© 9Jul48; MP3326.

289. July 13, 1948. Great earthquake disaster in Japan. Political spotlight: Bolivar, Mo. [President Truman and Venezuela's President Romulo Gallegos unveil a statue of Simon Bolivar]; New York [General Eisenhower ignores politics and greets freshman class]; Oregon [Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas vacations]. U. S. fliers defy Red blockade of Berlin. Chinese glamour girls join the beauty parade. Mountain [at Lake Placid] iced for midsummer skiing. Tightrope walk over the Alps. Pre-Olympic track test [at National AAU meet in Milwaukee].

© 13Jul48; MP3327.

290. July 16, 1948. Democratic convention [in Philadelphia]. Israel defies foes as truce ends. Thrills in final Olympic trials.

© 16Jul48; MP3328.

291. July 21, 1948. Democratic convention's dramatic highlights; victory for Truman. Death calls General Pershing. America's athletes sail for Olympics.

© 21Jul48; MP3335.

292. July 23, 1948. America's tribute to General Pershing. Showdown near in Berlin [between Russia, England, and U. S.] Togliatti shot, Rome Reds riot. Record blast [to construct TVA dam in Tennessee]. Milwaukee celebrated firemen's week. Anti-Truman forces name own ticket. Baseball sensation [Leo Durocher of Brooklyn Dodgers named manager of New York Giants]. Football season on the way.

© 23Jul48; MP3336.

293. July 28, 1948. Berlin crisis holds world spotlight: Washington, D. C., England, The Hague, London, Berlin. FBI round-up of Red leaders in U. S. College girl fashions favor the "old look." London all set for 1948 Olympics. Czechs hold Sokol Gymnast carnival.

© 28Jul48; MP3337.

294. July 30, 1948. Progressives name Wallace for president. The Berlin crisis; a report by General Clay. Ku Klux Klan out in open [Stone Mountain, Ga.]. Refugees from Soviet terror flee to U. S. Greatest airship [92–ton Constitution] in first flight. U. S. Olympic team hailed in London.

© 30Jul48; MP3338.

295. Aug. 4, 1948. Berlin report [with starvation in Berlin, U. S. policy is sent to Moscow]. Grasshopper plague in South America. Calgary Stampede rodeo thriller. Ship on reef has amazing escape [in False Bay, British Columbia]. Military magic [shown reserve officers, Fort Bragg, N. C.]. Horsemanship hurdle test [Germany]. [Aqua skiis] new cure for hot weather. Hearst trophy speedboat regatta [Long Beach, Calif.]. Big fair [in Chicago] shows rail progress.

© 4Aug48; MP3339.

296. Aug. 6, 1948. First films of the 1948 Olympics. U. S. woman spy for Reds tells startling story. Blast disaster [of I. G. Farben Chemical Works] wrecks town in Germany. Greatest airport inaugurated [New York International Airport at Idlewild].

© 6Aug48; MP3340.

297. Aug. 11, 1948. Communism in U. S. exposed by former Red. The Olympic story; victories galore for U. S. stars.

© 11Aug48; MP3341.

298. Aug. 13, 1948. Latest film thrills from the Olympics. Ballet school for toddlers [Pacific Palisades, Calif.]. U. S. giant bombers called back to duty. Movie stars' night in Paris.

© 13Aug48; MP3342.

299. Aug. 18, 1948. Sensations in Red drama; [Elizabeth Bentley testifies before House Committee; Michael Samarin, Russian teacher, accepts U. S. Government protection; Mrs. Oksana Kosenkina leaps from third story window]. The Olympic story; movies prove U. S. victory in disputed race.

© 18Aug48; MP3343.

300. Aug. 20, 1948. Baseball's idol Babe Ruth is dead. Operation Splash [2–ton, 30 foot lifeboat dropped by plane at sea]. Injured teacher [Oksana Kosenkina] finds safety against Reds. New clashes menace truce in Palestine. "Salute to Youth Month" opened by President Truman. Tribute to Michigan's state ferry service. Sports topics of the day: Holland [welcomes Mrs. Fannie Blankers-Koen]; Akron, Ohio [Soap-box Derby].

© 20Aug48; MP3344.

301. Aug. 25, 1948. Independent Korea hails MacArthur. Thousands bid last farewell to Babe Ruth. Well runs wild in fabulous oil strike [in western Canada]. Olympic finale; the 1948 games come to an end. Perfect legs win beauty acclaim [in California].

© 25Aug48; MP3345.

302. Aug. 27, 1948. Defense chiefs meet; amphibious drill tests battle tactics [Operation CAMID near Norfolk, Va.]. U. S. takes stern action in case of Red teacher. Treason trials for "Axis Sally" and "Tokyo Rose." China sets up a Boystown. Fur fashion preview. Bill Stern's sports thrills: [Chicago Cardinals vs. College All Stars; Sheriffs' Show, rodeo in Los Angeles]. West Virginia's North-South grid classic.

© 27Aug48; MP3346.

303. Sept. 1, 1948. Hiss vs. Chambers, face-to-face at Red probe. Mrs. Kosenkina's own story: Soviet teacher exposes Red terror. Yanks block Red raids in Berlin zone. A miracle down on the farm [Soil Conservation Field Day in Frederick County, Md.]

© 1Sep48; MP3458.

Volume 20, 1948/49.

200. Sept. 3, 1948. First World Council of Churches. Rioting Reds seize Berlin City Hall. Soviet consul [Jacob M. Lomakin] sails for home; he won't talk. 25–year-olds answer first draft call. Bill Stern's sports topics: Olympic champs come home; home town [Tulare, Calif.] hails young Olympic hero. Stillwater celebrated Minnesota centennial. Ice-capades of '49.

© 3Sep48; MP3459.

201. Sept. 8, 1948, Ex-Commies put finger on "mystery" Red spy chief. Greek rebels routed in Mt. Gramos battle. Dutch acclaim Wilhelmina, 50 years their Queen. Navy's Hawaii-Chicago flight sets record. Bill Stern's sport topics: title tennis [Billy Talbert and Gardnar Mulloy defeat Ted Schroeder and Frankie Parker]. Football's here: South Bend, Annapolis, West Point. U. S. pilgrimage to famous Lourdes shrine. Pennsylvania week. Youth month [proclamation by Governor Green of Illinois].

© 8Sep48; MP3460.

202. Sept. 10, 1948. Report from China: this is inflation. Israel builds as truce quiets Palestine. Good news for car owners. Latest sport: [sedan soccer]. Something new in [women's] headgear.

© 10Sep48; MP3461.

203. Sept. 15, 1948. Presidential battle of '48 under way. Jitterbugs jump at Harvest Moon Ball. Sky thrills at [Cleveland's National] Air Races. Indiana Labor [Day] celebration [Booneville]. Davis Cup victory for the U. S. Wilhelmina abdicates. Dutch hail new Queen Juliana.

© 15Sep48; MP3462.

204. Sept. 17, 1948. Berlin crisis. Movie stars join circus for charity. Pope blesses multitude. First pension check [from United Mine Workers' welfare fund]. Drama in the zoo [San Francisco]. Beauty on parade [Atlantic City contest]. Governor Dewey aids Youth Month. Pro-football thriller [Dons defeat Dodgers]. Pennsylvania Week [Governor Duff speaks].

© 17Sep48; MP3463.

205. Sept. 22, 1948. Ground broken for UN home in New York. First world citizen [Garry Davis]. Turmoil in Berlin. Progress rides the rails. Woman [Margaret Chase Smith of Maine] wins Senate seat. Mrs. America of 1948. Fire disasters [southern California]. Youth of the year [Bob Mathias is greeted by President Truman]. "Iron Horse" [motorcycle] jockeys compete.

© 22Sep48; MP3464.

206. Sept. 24, 1948. Bernadotte's assassination shocks the world. Riots mark new crisis in France. Humanitarian award [of Variety Clubs] for Marshall. Bathing beauties give lens fans a dizzy day. New tennis champs [Forest Hills, New York]. Texas U routs Louisiana State. Chicago Bears trim Washington Redskins.

© 24Sep48; MP3465.

207. Sept. 29, 1948. Truman vs. Dewey; the campaign warms up. Swiss air force keeps on alert. New York Jubilee fashion parade. Hurricane roars past Miami. Coast Guard in heroic sea rescue. New ring champ [Marcel Cerdan defeats Tony Zale]. Stunt crash landing [provides] air circus thriller. Boston Variety Club wins national award.

© 29Sep48; MP3466.

208. Oct. 1, 1948. Greatest UN crisis as East-West split on Berlin issue. The political campaign waxes hot in the West. Stars shine at Air Force show. Army routs Villanova; California sinks Navy; Notre Dame tops Purdue. [Boston] Braves clinch National [League] pennant.

© 1Oct48; MP3467.

209. Oct. 6, 1948. Democrats arraign Soviet threat to peace, urge UN to act. Campaign report: Warren in New York; Dewey in California; Truman in Texas. New swim suit styles in fashion spotlight. Gridiron thriller: North Carolina upsets Texas. Daredevils deluxe [New Jersey State Fair, Trenton].

© 6Oct48; MP3468.

210. Oct. 8, 1948. West presses case against Soviet in UN. Campaign snapshots [Truman, Dewey]. The new look in swim suits. Catholic Youth stage huge parade in Boston. American League champs: Cleveland wins pennant in tie play-off. Grid thrillers of this week: Harvard wins in upset; Michigan beats Oregon; Georgia Tech tops Tulane.

© 8Oct48; MP3469.

211. Oct. 13, 1948. World Series special [highlights of the first two games in Boston]. Hurricane hits Havana. Sir Stafford Cripps hails E. R. P. Truman renews campaign [in Philadelphia]. Spectacular crash marks Grand Prix. Notre Dame routs Pitt.

© 13Oct48; MP3470.

212. Oct. 15, 1948. Cleveland wins World Series. Winston Churchill warns of war. Truman interrupts campaign trip [to meet Secretary of State Marshall]. Dewey visits New York housing project. Paris fashion preview. Army beats Illinois in a close one. Northwestern conquers Minnesota.

© 15Oct48; MP3625.

213. Oct. 20, 1948. Eisenhower installed as Columbia president. Speedboat thrills on unique "track" [Danbury, Conn.]. California trims Wisconsin in drive for the Rose Bowl. The Dewey story.

© 20Oct48; MP3626.

214. Oct. 22, 1948. Bill Stern's gridiron report: Michigan upsets Northwestern; Penn shades Columbia in thriller. The Truman story.

© 22Oct48; MP3627.

215. Oct. 27, 1948. Red revolt in Korea. Report from Europe: [Finance ministers of 16 nations sign agreements for the European Recovery Plan. Secretary of State Marshall stops in Rome.] Legionnaires of nation in gala parade [Miami]. Paranurses, airborne angels of mercy. College spirit [freshman-sophomore rush at Columbia University]. Dixie grid thriller [Tulane vs. Mississippi]. Navy Day, 1948; sea power for peace. Governor Bradford speaks for a great cause [Community Chest Fund].

© 27Oct48; MP3628.

216. Oct. 29, 1948. Presidential campaign round-up. Reds foment French coal strike riots. Grateful Berlin kids thank U. S. flyers. Regal splendor in Hindu festival. Bill Stern's gridiron report: Michigan wallops Minnesota; Army topples Cornell.

© 29Oct48; MP3629.

217. Nov. 3, 1948. Unified forces in spectacular maneuvers [off Florida's Gulf coast]. French troops seize mines as riots spread. Britons cheer King opening Parliament. Strange case of Ilse Koch. New wave lengths for the Waves. Sky mystery solved [5–motor B–17], The "Big Mo" visits New York. Lady Luck smiles on Sweep winners.

© 3Nov48; MP3630.

218. Nov. 5, 1948. U. S. welcomes first shipload of DP's. Morgenthau reports on trip to Palestine. Champion daredevil performs over Alps. Grid thrillers of the week: Notre Dame vs. Navy; California tops USC; Northwestern vs. Ohio State; Georgia Tech defeats Duke.

© 5Nov48; MP3631.

219. Nov. 10, 1948. Dramatic story of Truman's triumph [re-election as President of the United States. Dewey concedes Truman victory].

© 10Nov48; MP3632.

220. Nov. 12, 1948. Truman hailed as conquering hero. Mounties star in [65th] National Horse Show [in New York]. Berlin kids run the Red blockade. Bill Stern's gridiron thrillers: Army power smothers Stanford; Penn toppled by Penn State; Tennessee upsets Georgia Tech.

© 12Nov48; MP3633.

221. Nov. 17, 1948. Will de Gaulle stop the Reds? [Depicts important events in de Gaulle's life.] More power for Berlin airlift. New wonder of science [electromagnet for Columbia University's new cyclotron]. The St. Hubert stag hunt [in the Rambouillet woods near Paris].

© 17Nov48; MP3634.

222. Nov. 18, 1948. U. S. ports paralyzed by dock strikes. Death for Tojo as war criminal. Beauty and the grapefruit [Florida's bathing beauties]. With Truman on vacation [Key West, Fla.]. MacKenzie King steps down [as Prime Minister of Canada]. Army vs. Penn, grid thriller of the year. Notre Dame rally tops Northwestern. California swamps Washington State.

© 18Nov48; MP3635.

223. Nov. 24, 1948. British rejoice over birth of royal prince. Death at sea for a gallant war veteran [Cruiser Pensacola]. Rootin' tootin' toddlers' contest [Las Vegas, Nev.]. Fort Bliss marks 100th anniversary. New premier for Canada [Louis St. Laurent]. With Truman on vacation [Key West, Fla.]. The gentler sex [women wrestlers in Boston]. Cornell beats Dartmouth in thriller.

© 24Nov48; MP3636.

224. Nov. 26, 1948. The Kosenkina drama: happy day for Red terror victim (Mrs. Oksana Kosenkina leaves the hospital). Truman ends vacation, confers with Marshall [on the Berlin and China crises]. Lighter side of the news: A baby chimp's day. Bill Stern's report on climax of grid season: Michigan tops Ohio State; Tarheels wallop Duke; Northwestern tops Illinois; S. M. U. conquers Baylor.

© 26Nov48; MP3739.

225. Dec. 1, 1948. Berlin airlift speeded for winter ordeal. Palestine underground here; [Menachem Beigin] welcomed to U. S. World's smallest plane in successful flight. Tropical ice mirage proves to be salt [Puerto Rico]. Bill Stern's All-America football stars of 1948.

© 1Dec48; MP3913.

226. Dec. 3, 1948. Army vs. Navy in sensational grid classic. Georgia beats Georgia Tech. Boystown founder honored. Cornell upsets Penn, 23–14. Churchill's little jest [receives honorary degree at London University]. Nation ushers in yuletide season. Philadelphia hails Santa.

© 3Dec48; MP3914.

227. Dec. 8, 1948. China's darkest hour [Madame Chiang Kai-shek arrives in Washington; Communists threaten to engulf all China]. Jap kids' band goes American in a big way. Film stars meet Britain's Queen. Squirrel cage jeep. Water skiers cut new capers [Cypress Gardens, Florida].

© 8Dec48; MP3915.

228. Dec. 10, 1948. Secret films bare Red spy ring. Truman visits the "Big Mo." Christmas preview [dolls for New York's underprivileged children]. Trojans stop Irish in grid sensation. Philadelphia high [schools] in tie for title. Mat mauling sextet [in Montreal].

© 10Dec48; MP3916.

229. Dec. 15, 1948. Berlin voters defy Red terror. Vice President-Elect Alben Barkley greeted by Governor Earl Warren in Los Angeles; Dr. Carlos Prio Socarras, new President of Cuba, greeted by President Truman in Washington. Candy treats for Europe's children. U. S. Marines in China. Powder Bowl classic [Indiana University girls play football].

© 15Dec48; MP3917.

230. Dec. 17, 1948. Aviation's newest marvel [twin-propellered helicopter]. Israel's President [Chaim Weizmann] visits Jerusalem. President Truman gets Xmas turkeys. First films of the new Wacs. [Blue-blooded dogs model togs of New York's poodle specialty shop]. Pro football playoff [Baltimore Colts vs. Buffalo Bills]. Wonder horse [Citation] wins again. New desert paradise [resort hotel, the Shadow Mountain Club, in the California desert].

© 17Dec48; MP3918.

231. Dec. 22, 1948. UN assembly ends stormy Paris session. Hundreds die in Chinese ship disaster. Baby gorilla enjoys modern zoo life. Deep sea Santa [visits Florida's Marineland]. Battling bambinos make leather fly [45–pounders at New York boys' club bouts]. Bike marathon [in France] muddy affair. Holiday greeting from embassy kids.

© 22Dec48; MP3919.

232. Dec. 24, 1948. Hail Prince Charlie; the royal christening. Nation salutes Wright plane, first to fly. Circus brings thrills to London youngsters. Pro-football title thrillers in snow; Eagles top Cardinals; Browns maul Bills.

© 24Dec48; MP3920.

233. Highlights of 1948. 1948 personalities in the news [Queen Juliana succeeds Queen Wilhelmina; Britain celebrates birth of Prince Charles; Gandhi assassinated; Chiang Kai-shek's government threatened by Communists]. The birth of a nation [Israel]. The Truman triumph.

© 29Dec48; MP3921.

234. Dec. 31, 1948. Marooned airmen await rescue from icecap. Petrillo ends ban on recorded music. President Truman greets neighbors [in Independence]. Big guns dismantled [at San Francisco's Golden Gate]. Rioting in Rome. Christian converts baptized in Japan. Higher education goes to bow wows [school for dogs in Boston]. Aquatic forum in Florida.

© 31Dec48; MP3922.

235. Jan. 5, 1949. Bill Stern's Sports parade of 1948; the champions and highlights of an action-packed twelve months. The Olympic story.

© 5Jan49; MP3923.

236. Jan. 7, 1949. Gridiron thrills from the Bowl classics: the Rose Bowl; the Sugar Bowl; the Orange Bowl; the Cotton Bowl. Holiday show for airlift men.

© 7Jan49; MP3924.

237. Jan. 12, 1949. Truman reports to 81st Congress. Puerto Rico installs first elected governor [Luis Munoz Marin]. Yale men killed in plane crash. Tornado rips Arkansas town [Warren]. Golden Gloves show fistic fury [New York]. Ski fever goin' up [Mount Hood, Ore.].

© 12Jan49; MP4118.

238. Jan. 14, 1949. Hawaii volcano erupts. Acheson named as Secretary of State. Bullitt reports on China crisis. London: Chelsea Arts Ball. Warsaw: baby lion cub boards with litter of puppies. Winter storm lashes Seaford on the English coast. New York: Jeanne Crow elected Queen of the 1949 Press Photographers' Ball. Philadelphia: Mummers' Parade. Cairo: funeral of the assassinated Prime Minister. Air show thrills [Miami's 17th annual All-America air maneuvers].

© 14Jan49; MP4119.

239. Jan. 19, 1949. Hollywood snowbound; it's different down in the Florida sun. Reds celebrate 1917 revolution. Ghost fleet comes to life. French send Gratitude Train. New golf champ [Lloyd Mangrum]. Punch and Judy show in Germany.

© 19Jan49; MP4120.

240. Jan. 21, 1949. Communist chiefs in U. S. on trial. The Navy's amazing new air weapon [Gorgon IV]. President Truman's cabinet [presented]. Ski meet thriller opens 1949 season [Fox River Grove, Ill.]. Smart styles for smart bow wows. Polio poster girl opens "dimes" drive. Rare birds show fancy feathers.

© 21Jan49; MP4121.

241. Jan. 26, 1949. The 1949 Presidential inaugural. Includes scenes of the President and Vice President Barkley taking the oath of office, the inaugural address, the parade down Pennsylvania Avenue, and the dinner of the Electoral College with the president telling his personal reactions on election night.

© 26Jan49; MP4122.

242. Jan. 28, 1949. Chiang out as China's leader. First election stirs Israel. Bull in a china shop. Churchill on vacation [on the French Riviera]. Acheson sworn in [as Secretary of State]. Ski meet thriller [Salisbury, Conn.] Ice boats in speed regatta [Fox Lake, Ill.] Muscles flex for "Mr. America" title [Oakland, Calif.]

© 28Jan49; MP4123.

244. Feb. 4, 1949. Blizzard-bound herds [on the western ranges] saved by air mission. Election films from Israel. U. S. film star [Tyrone Power] weds in Rome. Ace Admiral wins $100,000 Maturity. Indoor track thriller [Millrose Games in New York City]. Ski champs take the Alps.

© 4Feb49; MP4124.

245. Feb. 9, 1949. Gratitude Train brings thanks from France. Town menaced by cave-in [Carbondale, Pa.]. Double-take fashions. Sensational ski jumping [Olympian Hill, Wash.] Ski bug bites dog. Diving de luxe [Miami Beach].

© 9Feb49; MP4125.

246. Feb. 11, 1949. Flight from Nanking. Red "mock trial" of Cardinal [Mindszenty] denounced. Capital hails "Merci" train touring U. S. Anti-bias award for Irene Dunne. Those cowboys are off again [Palm Springs].

© 11Feb49; MP4126.

247. Feb. 16, 1949. Biggest narcotic haul on record. Life comes back to Monte Cassino. Greek church installs new Patriarch. "Merci" gifts from France. The crisp look rules new modes. "Ike" [Eisenhower] goes back to the Army. Animals at the San Francisco zoo don't like the cold wave.

© 16Feb49; MP4127.

248. Feb. 18, 1949. Final "kaput" for Hitler's chancellery. Transit strike ties up Philadelphia. Canada Premier [St. Laurent] visits Truman. School days in the land of the Nile [archaeology students at the University of Cairo]. Keglers roll 'em in national meet [World Series of bowling at Atlantic City]. Bob-sled trials drama of speed [Lake Placid]. Winter carnival in St. Paul. Experiment in brotherhood [New Haven, Conn.]

© 18Feb49; MP4128.

249. Feb. 23, 1949. President Truman sees spectacular air show [Andrews Field, Md.]. Operation "Snowball" [82d Fighter Group on winter maneuvers at Grenier Field, N. H.]. De Gaulle vows fight to finish against Reds. Tubeless tire ends blowouts. Champ pooches of 1949. Turf pays tribute to a great jockey [George Woolf].

© 23Feb49; MP4129.

250. Feb. 25, 1949. Army's head [Kenneth C. Royall] finds MacArthur's men ready. Huge hangar dynamited. Charwomen's day in London. Ballet revival cheers Germans. Biggest bobsled takes 100 for ride. Fancy footwork at snowshoe carnival [Ottawa] Teaching the "umps" how to call 'em.

© 25Feb49; MP4130.

251. Mar. 2, 1949. Israel inaugurates first president [Chaim Weizmann]. Pope denounces Reds as foes of religion. Strange case of Anna Strong [deported from Russia as a spy]. Carnival time on the Riviera. West hails "Merci" train. Miss Brevity for 1949. Button holds world title [for figure skating]. Spring workout [for California's Golden Bear oarsmen]. Eloquent appeal for Red Cross.

© 2Mar49; MP4131.

252. Mar. 4, 1949. Daring flight over raging volcano [Mauna Loa]. British play host to Russian troops celebrating 31st anniversary of Red Army at Soviet war memorial in British zone [Berlin]. Truman takes the Capital spotlight [at the Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner]. Surprise for gamblers [raid at Miami]. Golden Gate hails French "Merci" train. Long shot [Vulcan's Forge] wins Santa Anita Handicap. New ski jump record [of 297 feet set by Joe Perrault]. Daredevil diving [Nassau].

© 4Mar49; MP4132.

253. Mar. 9, 1949. Complete film story of first global non-stop flight [by U. S. Air Force B–50 bomber]. Cardinal [Spellman] takes hand in graveyard strike. Mardi Gras spirit rules New Orleans. Yanks open spring training. Cards answer call. [Smith College] co-eds learn life-saving. Greatest array of stars at MGM party.

© 9Mar49; MP4133.

254. Mar. 11, 1949. U. S. girl aide [Judith Coplon] nabbed in spy round-up. Newest giant of the skies [Clipper America]. Newsmen honor General Marshall. Truman turns reporter [Key West, Fla.]. Volcano erupts down under [New Zealand's Mt. Gnauruhoe]. Basketball wizards [Harlem Globetrotters defeat Minneapolis Lakers]. World champs warm up [Cleveland Indians]. Boston Braves on 1949 warpath. First work-outs for the Red Sox.

© 11Mar49; MP4134.

255. Mar. 16, 1949. "Wild West" train bandits captured. Axis Sally guilty of treason. Degree for a princess [Princess Elizabeth receives Doctor of Laws at Edinburgh University]. With Truman in Florida [receives degree at Rollins College]. The latest dance craze. Romans revive chariot racing. Joe Louis' million dollar story. Dodgers warm up. Tigers get ready.

© 16Mar49; MP4135.

256. Mar. 18, 1949. North Atlantic Defense Pact stirs Senators. Egypt restores famed temples buried 2000 years. Rome's motorists receive blessing. Fashion's latest from gay Paree. Junior battlers [New York Boys Athletic League tournament]. Canoe bogganing. Connie Mack on the job.

© 18Mar49; MP4136.

257. Mar. 23, 1949. Spectacular fire sweeps Army base [Oakland, Calif.]. Atlantic Pact nears reality. Report from Israel [leaders of United Jewish Appeal and Moshe Sharret arrive in New York]. U. S. opens doors to orphan DP's. Soviet at last returns one U. S. warship. New water sport [plastic canoes at Cypress Gardens]. Skiing paradise [Banff]. Cincinnati "Reds" all set for '48. Alaska's great dog derby.

© 23Mar49; MP4281.

258. Mar. 25, 1949. Free nations hail Atlantic Defense Pact. British fleet on the alert [first post-war maneuvers]. Police raids [in New York City] hit slot machines and dope. Basketball thriller [University of San Francisco vs. Loyola]. President wins newsreel "Oscar." Atomic energy opens gates of "secret city" [Oak Ridge, Tenn.]. Houston hails Shamrock Hotel.

© 25Mar49; MP4282.

259. Mar. 30, 1949. Reds invade U. S. to aid "culture." Churchill here, thanks U. S. for aid to Europe. Bastogne heroes report to MGM for battle epic. Greek soldiers entertain GI's. Mosley followers in London riot. China rebuilds army as Reds stall on peace. Turf thriller [Lincolnshire Handicap].

© 30Mar49; MP4283.

260. Apr. 1, 1949. Red "peace" confab stirs up a storm [meeting of the Cultural and Scientific Conference for World Peace]. Mississippi levee breaks. Dream house for child heroine [who rescued family from burning house]. New Defense Chief [Louis Johnson] takes office. Greeks bring gifts to Trumans. Thrilling films of Britain's Grand National. Sweepstakes winner.

© 1Apr49; MP4284.

261. Apr. 6, 1949. European leaders in U. S.; Defense Pact hailed on eve of signing. Russia's Gromyko arrives. U. S. ready to back Pact. Greece celebrates independence day. Sheep shed woollies [shearing of sheep in Canadian Rockies]. [Nine-year-old] youngster amazes musical world. Water ski champion [Willa Worthington]. Cancer trailer.

© 6Apr49; MP4285.

262. Apr. 8, 1949. World history made as 12 nations sign Defense Pact in Washington. Churchill says A-bomb alone stalls Soviet. Dizziest boat race. Maid of cotton [brings cotton fashions to Britain].

© 8Apr49; MP4286.

263. Apr. 13, 1949. Banker fugitive [Richard H. Crowe] caught by FBI. Hospital fire tragedy shocks nation [Effingham, Ill.] United Nations [General Assembly] convenes in New York. Children pay tribute on Pontiff's jubilee. Hope diamond changes hands. East side kids show Easter hats. Truman hails Army Day.

© 13Apr49; MP4287.

264. Apr. 15, 1949. Heart of the nation stirred by tragic death of a child [Kathy Fiscus imprisoned in an abandoned well]. Israel welcomes U. S. Ambassador [James G. McDonald]. Greek monarchs hailed on tour. Sport spotlight on junior stars: in Los Angeles ten-week-old baby demonstrates aquatic prowess and two-year-old diver does fancy diving; in Annapolis, sons try for Junior Boxing title of U. S. Navy.

© 15Apr49; MP4288.

265. Apr. 20, 1949. Earthquake rocks cities in Northwest. Mr. Truman goes calling [on the Senate]. Israel's President [Chaim Weizmann] on official visit [to U. S.]. [Ceremonies at Hyde Park] in memory of F. D. R. London's famous quads baptised. Cultural treasures returned to India. Cheerful signs of balmier days [select Swim For Health Girl for 1949].

© 20Apr49; MP4289.

266. Apr. 22, 1949. 1949 Easter parade greatest ever. Airmen set new endurance mark [for continuous flying]. U. S. denounces Soviet attack on Defense Pact. Dance champs charm Paris. Truman opens baseball season. Derby test thriller [Chesapeake Stakes at Havre De Grace]. Leafs win hockey title third year.

© 22Apr49; MP4290.

267. Apr. 27, 1949. $7,000,000 Capitol [in Olympia, Wash.] vacated as quake cracks building. King Farouk opens Egypt's world's fair. German war crime trials end at last. Anti-Reds riot in Munich. Bigger and better spring bonnets. Swedish champ wins Boston marathon. Memorial to Babe Ruth. Opportunity Bonds campaign opens.

© 27Apr49; MP4291.

268. Apr. 29, 1949. China Commies shell British warships as Red tide rolls on. Washington slums shock Senators. King George resumes duties. Lightning paint job [96 painters paint house in 2–1/2 minutes]. Record sugar crop for Puerto Rico. Art Students' [League] high jinks [costume ball]. [Benny and Betty Fox skip rope and dance on platform 13 stories above Chicago]. Foto-finish derby test [Wood Memorial race at Jamaica].

© 29Apr49; MP4292.

269. May 4, 1949. "Cold war" sensation; Reds' Berlin offer lifts peace hopes. Greek royalty on mountain pilgrimage. Down to earth after six weeks in air [Bill Barris and Dick Riedel]. Egypt's amazing treasure hunt. International ring thriller [Steve Belloise vs. Jean Stock].

© 4May49; MP4293.

270. May 6, 1949. Flight from Shanghai [civilian refugees flee from Communist threatened city]. The world sees a new king of May Day [in New York]. Berlin gets gambling fever. Navy introduces "Able Mable" [dive bomber]. Blossom time in apple land [Winchester, Va.]. Track stars shine in Penn relays [at Philadelphia's Franklin Field]. Water ski-nanigans [at Cypress Gardens, Fla.]

© 6May49; MP4459.

271. May 11, 1949. Army bids farewell to Clay as Soviet yields on blockade. Queen Juliana has 40th birthday. Elizabeth and Philip honored in Wales. Art inspires new fashions [in New York exhibition]. Salute to Israel on first birthday [in Madison Square Garden]. Durocher case stirs baseball world.

© 11May49; MP4460.

272. May 13, 1949. Shanghai digs in as Red armies near. Quadruplets thrill blasé New York [born to Charles and Ethel Collins]. Rome welcomes Princess Margaret. Humanitarian award to Herbert Hoover. Diamond jubilee Kentucky Derby sees big upset [as Ponder wins].

© 13May49; MP4461.

273. May 18, 1949. Death in Shanghai [traitors executed publicly]. Berlin hails end of Red blockade. Helicopters for Marines. Israel wins seat in U. N. United Nations honors Dr. Bunche. Water skiers in wacky race [near Seattle, Wash.].

© 18May49; MP4462.

274. May 20, 1949. New era in Berlin as blockade ends. Chemical blast rocks N. Y.'s Holland Tunnel. Grandma Moses wins achievement award. American Day celebrated [in New York and Hollywood]. Capot wins Preakness.

© 20May49; MP4463.

275. May 25, 1949. General Clay gets hero's welcome [in Washington and New York]. Spotlight on another F.D.R. Pope proclaims new Saint [Jeanne de Lestannac]. Modern 49ers hit bond trail for Uncle Sam [in Independence, Mo.] Great day for Monty Stratton [at film premiere in Greenville, Texas]. Skim-boating newest sport. International golden gloves [at Chicago Stadium]. U. S. honors President [Dutra] of Brazil.

© 25May49; MP4464.

276. May 27, 1949. The Big Four in Paris. New York welcomes Brazil President [Eurico Gaspar Dutra]. Debs make their bow to royalty [at Buckingham Palace]. 300 on flying boat [Marshall Mars] set aviation record. Miracle night nurse rocks baby to sleep. Plucky battlers in [Police Athletic Club] Tourney. World's greatest woman athlete [Mrs. Fanny Blanker-Koen]. Mr. America for 1949 [Jack Delinger].

© 27May49; MP4465.

277. June 1, 1949. Shanghai abandoned to invading Reds. West stands firm in Big Four parley. Report from India [of First Congress in Jaipuri]. Oysters grow on trees [in Puerto Rico]. Gift of mercy [presented to London's Roehampton Hospital by Mrs. Lewis Douglas]. Paratroopers keep ready [near Fort Bragg, N. C.]. All-Navy boxing championships [at Alameda, Calif.]

© 1Jun49; MP4466.

278. June 3, 1949. Personalities in the news. Churchill's tribute to U. S. Father of the Year [Dr. Ralph Bunche]. Wedding bells for Rita [Hayworth and Aly Khan]. Romance plus royalty [King George and Queen Elizabeth attend wedding of his private secretary's daughter]. Haitian look for new summer hats. Heat test for supersonic pilots. Herring run [in Maine]. Ali Baba's cave found in Egypt.

© 3Jun49; MP4467.

279. June 8, 1949. Hiss trial begins in Red spy case. Princess Rita [Hayworth] a happy bride. Prexy Eisenhower's first commencement [at Columbia University]. Jap Emperor at A-bomb city [Nagasaki]. Queen Mary's 82d birthday. Romance stars at Annapolis [Color Girl Marie Badecker and Midshipman George Benas]. Thrilling moment in motor classic [the Indianapolis Speedway Race].

© 8Jun49; MP4468.

280. June 10, 1949. Sixteen nations pay tribute to Marshall. Stalin reviews Soviet might. Fotoflash Queen [in Atlantic City]. Annapolis graduation. Celebrity golf [with Omar Bradley, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope]. English Derby a thriller [as Nimbus wins at Epsom Downs].

© 10Jun49; MP4469.

281. June 15, 1949. Graduation plus at West Point. Woman banker [Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark] named U. S. Treasurer. "Hell Week" for Navy volunteers [at Little Creek, Va.] How not to fly [demonstrated by Sammy Dixon]. Christianity on march in A-bombed city [Nagasaki]. Rome celebrates its liberation. Sailors turn nurses to care for babies [at Naval Hospital in Oakland, Calif.]

© 15Jun49; MP4470.

282. June 17, 1949. King George's birthday party a gala event. New twist in stunt flying. Variety clubs rededicate Will Rogers Hospital [at Saranac Lake, N. Y.] President has big day with war buddies. New golf champion [Cary Middlecoff]. Rough riding amateurs [at Livermore, Calif.]

© 17Jun49; MP4471.

283. June 22, 1949. Hitler's dreamboat comes to New York. The Ku Kluxers are in again. Trieste voters reject Reds. A new F. D. R. in Washington. Dewey home, reports on Europe. Fashion on parade [at the Rotary International Convention, N. Y.]. Swim suit queen [chosen at Rye, N. Y.]. Chimpanzee circus [at the St. Louis Zoo].

© 22Jun49; MP4472.

284. June 24, 1949. De Gaullists vs. Reds; tension in France. Gandhi School opens in India. New Secretary of War [Gordon Gray]. Summer's beauty marathon begins. World's swankiest racing classic [the Royal Hunt Cup]. [Mel] Patton stars at big track meet. Motorcycle thriller [at Guilford, N. H.].

© 24Jun49; MP4473.

285. June 28, 1949. Big Four parleys end in Paris amid smiles. Berlin [continues as the center of the Cold War]. Washington [Secretary Acheson congratulated by President]. New iron lung [demonstrated in New York]. Woman named envoy [Mrs. Perle Mesta appointed Minister to Luxembourg]. Adelaide Hawley's lighter side of the news. New world [heavyweight] champion [Ezzard Charles]. Bike thriller [on the Isle of Man]. Wimbledon tennis.

© 28Jun49; MP4474.

286. July 1, 1949. Man-made lightning sets world record [at Pittsfield, Mass.]. Governor [Warren] of Florida goes to California for a bride. General Ike [Eisenhower] as engineer. New landing gear for heavy bombers. Realistic maneuvers for Marine Reservists. Pride of Chinatown [New York's Chinese Club selects King and Queen]. Quad party [Britain's Taylor and Good quadruplets meet]. Marbles champs [at Asbury Park, N. J.]. Gala week in Gay Paree.

© 1Jul49; MP4475.

287. July 6, 1949. Counterfeiters rounded up near White House. U. S. General [John H. Hilldring] on sinking steamer, films rescue as "Princess Astrid" strikes a mine. Canada's man of the hour [Prime Minister St. Laurent]. Towers that walk [in Nola, Italy]. Movie industry praised in hospital dedication [in Santa Monica, Calif.]. Egypt's secret miracle city [Mahalla Al Kobra]. Gay Lothario, 73, held as love pirate [in Chicago].

© 6Jul49; MP4476.

288. July 8, 1949. Prison term for Judy Coplon as Red spy. G. I. adopts Chinese orphan he rescued. Catapult for small planes [at Katonah, N. Y.] Largest ore ship [the S. S. Wilfred Sykes] launched in Ohio. Film star [Irene Dunne] wins Notre Dame award. New sport thrill from Puerto Rico [as water skiers stage a midnight ballet]. Monte Carlo takes up dice.

© 8Jul49; MP4477.

289. July 13, 1949. Western powers' fleets in joint maneuvers. Arsenal on wings [Navy Skyraider plane]. France remembers General Patton. Jap prisoners home, stir Red issue. Miss Chinatown, 1949 [San Francisco]. U. S. net stars sweep Wimbledon. Midsummer skiing brings winter thrills.

© 13Jul49; MP4676.

290. July 15, 1949. Spy jury splits; Hiss must face new trial. Melchior sings for disabled war vets. Senator Johnson urges cut in movie ticket tax. Rodeo for Marines [Camp Pendleton, Calif.]. Sand skiing [Plum Island, Mass.]. Women wrestlers.

© 15Jul49; MP4677.

291. July 19, 1949. 79 perish in two plane crashes [near Burbank, Calif., and Bombay, India]. Field Marshal Montgomery sees West-Europe's fleets in battle drill. Montevideo, U. S. A., salutes namesake. Motorboat thriller. All star baseball [between National and American Leagues at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn].

© 19Jul49; MP4678.

292. July 22, 1949. Troops called as London dock strike grows. Rescue bell saves crew on sunken sub. First intimate films of Bonnie Prince Charlie. Chiefs of staff meet for parleys, and play [at White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.]. German film studio goes up in flames. Salt Lake gift thrills Japanese. Kid ski star [Ni Orsi]. Unique swimming pool [Navy's Catamount]. Calgary Stampede.

© 22Jul49; MP4679.

293. July 27, 1949. Airmen shot from plane at 550 mph. Navy rockets reveal new cosmic data. Jackie Robinson upholds Negro loyalty to U. S. Airliner sets homes afire in fatal crash [in Seattle]. Shriners' rally hears Truman warn Soviet. Fish story from "Down under." Water ballet [Newark Athletic Club's Nacettes].

© 27Jul49; MP4680.

294. July 29, 1949. Atlantic Pact ratified; signed by President. Tight squeeze for the "Big E" [Carrier Enterprise gets under the Brooklyn Bridge]. Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark, new Treasurer of the U. S., signs receipt for money. Boston welcomes family of Josef Bujak of Poland. "Drive-in" church in North Hollywood. The beautiful blue Danube is open again. Israel celebrates first army day. Frog derby. Vicki Draves stars in water festival.

© 29Jul49; MP4681.

295. Aug. 2, 1949. Churchill opens election campaign. U. S. welcomes French sea queen [Ile de France]. Korea mourns patriot Kim Koo. Denmark hails old Viking days. Ostrich is back in fashion news. International bike race. Midsummer skiing [New Hampshire's Belknap Mountain Ski]. Amputee ball game. Port Huron celebration [Blue Water Festival]. San Antonio holds Soap Box Derby.

© 2Aug49; MP4682.

296. Aug. 5, 1949. U. S. chiefs to Europe for talks on war aid. The Vikings invade Britain [reenacting landings of early Saxon Chiefs]. Artist Churchill [in northern Italy]. Mid-air crash [in New Jersey]. Real rainmaker [Donald Johnston of Regina, Sask.] Unique birthday party [Ozzie Osborne atop a flagpole]. Longest bicycle race [Tour of France]. Frontier days [rodeo at Cheyenne, Wyo.] Harmsworth Trophy.

© 5Aug49; MP4683.

297. Aug. 10, 1949. Happy birthday: Hoover at 75 keeps working for nation. Niagara stunt ends in near disaster. Realistic drill for ROTC cadets. Argentine naval cadets visit New Orleans. Marshall urges military aid to European nations. American girl [Shirley May France] ready for Channel test. Kitten shows kids easy way to swim.

© 10Aug49; MP4684.

298. Aug. 12, 1949. Red crisis in Asia; U. S. pledges aid to free nations. Parachutists battle raging forest fires [in Montana]. California girls OK French bathing suits. [British] motorbike daredevils.

© 12Aug49; MP4685.

299. Aug. 16, 1949. Earthquake disaster in Ecuador. Jimmy Stewart takes a bride. Defense pact parleys begin; Reds riot. Hoover warns nation on "collectivism." All-American golf tourney. Hambletonian surprise.

© 16Aug49; MP4686.

300. Aug. 19, 1949. Rivers of molten lava menace Spanish isle [La Palma] as volcano erupts. Airmen of five nations in defense tests. Jet planes in carrier flights. Is it romance for Vice President Barkley? Gallant British warship [Amethyst] hailed in Hong Kong. Football makes 1949 bow [College All-Stars vs. Philadelphia Eagles]. Soap Box Derby [in Akron].

© 19Aug49; MP4687.

301. Aug. 24, 1949. First Council of Europe. Plain talk by U. S. Air Force Chief Vandenberg. Helicopters join the Navy. Happy birthday to Ethel Barrymore, 70. Miss America in France. O'Dwyer praises film industry. Oldest sportsfest [Tournament of the Saracens in Italy]. Championship rodeo [at the Los Angeles Coliseum].

© 24Aug49; MP4689.

302. Aug. 26, 1949. Sport world honors Connie Mack, 86. Swiss reveal secret defenses in the Alps. Strange new ship on the high seas [Gar Wood's twin-hulled ship]. Navy frogmen get workout. Disabled vets in convention [Cleveland]. U. S. golfers keep the Walker cup. Jap swimmers win U. S. meet.

© 26Aug49; MP4688.

303. Aug. 31, 1949. Forest fires ravage vast areas in France. [President] Truman proclaims Atlantic Pact. Ex-Senator McGrath sworn in as Attorney General and Tom Clark takes oath as Justice of Supreme Court. Rescue drama in Ecuador 'quake. Sleeping beauties [baby parade at Asbury Park]. Latest in lifeboats. [Louise Brough and Margaret Osbourne Dupont win eighth national women's doubles title at Brookline, Mass. Britain's International Trophy Race at Silvertown].

© 31Aug49; MP4875.

Volume 21, 1949.

200. Sept. 2, 1949. Hurricane filmed in action from Miami to Palm Beach. "Captain Harry" Truman gets Legion ovation. World famous gems on public display. "Sistie's" a mother [Mrs. Van Seagraves, grandaughter of F. D. Roosevelt]. U. S. keeps Davis Cup. Little World Series [Hammonton, N. J., vs. Pensacola, Fla.]

© 2Sep49; MP4876.

201. Sept. 7, 1949. Truman aide [Harry Vaughan] under fire. The Legion on parade [in Philadelphia]. Coast Guard rushes aid to polio victim. Spectacular fire wipes out city block [in San Francisco]. Ice show beats the heat [in Atlantic City]. Daredevil drivers.

© 7Sep49; MP4877.

202. Sept. 9, 1949. Greeks crush Red guerillas. Legion elects World War II vet. New bride for F. D. Roosevelt, Jr. American youths design new autos. Puerto Rico's police on alert. Notre Dame footballers start '49 season. Pigskin stars visit Variety hospital.

© 9Sep49; MP4878.

203. Sept. 14, 1949. Parleys begin on British dollar crisis. MacArthur confers on Reds in Asia. Tragedy mars National Air Races [at Cleveland]. Miss America preview parade. Shirley May France fails in Channel swim. Greatest tennis match [U. S. Singles Championships at Forest Hills, N. Y.] Indiana hails labor parade.

© 14Sep49; MP4879.

204. Sept. 16, 1949. Bridge disaster recalled as new span rises [Tacoma Narrows bridge across Puget Sound]. New sky giant [British Brabazon]. British ship wrecked on California coast. Miss and Mrs. America chosen for 1949. Regatta in Venice. Air circus thriller [at Hybla Valley, Va.]

© 16Sep49; MP4880.

205. Sept. 21, 1949. West Germany elects first president [Theodor Heuss]. Navy's new super-rocket. Theatre heads hear tribute to film industry. Millinery fete for Variety Club charity. Perfect legs contest. Rough riding cycle derby [near Paris]. Sky thrills for a sheep.

© 21Sep49; MP4881.

206. Sept. 23, 1949. Appalling ship fire; U. S. tourists victims of Toronto tragedy. Vishinsky here in peaceful mood. Defense head hails films as aid to peace. Texas film theatres raise big polio fund. Family of six try long distance swim [from the Battery to Coney Island]. U. S. vs. Argentina in polo thriller.

© 23Sep49; MP4882.

207. Sept. 28, 1949. Pound devaluation stuns Britain. Dove of peace in UN [as fourth regular General Assembly opens]. Barkley hails aid to West. 3,000–year-old visitor [Peruvian mummy in New York's Museum of Natural History]. Fiery spirits [burning distillery in Paris]. Beauty chosen sweater queen. Danish gymnasts in fast turns.

© 28Sep49; MP4883.

208. Sept. 30, 1949. Atom bomb sensation; Russia has secret! Report stirs world. California bathing beauties go marching on. Thrills from the [New Jersey State] Fair. Season's first grid thrillers: Southern Cal sinks Navy; Michigan's close call; Notre Dame wallops Indiana.

© 30Sep49; MP4884.

209. Oct. 5, 1949. Defense chiefs see Navy might. Film industry reports to public. Strange doings at Princeton [in the department of psychology]. Jungle jive for African farmers. Football thunderbolt [University of Oklahoma vs. Boston College]. Yogi acrobats. Michigan boys' bands make a hit out West. Pennsylvania Week.

© 5Oct49; MP4885.

210. Oct. 7, 1949. Dodgers, Yanks win thrilling pennant races. Democrats honor Chairman Boyle. The President turns artists' model. Cinderella romance [Earl of Harewood marries Marion Stein]. Tyler Rose Festival. Gridiron thrillers: Michigan wallops Stanford; Penn downs Dartmouth; Minnesota routs Nebraska. Tulane trims Georgia Tech. Pennsylvania Week.

© 7Oct49; MP4886.

211. Oct. 12, 1949. World Series special. President opens Community Chest drive. School for water babies. Spectacular sky maneuvers [of the 82d Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N. C.]

© 12Oct49; MP4887.

212. Oct. 14, 1949. Yanks win World Series. Atlantic Pact Defense chiefs confer in U. S. Operation "Bulldog" tests, Europe's air defense. Gridiron thrillers: Army upsets Michigan; Navy sinks Duke; Oklahoma beats Texas; U. S. C. ties Ohio State.

© 14Oct49; MP4888.

213. Oct. 19, 1949. Washington drama: Navy vs. Air Force dispute stirs U. S. Nation welcomes Pandit Nehru. Reds set up new German puppet state. American films popular behind "iron curtain." Gala premier for "Intruder in the Dust." Allies display military might [in the British occupation zone of Germany].

© 19Oct49; MP4889.

214. Oct. 21, 1949. War clouds over Hong Kong. Communist leaders found guilty. New York hails Nehru. Catholic holy hour [Pawtucket, R. I.] Gridiron round-up: Irish crush Tulane; California upsets USC; Cornell swamps Yale.

© 21Oct49; MP4890.

215. Oct. 26, 1949. Sensation in UN; Vishinsky in rage as Yugoslavia wins. Columbia honors Nehru. Royal romance [Marquess of Milford-Haven and Mrs. Simpson]. Calf roping contest [Fryeburg Fair in Maine]. Autumn glamour in new styles. Air and Army chiefs denounce Navy charges.

© 26Oct49; MP4891.

216. Oct. 28, 1949. Truman dedicates UN's new home; urges A-bomb ban. Prison terms for Red chiefs [in New York]. Gridiron thrillers: Army crushes Columbia; Penn sinks Navy; Michigan upsets Minnesota.

© 28Oct49; MP4892.

217. Nov. 2, 1949. First all-jet airliner sets world record. Lady Godiva rides again [statue unveiled in Coventry, England]. Leopold seeks to regain throne. Nehru in Chicago. New trends in Latest fashions. Operation Hippo [in the San Francisco Zoo].

© 2Nov49; MP4893.

218. Nov. 4, 1949. Eric Johnston reports on Europe. Preview of holiday rush [in Paris and New York]. Vice President Barkley to wed. Mayor welcomes Variety Clubs to New York. Prize bonnets in daffy hat show. Gridiron thrillers: Notre Dame sinks Navy; Michigan downs Illinois; Ohio State wins; Pitt tops Penn; California beats UCLA; Alabama defeats Georgia.

© 4Nov49; MP4894.

219. Nov. 9, 1949. 55 die as fighter plane rams airliner [at the Washington National Airport]. Israel builds. New chief of Naval operations [Forrest P. Sherman]. Forest fire sweeps California canyons. Wrestling riot [Fred Atkins vs. Ivon Robert in Montreal]. Diving stars perform. National Horse Show [in New York].

© 9Nov49; MP4895.

220. Nov. 11, 1949. Unification on the march [Joint Chiefs of Staff see the Infantry at Fort Benning, Ga.] Prince Charlie's first birthday. New look for beach belles. Midwest hails the President. Gridiron [Michigan State]; mighty Army keeps rolling [against Fordham].

© 11Nov49; MP4896.

221. Nov. 16, 1949. Mid-air drama; parachutist saved in death drop. Nobel prize winners [William Francis Giauque and Hideki Yukawa]. Election echoes; the victors [William O'Dwyer and Herbert H. Lehman] speak. Spain welcomes Franco home. A smile from Paree. Aloha week in Hawaii. Famous racer [Rex Mays] dies in crash. Pro-football's game of the year [Los Angeles Rams vs. Philadelphia Eagles].

© 16Nov49; MP4897.

222. Nov. 18, 1949. Truman pledges nation to uphold brotherhood. Liverpool docks swept by fire. Search for lost children [being made by the Red Cross in Germany]. An affair of honor [two French lawyers fight duel near Paris]. Gridiron round-up: Notre Dame-North Carolina game a real thriller; Dartmouth upsets unbeaten Cornell; Pennsylvania nearly upsets Army; California routs Oregon.

© 18Nov49; MP4898.

223. Nov. 23, 1949. U. S. welcomes Shah of Iran. U. S. submarine fires first V-bomb. Air Force unveils new 3–jet bomber. Truman urges equal rights. Fashions for pooches. "Stork" airliner [baby girl born crossing Atlantic]. Aquatics in desert [Palm Desert, Calif.] Notables hail great film ["Battleground"].

© 23Nov49; MP4899.

224. Nov. 25, 1949. 18 survivors adrift at sea rescued in crash of bomber [near Bermuda]. Field Marshal Montgomery pays us a visit. Tito's "friend" [Zinka Milanov] denies romance. The Royal Command Film Performance [of "That Forsyte Woman"]. Barkley a happy bridegroom. Rose Bowl teams: Palo Alto, Stanford vs. California's Golden Bears; Ann Arbor, Ohio State vs. Michigan. Tulane gives Virginia defeat of year.

© 25Nov49; MP4900.

225. Nov. 30, 1949. Bill Stern's All-America stars and plays of 1949. U. S. cracks down on fake atomic remedies. Santa Claus arrives [in Toronto]. Princess Margaret inspects new hats.

© 30Nov49; MP4901.

226. Dec. 2, 1949. Spectacular highlights of the Army-Navy gridiron classic. Peron welcomes U. S. Ambassador [Stanton Griffis]. Reunion for Princess Elizabeth [with her husband]. Multitudes mourn Bill Robinson. Good news—Santa's here [in Hollywood and New York]. Notre Dame beats Southern California. Cornell beats Penn in grid classic.

© 2Dec49; MP4902.

227. Dec. 7, 1949. Montgomery, in U. S., blasts Communists. Columbia torn in political upheaval. Hurt in tragic air crash. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Burillo fly again. Miss Truman meets the press. Billiard wizard [Edward Horemans]. Super ski-maids [at the Cypress Gardens].

© 7Dec49; MP4903.

228. Dec. 9, 1949. Vice President Barkley and bride shine at rally of Democrats. Super speed [Navy unveils new Douglas Skyrocket]. Yuletide notes [in Hollywood, New York, and Miami]. All-aluminum bridge [built over Saguenay River in Canada]. SMU gives Notre Dame their toughest game. Philadelphia's scholastic football championship [Northeast Catholic vs. Simon Gratz].

© 9Dec49; MP4904.

229. Dec. 14, 1949. Vatican hails 1950 as holy year. Water famine brings warning to New Yorkers. Navy salutes Shah of Iran. Doctor of the year [Andy Hall of Mt. Vernon, Ill.] Record herring run [off Vancouver Island]. Strongest family [Baillargeon brothers of Canada]. Ex-champ Joe Louis fights again.

© 14Dec49; MP4905.

230. Dec. 16, 1949. Opera stars sing for hospitalized children. Newest giant of the skies [XB–123 transport plane]. Floods in Italy. Multiple birthday [London's Taylor quadruplets]. Princess Elizabeth steps out. Ski season opens. Aquamaids at the Cypress Gardens.

© 16Dec49; MP4906.

231. Dec. 21, 1949. Uncle Sam Santa flies Christmas cheer to Arctic wilds. Atomic scientist [Harold C. Urey] urges union to halt Red peril. 19 saved, 4 die, as plane crashes in Potomac. Sioux City disaster [in packing house blast]. Furs for 1950 on parade. Kid gymnasts. Happy New Year [greetings from children of Washington's diplomatic corps].

© 21Dec49; MP517.

232. Dec. 25, 1949. Aviation's birthday; Lindbergh honored. Haiti opens world's fair. Truman presides at Navy graduation [at Key West]. New rockets tested [by Air Force]. Greyhound thriller [at Miami]. Pro stars in charity classic [in Houston]. Pro football championship [in Los Angeles].

© 25Dec49; MP518.

233. Dec. 28, 1949. U. S. Consul Ward freed by China Communists. U. S. task force fights winter storms. Wedding bells for New York's Mayor O'Dwyer. Ice carnival [in Vancouver]. Canine stars.

© 28Dec49; MP519.

234. Dec. 30, 1949. Bill Stern's sports parade of 1949.

© 30Dec49; MP520.

NEXT MONTH'S PROFITS. Presented by Chevrolet.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© General Motors Sales Corp., Chevrolet Motor Division, title, descr., & 286 prints, 20Mar41; LU10330.

THE NEXT OF KIN. Released through Universal Pictures, c1943. 10 reels, sd. Ealing Studios, ltd.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director, Thorold Dickinson; original screenplay, Thorold Dickinson, Basil Bartlett, Angus McPhail, John Dighton; epilogue and prologue, J. Edgar Hoover; music, William Walton; music director, Ernest Irving; cameraman, Ernest Palmer; editor, Ray Pitt.

© Universal Pictures Co.; Inc.; 26Apr43; LP12020.

NIAGARA FALLS. Released by United Artists, c1941. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Hal Roach; director, Gordon Douglas; screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith, Hal Yates, Eugene Conrad; music director, Edward Ward; cameraman, Robert Pittack; film editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 3Oct41; LP10775.

NICE GIRL? Universal Pictures Co.; Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based on the play by Phyllis Duganne.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, William A. Seiter; screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music director, Charles Previn; photograph, Joe Valentine; film editor, Bernard Burton.

© Universal Pictures Co.; Inc.; 4Mar41; LP10298.

NICE WORK IF YOU CAN DO IT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 834 ft., sd. (Cinescopes, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, Willard Van Der Veer; commentary, James Wallington.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Nov40; MP10675.

NICHOLAS NICKLEBY. Ealing Studios, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. by Universal-International, c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A prestige picture. Based on Charles Dickens' novel.

Summary: A character story which shows the outrageous social practices which were prevalent in early 19th century England.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director Cavalcanti; screenplay, John Dighton; music, Lord Berners; editor, Leslie A. Norman.

Cast: Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Stanley Holloway, Derek Bond, Bernard Miles.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures, Inc.

© Ealing Studios, Ltd.; 11Dec47; LP1921.

THE NIFTY NINETIES. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse).

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Apr41; LP10498.

NIGHT AND DAY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 128 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based on the career of Cole Porter.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Schwartz; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Charles Hoffman, Leo Townsend, William Bowers; adaptation, Jack Moffitt; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; photographers, Peverell Marley, William V. Skall; film editor, David Weisbart. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Aug46; LP496.

A NIGHT AT EARL CARROLL'S. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Earl Carroll; director, Kurt Neumann; original story and screenplay, Lynn Starling, photographer, Leo Tover; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Dec40; LP10101.

A NIGHT AT THE FOLLIES. Released by Excelsior Pictures, c1947. Presented by Roadshow Attractions. 5 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The film reproduces a burlesque show presented at the Follies Theatre in Los Angeles.

Credits: Director, W. Merle Connell; film editor, Duke Goldstone.

Cast: Evelyn West, Amalia Aguilar, René Andre, Pat O'Shea, Jack Murray.

© Excelsior Pictures; 7Jul47; LP1700.

THE NIGHT BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 787 ft., sd., color. (MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Nov41; LP10865.

THE NIGHT BEFORE THE DIVORCE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,032 ft., sd. Based on the play by Gina Kaus and Ladislas Fodor.

Credits: Director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Jerry Sackheim; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 6Mar42; LP11175.

NIGHT CALL. SEE Take One False Step.

NIGHT CLUB GIRL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate Producer, Frank Gross; director, Eddie Cline; original story, Adele Comandini; screenplay, Henry Blankfort, Dick Irving Hyland; photographer, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12975.

NIGHT CLUB GIRLS. Quality Pictures Co., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Series 22)

Summary: Six burlesque dances.

Cast: Isabel Brown, Reggie Riano, Lolita, Martha Erickson, Lila O'Connor.

© W. Merle Connell, Nathan Robin, d.b.a. Quality Pictures Co.; 30Nov46; MP2817.

NIGHT DESCENDS ON TREASURE ISLAND. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 743 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.; 29Dec39; MP10050.

NIGHT EDITOR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels. Based upon the radio program by Hal Burdick.

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Henry Levin; story, Scott Littleton; screenplay, Hal Smith; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; LP282.

A NIGHT FOR CRIME. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, Alex Thurn-Taxis; original story, Jimmy Starr; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire, Sherman Lowe; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 12Feb42; LP11769.

THE NIGHT HAS A THOUSAND EYES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 80 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Cornell Hopley-Woolrich.

Summary: A vaudeville artist with clairvoyant power tries unsuccessfully to save himself and his friends from the disaster which he forsees.

Credits: Producer, Endre Bohem; director, John Farrow; screenplay, Barré Lyndon, Jonathan Latimer; music, Victor Young; editor, Eda Warren.

Cast: Edward G. Robinson, Gail Russel, John Lund, Virginia Bruce, William Demarest.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Oct48; LP1887.

A NIGHT IN CASABLANCA. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by David L. Loew. 81 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, David L. Loew; director, Archie L. Mayo; original screenplay, Joseph Fields, Roland Kibbee; music score, Werner Janssen.

© Loma Vista Films, Inc.; 10May46; LP364.

A NIGHT IN MEXICO CITY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Director and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Augustin Delgado.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24May44; LP12658.

NIGHT IN NEW ORLEANS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by James R. Langham.

Credits: Director, William Clemens; screenplay, Jonathan Latimer; editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4May42; LP11464.

NIGHT IN PARADISE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 10 reels, sd., color, 35 mm. From the novel "Peacock's Feather" by George S. Hellman.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Ernest Pascal; music director, Frank Skinner; cameraman, Hal Mohr; film editor, Milton Carruth. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 11Apr46; LP288.

THE NIGHT IS YOUNG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11296.

NIGHT LIFE IN A MODERN TAVERN; or, THE POWER OF DECISION; Religious Films, Inc., c1948. 33 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the influence of the church in combating a weakness found in a drinking family.

Credits: Script, Oscar Matthew.

© Oscar Matthew; 29Aug48; MP3505.

NIGHT LIFE IN CHICAGO. Loew's Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks). An MGM picture.

Summary: Shows interesting places to visit at night in Chicago, including the Walnut Room at the Bismarck Hotel, Chez Paree, the Pump Room at the Ambassador Hotel, and the Edgewater Beach Hotel.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Joseph Nussbaum.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Nov48; MP3570.

NIGHT LIFE IN THE ARMY. Terrytoons, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credit: Director, Mannie Davis. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 2Oct42; MP14667.

NIGHT MONSTER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Don Brown, Ford Beebe; director, Ford Beebe; original screenplay, Clarence Upson Young; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., 20Sep42; LP11597.

A NIGHT OF ADVENTURE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 65 min., sd. Based on the play "Hat, Coat, and Glove" by Wilhelm Speyer.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Gordon Douglas; screenplay, Crane Wilbur; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Jun44; LP12790.

THE NIGHT OF JANUARY 16TH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on the play by Ayn Rand.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, William Clemens; screenplay, Delmar Daves, Robert Pirosh, Eve Greene; photographer, John Mescall; film editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Sep41; LP10873.

NIGHT PILOTING. Springer Pictures, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: John H. Obold.

© Springer Pictures, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 5Apr44; MU14696.

NIGHT PLANE FROM CHUNGKING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Harry Hervey.

Credits: Director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Earl Felton, Theodore Reeves, Lester Cole; adaptation, Sidney Biddell; music score, Gerard Carbonara; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Jan43; LP12081.

THE NIGHT RIDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Dec41; MP11933.

NIGHT SONG. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 102 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A romantic comedy about a blind composer who regains his sight and wins success. Settings in San Francisco and New York.

Credits: Producer, Harriet Parson; director, John Cromwell; story, Dick Irving Hyland; screenplay, Frank Fenton, Dick Irving Hyland; adaptation, DeWitt Bodeen; music score and piano concerto, Leith Stevens; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Harry Marker.

Cast: Dana Andrews, Merle Oberon, Ethel Barrymore, Hoagy Carmichael.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Dec47; LP1412.

A NIGHT TO REMEMBER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Richard Wallace; story, Kelley Roos; screenplay, Richard Flournoy, Jack Henley; music, Werner R. Heymann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Nov42; LP11745.

NIGHT TRAIN TO MEMPHIS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc. c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Dec44; MP15496.

NIGHT TRAIN TO MEMPHIS. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 67 min., sd., 35 mm.

Credits: Associate producers, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Dorrell and Stuart McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; orchestral arrangements, Dale Butts; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; LP346.

NIGHT UNTO NIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures Corp., c1947. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Philip Wylie.

Summary: An epileptic scientist and a neurotic widow learn to accept their personal tragedies and find happiness together. Setting: the coast of Florida.

Credits: Producer, Owen Crump; director, Don Siegel; screenplay, Kathryn Scola; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Thomas Reilly.

Cast: Ronald Reagan, Viveca Lindfors, Broderick Crawford, Rosemary De Camp, Osa Massen.

© Warner Bros. Pictures Corp.; 15Jun47; LP2285.

THE NIGHT WE MET IN HONOMU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP11949.

THE NIGHT WE MET IN HONOMU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Aug43; MP13856.

NIGHT WIND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A canine paratrooper, now the pet of his dead master's son, is responsible for the capture of an enemy agent.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, James Tinling; original story, Robert G. North; screenplay, Arnold Belgard, Robert G. North; music score, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Roy V. Livingston.

Cast: Charles Russell, Virginia Christine, Gary Gray, Flame.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Aug48; LP2060.

A NIGHTINGALE SANG IN BERKELEY SQUARE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41; MP11197.

NIGHTMARE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Philip MacDonald.

Credits: Production and screenplay, Dwight Taylor; director, Tim Whelan; photographer, George Barnes; film editor, Frank Gross.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Nov42; LP11686.

NIGHTMARE. SEE Fear in the Night.

NIGHTMARE ALLEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 121 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by William Lindsay Gresham.

Summary: Against a background of sordidness and tragedy, the film depicts the career of a carnival barker who cheats everyone he meets, pretends to be a spiritualist in order to exploit the wealthy, and sinks to the lowest depths as a carnival freak.

Credits: Producer, George Jessel; director, Edmund Goulding; screenplay, Jules Furthman; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

Cast: Tyrone Power, Joan Blondell, Coleen Gray, Helen Walker, Taylor Holmes.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Oct47; LP1399.

NIGHTMARE OF A GOON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 996 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Josef Berne.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Apr42; LP11268.

NIGHTTIME IN NEVADA. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 67 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A dishonest rancher and his attorney seek to steal Roy Rogers' cattle in order to replenish a trust fund they have looted. Rogers disposes of both villains and settles the affairs of the young woman for whom the fund was created.

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

Cast: Roy Rogers, Adele Mara, Andy Devine, Grant Withers, The Sons of the Pioneers.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Aug48; LP1790.

THE NINE BAD SHOTS OF GOLF. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm. Based on the book by Jim Dante, Leo Diegel, and Len Elliott.

Summary: Jim Dante and Leo Diegel analyze some common errors in playing golf and demonstrate methods for eliminating them.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 1Jun48; MP3439.

NINE GIRLS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd. From the play by Wilfrid H. Pettitt.

Credits: Producer, Burt Kelly; director, Leigh Jason; screenplay, Karen DeWolf, Connie Lee; adaptation, Al Martin; music score, John Leipold; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp., 17Feb44; LP12510.

NINE LIVES ARE NOT ENOUGH. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 63 min., sd. From the novel by Jerome Odlum.

Credits: Associate producer, William Jacobs; director, A. Edward Sutherland; screenplay, Fred Niblo, Jr.; film editor, Doug Gould.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Sep41; LP10699.

9–PLANE FORMATIONS. 1 reel, sd., b&w. U. S. Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 9Sep43; 55 prints, 8Sep43; MU13911.

THE 1941 CHEVROLET. Presented by Chevrolet.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 116 prints, 3Feb41; MU10804.

1947 ARMY-NAVY FOOTBALL GAME. Colonial Films, c1947. 22 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The progress of the game, including slow-motion shots of the 92–yard run by Army's Rip Rowan; shots of the students' traditional by-play; and glimpses of the President and other prominent spectators.

Credits: Narrator, Jerry Flynn.

© American Film Services, Inc. (American Sports Films); 17Dec47; MP2658.

THE 1947 NATIONAL TENNIS SINGLES CHAMPIONSHIP. American Film Services, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd, b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Tennis matches played on the courts of the West Side Tennis Club, Long Island. Includes slow motion close-ups of Jack Kramer, Frank Parker, John Bromwich, Louise Brough, Margaret Osborne, and Doris Hart.

Credits: Narrator, Les Sands.

© American Film Services, Inc. (American Sports Films); 20Oct47; MP2828.

LOS NIÑOS CHINOS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with L. C. Goodrich, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Children of China."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Jan47; MP1621.

NIÑOS ESQUIMALES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Henry B. Collins, Jr., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Eskimo Children."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Mar47; MP1844.

NIÑOS HOLANDESES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc., in collaboration with Arthur I. Gates and Celeste C. Pearson, c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Children of Holland."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc.; 5Mar47; MP1849.

NIÑOS NAVAJOS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc., in collaboration with Ernest Horn and Celeste C. Pearson, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Navajo Children."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc.; 5Feb47; MP1678.

NIX ON HYPNOTRICKS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Popeye Cartoon)

Credits: Direction, Dave Fleischer; story, Bill Turner, Cal Howard; animation, Dave Tendlar, John Walworth.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Dec41; LP10920.

NO BLADE TOO SHARP. SEE The Crooked Way.

NO CAN DO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Nov45; MP16566.

NO CENSUS, NO FEELING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Oct40; LP10263.

NO CREDIT. Leonard W. Tregillus, c1948. 6 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon which shows colored clay objects in motion.

© Leonard W. Tregillus; 9Apr48; MP3036.

NO DOUGH, BOYS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,538 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Nov44; LP13119.

NO GREATER POWER. c1942. 2 reels, sd. Adapted from events related in the 19th chapter of the Gospel according to St. Luke concerning Zacchaeus.

Credits: Director, John T. Coyle; screenplay, Robert Edmunds, James K. Friedrich.

© Cathedral Films, Inc.; 25Apr42; LP11260.

NO GREATER SIN. University Film Productions, Inc., c1941. Presented by Edward A. Golden. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jeffrey Bernerd; director, William Nigh; original story, Mary Ransone; screenplay, Michel Jacoby; music director, Eddie Kay; film editor, Robert Golden.

© University Film Productions, Inc.; 3Apr41; LP10552.

NO HAND STRIPPING. Babson Bros. Co. 44 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Director, F. L. Hendren; editor, Paul Hance, Inc.; story, W. E. Petersen; narrator, George Mather; animator, Fletcher Smith, Inc.

© Babson Bros. Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 29Jan47; MU1593.

NO HANDS ON THE CLOCK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Geoffrey Homes.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, Billy Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Dec41; LP11061.

NO HOLDS BARRED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 138)

Summary: Action scenes at a wrestling match.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; narrator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Jun48; LP1679.

NO LEAVE, NO LOVE. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Charles Martin; original screenplay, Charles Martin, Leslie Kardos; music director, Georgie Stoll; orchestration, Calvin Jackson, Dewey Bergman; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Aug46; LP538.

NO MINOR VICES. The Enterprise Studios. Released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, c1948. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy-satire about an artist who disrupts the precisely ordered lives of a pediatrician and his wife-assistant with his interpretive paintings of the clinic.

Credits: Producer and director, Lewis Milestone; story and screenplay, Arnold Manoff; music director, Rudolf Polk; music, Franz Waxman; film editor, Robert A. Parrish.

Cast: Dana Andrews, Lilli Palmer, Louis Jourdan, Jane Wyatt, Norman Lloyd.

© Enterprise Productions, Inc., and Niagara Enterprises, Inc.; 6Oct48; LP1895.

NO MORE GAS. SEE The Tuttles of Tahiti.

NO MORE RELATIVES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; original story, Scott Darling; screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Edgar Kennedy, Florence Lake, Jack Rice, Dot Farley, Walter Long.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec47; LP1497.

NO MUTTON FER NUTTIN'. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Story, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Nov43; LP12392.

NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 859 ft., sd., b&w. (A Robert Benchley Miniature)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Robert Benchley; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Dec43; LP12502.

NO, NO, BABY, Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar45; MP15729.

NO, NO, NANETTE. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 96 min., sd. From the musical comedy by Frank Mandel, Otto Harbach, Vincent Youmans, Emil Nyitray.

Credits: Producer and director, Herbert Wilcox; screenplay, Ken England; music director, Anthony Collins; editor, Elmo Williams.

Appl. author: Suffolk Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20Dec40; LP10231.

NO ONE EVER COMES AROUND TO MY HOUSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Mar43; MP13419.

NO PARKING. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 10 min. (Vitaphone Variety)

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Dec39; LP9520.

NO PLACE FOR A LADY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Cohn; director, James Hogan; story and screenplay, Eric Taylor; music, Lee Zahler; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Feb43; LP11860.

NO PLACE LIKE HOME. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This Is America, no. 7)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Edward J. Montagne; written by Phil Reisman, Jr.; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Robert W. Stringer; photographer, Frank Follette; editor, David Cooper.

Appl. author: Pathe News, Inc.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 3May46; MP686.

NO ROMANCE IN YOUR SOUL, Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb42; MP12210.

NO ROOM. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Pictures the extra space and convenience of a General Electric Space Maker Refrigerator.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4418.

NO SAIL. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck and Goofy)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Dick Kinney, Bill Berg, Ralph Wright; animation, Bob Carlson, Hugh Fraser, John Reed, Judge Whitaker; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Apr45; LP13587.

NO TIME FOR COMEDY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 10 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stage play by S. N. Behrman.

Credits: Director, William Keighley; screenplay, Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Sep40; LP9912.

NO TIME FOR FUN. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Explains why the housewife using the General Electric Range with the automatic oven timer has time for outside pleasure.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4398.

NO TIME FOR LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd. A Mitchell Leisen production. From a story by Robert Lees and Fred Rinaldo.

Credits: Associate producer, Fred Kohlmar, director, Mitchell Leisen; screenplay, Claude Binyon; adaptation, Warren Duff; music score, Victor Young; editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Nov43; LP12483.

NO TIME TO LOSE. Automobile Insurance Co. and Standard Fire Insurance Co. affiliated with Aetna Life Insurance Co., Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: F. W. Bright.

© Aetna Life Insurance Co.; 2Jan45; MP16217.

NO VACANCY. 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; MP1367.

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

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jan46; MP200.

NOB HILL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 8,500 ft., sd. From a story by Eleanore Griffin.

Credits: Director, Henry Hathaway; screenplay, Wanda Tuchock, Norman Reilly Raine; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Jun45; LP13449.

NOBODY KNOWS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16132.

NOBODY LIVES FOREVER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 100 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Robert Buckner; director, Jean Negulesco; original screenplay, W. R. Burnett; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Oct46; LP626.

NOBODY MAKES A PASS AT ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13287.

NOBODY'S CHILDREN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Charles Barton; original story, Doris Malloy; adaptation, Walter White, Jr.; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Oct40; LP10027.

NOBODY'S DARLING. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Anthony Mann; original story, F. Hugh Herbert; screenplay, Olive Cooper; music director, Walter Scharf; orchestral arrangements, Marlin Skiles; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims. Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Aug43; LP12216.

NOCTURNE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Frank Fenton and Rowland Brown.

Credits: Producer, Joan Harrison; director, Edwin L. Marin; screenplay, Jonathan Latimer; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Elmo Williams.

Cast: George Raft, Lynn Bari, Virginia Huston.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Jan47; LP866.

NOISY NEIGHBORS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 17 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; direction and screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20Sep46; LP704.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8May44; MP14808.

NOMENCLATURE OF SHIPS; fundamental lines and sections. Caravel Films, Inc. United States Navy.

Appl. author: F. Burnham MacLeary.

© Caravel Films, Inc.; title, descr., & 86 prints, 8Nov43; MU14118.

NONE BUT THE LONELY HEART. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; c1944. 113 min., sd. From the novel by Richard Llewellyn.

Credits: Producer, David Hempstead; director, Clifford Odets; screenplay, Clifford Odets; music, Hanns Eisler; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20Oct44; LP13003.

NONE SHALL ESCAPE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Andre De Toth; story, Alfred Neumann, Joseph Than; screenplay, Lester Cole; music score, Ernst Toch; music director, W. W. Stoloff; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Feb44; LP12473.

NONE SO BLIND. SEE The Woman on the Beach.

NOODHULP; wonde en beenbreuke. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version of "First Aid (Wounds and Fractures)"

Summary: Demonstrates how to stop arterial bleeding and how to apply splints and braces for immobilizing fractured bones.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9Nov45; MP3373.

THE NOOSE HANGS HIGH. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Abbott and Costello enmeshed in the schemes of a gambler.

Credits: Producer and director, Charles Barton; original story, Daniel Tradash, Julian Blaustein, Bernard Fins; screenplay, John Grant, Howard Harris; adaptation, Charles Grayson, Arthur T. Horman; music director, Irving Friedman; music, Walter Schumann; orchestrations, Arthur Morton; film editor, Harry Reynolds.

Cast: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Joseph Calleia, Leon Errol, Cathy Downs.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 4Mar48; LP1578.

NORA PRENTISS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 111 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A First National picture. From a story by Paul Webster and Jack Sobell.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, N. Richard Nash; music, Franz Waxman; music director Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangement, Leonid Raab; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: Ann Sheridan, Kent Smith, Bruce Bennett, Robert Alda, Rosemary De Camp, and others.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Feb47; LP845.

NORTH FROM THE LONE STAR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Charles Francis Royal; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Mar41; LP10426.

NORTH OF THE BORDER. Distributed by Screen Guild Productions, c1946. Presented by Golden Gate Pictures, Inc. 40 min., sd., 35mm. By James Oliver Curwood.

Credits: Producer, William B. David; director, B. Reeves Eason; screenplay, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Carl Hoefle; cinematographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Roy Livingstone.

© Golden Gate Pictures, Inc.; 1Sep46; LP573.

NORTH OF THE ROCKIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Herbert Dalmas; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Apr42; LP11229.

THE NORTH STAR. Crescent Productions, Inc., c1943. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 106 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Lewis Milestone; original story and screenplay, Lillian Hellman; music, Aaron Copland; photographer, James Wong Howe; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Crescent Productions, Inc.; 4Nov43; LP12585.

NORTH TO THE KLONDIKE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by William Castle.

Credits: Director, Erle C. Kenton; screenplay, Clarence Upson Young, Lou Sarecky, George Bricker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Jan42; LP11347.

THE NORTHEASTERN STATES. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP14215.

NORTHERN NEIGHBORS. SEE Variety Views, no. 97.

NORTHERN PURSUIT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 94 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Leslie T. White.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Frank Gruber, Alvah Bessie; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, Jack Killifer.

Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 13Nov43; LP12363.

NORTHERN RAMPART. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 13)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, William Deeke; written by Oviatt McConnell; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 18Oct46; MP1449.

NORTHWARD, HO! Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., sepia. (A Miniature)

Credits: Director, Harry Loud; original screenplay, Herman Hoffman; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Roy Brickner.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Feb40; LP9563.

NORTHWEST HOUNDED POLICE. Loew's Inc., c1946. 693 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Walt Clinton, Ed Love, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Jul46; LP480.

NORTHWEST MOUNTED POLICE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 13 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer and director, Cecil B. DeMille; original screenplay, Alan Le May, Jesse Lasky, Jr., C. Gardner Sullivan; music score, Victor Young; editor, Anne Bauchens. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Nov40; LP10061.

NORTHWEST OUTPOST. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Allan Dwan; original story, Angela Stuart; screenplay, Elizabeth Meehan, Richard Sale; adaptation, Laird Doyle; original music score, Rudolf Friml; music director, Robert Armbruster; orchestrations, Ned Freeman; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Nelson Eddy, Ilona Massey, Joseph Schildkraut, Elsa Lanchester, Hugo Haas.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Jun47; LP1111.

NORTHWEST PASSAGE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 14 reels, sd., color. A King Vidor production. Based on the novel by Kenneth Roberts.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, King Vidor; screenplay, Laurence Stallings, Talbot Jennings; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Feb40; LP9597.

NORTHWEST RANGERS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. From a story by Arthur Caesar.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Marx; director, Joe Newman; screenplay, Gordon Kahn, David Lang; music score, David Snell, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Sep42; LP11618.

NORTHWEST STAMPEDE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 79 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a short story "Wild Horse Roundup," by Jean Muir.

Summary: An outdoor melodrama that includes a rodeo and a romance. Setting: Canadian Rockies.

Credits: Producer and director, Albert S. Rogell; story and screenplay, Art Arthur, Lillie Hayward; music director, Irving Friedman; music score, Paul Sawtell; orchestrations, Emil Cadkin; film editor, Philip Cahn.

Cast: Joan Leslie, James Craig, Jack Oakie, Chill Wills, Victor Kilian.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 19Aug48; LP1769.

NORTHWEST TRAIL. Distributed by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1945. Presented by Action Pictures, Inc. 7 reels, sd., 35mm, color. By James Oliver Curwood.

Credits: Producers, William B. David, Max M. King; director, Derwin Abrahams; screenplay, Harvey H. Gates; music, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Tom Neff. Cinecolor.

© Action Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec45; LP537.

THE NORTHWESTERN STATES. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP14214.

THE NORTHWESTERN STATES. SEE Os Estados do Noroeste.

NORWAY IN REVOLT. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 2.

THE NOSE, THROAT, AND EARS. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (McGraw-Hill Text Films. Health Education Series, no. 2).

Summary: With the aid of animated drawings, the film shows the structure and functions of the nose, throat, and ears, places stress on the danger of infection in these organs, and warns of the dangers of self-medication. Prepared to accompany the book, "Textbook of Healthful Living," by Harold S. Diehl, and designed to instruct college students and other adults.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 1Mar48; MP3253.

NOSTRADAMUS IV. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 999 ft., sd., b&w. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Directors, Cyril Endfield, Paul Burnford; screenplay, DeVallon Scott; score, Max Terr, Nathaniel Shikret; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct44; LP12951.

NOT A LADIES' MAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lew Landers; story, Robert Hyde; screenplay, Rian James; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10May42; LP11275.

NOT ON MY ACCOUNT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Charles E. Roberts; screenplay, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 17Sep43; LP12318.

NOT SO DUMB! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Paramount Paragraphics)

Credits: Written by Justin Herman; director, John A. Haeseler; narrator, Frank Crumit; editor, Leslie Roush.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar40; MP10045.

NOT TOO NARROW—NOT TOO DEEP. SEE Strange Cargo.

NOT WANTED. Emerald Productions, Inc. Released through Film Classics, Inc., c1949. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The story of an unmarried mother, her disillusionment, adjustments, and rehabilitation.

Credits: Producers, Ida Lupino, Anson Bond; director, Elmer Clifton; original story, Paul Jarrico, Melvin Wald; screenplay, Paul Jarrico, Ida Lupino; music, Leith Stevens; film editor, William Ziegler.

Cast: Sally Forrest, Keefe Brasselle, Leo Penn, Dorothy Adams, Wheaton Chambers.

© Emerald Productions, Inc.; 24Jun49; LP2367.

A NOTE OF PRAISE. c1945. 600 ft., sd., b&w or color, 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista Films.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 24Dec45; MP182.

NOTES TO YOU. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Manuel Perez; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Sep41; MP11562.

NOTHING BUT NERVES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec41; LP10956.

NOTHING BUT PLEASURE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1939. 1,580 ft.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec39; LP9323.

NOTHING BUT THE TOOTH. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; animation, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 17Dec47; MP3013.

NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd. From the play by James Montgomery and the novel by Frederic S. Isham.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Hornblow, Jr.; director, Elliott Nugent; screenplay, Don Hartman, Ken Englund; photographer, Charles Lang; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Oct41; LP10772.

NOTHING BUT TROUBLE. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, B. F. Zeidman; director, Sam Taylor; original screenplay, Russell Rouse, Ray Golden; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov44; LP13016.

NOTORIOUS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 101 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Alfred Hitchcock; written by Ben Hecht; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestral arrangements, Gil Grau; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Aug46; LP557.

THE NOTORIOUS GENTLEMAN. Released by Universal, c1946. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 108 min., 35mm. An Individual production.

Credits: Production and screenplay, Sidney Gilliat, Frank Launder; director, Sidney Gilliat; original story, Val Valentine; composer, William Alwyn; cameraman, Jack Asher; film editor, Thelma Myers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Sep46; LP575.

THE NOTORIOUS LONE WOLF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels. Based upon a work by Louis Joseph Vance.

Credits: Director, D. Ross Lederman; story, William J. Bowers; screenplay, Martin Berkeley, Edward Dein; adaptation, Garrett Graham.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Feb46; LP144.

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

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Leon Shelly; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photography, Wallace Hamilton; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 9Feb45; MP16113

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14499.

NOW IS THE TIME. Presented by Falstaff Brewing Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Falstaff Brewing Corp.; title & descr., 26Mar42; 231 prints, 30Mar42; MU12315.

NOW THE PEACE. Warwick Pictures, Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 18May45; MP16190.

NOW, VOYAGER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 117 min., sd. A Hal B. Wallis production. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the novel by Olive Higgins Prouty.

Credits: Director, Irving Rapper; screenplay, Casey Robinson; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; film editor, Warren Low.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 31Oct42; LP11662.

NOW WE'VE GOT IT. Jam Handy Organization. Presented by The Coca-Cola Co. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Coca-Cola Co.; title & descr., 3Feb40; 110 prints, 5Feb40; MU9950.

NOW YOU SEE IT. Loew's Inc., c1948. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: The film features macro- and micro-cinematography. Unusual views of humming birds, house-flies, praying mantes, caterpillars, and mosquitoes.

Credits: Director, Richard L. Cassell; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Feb48; MP2757.

NOW YOU'RE TALKING. Aetna Life Affiliated Companies, c1946. Presented by Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. 2 reels, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Leslie Coleman.

© Aetna Life Affiliated Companies; 10Oct46; MP1552.

NUMBER TEN LULLABY LANE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41. MP11216.

THE NURSE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Describes typical nursing duties in pediatrics, emergency, and maternity wards of a hospital, stressing the importance of the nurse in providing technical and personal services for the sick. For primary and middle grades.

Credits: Collaborator, Elizabeth S. Bixler.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Oct49; MP4780.

NURSE MATES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, Orestes Calpini, Louis Zukor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jun40; LP9731.

NURSERY CRIMES. Screen Gems, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Direction and story, Al Geiss.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 9Oct43; LP12484.

NURSERY RHYME MYSTERIES. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 954 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story and screenplay, George Seitz, Jr.; music score, Max Terr, Nat Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jul43; LP12177.

THE NURSE'S SECRET. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 7 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a story by Mary Roberts Rinehart.

Credits: Director, Noel M. Smith; screenplay, Anthony Coldewey.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 24May41; LP10480.

NURSING. John A. Haeseler, c1945. 1 reel. © John A. Haeseler.

Care of the New Born Baby. © 1Jan45; MP16612.

NURSING. Vocational Guidance Films, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series)

Credits: Manuscripts, Arthur P. Twogood.

© Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.; 1Feb42; MP12718.

NURSING. Willard Pictures, c1945. 1 reel each. © Willard Pictures Corp.

Care of the Cardiac Patient.

Appl. author: Alice E. Welty. © 15Feb45; MP15839.

Radiotherapy. © 1Jul45; MP16471.

Hydrotherapy. © 1Jul45; MP16473.

NURSING; the vital signs and their inter-relation. Willard Pictures, c1945. 1 reel. © Willard Pictures Corp.

Body Temperature, Pulse, Respiration, Blood Pressure.

© 1Jul45; MP16475.

NURSING; therapeutic uses of heat and cold. Willard Pictures, c1945. 1 reel each. © Willard Pictures Corp.

1. Administering Hot Applications. © 1Jul45; MP16472.

2. Administering Cold Applications. © 1Jul45; MP16474.

NURSING-FEEDING THE PATIENT. Willard Pictures, c1944. 2 reels.

Appl. author: Carol Linn Hale.

© Willard Pictures; 1Nov44; MP15564.

THE NUTMEG TREE. SEE Julia Misbehaves.

NUTTY BUT NICE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Jun40; LP9725.

NUTTY NEWS. c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Virgil Ross; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 3Jun42; MP12536.

NUTTY PINE CABIN. c1942. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, "Chuck" Couch; animation, Harold Mason, Robert Bentley; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 30Apr42; MP12434.

NYMPHS OF THE LAKE. 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 Painter; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 9Jun44; MP15760.

O

O, MY DARLING CLEMENTINE. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 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, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Nov43; LP12545.

O. S. S. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 107 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Produced and written by Richard Maybaum; director, Irving Pichel; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof, Heinz Roemheld.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jul46; LP474.

OS2U KINGFISHER. 3/4 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. United States Navy.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Mar44; MU14607.

OARS AND PADDLES. William J. Ganz Co. sd.

© William J. Ganz Co.; title, descr., & 83 prints, 6Mar42; MU12234.

OATH OF VENGEANCE. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Fred Myton.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 9Dec44; LP13576.

OBJECT LESSON. 1 reel.

© Christopher Young; title, descr., & 28 prints, 3Jul40; MU10316.

OBJECT LESSON. c1941. 1 reel.

© Christopher Young; 8May41; MP11183.

OBJECTIVE BURMA. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 142 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From an original story by Alvah Bessie.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Ranald MacDougall, Lester Cole; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestrations, Leonid Raab; photographer, James Wong Howe; film editor, George Amy.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Mar45; LP13150.

OBLIGING YOUNG LADY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 80 min., sd. Based on a story by Arthur T. Horman.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Richard Wallace; screenplay, Frank Ryan, Bert Granet; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Henry Berman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Sep41; LP10851.

OBRANÁ TĔLA PROTI NEMOCEM. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 24Jun46; MP836.

OBSERVATIONS ON HEPATITIS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for Mead Johnson and Co., c1946. 35 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Dr. Joseph Stokes, Jr., delivers a lecture on hepatitis, which presents the results of research performed by a medical group from the University of Pennsylvania.

© Mead Johnson & Co.; 5Dec46; MP3212.

OCCLUDED FRONTS. Walt Disney Productions, sd., color.

© Walt Disney Productions, title, descr., & 2 prints, 22Aug44; MU15128.

ODD MAN OUT. Released by General Film Distributors, Ltd., c1947. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 113 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Two Cities film. From F. L. Green's novel.

Credits: Producer and director, Carol Reed; story, F. L. Green; screenplay, F. L. Green, R. C. Sherriff; continuity, Olga Brooks; music, William Alwyn; cameraman, Robert Krasker; editor, Fergus McDonell.

Cast: James Mason, Kathleen Ryan, Robert Newton, Robert Beatty, Cyril Cusack.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 11Apr47; LP1016.

ODD VOCATIONS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 775 ft., sd. (Cinescopes, no. 5)

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Jun40; MP10288.

ODDITIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 893 ft., sd. (Panoramic, no. 7)

Credits: Producers, André De La Varre, B. K. Blake; narrator, John S. Martin; music score, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Oct42; MP13520.

ODE TO VICTORY. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 978 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Direction and original story, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Polly James; music score, Max Terr, Nat Shilkret; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Jul43; LP12242.

THE ODOR-ABLE KITTY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Robert Cannon; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Dec44; MP15834.

ODOR OF THE DAY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, Lloyd Turner; animation, J. C. Melenuez, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Oct48; MP3391.

ØYET OG DETS HYGIENE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 5Jun46; MP806.

OF FOX AND HOUNDS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Dec40; MP10652.

OF HUMAN BONDAGE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 105 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Story by W. Somerset Maugham.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Edmund Goulding; screenplay, Catherine Turney; music, Erich Wolfgang Korngold; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 30Jun46; LP445.

OF MEN AND MENUS. Presented by Frigidaire.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Frigidaire Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 147 prints, 3Feb41; LU10227.

OF MICE AND MEN. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Hal Roach. 11 reels, sd. By John Steinbeck. From the stage play produced by Sam H. Harris and staged by George S. Kaufman.

Credits: Producer and director, Lewis Milestone; screenplay, Eugene Solow; music score, Aaron Copland; editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 2Feb40; LP9395.

OF PUPS AND PUZZLES. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, George Sydney; original story and screenplay, Julian Harmon; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Sep41; LP10731.

OF THEE I STING. Warner Bros, Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Michael Maltese.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 2Aug46; MP969.

OF THESE OUR PEOPLE; story of the Jew in America. Horizon Films, Inc., c1946. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Written by Samuel Brody; narrator, Gegory Morton.

© Horizon Films. Inc.; 10Jul46; MP1034.

OFF AGAIN, ON AGAIN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,463 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; original story, Searle Kramer, Victor Travers.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Feb45; LP13236.

THE OFFICER AND THE LADY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Sam White; story, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Lambert Hillyer, Joseph Hoffman; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Jul41; LP10647.

OFFICER DUCK. Walt Disney Productions. c1939. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 22Sep39; LP9367.

OFFICER POOCH. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 748 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep41; LP10732.

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

Summary: Shows how officials are trained to make decisions. Includes actual scenes of officials at work at relays, wrestling matches, basketball, baseball, and football games.

Credits: Producer, Jack Eaton; director and photographer, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing; music, Harry D. Glass.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Aug49; MP4392.

OFFSET LITHOGRAPHY. Harris-Seybold-Potter Co. 45 min., si.

Appl. authors: Rex Howard, A. W. Johnston.

© Harris-Seybold-Potter Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 27May42; MU12512.

THE O'FLYNN. Fairbanks Pictures, Inc. Released by Universal International, c1948. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Previously entitled "The Fighting O'Flynn." Based on the novel by Justin Huntly McCarthy.

Summary: Napoleon's attempt to invade Ireland in order to conquer England is thwarted by the swashbuckling feats of the young O'Flynn. Setting, Ireland, in 1797.

Credits: Producer, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr.; director, Arthur Pierson; screenplay, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Robert Thoeren; music, Frank Skinner; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

Cast: Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Helena Carter, Richard Greene, Patricia Medina, Arthur Shields.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Fairbanks Pictures, Inc.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec48; LP2071.

OFTEN AN ORPHAN. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Lloyd Vaughan, Ken Harris, Phil Monroe, Ben Washam.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Aug49 (in notice: 1948); MP4507.

OH BABY! Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,697 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Jack White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr44; LP12604.

OH, DEAR—THE COUNTY FAIR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13189.

OH, FRENCHY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc,; 5Aug46; MP924.

OH GEE, OH GOSH, OH GOLLY, I'M IN LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun42; MP12634.

OH GENTLE SPRING. 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.; 3Apr42; MP12787.

OH, JOHNNY! 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; 28Oct41; MP11970.

OH, JOHNNY, HOW YOU CAN LOVE! Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, Charles Lamont; original story, Edwin Rutt; screenplay, Arthur T. Horman.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Jan40; LP9349.

OH, JOHNNY, OH, JOHNNY, OH! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jun41; MP11271.

OH LOOK! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jul43; MP13789.

OH! LOOK AT ME NOW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jul41; MP11421.

OH, MARIE! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11076.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Oct45; MP16366.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Mar45; MP15733.

OH! PLEASE TELL ME DARLING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8May44; MP14807.

OH, PROFESSOR, BEHAVE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 18 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; direction and screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Mar46; LP365.

OH! SUSANNA. 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; MP11971.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Sep41; MP11586.

OH, WHAT A NIGHT. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd. From a story by Marion Orth.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, Paul Gerard Smith; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28Jul44; LP12887.

OH WHAT IT SEEMED TO BE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13May46; MP555.

OH, YOU BEAUTIFUL DOLL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A musical presenting a fictionalized life of Fred Fischer, composer of many turn-of-the-century song hits.

Credits: Producer, George Jessel; director, John M. Stahl; screenplay, Albert and Arthur Lewis; music director, Alfred Newman; film editor, Louis Loeffler.

Cast: June Haver, Mark Stevens, S. Z. "Cuddles" Sakall, Charlotte Greenwood, Gale Robbins.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 26Oct49; LP2692.

OH YOU PRETTY WOMEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Mar44; MP14599.

OH-H-E-E MY, MY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Dec45; MP16562.

OHIO WILDLIFE. Cinecraft Productions, Inc., c1949. Presented by the Standard Oil Company of Ohio. 774 ft., sd. A "Let's Explore Ohio" film.

Summary: Two young boys are told about the birds and animals native to Ohio.

Credits: Author, Robert Welchans.

© Cinecraft Productions, Inc.; 8Jan49; MP3827.

OHM'S LAW. De Forest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 ft., b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics. Reel lesson 1)

Summary: Illustrates the mathematical relationship of pressure, current, and resistance in an electric circuit.

Credits: Producer, Paul Satterfield.

© De Forest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP3814.

OIL. Calumet Refining Co. 16mm.

Credits: Narrator, John Weigel.

© Albert J. Smith & Lyle W. Munson; title, descr., & 9 prints. 11Jul40; MU10330.

OIL AND MEN. The March of Time for the Standard Oil Company of Indiana, c1947. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film describes the importance of oil to the economy of the nation and shows the policies and work of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana.

Appl. author: Time, Inc.

© Standard Oil Company (Indiana); 31Oct47; MP2654.

OIL CAN—AND DOES. Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc. color.

Credits: Dialogue, Edward Mabley; animation, Charley Bowers; music score, Tom Bennett; photography, Harold Muller. Technicolor.

© Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc.; title, descr., & 104 prints. 31May41; LU10505.

OIL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Tholen Gladden.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Betty Underwood, Paul Maxey, Charles Coleman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Aug49; LP2495.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Oct45; MP16396.

OKAY FOR SOUND. The Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 20 min., sd., 35mm. (Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 2Oct46; LP643.

OKLAHOMA BADLANDS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Allan "Rocky" Lane pretends to be the owner of a ranch in order to help the real owner defend her property against the depredations of outlaws.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Yakima Canutt; screenplay, Bob Williams; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Black Jack, Eddy Waller, Mildred Coles, Roy Barcroft.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Feb48; LP1501.

OKLAHOMA BLUES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Jimmy Wakely brings to justice the outlaws who attempt to prevent Rainbow's End from being made the county seat.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Ben Cohen; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, Dub Taylor, Virginia Belmont, George Lewis, Zon Murray.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28Mar48; LP1542.

OKLAHOMA OUTLAWS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; screenplay, Ed Earl Repp; narrator, William Naworth.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Sep43; LP12238.

OKLAHOMA RAIDERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Betty Burbridge; film editor, Norman Cerf.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12424.

OKLAHOMA RENEGADES. 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, Nate Watt; original story, Charles Condon; screenplay, Earle Snell, Doris Schroeder; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Aug40; LP9888.

OL' MAN MOSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11161.

OLAF LAUGHS LAST. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,525 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26May42; LP11324.

OLARIA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Jul46; MP933.

OLD ACQUAINTANCE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 110 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stage play by John Van Druten.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, John Van Druten, Lenore Coffee; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leon Raab; film editor, Terry Morse.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Nov43; LP12401.

OLD AND MODERN NEW ORLEANS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 971 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, series 6, no. 2)

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Oct42; MP13411.

OLD AND NEW ARIZONA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 896 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, s. 4, no. 3)

Credits: Narrator: Gayne Whitman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Sep40; MP10639.

THE OLD APPLE TREE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Oct41; MP11713.

THE OLD ARMY GAME. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Sep43; LP12675.

OLD BLACKOUT JOE. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 543 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 18)

Credits: Directors, Paul Sommer, John Hubley; story, Ford Banes; animation, Jim Armstrong; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 27Aug42; LP11704.

OLD CHISHOLM TRAIL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1575.

THE OLD CHISHOLM TRAIL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Elmer Clifton; original story, Harry Fraser; screenplay, Elmer Clifton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Oct42; LP11740.

OLD DAN TUCKER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Mar46; MP258.

THE OLD DOLL'S HOUSE. SEE At the Stroke of Twelve.

AN OLD FASHIONED GIRL. Vinson Pictures Corp. Released through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. Presented by Equity Pictures, Inc. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Louisa May Alcott.

Summary: A story about a poor girl who becomes a music teacher in Boston in 1870.

Credits: Producer and director, Arthur Dreifuss; adaptation and screenplay, Arthur Dreifuss, McElbert Moore; music director, Herschel Gilbert.

Cast: Gloria Jean, Jimmy Lydon, John Hubbard, Frances Rafferty, Saundra Berkova.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 19Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2133.

THE OLD GANG. SEE Kid Dynamite.

THE OLD GREY HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, Robert Clampett; story, Michael Sasanoff; animation, Emanuel Gould; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 5Dec44; MP15448.

OLD GREY MARE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP303.

OLD HANK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Sep42; MP12934.

OLD HICKORY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 2 reels. From an original story by Don Ryan.

Credits: Director, Lewis Seller; screenplay, Don Ryan, Owen Crump.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 2Jan40; LP9321.

THE OLD HOMESTEAD. c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand L. Schaefer; director, Frank MacDonald; original screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart McGowan; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Aug42; LP11577.

OLD LADY 31. SEE The Captain Is a Lady.

OLD LOS ANGELES. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A gold prospector's search for his brother's murderer motivates the action in this musical Western. 1848 setting.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joe Kane; original story, Clements Ripley; screenplay, Gerald Adams, Clements Ripley; music director, Morton Scott; music score, Nathan Scott, Ernest Gold; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: William Elliott, John Carroll, Catherine McLeod, Joseph Schildkraut, Andy Devine.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31Mar48; LP1594.

OLD MACDONALD DUCK. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 23May41; LP10681.

OLD MACDONALD HAD A FARM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, 35mm. (A Noveltoon)

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Dec45; LP351.

OLD MACDONALD HAD A FARM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr41; MP11054.

OLD MAN MOSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13273.

THE OLD MILL STREAM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jun43; MP13639.

OLD MOTHER HUBBARD. SEE Mother Goose Presents The Story Book Review.

OLD NATCHEZ ON THE MISSISSIPPI. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 828 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nathaniel Finston, C. Bakaleinikoff; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jan40; MP10129.

OLD NEW MEXICO. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 781 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.; 6Nov40; MP10661.

OLD NEW ORLEANS. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 792 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.; 12Dec40; MP10771.

THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 8Aug41; MP11488.

THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Apr42; MP12479.

THE OLD OAKEN BUCKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Jun46; MP677.

AN OLD, OLD STORY. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Henry Cuyler Bunner.

Summary: A comedy about the romance of a butler and a housekeeper.

Credits: Producer and director, Charles Haas; screenplay, Sudie Lee Copeland; editor, Edward Mann.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2419.

OLD ROCKIN' CHAIR TOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ed Barge, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Sep48; LP1792.

THE OLD RUGGED CROSS. C. O. Baptista Films, c1946. 162 ft., sd., color or b&w, 16mm. (A Filmsing Melody)

© C. O. Baptista Films, sole owner of Scriptures Visualized Institute; 1Nov46; MP1319.

OLD SEQUOIA. Walt Disney Productions, c1945. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Homer Brightman; animation, Bill Justice, Paul Allen, Don Towsley, Josh Meador; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jul45; LP152.

THE OLD SHELL GAME. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Joe Stultz, Larry Riley; animation, Dave Tendlar, Tom Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Dec48; LP2017.

THE OLD SOUTH. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 983 ft., sd., b&w. (A Miniature)

Credits: Director, Fred Zinnemann; original screenplay, Herman Hoffman; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Roy Brickner.

© Loew's Inc,; 18Jan40; LP9493.

THE OLD SQUARE DANCE IS BACK AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Apr44; MP14765.

THE OLD SWIMMIN' HOLE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Robert McGowan; original story, Gerald Breitigam; screenplay, Dorothy Reid; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Oct40; LP10152.

THE OLD TEXAS TRAIL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, William Lively.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov44; LP12979.

YE OLDE MINSTRELS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 994 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Mar41; LP10344.

YE OLDE SWAP SHOPPE. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 678 ft., sd., color.

Credits: Director, U. B. Iwerks; music, Eddie Kilfeather; music director, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Jun40; LP9715.

OLDSMOBILE FIRST WITH GM HYDRAMATIC 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; MU2489.

OS OLHOS (COMO CUIDAR DÊLES). Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. Em colaboração com o Departamento de Oftalmologia, Escola de Médicos e Cirurgiões, Universidade Columbia e o Departamento de Oftalmologia, Escola Médica, Universidade de Nova York.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. Inc.; 22Jun46; MP830.

OLIO FOR JASPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, 35mm. (George Pal Puppetoon)

Credits: Director, George Pal.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Jan46; LP263.

OLIVE OYL AND WATER DON'T MIX. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Jack Mercer, Jack Ward; animation, Dave Tendlar, Abner Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8May42; LP11302.

OLIVE OYL FOR PRESIDENT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Jan48; LP1468.

OLIVE'S BOITHDAY PRESINK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941, 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Dave Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Jun41; LP10531.

OLIVE'S SWEEPSTAKE TICKET. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph E. Stultz; animation, Arnold Gillespie, Abner Kneitel.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Mar41; LP10307.

DIE OMSETTING VAN ENERGIEVORME. SEE Energy and Its Transformations.

OLYMPIC CAVALCADE. Westport International Film, Inc., c1948. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The outstanding events of the 11th Olympiad in Berlin, 1936, including the winning performance of Glen Morris in the decathlon events.

Credits: Produced and written by Joseph Lerner; narrator, Bill Slater; film editor, Geraldine Lerner.

© Westport International Film, Inc.; 24Sep48; LP1837.

THE OLYMPIC CHAMP. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Goofy)

© Walt Disney Productions; 10Dec41; LP13128.

OLYMPIC CLASS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Summary: Shows the skill of such swimming and diving champions as Ann Curtis, Nancy Merki, and Jimmy McLane, and such champions of track and field as Robert Bennett, Harrison Dillard, Earl Meadows, and Gil Dodds.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Feb48; MP3012.

OLYMPIC WATER WIZARDS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Summary: At Silver Springs, Fla., women swimming champions—including Brenda Helser, Billie Atherton, Suzanne Zimmerman, Katherine Rawls, Zoe Anne Olsen, Patricia Elsner, Marilyn Sahner, Ann Curtis, Clare Lamore, Nancy Grubb, and Jean Wilson—show their skill.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Nov48; MP3829.

THE OMAHA TRAIL. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 3 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Jesse Lasky, Jr.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Edward Buzzell; screenplay, Jesse Lasky, Jr., Hugo Butler; music score, David Snell; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Sep42; LP11587.

OMOO. SEE Omoo-Omoo, The Shark God.

OMOO-OMOO, THE SHARK GOD. Elsa Pictures, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1949. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Herman Melville's novel "Omoo."

Summary: A tale of seafaring and adventure on a tropical island.

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, Leon Leonard; screenplay, George D. Green, Leon Leonard; music, Albert Glasser; film editor, Stanley Frazen.

Cast: Ron Randell, Devera Burton, Trevor Bardette, Pedro DeCordoba, Richard Benedict.

© Elsa Pictures, Inc.; 15May49; LP2488.

ON A SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Sep41; MP11549.

ON A TYPICAL TROPICAL NIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Sep41; MP11500.

ON ALL FRONTS. Presented by the Buda Co. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Buda Co.; title & descr., 28Apr44; 22 prints, 29Apr44; MU14769.

ON AN ISLAND WITH YOU. Loew's Inc., c1948. 107 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A musical comedy about a movie star whose sweetheart kidnaps her and carries her to an island by plane.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Richard Thorpe; original story, Charles Martin, Hans Wilhelm; screenplay, Dorothy Kingsley, Dorothy Cooper, Charles Martin, Hans Wilhelm; music director, Georgie Stoll; film editors, Douglas Biggs, Ferris Webster.

Cast: Esther Williams, Peter Lawford, Ricardo Montalban, Jimmy Durante, Cyd Charisse.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr48; LP1581.

ON APPROVAL. English Films, Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd. From the play by Frederick Lonsdale.

Credits: Produced, directed, and adapted for the screen by Clive Brook; commentary, E. V. H. Emmett.

© English Films, Inc.; 10Feb45; LP13209.

ON FOREIGN NEWS FRONT SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 1.

ON GUARD! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP13235.

ON OUR MERRY WAY. Miracle Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists, c1948. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Previously released under title "A Miracle Can Happen."

Summary: A comedy in which a timid want-ad clerk becomes his newspaper's "inquiring reporter" through a subterfuge, and asks several people, "What influence has a child had upon your life?" Answers from an actress, two musicians, and from two swindlers, form separate sequences in the story.

Credits: Producers, Benedict Bogeaus, Burgess Meredith; directors, King Vidor, Leslie Fenton; original story, Arch Oboler, John O'Hara; screenplay, Laurence Stallings, Lou Breslow; music, Heinz Roemheld.

Cast: Burgess Meredith, Paulette Goddard, James Stewart, Henry Fonda, Dorothy Lamour.

© Miracle Productions, Inc.; 11Jun48 (in notice: 1947); LP1789.

ON STAGE. SEE The March of Time. v. 15, no. 1.

ON STAGE, EVERYBODY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 75 min., sd. Suggested by the Blue Network presentation.

Credits: Producer, Warren Wilson; director, Jean Yarbrough; original screenplay, Warren Wilson, Oscar Brodney; music director, Milton Rosen; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jul45; LP13479.

ON THE BOULEVARD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Apr46; MP490.

ON THE CAMPUS. 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., 25Apr40; 17 prints, 26Apr40; MU10172.

ON THE CAMPUS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Oct41; MP11715.

ON THE HOUSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jul46; MP815.

ON THE MALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11738.

ON THE MELLOW SIDE. SEE Emil Coleman and His Orchestra in On the Mellow Side.

ON THE OLD SPANISH TRAIL. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 75 min., sd., color, 35mm.

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

Cast: Roy Rogers, Trigger, Tito Guizar, Jane Frazee, Andy Devine.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Nov47; LP1296.

ON THE ROAD TO MONTERREY. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 826 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographer, Wilfrid Cline. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 31Mar44; MP534.

ON THE SHORES OF ITALY; Venice and Genoa. 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; MP1005.

ON THE SHORES OF NOVA SCOTIA. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Jun47; MP2200.

ON THE SPOT. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Grant Withers; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Joseph West; screenplay, Joseph West, Dorothy Reid; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 4Jun40; LP9710.

ON THE SPOT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (A Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23May41; MP11225.

ON THE SUNNY SIDE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6,285 ft., sd. Suggested by the story "Fraternity" by Mary C. McCall, Jr.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; screenplay, Lillie Hayward, George Templeton; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Dec41; LP11110.

ON THE SUNNYSIDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec42; MP13157.

ON THE TRAIL OF PILOT ROCK PINE. Pilot Rock Lumber Co., c1948. 41 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Logging operations in Oregon on the holdings of the Pilot Rock Lumber Company.

Credits: Direction and script, A. W. Moltke.

© Pilot Rock Lumber Co.; 10Mar48; MP3055.

ON TIME. Presented by Chevrolet. color.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 28Oct40; 60 prints, 30Oct40; MU10588.

ON TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jul43; MP13793.

ON TO VICTORY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11736.

ON TOP OF THE WORLD. Chevrolet.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 21Jan42; 110 prints, 15Jan42; MU12053.

ON TOP OF THE WORLD. 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; MU2380.

ON WATCH. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 5)

Summary: A report showing how the armed forces are obtaining enlistments, training the men, and equipping them with up-to-date weapons.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; written by Dudley Hale, Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Arthur Hannes; music, Lehman Engel; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 4Mar49; MP4155.

ONCE MORE, MY DARLING. Neptune Films, Inc., Released through Universal-International, c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story "Come Be My Love" by Robert Carson.

Summary: A comedy in which an Army officer captures an international jewel thief by engaging the affections of a debutante innocently involved in the plot.

Credits: Producer, Joan Harrison; director, Robert Montgomery; screenplay, Robert Carson; music, Elizabeth Firestone; music director, Frank Skinner; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

Cast: Robert Montgomery, Ann Blyth, Jane Cowl, Taylor Holmes, Lillian Randolph.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

© Neptune Films, Inc.; 8Sep49; LP2528.

ONCE OVER LIGHTLY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr41; MP11051.

ONCE OVER LIGHTLY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944, 20 min., sd. Adapted from Mack Sennett Comedies. (Featurette)

Credits: Narration, James Bloodworth.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Oct44; LP12929.

ONCE TOO OFTEN. SEE Blonde Ice.

ONCE UPON A HONEYMOON. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 115 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Leo McCarey; story, Sheridan Gibney, Leo McCarey; screenplay, Sheridan Gibney; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Nov42; LP11735.

ONCE UPON A SUMMERTIME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Jul41; LP10581.

ONCE UPON A TIME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Louis F. Edelman; director, Alexander Hall; story, Norman Corwin, Lucille Fletcher Herrmann; screenplay, Lewis Meltzer, Oscar Saul; adaptation, Irving Fineman; music score, Frederick Hollander; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Apr44; LP12612.

AS ONDAS DE LUZ. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, H. Horton Sheldon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Jun46; MP718.

LES ONDES DE SON ET LEURS ORIGINES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "Sound Waves and Their Sources."

Summary: With animated drawings the film describes several types of sound sources, including the vocal organs, and explains frequency, amplitude, wave length, and harmonics.

Credits: Collaborators, Harvey B. Lemon, Hermann I. Schlesinger, Harvey Fletcher, Donald MacKenzie.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Sep48; MP3379.

1–A DOGS. SEE Variety Views, no. 126.

ONE BODY TOO MANY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original screenplay, Winston Miller, Maxwell Shane; film editor, Howard Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Oct44; LP13054.

ONE CROWDED NIGHT. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 68 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Irving Reis; story, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Richard Collins, Arnaud d'Usseau; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures. Inc.; 9Aug40; LP9884.

ONE DANGEROUS NIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd. Based on a work by Louis Joseph Vance.

Credits: Producer, David Chatkin; director, Michael Gordon; story, Arnold Phillips, Max Nosseck; screenplay, Donald Davis; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Dec42; LP11746.

ONE DOZEN ROSES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jun42; MP12709.

ONE EXCITING WEEK. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 69 min., sd., 35mm. Based on an original story by Dennis Murray.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, Jack Townley, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; orchestral arrangements, Dale Butts; photographer, John Alton; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp,; 8Apr46; LP421.

ONE FOOT IN HEAVEN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 11 reels, sd. From the book by Hartzell Spence.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert Lord; director, Irving Rapper; screenplay, Casey Robinson; film editor, Warren Low.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov41; LP10812.

ONE FOR THE BOOK. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Roy Mack; written by Cyrus D. Wood, Eddie Forman.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Dec39; LP9393.

ONE HAM'S FAMILY. Loew's Inc., c1943. 696 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Preston Blair, Ed Love, Ray Abrams; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Jul43; LP12240.

100 PYGMIES AND ANDY PANDA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940, 1 reel, sd., color. (Walter Lantz Color Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy.

© Universal Pictures Co. Inc.; 8Apr40; MP10105.

THE ONE I LOVE BELONGS TO SOMEBODY ELSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Aug41; MP11380.

ONE INCH FROM VICTORY; Hitler's Russian Surprise. Scoop Productions, c1944. Presented by Robert Velaise. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Written and narrated by Quentin Reynolds.

© on commentary, editing and compilation, Scoop Productions; 24Apr44; MP14760.

ONE LAST FLING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A domestic comedy about a marital muddle resulting from unreasonable jealousy.

Credits: Producer, Saul Elkins; director, Peter Godfrey; original story, Herbert Clyde Lewis; screenplay, Richard Flournoy, William Sackheim; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, David Buttolph; film editor, Frederick Richards.

Cast: Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott, Douglas Kennedy, Ann Doran, Ransom Sherman.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 6Aug49; LP2453.

ONE LOOK AT YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Jun41; MP11237.

ONE LOOK AT YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr43; MP13485.

ONE MAN BAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14916.

ONE MAN LISTENS. Presented by Remington Arms Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Remington Arms Co., Inc.; title, descr., & 248 prints, 3Feb41; LU10226.

THE ONE MAN NAVY. 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.; 5Sep41; MP11531.

ONE MAN NEWSPAPER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 136)

Credits: Producers: Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec44; MP15491.

ONE MAN'S LAW. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Bennett Cohen, Jack Natteford; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Jun40; LP9801.

ONE MAN'S MEMORIES. General Pictures Productions, Inc., c1949. Presented by the Insurance Research and Review Service, Inc. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Describes the various types of insurance which one man carries in order to give his family financial security in the event of his death.

© The Insurance Research & Review Service, Inc.; 15Mar49; MP4048.

ONE MEAT BALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Mar45; MP15658.

ONE MEAT BRAWL. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story. Warren Foster.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 9Jan47; MP1548.

ONE MILLION B. C. Released through United Artists, c1940. Presented by Hal Roach. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Directors, Hal Roach, Hal Roach, Jr.; original screenplay, Mikell Novak, George Baker, Joseph Frickert; descriptive narration, Grover Jones; narrator, Conrad Nagel; music score, Werner R. Heymann; editor, Ray Snyder.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 12Apr40; LP9549.

ONE MORE TOMORROW. c1946. Presented by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. 87 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National Picture. Based on the play "The Animal Kingdom" by Philip Barry.

Credits: Producer, Benjamin Glazer; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Charles Hoffman, Catherine Turney; music, Mas Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; photographer, Bert Glennon; film editor, David Weisbart.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Jun46; LP352.

ONE MOUSE IN A MILLION. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 3Nov39; MP10069.

ONE MYSTERIOUS NIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based upon the character "Boston Blackie" created by Jack Boyle.

Credits: Producer, Ted Richmond; director, Oscar Boetticher, Jr.; original screenplay, Paul Yamitz; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Oct44; LP13022.

ONE NATION—INDIVISIBLE. Institute for American Democracy, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Appl. author: Theodore Cecil Robinson.

© Institute for American Democracy, Inc.; 1Jul46; MP1275.

ONE NIGHT IN LISBON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based on a play by John Van Druten.

Credits: Producer and director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Virginia Van Upp; photographer, Bert Glennon; film editor, Eda Warren.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Jun41; LP10530.

ONE NIGHT IN PARIS. Released by Alliance Films Corp., c1938. 65 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Summers; screenplay, F. McGrew Willis; music, Denes V. Buday, Peter Fenn; music director, Willy Schmidt Gentner; photography, Otto Kanturek; film editor, Lionel Tomlinson.

Appl. author: Associated British Picture Corp., Ltd.

© Alliance Films Corp.; 29Oct38; LP9387.

ONE NIGHT IN THE TROPICS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd.

From the novel "Love Insurance" by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Director, A. Edward Sutherland; screenplay, Gertrude Purcell, Charles Grayson; adaptation, Kathryn Scola, Francis Martin; music, Jerome Kern; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Joseph Valentine; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 14Nov40; LP10042.

ONE NOTE TONY. Terrytoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Oct47; LP1628.

ONE OF OUR AIRCRAFT IS MISSING. Produced with the full cooperation of the Royal Air Force, the Air Ministry, and the Royal Netherland Government, London. Released thru United Artists. c1942. Presented by Alexander Korda Films, Inc. 86 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Michael Powell; written by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger; photographer, Roland Neame; editor, David Lean.

Appl. author: Emeric Pressburger.

© Manhattan Films, Inc.; 10May42; LP11691.

ONE OF THE BOSTON BULLERTONS. SEE Private Affairs.

ONE STEP AHEAD. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by F. C. Russell Co. 915 ft., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the manufacture and installation of the Rusco self-storing storm window, and introduces Rusco awnings and jalousies.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 9 prints, 31May49; MU4167.

ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 90 min., sd. color, 35mm. Based on the play by James Hagan. A new version of the motion picture released in 1933 under the same title, and of the 1941 motion picture released under the title, "The Strawberry Blonde."

Summary: A musical about a dentist who finds himself about to pull an aching tooth for the shyster lawyer who stole his girl and sent him to prison. Setting, New York in 1900.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Raoul Walsh; screenplay, Robert L. Richards; original music and lyrics, Ralph Blane; music director, Ray Heindorf; film editor, Christian Nyby.

Cast: Dennis Morgan, Janis Paige, Don DeFore, Dorothy Malone, Ben Blue.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Jan49; LP2041.

ONE THRILLING NIGHT. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, Joseph Hoffman; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jul42; LP11455.

ONE TOUCH OF VENUS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., and Artists Alliance, Inc., c1948. 81 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the musical play by S. J. Perelman and Ogden Nash, suggested by the novel "The Tinted Venus" by F. Anstey [pseud. of Thomas Anstey Guthrie]

Summary: A musical fantasy in which a kiss from a window-decorator brings to life the Anatolian Venus.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cowan; director, William A. Seiter; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz, Frank Tashlin; music, Kurt Weill; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Robert Walker, Ava Gardner, Dick Haymes, Eve Arden, Olga San Juan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., & Artists Alliance, Inc.; 16Nov48; LP1946.

1 - 2 - 3 - GO! Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 949 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Apr41; LP10444.

ONE WAY TO LOVE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 9 reels. Based on a story by Lester Lee and Larry Marks.

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Joseph Hoffman, Jack Henley.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Dec45; LP32.

ONE-ZY, TWO-ZY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Jun46; MP649.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jun44; MP14988.

ONION PACIFIC. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph E. Stultz; animation, Willard Browsky, James Davis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24May40; LP9669.

THE ONLY ALL-GLASS COFFEE BREWER. Cory Glass Coffee Brewer Co. sd.

© Cory Glass Coffee Brewer Co.; title, descr., & 108 prints, 28Oct45; MU16446.

ONLY DREAMS. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Portrays the advantages of the General Electric Combination Refrigerator which includes a home-freezer compartment.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4400.

AN ONLY SON. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the story by Sarah Orne Jewett.

Summary: A drama in which a farmer, clinging to the ways of the past, learns to understand his inventor-son. Setting, New England in the mid-nineteenth century.

Credits: Producer and director, Charles Haas; screenplay, Lee Copeland; editor, Daniel Cahn.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2429.

ONLY THE BEST. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Dad makes minor repairs about the house, but takes his Chevrolet to Chevrolet Service for expert repair work.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 25Mar48; MU3019.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP11958.

ONTARIO—LAND OF LAKES. Loew's Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: A pictorial view of Ontario, showing the old world charm of Ottawa, the religious shrines, the chain of lakes, the capital city of Toronto, and the grandeur of Niagara Falls.

Credits: Produced and narrated by James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Paul Rogalli.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jan49; MP3772.

DIE ONTWIKKELING VAN STEDE. SEE Growth of Cities.

DIE ONTWIKKELING VAN VERBINDINGS-MIDDELS. SEE Development of Communication.

DE OOGEN EN HUN VERZORGING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 7Jun46; MP797.

OOH-OOH GEORGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel. sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Nov43; MP14123.

OOH, OOH, GEORGIE. c1943. Presented by Soundies. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Adrian Weiss; director, Clarence Bricker.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP1361.

THE OPEN DOOR. Presented by General Motors Corp. 5 reels, b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 18 prints, 3Dec45; MU16571.

THE OPEN DOOR. SEE Shadow on the Wall.

OPEN FIRE! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narration, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Feb44; MP14570.

OPEN SEASON FOR SAPS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Oct44; LP13137.

OPEN SECRET. Marathon Pictures Corp. Released by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 69 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Harry Brandt production.

Summary: A young couple thwarts the attempts of a gang of hoodlums to wage an anti-Semitic campaign.

Credits: Producer, Frank Satenstein; director, John Reinhardt; original story, Max Wilk, Ted Murkland; screenplay, Henry Blankfort, Max Wilk; music director, David Chudnow; music, Herschel Gilbert; film editor, Stanley Frazen.

Cast: John Ireland, Jane Randolph, Roman Bohnen, Sheldon Leonard.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 5May48; LP1681.

OPENED BY MISTAKE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Hal Hudson and Kenneth Earl.

Credits: Director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Stuart Palmer, Garnett Weston, Louis S. Kaye; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10May40; LP9636.

OPERATIN' RHYTHM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Feb43; MP13241.

OPERATION HOLIDAY. SEE Variety Views, no. 156.

OPERATION OF THE GUNSIGHT MARK FOURTEEN. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm. United States Navy.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 8 prints, 12Feb44; MU14477.

OPERATION UNDERGROUND. Telenews Productions, Inc., with the assistance of the editors of Newsweek Magazine, c1946. 18 min., sd., 16mm.

Credits: Script, Jack Tobin; narrator, Byron McKinney; music, Robert Lopez.

Appl. author: Reseau Bourgogue.

© Telenews Productions, Inc. (in notice: Telenews, Inc.); 12Dec46; MP1584.

OPERATION WHITE TOWER. RKO Pathe, Inc., in cooperation with the Boston Museum of Science, c1948. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 4)

Summary: Bradford Washburn leads a scientific expedition sponsored by the Boston Museum of Science to the top of Mt. McKinley.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, William Deeke; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, Dave Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 6Feb48; MP2775.

OPERATIONS ON THE MILLING MACHINE. © Caravel Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Joseph Rothman.

Cutting Keyways. © title, descr., & 63 prints, 18Oct41; MU11673.

Plain Indexing and Cutting a Spur Gear. © title, descr., & 68 prints, 18Oct41; MU11676.

Straddle Milling. © title, descr., & 73 prints, 18Oct41; MU11677.

Straddle and Surface Milling to Close Tolerances. © title, descr., & 78 prints, 18Oct41; MU11678.

OPFERGONG (Sacrifice). 91 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: UFA Filmkunst.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title & descr., 5Dec46; 10 prints, 2Nov46; LU695.

OPPORTUNITY; THE BEST LOCATION IN THE NATION. Time, Inc., for the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., c1947. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Cleveland, an important center of post-war industrial development, is presented as a pleasant place to work and live.

© Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co.; 15Nov47; MP2698.

OPPORTUNITY UNLIMITED. The Jam Handy Organization. Presented by Remington Arms Co., Inc. and Peters Cartridge Division, sd.

Credits: Director, J. Cullen Landis; scenario, Gordon H. Miller; music director, Samuel Benavie; film editor, Alice Kannar.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Remington Arms Co., Inc.; title & descr., 21Jan42; 231 prints, 12Jan42; LU11012.

OPTICAL CRAFTMANSHIP. Bell & Howell Co., for U. S. Office of Education, c1944. © Bell & Howell Co.

Appl. author: William F. Kruse.

Rough Grinding Spherical Surfaces. 3 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15373.

Rough Grinding by Pen-Bar Spherical Surfaces. 2 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15374.

Pitch Buttoning and Blocking Spherical Lenses. 3 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15375.

Fine Grinding Spherical Surfaces. 2 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15376.

Polishing Spherical Surfaces, 3 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15377.

Centering, Edge Grinding, and Beveling Spherical Surfaces. 3 reels. © 11Sep44; MP15378.

OPUS 12 EEE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Dec44; MP15497.

ORANGE BOWL BOUNCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Aug46; MP997.

THE ORANGE GROWER. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Edwin R. Parker.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 3Oct39; MP9828.

THE ORANGE GROWER. SEE

O Cultivador de Laranjas.

El Cultivo del Naranjo.

ORANGES THAT PLEASE. Food Machinery Corp., Riverside Division, 24 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Henry Greene.

© Food Machinery Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 23Mar42; MU12287.

ORCHESTRA WIVES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 8,784 ft., sd. From the original story by James Prindle.

Credits: Director, Archie Mayo; screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music direction, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Sep42; LP11643.

ORCHIDS TO CHARLIE. c1941. 3,438 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original screenplay, Margaret Byers, H. W. Hanemann.

Appl. authors: Margaret Byers, H. W. Hanemann.

© Elizabeth Arden; 15Jul41; LP10751.

ORCHIDS, TUESDAYS. SEE Los Martes, Orquideas.

ORDERS FROM TOKYO. The Vitaphone Corp. in cooperation with the Commonwealth Government of the Philippines and the Office of Strategic Services, c1945. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Narrator, David C. Griffin. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Sep45; LP13467.

OREGON TRAIL. c1945. 6 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Frank Gruber.

Credits: Associate producer, Bennett Cohen; director, Thomas Carr; screenplay, Betty Burbridge; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 11Jul45; LP13376.

OREGON TRAIL SCOUTS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 58 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, Harold R. Minter.

Cast: Allan Lane, Bobby Blake, Martha Wentworth.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7May47; LP1112.

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

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP135.

AN ORGAN NOVELTY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Henabery.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 3Jan40; MP9915.

THE ORPHAN DUCK. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 6Oct39; MP10096.

ORPHANS' BENEFIT. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Mickey Mouse)

© Walt Disney Productions; 30Apr41; MP11468.

ORPHANS OF THE NORTH. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Norman Dawn; continuity, Susan Denis; film editor, Charles Hunt.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23Jul40; LP9819.

ORPHEUS IN HADES. Ambassador Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd. b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Offenbach's composition is played by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Schmidt-Gentner.

Credits: Producer, Eugen Sharin; director, Leopold Hainisch.

© Ambassador Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4481.

ORTHOGRAPHIC PROJECTION. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Engineering Drawing, film 2)

Summary: An instructional film in the field of engineering drawing. By a combination of animated diagrams and photography, this film attains three-dimensional effects which simplify the explanation of shape description. A concluding summary reviews the main principles of orthographic projection.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 29Dec47; MP3062.

OSSINING IN WARTIME. 54 min., si., color. 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: Robert F. Gowen.

© Robert F. Gowen Laboratories; title & 10 prints, 6Aug46; descr., 13May46; MU934.

OSTEOPATHIC MECHANICS: A SYMPOSIUM. Committee on Professional Visual Education of the American Osteopathic Association. 16mm.

Credits: Screen story and direction, Ralph W. Rice.

© American Osteopathic Association; title & descr., 2Jun41; 15 prints, 26Jul41; MU11365.

OSTEOPATHIC RESEARCH, THE SECOND LUMBAR LESION. Produced for the Committee on Professional Visual Education of the American Osteopathic Association. 16mm.

Credits: Producers, Louisa Burns, Ralph W. Rice.

© American Osteopathic Association; title, descr., & 30 prints, 29May40; MU10234.

OSTEOPATHIC THERAPEUTICS, ANTERIOR POLIOMYELITIS; a clinical study. 16mm.

Credits: Producers, William W. W. Pritchard, Ralph W. Rice.

© American Osteopathic Association; title, descr, & 50 prints, 29Apr40; MU10163.

THE OTHER LOVE. Lexington Productions, Inc., c1947. Presented by the Enterprise Studios. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Adapted from the short story "Beyond" by Erich Maria Remarque.

Credits: Producer, David Lewis; director, Andre de Toth; screenplay, Harry Brown, Ladislas Fodor; music, Miklos Rozsa; music director, Rudolph Polk; film editor, Walter Thompson.

Cast: Barbara Stanwyck, David Niven, Richard Conte, Gilbert Roland, Joan Lorring.

© Lexington Productions, Inc.; 26Jul47; LP1105.

OUR AFRICAN FRONTIER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd., color. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Written by Carl Dudley.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Sep43; LP12261.

OUR ALASKAN FRONTIER. Warner Bros. Pictures. Inc., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Narration, Carl Dudley; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15Jan44; MP14417.

OUR AMAZING BEAVERS. Bay State Film Productions, Inc., for the Development Commission, State of Vermont. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes showing the native habitat of the common beaver are followed by a longer sequence showing beavers in an artificial setting at the Eastern States Exposition in West Springfield, Massachusetts.

Credits: Narration, Thornton W. Burgess.

© Development Commission, State of Vermont; title & descr., 29Jan48; 1c, 6Jan48; MU2710.

OUR AMERICA AT WAR. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 5.

OUR ANIMAL NEIGHBORS. Coronet, c1947. 12 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Robert Snedigar.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 18Jan47; MP2570.

OUR COMMON FUELS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Paul E. Kambly.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 27Jun47; MP2495.

OUR CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT. Del Cal Theatres, Inc., c1940–41. sd. © Del Cal Theatres, Inc.

1. We the People. 2 reels. © 15Oct40; MP10810.

2. Milestones of Democracy. 1 reel. © 1Jun41; MP11644.

OUR DAILY BREAD. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 4)

Summary: The story of wheat and the scientific achievements that have made mass production possible.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director and photographer, Larry O'Reilly; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 4Feb49; MP4069.

OUR FRONTIER IN ITALY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Narrative, Saul Elkins.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1May44; LP12620.

OUR FUNNY FINNY FRIENDS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Larz Bourne, Larry Riley; animation, Al Eugster, Bill Hudson; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Aug49; LP2545.

OUR HEARTS WERE GROWING UP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Frank Waldman.

Credits: Producer, Daniel Dare; director, William D. Russell; screenplay, Norman Panama, Melvin Frank; music score, Victor Young.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Jun46; LP375.

OUR HEARTS WERE YOUNG AND GAY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. From the book by Cornelia Otis Skinner & Emily Kimbrough.

Credits: Associate producer, Sheridan Gibney; director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Sheridan Gibney; music score, Werner Heymann; editor, Paul Weatherwax.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Sep44; LP12955.

OUR JOB TO KNOW. Willard Pictures, c1944. Presented by American Social Hygiene Association. 2 reels, sd.

© American Social Hygiene Association; 30Sep44; MP15431.

OUR LADY AND THE TUMBLER. Teletale Productions, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The legend of the acrobat who, having no suitable gift to offer on Christmas Day, performs a tumbling act in church.

Appl. author: Peggy Robb.

© William J. McClellan III, d.b.a. Teletale Productions; 17Dec48; LP2105.

OUR LAST FRONTIER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (Movietone's Alaskan Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narration, Hugh James; photography, Palmer Miller, Curtis Nagel; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Sep42; MP15401.

OUR LIVING CONSTITUTION. Coronet, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Discusses the fundamental constitutional rights of the citizen, and explains how the Constitution provides the basis for a constantly changing government.

Credits: Educational collaborator, J. Donald Kingsley.

© David A. Smart; 12Jul49; MP4493.

OUR NATIONAL DEFENSE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 904 ft., sd. (Washington Parade, s. 2, no. 6)

Credits: Commentary, Basil Ruysdael; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Sep40; MP10482.

OUR OLD CAR. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 979 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Cyril Endfield; original story and screenplay, John Nesbitt; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 8May46; LP305.

OUR OWN COUNTRY. M. Minter Culver, c1941. 4 reels. (The Story of Civilization) As condensed from "The Covered Wagon."

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11916.

OUR SECOND FRONT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 951 ft., sd. (A Columbia Panoramic)

Credits: Commentator, John W. Vandercook; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec42; MP13512.

OUR SHRINKING WORLD. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 10 min., sd., b&w. With Teachers' Guide.

© Young America Films. Inc.; 25Feb46; MP306.

OUR SOIL RESOURCES; formation and conservation. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The film explains how soil is formed, notes the geographical limits of the four great soil groups of the earth, locates each of these groups on a map of the United States, and shows vegetation indigenous to each group. Man's exploitation of the soil and suggestions for soil conservation are discussed. For high schools, teachers' colleges, and adult education groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Firman E. Bear.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.; 8Dec47; MP2646.

OUR TEACHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc. c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr43; MP13487.

OUR TEETH. c1941. 1 reel.

© Kurt Karl Bosse; 15Oct41; MP13164.

OUR TOWN. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Sol Lesser. 10 reels, sd. From the play by Thornton Wilder.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Sam Wood; screenplay, Thornton Wilder, Frank Craven, Harry Chandlee; music, Aaron Copland; film editor, Sherman Todd.

© Principal Artists Productions; 7Jun40; LP9691.

OUR TOWN BUILDS AN AIRPORT. Sun Dial Films, Inc., c1948. 36 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An average community builds its own airport with the aid of funds and technical assistance provided under the terms of the Federal Airport Act. The film is designed to show some of the financial and technical problems of airport planning, design, construction, and operation.

© Sun Dial Films, Inc.; 1Jun48; MP3151.

OUR VINES HAVE TENDER GRAPES. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the book "For Our Vines Have Tender Grapes" by George Victor Martin.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Ralph E. Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Sep45; LP13461.

OUR WALTZ. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc. c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Aug46; MP1129.

OUR WIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 10 reels, sd. A John M. Stahl production. From the play by Lillian Day and Lyon Mearson.

Credits: Associate producer, Irving Starr; director, John M. Stahl; screenplay, P. J. Wolfson; music, Leo Shuken; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Aug41; LP10997.

OUT CALIFORNIA WAY. c1946. 67 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Lesley Selander; original story, Barry Shipman; screenplay, Betty Burbridge; music score, Nathan G. Scott; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, Charles Craft. Trucolor.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Nov46; LP671.

OUT FISHIN'. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jan45; MP15646.

OUT FROM TOBACCOLAND. Pictorial Research, Inc., c1949. Presented by Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Pictures the growth and scope of the cigarette industry, and explains how the industry has contributed to the welfare and happiness of the people.

Credits: Producer, Louis De Rochemont.

© Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.; 15Feb49; MP4433.

OUT OF CONTROL. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the work-saving features of the General Electric Wringer Washer, and the ease with which the machine is operated.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4395.

OUT OF DARKNESS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 964 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story and screenplay, Doane Hoag; music score, Edward Kane; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Apr41; LP10382.

OUT OF THE BLUE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 86 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Bryan Foy production. Based on a story by Vera Caspary.

Credits: Producer, Isadore G. Goldsmith; director, Leigh Jason; screenplay, Walter Bullock, Vera Caspary, Edward Eliscu; music, Carmen Dragon; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: George Brent, Virginia Mayo, Turhan Bey, Ann Dvorak, Carole Landis.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 27Oct47; LP1273.

OUT OF THE DEPTHS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, D. Ross Lederman; story, Aubrey Wisberg; screenplay, Martin Berkeley, Ted Thomas.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Dec45; LP33.

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

© M. Minter Culver; 30Oct41; MP11891.

OUT OF THE FOG. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the play "The Gentle People" by Irwin Shaw.

Credits: Director, Anatole Litvak; screenplay, Robert Rossen, Jerry Wald, Richard Macaulay.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Jun41; LP10541.

OUT OF THE FRYING PAN INTO THE FIRING LINE. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 27Jul42; LP12269.

OUT OF THE NIGHT. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 9 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Fritz Rotter.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; screenplay, Adele Commandini.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 31Mar45; LP13567.

OUT OF THE NIGHT. Pacific Garden Mission, Inc., c1948. 31 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the beneficent work of the Pacific Garden Mission.

© The Pacific Garden Mission, Inc.; 15Oct48; MP4264.

OUT OF THE PAST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "Build My Gallows High" by Geoffrey Homes [pseud. of Daniel Mainwaring]

Credits: Producer, Warren Duff; director, Jacques Tourneur; screenplay, Geoffrey Homes; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: Robert Mitchum, Jane Greer, Kirk Douglas, Rhonda Fleming, Richard Webb.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Nov47; LP1360.

OUT OF THE SEA. sd., b&w.

Credits: Narration, Vincent Pelletier.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Dow Chemical Co.; title & descr., 19Oct44; 11 prints, 18Oct44; MU15324.

OUT OF THE STORM. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Payroll clerk Donald Lewis yields to temptation and steals $100,000 in the confusion that follows a holdup. After days of tension and danger, he gives himself up to the District Attorney.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original story, Gordon Rigby; screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: James Lydon, Lois Collier, Marc Lawrence, Richard Travis, Robert Emmett Keane.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Aug48; LP1758.

OUT OF THIS WORLD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 10 reels, sd. Based on stories by Elizabeth Meehan and Sam Coslow.

Credits: Producer, Sam Coslow; director, Hal Walker; screenplay, Walter DeLeon, Arthur Phillips; music director, Victor Young.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Jun45; LP13371.

OUT WEST. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Apr47; LP958.

OUT WEST WITH THE PEPPERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd. Based upon a book by Margaret Sidney.

Credits: Director, Charles Barton; screenplay, Harry Rebaus; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jun40; LP9744.

OUTCASTS OF THE TRAIL. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a robber, after serving a prison term, attempts to make amends for his past misdeeds.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, Philip Ford; written by Olive Cooper; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Monte Hale, Paul Hurst, Jeff Donnell, Roy Barcroft, John Gallaudet.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31May49; LP2320.

OUTDOOR LIVING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Producer, Howard Hill; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc,; 24Dec44; MP16292.

OUTFOXED. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Droopy Cartoon) (An MGM cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Walter Clinton, Bob Cannon, Michael Lah, Grant Simmons; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Oct49 (in notice: 1948); LP2597.

THE OUTLAW. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Howard Hughes. 115 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Howard Hughes; screenplay, Jules Furthman; music director, Victor Young; photographer, Gregg Toland; film editor, Wallace Grissell.

© Hughes Productions; 15Feb41; LP177.

OUTLAW BRAND. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which Jimmy Wakely captures an outlaw stallion and solves a murder.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Carl Pierson.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, "Cannonball" Taylor, Kay Morley, Christine Larson, Tom Chatterton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 24Oct48; LP1952.

OUTLAW COUNTRY. Western Adventure Productions, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1948. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Lash and Fuzzy track down the Frontier Phantom and his gang of counterfeiters.

Credits: Producer, Ron Ormond; director, Ray Taylor; screenplay, Ron Ormond, Ira Webb; music, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" La Rue, "Fuzzy" St. John, Dan White, John Merton, Nancy Saunders.

© Western Adventure Productions, Inc.; 15Dec48; LP2057.

OUTLAW ROUNDUP. PRC Pictures. Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Alfred Stern; director, Harry Fraser; original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 2Feb44; LP12475.

OUTLAW TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Alvin Neitz; screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 16Mar44; LP12534.

OUTLAWS OF BOULDER PASS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Steve Braxton; music, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 5Feb43; LP11834.

OUTLAWS OF CHEROKEE TRAIL. c1941. 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, Les Orlebeck; original screenplay, Albert De Mond; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Sep41; LP10708.

OUTLAWS OF PINE RIDGE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, William Witney; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Oct42; LP11756.

OUTLAWS OF SANTA FE. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, John McBurnie; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Mar44; LP12532.

OUTLAWS OF STAMPEDE PASS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Wallace Fox; original story, Johnston McCulley; screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Sep43; LP12277.

OUTLAWS OF THE DESERT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney, Bernard McConville; music score, John Leipold; music director, Irvin Talbot; photography, Russell Harlan; editor, Carroll Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Dec41; LP10862.

OUTLAWS OF THE PANHANDLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Nelson; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Feb41; LP10239.

OUTLAWS OF THE PLAINS. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story, Elmer Clifton; screenplay, A. Fredric Evans; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 22Sep46; LP578.

OUTLAWS OF THE RIO GRANDE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, George H. Plympton; editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 5Mar41; LP10302.

OUTLAWS OF THE ROCKIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Sep45; LP13502.

THE OUTLINE OF JITTERBUG HISTORY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12354.

THE OUTPOST. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Jul42; MP13968.

OUTPOST IN MOROCCO. Moroccan Pictures, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about the heroics of a captain in the Foreign Legion who quells an Arab uprising. Filmed in North Africa.

Credits: Producers, Samuel Bischoff, Joseph N. Ermolieff; director, Robert Florey; story, Joseph N. Ermolieff; screenplay, Charles Grayson, Paul de Sainte-Colombe; music score, Michel Michelet; film editor, George Arthur.

Cast: George Raft, Marie Windsor, Akim Tamiroff, John Litel, Eduard Franz.

© Moroccan Pictures, Inc.; 24Mar49; LP2258.

OUTSIDE THE 3–MILE LIMIT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lewis D. Collins; story, Eric Taylor, Albert DeMond; screenplay, Albert DeMond; music, Lee Zahler; photography, James S. Brown, Jr.; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Feb40; LP9463.

THE OUTSKIRTS OF THE TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Oct42; MP13084.

OVER MY DEAD BODY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,100 ft., sd. From a novel by James O'Hanlon.

Credits: Director, Malcolm St. Clair; screenplay, Edward James; music, Emil Newman, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Dec42; LP12025.

OVER THE ANDES. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 833 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographer, Winton C. Hoch. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Sep44; MP362.

OVER THE MOON. Distributed by United Artists, c1940. Presented by Alexander Korda. 8 reels, sd., color. Based on a story by Robert Sherwood and Lajos Biro.

Credits: Director, Thornton Freeland; scenario, Anthony Pellissier, Alec Coppel; dialogue, Arthur Wimperis; music, Michael Spoliansky; music director, Muir Mathieson; cameraman, Harry Stradling; film editor, Pat Woolley. Technicolor.

© London Film Productions, Ltd.; 9Jan40; LP9417.

OVER THE SANTA FE TRAIL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 63 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; story, Eileen Gary; screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Paul Mertz; film editor, Robert Hoover.

Cast: The Hoosier Hotshots, Ken Curtis, Jennifer Holt, Guy Kibbee, Guinn "Big Boy" Williams.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Feb47; LP947.

OVER THE SEAS TO BELFAST. c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 797 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographers, Virgil Miller, S. D. Onions. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Sep46; MP1058.

OVER THE WALL. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; original story, Matt Taylor; screenplay, Ed Earle Repp.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Feb44; LP12481.

OVER THERE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Apr43; MP13457.

OVER 21. c1945. Presented by Columbia Pictures. 11 reels, sd. A Sidney Buchman production. Adapted from the play by Ruth Gordon as produced by Max Gordon.

Credits: Director, Charles Vidor; screenplay, Sidney Buchman; music score, Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Sidney Buchman Productions, Inc.; 13Jul45; LP13398.

OVERLAND MAIL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels each, sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ford Beebe, John Rawlins; original story, Johnston McCulley; screenplay, Paul Huston.

1. A Race With Disaster. © 12Jun42; LP11395.

2. Flaming Havoc. © 12Jun42; LP11396.

3. The Menacing Herd. © 12Jun42; LP11397.

4. The Bridge of Disaster. © 17Jun42; LP11398.

5. Hurled to the Depths. © 17Jun42; LP11399.

6. Death at the Stake. © 17Jun42; LP11400.

7. The Path of Peril. © 24Jun42; LP11420.

8. Imprisoned in Flames. © 24Jun42; LP11421.

9. Hidden Danger. © 24Jun42; LP11419.

10. Blazing Wagons. © 13Jul42; LP11482.

11. The Trail of Terror. © 13Jul42; LP11483.

12. In the Claws of the Cougar. © 13Jul42; LP11484.

13. The Frenzied Mob! © 31Jul42; LP11501.

14. The Toll of Treachery! © 31Jul42; LP11502.

15. The Mail Goes Through! © 31Jul42; LP11503.

OVERLAND MAIL ROBBERY. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; original story, Robert Yost; screenplay, Bob Williams, Robert Yost; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, John MacBurnie; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 20Oct43; LP12369.

OVERLAND RIDERS. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Ellen Coyle; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 21Aug46; LP531.

OVERLAND STAGECOACH. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Steve Braxton; music, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 8Feb43; LP11843.

OVERLAND TO DEADWOOD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Sep42; LP11940.

OVERLAND TRAILS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 48 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The hero of this Western brings to justice the men who murdered his father in order to gain possession of a rich gold claim.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton, Bill Kennedy, Virginia Belmont, Steve Darrell.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Feb48; LP1463.

THE OVERLANDERS. Ealing Studios, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. by Universal-International, c1948. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. A Prestige picture.

Summary: A dramatization of the mass migration of cattle across Australia before the threatened Japanese Invasion in 1942. Filmed in Australia with the cooperation of the Commonwealth Government.

Credits: Producers, Michael Balcon, Ralph Smart; directed and written by Harry Watt; music, Jack Ireland; editor, E. M. Inman Hunter.

Cast: Chips Rafferty, Daphne Campbell, John Nugent Hayward, Jean Blue, Helen Grieve.

Appl. author: Universal Pictures, Inc.

© Ealing Studios, Ltd.; 28Oct48; LP1909.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jan41; MP11195.

OVERSEAS ROUNDUP. Released by Warner Bros., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Mar45; MP15748.

OVERSEAS ROUNDUP NO. 2. Released by Warner Bros., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29May45; MP15977.

OVERSEAS ROUNDUP NO. 3. The Vitaphone Corp. Released by Warner Bros., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Jul45; MP16162.

OVERTURE TO GLORY. G. & L. Motion Picture Corp., c1940. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Max Nosseck; story, Ossip Dymow; screenplay, Max Nosseck, Ossip Dymow.

© G. & L. Motion Picture Corp.; 1Mar40; LP9474.

THE OVERTURE TO WILLIAM TELL. Walter Lantz Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune) A Universal picture.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Verne Harding, S. C. Onaitis; music, Darrell Calker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 9Jun47; MP2181.

THE OX-BOW INCIDENT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,776 ft., sd. From the novel by Walter Van Tilburg Clark.

Credits: Director, William A. Wellman; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 19Nov42; LP12907.

OXIDAÇÃO E REDUÇÃO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, Hermann I. Schlesinger, Harvey B. Lemon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Jun46; MP775.

OXY-ACETYLENE WELDING—LIGHT METAL. c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: George W. Chapman.

© DeFrenes & Co.; 18Sep44; MP15287.

OXYGEN. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Therald Moeller.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 29Aug47; MP2557.

OXYGEN THERAPY IN HEART DISEASE. Linde Air Products Co. sd.

© Linde Air Products Co.; title & descr., 19Jun47; 3 prints. 1May47; MU2135.

OXYGEN THERAPY PROCEDURES. The Linde Air Products Co., c1944. 1 reel.

© The Linde Air Products Co.; 11Nov44; MP15447.

OZARK SPORTSMEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Nov43; MP14361.

OZZIE NELSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Director, Roy Mack.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Jun40; MP10309.

OZZIE NELSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd. (Melody Master)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Mar43; MP13405.

OZZIE NELSON BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Feb43; MP13285.

P

PBM MARINER. 3/4 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. United States Navy.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Mar44; MU14606.

PACEMAKERS FOR INDUSTRY. Presented by Jervis B. Webb Co., 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 17Nov44; 5 prints, 18Nov44; MU15393.

PACIFIC ADVENTURE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the life of Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.

Credits: Director, Ken G. Hall; screenplay, John Chandler, Alex Coppel; adaptation, Ken G. Hall, Max Afford; music director, Henry Krips; film editor, Terry Banks.

Cast: Ron Randell, Muriel Steinbeck.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Jul47; LP1090.

PACIFIC BLACKOUT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Franz Spencer and Curt Siodmak.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Lester Cole, W. F. Lipscomb; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Thomas Scott.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec41; LP10957.

PACIFIC CANADA. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Dec43; MP14746.

THE PACIFIC COAST. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PACIFIC FRONTIER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd., color. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Written and edited by Frederick Richards; narrator, Raine Bennett.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Jun42; LP11402.

PACIFIC PARADISE. Dunning Process Co., c1940. Presented by Paramount. 892 ft., sd., color. (Paramount Color Cruises)

Credits: Narrator, Gregory Abbott; photography, John W. Boyle. Magnacolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jun40; MP10296.

PACIFIC RENDEZVOUS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, B. F. Ziedman; director, George Sidney; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz, P. J. Wolfson, George Oppenheimer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 19May42; LP11310.

PACKAGE FOR JASPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. George Pal Productions, Inc.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jan44; LP12455.

PADDLE YOUR OWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Nov45; MP16492.

PADDLIN' MADELINE HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jul43; MP13714.

PADDY CALLAHAN HAS JOINED THE ARMY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Jul42; MP12816.

PAGLIACCI SWINGS IT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; music director, Edward Ward; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22May44; LP12659.

THE PAINT FILM. Paul Hance Productions, Inc., for the New Jersey Zinc Company, c1947. 29 min., sd., color, 16mm.

© Paul Hance Productions; 5Dec47; MP2537.

THE PAINTER AND THE POINTER. 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, Les Kline, Emery Hawkins; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 4Jan45; MP15567.

PAINTING AND DECORATING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 20Sep45; MP16610.

PAINTING REFLECTIONS IN WATER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Eliot O'Hara, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Jun47; MP2113.

PAISAN. Made for Organization Films International in collaboration with Foreign Film Productions, Italy, c1947. Released in the U. S. by Mayer-Burstyn, Inc., 1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. In Italian with English titles.

Summary: Six episodes which show the relationship between the Italian people and the men of various nationalities who invaded their homeland during World War II.

Credits: Producer and director, Roberto Rossellini; screenplay, Alfred Hayes, Frederico Fellini, Sergio Amidei, Marcelloa Pagliero, Roberto Rossellini; scenario and dialogue, Sergio Amidei; American version, Stuart Legg, Raymond Spottiswoode; English titles, Herman G. Weinberg; music, Renzo Rossellini.

Cast: Carmela Salzo, Robert Von Loon, Dots M. Johnson, Alfonsino, Maria Michi.

© Mayer-Burstyn, Inc.; 1Dec47; LP2486.

THE PALEFACE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A burlesque of the horse opera. A timid, traveling dentist, mistaken for a federal agent, despite gun duels and an attempted burning at the stake, escapes the Indians on the warpath, outwits the outlaws, and wins the love of a gun-toting cowgirl.

Credits: Producer, Robert L. Welch; director, Norman Z. McLeod; original screenplay, Edmund Hartmann, Frank Tashlin; music score, Victor Young; editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

Cast: Bob Hope, Jane Russell, Robert Armstrong, Iris Adrian, Robert Watson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Dec48; LP2183.

PALESTINE. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PALM BEACH STORY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Jones; written and directed by Preston Sturges; music score, Victor Young; editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Nov42; LP11763.

PALM TREE POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1163.

PALMETTO QUAIL. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd., 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 12)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, William Deeke; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Clare Grundman; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 12Jul46; MP1061.

LA PALOMA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1701.

PAL'S ADVENTURE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of a small boy and the dog who helps to clear him of an unjust accusation of robbery.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; original story, Otto Englander; screenplay, James Bloodworth; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, Sharyn Moffett, Flame, Rudy Wissler, Billy Cummings.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Sep48; LP1863.

PALS OF THE PECOS. c1941. 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, Lester Orlebeck; original story, Oliver Drake; screenplay, Oliver Drake, Herbert Dalmas; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Apr41; LP10414.

PALS OF THE SILVER SAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Robert Emmett; photography, Marcel A. LePicard; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Apr40; LP9596.

PAL'S RETURN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Pal saves the life of a small boy and is thereafter accepted by the boy's parents into their home.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Leslie Goodwins; story and screenplay, Stephen Moore; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: Gary Gray, John Ridgely, Anne Nagel, Robert Bray, Flame.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Nov48; LP2009.

PANAMA. RKO-Pathe, Inc. in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This Is America, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Dudley Hale; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Harold Anderson; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO-Pathe, Inc.; 31May46; MP840.

PANAMA: CROSSROADS OF THE WESTERN WORLD. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Locates Panama and the strategic Canal on the map, shows that the early Spanish influence lingers in the architecture of the country and religious customs of the people, and gives an over-all survey of the climate, the industries, and the products of the country.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Clyde Kohn.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 15Aug47; MP3691.

PANAMA HATTIE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Herbert Fields and B. G. DeSylva, produced by B. G. DeSylva, music and lyrics by Cole Porter.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Norman Z. McLeod; screenplay, Jack McGowan, Wilkie Mahoney; music adaptation, Roger Edens; music direction, Georgie Stoll; orchestrations, Leo Arnaud, George Bassman, Conrad Salinger; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11530.

PAN-AMERICANA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 84 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, John H. Auer; original story, Frederick Kohner, John A. Auer; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestrations, Gene Rose; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb45; LP13169.

PAN-AMERICONGA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb41; MP10847.

PANCHO'S RAINBOW. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Pancho seeks for a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow and finds a cooler full of Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 23Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2614.

PANCHROMATIC MAKE-UP FOR CINEMATOGRAPHY. c1947. 4 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Henry Macy Dollison.

© Photographic Technicians, Inc.; 1Mar47; MP1748.

PANDORA'S BOX. Terrytoons, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Jun43; MP14904.

PANHANDLE. Allied Artists Productions, Inc., c1948. 85 min., sd., sepia, 35mm.

Summary: A Western melodrama in which a former marshal returns to a lawless Texas town in order to avenge the murder of his brother.

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

Cast: Rod Cameron, Cathy Downs, Reed Hadley, Anne Gwynne, Blake Edwards.

© Allied Artists Productions, Inc.; 7Mar48; LP1541.

PANIC. Filmsonor, Paris, c1946. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Georges Simenon's novel "Les Fiançailles de Mr. Hire."

Credits: Scenario and dialogue, Charles Spaak, Julien Duvivier.

© Tricolore Films, Inc.; 11Dec46; LP1257.

A PANIC IN THE PARLOR. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock: director, Charles Roberts: story, Charles Roberts, George Jeske; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Jun41; LP10557.

THE PANTHER'S CLAW. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, William Beaudine; original story, Anthony Abbott; screenplay, Martin Mooney; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 3Mar42; LP11184.

PANTRY PIRATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Jan41; LP10275.

PAPA GETS THE BIRD. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 727 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep40; MP10648.

PAPA NICCOLINI. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jan42; MP12048.

PAPER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, C. E. Libby.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Sep46; MP1145.

PAPER BULLETS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice Kozinsky; director, Phil Rosen; original story and screenplay, Martin Mooney; music direction, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; cinematographer, Arthur Martinelli; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 6Jun41; LP10576.

PAPER DOLL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Dec42; MP13128.

PAPER FORESTS. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (America's Resources Series)

Summary: Shows every phase of the work of the Canadian lumbermen, from the felling of the trees to the arrival of the logs at the paper mill.

Credits: Director and photographer, Duncan MacD. Little.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4083.

PAPER MAGIC. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 146)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Ben Grauer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Oct45; MP16421.

PAPER MAKING. Coronet, c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Educational authors, J. E. Hansen, Freeman H. Brown; narrator, Vincent Pelletier; cameraman, James A. Larsen.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 29Oct41; MP1531.

PARACHUTE ATHLETES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jun42; MP12598.

PARACHUTE BATTALION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 75 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, John Twist, Hugh Fite; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Aug41; LP10700. (See also Parachute Battalion, 1Aug41; LP10646)

PARACHUTE BATTALION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 75 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, John Twist, Hugh Fite; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Aug41; LP10646. (See also Parachute Battalion, 14Aug41; LP10700)

PARACHUTE NURSE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Elizabeth Meehan.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Charles Barton; screenplay, Rian James; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27May42; LP11331.

PARADE OF PROGRESS. Hugh Harman Productions, Inc., c1945. 1,800 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Wallace Bosco; narration, Emory Green.

© Hugh Harman Productions, Inc.; 15Oct45; MP16543.

PARADE OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS. Globe Productions, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Soundies, no. 1–E)

© Globe Productions, Inc.; 10Aug40; MP11486.

PARADE OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar43; MP13348.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar41; MP10966.

THE PARADINE CASE. Vanguard Films, Inc., c1947. 132 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Robert Hichens' novel.

Summary: A melodrama in which a famous lawyer becomes infatuated with his client, a woman accused of murdering her blind husband. Glimpses of gay, luxurious living contrast with the principal setting, a courtroom in Old Bailey, London.

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, David O. Selznick; adaptation, Alma Reville; music, Franz Waxman; film editor, Hal C. Kern.

Cast: Gregory Peck, Ann Todd, Charles Laughton, Charles Coburn, Ethel Barrymore.

© Vanguard Films, Inc.; 27Dec47; LP1489.

PARADISE ISLES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Sep43; MP13928.

PARAMOUNT NEWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1939–49. 1 reel each, unless otherwise indicated, sd. © Paramount Pictures Inc.

1939/40.

1. © 30Aug39; MP9888.

2. © 3Sep39; MP9889.

3. © 7Sep39; MP9890.

4. © 11Sep39; MP9891.

5. © 14Sep39; MP9892.

6. © 18Sep39; MP9893.

7. © 21Sep39; MP9894.

8. © 25Sep39; MP9895.

9. © 28Sep39; MP9896.

10. © 2Oct39; MP9897.

11. © 5Oct39; MP9898.

12. © 9Oct39; MP9899.

13. © 12Oct39; MP9900.

14. © 16Oct39; MP9901.

15. © 19Oct39; MP9902.

16. © 23Oct39; MP9903.

17. © 26Oct39; MP9904.

18. © 30Oct39; MP9905.

19. © 2Nov39; MP9906.

20. © 6Nov39; MP9907.

21. © 9Nov39; MP9908.

22. © 13Nov39; MP9909.

23. © 16Nov39; MP9910.

24. © 20Nov39; MP9911.

25. © 23Nov39; MP9918.

26. © 27Nov39; MP9919.

27. © 30Nov39; MP9920.

28. © 4Dec39; MP9921.

29. © 7Dec39; MP9922.

30. © 11Dec39; MP9923.

31. © 14Dec39; MP9924.

32. © 18Dec39; MP9925.

33. © 21Dec39; MP9926.

34. © 25Dec39; MP9927.

35. © 28Dec39; MP9928.

36. © 1Jan40; MP9970.

37. © 4Jan40; MP9971.

38. © 8Jan40; MP9972.

39. © 11Jan40; MP9973.

40. © 15Jan40; MP9974.

41. © 18Jan40; MP9975.

42. © 22Jan40; MP9976.

43. © 25Jan40; MP9977.

44. © 29Jan40; MP10142.

45. © 1Feb40; MP10143.

46. © 5Feb40; MP10144.

47. © 8Feb40; MP10145.

48. © 12Feb40; MP10146.

49. © 15Feb40; MP10147.

50. © 19Feb40; MP10148.

51. © 22Feb40; MP10149.

52. © 26Feb40; MP10150.

53. © 29Feb40; MP10151.

54. © 4Mar40; MP10152.

55. © 7Mar40; MP10153.

56. © 11Mar40; MP10154.

57. © 14Mar40; MP10155.

58. © 18Mar40; MP10156.

59. © 21Mar40; MP10157.

60. © 25Mar40; MP10158.

61. © 28Mar40; MP10241.

62. © 1Apr40; MP10242.

63. © 4Apr40; MP10243.

64. © 8Apr40; MP10244.

65. © 11Apr40; MP10245.

66. © 15Apr40; MP10246.

67. © 18Apr40; MP10247.

68. © 22Apr40; MP10248.

69. © 25Apr40; MP10249.

70. © 29Apr40; MP10250.

71. © 2May40; MP10251.

72. © 6May40; MP10252.

73. © 9May40; MP10364.

74. © 13May40; MP10365.

75. © 16May40; MP10366.

76. 2 reels. © 20May40; MP10372.

77. © 23May40; MP10367.

78. © 27May40; MP10368.

79. © 30May40; MP10369.

80. © 3Jun40; MP10373.

81. © 6Jun40; MP10374.

82. © 10Jun40; MP10375.

83. © 13Jun40; MP10376.

84. © 17Jun40; MP10377.

85. © 20Jun40; MP10378.

86. © 24Jun40; MP10379.

87. © 27Jun40; MP10551.

88. © 1Jul40; MP10552.

89. © 4Jul40; MP10553.

90. © 8Jul40; MP10554.

91. © 11Jul40; MP10555.

92. © 15Jul40; MP10556.

93. © 18Jul40; MP10557.

94. © 22Jul40; MP10558.

95. © 25Jul40; MP10559.

96. © 29Jul40; MP10560.

97. © 1Aug40; MP10561.

98. © 5Aug40; MP10562.

99. © 8Aug40; MP10563.

100. © 12Aug40; MP10564.

101. © 15Aug40; MP10565.

102. 2 reels. © 19Aug40; MP10566.

103. © 22Aug40; MP10567.

104. © 26Aug40; MP10568.

1940/41.

1. © 29Aug40; MP10569.

2. © 2Sep40; MP10570.

3. © 5Sep40; MP10571.

4. © 9Sep40; MP10572.

5. © 12Sep40; MP10573.

6. © 16Sep40; MP10574.

7. © 19Sep40; MP10716.

8. © 23Sep40; MP10717.

9. © 26Sep40; MP10718.

10. © 30Sep40; MP10719.

11. © 3Oct40; MP10720.

12. © 7Oct40; MP10721.

13. © 10Oct40; MP10722.

14. © 14Oct40; MP10723.

15. © 17Oct40; MP10724.

16. © 21Oct40; MP10725.

17. © 24Oct40; MP10726.

18. © 28Oct40; MP10727.

19. © 31Oct40; MP10728.

20. © 4Nov40; MP10729.

21. © 7Nov40; MP10730.

22. © 11Nov40; MP10731.

23. © 14Nov40; MP10732.

24. © 18Nov40; MP10733.

25. © 21Nov40; MP10734.

26. © 25Nov40; MP10735.

27. © 28Nov40; MP10736.

28. © 2Dec40; MP10737.

29. © 5Dec40; MP10738.

30. © 9Dec40; MP10739.

31. © 12Dec40; MP11001.

32. © 16Dec40; MP11002.

33. © 19Dec40; MP11003.

34. © 23Dec40; MP11004.

35. © 26Dec40; MP11005.

36. © 30Dec40; MP11006.

37. © 2Jan41; MP11007.

38. © 6Jan41; MP11008.

39. 2 reels. © 9Jan41; MP11009.

40. © 13Jan41; MP11010.

41. © 16Jan41; MP11011.

42. © 20Jan41; MP11012.

43. © 23Jan41; MP11013.

44. © 27Jan41; MP11014.

45. © 30Jan41; MP11015.

46. © 3Feb41; MP11016.

47. © 6Feb41; MP11017.

48. © 10Feb41; MP11018.

49. © 13Feb41; MP11019.

50. © 17Feb41; MP11020.

51. © 20Feb41; MP11021.

52. © 24Feb41; MP11022.

53. © 27Feb41; MP11023.

54. © 3Mar41; MP11024.

55. © 6Mar41; MP11387.

56. © 10Mar41; MP11388.

57. © 13Mar41; MP11389.

58. © 17Mar41; MP11390.

59. © 20Mar41; MP11391.

60. © 24Mar41; MP11392.

61. © 27Mar41; MP11393.

62. © 31Mar41; MP11394.

63. © 3Apr41; MP11395.

64. © 7Apr41; MP11396.

65. © 10Apr41; MP11397.

66. © 14Apr41; MP11398.

67. © 17Apr41; MP11399.

68. © 21Apr41; MP11400.

69. © 24Apr41; MP11401.

70. © 28Apr41; MP11402.

71. © 1May41; MP11403.

72. © 5May41; MP11404.

73. © 8May41; MP11405.

74. © 12May41; MP11406.

75. © 15May41; MP11407.

76. © 19May41; MP11408.

77. © 22May41; MP11409.

78. © 26May41; MP11410.

79. © 29May41; MP11461.

80. © 2Jun41; MP11791.

81. © 5Jun41; MP11792.

82. © 9Jun41; MP11793.

83. © 12Jun41; MP11794.

84. © 16Jun41; MP11795.

85. © 19Jun41; MP11796.

86. © 23Jun41; MP11797.

87. © 26Jun41; MP11798.

88. © 30Jun41; MP11799.

89. © 3Jul41; MP11800.

90. © 7Jul41; MP11801.

91. © 10Jul41; MP11802.

92. © 14Jul41; MP11803.

93. © 17Jul41; MP11804.

94. © 21Jul41; MP11805.

95. © 24Jul41; MP11806.

96. © 28Jul41; MP11807.

97. © 31Jul41; MP11808.

98. © 4Aug41; MP11809.

99. © 7Aug41; MP11810.

100. © 11Aug41; MP11811.

101. © 14Aug41; MP11812.

102. © 18Aug41; MP11813.

103. © 21Aug41; MP11814.

104. © 25Aug41; MP11815.

1941/42.

1. © 28Aug41; MP11816.

2. © 1Sep41; MP11817.

3. © 4Sep41; MP11818.

4. © 8Sep41; MP11819.

5. © 11Sep41; MP11820.

6. © 15Sep41; MP11821.

7. © 18Sep41; MP11822.

8. © 22Sep41; MP11823.

9. © 25Sep41; MP11824.

10. © 29Sep41; MP11825.

11. © 3Oct41; MP11826.

12. © 7Oct41; MP11827.

13. © 10Oct41; MP12096.

14. © 14Oct41; MP12097.

15. © 17Oct41; MP12098.

16. © 21Oct41; MP12099.

17. © 24Oct41; MP12100.

18. © 28Oct41; MP12101.

19. © 31Oct41; MP12102.

20. © 4Nov41; MP12103.

21. © 7Nov41; MP12104.

22. © 11Nov41; MP12105.

23. © 14Nov41; MP12106.

24. © 18Nov41; MP12107.

25. © 21Nov41; MP12108.

26. © 25Nov41; MP12109.

27. © 28Nov41; MP12110.

28. © 2Dec41; MP12111.

29. © 5Dec41; MP12112.

30. 2 reels. © 9Dec41; MP12113.

31. 2 reels. © 12Dec41; MP12114.

32. © 16Dec41; MP12115.

33. © 19Dec41; MP12116.

34. © 23Dec41; MP12117.

35. © 26Dec41; MP12118.

36. © 30Dec41; MP12119.

37. © 2Jan42; MP12120.

38. © 6Jan42; MP12121.

39. © 9Jan42; MP12122.

40. © 13Jan42; MP12123.

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1942/43.

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1943/44.

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1944/45.

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1945/46.

1. © 1Sep45; MP16512.

2. © 5Sep45; MP16513.

3. © 8Sep45; MP16514.

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5. © 15Sep45. MP16516.

6. © 19Sep45; MP16517.

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12. © 10Oct45; MP16523.

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15. © 20Oct45; MP16526.

16. Oct. 24, 1945. British miracle—air strips that float. Duke [of Windsor] visits Queen Mother [Mary]. Tomorrow's flying flivvers. Death for Laval. The fleet comes back.

© 24Oct45; MP2.

17. Oct. 27, 1945. "Big 10" upset! Purdue vs. Ohio State. Navy releases submarine films. Allied justice—24 Nazis indicted.

© 27Oct45; MP3.

18. Oct. 31, 1945. British test German terror weapon [V–2 rocket bomb]. "Big Mo" [USS Missouri] comes home. Shangri-La [aircraft carrier] returns. Truman asks for military training. The V-T [proximity] fuse.

© 31Oct45; MP4.

19. Nov. 3, 1945. Season's thriller! Last minute Navy victory. Salute the Navy [Navy Day in ports of the nation].

© 3Nov45; MP5.

20. Nov. 7, 1945. Chicago fire razes grain elevator. President opens Victory Loan drive. For sale: 30,000 GI horses. Nazi aftermath—displaced Germans. World Charter becomes law of nations. Thunder over Japan [war crimes trial begins].

© 7Nov45; MP6.

21. Nov. 10, 1945. Management, Labor meet. Thanksgiving turkeys learn fate. GI road to Rome. Jap fleet passes in review. Yanks seize Jap gold. Navy vs. Notre Dame. Battle of the six-inch line.

© 10Nov45; MP7.

22. Nov. 14, 1945. World's mightiest mortar. Home town welcomes Halsey. Underwater Thanksgiving. Inside Berlin. Election roundup [in New York City and Detroit].

© 14Nov45; MP8.

23. Nov. 17, 1945. Three-wheel whizzer [automobile]. Bye-bye baby—by air. [RAF Gloster] Meteor breaks air records. Attlee, Truman face peace problems. Service Juggernauts roll! Navy vs. Michigan; Army vs. Notre Dame.

© 17Nov45; MP9.

24. Nov. 21, 1945. Eisenhower says, "Train or perish." Inside Japan. Holiday on the Rhine. Headlines for history: Pearl Harbor inquiry open; we keep the atom bomb [announcement by Truman, Attlee and MacKenzie King].

© 21Nov45; MP10.

25. Nov. 24, 1945. Billion dollar scrap-heap [of Navy planes and Army bombers]. Fashion goes to school [at U.C.L.A.]. Behind Pearl Harbor. Unified command drama. Pigskin parade nears climax! Irish wallop Wildcats! Army vs. Penn.

© 24Nov45; MP11.

26. Nov. 28, 1945. Legion takes Chicago. Nation watches strike scene. GI dream comes true. Jap atrocities revealed [in trial of Yamashita].

© 28Nov45; MP12.

27. Dec. 1, 1945. Sea heroes end voyage [Admiral Halsey retires]. U. S. jails top [German] generals. Pearl Harbor inquiry widens. Play-off games [football]. Indiana vs. Purdue.

© 1Dec45; MP13.

28. Dec. 5, 1945. Inside Japan with GI Joe. Hirohito reports to ancestors. History's greatest trial [in Nuremberg].

© 5Dec45; MP14.

29. Dec. 8, 1945. Army vs. Navy ... the year's number one classic.

© 8Dec45; MP15.

30. Dec. 12, 1945. For Christmas—gifts across the sea. Open wide-scale war on cancer. Hurley takes the stand. Film industry honored for war service. Death rides the school bus. Basketball: big town debut.

© 12Dec45; MP16.

31. Dec. 15, 1945. "Pinball" target plane. "The Hat" set to music [La Guardia retires as Mayor of New York]. Washington headlines: Byrnes answers Hurley; Marshal testifies; Eisenhower takes over. The "Bobby-sox" Bowl.

© 15Dec45; MP219.

32. Dec. 19, 1945. Names in the news: Halsey becomes "5–star" admiral; Byrnes leaves for Moscow. Death of a Nazi [General Anton Dostler executed]. Something new down on the farm. Army destroys Japanese atom-smasher. Successful designer [Annabelle Graham] and she's only eleven.

© 19Dec45; MP220.

33. Dec. 22, 1945. Halsey sails into New York. Navy reveals bat bombs. Headline people: General Marshall leaves for China; Admiral King receives D. S. M.; Admiral Nimitz takes naval command. Nuremberg—new drama in history's greatest trial [American-made atrocity films are shown to defendants]. Football! Rams win pro title [Cleveland defeats Washington].

© 22Dec45; MP221.

34. Dec. 26, 1945. Boom in winter sports [ski school on Mt. Hood]. Candy-cane King. Atom bomb aftermath [changes in animals at Alamogordo, New Mexico]. Japs leave Korea. Indo-China water festival. Home from the wars [men and ships]. Record blizzard [in Buffalo and New York].

© 26Dec45; MP222.

35. Dec. 29, 1945. Housing crisis [a report on conditions throughout the country]. Paramount News presents 1945–46 sports review [parade of champions; statements by Babe Ruth, Earl Blaik, Bobby Jones and Avery Brundage].

© 29Dec45; MP223.

36. Jan. 2, 1946. Airborne homecoming [Pacific GI's home for Christmas]. Washington holiday [community Christmas tree]. George S. Patton, 1885–1945 [camera highlights of his career]. Nobel prizes honor world's great: Professor Wolfgang Pauli, Cordell Hull, Dr. Alexander Fleming, Dr. Ernest Chain, Dr. Howard Florey and Miss Gabriela Mistral. Yamashita guilty.

© 2Jan46; MP224.

37. Jan. 5, 1946. [Marine tanks] destroy Jap planes [in giant barn-fire]. Thirty-two new cardinals named. President at home. Diving—mid-winter spring [at Miami Beach]. Holiday disasters [explosion at Santa Barbara and fire at Cambridge, Massachusetts]. One world; nations sign Bretton Woods [agreement]. Cage season hits peak [North Carolina University defeats New York University at basketball].

© 5Jan46; MP225.

38. Jan. 9, 1946. Twenty-four dead in mine disaster. Soldier's dog waits two years. General Patton laid to rest. Truman addresses nation. 1946 Bowl games [Cotton Bowl, Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl and Orange Bowl].

© 9Jan46; MP226.

39. Jan. 12, 1946. 2 reels. History, 1945 [a review of events] and the search for peace, 1946.

© 12Jan46; MP227.

40. Jan. 16, 1946. Yokohama, 400,000–dollar PX fire. Pow! Sock! Golden Gloves [1946 tournament]. A hero comes home [Sinbad, the Coast Guard's mongrel]. March of Dimes—'46 campaign under way. UNO delegates visit U. S. On the labor front [strike news and a statement by Henry Ford, Jr.].

© 16Jan46; MP228.

41. Jan. 19, 1946. Helicopter sets new world records [Sikorsky's R–5]. "Keep us flying" [veterans wish to use immobilized Army transports]. U. S. holiday for "Winnie" [Churchill]. Death rides South's rivers [floods]. Victory parade [in New York]; mighty GI tribute [skytroopers led by Major General Gavin].

© 19Jan46; MP229.

42. Jan. 23, 1946. Autos in the sky [auto-airplanes]. Washington headlines: Kimmel's own story; Eisenhower on demobilization. Strike report. UNO Assembly opens in London [George VI welcomes the delegates at a banquet; UNO's first President, Paul-Henri Spaak, is elected; Prime Minister Clement Attlee speaks].

© 23Jan46; MP230.

43. Jan. 26, 1946. Churchill in Florida. New F. D. R. dimes. Seventeen dead in plane crash [Miami-to-Boston plane]. Eumetopias (seal, to you) sets record. Jungle saga; rescue [of wounded air pilot] in Burma. President Truman honors draft boards. Sports! Turf fever [at Hialeah].

© 26Jan46; MP231.

44. Jan. 30, 1946. Operation Crossroads; atom bomb versus naval vessels [tests on Bikini Atoll]. Best film; New York critics make award [to "The Lost Week End"]. Nation's highest tribute [Congressional Medals awarded to Sergeant John McKinney, Lieutenant Daniel Lee, Lieutenant Donald Gary and Commander Joseph O'Callahan]. Fashions for dimes [fashion show for the March of Dimes]. Newest jet fighter [the XP–81]. Sky high skiing [revival of Norge Ski Club tournament].

© 30Jan46; MP232.

45. Feb. 2, 1946. Coast-to-coast in 4 hours, 13 minutes [three jet-propelled P–80's break coast-to-coast records at 585 m.p.h.]. Crow menace; farmers fight new plague [with bombs, in Kansas]. Hardware headware [hats made of kitchenware]. UNO meets first tests [dealing with African colonies and Iranian affairs]. "FDR" [carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt] on shakedown cruise.

© 2Feb46; MP403.

46. Feb. 6, 1946. Submarine fleet, resting but not rusting [de-commissioned at Mare Island Navy Yard, but kept ready for future use]. Headline People: Pope honors [Major General William J.] Donovan; Lewis back in A. F. L.; champ [Joe Louis] in the groove. Franklin D. Roosevelt—the Nation remembers [polio celebration in Washington]. Gouin succeeds DeGaulle. Reaching for the moon—first man-made contact achieved with radar.

© 6Feb46; MP404.

47. Feb. 9, 1946. Big League tryouts for ex-GI's. Chinese take over [in Manchuria]. Airliner [TWA Constellation] smashes record. Churchill's busy days. UNO names site [on New York and Connecticut borders]. Here come the (war) brides.

© 9Feb46; MP405.

48. Feb. 13, 1946. Brazil inaugurates new President. Yards and yards of hats. Middle East spotlight [King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia visits King Farouk of Egypt; General Sir Alan Cunningham deals with riots in Jerusalem]. Koreans come home. Louis vs. Conn. March of Dimes in France.

© 13Feb46; MP406.

49. Feb. 16, 1946. Army reveals mine clearing equipment. Exit the Jap [from China]. China's first cardinal. Sponge divers back in

## action [in the Gulf of Mexico]. New awards honor film industry.

© 16Feb46; MP407.

50. Feb. 20, 1946. So, you want a new car [a midget car, a windjammer and a homemade model]. Brotherhood: tolerance drive opens. Ickes resigns. Dogdom's biggest day [Westminster Kennel Club show]. New York: ghost town for a day [tug strike].

© 20Feb46; MP408.

51. Feb. 23, 1946. Atom tests—the Navy gets set [preparations at Bremerton, Washington and San Francisco]. New cardinals—prelates at Rome ceremony. Back to work—in steel. Film stars inaugurate new flights. [SS] Yukon survivors back in States. The "Quints," first pictures since '43.

© 23Feb46; MP409.

52. Feb. 27, 1946. New sky giant [Douglas DC–6] makes its bid. UNO: America's delegates back home. Housing action for vets. Five die in mystery blast [New Orleans apartment building]. Operation Musk-ox; Canada probes Arctic wastes. Golden Gloves, tomorrow's champs.

© 27Feb46; MP410.

53. Mar. 2, 1946. Bob-sled championships. More war brides. Taxi trouble; 700 vets storm Capital. India wedding without a bride. New cardinals; ceremony in Rome.

© 2Mar46; MP411.

54. Mar. 6, 1946. One million tires up in smoke [in Atlanta]. Headline people: Chiang Kai-Shek returns to Shanghai; Mrs. Roosevelt reports on UNO; Churchill's school days [honorary degree at Miami University]. Housing crisis; help for the homeless. Death claims Jap war criminals. Zoo news; it must be spring.

© 6Mar46; MP412.

55. Mar. 9, 1946. Hirohito meets the people. U. S. acts in world food crisis Famine [Commission meets in Washington with Henry Luce, Eric Johnston, Secretary Anderson and Herbert Hoover]. Barnyard penthouse. Peace problems—UNO's gravest test [trouble spots: Spain and Iran; Greenwich, Connecticut, votes on home for UNO; Byrnes' address on U. S. policy toward Russia]. National Leaguers get set.

© 9Mar46; MP413.

56. Mar. 13, 1946. Baseball: those Yankees are back. Clear the tracks [the President runs a train and speaks at a meeting of the Federal Council of Churches]. Argentina's battle of ballots. Students [in Shanghai] demonstrate against Reds. Churchill's Missouri address.

© 13Mar46; MP414.

57. Mar. 16, 1946. One hundred and one thousand dollars by a nose [War Knight wins Santa Anita race]. Hollywood awards new "Oscars." Freak glacier. Winnie [Churchill] says goodbye to South. British loan; Truman gets report. Atom bomb test; Bikini gets ready; [also scenes at] Clovis, New Mexico. Piano prodigy [Frankie "Sugar Chile" Robinson] wows Nation.

© 16Mar46; MP415.

58. Mar. 20, 1946. Monster out of the sea [a new island 200 miles south of Yokosuka, Japan]. Hyde Park: Churchill pays homage [at Roosevelt's grave]. First pictures: Russians leave Mukden. Connally reports [on UNO]. Ghost ship comes home [destroyer Stewart given up for lost in 1942]. The battle of the century [training pictures of Joe Louis, Billy Conn and Ted Evans]. Bowling's electric "brain."

© 20Mar46; MP416.

59. Mar. 23, 1946. World's Series of bowling. Princess [Elizabeth] at England's West Point. Headline people [General George C. Marshall reports to President Truman and Secretary of State Byrnes on Manchuria; former President Hoover begins a survey of starvation areas in Europe; British Field Marshal Montgomery returns to Germany]. Campaign with a sock [free nylons]. Argentina: Peron conceded election.

© 23Mar46; MP577.

60. Mar. 27, 1946. War-weary planes go boom [obsolete planes in Europe destroyed]. Red Cross [Commissioner Stanton Griffis awarded] medal for merit. Housing, definitely the newest [round, aluminum, and plastics houses]. Portrait of a statesman [Churchill painted by Douglas Chandor]. Bluebeard murder trial [Paris]. Basketball: cage finale [Rhode Island State vs. Kentucky at Madison Square Garden].

© 27Mar46; MP578.

61. Mar. 30, 1946. Swiss holiday. Bedell Smith [goes] to Russia [as U. S. Ambassador]. Hoover in Europe [as Honorary Chairman of the Famine Emergency Committee]. Last voyage for [Turkish] Envoy. Capital blossoms out. New Jap clean-up. Navy tests; carrier [Midway] meets the Arctic. UNO Security Council starts sessions in New York.

© 30Mar46; MP579.

62. Apr. 3, 1946. National champs [basketball]. Valentine [former New York Police Commissioner] patrols Tokyo beat. U. A. W. picks Reuther. Navy reveals airborne television. UNO crisis [Soviet-Iranian dispute].

© 3Apr46; MP580.

63. Apr. 6, 1946. Paris in the spring. Safer flying-plane-testing lab revealed. Educators hear Eisenhower. FBI nabs Russian on spy charges. Romance; GI dream comes true. Basketball wow finish [Madison Square Garden].

© 6Apr46; MP581.

64. Apr. 10, 1946. Spotlight on labor. Republicans name new chairman [Carroll B. Reece]. First pictures [of] Warsaw today. War on cancer; 12 million dollar drive opens. Nature on the rampage: Pacific tidal wave; Jap volcano cuts loose.

© 10Apr46; MP582.

65. Apr. 13, 1946. Boxing: ring veterans climax season [naval officers' sons at Annapolis]. Masters' tournament: golf's big plum [Herman Keiser defeats Ben Hogan; Bobby Jones also plays]. Army Day, 1946 [in] Washington, D. C., San Francisco, [and] New York City.

© 13Apr46; MP583.

66. Apr. 17, 1946. Navy news: wings over Manhattan [planes from the carrier Midway]; warships check in; Operation Road's End [Jap subs sunk]. Movie theatres organize for public service. Cypress trees aid housing shortage. League of Nations in final session. Baseball fever grips U. S.

© 17Apr46; MP584.

67. Apr. 20, 1946. Play ball [first post-war baseball season]. In memoriam [scenes at Hyde Park and Warm Springs].

© 20Apr46; MP585.

68. Apr. 24, 1946. Home rule for India (so near, so far). A boy named Buster [cancer victim]. Now GI wives go over there. Fifty years on wheels [automobile's Golden Jubilee]. Japan—royal tintype. Shall we waltz? England says yes!

© 24Apr46; MP586.

69. Apr. 27, 1946. Nippon votes. Food crisis. Army-Navy—the switched week end. Harlan F. Stone, 1872–1946. Easter—on parade [in New York]. Easter—renewal of faith [at Hollywood Bowl].

© 27Apr46; MP587.

70. May 1, 1946. Truman turns sailor for fleet review. Dancing—low-down from London. Baruch tackles atom job—on park bench. Animal headliners [Smoky, Yorkshire terrier; Oofy, year-old chimpanzee]. Big Four meet in Paris [to draft peace treaties].

© 1May46; MP588.

71. May 4, 1946. Big Four in session. Forty-four dead in train wreck [at Naperville, Illinois]. "Ike" leaves for the Pacific. Aviation—preview of tomorrow: the Flying Wing; super rocket engine. La Guardia pleads for more wheat. Auto grand prix [at Nice, France].

© 4May46; MP602.

72. May 8, 1946. Warship blows up at pier [in Earle, New Jersey]. New President [Manuel Roxas] elected in the Philippines. Tokyo Bay—Army recovers hidden silver. New German films—the V–2. The inside story of Mexican baseball.

© 8May46; MP603.

73. May 11, 1946. Kentucky Derby! You name it, they've got it ... south of the Border. Louis and Conn—now it's official. National disaster. [Strike of 400,000 soft coal miners]. Swim and sway [at Smith College]. Alcatraz—the break that failed.

© 11May46; MP608.

74. May 15, 1946. Berlin—one year after V-E. Japan [free speech in the Imperial Park Plaza]. First GI wives arrive in Europe. Navy tests "eggbeater" propeller. Now—lady cops for Tokyo. Packages rushed to hungry Europe. Russia votes.

© 15May46; MP609.

75. May 18, 1946. Assault wins Preakness. Jap war lords face justice [in Tokyo trial]. Sheep flood Coulee Dam. Ku Klux Klan back in South. Seventy-five miles up—rocket tests forecast new age.

© 18May46; MP655.

76. May 22, 1946. Harness racing: test new starting gate. House [boats] for sail. World famine—Hoover reports. Fashion notes—hats that bloom, tra-la. Death rides the skies [as airliner crashes near Richmond, Virginia]. Italy at the crossroads [monarchy or republic].

© 22May46; MP656.

77. May 25, 1946. Britain reshapes empire. "In sickness and in health" [Major Hornbostel seeks to join wife, a leprosy victim]. Tulip time in Holland, Michigan—once again. Byrnes reports on peace failure. War victims find haven in America.

© 25May46; MP681.

78. May 29, 1946. Railroad showdown [in strike]. Evangeline Booth honored. General Eisenhower visits Japan. Atom bomb number 4—zero hour near in Pacific.

© 29May46; MP682.

79. June 1, 1946. Louis and Conn—rarin' to go. World's biggest dog show [at Madison, New Jersey]. Days of crisis: [Nation-wide rail strike; coal strike].

© 1Jun46; MP713.

80. June 5, 1946. West Pointers honor "50–year man" [Marty Maher]. Clear the track [for model trains]. Atomic "ark" [with 4100 animals aboard 22 ships for target area]. UNRRA in action [to improve world food position]. Baseball highlights [at Yankee Stadium; in Chicago]. Egypt's new status [as British promise to evacuate].

© 5Jun46; MP714.

81. June 8, 1946. Horse of the year [Assault, winner of Derby and Preakness]. Wild tribes [of Central America] aid food drive. Duke, Duchess [of Windsor] return to Riviera. Five hundred mile speedway [at Indianapolis]. Two years after D-Day: England, France, Belgium and Washington remember [in ceremonies].

© 8Jun46; MP768.

82. June 12, 1946. Europe's elections: France votes; Italy votes. President appoints Vinson and Snyder. Is the automobile here to stay? "Yes," says Detroit. Chicago fire shocks nation—58 dead in hotel disaster. Poland—the road back [in devastated Warsaw]. To keep America strong—West Point and Annapolis graduations.

© 12Jun46; MP769.

83. June 15, 1946. Amazing air age gadgets: push button planes; pilot ejector seat. One and one-half million dollar [Hessian] jewel robbery [investigated]. Torpedo: San Francisco's close call revealed. London's great victory parade: at Buckingham Palace, the Mall, Hyde Park.

© 15Jun46; MP822.

84. June 19, 1946. Oil fire [at Whiting, Indiana]. Furs—seeing is believing. Big four—Byrnes leaves for showdown in Paris. Spotlight on Palestine. Rescue! Demonstrate new life-saving device. Victory Day finale [in London].

© 19Jun46; MP823.

85. June 22, 1946. Peron takes over [in Buenos Aires]. Marriage in Kentucky [of Mr. and Mrs. Sprouse, eighteen and seventy-nine years]. Big Four meet in Paris. Baruch's atom bomb plan. Sports headlines [Cleveland, golf; New York, horse racing].

© 22Jun46; MP848.

86. June 26, 1946. Report from Tokyo [on black market and food shortage]. Jewel suspects [Colonel Jack Durant and his Wac captain wife] fly to trial [in Frankfurt, Germany]. Midget Michelangelo [Chicago's five-year old Skippy Miller]. Germany [Nazi steel helmets turned into utensils]. Tornado! 14 dead in freak disaster [in Detroit]. The winner and still the champion [Joe Louis retains title in New York].

© 26Jun46; MP849.

87. June 29, 1946. Vinson takes oath as new Chief Justice. The "Chimp-ion ship" wild west show [at St. Louis zoo]. For sale! Jeeps! Jeeps! Jeeps [at the Atlanta ordnance depot]. Berlin rebuilds. War on famine—Hoover sees hope. Rush relief shipment [to Europe and Asia]. Egypt's grain for India. Speed! College track champs.

© 29Jun46; MP867.

88. July 3, 1946. $2,000,000, ferry fire [at Staten Island]. Browder back from Russia. Operation Bow-wow [as St. Bernards fly to dog show]. Rare pictures: Japan's Crown Prince. China; 30,000,000 face starvation. The biggest plane that ever flew [the XB–35, Northrop Flying Wing].

© 3Jul46; MP868.

89. July 6, 1946. Bug menace! Helicopter wars on farm pests. Hirohito visits new Diet. What price OPA? Bikini—zero hour [before Operation Crossroads].

© 6Jul46; MP902.

90. July 10, 1946. Track Olympic style. Congress honors Roosevelt. Spotlight on Trieste. China! UNRRA sends help. Nisei vets come home [to New York].

© 10Jul46; MP903.

91. July 13, 1946. Bikini [camera story of Atom bomb number 4, history's greatest military experiment].

© 13Jul46; MP927.

92. July 17, 1946. All-star baseball! Headline plane wrecks: [Howard Hughes cracks up; B–17 crashes, 25 dead]. Mother Cabrini canonized. Report from Palestine [British warships stop refugees]. Jumbo [trained seal] s(t)eals the show.

© 17Jul46; MP928.

93. July 20, 1946. Tennis: Riggs wins pro title. Washington headlines: [Byrnes returns from Paris; Truman signs British loan]. Record smasher! Around the world in 12 years [Larry Hightower, wheelbarrow pusher]. The People ask, OPA or no OPA? [The threat of runaway inflation].

© 20Jul46; MP939.

94. July 24, 1946. Operation Goodwill [RAF Lancaster bombers tour U. S.]. Seattle Russian cleared of espionage. Churchill keeps a promise [visits Metz, France]. Palestine—days of crisis [between British and Jewish Army] Royal mystery in Siam [death of King]. France celebrates [peacetime Bastille Day].

© 24Jul46; MP940.

95. July 27, 1946. Small-fry speedway [National Soapbox Derby in Akron]. Action on the food front [cattle for Europe] canning for peace; packages [for France]. Bus-king size! Last German war prisoners leave America. Blame it on the heat [1,250,000 Americans at Coney Island].

© 27Jul46; MP975.

96. July 31, 1946. Shriners on parade [in San Francisco]. One world—youth shows the way [Youth Hostels help rebuilding in Europe]. "Doodlebug" fights fires under docks. Ham's harvest—radios at 20 cents a pound! Planes vs. weather! Army probes mysteries of thunderstorms. This really takes the cake [amazing artistry in icing].

© 31Jul46; MP976.

97. Aug. 3, 1946. Water ski champs [at Holland, Michigan]. Paris peace puzzle—Byrnes sets policy. Golf's biggest plum [Herman Barron winner in tournament]. Palestine explosion kills 76. Crisis! Can the Dodgers make it?

© 3Aug46; MP1009.

98. Aug. 7, 1946. Super air giants [the HK-I]. Whisker Derby [at Palisades Park, New Jersey]. World awaits Nuremberg verdict. Paris—the search for peace. Russia parades might!

© 7Aug46; MP1010.

99. Aug. 10, 1946. Atomic bombs. [Bikini Blast.] Explosion of atomic bomb number 5; [the aftermath]. Hiroshima—one year after [grim monument to the power of the atom]. "Can man control atomic power?"

© 10Aug46; MP1053.

100. Aug. 14, 1946. Lightning sets tanker afire. The Trumans go home [to Independence, Missouri] to vote. Earthquakes. Caribbean area hit. Tribute to F. D. R. [at Campobello Island, New Brunswick]. Atom bomb city [Oak Ridge, Tennessee].

© 14Aug46; MP1054.

101. Aug. 17, 1946. Postscripts to war! Film report from Germany: U-boat nest destroyed; dump Nazi poison gas. Palestine! New tension grips Middle East. Rio hails Eisenhower. Welsh bards honor Princess Elizabeth.

© 17Aug46; MP1066.

102. Aug. 21, 1946. National aquaplane regatta [at Hermosa Beach, California]. Brazil—new honors for Ike! Crisis over Trieste. Mr. Truman takes a walk. U. S., Britain clash over ship rescue. World's largest bomber [the XB–36].

© 21Aug46; MP1067.

103. Aug. 24, 1946. Truman on vacation voyage. Tornado twisters hit Minnesota! Rumanian war criminals on trial. Rebuild Dnieprostroy Dam [in Russia]. Palestine ... British tighten grip. Soap-box Derby—big league stuff [at Akron, Ohio].

© 24Aug46; MP1077.

104. Aug. 28, 1946. Peace crisis! Ultimatum to Marshal Tito. Atom bomb—Blandy brings Bikini report. Near East—Trans-Jordan awaits UN decision. What to wear? Designers say, "Scarfs." The farmer takes a tank. Climbing season at new peak [at Canada's Bugaboo Glacier].

© 28Aug46; MP1078.

1946/47.

1. Aug. 31, 1946. Football is back! Cyprus—British intern 2,000 refugees. Film log: President's cruise. Top of the world! New supplies for Mont Blanc. Everything goes double in Pawpaw [Michigan].

© 31Aug46; MP1096.

2. Sept. 4, 1946. Cloudburst isolates resort [at York Beach, Maine]. Football! Joe College grooms for record year. Estonian refugees get temporary haven [Miami, Florida]. Bermuda—Presidential fish story. Baby contest: small fry sizzle [at Asbury Park, New Jersey]. Paris incident [Foreign Minister Molotov walks out on festivities]. Thar she blows! Boom in whaling industry [off the coast of Chile].

© 4Sep46; MP1097.

3. Sept. 7, 1946. Yugoslavia—last chapter? Mediterranean: U. S. Navy on the move. Sky rescue: soldier shot out of P–61. Dame Fashion says, "Put a feather in your cap." First pictures—crisis in India. World's speedboat record.

© 7Sep46; MP1117.

4. Sept. 11, 1946. Ice show aids vets. First pictures—Greek King regains throne. Football—who will stop Army's march? Veterans of Foreign Wars, 47th National Encampment. World Series of the dance.

© 11Sep46; MP1118.

5. Sept. 14, 1946. Golf—$10,000—winner takes all. A voyage to Palestine. Beauty, talent, brains! Miss America 1946. Byrnes on Germany.

© 14Sep46; MP1174.

6. Sept. 18, 1946. Headline people: Mark Clark reports on Austria; Howard Hughes flies again; Monty makes first visit to U. S. Lourdes—prisoners' pilgrimage. Dodgers vs. Cardinals.

© 18Sep46; MP1175.

7. Sept. 21, 1946. Labor crisis grips U. S. Crash landing; burning plane lands safely. Is this the world's fattest man? Aftermath of Yugoslavia incident. World Series fever.

© 21Sep46; MP1176.

8. Sept. 25, 1946. Little Olympics [in Berlin]. Squatters' siege ends. Truman silences Wallace. Man meets gorilla [at Bronx zoo]. Battle of Britain—six years after.

© 25Sep46; MP1177.

9. Sept. 28, 1946. Wallace ouster ends Capital crisis. Happy birthday! Fabulous party for Maharajah. First pictures: Newfoundland air rescue. Army rolls on [West Point vs. Villanova]; Chicago Bears vs. Washington Redskins.

© 28Sep46; MP1208.

10. Oct. 2, 1946. World's championship rodeo. Report from Shanghai. "Oscars" for fashion designers. First flying post office. Employ the handicapped—America mobilizes.

© 2Oct46; MP1209.

11. Oct. 5, 1946. Greek King goes home. Indians charge Manhattan fraud. Moscow mourns [Mikhail Ivanovich Kalinin]. President sees some football [Oklahoma vs. Army].

© 5Oct46; MP1232.

12. Oct. 9, 1946. First pictures—Greek King in Athens! Headline people: U. S.-British beauty swap; Eisenhower back in Europe; humanitarian award [to Barney Balaban]. Voyage of the "Turtle!" Navy plane spans globe.

© 9Oct46; MP1233.

13. Oct. 12, 1946. World Series 1946. Historic pictures—Nuremberg last chapter. Football—Columbia sinks Navy.

© 12Oct46; MP1278.

14. Oct. 16, 1946. B–29 flies across top of the world. Voilà, Paris rides again. Bundles for China. Mexico honors U. S. motion pictures. Air disaster in French Alps. Scotland—5–star invasion [Eisenhower on tour].

© 16Oct46; MP1279.

15. Oct. 19, 1946. Truman's speech on meat. Movies strike; film stars urge arbitration. Nation's two top teams win tough ones [Texas vs. Oklahoma; Army vs. Michigan].

© 19Oct46; MP1297.

16. Oct. 23, 1946. Byrnes reports on Paris. British Legion hails Churchill. First Pictures—Windsors in England. Housing—Wyatt sees end of lumber "bottleneck." Cards win wildest World Series.

© 23Oct46; MP1298.

17. Oct. 26, 1946. Twenty-three straight for Army. SS Queen Elizabeth—greatest liner sails in peace. Navy Day, 1946.

© 26Oct46; MP1321.

18. Oct. 30, 1946. Clothing gifts—war babies give thanks. Nazi's last mile. The search for peace: New York City—the opening of the United Nations.

© 30Oct46; MP1322.

19. Nov. 2, 1946. Navy introduces world's largest helicopter. What's new at the zoo?—Antelope cervicapra. Latest hair styles from Paris. Ship news—headline people sail for Europe. Battle of the century: [Army—Notre Dame].

© 2Nov46; MP1341.

20. Nov. 6, 1946. Speed—Austrian Motorcycle Derby. United Nations—clash of words. A rugged individualist [Jimmy Garvin age thirteen]. Remember Lidice. The old college try—pro style [New York Giants win over Chicago Bears].

© 6Nov46; MP1342.

21. Nov. 9, 1946. Remember "Da Preem"; or, Can this be wrestling? New housing speeds up! England—royal wedding bells. Big Four meet in New York. Season roars to climax [for football].

© 9Nov46; MP1370.

22. Nov. 13, 1946. Early-birds hit ski trails. London—movie stars on command performance. G.O.P. sweeps nation. Football—Eagles beat Giants.

© 13Nov46; MP1371.

23. Nov. 16, 1946. New Mexico—Army sends V–2 rocket 102 miles up. Inventor—Robert Fulton—1946. "The battle of the century"—Army vs. Notre Dame.

© 16Nov46; MP1379.

24. Nov. 20, 1946. Biggest navy skyship! One hundred and eighty passenger plane makes debut. Divers take fish census. Truman offers cooperation with G.O.P. Oklahoma—moving day for houses. "Mercy mission"—aid flown to Colorado snow captives. SS America makes gala maiden voyage.

© 20Nov46; MP1380.

25. Nov. 23, 1946. Army wallops Penn. Report from Japan—Hirohito marks new democracy. Jurisdictional dispute—new flare ups in movie strike. New torpedo sinks U-boat in 10 seconds.

© 23Nov46; MP1403.

26. Nov. 27, 1946. Coal crisis!—U. S. acts against Lewis. New York says farewell to Jimmy Walker. Tension in India. Nehru in crisis meeting. Moslems pray. Thousands flee riot areas. Gandhi tours riot area. Aviation news! New glider—no wings. Raymond Duncan comes home.

© 27Nov46; MP1404.

27. Nov. 30, 1946. Bowl fever [football]. War on intolerance. The days are flying—towards Christmas. Ready for the holidays. Toys. Television.

© 30Nov46; MP1416.

28. Dec. 4, 1946. Paramount News presents its 1946 All-America football team—the eleven greatest.

© 4Dec46: MP1417.

29. © 7Dec46; MP1468.

30. © 11Dec46; MP1469.

31. © 14Dec46; MP1478.

32. © 18Dec46; MP1479.

33. © 21Dec46; MP1506.

34. © 25Dec46; MP1507.

35. © 28Dec46; MP1519.

36. © 1Jan47; MP1520.

37. 2 reels. © 4Jan47; MP1580.

38. © 8Jan47; MP1581.

39. © 11Jan47; MP1603.

40. © 15Jan47; MP1604.

41. © 18Jan47; MP1644.

42. © 22Jan47; MP1645.

43. © 25Jan47; MP1665.

44. © 29Jan47; MP1666.

45. © 1Feb47; MP1726.

46. © 5Feb47; MP1727.

47. © 8Feb47; MP1734.

48. © 12Feb47; MP1735.

49. © 15Feb47; MP1784.

50. © 19Feb47; MP1785.

51. © 22Feb47; MP1811.

52. © 26Feb47; MP1812.

53. © 1Mar47; MP1823.

54. © 5Mar47; MP1824.

55. © 8Mar47; MP1880.

56. © 12Mar47; MP1881.

57. © 15Mar47; MP1895.

58. © 19Mar47; MP1896.

59. © 22Mar47; MP1940.

60. © 26Mar47; MP1941.

61. © 29Mar47; MP1967.

62. © 2Apr47; MP1968.

63. © 5Apr47; MP1976.

64. © 9Apr47; MP1977.

65. © 12Apr47; MP1989.

66. © 16Apr47; MP1990.

67. © 19Apr47; MP2006.

68. © 23Apr47; MP2007.

69. © 26Apr47; MP2038.

70. © 30Apr47; MP2039.

71. © 3May47; MP2070.

72. © 7May47; MP2071.

73. © 10May47; MP2085.

74. © 14May47; MP2086.

75. © 17May47; MP2109.

76. © 21May47; MP2110.

77. © 24May47; MP2117.

78. © 28May47; MP2118.

79. © 31May47; MP2141.

80. © 4Jun47; MP2142.

81. © 7Jun47; MP2156.

82. © 11Jun47; MP2157.

83. © 14Jun47; MP2161.

84. © 18Jun47; MP2162.

85. © 21Jun47; MP2190.

86. © 25Jun47; MP2191.

87. © 28Jun47; MP2212.

88. © 2Jul47; MP2213.

89. © 5Jul47; MP2218.

90. © 9Jul47; MP2219.

91. © 12Jul47; MP2228.

92. © 16Jul47; MP2229.

93. © 19Jul47; MP2251.

94. © 23Jul47; MP2252.

95. © 26Jul47; MP2270.

96. © 30Jul47; MP2271.

97. © 2Aug47; MP2292.

98. © 6Aug47; MP2279.

99. © 9Aug47; MP2293.

100. © 13Aug47; MP2294.

101. © 16Aug47; MP2309.

102. © 20Aug47; MP2310.

103. © 23Aug47; MP2323.

104. © 27Aug47; MP2324.

1947/48.

1. © 30Aug47; MP2345.

2. © 3Sep47; MP2346.

3. © 6Sep47; MP2352.

4. © 10Sep47; MP2353.

5. © 13Sep47; MP2359.

6. © 17Sep47; MP2360.

7. © 20Sep47; MP2397.

8. © 24Sep47; MP2398.

9. © 27Sep47; MP2394.

10. © 1Oct47; MP2395.

11. © 4Oct47; MP2402.

12. © 8Oct47; MP2403.

13. © 11Oct47; MP2439.

14. © 15Oct47; MP2440.

15. © 18Oct47; MP2443.

16. © 22Oct47; MP2444.

17. © 25Oct47; MP2451.

18. © 29Oct47; MP2452.

19. © 1Nov47; MP2481.

20. © 5Nov47; MP2482.

21. © 8Nov47; MP2484.

22. © 12Nov47; MP2485.

23. © 15Nov47; MP2532.

24. © 19Nov47; MP2533.

25. © 22Nov47; MP2546.

26. © 26Nov47; MP2547.

27. © 29Nov47; MP2576.

28. © 3Dec47; MP2577.

29. © 6Dec47; MP2579.

30. © 10Dec47; MP2580.

31. Dec. 13, 1947. Walcott's claim to heavyweight title denied. Days of violence in Palestine. France: Government demands strike showdown [Communist leader, Maurice Thorez, speaks]. 105,000 see Notre Dame crush USC. Bowl game junior size [Philadelphia high school football championship].

© 13Dec47; MP2593.

32. Dec. 17, 1947. Slowest round-world flight [by George Truman and Clifford Evans in Piper Cubs]. Plight of Navajo Indians arouses Nation. T-Men smash counterfeit ring. Santa Claus hits a home run ["Babe" Ruth entertains polio victims]. U.S. skiers ready for winter Olympics.

© 17Dec47; MP2594.

33. Dec. 20, 1947. U.S. transfers gun boats to Greek Navy. Million ducks invade Louisiana rice field. Hirohito visits [Hiroshima] first atomic bomb target. Australia hails sheep dog champion. Big Four parley fails [end of London Conference and scenes of the dismantling of German plants for mass shipment to Russia].

© 20Dec47; MP2648.

34. Dec. 24, 1947. NYU cagers outshoot Connecticut. Alan Ladd and William Demarest [speak in behalf of the Citizens' Food Committee]. To be young at holiday time ... [Santa Claus visits American boys and girls and war orphans abroad].

© 24Dec47; MP2649.

35. Dec. 27, 1947. Ice-skate ball makes bow [basketball game on ice]. People in the eyes of the world: "The Angel" [Maurice Tillet, French wrestler] returns; Russia sends new envoy [Alexandre Paniushkin, Ambassador to the U.S.]. Police drive homeless from Jap catacombs. Marshall reports on Big Four [London conference]. Friendship by the shipload [President Auriol expresses the gratitude of the French for American food].

© 27Dec47; MP2656.

36. Dec. 31, 1947. 1947 sports in review: track and field [Harrison Dillard, Mel Patton]; swimming [Jimmy McLane]; boxing [Joe Walcott vs. Joe Louis]; tennis [Jack Kramer]; golf [Lew Worsham, Sammy Snead, Babe Didrikson Zaharias]; turf [Jet Pilot]; baseball [Yankees vs. Dodgers]; football [Notre Dame team, Johnny Lujack].

© 31Dec47; MP2657.

37. Jan. 3, 1948. 2 reels. 1947, year of division: Blasts wreck Texas City; Palestine partition approved; Washington hearings hold the headlines; fashions, the new look; veto battle makes labor history; politics—who will it be in '48? The story of the East-West split.

© 3Jan48; MP2690.

38. Jan. 7, 1948. New York digs out [greatest snowfall in city's history]. Miss Truman meets the press. Silver Jubilee: Maharajah of Jaipur honored. Football: Blanchard, Davis, Tucker [of West Point] in news again.

© 7Jan48; MP2691.

39. Jan. 10, 1948. 1948 Bowl games: Orange Bowl; Cotton Bowl; Rose Bowl; Sugar Bowl.

© 10Jan48; MP2713.

40. Jan. 14, 1948. Leathernecks sail for Mediterranean. First Friendship Food arrives in Italy [Naples and Rome]. Ex-King Michael reaches exile in Switzerland. Congress hears Truman [State of the Union message].

© 14Jan48; MP2714.

41. Jan. 17, 1948. Winter sports: hockey squads sail for Olympics; high flying hickory aces [skiing at Bear Mountain, N. Y.]. European aid program debated [Secretary Marshall before Senate Foreign Affairs Committee]. Guerrillas on Konitsa front [border warfare in northern Greece]. Thrill-a-minute air show [Miami].

© 17Jan48; MP2715.

42. Jan. 21, 1948. Silver Skates classic thrills New York. Anti-royalist riots in Rome. Time for dimes [Margaret Truman; three-year-old poster-baby, Terry Tullos; the President]. General Chennault and bride. Montgomery's mission to Ethiopia. Survival in the air age [report by Chairman Finletter of the President's Air Policy Commission and a newsreel report on our aircraft industry].

© 21Jan48; MP2716.

43. Jan. 24, 1948. Cold breezes, hot racing at Hialeah. Eisenhower honored in Philadelphia. Baruch on foreign aid: "Mobilize for peace." Winter Olympics, last minute preparations [St. Moritz, Switzerland]. Danger rides the hickory boards [ski-jumping tournament at Fox River Grove, Ill.].

© 24Jan48; MP2722.

44. Jan. 28, 1948. Secret Nazi papers bared. Russo-German plot revealed. Innovations: Japan [war widows make toy automobiles from beer cans]; anti-freeze sailor suit [Navy suits to prevent freezing in coldest waters]; the newer look [venetian blinds made into a dress]. Petrillo goes on the record for Congress. U.S.-Canada win European figure skating championships.

© 28Jan48; MP2723.

45. Jan. 31, 1948. Speed on the boards; Mr. [Gil] Dodds goes to town again [Knights of Columbus track meet in Boston]. Stronger voice for U.S. abroad [Foreign Information Service]. News around the globe: Gandhi breaks five-day fast; [Princess] Elizabeth's food gifts feed needy; mass marriages in China. Charges and denials; Stassen vs. Pauley. Wintry regatta for ice boats [Hamilton Bay, Ont.]

© 31Jan48; MP2741.

46. Feb. 4, 1948. U.S. faces crisis in oil. Aid from those who care [Paulette Goddard distributes CARE packages to French war orphans]. News from fields of science and invention: Navy develops "walking" barge; safety, no-burn door demonstrated; science probes mysteries of "silent sound" [at Penn. State College]. Skiing on the land [Rossland, British Columbia]. Skiing on the sea [Bruce Parker at Nassau].

© 4Feb48; MP2742.

47. Feb. 7, 1948. Winter Olympics [at] St. Moritz. Canada welcomes new pioneers [displaced persons from Europe]. India without Gandhi [includes highlights of his career]. Record indoor mile; Gil Dodds breaks own world mark [Madison Square Garden].

© 7Feb48; MP2765.

48. Feb. 11, 1948. Hearings on legislation to curb Reds [Representative Mundt and Attorney General Tom Clark testify]. Gandhi's funeral rites. Skiing [at Leavenworth, Wash., Mont Gabriel, Que., and by lamplight near Seattle].

© 11Feb48; MP2766.

49. Feb. 14, 1948. Landmark burns; fire destroys historic inn [18th century stagecoach stop in New Hampshire]. Ike [General Eisenhower] retires; Bradley new chief of staff. U.S. makes Olympic history [at St. Moritz: Mrs. Gretchen Fraser is skiing champion; Dick Button is skating champion. Barbara Ann Scott of Canada is women's figure skating champion].

© 14Feb48; MP2771.

50. Feb. 18, 1948. Carnival season; fun along the Riviera [from Nice to Viareggio]. Miracle of Syracuse [a second set of triplets is born to Mrs. Michael Walker]. Air drama in the French Alps [crash of U. S. Flying Fortress near Digne]. Hats, Easter preview [New York]. Campaign of mercy [Bob Hope collects President Truman's contribution to the Red Cross]. Off Miami Beach; spinnaker spectacle [Lipton Cup race].

© 18Feb48; MP2772.

51. Feb. 21, 1948. First floods of '48 [Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee Rivers]. [Winthrop] Rockefeller weds a "Cinderella" [Mrs. Barbara Sears]. Dewey opens campaign. Irish elections. French-Spanish frontier reopened. Pope Pius says: use atom solely for peace. Sports: table tennis, Britisher [Richard Bergmann] wins world's championship; farewell to Switzerland [U.S. four-man bobsled team wins one of final events in 1948 Olympics].

© 21Feb48; MP2799.

52. Feb. 25, 1948. Basketball; hottest in the East [NYU vs. Manhattan College at Madison Square Garden]. Gandhi ashes scattered on sacred waters. In brotherhood there is strength [messages for Brotherhood Week from General Eisenhower and high school students]. King and queen of figure skating [Dick Button and Barbara Ann Scott win world championships at Davos, Switzerland].

© 25Feb48; MP2798.

53. Feb. 28, 1948. Joe Louis—gloves across the sea [Mr. and Mrs. Joe Louis sail for England on the "Queen Mary."] Ethiopia: Selassie attends Epiphany rites. India: Mountbatten calls on Maharajah [of Bikaner]. Fashions. Political fireworks begin [President Truman speaks at Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner; Henry Wallace speaks in Florida; Governor Jim Folsom of Alabama speaks on the Solid South's political dissatisfaction].

© 28Feb48; MP2820.

54. Mar. 3, 1948. Communists control Czechoslovakia. Truman the tourist [in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands]. Eisenhower in civilian clothes. Palestine and the United Nations: Warren R. Austin outlines the position of the U.S.; illegal immigrants to Palestine intercepted by British Navy; Arab volunteers trained for guerilla warfare against the Jews; the Ben Yehuda street explosion in Jerusalem.

© 3Mar48; MP2809.

55. Mar. 6, 1948. Turf classic [Santa Anita Handicap in California]. Greek Army traps rebels at frontier [Yanina, near the Albanian frontier]. A soldier remembers a promise [Colonel John Hanlon returns bedsheets borrowed in 1944 from the housewives of Hemroulle, Belgium]. First pictures from Czechoslovakia [Communist Premier Klement Gottwald denounces ministers of the former government; President Benes bows to Red demands].

© 6Mar48; MP2831.

56. Mar. 10, 1948. Basketball: Notre Dame ends NYU's [winning] streak. Washington: Czech envoy quits to oppose Reds. Republicans name Stassen and Warren. Earl Long wins in Louisiana. Sport season hears the call of the mild; [ski-jumping on Iron Mountain, Michigan; New York Giants at Phoenix, Arizona; Boston Red Sox at Sarasota, Florida].

© 10Mar48; MP2830.

57. Mar. 13, 1948. Baseball: world champions [Yankees] warm up in Florida; [Pittsburgh Pirates in Hollywood]. Truman and MacArthur will accept if nominated. Greek Army pushes border offensive. A queen comes home [figure-skating champion, Barbara Ann Scott in Montreal]. Top Turf thriller [Salmagundi wins Santa Anita Derby].

© 13Mar48; MP2856.

58. Mar. 17, 1948. Ship news: "Elizabeth" brings in celebrities [J. Arthur Rank, Mrs. Gretchen Fraser, Dick Button, former King Michael and Queen Helen of Rumania]. Dewey wins first primary [New Hampshire]. All eyes on ice champion [Barbara Ann Scott welcomed by Prime Minister Mackenzie King in Ottawa]. Tragedy behind the Iron Curtain [suicide of Czech Foreign Minister—Jan Masaryk; other scenes in Prague].

© 17Mar48; MP2857.

59. Mar. 20, 1948. Eighty-day pin derby [American Bowling Conference Annual Tournament in Detroit]. Spring football: civilian coach [George Sauer] leads Navy. British repeal 75 per cent tax on U.S. films [comments by Eric Johnston]. People in the eyes of the world: [Dick Button, figure skating champion]; romance out of a story book [radio singer Jane Froman marries airline pilot John Curtis Burn in South Miami]; [Major General Bennett E.] Meyers goes to prison. Byrnes asks action on Russia. Baseball: life with the Dodgers [in Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic].

© 20Mar48; MP2884.

60. Mar. 24, 1948. Peace in a free world: America hears the price [as President] Truman denounces Soviet. Prague [Jan Masaryk's funeral]. Brussels [Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg sign a 50–year agreement]. Paris [meeting of the 16 nations which are cooperating in the European Recovery Program]. [President Truman in New York for St. Patrick's Day ceremonies; shakes hands with Governor Dewey].

© 24Mar48; MP2885.

61. Mar. 27, 1948. Twisters rip through nine states. Hollywood awards its Oscars [Academy awards presented to Celeste Holm, Loretta Young, and Ronald Colman]. 50–1 shot captures Grand National [Sheila's Cottage wins at Aintree, England; two typical Sweepstakes winners in New York City].

© 27Mar48; MP2915.

62. Mar. 31, 1948. Report on U.S. defense; match Russia's might [Secretary of Defense Forrestal makes recommendations to Senate Armed Services Committee for expansion of U.S. military forces; Secretary of the Navy Sullivan reports the presence of alien submarines off our shores]. Art with war record [German art treasures exhibited at the National Gallery of Art in Washington]. New tests for American buzz bombs [JB–2's tested at Eglin Field, Fla.]. Golden Gloves: East vs. West [Dick Guerrero vs. Leland Pillen and Luis Ortiz vs. Wallace Smith at Madison Square Garden].

© 31Mar48; MP2916.

63. Apr. 3, 1948. [Guy] Lombardo sets speedboat mark. Air Force honors a pioneer [Brigadier General Billy Mitchell]. Roosevelt sons back Ike [Eisenhower]. Italy at the crossroads [of Democracy and Communism]. The light of faith: [Hollywood Bowl for Easter; cherry blossoms in Washington, D. C.; Easter parade on New York's Fifth Avenue].

© 3Apr48; MP2937.

64. Apr. 7, 1948. Top-flight basketball; Oilers [of Oklahoma] win Olympic trials [from Kentucky University]. Fashion news: special from Paris. Senate [Armed Services] Committee hears Wallace. A salute to the U.S. Army [Army Day, 1948].

© 7Apr48; MP2938.

65. Apr. 10, 1948. Foreign aid rushed under new law [Marshall Plan]. Ex-dishwasher [Greek immigrant] buys a [Pennsylvania] town. Canada-U.S. amity hailed at Williamsburg, Va. Now it's Grandpa Ike. Trousseau for a princess [Ann of Bourbon-Parma]. Mountbatten visits Burma.

© 10Apr48; MP2956.

66. Apr. 14, 1948. Water classic [Dixie water ski championships, Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Hoffman heads E.R.P. [European Recovery Program]. Marshall leads U.S. at parley of the Americas [at Bogota, Colombia]. Primary upset: [Harold E.] Stassen victor in Wisconsin. First pictures: Soviet, British planes crash in Berlin.

© 14Apr48; MP2957.

67. Apr. 17, 1948. Hockey champions [Toronto team defeats Detroit team in Stanley Cup finals]. Lewis ends coal strike [meeting of Senator Styles Bridges, Mr. Lewis, and Ezra Van Horn]. Kiddie on the keys [four-year old Jerard Jennings plays the piano, xylophone, and drums]. Italy's hour of decision [pre-election demonstrations].

© 17Apr48; MP2987.

68. Apr, 21, 1948. Bogota's reign of terror [scenes of the rioting which followed the assassination of Jorge Gaitan]. Fur crying out loud [fur coats for men in Hollywood]. Russia's Supreme Council in session [Stalin applauded]. England pays homage to an American [royal family present as Mrs. Roosevelt unveils statue of her husband in Grosvenor Square, London].

© 21Apr48; MP2988.

69. Apr. 24, 1948. Citation wins pre-Derby turf classic! [The Chesapeake Stakes at Havre De Grace, Md.]. Bogota, Colombia: Savage revolt leaves its mark [after revolt following assassination of Jorge Gaitan]. Play ball! [President Truman throws first ball to start major-league season, at New York-Washington game]. First pictures: Italy goes to the polls [scenes at April 14 elections, ending campaign between Communists and Christian Democrats].

© 24Apr48; MP3006.

70. Apr. 28, 1948. Air Forces stockpile in Texas [planes being taken from storage at Kelly Field, in Air Force expansion program]. Cross-wind landing gear introduced. Variety Clubs honor Marshall [present Humanitarian Award to Secretary of State George Marshall]. America sends subs to Turkey [scenes of transfer of vessels, New London, Conn.]. Reuther shooting stirs nation [United Automobile Workers' head is victim of murder attempt]. 100,000 hear De Gaulle attack Soviet Union [at Marseilles].

© 28Apr48; MP3007.

71. May 1, 1948. Famed warship ["Texas"] becomes state shrine. Mrs. Roosevelt warmly greeted in Holland. Marshall home from Bogota. Zero hour in the Holy Land. Wrestling gets a new-looker [Gorgeous George in Los Angeles].

© 1May48; MP3044.

72. May 5, 1948. Reds riot in Milan. Circus thrills amid ruins [Frankfurt, Germany]. Royalty's hour in England: [installation of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh into the Most Noble Order of the Garter; Silver Wedding Anniversary of the King and Queen].

© 5May48; MP3045.

73. May 8, 1948. Apple blossom time [at Winchester, Va.]. General [Eisenhower] takes leave of his troops at Fort Meyer, Va. May Day around the globe—Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, New York. 1948 Kentucky Derby [won by Citation].

© 8May48; MP3057.

74. May 12, 1948. Taft vs. Stassen in Ohio. Alabama rejects Truman. Dewey stumps Oregon. "Lillipup" [Chihuahua] wows Texas. Truman on housing; family life meeting hears President. Uncle Sam's women divers show form [Las Vegas, Nev.].

© 12May48; MP3058.

75. May 15, 1948. Road to friendship; Canada, U.S. hail newest highway link. News in art: fresh air sculpture in Washington Square, New York. Record exhibit: 23 countries show products at Paris fair. [In Birmingham, England, the British Industries Fair reaches record proportions]. Rail strike averted [by President].

© 15May48; MP3059.

76. May 19, 1948. Churchill sees hope in unified Europe. Wilhelmina announces abdication. Soviet-U.S. notes discussed by Marshall. French greet first ship in [Marshall] aid plan. "Right-to-work" law is urged by Cecil B. DeMille. Palestine: last films before end of mandate. Skyful of silk: Army's largest peacetime 'chute maneuver.

© 19May48; MP3060.

77. May 22, 1948. People in the eyes of the world. Paris "falls" to visitors from London [Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh]. Big names tee off in benefit drive [in Washington, Bing Crosby, General Bradley, and Attorney-General Clark lead the parade in National Celebrities Golf Tournament]. Young Democrats hear Truman in Washington. Meat strike: Minnesota calls out National Guard. Mr. America muscles in [George Zifferman of California wins weight-lifting and beauty contest]. Rally hails new state in Palestine.

© 22May48; MP3061.

78. May 26, 1948. Report from Palestine [Sir Alan Cunningham, British High Commissioner, leaves Jerusalem; new state of Israel proclaimed in Tel Aviv; Haganah troops prepare for attack; refugees set sail from Europe for Palestine; American Jewish volunteers interned at Lebanon]. Bob Hope dad to 4,000 kids [in Helldorado celebration at Las Vegas, Nev.]. Sports flash: the Paris walk [postmen's walking race]. Election in South Korea [in U.S. zone].

© 26May48; MP3092.

79. May 29, 1948. Dogdom's high society [18th Annual Morris and Essex Dog show at Madison, N.J.] U.S. meets first President of Israel [Dr. Chaim Weizmann confers with President Truman]. "Queen Mary" brings many celebrities [Ambassador Stanton Griffis, Russian Ambassador Jacob A. Malik, Mae West]. GOP hopefuls set for battle of delegates [Stassen, Dewey, Taft, and Vandenberg].

© 29May48; MP3157.

80. June 2, 1948. Palestine: days of trial [Dr. Chaim Weizmann guest of President Truman at the White House; Jewish refugees arrive at Tel Aviv]. Father Flanagan: Boys Town says farewell [mourns priest's death]. 2,460 sheep cross Coulee [Dam]. Jesse James reported alive [Colonel Frank Dalton claims to be former outlaw]. Golf classic: Hogan wins second PGA championship [St. Louis].

© 2Jun48; MP3158.

81. June 5, 1948. Taps for "Salt Lake City"; Navy sinks cruiser used in atom test. Drew Pearson receives "Father of the Year" award from [General] Eisenhower. World premiere [of "The Emperor Waltz"] in Hollywood. News on the novel side: the human fish [Margaret Hutton demonstrates swimming technique in a Los Angeles Pool; three bears in the Vienna woods].

© 5Jun48; MP3159.

82. June 9, 1948. Floods take toll. Pacific Northwest hit by raging waters [Vanport and Portland, Or.; Fraser River Valley, B.C.] News around the globe: Smuts loses in South African elections; Italy greets aid cargo from U.S.; new stamps honor heroic clergymen [the four chaplains who died on a torpedoed transport in 1943]; U.S. statesmen [James F. Byrnes and Senator Arthur Vandenberg] honored at Columbia [University]; at Brest, France, President Auriol reviews fleet. Heavyweight boxing: German champ [Hein Ten Hoff] retains title.

© 9Jun48; MP3160.

83. June 12, 1948. Heel 'n' toe classic: Harry Laskau walks into America's Olympic line-up. Canada: show window of the world. [Viscount Alexander, Canada's Governor General, opens Canadian International Trade Fair in Toronto]. Inside Czechoslovakia: [Communists take over Czechoslovakia's Parliament]. President Benes: last films before resigning. President Truman makes 10,000 mile speaking tour. English Derby run before million fans.

© 12Jun48; MP3166.

84. June 16, 1948. Water sports: tuna fish on the hook [in the Bahamas]. Three Americans [Barney Balaban, John W. McCormick, William F. Halsey] honored by inter-faith group. It's here again: the great vacation season. "Queen Mary" brings popular English actor [Sir Ralph Richardson to begin work on film adaptation of "The Heiress"]. Vandenberg assails cut in foreign aid. Palestine: cease-fire showdown [Bernadotte's truce].

© 16Jun48; MP3167.

85. June 19, 1948. Freedom train begins 10th month of tour. Zoo circus: chimps no chumps at clowning. New look gets into the swim [Paris beach wear]. Politics: presidential fireworks [Republicans in Philadelphia; Truman continues western tour]. Babe Ruth: his number becomes immortal.

© 19Jun48; MP3168.

86. June 23, 1948. U.S. sailors fight for Olympic berths. American girls rout British at Wimbledon. Nippon goes to the races. France remembers: memorial to fallen Yanks dedicated. Truman family [on West Coast]. New ocean phenomena uncovered [Swedish oceanographers film undersea life].

© 23Jun48; MP3169.

87. June 26, 1948. GOP meets to name '48 ticket. Republican National Convention opens in Philadelphia. 1094 delegates weigh the chances of favored and dark-horse candidates. Taft, Stassen, and Dewey hold featured spotlight. Governor Dwight H. Green delivers keynote address.

© 26Jun48; MP3170.

88. June 30, 1948. Dewey wins! Republican candidate for president chosen by unanimous vote. Comprehensive newsreel round-up of last days of convention. Dewey appears before convention to deliver victory address.

© 30Jun48; MP3171.

89. July 3, 1948. Berlin: new days of crisis [U.S. airplanes fly food into city; Germans exchange marks for new currency]. [Lord Louis] Mountbatten's farewell to India [retires as Governor-General]. Palestine: Haganah, Irgun clash over arms ship [at Tel Aviv]. Dewey and Warren: GOP set for big campaign [first press conference of Republican nominees; Dewey attends church at Pawling, N.Y.]. Joe Louis: champ says he'll retire [after victory over Joe Walcott]. Patty Berg wins Western [Open] Golf title [at Chicago].

© 3Jul48; MP3192.

90. July 7, 1948. Rhodes: world watches [Count Folke] Bernadotte's peace moves [for solution of Palestine problem]. Eric Johnston protests British film quota [in Washington]. Pawling, New York: the Deweys hosts to the Warrens. "Adopted" town [Maille, France] meets U.S. benefactors [Mr. and Mrs. Girard Hale of Santa Barbara, Calif.]. Eyes of the sports world on Olympics [National Track and Field Meet at University of Minnesota]. San Diego: women aquatic hopefuls.

© 7Jul48; MP3193.

91. July 10, 1948. France's turf classic: "My Love" wins the Grand Prix [de Paris]. Hero of Israel [Colonel David Marcus] brought home for burial [at U.S. Military Academy]. Czechoslovakia: first Red president [Clement Gottwald] takes over. Fashion news: furs look ahead. Good government, junior style [Youth Month in Kansas City, Mo.]. Mt. Rainier: summer skiers beat the heat.

© 10Jul48; MP3214.

92. July 14, 1948. Jap 'quake destroys an entire city [Fukui]. Bavarian Alps: tight-rope sensation two miles up [acrobatic act by Siegward Bach]. Personalities in the news: [General Eisenhower greets classes at Columbia University; leaves home for a game of golf with George Allen; California Democrats seek to draft Eisenhower for nomination; Truman is host to President Gallegos of Venezuela.] Heat-beaters: ice-cold ski-jumping [at Lake Placid, N.Y.].

© 14Jul48; MP3215.

93. July 17, 1948. Democrats take over in Philadelphia. [Eisenhower headquarters close. Pepper announces candidacy.] U.S. ready for Olympics. Final track tryouts [in Evanston, Ill.] marked by upsets. Olympic teams picked for swimming, diving [in Detroit].

© 17Jul48; MP3221.

94. July 21, 1948. Crucial test confronts Democrats. Truman and Barkley nominated at heated session. [Delegates from Alabama and Mississippi bolt convention. Truman delivers acceptance speech. Barkley is awarded vice-presidential nomination by acclamation.]

© 21Jul48; MP3222.

95. July 24, 1948. New truce for Palestine. Jews, Arabs heed order by UN. Nominees of South: states' rights convention names ticket [Thurmond of South Carolina and Wright of Mississippi]. Dodgers-to-Giants: Durocher astounds baseball [becomes new boss of the Giants]. Pershing goes to rest; U.S. in last tribute to AEF chief.

© 24Jul48; MP3223.

96. July 28, 1948. Gymnastic eyeful: 20,000 women in biggest Sokol drill [in Prague]. Vanport: flood city lifts head above waters [of Columbia River]. Master's voice saves dog [flying 3,000 miles, Queenie rejoins her master in Los Angeles]. The international scene: Berlin crisis holds number one spot [Berliners protest Russian blockade]; Clay recalled from Berlin; FBI arrests top Reds [Foster and others]; draft plans announced. [Major General Lewis B. Hershey assumes charge of draft]. B–29's arrive in England.

© 28Jul48; MP3227.

97. July 31, 1948. 1948 Olympiad: London host to topflight athletes. Week end at Pawling: Dewey keeps pace with world issues. Aquatennial: Minneapolis stages great water spectacle. Wallace party states policy; pro-Soviet line upheld by convention.

© 31Jul48; MP3242.

98. Aug. 4, 1948. Canadian ship crashes on reef [off of British Columbia]. Chicago hails 100 years of railroading. West Point goes Hollywood [and awards "Oscars"]. President calls 80th Congress in special session. Summer sports flashes: underwater aquaplanes [Silver Springs, Fla.]; Stymie retires [as world's biggest moneymaking race horse]; Cheyenne rodeo; Calgary Stampede.

© 4Aug48; MP3243.

99. Aug. 7, 1948. Aerial crossroads of the world [Truman and Dewey are present at dedication of New York's International Airport]. Israel salutes heroes on "Nation Day" [at Tel Aviv]. Blast wrecks [I. G. Farben] chemical plant in [Ludwigshafen] Germany. Spectacle and thrills mark Olympic Games [at Wembley Stadium, London. The Royal Family attends opening ceremonies.]

© 7Aug48; MP3264.

100. Aug. 11, 1948. [American Legion] Boys Forum sees government at work [in Washington]. America dominates Olympics: [record of winning performances by Uncle Sam's team in London Olympiad].

© 11Aug48; MP3265.

101. Aug. 14, 1948. Greek army advances [toward the Albanian border]; regulars close in on rebels. Canada: St. Laurent to succeed Mackenzie King. New Olympic films; sports report from London.

© 14Aug48; MP3270.

102. Aug. 18, 1948. The strange case of the Soviet teachers [Oksana Stepanova Kosenkina and Mikhail Ivanovitch Samarin]. New films from London climax action in Olympic track events.

© 18Aug48; MP3271.

103. Aug. 21, 1948. Accent on Young America; new program rallies nation to its youth; [President Truman receives new stamps commemorating Youth Month]. Babe Ruth, 1895–1948 [dies in New York]. Hiroshima, three years after [destruction by atomic attack]. Palestine: incident in no-man's land [bodies exchanged under UN observation]. Largest airborne lifeboat 'chuted from B–29 [at Mitchell Field, N.Y.]. Greatest woman Olympic star comes home [Fanny Blankers-Koen returns to Amsterdam, Holland].

© 21Aug48; MP3307.

104. Aug. 25, 1948. Greatest oil discovery in Canada [new field opened at Edmonton, Alberta; gusher out of control]. Babe Ruth goes to rest [body lies in state; requiem mass at St. Patrick's, New York]. Korea republic proclaimed. [New President Rhee greets General MacArthur]. Olympic fade-out: final events and closing ceremonies [at London].

© 25Aug48; MP3308.

1948/49.

1. Aug. 28, 1948. Middies, cadets join forces in amphibious test [on Virginia coast]. Cologne Cathedral reopened for seven hundredth anniversary. [Secretary of Defense] Forrestal talks defense plans with Canada [at Ottawa, attends policy meeting at Newport, R.I.]. Axis Sally [Mildred Elizabeth Gillars] faces trial for treason [in Washington]. [Tokyo Rose (Iva Toguri) also under charges]. Grid preview: [Chicago] Cardinals beat [College] All-Stars [in Chicago]. Seattle, Washington sail classic [North American Star Boat Sailing Championships].

© 28Aug48; MP3312.

2. Sept. 1, 1948. Soviet rejects U.S. note on teachers [severs consular relations after Kosenkina protest]. Back to school fashions. [Alger] Hiss vs. [Whittaker] Chambers: key witnesses face to face at spy hearing [before House Un-American Activities Committee]. Heat wave [temperatures near record levels in New York].

© 1Sep48; MP3313.

3. Sept. 4, 1948. Best on the ice; skate stars preview gayest carnival [Ice Capades of 1949]. World churchmen meet in Amsterdam. Headlines, news, and people: draft call inductions set for November; Soviet Consul [Jacob Lomakin] sails from New York; U.S. Olympic stars home after London sweep. Red hot football; temperature 99 degrees [Dodgers vs. Yankees].

© 4Sep48; MP3353.

4. Sept. 8, 1948. Ship news; celebrities sail aboard Queen Mary. Wilhelmina of Holland ends 50 year reign. Football, collegians get ready: Irish eye third straight national crown; Army rated tops in East; Navy faces tough schedule.

© 8Sep48; MP3354.

5. Sept. 11, 1948. UN moves to France; Paris ready for delegates of 58 nations. School daze; twirlers learn tricks with the sticks [Huntsville, Texas]. Aid for Greece; U.S. builds bridges to speed recovery. The novel in fashions. China fights inflation with money reforms.

© 11Sep48; MP3371.

6. Sept. 15, 1948. Spirit of the dance; amateur hoofers wow crowds at Harvest Ball [Madison Square Garden, New York]. Campaign fireworks; Truman, Stassen deliver opening verbal blasts. Juliana takes oath as Dutch ruler.

© 15Sep48; MP3372.

7. Sept. 18, 1948. Boston baseball fever; Beantown eyes first subway series [as Braves and Red Sox lead major leagues]. Russia drives for rule of Berlin. U.S. united on foreign policy, says Vandenberg. Pope spurs anti-Red campaign. Stars aid charity; Hollywood under the big top.

© 18Sep48; MP3393.

8. Sept. 22, 1948. Newest on the rails [20th Century Limited]. Elections: "As Maine goes, so goes ...?" [Maine goes Republican]. Campaign for packages aids European needy. Ground broken for UN capitol [in New York City]. Youth of the Year [Bob Mathias and Arthur Cook greeted by Truman]. Brandenburg Gate incident in Berlin. Czechoslovakia mourns Benes. Football: Giants trim Bears for charity.

© 22Sep48; MP3394.

9. Sept. 25, 1948. Presidential race quickens; Truman, Dewey swing West on big tours. Babes in the news [quadruplets in Great Britain]. Marshall's busy days: [receives Humanitarian Award of 1947 by Variety Clubs International; flys to Paris for meeting of United Nations General Assembly]. Bernadotte assassination rocks UN. Jet plane sets world speed mark, 671 m.p.h.

© 25Sep48; MP3398.

10. Sept. 29, 1948. Winds on rampage; $25,000,000 loss as hurricane rips Florida. Vive Cerdan; French battler wins middleweight boxing crown. Bernadotte: body of slain UN mediator flown home. Dewey vs. Truman; highlights of Western campaign trips. Amazing new aircraft "Parasite Jet" [XF–85] flown for first time.

© 29Sep48; MP3399.

11. Oct. 2, 1948. Top performers keep 'em laughing at AAF reunion [boxing bout between Bob Hope and Jack Dempsey]. Last rites for Bernadotte in Sweden. Nation hails return of King Football [California vs. Navy; Notre Dame vs. Purdue; Army vs. Villanova].

© 2Oct48; MP3425.

12. Oct. 6, 1948. Truman or Dewey? Presidential race enters final weeks. "Lab in sky" speeds television, radar progress [I. T. & T. electronic engineers probe the secrets of microwaves]. United Nations, new war of words [debate in Paris]. Italian Reds rally for Togliatti in Rome. First pictures of Politburo at Zhdanov funeral in Moscow. Break-neck stunts [Joie Chitwood and his Auto Daredevils].

© 6Oct48; MP3426.

13. Oct. 9, 1948. World Series fever: Cleveland meets Braves, with [Bob] Hope. President Truman's Washington homecoming. GI's insurance sends Jap ex-pilot to U.S. college. Sports: Citation wins Belmont classic by 8 lengths; Northwestern upsets Purdue; North Carolina beats Georgia.

© 9Oct48; MP3446.

14. Oct. 13, 1948. Coast Guard saves 23 from plane on [Florida] Keys. Report on Palestine [Bartley Crum returns from the Holy Land]. 1948 World Series.

© 13Oct48; MP3447.

15. Oct. 16, 1948. Marshall's flying visit from Paris. Churchill urges U.S. to keep atom bomb. Cleveland takes the [World] Series. Football game of the week: Army vs. Illinois.

© 16Oct48; MP3480.

16. Oct. 20, 1948. "Little Henry," world's first ram-jet helicopter. Speedboat racing; weirdest water arena [Danbury, Conn.] The Dewey story [a film presentation of the life of Thomas Dewey].

© 20Oct48; MP3481.

17. Oct. 23, 1948. Gridiron heat wave: 86,000 see mighty Michigan crush [Northwestern] Wildcats; Penn beats Columbia in final seconds. The Truman story [a film presentation of the life of Harry S. Truman].

© 23Oct48; MP3482.

18. Oct. 27, 1948. Stephenson paces Army win over Harvard. North Japan floods take awful toll. General Clay [gives] first hand report on Berlin. General MacArthur host to President [Syngman Rhee] of Korea. Eric Johnston gives views after trip to Russia. Governor Dewey calls for unity in world affairs. Invasion; American Legion wins Miami "beachhead" [10,000 attend National Convention].

© 27Oct48; MP3483.

19. Oct. 30, 1948. UN, Paris: Reds veto bid to end Berlin crisis. France seeks showdown in mine strike. First DPs sail under new U.S. law. Coast-to-coast battle of ballots. College football parade: Penn state vs. Michigan State; Minnesota vs. Michigan.

© 30Oct48; MP3527.

20. Nov. 3, 1948. France's labor crisis; latest films of mine strike. Troubled China celebrates Independence Day. Fashions: Navy goes overboard for new look. The story behind the airlift, Berlin. Roller Derby highlights fall sports.

© 3Nov48; MP3528.

21. Nov. 6, 1948. Nation hails Marine Corps on anniversary. First DPs arrive in New York. Morgenthau reports on Palestine trip. Football's parade of champions: California vs. USC, Georgia Tech vs. Duke, Notre Dame vs. Navy.

© 6Nov48; MP3533.

22. Nov, 10, 1948. Israeli victory in Negeb desert fighting. Truman's smashing victory [with 304 electoral votes].

© 10Nov48; MP3534.

23. Nov. 13, 1948. Washington's greatest victory show. Capital welcomes Truman. Football: Army power crushes Stanford. 80,000 see Penn State topple Penn.

© 13Nov48; MP3544.

24. Nov. 17, 1948. Snowbirds [on Mt. Rainier] rush season for ski doings. France: Troops restore order in mine crisis. Tanks come out of mothballs [Tacoma, Wash.]; Army introduces its newest tank [the General Patton] at Maryland's Aberdeen Proving Ground. Fashions? Look what Paris has! Touchdown parade: Missouri is shown by Oklahoma.

© 17Nov48; MP3545.

25. Nov. 20, 1948. Riots in Paris; police battle Reds on peace anniversary. Justice—Tojo and company sentenced. It's a boy for Princess Elizabeth. Patton tank christened by widow. "Red Dean" [Hewlett Johnson] visits U.S. Fightin' football: Irish rally to beat Northwestern; Army vs. Penn, Cadets win in final seconds.

© 20Nov48; MP3571.

26. Nov. 24, 1948. Bikini vet ends career; Navy sinks cruiser Pensacola. An American family [the Trumans] vacations in Florida. Canada welcomes new Prime Minister [Louis St. Laurent]. Nation's youngest Governor [Herman Eugene Talmadge of Georgia]. Milady looks to '49; hats on to fashions. Cleveland wins 10th straight to top pro grid.

© 24Nov48; MP3585.

27. Nov. 27, 1948. Latest jet: Navy's "flying wing" fighter [XF7U–1]. Hollywood stars off to London via Canada. Our busy President [in Key West, Fla., at Blair House, Washington, and at the Washington airport greeting Secretary of State Marshall]. Football: Southern Methodist vs. Baylor; Michigan vs. Ohio State; Harvard vs. Yale.

© 27Nov48; MP3589.

28. Dec. 1, 1948. Aviation's mighty mite: Wee-Bee plane in debut. Amazing salt harvest, Puerto Rico. 1948 touchdown review; the season's All-America plays.

© 1Dec48; MP3590.

29. Dec. 4, 1948. Army vs. Navy. Underdog Navy ties unbeaten Army [in football game.] President Truman sees game.

© 4Dec48; MP3604.

30. Dec. 8, 1948. Flight tests prove worth of air brakes [at Caldwell, N.J.] "Yankee Doodle" in Tokyo [children play tunes learned from GI's]. [Baby six months old floats in swimming pool.] From Hollywood sheer nonsense [stockings]. Reds claim Suchow. Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek seeks aid for China's government. From Suchow [combat pictures of crucial battle].

© 8Dec48; MP3605.

31. Dec. 11, 1948. New spy evidence. Government seizes microfilms of stolen data [found in pumpkin]. Stars over London [screen luminaries, Billy de Wolfe and others, meet the Royal Family]. President salutes the "Mighty Mo" at Norfolk, Virginia. Christmas comes but once a year. Upset! USC ties mighty Notre Dame.

© 11Dec48; MP3640.

32. Dec. 15, 1948. World's biggest warplane, B–36, gets screen test. Washington: new sensations at spy inquiry [by House Un-American

## Activities Committee]. Bogus $10 and $20 bills flood big cities.

Report from China: evacuation of U.S. civilians from Shanghai; 1200 U.S. marines arrive at Tsingtao.

© 15Dec48; MP3641.

33. Dec. 18, 1948. [Kaman] helicopter magic. Preview of tomorrow's flight [in Windsor Locks, Conn.]. Women [Wacs and Waves] in uniform make news. Quebec welcomes a favorite son [Louis St. Laurent, Prime Minister of Canada]. Newfoundland signs to join Canada. Pre-holiday visit with President Truman. Palm Desert, Calif.—wasteland to wonderland.

© 18Dec48; MP3665.

34. Dec. 22, 1948. Gloves in bloom; from New York sidewalks to boxing fame [Madison Square Boys' Clubs]. "Sinbad" [gorilla] makes debut [in Chicago zoo]. China ship [Kianyga] disaster. UN ends Paris session. Charity at Yuletide [Cardinal Spellman at New York foundling hospital].

© 22Dec48; MP3666.

35. Dec. 25, 1948. Kitty Hawk presented to National Museum. Baby Prince [Charles of Edinburgh] makes debut before cameras [at christening]. Movie celebrities [Alan Ladd, Sue Carol, and Joan Caulfield] home for the holidays. Attorney General Clark urges stronger espionage laws. Pro grid finals: Cleveland routs Buffalo; "Snow Bowl" Eagles down Cardinals in blizzard [at Philadelphia].

© 25Dec48; MP3678.

36. Dec. 29, 1948. Intersectional basketball thrills big city [at Madison Square Garden]. French raze Red radio towers [in Berlin]. From Paris, a hat to fit your profile. Ku Klux Klan initiation ceremonies [in Georgia; Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt cites child membership as hate-breeding].

© 29Dec48; MP3679.

37. Jan. 1, 1949. Headline news stories of 1948: Harry S. Truman, man of the year; revolt in Bogota; Hiss versus Chambers; Oksana Kosenkina; Olympic games; Gandhi, India's last tribute; Palestine, a state is born; the Berlin crisis; the airlift; the UN in 1948.

© 1Jan49; MP3730.

38. Jan. 5, 1949. Atom ore; pitchblende bonanza in Colorado. U.S. returns original Magna Carta to England. Pact signed ending ban on recordings. 1948 in sports.

© 5Jan49; MP3731.

39. Jan. 8, 1949. Football welcomes New Year. 1949 Bowl games: [The Longhorns of Texas meet the Bulldogs of Georgia in the Orange Bowl; Northwestern and California fight in Rose Bowl; Southern Methodists triumph over Oregon in the Cotton Bowl]. Stars over Berlin: Operation Good Cheer. [Prominent American entertainers and public figures bring a touch of home to the men of the Berlin Airlift].

© 8Jan49; MP3760.

40. Jan. 12, 1949. Nature hits hard across the nation. [Blizzard strikes in the Rocky Mountain states, sweeping eastward across the Middle West. 120 homes demolished by tornado in Warren, Ark.] Truman asks: Tax boost, inflation control, Labor Act repeal. President outlines "Fair Deal" program as Congress meets with Democrats in control. Sports highlights: Clemson noses out Missouri [at Jacksonville's Gator Bowl]; Skiing—at your door [on the slopes of Mt. Hood, Oregon].

© 12Jan49; MP3761.

41. Jan. 15, 1949. Rockies area hit anew in worst winter. Cairo: last rites for [Nokrashy Pasha], Egypt's slain premier. George C. Marshall—a statesman steps down. Child minister's wedding rite stirs debate.

© 15Jan49; MP3801.

42. Jan. 19, 1949. Russia's big show; 31st anniversary of Bolshevik Revolution. Weather flash; snow in California. Dean Acheson testifies before Senate Committee. U.S. tightens patrol on Mexico border [to check illegal immigration of Mexican laborers]. Curtain time for kiddies [Punch and Judy shows in Austria].

© 19Jan49; MP3802.

43. Jan. 22, 1949. Pilotless jet [Gorgon IV] in longest flight. Rocket ship climbs 13,000 feet in a minute. Lookin' to spring, "Miss Budget" picks cotton. Washington: Truman "joins" a union [American Federation of Musicians]. Paris: Garry Davis opens drive for "world citizens." New York: top U.S. Reds go on trial. Ski jump classic [Fox River Grove, Ill.]; Olympic champ from Norway wins U.S. meet.

© 22Jan49; MP3807.

44. Jan. 26, 1949. The inauguration of Harry S. Truman.

© 26Jan49; MP3808.

45. Jan. 29, 1949. China at the crossroads [Chiang Kai-Shek leaves for a self-imposed exile and General Li Tsung-jen, successor to Chiang, sues for peace with Communists]. Rhodes: Egypt-Israel armistice talks. Palestine: Israel air force at rites for RAF pilot. Near Haifa [young people from Canada, United States, and Mexico arrive to build "All-American" Israel settlement]. Acheson officially takes over [as Secretary of State]. Skate festival [Hollywood Ice Revue].

© 29Jan49; MP3809.

46. Feb. 2, 1949. Film record of Russia's "peace offensive." "Cold war" over best seller ["I Chose Freedom" by Victor Kravchenko]. News on the novel side: [Willa Worthington makes bathing suits of metalic fabrics. Tiny Koala bears in Australia.] Fastest bomber [XB–47] in super-jet take-off.

© 2Feb49; MP3810.

47. Feb. 5, 1949. Israel 8 months after statehood [holds first election]. Canadian Parliament opens. Report from the western blizzard front. Distance Stars from Europe in Millrose meet [at Madison Square Garden].

© 5Feb49; MP3837.

48. Feb. 9, 1949. French say 'merci' for our bounty [with Gratitude Train]. UN commission pushed search for Palestine peace. Senate debates new labor bill. First pictures: Soviet moves all troops from Korea. Norwegian wings 290 feet in U.S. ski meet.

© 9Feb49; MP3838.

49. Feb. 12, 1949. Baseball's $100,000 success story; a guy named Joe [DiMaggio]. Tokyo: Royall begins tour of Pacific defenses. Pilots who fled Russia start tour. Marshall Plan youth [high school students from 14 nations] meet President Truman. Capital hails 'thank you' train [from Paris]. Dramatic first films: retreat from Nanking.

© 12Feb49; MP3839.

50. Feb. 16, 1949. Protests grow over sentencing of Mindszenty. Washington: Dewey gives formula for saving G.O.P. India: one year after death of Gandhi. "Most popular star": fans again pick Crosby. A salute to Brotherhood Week.

© 16Feb49; MP3840.

51. Feb. 19, 1949. Bridge collapses on trains near Paris. Boy Scouts report to the "Boss" [twelve Eagle Scouts visit President Truman]. Cairo students study world's oldest pyramid. Canada's Premier visits Washington for major talks. Bowling Congress [annual tournament in Atlantic City]. Varsity skiing: Washington U. wins from Canada's best [Banff, Alberta]. Yachting special: rough winter skippers in Miami classic [16th annual Lipton Cup Race].

© 19Feb49; MP3885.

52. Feb. 23, 1949. Consistory in Rome [denounces the Hungarian trial of Cardinal Mindszenty]. Baseball's Gardella case. A night at the dog show [73rd Westminster Kennel Club show in New York]. Sky power: President sees Air Force's biggest show [at Andrews Field, Maryland].

© 23Feb49; MP3886.

53. Feb. 26, 1949. Royall reports on the Far East. For Milady, scarves set new style note. Romance rumor links Princess Margaret to a commoner [former Army Captain Tom Egerton]. Bob Hope receives "Achievement Award" [presented by Look Magazine]. Israel makes history: First Assembly convenes in Jerusalem.

© 26Feb49; MP3905.

54. Mar. 2, 1949. 300,000 hear Pope denounce Communism. Israel, Egypt sign armistice. [First films of the inaugural of Dr. Chaim Weizmann as President of Israel]. The economic state of the Union [Leon H. Keyserling surveys America's economic condition].

© 2Mar49; MP3906.

55. Mar. 5, 1949. War report from Greece. Israel, Arabs begin exchange of prisoners. News from Germany: Red troops mark Army Day in Berlin; Fritz Kuhn freed, seeks U.S. citizenship. Fashion debate—hemlines long or short?

© 5Mar49; MP3940.

56. Mar. 9, 1949. Spring and baseball, they'll soon be here [New York Yankees at St. Petersburg, Fla.] Cardinal Spellman leads students digging graves. B–50 hops around globe non-stop. The champ hangs up his gloves [Joe Louis officially retires and turns promoter].

© 9Mar49; MP3941.

57. Mar. 12, 1949. Baseball's world champions [Cleveland Indians] look to '49—with [Bob] Hope. Soviet mission forced to quit U.S. zone [Frankfurt]. News diary of the First Family [President Truman receives outgoing and incoming Secretaries of Defense; leaves for Key West, Fla. Margaret Truman christens the "Clipper America."] Security Council votes Israel's admission to UN. Sports spectacle; basketball's greatest "freeze" [Minnesota Lakers vs. Harlem Globe Trotters].

© 12Mar49; MP3948.

58. Mar. 16, 1949. Odom flies Hawaii-N.J.; gas costs $75. Russia returns lend-leased U.S. cruiser [the Milwaukee]. Danish minister [Gustav Rasmussen] in U.S. for pact talks. Axis Sally guilty of treason. Modern version: Great train robbery! [Two desperadoes rob a B&O express near Martinsburg, W. Va.] Smallest engine, smallest car [makes its debut in Munich, Germany].

© 16Mar49; MP3961.

59. Mar. 19. 1949. Baseball's "elder statesman" [Connie Mack in Florida with the Philadelphia Athletics]. Restore temple [at Karnak on the Nile] destroyed by 'quake in 27 B.C. "Canada Day" at West Point. Science news: world's lightest solid [plastic foam]. Czechoslovakia, one year after the Red seizure. Speed in sports: 200–mile cycle derby [Daytona Beach, Fla.]; amateur Grand National [Hunt Steeplechase at Cheltenham, Eng.].

© 19Mar49; MP3983.

60. Mar. 23, 1949. Springtime on skis in Alberta [new ski lift opens at Banff]. Israel's first trans-Atlantic cargo ship [the S. S. Haifa is dedicated in New York. Moshe Sharett, Israeli Foreign Minister, comes to U.S. for conference on the United Jewish Appeal]. For atom workers: remote control hands [shown at the Argonne National laboratory in Chicago]. Russians transfer "Milwaukee." [Lend-leased vessel reverts to the American Navy]. Spectacular waterfront fire in California [Army dock and warehouse at Oakland become smoking ruins].

© 23Mar49; MP3962.

61. Mar. 26, 1949. The Atlantic Pact. An analysis of the significant aims embodied in the proposed twenty-year treaty.

© 26Mar49; MP3984.

62. Mar. 30, 1949. West Berlin outlaws Red currency. Graphic report on China's "Last Bastion" [on the island of Formosa]. Easter fashions are "ooh la la." Welcome for Winnie [Churchill arrives in America]. When in Greece, Yankee sees, Yankee does [members of American armed forces sight-see in Athens].

© 30Mar49; MP3985.

63. Apr. 2, 1949. Peace parley [of the Cultural and Scientific Conference for World Peace meeting in New York]. Oscars: Hollywood makes annual awards. Peron takes oath of new constitution. Grand National: 66–1 shot wins classic at Aintree [England].

© 2Apr49; MP4012.

64. Apr. 6, 1949. Water artistry [at Cypress Gardens, Fla., by Willa Worthington, water-ski champion]. Queen Mary docks in New York with Andrei Gromyko and foreign ministers of Belgium, Luxembourg and England aboard. New Defense chief [Louis Johnson] meets the press. UN seeks peace for the entire Middle East. "Gorilla" flees zoo; climbs Eiffel Tower.

© 6Apr49; MP4013.

65. Apr. 9, 1949. Newcomers win titles in National AAU swim meet. Newfoundland welcomed as 10th province. For the cause of peace, twelve nations sign [North Atlantic] pact in Washington.

© 9Apr49; MP4032.

66. Apr. 13, 1949. Nation salutes men in khaki: Army Day, 1949. Tragic hospital fire in [Effingham] Illinois. Mailman makes "gem" of a delivery [$1,500,000 worth of precious stones]. Pope Pius XII marks 50 years of priesthood. General Assembly [of UN] meets in New York.

© 13Apr49; MP4033.

67. Apr. 16, 1949. The Kathy drama [body of Kathy Fiscus recovered from abandoned well at San Marino, Calif.] Greek King re-opens historic Corinth Canal. China: tension mounts amid bids for peace. Speed in sports: break-neck cycle race [at the Montreuil motor course, France]; dressy turf opening at Longchamp [in Paris].

© 16Apr49; MP4059.

68. Apr. 20, 1949. What price housing? [Analysis of the need for new homes, as Congressional debate on the Government's housing bill is opened].

© 20Apr49; MP4060.

69. Apr. 23, 1949. Acting UN mediator, Ralph Bunche, arrives in New York from Palestine. Stephen T. Early appointed first Undersecretary of Defense. Burt Lancaster returns to the circus. A day of devotions [Easter]. Baseball gets down to business [President Truman throws the first pitch in the 1949 season; Red Cross distributes booklet "Care and Protection of Dodger Fans"; Grantland Rice selects Boston Red Sox and Pittsburgh Pirates].

© 23Apr49; MP4089.

70. Apr. 27, 1949. DP's stage anti-Communist demonstration [Munich]. Taxes slashed in Canada. News portraits of Farouk and beautiful sisters. Truman rallies nation to bond drive. Erin hails birth of Republic of Ireland.

© 27Apr49; MP4090.

71. Apr. 30, 1949. Olympia wins Wood Memorial by a neck [at Jamaica race-track]. World's record: [96 painters] paint vet's house in 2 min., 32 seconds. New "cure" reported [Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey circus visits Bellevue Hospital]. China: decisive stage of civil war.

© 30Apr49; MP4091.

72. May 4, 1949. California fliers set endurance mark [1008 hours in the air]. Philip Jessup and Andrei Gromyko arrive to open negotiations on lifting Berlin blockade. Secretary of State Acheson speaks before Senate Foreign Relations Committee for ratification of North Atlantic Pact. World Congress of Partisans of Peace assembles in Paris. Steve Belloise scores technical knockout over Jean Stock [Paris].

© 4May49; MP4092.

73. May 7, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted! May Day, U.S. and abroad: orations delivered by Communists and pro-Allies at Brandenburg Gate, Berlin; Communists' parade, and DeGaulle's rightists stage rally in Paris; parades in New York City. Runnin' on water; zany skiers skip over the waves [Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Shanghai—the great exodus. Blossom Festival [Winchester, Va.]; [Bob] Hope bobs for the apple.

© 7May49; MP4139.

74. May 18, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted: [preparations being made in Berlin; New York City is scene of historic agreement.] Freedom's timetable: European Recovery Program; Western European defensive unity; North Atlantic Pact; agreement on Berlin. Frankfort, Germany: report on steps toward Western German Republic. Exclusive interview with Gen. Lucius D. Clay. Tribute to the men of the Berlin airlift.

© 18May49; MP4140.

75. May 21, 1949. $5,000,000 race track fire [Hollywood Park]. Variety Clubs honor [Herbert] Hoover. Report from Shanghai; last-ditch defenses. "Little Four" [Collins quadruplets] born in New York. Ponder, 16–1 wins Kentucky Derby.

© 21May49; MP4158.

76. May 25, 1949. Executions in streets of Shanghai. Hague machine smashed in Jersey City. Israel wins United Nations membership. Marines test "invasion" with helicopters [at Quantico war games]. The amazing Acrojets [F–80 Jet planes presented by Air Force].

© 25May49; MP4157.

77. May 28, 1949. Thrill-packed Preakness: Capot beats Palestinian by a head. Berlin freed from the blockade. I am an American: we reaffirm faith in our government. [U.S. citizens restate their allegiance on "I am an American Day."]

© 28May49; MP4209.

78. June 1, 1949. [Hollywood] stars help launch big bond drive [in Independence, Mo.] Washington greets Brazil's chief executive [Eurico Gaspar Dutra]. F.D.R., Jr. [of New York] elected to Congress. U.S. salutes hero of the peace: General Clay honored as he retires.

© 1Jun49; MP4210.

79. June 4, 1949. Big Four open talks on Germany. Nation mourns Forrestal. Border fiesta; eyes of Texas on Laredo. Names and events on the sports scene: crown new Mr. America; one-woman track team [Fanny Blankers-Koen winner at Ninth Annual Coliseum Relays at Los Angeles]; Dempsey referees mat title bout.

© 4Jun49; MP4249.

80. June 8, 1949. Key issues debated by Big Four Council in Paris. Lest we forget [program on Memorial Day and the fifth anniversary of D-Day].

© 8Jun49; MP4250.

81. June 11, 1949. West Germany constitution comes into force. Newest [trailer] coaches hit the open road. President Dutra Inspects TVA installations. Admiral Kirk sworn in as ambassador to Russia. Lilienthal testifies at atom probe. News on the novel side: unicycle demonstrated in Bordeaux, France; 55 Hamadryads arrive at the Munich, Germany, zoo.

© 11Jun49; MP4251.

82. June 15, 1949. Snead wins PGA title 2nd time. Eisler freed; will not return to U.S. General Clay bids the army farewell. British royalty sees "trooping the colors." Rita [Hayworth] and Aly [Khan] take their vows.

© 15Jun49; MP4252.

83. June 18, 1949. Crosby, Hope tee off with Capital "brass." Marshall honored for aid to world. Russia's biggest show of might [May Day parade in Moscow].

© 18Jun49; MP4258.

84. June 22, 1949. Soviet aims enforced at Czech Congress. Workers' protest rally turns into riot [Tokyo]. Franco opens Spanish Parliament. Congressman Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., in Israel. First woman U.S. Treasurer takes over [Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark]. Next heavy champ—Walcott or Charles? Tuna stalkers have field day in Bahamas.

© 22Jun49; MP4259.

85. June 25, 1949. Close finish in National Open golf. Truman meets buddies [in Little Rock, Ark.]; makes major address. Will Rogers Hospital taken over by Variety Clubs. Britain honors George VI on 53rd birthday.

© 25Jun49; MP4325.

86. June 29, 1949. Ku Klux Klan in headlines again [initiates new members at Stone Mountain, Ga.] "Little England" puts on the dog [annual dog show at Hyde Park, London]. Mr. [Franklin D.] Roosevelt [Jr.] goes to Washington. Stand up and be counted, a preview of the 1950 census.

© 29Jun49; MP4326.

87. July 2, 1949. Cyclists from U.S. and Canada ride in New Hampshire. Financial page: how a crisis in wheat was averted. Gaullist, Red rallies bring out 20,000 police. Cleveland: baseball fan a pole-sitter 'til tribe leads. Beach styles in a "glass" by themselves. Mister, your hat [hats for men by West Coast designer].

© 2Jul49; MP4347.

88. July 6, 1949. Ezzard Charles beats Walcott in title bout. July Fourth, a salute to our country—a special documentary-newsreel production.

© 6Jul49; MP4348.

89. July 9, 1949. U.S. stars aid French charity drive. Texan weds granddaughter of late Kaiser [Wilhelm]. Florida Governor [Fuller Warren] weds girl from California. Greatest show of man-made lightning [General Electric's high-voltage engineering laboratory at Pittsfield, Mass.] Premier Tito bids for trade with the West. Regatta: Golden Bears win on the Hudson.

© 9Jul49; MP4357.

90. July 13, 1949. Unique rites mark feast of St. Paulinus [at Nola, Italy]. U.S. mobilization plan urged by Baruch. Canada votes; Liberal Party wins in landslide. Baseball: Joe DiMaggio returns to line-up. Square dancing by moonlight [New York Central Park].

© 13Jul49; MP4358.

91. July 16, 1949. Nocturnal aquatics in Puerto Rico. New president of World Bank [Eugene R. Black]. Irene Dunne receives award from Notre Dame. Judith Coplon convicted of espionage. American GI [welcomes] Chinese orphan [in New York].

© 16Jul49; MP4373.

92. July 20, 1949. 2900–mile bike race; 120 cyclists begin grueling "Tour de France." Western Europe unites in mass fleet maneuvers. New Red menace for Japan [2,000 Japanese soldiers return from Soviet prison camps]. Lake Placid, N.Y., ice-cold ski jumping. Wimbledon: America's Ted Schroeder wins tennis final.

© 20Jul49; MP4374.

93. July 23, 1949. "All star" baseball; movie favorites go to bat for hospital fund. New drive on for cuts in luxury taxes [Senator Edwin C. Johnson explains the bill]. Automatic drive in; hamburgers a la push button. Crippling dock strikes [in Honolulu and London].

© 23Jul49; MP4388.

94. July 27, 1949. Tragic air crashes in California and India. Truman reports on economic state of the nation. American League All Stars whip Nationals.

© 27Jul49; MP4389.

95. July 30, 1949. Gay Paris celebrates Bastille Day. Fire destroys big movie stage in Munich. Tokyo receives gift of animals from Salt Lake City. President signs bill for vast building program. Rare films of a future king [Prince Charles of England].

© 30Jul49; MP4509.

96. Aug. 3, 1949. Truman speech follows 5–hour Shriner parade [in Chicago]. Jackie Robinson testifies on Negro loyalty. Airliner crashes into homes [Seattle]. France bids for return to sea power [luxury liner, Ile de France returns to trans-Atlantic passenger service].

© 3Aug49; MP4510.

97. Aug. 6, 1949. Latest films from strike waterfronts: London walkout ends; Hawaii sees violence. President Truman signs North Atlantic Treaty. Israel honors heroes on first Army Day [in Tel Aviv]. Minnesota celebrates Aquatennial [in Minneapolis]. Argentina hails 133rd year of independence [in Buenos Aires]. U.S. Tars make flat top their training field [the football squad of the Pacific Fleet on the U.S.S. Boxer].

© 6Aug49; MP4436.

98. Aug. 10, 1949. Ile de France makes Atlantic postwar debut. 1,000,000 attend funeral of Korean patriot [Kim Koo, in Seoul]. Churchill blasts British Labor Party. Sport news around the globe: Charles, Lesnevich set for bout for heavyweight crown; new swim stars thrill Japan [Konishin Furuhashi and Shirou Hashizume, in Tokyo].

© 10Aug49; MP4437.

99. Aug. 13, 1949. 1,000,000 hear Pandit Nehru hit Communism. Danes re-invade Britain after 1,500 years [a mock raid at Broadstairs, England]. Probe "buzzing" in fatal air collision [above New Jersey]. Sports: U.S. retains international speedboat trophy [the Harmsworth Trophy]; Ponder wins rich turf classic [at Arlington].

© 13Aug49; MP4438.

100. Aug. 17, 1949. U.S. declares war on grasshoppers. Local boys meet their government [100 boys of the American Legion Forum, in Washington]. Greece: guerilla power wanes; refugees flock back home. A 75th birthday salute [to] Herbert Hoover, only living ex-president of the United States.

© 17Aug49; MP4439.

101. Aug. 20, 1949. Watercade thrills 3,000 at benefit show [for the Lou Costello Jr. Youth Foundation, in Hollywood]. Sawdust trail to the silver screen [Cecil B. DeMille studies the Ringling Brothers' Circus, in Chicago]. China, the story of a nation's defeat: State Department's "White Paper" on China reveals failure of Nationalist regime; new course charted for America's anti-Communist policy in Far East.

© 20Aug49; MP4452.

102. Aug. 24, 1949. The tops in sports. "Miss Tilly" trots off with the Hambletonian. Mangrum wins rich golf prize by a 3–foot putt [in Chicago]. President of Philippines [Elpidio Quirino] in New York. Monkey vs. parrot [at the Parrot Jungle, in Miami]. On-the-spot-coverage: Ecuador earthquake.

© 24Aug49; MP4453.

103. Aug. 27, 1949. Hometown boy winner of Soapbox Derby [Freddie Derks of Akron]. Syria's President [Husni Zayim] and Premier [Muhsen Berazi] are executed. Dame fashion says, ties right. Barkley dedicates airport [Paducah, Ky.] West Germany goes to the polls.

© 27Aug49; MP4511.

104. Aug. 31, 1949. World's biggest rodeo [Los Angeles Coliseum]. The Senate "5 percenter" investigation. Atlanta mourns a first citizen [Margaret Mitchell]. [Dr. Otis Barton goes] down under the sea in a steel ball [off Santa Cruz Island, Calif.] New steps toward a unified Europe [at the Alsatian city of Strasbourg].

© 31Aug49; MP4512.

1949.

1. Sept. 3, 1949. Greatest swim performance on record [Tokyo team at the National AAU meet]. Harry Truman's busy day: Washington to Miami [to attend the national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars] and back. First tests for Gar Wood's "no-roll" boat. Honor baseball's "elder statesman" [Connie Mack].

© 3Sep49; MP4546.

2. Sept. 14, 1949. Forest fires hit southwest France. Theodor Herzl reburied in Jerusalem. President Truman [signs proclamation for the Atlantic Pact]. Tom C. Clark [sworn in as member of Supreme Court]. Philip Mickman [youngest person to swim the English channel]. Ecuador—how a stunned nation is digging out [from an earthquake].

© 14Sep49; MP4547.

3. Sept. 17, 1949. The great Florida hurricane. Canada opens biggest "show window" [70th annual National Exhibition in Toronto]. Truman tells aims of British-U.S. dollar talks. "Little World Series" [Pensacola, Fla., vs. Hammonton, N.J.]. U.S. retains Davis Cup.

© 17Sep49; MP4548.

4. Sept. 21, 1949. [American] Legion "invades" Philadelphia [at their 31st annual convention]. Drama on the Washington scene [Senate Committee investigating five-percenters questions John Maragon and Major General Vaughan]. Fancy blades in hot capers on frozen stage [Ice Capades of 1950 at Atlantic City].

© 21Sep49; MP4549.

5. Sept. 24, 1949. Football back in headlines [Notre Dame, the New York Giants, and University of Georgia]. Shoes to conquer dame fashion. Spotlight on the Balkans [Marshal Tito closes Yugoslav-Greek frontier; Greek Army fights Communist guerrillas].

© 24Sep49; MP4592.

6. Sept. 28, 1949. President Truman [makes a policy address in Pittsburgh]. Shirley May France [fails in attempt to swim English Channel]. Robeson concert erupts into violence [Peekskill, N.Y.] [British officials arrive in New York to discuss] the big dollar question. Gonzales beats Schroeder for U.S. singles title.

© 28Sep49; MP4593.

7. Oct. 1, 1949. Sports special. Baseball's big push. [Behind the scenes with the St. Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Yankees, and Boston Red Sox; last-minute predictions.]

© 1Oct49; MP4594.

8. Oct. 5, 1949. Mercy mission in the Arctic [supplies parachuted to polar explorers marooned for three months]. New German Parliament gets down to business. Theatre owners get together in movie capital. "World Series" of the dance [Harvest Moon Ball].

© 5Oct49; MP4595.

9. Oct. 8, 1949. Vishinsky speaks (in English) for stronger UN. "Wrestling on wheels" hits big time [Roller Derby at Madison Square Garden]. Defense Secretary [Louis Johnson] praises record of film industry. Tragic ship fire at Toronto pier.

© 8Oct49; MP4621.

10. Oct. 12, 1949. UN tackles problems of the hour. King Abdullah of Jordan hailed in Spain. The pound; the story behind devaluation. Navy previews newest in "soot suits" [fireproof suits]. Remove wraps from [Peruvian] mummy 3,000 years old. Wired for high thrills [European aerialists in Bavaria].

© 12Oct49; MP4622.

11. Oct. 15, 1949. Russia and the atom. Football season opens with spectacular performances; USC vs. Navy; Michigan vs. Michigan State; Notre Dame vs. Indiana; Georgia Tech vs. Vanderbilt.

© 15Oct49; MP4660.

12. Oct. 19, 1949. Football; Rose Bowl champ wins opener [Northwestern vs. Purdue]. Film industry pledges to guard freedom. Fashions: Paris and New York. Yoga experts in fantastic gymnastics. Unification aboard a carrier [Defense chiefs meet on the aircraft carrier, Franklin D. Roosevelt].

© 19Oct49; MP4661.

13. Oct. 22, 1949. New York gets a subway series [New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers to meet in 1949 World Series]. Royal family goes to the wedding [of the Earl of Harewood]. Football: Penn State vs. Army; Pittsburgh vs. Northwestern; North Carolina vs. Georgia.

© 22Oct49; MP4662.

14. Oct. 26, 1949. 82nd Airborne puts on show for President [at Fort Bragg, N.C.] 1949 World Series: Yankees win opening game; Dodgers win second.

© 26Oct49; MP4663.

15. Oct. 29, 1949. World Series finale: Yankees defeat Dodgers in 5th game to win title. Football: Navy vs. Duke; West Point vs. Michigan.

© 29Oct49; MP4664.

16. Nov. 2, 1949. Wild West goes to prison [18th Annual Texas Prison Rodeo]. A report on American films abroad. Nehru here on visit of state. Air Force-Navy controversy gets hearing.

© 2Nov49; MP4665.

17. Nov. 5, 1949. Report on Communism. Eleven leaders of U.S. Communist party found guilty; parade welcomes Nehru to New York. The British authorities prepare for possible Communist difficulties in Hong Kong; liner arrives in Hong Kong with pictures of the Communist entry into Shanghai. Football: Notre Dame 46, Tulane 7.

© 5Nov49; MP4716.

18. Nov. 9, 1949. Russia protests, but Yugoslavia wins UN seat. What's swimmin' for '50? [California styles]. B–36 rebuttal; airmen and Army answer charges of Navy. Football: Minnesota vs. Ohio State; Southern Methodist vs. Rice.

© 9Nov49; MP4717.

19. Nov. 12, 1949. Truman attends UN cornerstone ceremony. Eyeful of stars at Hollywood premiere [of "The Heiress"]. Portugal cheers visit of Franco. Football: Michigan vs. Minnesota; Army vs. Columbia.

© 12Nov49; MP4746.

20. Nov. 16, 1949. Tennis: Gonzales loses to Kramer in pro debut. Oldest known Bible scrolls on display [at the Library of Congress, Washington]. Highlights of Franco's visit to Portugal. Newest in aviation: new channel wing plane is shown in Maryland; two Italian pilots introduce an air-car in Milan. Eisenhower urges parley on nation's welfare.

© 16Nov49; MP4747.

21. Nov. 19, 1949. King leads Greece in war remembrance. Bidault takes over reins of French government. First U.S. woman ambassador sworn in [Mrs. Eugenie Anderson, Ambassador to Denmark]. Barkley and Mrs. Hadley set the date. Eric Johnston reports on tour of Europe. [Direct broadcast from the delivery room to fathers-to-be at California hospital.] Football: Irish roll over Navy.

© 19Nov49; MP4748.

22. Nov. 23, 1949. Horse is king at big show [61st National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden]. Pre-wedding portraits: Barkley and Mrs. Hadley. New Navy chief Sherman succeeds Denfeld. America's worst civil air crash [airliner and P–38 crash over Washington's National Airport]. The height of diving thrills [at Miami Beach].

© 23Nov49; MP4749.

23. Nov. 26, 1949. Defense chiefs attend big firepower show. Minnesota "wild about Harry" [President Truman celebrates two anniversaries in St. Paul and Minneapolis]. First tests for the water-walker [in Bavaria]. Bathing suits "arty." Football: Army 35, Fordham 0; Notre Dame 34, Michigan State 21.

© 26Nov49; MP4758.

24. Nov. 30, 1949. Big top goes to college [Florida State University studies about the circus]. Coal strike truce. The top political story of '49 [November elections]. Soviet embassy [in Washington] stages lavish reception. Pro grid thriller [Philadelphia Eagles vs. Los Angeles Rams].

© 30Nov49; MP4759.

25. Dec. 3, 1949. Student riders in Texas "Bronco Bowl." Acheson promises Germany support. Washington: tribute to Unknown Soldier. Football: Ohio State 30, Illinois 17; Army 14, Penn 13; Notre Dame 42, North Carolina 6.

© 3Dec49; MP4825.

26. Dec. 7, 1949. Pioneer days recalled at photo museum [the home of George Eastman]. The meaning of Thanksgiving, featuring At home, The pilgrim, and The spirit of Thanksgiving.

© 7Dec49; MP4826.

27. Dec. 10, 1949. Happy ending to search for B–29 [northeast of Bermuda]. Vice President Barkley and bride win hearts of nation. Gridiron climax: California 33, Stanford 14; Ohio State 7, Michigan 7; North Carolina 21, Duke 20.

© 10Dec49; MP4827.

28. Dec. 14, 1949. Honors for promoting American Way. The hot dog makes a hit in Tokyo. 1949 All-America football team.

© 14Dec49; MP4828.

29. Dec. 17, 1949. Santa Claus Lane opens in Hollywood. Stanton Griffis, new Ambassador to Argentina, presents credentials to President Peron. Vice President Barkley and bride at Sea Island, Ga. Princess Elizabeth joins Duke of Edinburgh. Broadway says its farewell to Bill Robinson. The Army-Navy game.

© 17Dec49; MP4950.

30. Dec. 21, 1949. Baseball in December; behind the scenes with Big League performers during the off-season.

© 21Dec49; MP4951.

31. Dec. 24, 1949. Evacuation from Greece. The Trumans: happy holiday [at Key West] but no fish. Mrs. Barkley joins Vice President's party [at Democratic dinner in New York]. Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein [reports on his] impressions of U. S. Fashions in the sky. Football: near upset at Dallas [Notre Dame vs. Southern Methodist].

© 24Dec49; MP4973.

32. Dec. 28, 1949. Comeback for Joe Louis? [Louis knocks out Valentino in 8th round]. General Li Tsung Jen in New York for medical care. Shah of Iran honored by our Navy. Andrei Vishinsky sails for home. Report on Tito's Yugoslavia.

© 28Dec49; MP4952.

33. Dec. 31, 1949. Battle of basketball giants [CCNY vs. Southern Methodist]. Santa makes a preview appearance. Princess Elizabeth at Malta. Grand National Bakeoff [at New York's Waldorf Astoria]. Stork knocks five times in one year [Mrs. Thelma Gibbs has twins and triplets]. London honors men of Berlin airlift.

© 31Dec49; MP4953.

PARAMOUNT PICTORIAL. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel each, sd. (Paramount Paragraphics) © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Written by Justin Herman; editors, Leslie Roush, Robert Blauvelt.

2. Tonsorial Trouble. © 9Aug40; MP10412.

6. © 16Feb40; MP9985.

PARAN-PAN-PAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10979.

PARDON ME, BUT YOU LOOK JUST LIKE MARGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jun43; MP13704.

PARDON MY BERTH MARKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Mar40; LP9502.

PARDON MY CLUTCH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 7 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Feb48; LP1454.

PARDON MY GUN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Wyndham Gittens; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Dec42; LP11924.

PARDON MY LAMB CHOP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Broad comedy antics occur in the kitchen.

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Zion Myers; film editor, Edwin Bryant.

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane, Dorothy Granger.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Jun48; LP1684.

PARDON MY PAST. c1945. Presented by Columbia Pictures. 10 reels, sd. A Mutual production.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Fenton; original story, Patterson McNutt, Harlan Ware; screenplay, Earl Felton, Karl Kamb; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; film editor, Richard Heermance.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Sep45; LP13679.

PARDON MY RHYTHM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on short story by Hurd Barrett.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Felix E. Feist; screenplay, Val Burton, Eugene Conrad; photographer, Paul Ivano; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May44; LP12880.

PARDON MY SARONG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, True Boardman, Nat Perrin, John Grant; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11466.

PARDON MY STRIPES. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on an idea by Adrian Johnson.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, John H. Auer; original story, Mauri Grashin, Robert T. Shannon; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Stuart Palmer; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Howard O'Neill.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jan42; LP11188.

PARDON MY TERROR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Edward Bernds.

Cast: Schilling and Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Nov46; LP1378.

PARIS AFTER DARK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 7,734 ft., sd. Based on a story by Georges Kessel.

Credits: Director, Leonide Moguy; screenplay, Harold Buchman; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Oct43; LP12652.

PARIS CALLING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Benjamin Glazer; director, Edwin L. Marin; screenplay, Benjamin Glazer, Charles S. Kaufman; original story collaboration, John S. Toldy; cameraman, Milton Krasner; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec41; LP10890.

PARIS IN THE SPRING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Harry Grey; director, Mel Epstein; original screenplay, Jack Roberts, Peter R. Brooke; music direction, Irvin Talbot; music score, Van Cleave; editor, Everett Douglas.

Cast: Roger Dann, Sally Rawlinson, Max Willenz, Guy de Vestel, Bob Baker's marionettes.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Sep47; LP1331.

PARIS IS GAY AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Nov44; MP15397.

PARIS ON THE PLATA. SEE Variety Views, no. 172.

PARIS UNDERGROUND. Released through United Artists, c1945. 96 min., sd. Based on the book by Etta Shiber in collaboration with Anne and Paul Dupre and Oscar Ray.

Credits: Producer, Constance Bennett; director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Boris Ingster, Gertrude Purcell; music score and direction, Alexander Tansman; cinematographer, Lee Garmes; film editor, Hanson Fritch.

© Constance Bennett Productions, Inc.; 14Sep45; LP13477.

PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURE IN ACTION. Coronet Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Educational authors, Harold H. Crabill in collaboration with the Bureau of Visual Aids, Extension Division, Indiana University.

© Coronet Productions; 8Oct41; MP1724.

PARLOR, BEDROOM, AND WRATH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Columbia All-Star comedy.

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Betty Myers; film editor, Edwin Bryant.

Cast: Eddie Quillan, Wally Vernon, Christine McIntyre, Vernon Dent.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Dec48; LP2019.

PAROLE FIXER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd. Based on J. Edgar Hoover's "Persons in Hiding."

Credits: Director, Robert Florey; screenplay, William R. Lipman, Horace McCoy; photographer, Harry Fishbeck; film editor, Harvey Johnston.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Feb40; LP9401.

PAROLE, INC. Equity Pictures. Released by Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A parole board is controlled by the underworld until a government investigator assists local police in exposing the schemes of a group of criminals.

Credits: Producer, Constantin J. David; director, Alfred Zeisler; original story, Royal K. Cole, Sherman L. Lowe; screenplay, Sherman L. Lowe; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, John D. Faure.

Cast: Michael O'Shea, Turhan Bey, Evelyn Ankers, Virginia Lee, Charles Bradstreet.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 11Dec48; LP2026.

THE PARSON OF PANAMINT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Peter B. Kyne.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, William McGann; screenplay, Harold Shumate, Adrian Scott; photographer, Russell Harlan; editor, Carrol Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jun41; LP10677.

PART TIME PAL. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Michael Lah, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Mar47; LP868.

PARTNERS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Ralston Purina Co. 1,670 ft., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Emphasizes the necessity for careful breeding, training, and nutrition in the development of superior dogs. Setters, pointers, and retrievers are shown in hunting scenes.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 16Aug48; MU3226.

PARTNERS IN PRODUCTION. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co., c1946. Presented by Aetna Life Affiliated Companies of Hartford, Conn. 2 reels, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Leslie Coleman.

© Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.; 1Oct46; MP1550.

PARTNERS IN PROGRESS. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co., Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how the Southern Bell Telephone Company is meeting the increasing demand for rural telephone service.

© Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., Inc.; 16Jul49; MP4550.

PARTNERS IN PROSPERITY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by The Ralston-Purina Co. 1,133 ft., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows how plant design, sales promotion, and training of employees aid Purina dealers in developing a prosperous business in a Texas farming community.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 12 prints, 31May49; MU4169.

PARTNERS IN TIME. c1946. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 74 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, William Nigh; original screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Lud Gluskin; editor, S. Roy Luby.

© Jack Wm. Votion Productions, Inc.; 18Apr46; LP377.

PARTNERS OF THE SUNSET. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A series of crimes follows the marriage of a middle-aged rancher to an unscrupulous young woman.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, Dub Taylor, Christine Larson, J. Kirby, Leonard Penn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 9May48; LP1630.

PARTNERS OF THE TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay and story, Frank H. Young; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Heim.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 19Feb44; LP12644.

PARTNERSHIP OF FAITH. Transfilm Inc., for the Studebaker Corp., c1949. 24 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Designed for use as an employee orientation and indoctrination film in the various Studebaker plants. Through scenes photographed at the South Bend plant, the history, traditions, current practices, and aspirations of the company and employees are shown.

Credits: Producer, Walter Lowendahl; director, Marvin Rothenberg; written by Burton Rowles, Jr.; editor, Robert Klaeger.

© The Studebaker Corp.; 14Mar49; MP4837.

PARTS OF NINE. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Advisers, William A. Brownell, Laura K. Eads; script advisers, Ruth Barrell, Gladys Greenman, Brenda Lansdown, Eleanor Martin.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 10Dec47; MP2543.

PARTS OF THINGS. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Advisers, William A. Brownell, Laura K. Eads; script advisers, Ruth Barrell, Gladys Greenman, Brenda Lansdown, Eleanor Martin.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 25Nov47; MP2487.

PASO POR AQUI. SEE Four faces west.

PASS THE BISCUITS MIRANDY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4May42; MP12495.

PASS THE BISCUITS MIRANDY! c1943. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 27Aug43; MP13907.

PASSAGE TO MARSEILLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 109 min., sd. A Hal B. Wallis production. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Casey Robinson, Jack Moffitt; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Owen Marks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Mar44; LP12525.

THE PASSENGER TRAIN. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 29Aug40; MP10688.

THE PASSING OF BLACK EAGLE. SEE Black Eagle.

PASSKEY TO DANGER. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William J. O'Sullivan; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, O'Leta Rhinehart, William Hagens; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; LP321.

PASSPORT TO ALCATRAZ. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Larry Darmour; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Albert DeMond; music, Lee Zahler; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25May40; LP9666.

PASSPORT TO DESTINY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 63 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Ray McCarey; original screenplay, Val Burton, Muriel Roy Bolton; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Feb44; LP12586.

PASSPORT TO HEAVEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15516.

PASSPORT TO NOWHERE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 27Jun47; MP2239.

PASSPORT TO SUEZ. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Andre de Toth; story, Alden Nash; screenplay, John Stone; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Aug43; LP12386.

PASTEUR'S LEGACY. Loew's International Corp., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the life of Louis Pasteur.

© Loew's International Corp.; 12Mar47; MP1791.

PASTOR HALL. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by James Roosevelt. 10 reels, sd. Based on a story by Ernst Toller.

Credits: Producer, John Boulting; director, Roy Boulting; screen story, Leslie Arliss, Anna Reiner, Haworth Bromley; original music, Charles Brill, Mac Adams; music director, Charles Brill; photography, Mutz Greenbaum.

Appl. author: Charter Film Productions.

© United Artists Corp.; 5Jul40; LP9933.

PASTORALE. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Narration, Jesse William Stitt.

Appl. author: Donn Marvin.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 24Apr46; MP592.

PATHWAYS TO PROGRESS. Presented by The Clark Equipment Co. 2–1/2 reels, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Mar45; 5 prints, 9Mar45; MU15668.

PATIENCE AND FORTITUDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Apr46; MP539.

PATIENT PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Norman McCabe; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Aug40; MP10427.

THE PATIENT VANISHES. Pathe Pictures, Ltd., England. Released through Film Classics, Inc., c1947. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the Mick Cardby detective story "They Called Him Death" by David Hume [pseud. of John Victor Turner]

Credits: Producer, John Argyle; director, Lawrence Huntington; screenplay, Edward Dryhurst, John Argyle.

Cast: James Mason, Mary Clare, Margaret Vyner, Gordon McLeod, Frederick Valk.

© Film Classics, Inc.; 1Jun47; LP1065.

PATIO MUSEUM. SEE Variety Views, no. 164.

PATRICK THE GREAT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. From an original story by Jane Hall, Frederick Kohner, Ralph Block.

Credits: Director, Frank Ryan; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser, Dorothy Bennett; music director, Don George; photographer, Frank Redman; film editor, Theodore J. Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12966.

PATRIOTIC POOCHES. 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.; 9Apr43; LP12895.

PATROL AND TROOP CAMPING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 19 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the preparation necessary for troop camping, with camping scenes which show some of the best aspects of Scouting.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2226.

PATROL AND TROOP HIKING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Contrasts the right and wrong way to conduct hiking

## activities.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2225.

PATROL AND TROOP MEETINGS. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows a regular meeting of a Boy Scout troop.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2224.

PATROL AND TROOP PROGRAM PLANNING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A scoutmaster training film indicating the need for preparatory work and demonstrating the place of the Troop Committee, the parents, the patrol, and the troop in a planned program.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2223.

PATROL BOMBER EQUIPMENT. 1 reel each, sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics. © Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

1. Cruising Gear. © title & descr., 14Jan43; 209 prints, 13Jan43; MU13195.

2. Abandon Ship. © title & descr., 11Nov43; 5 prints, 13Nov43; MU14131.

PATROLLING THE ETHER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Paul Burnford; original story and screenplay, De Vallon Scott, Alan Friedman; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr44; LP212.

PATTERN FOR PROGRESS. Charles D. Beeland Co., c1948. Presented by the Greater Atlanta Community Chest, Inc. 6 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the work of many of the agencies in the Atlanta Community Chest, emphasizing their contribution to the welfare of the city.

Credits: Director and photographer, Charles D. Beeland; technical adviser for the Community Chest and story by Arthur E. Burdge; narrator, Sid Lasher; film editor, Victor A. Lambert.

© Greater Atlanta Community Chest, Inc.; 20Aug48; MP4421.

PATTY CAKE, BAKER MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jul43; MP13726.

PAUNCH 'N JUDY. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 595 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 9)

Credits: Story, Manny Gould; animation, Ben Harrison; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Dec40; LP10258.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11033.

PAY DAY ROLLS AROUND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Apr46; MP488.

PAYDAY—SOMEDAY. Robert Greene Lee, c1948. 80 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An illustrated sermon based on the Old Testament story of Ahab, King of Israel.

© Robert Greene Lee; 6Dec48; MP4422.

PAY DIRT. Presented by Dow Chemical Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Dow Chemical Co.; title, descr., & 207 prints, 3Feb41; MU10807.

PAY LOADS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Introduces the 1949 Chevrolet truck line, and features the versatility of the new 1949 Chevrolet stake truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 4 prints, 31May49; MU4176.

PAY LOADS PAY OFF. William J. Ganz Co., c1947. Presented by the Institute of Visual Training. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© William J. Ganz Co.; 1Mar47; MP1920.

PAY TO LEARN. SEE The Navy Comes Through.

PAYING THE PIPER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Manny Gould, John Carey, Charles McKimson, Phil DeLara.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 15Dec47; MP3966.

THE PAYOFF. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Schwarz; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original story, Arthur Hoerl; screenplay, Edward Dein; music score, Charles Dant; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11817.

THE PAY-OFF PENCIL. SEE The Pil'o Money Pencil.

PEABODY'S MERMAID. SEE Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid.

PEACE BY ADOLF HITLER. SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 13.

PEACE MARSHAL. SEE The Kansan.

PEACE ON EARTH. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 804 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Dec39; MP10210.

PEACEFUL QUEBEC AT WAR. SEE Variety Views, no. 102.

PEACHY PRODUCTIONS PRESENT—.

© Calvin Herbert Besore; title, descr., & 3 prints. 12Oct47; MU2396.

PEACOCK'S FEATHER. SEE Night in Paradise.

THE PEARL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An F.A.M.A.-Aguila production. Based on the story by John Steinbeck.

Summary: An allegorical picture about the disastrous effect of sudden riches on the fortunes of a Mexican fisherman.

Credits: Producer, Oscar Dancigers; director, Emilio Fernandez; screenplay, John Steinbeck, Emilio Fernandez, Jackson Wagner; music, Antonio Diaz Conde; film editor, Gloria Schoemann.

Cast: Pedro Armendariz, Maria Elena Marques, Fernando Wagner, Charles Rooner.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec47; LP1584.

PEARL OF DEATH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on "The Six Napoleons" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Producer and director, Roy William Neill; screenplay, Bertram Milhauser; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Aug44; LP12882.

PÉČE O OČI. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP794.

PÊCHEURS DE LA NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 29Jun46; MP838.

PECK UP YOUR TROUBLES. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Oct45; MP16430.

PECKIN'. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Nov42; MP13100.

PEDAGOGICAL INSTITUTION (COLLEGE TO YOU). Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph Stultz; animation, Abner Kneitel, Arnold Gillespie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Sep40; LP9917.

PEDESTRIAN PATTERNS. 400 ft.

Credits: Producer and director, Edward Thomas Myers.

© Edward Thomas Myers; title, descr., & 4 prints, 11Apr45; MU15833.

PEDRO. SEE Saludos Amigos.

A PEE-KOOL-YAR-SIT-CHEE-AY-SHUN. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 657 ft., sd., color. Adapted from the "Li'l Abner" cartoon strip by Al Capp.

Credits: Story and direction, Sid Marcus; animation, Jim Armstrong, Grant Simmons; music, Edward Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 11Sep44; LP12817.

PEEKS AT HOLLYWOOD. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Director, Irving Applebaum; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec45; MP155.

A PEEP IN THE DEEP. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 570 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 6)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Harry Love, Louie Lilly; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Aug40; LP9852.

PEEP IN THE DEEP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar46; LP350.

PEG LEG PETE, THE PIRATE. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP12005.

PEGGY O'NEILL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16129.

PEIPING FAMILY. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1948. 21 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A documentary film showing the traditions and customs of middle-class Chinese life, with emphasis on the struggles of an American-educated Chinese man to support and educate his large family.

Credits: Director, William James; narration, Basil Beyea.

© International Film Foundation, Inc.; 30Sep48; MP3763.

THE PELICAN AND THE SNIPE. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd. A Walt Disney South American production.

© Walt Disney Productions; 29Nov43; LP12603.

PELICAN PRANKS. SEE Variety Views, no. 158.

THE PENALTY. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a play by Martin Berkeley.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Harry Ruskin, John C. Higgins; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Mar41; LP10318.

PENNSYLVANIA LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ACTION. Pennsylvania State College, c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Directed and written by Frank Neusbaum; narrator, William S. Livengood, Jr.

© The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; 1Dec45; MP29.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Aug42; MP12822.

PENNY ARCADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Jul42; MP12817.

PENNY SERENADE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 12 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Martha Cheavens.

Credits: Producer and director, George Stevens; story, Martha Cheavens; screenplay, Morrie Ryskind; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Apr41; LP10421.

PENNY TO THE RESCUE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 954 ft., sd., color. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jan41; LP10345.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15513.

PENTHOUSE RHYTHM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Frank Gross; director, Eddie Cline; story, Min Selvin, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Stanley Roberts, Howard Dimsdale; photographer, William Sickner; film editor, Russel Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12974.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11123.

PEOPLE ARE FUNNY. c1946. Presented by Paramount. 10 reels, sd. A Pine-Thomas production. Based on John Guedel's radio program.

Credits: Producer and director, Sam White; original story, David Lang; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, David Lang; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Jan46; LP22.

PEOPLE OF HAWAII. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 17Dec40; MP10829.

PEOPLE OF HAWAII. SEE Habitantes del Hawaii.

PEOPLE OF MEXICO. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Wallace W. Atwood.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Mar39; MP9820.

PEOPLE OF MEXICO. SEE A Vida Rural No México.

PEOPLE OF RUSSIA. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 922 ft., sd., b&w. (A FitzPatrick Miniature)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jan43; MP13212.

PEOPLE OF SABA. Coronet, c1945. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: CIF Staff.

© Esquire, Inc.; 31Dec45; MP1534.

A PEOPLE OF THE CONGO; THE MANGBETU. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: James P. Chapin.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Jul39; MP9825.

A PEOPLE OF THE CONGO: THE MANGBETU. SEE La Tribu Mangbetu.

PEOPLE OF WESTERN CHINA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 26Dec40; MP10830.

PEOPLE OF WESTERN CHINA. SEE Los Chinos Occidentales.

PEOPLE ON PAPER. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 972 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Herbert Morgan; original story and screenplay, John Nesbitt; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct45; LP13623.

THE PEOPLE VS. DR. KILDARE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Lawrence P. Bachmann and Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust]

Credits: Director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Willis Goldbeck, Harry Ruskin; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Apr41; LP10443.

PEOPLES OF THE SOVIET UNION. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1946. 33 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Robert Spencer Carr.

© International Film Foundation, Inc.; 1Oct46; MP2210.

PEPE LE MOKO. SEE Casbah.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr43; MP13437.

PERCENT IN EVERYDAY LIFE. Coronet, c1948. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: This film motivates an interest in the study of percent, clarifies the meaning of percent, and explains the use of percent in everyday activities. For 6th to 9th grade levels.

Credits: Educational collaborator, H. C. Christofferson.

© David A. Smart; 31Aug48; MP3716.

PERFECT FORM. 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; MU10540.

THE PERFECT CASE. SEE Boomerang.

THE PERFECT MARRIAGE. Hal Wallis Productions, Inc., c1946. 9 reels. Based upon the play by Samson Raphaelson.

Credits: Director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Leonard Spigelgass.

© Hal Wallis Productions, Inc.; 18Jul46; LP436.

A PERFECT PAIR. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Introduces the complete line of Dearborn Motors plows, showing a Ford tractor at work with a variety of plows.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 13Apr40; MU3993.

THE PERFECT POWERS GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Sep41; MP11501.

THE PERFECT SNOB. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,600 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Ray McCarey, original screenplay, Lee Loeb, Harold Buchman; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Dec41; LP11020.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10906.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11077.

PERFORMANCE PLUS. Presented by Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.; title & descr., 22Jun40; 253 prints, 24Jun40; MU10301.

PERILOUS HOLIDAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 9 reels, sd. Based upon the magazine serial by Robert Carson.

Credits: Producer, Phil L. Ryan; director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Roy Chanslor; music score, Paul Sawtell; music direction, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Mar46; LP250.

PERILOUS WATERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the story "Search" by Leon Ware.

Summary: A Navy veteran is hired by a racketeer to kill a newspaper publisher, a crusader against gambling. Action takes place on board the publisher's yacht.

Credits: Producer, Jack Wrather; director, Jack Bernhard; screenplay, Richard Wormser, Francis Rosenwald; music score, Rudy Schrager; film editor, Stewart S. Frye.

Cast: Don Castle, Audrey Long, Peggy Knudsen, Samuel S. Hinds, Gloria Holden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Feb48; LP1570.

PERILS OF NYOKA. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Jun42; no. 1–5, LP11567; no. 6–10, LP11613; no. 11–15, LP11633.

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

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. Desert Intrigue.

2. Death's Chariot.

3. Devil's Crucible.

4. Ascending Doom.

5. Fatal Second.

6. Human Sacrifice.

7. Monster's Clutch.

8. Tuareg Vengeance.

9. Burned Alive.

10. Treacherous Trail.

11. Unknown Peril.

12. Underground Tornado.

13. Thundering Death.

14. Blazing Barrier.

15. Satan's Fury.

THE PERILS OF PAULINE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 92 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by P. J. Wolfson, with a salute to Charles W. Goddard who wrote the original serial "The Perils of Pauline."

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, George Marshall; screenplay, P. J. Wolfson, Frank Butler; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Arthur Schmidt.

Cast: Betty Hutton, John Lund, Billy De Wolfe, William Demarest, Constance Collier.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Jul47; LP1080.

PERILS OF THE JUNGLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Producer, Attilio Gatti; written by Herald Medford; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Oct41; MP11664.

PERILS OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, James W. Horne; original screenplay, Basil Dickey, Scott Littleton, Louis Heifetz, Jesse A. Duffy.

1. The Totem Talks. © 25May42; LP11444.

2. The Night Raiders. © 27May42; LP11445.

3. The Water God's Revenge. © 27May42; LP11446.

4. Beware, The Vigilantes. © 15Jun42; LP11447.

5. The Masked Mountie. © 19Jun42; LP11448.

6. Underwater Gold. © 22Jun42; LP11449.

7. Bridge to the Sky. © 1Jul42; LP11450.

8. Lost in the Mine. © 6Jul42; LP11499.

9. Into the Trap. © 13Jul42; LP11500.

10. Betrayed by Law. © 20Jul42; LP11496.

11. Blazing Beacons. © 27Jul42; LP11497.

12. The Mountie's Last Chance. © 14Aug42; LP11516.

13. Painted White Man. © 15Aug42; LP11517.

14. Burned at the Stake. © 28Aug42; LP11550.

15. The Mountie Gets His Man. © 1Sep42; LP11551.

PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT SERIES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.

Credits: Collaborator, Lawrence K. Frank.

Helping the Child to Face the Don'ts. © 13Dec48; MP3682.

Helping the Child to Accept the Do's. © 13Dec48; MP3683.

Emergence of Personality; baby meets his parents. © 28Dec48; MP3822.

PERSONALITY KID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, George Sherman; story, Cromwell MacKechnie; screenplay, Lewis Helmar Herman; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Aug46; LP590.

PERSONALITY! PLUS!! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Apr42; MP12412.

PERSONALIZED LUBRICATION SERVICE. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), c1946. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, M. Constable; story, James P. Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 1Sep46; LP980.

PERSONALIZED PRODUCT DISPLAY. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Co. (Indiana), c1947. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Director, O. P. Lippert; story, James Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 25Jun47; MP2545.

PERSONALIZED SERVICE. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), c1946. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, M. Constable; story, James P. Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 15Jul46; LP979.

PERSONS IN HIDING. SEE

Parole Fixer.

Queen of the Mob.

PERU; ein Volk der Berge. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. German version of "Peru; People of the Mountains."

Summary: Contrasts Peru's modern capital city, Lima, with the ruins of the ancient Inca empire and with Cuzco, contemporary Indian city. The simple, almost primitive customs of the descendants of the once-proud Indian peoples are exemplified by the activities of an Indian family in a remote plateau village. For middle grades, high school, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Earle K. James.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Aug49; MP4614.

PERU; people of the mountains. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 26Dec40; MP10831.

PERU; people of the mountains. SEE Peru; ein Volk der Berge.

PESAS: TIRO, DISCO, JABALINA, MARTILLO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Lawson Robertson, Dean Cromwell and the Amateur Athletic Union, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Weight Events."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Feb47; MP1675.

A PEST IN THE HOUSE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 8Aug47; MP2255.

PEST PILOT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug41; MP11436.

THE PEST THAT CAME TO DINNER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, George Hill; animation, John Carey, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Oct49 (in notice: 1947); MP4586.

PET PEEVES. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun47; LP1156.

PETE ROLEUM AND HIS COUSINS. Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc., color.

Credits: Production and scenario, Joseph Losey; animation, Charley Bowers; music, Hanns Eisler; photography, Harold Muller; editor, Helen Van Dongen.

© Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc.; title, descr., & 149 prints, 31May41; LU10506.

PETE SMITH'S SCRAPBOOK. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 850 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; MP12628.

PETE THE PIPER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar41; MP10967.

PETER RABBIT'S ADVENTURES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, si., b&w, 8mm.

Summary: Shows what happens to Peter when he leaves home to eat the farmer's lettuce.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Feb48; MP3141.

PETRA. World Window, Inc., London, c1938. Distributed by United Artists. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 6)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director and film editor, Hans Nieter; music, Ludwig Brav; photography, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© World Window, Inc.; 1Nov38; MP10035.

PETROLEUM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Lester E. Klimm, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (World Energy Resources Series)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1697.

PETROLEUM. SEE Erdoel.

PETTICOAT LARCENY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 61 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Jack Townley, Stuart Palmer; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Jul43; LP12152.

PETTICOAT POLITICS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. (The Higgins Family)

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Taylor Caven; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31Jan41; LP10252.

THE PHANTOM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943–44. 2 reels each. Based on the cartoon character created by Leon Falk and Ray Moore. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; screenplay, Leslie J. Swabacker, Morgan B. Cox, Victor McLeod, Sherman Lowe.

1. The Sign of the Skull. © 24Dec43; LP12529.

2. The Man Who Never Dies. © 31Dec43; LP12537.

3. A Traitor's Code. © 7Jan44; LP12560.

4. The Seat of Judgment. © 15Jan44; LP12567.

5. The Ghost Who Walks. © 22Jan44; LP12583.

6. Jungle Whispers. © 29Jan44; LP12608.

7. The Mystery Well. © 5Feb44; LP12779.

8. In Quest of the Keys. © 12Feb44; LP12617.

9. The Fire Princess. © 19Feb44; LP12632.

10. The Chamber of Death. © 26Feb44; LP12641.

11. The Emerald Key. © 5Mar44; LP12648.

12. The Fangs of the Beast. © 12Mar44; LP12780.

13. The Road to Zoloz. © 17Mar44; LP12684.

14. The Lost City. © 24Mar44; LP12691.

15. Peace in the Jungle. © 31Mar44; LP12714.

THE PHANTOM COWBOY. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Doris Schroeder; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Feb41; LP10303.

PHANTOM EMPIRE. SEE Radio Ranch.

THE PHANTOM FILLY. SEE Home in Indiana.

PHANTOM KILLER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, Karl Brown; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28Aug42; LP11546.

PHANTOM LADY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by William Irish.

Credits: Associate producer, Joan Harrison; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Bernard C. Schoenfeld; music director, Don George; photographer, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Feb44; LP12505.

PHANTOM OF CHINATOWN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Malvern; director, Phil Rosen; original story, Ralph Bettinson; screenplay, Joseph West; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 18Nov40; LP10160.

PHANTOM OF 42nd STREET. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Jack Harvey and Milton Raison.

Credits: Associate producers, Martin Mooney, Albert Herman; director, Albert Herman; screenplay, Milton Raison; music, Karl Hajos; film editor, Hugh Winn.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 2May45; LP13570.

THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd., color. Based on the composition by Gaston Leroux.

Credits: Producer, George Waggner; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Eric Taylor, Samuel Hoffenstein; music director, Edward Ward; cameraman, Hal Mohr. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Sep43; LP12298.

PHANTOM OF THE PLAINS. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Red Harman's comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, R. G. Springsteen; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Earle Snell, Charles Kenyon; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Aug45; LP13494.

THE PHANTOM PINTO. Ellkay Productions, c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Richard C. Kahn.

© Ellkay Productions; 30Dec40; LP10147.

THE PHANTOM PLAINSMEN. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Robert Yost. Based on characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; screenplay, Robert Yost, Barry Shipman; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Jun42; LP11510.

PHANTOM RAIDERS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. (A Nick Carter Adventure)

Credits: Producer, Frederick Stephani; director, Jacques Tourneur; original story, Jonathan Latimer; screenplay, William R. Lipman; music score, David Snell; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 31May40; LP9684.

THE PHANTOM RIDER. c1945–46. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each, sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; [no. 1–6], 26Oct45; LP13678; no. 7–12, 8Jan46; LP106.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Fred Brannon; original screenplay, Albert DeMond, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Lynn Perkins, Barney Sarecky; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold R. Minter.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Avenging Spirit.

2. Flaming Ambush.

3. Hoofs of Doom.

4. Murder Masquerade.

5. Flying Fury.

6. Blazing Peril.

7. Gauntlet of Guns.

8. Behind the Mask.

9. The Captive Chief.

10. Beasts at Bay.

11. The Death House.

12. The Last Stand.

THE PHANTOM SPEAKS. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, John English; original screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1May45; LP13243.

THE PHANTOM SUBMARINE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Cohn; director, Charles Barton; story, Augustus Muir; screenplay, Joseph Krumgold; music director, M. W. Stoloff; photography, Barney McGill; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Dec40; LP10981.

THE PHANTOM THIEF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based upon the character created by Jack Boyle.

Credits: Producer, John Stone; director, D. Ross Lederman; story, G. A. Snow; screenplay, Richard Wormser, Richard Weil; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2May46; LP392.

PHANTOM VALLEY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In attempting to bring peace to warring ranchers and homesteaders, the Durango Kid discovers that the leader of the troublemakers is a young girl trying to obtain by murder all the lands in Phantom Valley.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Virginia Hunter, Ozie Waters and his Colorado Rangers.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Dec47; LP1402.

PHANTOMS INC. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Harold Young; original story, Brainerd Duffield; screenplay, Edward Bock; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun45; LP13392.

THE PHARMACIST. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Sep46; MP1191.

PHIL THE FLUTER'S BALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jun42; MP12714.

THE PHILADELPHIA STORY. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Philip Barry.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, George Cukor; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov40; LP10102.

THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. Eastman Kodak Co., c1942. 954 ft. Revised.

Appl. author: George W. Hoke.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; 11Jun42; MP12720.

THE PHILIPPINE REPUBLIC. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PHILIPPINES 1898–1946. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 10.

PHILMONT ADVENTURE. Boy Scouts of America, c1949. 1,275 ft., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The significance of the phrase "Scouting in the out-of-doors" is illustrated by the activities of the Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico.

© Boy Scouts of America; 15Apr49; LP2660.

PHILO VANCE RETURNS. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, Robert E. Kent; music, Albert Glasser; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Gene Fowler, Jr.

Cast: William Wright, Terry Austin, Leon Belasco.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 14Jun47; LP1052.

PHILO VANCE'S GAMBLE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 62 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Basil Wrangell; original story, Lawrence Edmund Taylor; screenplay, Eugene Conrad, Arthur St. Claire; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

Cast: Alan Curtis, Terry Austin, Frank Jenks, Tala Birell.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 12Mar47; LP1205.

PHILO VANCE'S SECRET MISSION. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Reginald Le Borg; original screenplay, Lawrence Edmund Taylor; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

Cast: Alan Curtis, Sheila Ryan, Tala Birell.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 5Aug47; LP1180.

PHONEY BALONEY. Screen Gems, Inc., c1945. 670 ft., sd., color. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sid Marcus; animation, Paul Sommer, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 1Nov45; LP99.

THE PHONOGRAPH. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 10)

Summary: Pat shows his puppet, Pirro, how to play records on the phonograph.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49; (in notice: 1948); LP2337.

PHONY CRONIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,492 ft., sd.

Credits: Producers, Del Lord, Hugh McCollum; direction, story, and screenplay, Harry Edwards; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Aug42; LP12058.

PHONY EXPRESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,562 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman, Monty Collins.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Nov43; LP12344.

PHOTO FRENZY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 5)

Summary: A film on photography that shows technical procedures, members of a camera club on a field trip, and some of the masterpieces that camera enthusiasts produce.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Larry O'Reilly; script, Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 5Mar48; MP2894.

PHOTO-LITHOGRAPHY. Eastman Kodak Co. 44 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Presents to photo-lithographers the advantages that result from using Kodak products.

Appl. author: Lloyd Reber.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 20Aug48; MU3347.

PHOTOGRAPHY. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Aug46; MP1075.

THE PHYSIOLOGY OF NORMAL MENSTRUATION. Schering Corp., c1948. 29 min., color, sd., 16mm.

Summary: A scientific presentation of the basic physiology of menstruation. A film for the medical profession to be used as a review of the subject for professional groups and as an aid in the instruction of students.

Appl. author: Norman L. Heminway.

© Schering Corp.; 23Jul48; MP4039.

PIANO MOONER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,572 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Langdon; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Dec42; LP12047.

PIANO RHYTHM. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 1)

Summary: Presents Jan August who plays "Malaguena" and "Nola" and Kitty Kallen who sings "Kiss Me Sweet."

Credits: Producer, Burton Benjamin; director, Herman Fuchs; editor, Isaac Kleinerman.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 9Sep49; MP4810.

PIANO SERENADE. 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.; 18Nov46; MP1309.

PICK A PECK OF PLUMBERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,575 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Aug44; LP13201.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12May41; MP11134.

PICKLED PUSS. Screen Gems, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody, no. 133)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Cal Howard; animation, Grant Simmons, Paul Sommers, Morey Reden.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Sep48; LP1826.

PICKUPS PAY OFF. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the diversified uses that can be made of a 1949 Chevrolet pickup truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 4 prints, 31May49; MU4180.

PICNIC PANIC. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 857 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Direction and story, Bob Wickersham; animation, Chick Otterstrom, Paul Sommer; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 20Jun46; LP549.

THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w with color sequences. Based on the novel by Oscar Wilde.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; direction and screenplay, Albert Lewin; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Mar45; LP13198.

PICTURE PIONEER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Person-Oddity, no. 153)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; script, Frank Kelly; narration, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Jun46; MP741.

PICTURESQUE MASSACHUSETTS. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 844 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Oct42; MP12908.

PICTURESQUE PATZCUARO. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 846 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Wilfrid Cline. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; MP12589.

PIE IN THE EYE. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A slapstick comedy adapted from the old Mack Sennett comedies.

Credits: Narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore; film editor, DeLeon Anthony.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Dec48; MP3738.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15572.

THE PIED PIPER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,859 ft. Based on the novel by Nevil Shute.

Credits: Director, Irving Pichel; written for the screen by Nunnally Johnson; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Aug42; LP12949.

THE PIED PIPER OF BASIN STREET. c1944. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walt Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Verne Harding, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 27Nov44; MP15492.

PIER 13. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 5,970 ft., sd. Based on a story by Barry Conners and Philip Klein.

Credits: Director, Eugene Forde; screenplay, Stanley Rauh, Clark Andrews; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Aug40; LP9863.

PIERRE OF THE PLAINS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the play by Edgar Selwyn.

Credits: Producer, Edgar Selwyn; director, George B. Seitz; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Bertram Millhauser; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Jun42; LP11425.

PIG FOOT PETE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP56.

PIG MEAT THROWS THE BULL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP150.

PIGEON PATROL. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Ralph Somerville; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 17Jul42; MP12691.

PIGS AND ELEPHANTS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The characteristics and habits of domestic pigs, of foreign relatives of the domestic pig, of hippopotami, and of African and Indian elephants.

Credits: Collaborators, Eliot C. Williams, Donald M. Hatfield.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 28Feb47; MP2586.

PIGS IN A POLKA. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Blue Ribbon Cartoon) A re-release.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Oct49 (in notice: 1942); MP4648.

PIGSKIN PASSES. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Spectacular plays from outstanding football games of the past and present.

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

© The Vitaphone Corp., 23Sep49; MP4582.

PIGSKIN SKILL. Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Presents the skill and talents of football players who have brought fame to the Los Angeles Rams.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, Carl Dudley; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Sep48; MP3269.

PIGTAIL PILOT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 138)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Irwin Darlington.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec44; MP15490.

LA PILA SIMPLE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Morris Meister, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "The Primary Cell."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Feb47; MP1676.

THE PILGRIM LADY. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, William J. O'Sullivan; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Richard Cherwin; cinematographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Nov46; LP670.

PILGRIM PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Warren Foster; animation, Norman McCabe.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Mar40; MP10046.

A PILGRIMAGE TO AMSTERDAM FOR THE WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES, 1948. 900 ft., color, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of a trip from New York to the meeting of the World Council of Churches in Amsterdam, including views of Paris, London, Stockholm, and Copenhagen.

Credits: Produced, photographed, and narrated by Edwin L. Whisler.

© Edwin L. Whisler; title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Sep49; MU4563.

A PILHA ELÉTRICA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Morris Meister, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "The Primary Cell."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Jan47; MP1624.

PILLOW OF DEATH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; original story, Dwight V. Babcock; screenplay, George Bricker; photographer, Jerry Ash; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Oct45; LP13649.

PILLOW TO POST. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 92 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stageplay by Rose Simon Kohn.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, Charles Hoffman; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, Alan Crosland, Jr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Jun45; LP13304.

THE PIL'O MONEY PENCIL; or, THE PAY-OFF PENCIL. c1940. 1 reel.

© Frank Duffy; 20Mar40; MP10079.

PILOT NO. 5. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, B. P. Fineman; director, George Sidney; original story and screenplay, David Hertz; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Apr43; LP11995.

PILOTING. Springer Pictures, Inc. for the United States Navy.

Appl. author: John H. Obold.

© Springer Pictures, Inc.; title, descr., & 6 prints each, 26Jun43; pt. 1, MU13705; pt. 2, MU13706.

PIN GAMES. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 4)

Summary: An explanation of different types of bowling; scenes of bowling at Worcester, Massachusetts, and of the bowling stars and champions, Michael Litrenta, Elizabeth Barger, Ralph Keeney, and Joe Norris.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Red Barber; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 21Dec47; MP2650.

PIN MARIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Apr46; MP426.

PIN UP GIRL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 7,450 ft., sd. Based on a story by Libbie Block.

Credits: Director, Bruce Humberstone; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan, Earl Baldwin; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10May44; LP12839.

PIN-UP POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Jul44; MP14999.

PIN-UPS ON PARADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14647.

A PINCH IN TIME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Hugh Herbert is mistaken for a pearl thief.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Del Lord; screenplay, Edward Ullman; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Hugh Herbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Nov48; LP1956.

PINKY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 102 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Cid Ricketts Sumner's novel, "Quality."

Summary: A drama dealing with the racial question as it affects a light-skinned Negress who returns to the South after being accepted as a white girl in Boston.

Credits: Producer, Darryl F. Zanuck; director, Elia Kazan; screenplay, Philip Dunne, Dudley Nichols; music director, Alfred Newman; film editor, Harmon Jones.

Cast: Jeanne Crain, Ethel Barrymore, Ethel Waters, William Lundigan, Basil Ruysdael.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Sep49; LP2671.

PINKY TOMLIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; photographers, George Webber, J. Burgi Contner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jul40; MP10381.

PINOCCHIO. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 10 reels. From the story by Collodi.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Jan40; LP9415.

PINS AND CUSHIONS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Paul Douglas' Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Feb46; MP360.

THE PINTO BANDIT. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Alfred Stern; direction and original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 27Apr44; LP12618.

THE PINTO KID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Nov40; LP10084.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14810.

PIONEER DAYS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry S. Webb; story, Forrest Sheldon; screenplay, Bennett Cohen; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 17Jan40; LP9380.

A PIONEER HOME. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A general view of pioneer life showing the furnishings and physical surroundings of the home, the hard work and simple pleasures of family life. For primary and intermediate grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Viola Theman.

© David A. Smart; 17Nov48; MP3721.

PIONEER JUSTICE. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Adrian Page; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" La Rue, Al "Fuzzy" St. John, Jennifer Holt.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 29May47; LP1133.

THE PIONEERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. From the novel by James Fenimore Cooper.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Charles Andersen; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 10May41; LP10468.

THE PIONEERS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Aug43; MP13854.

PIONEERS OF THE FRONTIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Nelson; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Jan40; LP9369.

PIONEERS OF THE PLAINS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP14213.

PIONEERS OF THE WEST. 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, Lester Orlebeck; original screenplay, Jack Natteford, Karen DeWolf, Gerry Geraghty; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Mar40; LP9533.

PIP-EYE, PUP-EYE, POOP-EYE AND PEEP-EYE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Seymour Kneitel; animation, Seymour Kneitel, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Apr42; LP11213.

PIPE DREAMS. 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; MP1291.

THE PIPE OF PLENTY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Michigan Consolidated Gas Company. 811 ft., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates how the Michigan Consolidated Gas Company serves the community, and features the planning and construction of a new pipe line.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 11 prints, 31May49; MU4181.

THE PIRATE. Loew's Inc., c1948. 102 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the play by S. N. Behrman.

Summary: In this musical comedy, with the setting laid in a mythical Caribbean seaport, a clever traveling actor and his troupe detect the disguise of a pirate and rescue a maiden from his power.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Vincente Minnelli; screenplay, Albert Hackett, Frances Goodrich; music director, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

Cast: Judy Garland, Gene Kelly, Walter Slezak, Gladys Cooper, Reginald Owen.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Mar48 (in notice: 1947); LP1556.

THE PIRATES OF CAPRI. Film Classics, Inc., c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An historical adventure drama filmed in Italy about a nobleman who secretly leads the people of Naples to revolt against the tyrannical Bourbon rule in 1799.

Credits: Producer, Victor Pahlen; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; story and adaptation, G. A. Colonna, George Moser, B. Valeri; screenplay, Sidney Alexander; music, Nina Rota; film editor, R. Lucidi.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Binnie Barnes, Mariella Lotti, Rudolph Serato, Alan Curtis.

© Industrie Cinematografiche Socali S.R.L.; 1Dec49; LP2705.

PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 57 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Howard Bretherton; story, Berne Giler; screenplay, Doris Schroeder, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Oct42; LP11723.

PIRATES ON HORSEBACK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Ethel La Blanche, J. Benton Cheney; photography, Russell Harlan; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23May41; LP10525.

PIRATE'S TREASURE. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After digging madly all over the beach, the pirates find a treasure chest containing ice-cold Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 19Sep49 (in notice: 1948); LP2612.

PISTOL PACKIN' MAMA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Sep43; MP13932.

PISTOL PACKIN' MAMA. c1943. 7 reels, sd. Based on the song by Al Dexter.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Frank Woodruff; original story, Arthur Caesar, Edward Dein; screenplay, Edward Dein, Fred Schiller; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Dec43; LP12457.

PISTOL PACKIN' NITWITS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,558 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Apr45; LP13538.

PISTOL PACKIN' PAPA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Dec43; MP14317.

PITCH A BOOGIE WOOGIE. Lord-Warner Pictures, Inc., c1948. 4 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Musical short, with a brief plot that offers an opportunity for slapstick.

Credits: Director, William Lord.

© Lord-Warner Pictures, Inc.; 15Jan48; LP1414.

PITCHIN' IN THE KITCHEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,671 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Sep43; LP12258.

PITCHIN' WOO AT THE ZOO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Sep44; LP12936.

PITFALL. Regal Films, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1948. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Jay Dratler.

Summary: A crime melodrama in which an insurance agent, bored with the routine of domesticity and business, seeks excitement and finds disaster.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Andre de Toth; screenplay, Karl Kamb; music director, Louis Forbes; film editor, Walter Thompson.

Cast: Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott, Jane Wyatt, Raymond Burr, John Litel.

© Regal Films, Inc.; 13Aug48; LP1760.

PITTSBURGH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Lewis Seiler; original story, George Owen, Tom Reed; screenplay, Kenneth Gamet, Tom Reed; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Robert DeGrasse; film editor, Paul Landers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec42; LP11720.

THE PITTSBURGH KID. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Octavus Roy Cohen.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Jack Townley; screenplay, Earl Felton, Houston Branch; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Aug41; LP10697.

PIXIE PICNIC. Walter Lantz Productions, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Miniatures)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Verne Harding, Fred Moore; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 3Sep48; MP3435.

PLA-LADY. 1 reel, 16mm.

Summary: Performed by children under eight years of age who imitate the actions of their elders when they dress and rehearse for a musical show and attend a banquet.

Credits: Produced and written by William M. Riddick.

© Stanley Riddick Studio; title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Sep49; MU4838.

PLAIN FACTS. American Social Hygiene Association, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Narrator, Walter Clarke.

© American Social Hygiene Association; 31Jul41; MP11700.

PLAIN FACTS. SEE La Escueta Verdad.

PLAIN TURNING ON THE METAL WORKING LATHE. Burton Holmes Films, Inc. for South Bend Lathe Works, c1941. 1 reel, sd. Based on the handbook "How To Run a Lathe."

Appl. authors: John J. O'Brien, Russel E. Frushour.

© South Bend Lathe Works; 15Aug41; MP11541.

PLAINSMAN AND THE LADY. c1946. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Kane; original story, Michael Uris, Ralph Spence; screenplay, Richard Wormser; music, George Antheil; music director, Cy Feuer.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Sep46; LP683.

PLAN FOR DESTRUCTION. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story and screenplay, Karl Kamb, John C. Higgins; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Mar43; LP11891.

PLANE DAFFY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Warren Foster; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Oct44; MP15305.

PLANE GOOFY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Nov40; MP10802.

PLANER AND SHAPER OPERATION. Film Productions Co., c1941. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Roy Arthur Clapp.

© Film Productions Co.; 1Sep41; MP11610.

PLANES OF THE U. S. NAVY. Time, Inc., c1942. 2 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 9Jul42; MP13785.

PLANES WITHOUT PILOTS, sd., 16mm.

© Bell Aircraft Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 18Dec46; MP1402.

PLANNING FOR GOOD EATING. Walt Disney Productions, for the Institute of Inter-American Affairs, c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm. (Health for the Americas)

Summary: A film showing that variety in diet is necessary for good health.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Apr46; MP2726.

PLANT A LITTLE GARDEN IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17May43; MP13591.

PLANTATION MELODIES. Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, LeRoy Prinz; screenplay, Jack Scholl.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 17May45; LP13255.

A PLANTER OF COLONIAL VIRGINIA (1740–1765) Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 25Jun40; MP10692.

PLANTS AND RESEARCH LABORATORIES OF HOUDRY. The Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Houdry Process Corp. 1–1/2 reels, sd. Narration in Russian.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 12 prints, 17Jun45; MU16034.

PLASTIC ART. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Forest Grant.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Jul39; MP9824.

PLASTIC ART. SEE Escultura.

PLASTICS. Caravel Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel each, 16mm. © Caravel Films, Inc.

1. Origin and Synthesis of Plastics Materials. © 1Feb46; MP434.

2. Methods of Processing Plastics Materials. © 1Feb46; MP435.

3. Compression Molding. pt. 1: Preparing the Charge and Loading the Mold. © 1Feb46; MP436.

5. Transfer Molding, Molding a Part with Inserts. © 1Feb46; MP437.

6. Semi-Automatic and Hand Molding of Intricate Parts. © 1Feb46; MP438.

7. Injection Molding. pt. 1: Setting Up the Press and Molding a Part. © 1Feb46; MP439.

9. Finishing Molded Parts. © 1Feb46; MP440.

10. Machining Laminated Plastics. © 1Feb46; MP441.

THE PLASTICS INVENTOR. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Jack Hannah, Dick Shaw; animation, Don Towsley, Bill Justice, Paul Allen, Brad Case; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 5Jul44; LP13106.

PLAY AND PLENTY. SEE Variety Views, no. 162.

PLAY BALL, SON! Herb Lamb Productions, Inc., c1946. 3 reels, sd. & si., 16mm. Based on the book by Bert V. Dunne.

© Herb Lamb Productions, Inc.; 30Apr46; MP522.

PLAY GIRL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 77 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Frank Woodruff; story and screenplay, Jerry Cady; music director, Paul Sawtelle; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10473.

PLAY IN THE SNOW. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul45; MP16393.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15971.

PLAYBILL. Presented by Chevrolet. sd.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 66 prints, 10Oct40; MU10531.

PLAYFUL PELICAN. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Ed Love, Ken O'Brien; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 8Oct48; MP3441.

THE PLAYFUL PEST. Screen Gems, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Paul Sommer; story, Sam Cobean.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 3Dec43; LP12486.

PLAYGIRL POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jul46; MP859.

THE PLAYGIRLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters Band)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Dec41; MP12378.

PLAYGROUND SAFETY. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Vivian Weedon.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Apr47; MP2496.

PLAYING BY EAR. Loew's Inc., c1946. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David O'Brien; screenplay, David Barclay, Joe Ansen; music, Max Terr; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Dec46; MP1503.

PLAYING GROWNUPS. 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., & 22 prints, 26Apr40; MU10219.

PLAYING IN THE PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16074.

PLAYING THE PIED PIPER. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 641 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 14)

Credits: Director, Lou Lilly; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 3Aug41; LP10826.

PLAYING WITH NEPTUNE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; described by Ed Thorgersen.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Feb41; MP10893.

PLAYLANDS OF MICHIGAN. Loew's Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: Views of the wonders of Michigan's resort towns, rivers, and lakes.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Virgil Miller; music arranger, Joseph Nussbaum.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Mar49; MP3944.

PLAYMATES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 96 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, David Butler; story, James V. Kern, M. M. Musselman; screenplay, James V. Kern; music, James Van Heusen; music director, Roy Webb; music arrangements, George Duning; editor, Irene Morra.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Nov41; LP10850.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14915.

PLAYMATES FROM THE WILD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17May40; MP10226.

PLAYTIME IN HAWAII. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photography, Al Brick; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Dec41; MP12251.

PLAYTIME IN RIO. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Rio de Janeiro is the setting of this film in which golf, swimming, soccer, horse racing, and the rigorous training of members of the Brazilian police force are featured.

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Dec48; MP3869.

PLAYTIME IN SCANDINAVIA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: At Soliden, the summer capital of Sweden, King Gustav, nonagenarian sportsman, plays croquet, and his subjects enjoy the favorite summer sports of Sweden—gymnastics, swimming, and skiing. Scenes of the yacht race for Kattegat Cup, between Swedish and Norwegian boats, are included.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Earl Allvine; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Apr48; MP3244.

PLAYTIME'S JOURNEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Mel Allen; music, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Dec48; MP2342.

PLEASE ANSWER. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., sepia. (What's Your I.Q., no. 3) (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Aug40; LP10111.

PLEASE TAKE A LETTER, MISS BROWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41; MP11213.

PLEASED TO MITT YOU. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp,; 6Jul40; LP9753.

PLEASUREBOUND IN CANADA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 797 ft., sd. (A Columbia Tour, series 3, no. 7)

Credits: Narrator, John Martin; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18May40; MP10205.

PLEDGE TO BATAAN. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, David Griffin; narration, Ralph Schoolman, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Mar45; LP13173.

PLENTY BELOW ZERO. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 653 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody) (Fox and Crow)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Leo Salkin; animation, Howard Swift; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 23Apr43; LP12049.

THE PLOT TO KILL ROOSEVELT. Selected Films, Inc., England. Released in the U. S. by United Artists Corp., c1948. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Originally entitled "Teheran."

Summary: A ficticious melodrama about an English war correspondent who thwarts a Persian plot to murder Roosevelt at the Teheran Conference in 1943.

Credits: Director, William Freshman.

Cast: Derek Farr, Marta Labarr, Manning Whiley, Pamela Stirling, John Slater.

© Selected Films, Inc.; 22Oct48; LP2070.

PLUMBING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 20Sep45; MP16611.

THE PLUNDERERS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 87 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A U.S. Cavalry officer, having disguised himself as a badman, apprehends a desperado and his gang. Sioux Indians attack the party and kill the outlaw, thereby relieving the officer of the unhappy task of hanging him. Setting, the West of 1870.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Joseph Kane; original story, James Edward Grant; screenplay, Gerald Geraghty, Gerald Adams; music, Dale Butts; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Rod Cameron, Ilona Massey, Adrian Booth, Forrest Tucker, George Cleveland.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Nov48; LP1999.

PLUTO AND THE ARMADILLO. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Wall Disney Productions; 27Aug42; LP11871.

PLUTO AT THE ZOO. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 20May42; LP11694.

PLUTO, JUNIOR. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jan42; LP11126.

PLUTO'S BLUE NOTE. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Jack Huber; animation, Jerry Hathcock, George Kreisl, George Nicholas, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 4Sep47; LP1376.

PLUTO'S DREAM HOUSE. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 17Jul40; LP9866.

PLUTO'S FLEDGLING. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Eric Gurney; animation, Phil Duncan, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 6Nov47; LP1970.

PLUTO'S HOUSEWARMING. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, Jerry Hathcock, Marvin Woodward, Blaine Gibson.

© Walt Disney Productions; 19Aug46; LP1128.

PLUTO'S KID BROTHER. Walt Disney Productions, c1945. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Harry Reeves, Jesse Marsh; animation, George Nicholas, Gerry Hathcock, Robert Youngquist, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 25Jul45; LP155.

PLUTO'S PLAYMATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jan41; LP10286.

PLUTO'S PURCHASE. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, Robert Youngquist, George Kreisl, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Aug47; LP1718.

PLUTO'S SURPRISE PACKAGE. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Eric Gurney; animation, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Hugh Fraser, George Rowley; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 19Apr48; LP1986.

PLUTO'S SWEATER. Walt Disney Productions. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Milt Schaffer; music, Oliver Wallace; animation, Phil Duncan, Hugh Fraser, George Nicholas, Dan MacManus.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18May48; LP2347.

PNEUMONIA. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Chinese.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 30May46; MP951.

PNEUMONIA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 3Oct41; MP14226.

POBYEDA. SEE Counter-Attack.

THE POCKET BOOK OF BASIC ENGLISH. SEE Basic English.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11165.

POET AND PEASANT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Feb45; MP15633.

THE POET AND PEASANT, c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walter Lantz; director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Walter Lantz Productions & Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Feb46; MP786.

POI MY BOY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1698.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jun44; MP14930.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; how to plan a victory vegetable garden. The Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 2Jul43; MP13809.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; preserving the victory garden crop. Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: F. W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 15Aug43; MP14840.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; summer care of the victory garden. The Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 15Jul43; MP13858.

POINTS FOR PEDALERS. Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. of Hartford, Conn., c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 1Nov43; MP14189.

POINTS ON ARROWS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec41; MP11941.

POLAND. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 17Jan39; MP9847.

POLAR PEST. Loew's Inc., c1944. 609 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Arnold Gillespie, Michael Lah, Ed. Barge, Jack Carr; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Dec44; LP13082.

POLAR PEST. Loew's Inc., c1944. 609 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Arnold Gillespie, Michael Lah, Ed Barge, Jack Carr; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.: 21Dec44: LP260.

POLAR PLAYMATES. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 605 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Volus Jones; animation, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 25Apr46; LP551.

THE POLE VAULT. Coronet, c1945. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Physical Education Series)

Credits: Produced under the supervision of Dean B. Cromwell.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 22Dec45; MP1539.

POLICE BULLETS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Ande Lamb.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Jean Yarbrough; screenplay, Edmond Kelso, Ande Lamb; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Aug42; LP11589.

THE POLICEMAN. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 30Nov40; MP10693.

POLICEMAN'S HOLIDAY. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 9.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16320.

POLITICAL PARTIES. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, J. Donald Kingsley.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 7Jul47; MP2505.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Apr44; MP14763.

POLKA-DOT PUSS. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Feb49; LP2141.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Nov44; MP15390.

THE POLLARD JUMP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Apr46; MP355.

POLLY WANTS A DOCTOR. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 587 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 33)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Howard Swift; story, Dun Roman; animation, Jim Armstrong, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12495.

POLO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 125)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Jan47; MP1970.

POLO CHAMPIONS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 869 ft., sd. (The World of Sports, no. 74)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, William Kelly; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Nov41; MP12064.

A POLO PHONY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc,; 16May41; LP10570.

POLO WITH THE STARS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Director, Paul R. Thoma; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Sep41; MP11573.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16588.

POLSKA NIE ZGINEŁA (POLAND IS NOT LOST). c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Narration, St. Sobieniowski.

Appl. authors: John Milo and Aurelio Battistoni.

© Roma Film Co.; 10Dec40; MP10753.

PONTOON ASSEMBLY AND UTILIZATION; pontoon floating drydock. Sound Masters, Inc. for the Training Film Section, Photographic Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. © Sound Masters, Inc.

Appl. author: J. F. Clemenger.

1. String and Deck Assembly. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14160.

2. Stabilizer Powers and Catwalks. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14161.

3. Ramp and Air Feed System. © title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Nov43; MU14162.

4. Adjustable Boat Cradle. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14163.

5. Testing and Operation. © title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Nov43; MU14164.

PONTOON ASSEMBLY AND UTILIZATION. Sound Masters, Inc., for Training Film Section, Photographic Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. © Sound Masters, Inc.

Appl. author: James F. Clemenger.

3. Assembling a Pontoon Bridge. © title, descr., & 8 prints, 25Mar43; MU13396.

5. The Pontoon Wharf. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 12Jun43; MU13648.

PONY EXPRESS DAYS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 19 min., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Charles L. Tedford. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Jul40; LP9762.

PONY POST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Ray Taylor; original story and screenplay, Sherman Lowe.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Oct40; LP9997.

THE POOCH PARADE. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Fable, no. 5)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Harry Love, Louie Lilly; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Jun40; LP9717.

POOPDECK PAPPY. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, Bill Nolan, Winfield Hoskins.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Nov40; LP10054.

POP ALWAYS PAYS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 67 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Arthur J. Beckhard; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Jun40; LP9785.

POP AND MOM IN WILD OYSTERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Animated Antics, HO–5)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10262.

POP GOES THE WEASEL, Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13227.

POP-PIE A LA MODE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Dave Tendlar.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Jun45; LP13370.

POP RINGS THE BELL. Presented by National School Service Institute. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© National School Service Institute; title & descr., 18Mar44; 5 prints, 21Mar44; MU14616.

POPE LEO XIII. Creative Arts Studio, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Howard Lamarr Walls.

© Creative Arts Studio, Inc.; 11Aug47; MP2237.

POPEYE AND THE PIRATES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, I. Klein, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Sep47; LP1226.

POPEYE MEETS HERCULES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, I. Klein; animation, George Germanetti, Tom Moore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Jun48; LP1677.

POPEYE MEETS RIP VAN WINKLE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordon; animation, Myron Waldman, Sidney Pillet.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9May41; LP10459.

POPEYE MEETS WILLIAM TELL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordon; animation, James Culhane, Alfred Eugster.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Sep40; LP9931.

POPEYE'S PREMIERE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Story, Bill Turner, I. Klein; animation, Dave Tendlar, John Gentiella.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Mar49; LP2190.

POPPA KNOWS WORST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; direction and screenplay, Ben Holmes; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Apr44; LP12797.

POPPIN' THE CORK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13678.

POP'S COMIN' HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14913.

POPULAR SCIENCE. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1939–49. 1 reel each, sd., 35mm. © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Writers, Gayne Whitman, Walter Anthony, George Brandt; narrators, Gayne Whitman, Van Des Autels.

J9–3. © 15Dec39; MP9854.

J9–4. © 16Feb40; MP9982.

J9–5. © 26Apr40; MP10185.

J9–6. © 28Jun40; MP10313.

J0–1. © 6Sep40; MP10455.

J0–2. © 1Nov40; MP10592.

J0–3. © 20Dec40; MP10679.

J0–4. © 21Feb41; MP10865.

J0–5. © 2May41; MP11114.

J0–6. © 4Jul41; MP11307.

J1–1. © 19Sep41; MP11574.

J1–2. © 7Nov41; MP12031.

J1–3. © 30Jan42; MP13412.

J1–4. © 3Apr42; MP12347.

J1–5. © 12Jun42; MP12586.

J1–6. © 31Jul42; MP12730.

J2–1. © 2Oct42; MP12892.

J2–2. © 27Nov42; MP13067.

J2–3. © 5Feb43; MP13246.

J2–4. © 5Apr43; MP13446.

J2–5. © 11Jun43; MP13656.

J2–6. © 6Aug43; MP13870.

J3–1. © 15Oct43; MP14104.

J3–2. © 10Dec43; MP14360.

J3–3. © 25Feb44; MP14554.

J3–4. © 31Mar44; MP14823.

J3–5. © 12Jun44; MP14964.

J3–6. © 4Aug44; MP15090.

J4–1. © 6Oct44; MP15404.

J4–2. © 22Dec44; MP15502.

J4–3. © 16Feb45; MP15653.

J4–4. © 6Apr45; MP15808.

J4–5. © 1Jun45; MP16014.

J4–6. © 10Aug45; MP16234.

J5–1. © 12Oct45; MP16469.

J5–2. © 7Dec45; MP16592.

J5–3. © 8Feb46; MP273.

J5–4. © 8Apr46; MP513.

J5–5. © 21Jun46; MP712.

J5–6. © 16Aug46; MP979.

J6–1. © 11Oct46; MP1180.

J6–2. © 27Dec46; MP1480.

J6–3. © 28Feb47; MP1737.

J6–4. © 4Apr47; MP1894.

J6–5. Moon Rocket. After a brief reference to an electric toothbrush and other minor inventions, the film shows how V–2 rockets, equipped with recording devices, aid man in learning about the ionosphere 100 miles above the earth.

© 31May47; MP2632.

J6–6. Twentieth Century Vikings.

© 25Jul47; MP2214.

J7–1. Radar Fishermen.

© 17Oct47; MP2390.

J7–2. Desert Destroyers. The raising of oysters near Conway Castle, Wales; the household devices invented by Mr. W. J. Haynes of Kansas City; and the testing of airborne rockets at the Inyokern Naval Ordnance Test Station in the Mojave Desert.

© 26Dec47; MP2590.

J7–3. Streamlined luxury. New kitchen appliances; apparatus for testing landing gear and brakes of airplanes; new machines for harvesting and canning pineapple in Hawaii; and a train that is the forerunner of our trains of tomorrow.

© 20Feb48; MP2731.

J7–4. Fog Fighters. The making of Johansson gage blocks at Eskilstuna, Sweden; the scientific barber shop at Westwood Village, California; and the new methods used to assure safe landings of planes in fog at Arcata, California.

© 2Apr48; MP2851.

J7–5. The Big Eye. The gigantic telescope and 200–inch mirror at Mt. Palomar, Calif. Shots of two new types of cars that show the influence of aircraft construction methods.

© 21May48; MP3005.

J7–6. The Flying Wing. Demonstrates scientific marvels of the present day. Partially pre-cooked food eliminates drudgery for mother; a "mechanical brain" at UCLA does arithmetic for aeronautical engineers; and the new Flying Wing jet plane demolishes distance for travellers.

© 6Aug48; MP3349.

J8–1. Solar Secrets. Kitchen appliances, including an air conditioner and an electronic range, are demonstrated. A mechanical whirlwind turns soil on a Texas farm. A New York girl creates dolls who resemble their "mothers." Fred MacMurray demonstrates exercise devices at Bing Crosby's Research Foundation. In Colorado, scientists study solar secrets by means of a total solar eclipse made to order.

© 24Dec48; MP3649.

J8–2. The Stocking Yarn. Shows the David Taylor Model Basin near Washington, D. C., where the Navy conducts scientific experiments on model ships and planes; shows the rose gardens of Tyler, Texas, from which flowers are shipped to all parts of the country; and traces the history of the knitting of stockings from the time of Queen Elizabeth to the present.

© 4Feb49; MP3798.

J8–3. White Magic. Shows the processing of gypsum and demonstrates the varied uses of the mineral. A new method for creating Photoware is developed. "Hot rod" enthusiasts compete in home-built racing cars at El Mirage Dry Lake.

© 1Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP3959.

J8–4. Air Force Fire Fighters. In Illinois, Arthur Hammerstein, retired, becomes a successful inventor of household gadgets; in Chile, the tunnels of a coal mine extend a thousand miles under the ocean's floor; in Peoria, Illinois, the Department of Agriculture converts corncobs into liquid motor fuel; at Lowry Base in Denver, the Air Force personnel is trained in structural firefighting and aircraft crash rescue work.

© 29Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4034.

J8–5. Seaweed Science. Demonstrates how a ten-ten scientific beachcomber cleans a sandy beach; shows how synthetic gems are produced; shows how children are taught aviation sciences at Weed Patch, Calif.; and shows how seaweed is gathered off the coast of Florida and processed for agar.

© 17Jun49; MP4265.

J8–6. Talking Turkey. Shows the mechanical bucking horse used to teach beginners at the ranch of Bill Pace; demonstrates machinery used for improved soil tillage methods; demonstrates a new paint which defies flames; and shows how methods for production of turkeys have been improved by science.

© 19Aug49; MP4514.

PORKY CHOPS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; animation, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Dec48 (in notice: 1947); MP3804.

PORKY PIG'S FEAT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, Phil Monroe; music director, Carl. W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jul43; MP13795.

PORKY THE GIANT KILLER. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Melvin Millar; animation, Gil Turner.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Nov39; MP10005.

PORKYLIAR PIGGY. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 679 ft., sd., color. Adapted from the "Li'l Abner" cartoon strip by Al Capp.

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Al Geiss; animation, Chic Ollerstrom, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Oct44; LP13260.

PORKY'S ANT. Leon Schlesinger Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Rudolph Larriva; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9May41; MP11128.

PORKY'S BASEBALL BROADCAST. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 6Jul40; MP10318.

PORKY'S BEAR FACTS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Manuel Perez; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Mar41; MP11026.

PORKY'S CAFE. c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Rudolph Larriva; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Mar42; MP12238.

PORKY'S HIRED HAND. c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Richard Bickenbach; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec40; MP11259.

PORKY'S LAST STAND. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, I. Ellis; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec39; MP9852.

PORKY'S MIDNIGHT MATINEE. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Robert Cannon; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Dec41; MP12285.

PORKY'S PASTRY PIRATES, c1942. 1 reel, sd. Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Gerald Chiniquy; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Jan42; MP12068.

PORKY'S PASTRY PIRATES. Released by Warner Bros., c1942. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Gerald Chiniquy; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Mar42; MP12324.

PORKY'S POOCH. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, I. Ellis; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec41; MP11947.

PORKY'S POOR FISH. c1940. 1 reel. sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, David Hoffman; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Apr40; MP10137.

PORKY'S PREVIEW. Leon Schlesinger Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Vergil Ross; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Apr41; MP11089.

PORKY'S PRIZE PONY. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Ken Harris; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Jun41; MP11251.

PORKY'S SNOOZE REEL. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Warren Foster; animation, John Carey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20Dec40; MP10762.

THE PORT OF FORTY THIEVES, c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Walter H. Goetz; director, John English; original screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Richard Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jun44; LP12731.

PORT OF NEW YORK. Contemporary Productions, Inc. Released through Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which the Bureau of Customs of the U. S. Treasury Department copes with illicit traffic in narcotics. Filmed in New York. Given semi-documentary treatment.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Laslo Benedek; story, Arthur A. Ross, Bert Murray; screenplay, Eugene Ling; music, Sol Kaplan; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: Scott Brady, Richard Rober, K. T. Stevens, Yul Brynner, Arthur Blake.

© Contemporary Productions, Inc.; 10Nov49; LP2625.

PORT OF NEW YORK. RKO Pathe, Inc. in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This is America, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Jerry Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Alan Shulman; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 28Jun46; MP1072.

PORT SAID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A story of murder in Port Said. The principal characters are a young author and his theatrical acquaintances.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Reginald Le Borg; story, Louis Pollock; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg.

Cast: William Bishop, Edgar Barrier, Gloria Henry, Richard Hale, Stephen Geray.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Apr48; LP1536.

PORTRAIT OF A GENIUS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story and screenplay, Carl Ward Dudley; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jan43; LP11864.

PORTRAIT OF JENNIE. Vanguard Films, Inc. Released through Selznick, c1949, 86 min., sd., b&w with sepia, and color sequences, 35mm. Based on the novel by Robert Nathan.

Summary: The story of a disillusioned New York painter who falls in love with a vision of a young girl from a bygone day who had drowned in a New England hurricane.

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, William Dieterle; screenplay, Paul Osborne, Peter Berneis; adaptation, Leonardo Bercovici; music, Dimitri Tiomkin; photography, Joseph August; film editor, William Morgan.

Cast: Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotton, Ethel Barrymore, Lillian Gish, Cecil Kellaway.

© Vanguard Films, Inc.; 29Mar49 (in notice: 1948); LP2188.

PORTRAIT OF THE WEST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A survey of Nevada: trails, ranches, sand dunes, ghost towns, resorts, gold and silver mines, the Hoover Dam, Lake Mead, and Pyramid Lake.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Aug48; MP3606.

PORTUGAL. Time, Inc., c1944. 2 reels.

© Time. Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15217.

A POSIÇÃO E O EXERCÍCIO FÍSICO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Arthur H. Steinhaus.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Jun46; MP772.

POSSESSED. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 108 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Rita Weiman.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Curtis Bernhardt; screenplay, Silvia Richards, Ranald MacDougall; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

Cast: Joan Crawford, Van Heflin, Raymond Massey, Geraldine Brooks, Stanley Ridges.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Jul47; LP1160.

POST OFFICE INVESTIGATOR. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: When a collection of rare stamps is stolen, the chief suspect turns sleuth and solves the crime.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, George Blair; written by John K. Butler; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Audrey Long, Warren Douglas, Jeff Donnell, Marcel Journet, Tony Cannon.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Aug49; LP2510.

POST OPERATIVE CARE.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct43; MU14012.

THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by James M. Cain.

Credits: Producer, Carey Wilson; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, Harry Ruskin, Niven Busch; music score, George Bassman; orchestration, Ted Duncan; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Mar46; LP146.

THE POSTMAN DIDN'T RING. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,131 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; original story, Mortimer Braus, Leon Ware; screenplay, Mortimer Braus; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Jul42; LP11475.

POSTMARK: U. S. A. Educational Film Division of Paramount Pictures Inc., in cooperation with National Association of Manufacturers for the National Industrial Information Committee, c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; photography, George Webber.

© National Association of Manufacturers of the United States of America; 15Jan43; MP13215.

POSTURE AND EXERCISE. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 19Dec41; MP14212.

POSTURE HABITS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Erwin F. Beyer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 29Aug47; MP2559.

POSTWAR SALES REGARDING THOUGHT STARTERS. Presented by General Motors. sd., b&w.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15352.

POT O' GOLD. Released thru United Artists, c1941. Presented by James Roosevelt. 7,697 ft., sd. A George Marshall production.

Credits: Producer, James Roosevelt; director, George Marshall; story, Monte Brice, Andrew Bennison, Harry Tugend; screenplay, Walter De Leon; music director, Lou Forbes; film editor, Lloyd Nosler.

© James Roosevelt; 8Apr41; LP10413.

POTTERY MAKING. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Forest Grant.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 23Jun39; MP9823.

POTTERY MAKING. SEE Alfarería.

POTTERY POETS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 147)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Larry Elliott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Oct45; MP16422.

POULTRY ON THE FARM. SEE

Cría de Gallinas.

Os Galináceos na Herdade.

POULTRY RAISING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 15Nov45; MP42.

POUND FOOLISH. Loew's Inc., c1938. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Felix E. Feist; original story, Doane Hoag, Alan Friedman; screenplay, Doane Hoag, Felix E. Feist; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Dec39; LP9403.

O POVO DA CHINA OCIDENTAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Collaborator, O. J. Caldwell.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jul46; MP895.

O POVOS DAS PLANTAÇÕES. SEE Brasil (O Povos das Plantações)

POWDER RIVER GUNFIRE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 24 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The capture of the gang trying to steal a gold claim provides the excitement in this musical Western.

Credits: Director, Harold James Moore; story and screenplay, Irwin Winehouse; film editor, Leonard Anderson.

Cast: Kenne Duncan, Royal Raymond, Don Douglas, Dick Thomas, The Santa Fe Rangers.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Mar48; MP2855.

POWDER RIVER RUSTLERS. Republic Pictures Corp., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Rocky Lane exposes a plot to defraud the citizens of El Dorado.

Credits: Director, Philip Ford; screenplay, Richard Wormser; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Robert M. Leeds.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Gerry Ganzer, Roy Barcroft, Francis McDonald.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Nov49 (in notice: 1950); LP2643.

POWDER TOWN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 79 min., sd. From an original idea by Vicki Baum and the novel by Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust]

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Rowland V. Lee; screenplay, David Boehm; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11May42; LP11372.

POWER AND THE LAND. c1940. 36 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Joris Ivens; commentary, Stephen Vincent Benet.

© Dept. of Agriculture, Rural Electrification Administration and M. L. Ramsay; 19Aug40; MP10425.

THE POWER BEHIND THE NATION. Norfolk & Western Railway Co., c1940. 38 min., sd., color.

Credits: Narrator, Bob Trout.

Appl. author: Waldo E. Austin.

© Norfolk & Western Railway Co,; 1Nov40; MP10711.

POWER BEHIND THE NATION. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. Presented by the Motion Picture Association of America. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Narration, Saul Elkins; narrator, Art Gilmore; music, William Lava; editor, De Leon Anthony. Technicolor.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 28Sep47; LP1228.

POWER DIVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Paul Franklin.

Credits: Producer, William C. Thomas; director, James Hogan; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Edward Churchill; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Bob Crandall.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Apr41; LP10435.

POWER FOR DEFENSE. National Defense Advisory Commission in cooperation with the Tennessee Valley Authority, c1940. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Arch Andrew Mercey; commentary, Robert Collyer; narrator, Thomas Chalmers; photography, Floyd Crosby, Carl Pryer.

© National Defense Advisory Commission; 20Nov40; MP10873.

THE POWER HOUSE OF AVIATION.

Appl. author: Allan Poucher Snody.

© Wright Aeronautical Corporation; title, descr., & 2 prints, 26Jul45; MU16171.

THE POWER OF DECISION. SEE Night Life in a Modern Tavern.

THE POWER OF FREE PEOPLE. Presented by Wisconsin Power and Light Co. 3 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 14Feb46; 130 prints, 17Feb46; MU205.

THE POWER OF THE BLOOD. c1946. 800 ft., sd., b&w or color, 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista Films.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 1Apr46; MP466.

POWER OF THE PRESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lew Landers; story, Sam Fuller; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Aug43; LP12188.

THE POWER OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 66 min., sd. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System radio program entitled "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music, Wilbur Hatch; film editor, Reg Browne.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr45; LP13270.

POWER PLUS. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 12Feb42; 66 prints, 9Feb42; MU12160.

THE POWERS GIRL. Released thru United Artists, c1943. Presented by Charles R. Rogers. 93 min., sd. Based on a play by William A. Pierce and Malvin Wald.

Credits: Producer, Charles R. Rogers; director, Norman Z. McLeod; screenplay, E. Edwin Moran, Harry Segall; music, Jule Styne; music director, Louis Silvers; film editor, George Arthur.

© Rogers Productions, Inc.; 27Jan43; LP11881.

THE POWERS OF CONGRESS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, John Day Larkin.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 30Sep47; MP2561.

THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF FREE GUNNERY PRINCIPLES IN THE AIR; fire doctrine for aerial free gunnery. Presented by the United States Navy, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11Nov43; 11 prints, 13Nov43; MU14133.

THE PRACTICAL JOKER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 963 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director. Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Jan44; LP12518.

PRACTICALLY YOURS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. A Mitchell Leisen production.

Credits: Producer, Harry Tugend; director, Mitchell Leisen; written by Norman Krasna; music score, Victor Young; editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Dec44; LP13138.

PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 532 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 3)

Credits: Story, Harry Love; animation, Allen Rose; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Mar40; LP9517.

THE PRAIRIE. Zenith Pictures, Inc., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An Edward F. Finney production. Based on the story by James Fenimore Cooper.

Summary: A story of pioneer days on the western plains. The plot centers in the adventures of a white girl, who is rescued from the Indians, and the misfortunes of her sweetheart, who is unwittingly involved in a murder.

Credits: Producer, George Moskov; director, Frank Wisbar; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire; music direction and score, Alexander Steinert; film editor, Douglas Bacier.

Cast: Lenore Aubert, Alan Baxter, Russ Vincent, Jack Mitchum, Charles Evans.

© Zenith Pictures, Inc.; 29May48; LP1715.

PRAIRIE BADMEN. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

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

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 9Jul46; LP479.

PRAIRIE CHICKENS. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Fred Guiol; director, Hal Roach, Jr.; original story, Donald Hough; screenplay, Arnold Belgard, Earle Snell; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 13Oct42; LP11937.

PRAIRIE CHICKENS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Pictures of the Missouri prairie chicken in action.

Appl. author: Anthony A. Sassano.

© Missouri Conservation Commission; 3Feb49; MP3797.

PRAIRIE EXPRESS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Barney A. Sarecky; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney, Anthony Coldewey; film editor, Fred Maguire.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Oct47; LP1275.

PRAIRIE GUNSMOKE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; story. Jack Ganzhorn; screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Jul42; LP11459.

PRAIRIE LAW. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, David Howard; story, Bernard McConville; screenplay, Doris Schroeder, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Paul Sawtelle; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Jun40; LP9738.

PRAIRIE OUTLAWS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1948. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western, in which Eddie Dean helps a telegraph company put its line through bandit territory.

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

Cast: Eddie Dean, Roscoe Ates, Sarah Padden, Al Larue.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 12May48; LP1669.

PRAIRIE PALS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Newfeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, Patricia Harper; music, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 19Feb43; LP11873.

PRAIRIE PIONEERS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. From an original idea by Karl Brown. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Lester Orlebeck; screenplay, Barry Shipman, music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb41; LP10304.

PRAIRIE PIRATES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 23 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; adapted from the screenplay by Sherman L. Lowe; music arranger, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, Ted J. Kent.

Cast: Tex Williams, Smokey Rogers, Patricia Hall, Deuce Spriggens, William Haade.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar49; MP4086.

PRAIRIE PROVINCES OF CANADA. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14747.

PRAIRIE RAIDERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 54 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

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

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Nancy Saunders, Robert Scott, Ozie Waters.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29May47; LP1037.

PRAIRIE RUSTLERS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

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

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 20Nov45; LP13569.

PRAIRIE SCHOONERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Nelson; story, George Cory Franklin; original screenplay, Fred Myton, Robert Lee Johnson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Oct40; LP9966.

PRAIRIE SPOONERS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 13 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; direction and story, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Jan41; LP10221.

PRAIRIE STRANGER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based upon a book by James L. Rubel.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Winston Miller; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Aug41; LP10780.

PRAIRIE WINGS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1948. 18 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A film about the ducks and geese in Arkansas' Grand Prairie: the types of ducks found in the region, the techniques involved in many phases of flight, and tactics used in hunting the birds.

Appl. author: Anthony A. Sassano.

© Ducks Unlimited, Inc.; 25Oct48; MP3686.

THE PRAIRIE'S NOT SO FAR AWAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc,; 14May45; MP15940.

PRANCING IN THE PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec43; MP14484.

PREACHER AND THE BEAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr45; MP15847.

PRECIOUS CARGO. Jam Handy Organization. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 4 prints, 21Apr47; MU1955.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; fundamentals of patternmaking. c1945. 1 reel each, sd., 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Making a One-Piece Flat Pattern. © 1Jun45; MP746.

4. Making a Pattern with a Tail Print. © 1Jun45; MP756.

4A. Making a Core Box for a Tail Print. © 1Jun45; MP503.

8. Making a Matchboard Pattern. © 1Jun45; MP752.

9. Making a Core Box for a Vertical Core. © 1Jun45; MP755.

10. Making a Core Box for a Flanged Pipe Elbow. © 1Jun45; MP753.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; fundamentals of patternmaking. Photo and Sound, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each, sd., 16mm. © Photo and Sound, Inc.

2. Making a Pattern with a Vertical Core. © 1Sep45; MP387.

3. Making a Pattern with a Horizontal Core. © 1Sep45; MP388.

5. Making a Segmented Pattern. © 1Sep45; MP389.

6. Making a Pattern for a Three-part Mold. © 1Sep45; MP390.

7. Making a Pattern for a Flanged Pipe Elbow. © 1Sep45; MP391.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the band saw. c1945. 1 reel, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Sawing with Jig and Changing Band. © 1Jun45; MP502.

2. Sawing a Reverse Curve and a Bevel Reverse Curve. © 1Jun45; MP754.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the jointer, c1945. 1 reel each. © R.C.M. Productions, Inc.

1. Jointing Edges and Ends 90 Degrees to Face. © 1Feb45; MP15643.

2. Beveling, Stop Chamfering, and Tapering Square Stock. © 1Feb45; MP15642.

3. Face Planing Uneven Surfaces. © 1Feb45; MP15645.

4. Jointing an Edge for Gluing—Installing Knives. © 1Feb45; MP15644.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the sander. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Sanding Flat and Irregular Surfaces. © 1Jun45; MP749.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the single face surfacer. c1945. 1 reel each. © R.C.M. Productions, Inc.

1. Planing Rough Surfaces to Dimensions. © 1Feb45; MP15641.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the spindle shaper. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Rabbeting and shaping an Edge on Straight Stock. © 1Jun45; MP748.

2. Shaping after Template and Shaping Curved Edges. © 1Jun45; MP751.

3. Cutting Grooves with Circular Saw Blades. © 1Jun45; MP747.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the variety saw. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Ripping and Cross-Cutting. © 1Jun45; MP750.

2. Beveling, Mitering, Rabbeting, Dadoing. © 1Jun45; MP500.

3. Cutting Tenons and Segments. © 1Jun45; MP501.

4. Cutting Cove Molding and a Corebox. © 1Jun45; MP953.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the wood lathe, c1945. 1 reel each. © Photo & Sound, Inc.

Appl. author: William Betts.

1. Turning a Cylinder Between Centers. © 1Mar45; MP15721.

2. Turning Taper Work. © 1Mar45; MP15722.

3. Turning Work on a Face Plate. © 1Mar45; MP15723.

4. Turning Work on a Chuck. © 1Mar45; MP15724.

5. Face Turning a collar. © 1Mar45; MP15725.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; problems in patternmaking. The Jam Handy Organization, c1945. 1 reel each. © The Jam Handy Organization.

Designing Core Boxes for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16017.

Designing a Pattern for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16018.

Making a Pattern Requiring a Cover Core. © 15May45; MP16019.

Making Pattern, Coreboxes, and Assembling Cores for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16023.

Making a Pattern Requiring Segmental Construction. © 15May45; MP16024.

Making a Pattern for a Machine Molded Steel Globe and Angle Valve. © 15May45; MP16025.

Making a Core Box for a Machine Base. © 15May45; MP16026.

Redesigning a Pattern for Production Purposes. © 15May45; MP16027.

Making a Pattern using a Green and a Dry Sand Core. © 15May45; MP16029.

Making a Pattern Requiring Box Construction. © 15May45; MP16030.

PREFLIGHT AND DAILY INSPECTION P–63. Bell Aircraft Corp. Motion Picture Division. 22 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Harold Kopel; cameraman, Edward Bollinger.

© Bell Aircraft Corp.; title, descr. and 12 prints, 14Nov45; MU16502.

PREHISTORIC PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Melvin Millar; animation, John Carey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12Oct40; MP10517.

PRE-HYSTERICAL MAN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Carl Meyer, Jack Mercer; animation, Dave Tendlar, Mary Reden; music arranger, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar48; LP1555.

PRELUDE TO NIGHT. SEE Ruthless.

PRE-OPERATIVE CARE.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct43; MU14013.

PREPARATION OF THE MOUTH FOR DENTURES BY ELECTRO SURGICAL METHODS, si., color, 16mm.

© William A. Coles; title & descr., 15Apr40; 9 prints, 3Apr40; MU10112.

PRESENTING LILY MARS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by Booth Tarkington.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Pasternak; director, Norman Taurog; screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music director, Georgie Stoll; music adaptation, Roger Edens; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May43; LP12080.

PRESERVING FOOD. Coronet, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows why preservation of food is necessary, and explains the reasons behind methods of short-term and long-term preservation.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Ritta Whitesel.

© David A. Smart; 17Jun49; MP4234.

PRESERVING THE VICTORY GARDEN CROP. SEE Pointers for planters.

PRESTRESSED CONCRETE. Gustave A. Magnel. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents a review of the use of concrete, explains the method of prestressing developed by Messrs. Blaton and Magnel, and shows the construction of recent structures using prestressed concrete.

© Gustave A. Magnel; title, descr., & 4 prints, 15Jul49; MU4331.

THE PRETENDER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 69 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder; original screenplay, Don Martin; music director, Paul Dessau; film editor, Asa Boyd Clark.

Cast: Albert Dekker, Catherine Craig.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Jul47; LP1166.

PRETTY DOLLY. RKO Radio Pictures. Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; story, Charles E. Roberts, Ewart Adamson; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Jan43; LP11810.

PRETTY KITTY BLUE EYES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec44; MP15600.

PREVIEWS OF TOMORROW. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Buick Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 2 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 16Feb47; 5 prints, 18Feb47; MU1663.

THE PREY. 2 reels, sd. U. S. Navy.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 2Jul43; 40 prints, 1Jul43; MU13802.

THE PRICE OF FREEDOM. Apex Film Corp., c1949. Presented by the National Association of Manufacturers. 23 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The son of a newspaper editor visits his uncle in Germany and learns how government control gradually took away the freedom of the people. He returns and influences his father to print news items which will lead the people of their community to see the world situation as it is instead of as they want to believe it is.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, William J. Thiele; story, Holcombe Parkes; screenplay, William J. Thiele, David P. Sheppard, Thomas M. Wolff; music, David Chudnow; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

Cast: Arthur Franz, Ray Collins, Michael Chekov, Will Wright.

© Apex Film Corp.; 29Apr49; MP4393.

THE PRICE OF VICTORY. c1942. 13 min., sd. A Pine-Thomas production.

Credits: Director, William H. Pine; screen adaptation, Howard J. Green; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; editor, Howard A. Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Oct42; MP14666.

PRICELESS CARGO. Presented by Superior Coach Corp. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title, descr., & 13 prints, 5Aug46; MU921.

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the dramatization of Jane Austen's novel written by Helen Jerome.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Aldous Huxley, Jane Murfin; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Jul40; LP9764.

PRIDE OF THE BOWERY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Joseph H. Lewis; story, Steven Clensos; screenplay, George Plympton; photography, Robert Cline.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Dec40; LP10470.

PRIDE OF THE MARINES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 119 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a book by Roger Butterfield.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Delmer Daves, screenplay, Albert Maltz; adaptation, Marvin Borowsky; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; photographer, Peverall Marley; film editor, Owen Marks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Sep45; LP13451.

PRIDE OF THE PLAINS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Oliver Drake.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, John K. Butler, Bob Williams; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, John MacBurnie; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Dec43; LP12411.

THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 128 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Sam Wood; original story, Paul Gallico; screenplay, Jo Swerling, Herman J. Mankiewicz; music, Leigh Harline; photography, Rudolph Mate; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 15Jul42; LP11486.

PRIMARY AND ADVANCED FLYING INSTRUCTION.

© Edwin Clarence Hedler; title, descr., & small roll, 15Jan40; MU9949.

THE PRIMARY CELL; electricity from chemical action. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Jun44; MP15910.

THE PRIMARY CELL. SEE

La Pila Simple.

A Pilha Elétrica.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE A. sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics Training Division.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 87 prints, 5Jul43; MU13998.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE B. sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics Training Division.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 84 prints, 5Jul43; MU13999.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE C. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics, Training Division. 1 reel, sd.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 14Jan44; 5 prints, 13Jan44; MU14402.

PRIMROSE PATH. RKO Radio Pictures. Inc., c1940. 93 min., sd. A Gregory LaCava production. From the play by Robert L. Buckner and Walter Hart, as produced by George Abbott.

Credits: Director, Gregory LaCava; screenplay, Allan Scott, Gregory LaCava; music score, Werner R. Heymann; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9647.

PRINCE OF THE PLAINS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western based on the life of Bat Masterson, a defender of law and order in the early bandit-ridden West.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, Philip Ford; written by Louise Rousseau, Albert DeMond; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: Monte Hale, Paul Hurst, Shirley Davis, Roy Barcroft, Rory Mallinson.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 9May49; LP2294.

THE PRINCE OF THIEVES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 8 reels, sd., color, 35mm. Based on Alexandre Dumas' story.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel; adaptation, Charles H. Schneer; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: John Hall, Patricia Morison, Adele Jergens, Alan Mowbray, Michael Duane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1356.

PRINCELY INDIA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Shows some of the 600 states of India, the men who rule them, the religious ceremonies of the natives, their dances, and the magnificent architecture of the country.

Credits: Written by Owen Crump; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 3Jan49; MP3655.

THE PRINCESS AND THE PIRATE. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 94 min., sd., color. Suggested by a story by Sy Bartlett.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, David Butler; screenplay, Don Hartman, Melville Shavelson, Everett Freeman; adaptation, Allen Boretz, Curtis Kenyon; music, David Rose; film editor, Daniel Mandell. Technicolor.

© Regent Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov44; LP12987.

PRINCESS O'HARA. SEE It Ain't Hay.

PRINCESS O'ROURKE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 94 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. A Hal B. Wallis production.

Credits: Written and directed by Norman Krasna; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Warren Low.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct43; LP12336.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14May45; MP15939.

PRINCESS POO-POO-LY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec42; MP13154.

PRINCIPAL DIMENSIONS, REFERENCE SURFACES, AND TOLERANCES.

Appl. author: John G. Curtis.

© Atlas Educational Film Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 5Jun44; MU14910.

PRINCIPES FONDAMENTAUX DE L'ACCOUSTIQUE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "Fundamentals of Acoustics."

Summary: By means of animated diagrams, the range and physiology of hearing, and the principles of velocity and refraction of sound are explained. Engineering problems, such as the elimination of high and low frequencies, are also considered.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 15Nov48; MP3599.

PRINCIPLES OF BAKING (FLOUR MIXTURES). c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Dec43; MP14748.

PRINCIPLES OF COOKING (MEATS AND VEGETABLES). c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 15Dec43; MP14749.

PRINCIPLES OF FLIGHT. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1940. 987 ft.

Appl. author: Clarence E. Baer.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 28Nov40; MP10709.

PRINCIPLES OF HOME CANNING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Oct44; MP15987.

PRINCIPLES OF RADIO. c1943. 1 reel each. © Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

2. Receiving Radio Messages. © 17Dec43; MP14750.

3. Vacuum Tubes. © 28Dec43; MP14751.

PRINCIPLES OF SCALE DRAWING. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how to make scale drawings, how to interpret the drawings, and how the drawings are used. For junior and senior high school grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Harold P. Fawcett.

© David A. Smart; 28Jan49; MP4217.

PRINTING. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 15May47; MP2078.

PRIORITIES ON PARADE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Albert S. Rogell; original screenplay, Art Arthur, Frank Loesser; music direction, Victor Young; photographer, Daniel Fapp; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Jul42; LP11617.

PRIORITY BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Sep42; MP12981.

PRISON SHIP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 60 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Alexis Thurn-Taxis; director, Arthur Dreifuss; story, Josef Mischel; screenplay, Josef Mischel, Ben Markson; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Nov45; LP13698.

PRISON WARDEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 62 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a newly-appointed warden attempts to reform a mismanaged prison while his wife schemes to aid a convict who is her former sweetheart.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Seymour Friedman; screenplay, Eric Taylor; music, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Warner Baxter, Anna Lee, James Flavin, Harlan Warde, Charles Cane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Oct49; LP2576.

PRISONER OF JAPAN. c1942. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 7 reels, sd. Atlantis Picture Corp. An Arthur Ripley Production. Based on a story by Edgar C. Ulmer.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Arthur Ripley; original screenplay, Robert Chapin, Arthur Ripley; music score, Leon Erdody; film editor, Holbrook Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp., 3Jul42; LP11480.

PRISONER OF LOVE. 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; MP1781.

PRIVATE AFFAIRS. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 8 reels, sd. Based on the story "One of the Boston Bullertons" by Walter Greene.

Credits: Associate producer, Glenn Tryon; director, Albert S. Rogell; screenplay, Leonard Spigelgass, Charles Grayson; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures, Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9734.

THE PRIVATE AFFAIRS OF BEL AMI. Loew-Lewin, Inc., c1947. 119 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the novel "Bel Ami" by Guy de Maupassant.

Credits: Producer, David L. Loew; director, Albert Lewin; screenplay, Albert Lewin; music score, Darius Milhaud; film editor, Albrecht Joseph.

Cast: George Sanders, Angela Lansbury, Ann Dvorak, Warren William, Francis Dee.

© Loew-Lewin, Inc.; 7Mar47; LP887.

PRIVATE BUCKAROO. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Cline; original story, Paul Gerard Smith; screenplay, Edmund Kelso, Edward James.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29May42; LP11334.

PRIVATE MISS JONES. SEE Thousands Cheer.

PRIVATE NURSE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,450 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, David Burton; original screenplay, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22Aug41; LP10791.

PRIVATE PLUTO. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 1Feb43; LP11950.

PRIVATE SNUFFY SMITH. Capital Productions, c1942. 7 reels, sd. From "Barney Google and Snuffy Smith" by Billy De Beck.

Credits: Producer, Edward Gross; director, Edward Cline; original screenplay, John Grey, Jack Henley, Lloyd French, Donoho Hall; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Robert Crandall.

© Capital Productions; 16Jan42; LP11565.

PRIZE FIGHTER. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 1)

Summary: Introduces Roland La Starza, a promising heavyweight fighter, and shows his daily routine during the training period before a fight.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Edward Rice; narrator, Bill Corum; editor, Gene Milford.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 23Sep49; MP4809.

PRIZE MAID. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The domestic bliss of the Newlyweds is disrupted when they win a maid on a radio program.

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

Cast: Robert Neil, Suzi Crandall, Patsy Moran, Marlo Dwyer, Joe Devlin.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Sep49; LP2598.

PROBLEM PAPPY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Myron Waldman, Sidney Pillet.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Jan41; LP10168.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Caravel Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each. © Caravel Films, Inc.

Instructing the Blind Worker on the Job. © 1Jun45; MP30.

Employing Workers in Industry. © 1Jun45; MP31.

Employing Disabled Workers in Industry. © 1Jul45; MP431.

Establishing Working Relations for the Disabled Worker. © 1Jul45; MP432.

Instructing the Disabled Worker on the Job. © 1Jul45; MP433.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Caravel Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel each, sd. © Caravel Films, Inc.

Appl. author: F. Burnham MacLeary.

A New Supervisor Takes a Look at His Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 35 prints, 9Sep44; MU15197.

© 1Nov44; MP15769.

Introducing the New Worker to His Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 35 prints, 9Sep44; MU15200.

© 1Nov44; MP15770.

Instructing the New Worker on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 29 prints, 9Sep44; MU15199.

© 1Nov44; MP15771.

Placing the Right Man on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 51 prints, 9Sep44; MU15202.

© 1Nov44; MP15773.

Supervising Workers on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 39 prints, 9Sep44; MU15201.

© 1Nov44; MP15774.

Maintaining Workers' Interest.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 25 prints, 9Sep44; MU15198.

© 1Nov44; MP15772.

The Supervisor as a Leader, pt. 1.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 33 prints, 9Sep44; MU15195.

© 1Nov44; MP15767.

The Supervisor as a Leader, pt. 2.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 36 prints, 9Sep44; MU15196.

© 1Nov44; MP15768.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Century Productions, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. © Century Productions, Inc.

Safety in the Shop. © 1Oct45; MP91.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Division of Visual Aids, U. S. Office of Education, c1944–45. 1 reel each. © Herbert Kerkow.

Supervising Women Workers.

© 25Aug44; MP15156.

© 1Aug45; MP363.

Every Minute Counts.

© 25Aug44; MP15157.

© 1Aug45; MP364.

Using Visual Aids in Training.

© 13Jul44; MP15022.

© 1Aug45; MP365.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Mode-Art Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel each. © Mode-Art Pictures, Inc.

Improving the Job. © 17Jul44; MP15576.

Maintaining Good Working Conditions. © 17Jul44; MP15577.

Maintaining Quality Standards. © 17Jul44; MP15578.

Planning and Laying Out Work. © 17Jul44; MP15579.

Working with Other Supervisors. © 17Jul44; MP15580.

PROBLEMS OF FLIGHT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 12Jun41; MP14211.

PROBLEMS OF HOUSING; the individual home. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15988.

PROCESSING EKTACHROME COLOR FILM. 167 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: A. Lloyd Reber, Jr.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 16Aug46; MU977.

THE PRODIGAL SON. c1944. 1,000 ft., 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 15May44; LP12734.

PRODUCTION CONTROL. Production Research Co. 825 ft., sd.

Credits: Directed and written by Charles J. Hupp.

© Charles J. Hupp, d.b.a. Production Research Co.; title, descr., & 50 prints, 3Jul46; MU839.

PRODUCTION OF FOODS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (World Food Problems, no. 2)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9May46; MP591.

PRODUCTIVITY—KEY TO PLENTY. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Traces the development of machine power in the United States from 1850 to date, emphasizing that the United States has achieved great production, a large income, and a high standard of living because of the mastery of machine power.

Credits: Collaborator, J. Frederic Dewhurst.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Mar49; MP3990.

PROEM. [A. F. Films, Inc.] c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon presenting the figures of a chess set made of modeling clay.

Credits: Music, William Smith.

Appl. authors: Leonard Tregillus, Ralph W. Luce, Jr., William Smith.

© Ralph W. Luce, Jr.; 7Oct49; MP4668.

PROFESSIONALISM IN RETAILING. Presented by Butler Bros. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Butler Bros.; title & descr., 17Jan40; 128 prints, 19Jan40; MU9942.

PROF. OFFKEYSKY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Jun40; MP10285.

PROF. PEABODY'S BANJO SCHOOL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec42; MP13169.

PROF. SMALL AND MR. TALL. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 691 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; directors, Paul Sommer, John Hubley; story, John McLeish; animation, Jim Armstrong, Volus Jones; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 26Mar43; LP11977.

PROFESSOR TOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Oct48; LP1923.

PROGRESS REPORT—1943. Presented by General Motors. 4 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Public relations; title, descr., & 264 prints, 29Nov43; MU14230.

PROGRESS THROUGH ENGINEERING. Presented by General Motors Corp. 20 min., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 9May46; 12 prints, 13May46; MU559.

PROGRESSIVE HONING WITH AUTOMATIC SIZING. Presented by Micromatic Hone Corp. 1–1/2 reels, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 13 prints, 3Dec45; MU16573.

O PROGRESSO DAS COMUNICAÇÕES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "The Development of Communication."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Mar47; MP1840.

PROJECT X. Transcontinental Productions, Inc. Released through Film Classics Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Joining forces with Federal agents, a young physicist tracks down a Communist spy ring seeking atomic energy secrets.

Credits: Producer, Edward Leven; director, Edward J. Montagne; screenplay, Gene Hurley, Earl Kennedy; film editor, Theodore Waldeyer.

Cast: Keith Andes, Rita Colton, Jack Lord, Kit Russell, Joyce Quinlan.

© Transcontinental Productions, Inc.; 14Oct49; LP2553.

PROJECTIVE MOVEMENT SEQUENCES. Produced in the Audio-Visual Laboratory of Teachers College, Columbia University under the direction of William H. Lundin. 4 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A film showing continuously moving metallic particles. To be used by psychologists as an instrument for evaluating personality.

© William Howard Lundin; title, descr., & 8 prints, 25Mar48; MU2826.

THE PROMISED LAND. 60 min., sd., color.

Appl. author: T. R. Jackman.

© DeVry Corp.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 20Jul40; MU10403.

PROMISES WE LIVE BY. SEE Back of Every Promise.

PRONTO SOCÔRRO; ferimentos e fraturas. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., em colaboraçao com a Cruz Vermelha Americana, c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Jun46; MP719.

PROOF FOR ANY MAN. Presented by Associated Lines of the B. F. Goodrich Co. (Hood) 2 reels.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© B. F. Goodrich Associated Lines; title, descr., & 231 prints, 19May41; LU10464.

PROPAGAÇAO DO CALOR. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, H. Horton Sheldon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP777.

PROPAGANDA TECHNIQUES. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Outlines a procedure for recognizing propaganda, explains the purposes and techniques of propaganda, and stresses the importance of critical evaluation of propaganda.

Credits: Educational collaborator, William G. Brink.

© David A. Smart; 14Jul49; MP4490.

PROPER STEPS. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Personal Guidance Series)

Summary: A health film based on medical research, showing how walking habits cause common foot abuses and how these habits may be corrected.

Credits: Director and photographer, Josef Bohmer.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4556.

PROPERTIES OF WATER. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Simple experiments are conducted to show the chemical composition of water and its properties as a solid, a liquid, and a gas.

Appl. authors: E. C. Waggoner, Gilbert I. Renner.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 8Sep47; MP2585.

PROPERTY TAXATION; arithmetic of taxes. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 14Mar46; MP334.

THE PROSPECTING BEAR. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 808 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolph Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Mar41; LP10340.

PROSPECTING FOR PETROLEUM. George Pal production, sponsored by the Shell Oil Co., Inc., c1948. 26 min., sd., color, 16mm. (This Is Oil, no. 1)

Summary: The story of petroleum; how it was formed through ages of geological change, and how it is found, extracted, and put to use by man today.

Credits: Producer, George Pal; director, Duke Goldston; animation, Erwin Broner.

© Shell Oil Co., Inc.; 12Feb48; LP1778.

THE PROSPERITY PRESS OPERATOR TRAINING BUNDLE.

Appl. author: H. H. Brown Lee.

© The Prosperity Co., Inc.; title & descr., 13Jan41; 17 prints, 18Dec40; MU10756.

PROSPERITY 2–GIRL SHIRT FINISHING UNIT. Prosperity Co., Inc., c1947. 2 reels, b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: M. C. Ritter.

© Prosperity Co., Inc.; 21Apr47; MP2184.

PROTECTING ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT FROM HIGH IMPACT SHOCK. Presented by the U. S. Navy. 1–1/2 reels, b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 13 prints, 5Aug46; MU918.

PROTECTIVE CUSTODY. Letha McHale and Robert S. Wilson. b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film reproduces drawings of scenes of Santo Tomas Internment Camp in the Philippines and shows portraits of internees.

© Letha McHale, Robert S. Wilson; title, descr., & 2 prints, 14May48; MU2992.

PROUDLY WE SERVE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Marine Corps, c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Written and directed by Crane Wilbur.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Oct44; LP12898.

PROVE IT BY THE THINGS YOU DO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Feb46; MP243.

PROVING GROUND. Presented by Celanese Celluloid Corp., Plastics Division of Celanese Corp. of America. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Celanese Celluloid Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 5 prints, 31Oct44; MU15346.

PRUNES AND POLITICS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, George Jeske; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12441.

PSALMODY. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Narration, Jesse William Stitt.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 1Jun46; MP870.

PUBLIC DEB. NO. 1. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 7,247 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Gregory Ratoff; story, Karl Tunberg, Don Ettlinger; screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Sep40; LP9929.

PUBLIC ENEMIES. c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Michael Burke.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Albert S. Rogell; screenplay, Edward T. Lowe, Lawrence Kimble; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Oct41; LP10903.

PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. authors: Marjorie F. Ellis, Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co., 28Sep43; MP14297.

PUBLIC JITTERBUG NO. 1. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 20 min., sd. (Broad Brevity)

Credits: Director, Joseph Henabery; story, Burnet Hershey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec39; LP9604.

PUBLIC NUISANCES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jun43; MP13640.

PUBLIC OPINION. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Harold D. Lasswell.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 21Nov46; MP1383.

PUBLIC OPINION POLLS. United Productions of America, c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© United Productions of America; 15Feb47; MP2012.

PUBLIC RELATIONS. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

PUCK CHASERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 942 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Oct45; MP193.

PUDDIN' HEAD. c1941. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Joseph Santley; original story, Jack Townley; screenplay, Jack Townley, Milt Gross; music director, Cy Feuer; orchestrations, Walter Scharf; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Jun41; LP10613.

PUDENDAL BLOCK WITH DEMEROL AND INTRACAINE. Lees Malcolm Schadel, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows in detail the use of the pudendal block with Demerol and Intracaine.

© Lees Malcolm Schadel, Jr.; 14Jul49; MP4540.

PUDGY BOY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11May42; MP12543.

PUEBLO PLUTO. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Milt Schaffer; animation, Phil Duncan, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 15Jan48; LP1984.

PULLING FOR PROFITS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Detroit Automotive Products Corp. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Detroit Automotive Products Corp.; title & descr., 8May47; 14 prints, 12May47; MU2000.

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

Summary: Demonstrates the power of the Chevrolet truck as it carries milk over rough country roads to a railroad stop.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 11 prints, 10May48; MU3028.

PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 17Oct40; MP10690.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr45; MP15779.

PUMPERNICKEL POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec43; MP14409.

PUNCTUATION—MARK YOUR MEANING. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The true significance of the various symbols of punctuation and their relation to the written expression of thought is made clear, when a young student struggles to clarify the meaning of his unpunctuated story. For junior high school classes.

Credits: Collaborator, Viola Theman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 19Nov47; MP3278.

THE PUNJAB. SEE India.

PUPPET LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Joe Stultz.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Aug44; LP12885.

PUPPETRY; string marionettes. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Hansel, a puppet, takes a little boy on a tour of a workshop where puppets are made. The film includes a visit to the rehearsal room, explains the plan of the puppet theatre, and presents a brief episode from "Hansel and Gretel." A teaching film for intermediate grades, high schools, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborators, Frank and Elizabeth Haines.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 26Nov47; MP2639.

PURITY SQUAD. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1,798 ft., sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Harold Kress; original story and screenplay, Charles Francis Royal; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep45; LP13520.

THE PURLOINED PUP. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Harry Reeves, Jesse Marsh; animation, George Nicholas, Robert Youngquist, Gerry Hathcock, Ernie Lynch; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Apr46; LP337.

THE PURPLE HEART. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 8,962 ft., sd. From a story by Melville Crossman.

Credits: Director, Lewis Milestone; written for the screen by Jerome Cady; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Mar44; LP12811.

THE PURPLE MONSTER STRIKES. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–6; 3Aug45; LP13462; no. 7–15, 11Oct45; LP13532.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Fred Brannon; original screenplay, Royal Cole, Albert DeMond, Basil Dickey, Lynn Perkins, Joseph Poland, Barney Sarecky; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold Minter.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Man in the Meteor.

2. The Time Trap.

3. Flaming Avalanche.

4. The Lethal Pit.

5. Death on the Beam.

6. The Demon Killer.

7. The Evil Eye.

8. Descending Doom.

9. The Living Dead.

10. House of Horror.

11. Menace from Mars.

12. Perilous Plunge.

13. Fiery Shroud.

14. The Fatal Trail.

15. Take-Off to Destruction.

THE PURPLE V. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. From a story by Robert R. Mill.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser, Curt Siodmak; adaptation, Bertram Millhauser; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Mar43, LP12019.

PURSUED. Hemisphere Films, Inc., c1947. Presented by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. 101 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Milton Sperling; director, Raoul Walsh; original screenplay, Niven Busch; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Christian Nyby.

Cast: Teresa Wright, Robert Mitchum, Judith Anderson, Dean Jagger, Alan Hale.

© Hemisphere Films, Inc.; 8Mar47; LP1108.

PURSUIT TO ALGIERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the "Sherlock Holmes" characters created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Director, Roy William Neill; original screenplay, Leonard Lee; music director, Edgar Fairchild; film editor, Saul A. Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 25Oct45; LP13642.

PUSS GETS THE BOOTS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 838 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Feb40; MP10323.

PUSS N' TOOTS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 681 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; LP11429.

PUT-PUT-PUT (YOUR ARMS AROUND ME). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Jul42; MP12803.

PUT-PUT TROUBLES. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 15May40; LP9716.

PUT YOUR ARMS AROUND ME, HONEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Sep43; MP13990.

PUT YOUR LITTLE FOOT RIGHT OUT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Aug46; MP925.

PUTTIN' ON THE ACT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Dave Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Aug40; LP9877.

PUTTIN' ON THE DOG. Loew's Inc., c1944. 645 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ben Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Oct44; LP12963.

PUTTIN' ON THE DOG. Loew's Inc., c1944. 645 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ben Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Oct44; LP13018.

PUTTING ON THE DOG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP14432.

PYGMIES OF AFRICA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: H. C. Raven.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 4Oct39; MP9830.

Q

QUACK SERVICE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,428 ft., sd.

Credits: Direction, story and screenplay, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Aug43; LP12202.

QUAIL POINTERS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 3)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Phil Reisman, Jr.; narrator, Andre Baruch.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 14Nov47; MP2534.

QUAINT QUEBEC. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A visit to Quebec, including scenes of the St. Lawrence, the plains of Abraham, Montmorency Falls, St. Anne de Beaupre, and the Gaspe Peninsula.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Lowell Thomas; music score, L. De Francesco; photographer, Jack Painter; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4146.

QUAINT ST. AUGUSTINE. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 805 ft., sd., color. (A James A. FitzPatrick Traveltalk)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston, C. Bakaleinikoff; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Nov39; MP10114.

QUALITY. SEE Pinky.

QUANDO BOBBY VAI PARA A ESCOLA. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., for Mead Johnson & Co., c1947. 23 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "When Bobby Goes to School."

Credits: Collaborators, Arthur H. Parmelee, Warren M. Cox.

© Mead, Johnson & Co.; 2Jun47; LP1142.

QUARRY ROAD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel. sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Mar43; MP13336.

QUARTER HORSES. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd. (Sportscope, no. 7)

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.; 22Feb46; MP250.

THE QUARTERBACK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Anthony Veiller; director, H. Bruce Humberstone; original screenplay, Robert Pirosh; music director, Irvin Talbot; photography, Leo Tover; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Oct40; LP9958.

QUARTET. Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 120 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on short stories by William Somerset Maugham.

Summary: Four different phases of English life are reflected in the dramatization of "The Facts of Life," "The Alien Corn," "The Kite," and "The Colonel's Lady."

Credits: Producers, Sydney Box, Antony Darnborough; directors, Ken Annakin, Arthur Crabtree, Harold French, Ralph Smart; screenplay, Robert Cedric Sherriff; music, John Greenwood; music director, Muir Mathieson; editor, Jean Barker.

Cast: Basil Radford, Naunton Wayne, Dirk Bogarde, Francoise Rosay, Hermione Baddeley.

© Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd.; 6May49 (in notice: 1948); LP2468.

QUATTRO PASSI FRA LE NUVOLE. SEE The Bigamist.

QUE BUENA ES LA CONGA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Nov43; MP14169.

QUEBEC IN SUMMERTIME. Loew's Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Summary: Shows many points of interest in the province of Quebec, including Montreal, the city of Quebec, Montmorency Falls, the shrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupre, the Isle of Orleans, the Laurentian Hills, and the St. Lawrence and Saguenay Rivers.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music, Lesley Kirk, Joseph Nussbaum.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Mar49; MP4006.

QUEEN OF BROADWAY. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Sternbach; director, Sam Newfield; original story, George Wallace Sayre; screenplay, Rusty McCullough, George Wallace Sayre; music score, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 26Jan43; LP11812.

QUEEN OF BURLESQUE. c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, David A. Lang.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 4Jul46; LP418.

QUEEN OF DESTINY. c1940. Presented by Imperator Film Productions, Ltd. 95 min., sd., color. By Miles Malleson and Robert Vansittart.

Credits: Producer and director, Herbert Wilcox; scenario and dialogue, Charles De Grandcourt, Miles Malleson, Robert Vansittart; music director, Muir Mathieson; photography, W. V. Small; editor, Jill Irving. Technicolor.

Appl. author: Imperator Film Productions, Ltd.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 2Aug40; LP10177.

THE QUEEN OF HEARTS. SEE Mother Goose Presents The Story Book Review.

QUEEN OF THE AMAZONS. Screen Art Pictures Corp., c1946. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Finney; original story and screenplay, Roger Merton.

© Screen Art Pictures Corp.; 15Nov46; LP809.

QUEEN OF THE MOB. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd. Based on J. Edgar Hoover's book "Persons in Hiding."

Credits: Director, James Hogan; screenplay, Horace McCoy, William R. Lipman; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Jun40; LP9746.

QUEEN OF THE YUKON. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels, sd. Original Story by Jack London.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Malvern; director, Phil Rosen; screenplay, Joseph West; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Sep40; LP9903.

QUEENS OF THE COURT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 10 min., sd., 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Nov46; MP1482.

QUEER BIRDS. SEE Variety Views, no. 145.

QUENTIN QUAIL. Warner Bros. Cartoons. c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec45; MP279.

QUEST OF THE ALASKA SEALSKIN. color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Berthold L. Lange.

© Fouke Fur Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 28Mar42; MU12313.

QUICK AS A FLASH. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the work of the Dearborn cordwood saw, using the Ford tractor as power.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 13Apr49; MU3997.

A QUICK HOOK-UP. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows how implements which can be easily attached to the tractor facilitate farming.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 13Apr49; MU3992.

THE QUIZ KIDS. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Producer, Leslie Roush; photography, William Steiner.

1. © 12Sep41; MP11556.

2. © 5Dec41; MP11925.

3. © 6Feb42; MP13305.

4. © 17Apr42; MP12411.

5. © 22May42; MP12513.

6. © 31Jul42; MP12729.

QUICK ON THE TRIGGER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The Durango Kid gets his man.

Credits: director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Lyle Talbot, Helen Parrish, George Elderedge.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Nov48; LP1935.

QUICK RETURNS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Nov41; MP11851.

QUICK WATSON, THE RHYTHM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14085.

QUICKER'N A WINK. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Oct40; LP10011.

A QUIET FOURTH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 15 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Harry D'Arcy, Paul Conlon; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Dec41; LP10847.

THE QUIET ONE. Published in Scotland, c1948. Released through Mayer-Burstyn, Inc., 1949. 68 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. Produced in cooperation with the Wiltwyck School for Boys, at Esopus, New York.

Summary: A documentary social drama about the reclamation of a ten-year-old Harlem boy who is unwanted, misunderstood, and inwardly tortured.

Credits: Producer, Janice Loeb; director, Sidney Meyers; screenplay, Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb, Sidney Meyers; commentary and dialogue, James Agee; narrator, Gary Merrill; music, Ulysses Kay; film editors, Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb, Sidney Meyers.

Cast: Donald Thompson, Clarence Cooper, Sadie Stockton, Estelle Evans, Paul Baucum.

© Film Documents, Inc.; 10Sep48; LP2552.

QUIET PLEASE! Loew's Inc., c1945. 697 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ed Barge; music director, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Nov45; LP13660.

QUIET, PLEASE, MURDER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,313 ft., sd. From a story by Lawrence G. Blochman.

Credits: Direction and screenplay, John Larkin; musical director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Dec42; LP12221.

QUIET! PLEEZE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Milford Davis; animation, Willard Bowsky, Lod Rossner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Feb41; LP10245.

QUIET WEDDING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels. Based on the play by Esther McCracken.

Credits: Director, Anthony Asquith; screenplay, Terence Rattigan, A. E. de Grunwald.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Nov41; LP10857.

A QUÍMICA NO MUNDO MODERNO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, W. T. Read.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jun46; MP727.

QUIZ BIZ. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 867 ft., sd. (What's Your I. Q., no. 4) (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; story, Will Jason, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Feb41; LP10370.

QUIZZY-TOONS. si., 16mm.

© William D. Cope; title, descr., & set of prints, 19May46; MU575.

R

R. C. L. Burton Holmes Films, Inc. 16mm. (Radio Technician Training) United States Navy.

© Burton Holmes Films, Inc.; title, descr., & 15 prints, 7Feb44; MU14468.

RKO PATHE NEWS. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946–47. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© RKO Pathe. Inc.

Volume 17, 1946.

38. Yamashita found guilty. Hess confesses insanity sham. First jet [plane, the Royal Navy "Vampire"] take-off from carrier. Flametanks demolish Jap planes [at the Sasebo naval base in Japan].

© 1Jan46; MP17.

39. Congress, Parliament sing Christmas carols. Truman goes home for Christmas. Japs petition to save Yamashita. Eight-year-olds learn aviation [in Chattanooga, Tennessee]. Jap Embassy turned over to U. S. Self-service wash at Laundromat. [New hydraulic] jack works from car's dashboard.

© 3Jan46; MP18.

40. Truman reports to nation. Patton buried [in Luxemburg] where his army advanced. Delegates sail for [London] for first UNO Assembly. La Guardia [is] replaced by O'Dwyer. Saints and Sinners honor Halsey [in New York]. Alabama tops Trojans in Rose Bowl classic.

© 8Jan46; MP44.

41. General Homma on trial [in Manila]. Ambassador Marshall arrives in China. GI's fraternize with Tokyo girls. Canadian court dooms [Brigade Fuhrer Meyer] Nazi killer. Last Jap war captives leave United States. New York welcomes 82nd Airborne [Division]. GI's at Vienna motorcycle race.

© 10Jan46; MP74.

42. Kidnap murder [of Susan Degnan in Chicago] shocks nation. Army, Navy plan atom bomb test on ships. Kaiser-Frazer Corporation signs UAW contract. UNO committee searches for site. Flames level huge post exchange [in Yokohama]. Britain gets first bananas in years. Movies honor [Ted Gamble] bond drives leader.

© 15Jan46; MP85.

43. Eighty-second Division in biggest victory parade. Winston Churchill arrives in the U. S. The Little Flower [LaGuardia] as private citizen. Helicopter [Army-Sikorsky R–5] sets five world marks.

© 17Jan46; MP92.

44. First meeting of UNO Assembly [in London]. GI's demonstrate [against the slow rate of demobilization]—Eisenhower answers. Pearl Harbor inquiry hears Admiral Kimmel. "Bathers' day" in [Boras] Sweden.

© 22Jan46; MP118.

45. Strike closes steel industry. New Kaiser and Frazer cars go on display. Truman honors draft board volunteers. Ruined Warsaw rebuilt by Poles. Rescue pilot from Burma jungle. Close famed London Rainbow Club. Stassen heads Brotherhood Week.

© 24Jan46; MP130.

46. Navy outlines atom bomb test. Assembly begins job [in London]. Government and Communists sign truce in China. General Morgan under fire for statement [that Polish Jews were secretly organized for illegal exodus into Palestine].

© 29Jan46; MP144.

47. Jet plane [Army P–80] in fastest flight across U. S. [U. S.] seizes meat plants—strikers go back. The "F. D. R." on shakedown cruise. Byrnes praises UNO's progress. England in bid for world's trade. [Allies] restore blasted German rail roads.

© 31Jan46; MP147.

48. Radar contacts the moon [at an Army Signal Corps laboratory in Belmar, New Jersey]. De Gaulle resigns [as President of France]—Gouin, new President. Truman, nation mark Roosevelt birthday. Germany holds first free election [in 13 years]. U. S. sub fleet goes into storage.

© 5Feb46; MP151.

49. GI's English brides arrive in America. Transport in record flight across nation. [Chinese 6th] Army of occupation sails for Manchuria. Harry Hopkins dies at fifty-five. U. S. opens bridges across Rhine. New fabrics, walls resist stains. [France's] herring fleet catches vital food.

© 7Feb46; MP174.

50. Brazil inaugurates President Dutra. POW's guard billions in U. S. surplus goods [near Paris]. U. S. ships repatriate Koreans from Japan. Open New York to Paris air service. Rare ivory is shaped for market. Princess [Elizabeth of England] on tour of inspection. Luxembourg honors Grand Duchess [Charlotte].

© 12Feb46; MP179.

51. [UNRRA distribution centers] increase relief to starving Europe. Mine fields cleared by new army devices. Send Jap "conquerors" home from China. Great Florida fleet harvests sponge crop.

© 14Feb46; MP194.

52. New York shuts down [because of an eight-day tugboat strike]. Secretary Ickes resigns after Capitol row. Justices [Frankfurter, Murphy and Stone] in plea for American brotherhood. Cardinals-elect on Rome flight. New auto midget comes on market.

© 19Feb46; MP208.

53. Steel strike ends. Saratoga [carrier] ready for atomic tests. Kaiser introduces new family plane. Ski champs in international meet. Dionne quints at Canada carnival. Barefoot pilgrims carry holy statue to Notre Dame [in Paris]. [Enormous snow plows] clear path thru thirty foot snow [in Mt. Rainier National Park].

© 21Feb46; MP215.

54. UNO delegates return home. Bradley urges action on veterans problems. Musk-ox task force braves Arctic wastes. First jet squadron in formation flight. Find missing Italian royalty. Royal opera opens in London.

© 26Feb46; MP233.

55. Cardinals [in Rome] receive red hats. Taxi drivers ride on Washington. China celebrates happy New Year. Mrs. Roosevelt in Germany visit. Richelieu [battleship] comes home to France.

© 28Feb46; MP241.

56. General Homma sentenced to die [in Manila trial]. UNO begins move to Hunter College. Giant machine "lays" new homes like eggs. Fast army plane [XF–12] is new airliner. Churchill gets honorary degree [from the Miami University]. Shanghai hails Chiang Kai-Shek. GI's "rest up" on Jap ski run.

© 5Mar46; MP248.

57. President [Truman] calls meeting on food crisis. Jap Emperor unbends on visit to people. New York opens emergency homes for veterans. Fun and prices hit new high in Florida. Find child and nurse in kidnaping. Navy shows first "hobby [lobby]" station. New Red Cross drive opened by Truman.

© 7Mar46; MP260.

58. Churchill [at Fulton, Missouri]. Truman [in Columbus, Ohio] in major speeches. France closes its Spanish frontier. Peron, Tamborini in race for presidency [in Argentina]. Cardinals [Spellman and Mooney] hailed on return to U. S. French GI brides sail for America.

© 12Mar46; MP265.

59. First pictures of atom test site [at Bikini Atoll]. Radio-guided planes for atom experiment. Truman supports loan to Britain. Churchill and "Ike" together on tour. Jap Empress on first visit to people.

© 14Mar46; MP274.

60. First report from looted Mukden. One-hundred-thirteen-day General Motors strike comes to end. New volcanic island rises from the sea [off Japan]. Churchill to F. D. R.—a last salute. Dam brings vital power to France. Army demobilizes smallest train [in England].

© 19Mar46; MP282.

61. Churchill, Byrnes in significant speeches [in New York]. General Marshall home from China. Peron wins crucial Argentine election. Meet Mrs. Attlee of 10 Downing Street. [Scientists] record tremendous sun upheavals. GI show at Ernie Pyle theater [in Tokyo].

© 21Mar46; MP290.

62. Churchill poses for portrait, leaves U. S. Show electronic blanket. Pathe News report: United Nations. Destroy U. S. planes, gunpowder [in Germany and Alabama]. Smith named Russia Ambassador. Iran dispute submitted to UNO. UNRRA meets in Atlantic City.

© 26Mar46; MP300.

63. UNO meets in New York. Hoover surveys food crisis in France. "Bluebeard" Petiot at scene of his crimes. Army embarks on Jap anti-typhus drive. Carrier Midway on Arctic cruise. Princess [Elizabeth] christens H. M. S. Eagle.

© 28Mar46; MP329.

64. Russia walks out. The Iran-USSR dispute before UNO Security Council: the Iran question; Russia leaves; Iran is heard.

© 2Apr46; MP343.

65. Insane pianist fights way back through music. President Truman awards two medals of honor [to Commander O'Kane and Sergeant McGaha]. Two million dollar fire ruins pulpwood, big bridge [in Canada]. Pre-war gaiety in Paris festival. Thirteen-hundred-pound rocket is U. S. biggest. [Crewmen] resume Oxford, Cambridge classic. Mine phosphates for Europe's farms.

© 4Apr46; MP359.

66. Tidal wave hits Hawaii. UN Council agrees on Iran dispute. Goering takes stand at Nuremberg trial. First films of Warsaw as Hoover tours city. Meager rations for the beaten Germans.

© 9Apr46; MP394.

67. President Truman in Army Day speech [in Chicago]. One thousand Japs, Formosans jammed on "hell ship" [at Sydney, Australia]. Yugoslavia's Tito is hailed by Czechs. A village of France [Dortan] rises from war ruins. Russian fashions at Moscow show. War planes in mammoth junk heap.

© 11Apr46; MP417.

68. League of Nations ends for all time. Jap undersea fleet sent to the bottom. French [troops] come back to Indo-China. Florida cypress cut for lumber. First Lady [Mrs. Truman] at Children's Hospital. [U. S. motion picture] exhibitors' team to serve U. S.

© 16Apr46; MP419.

69. F. D. R.—a nation remembers. Physician reports President [Truman] well after first year. DDT cleans up an entire county [Muscogee, in Georgia]. Open UNRRA University in Munich. Land mines in gigantic blow-up [in Texas].

© 18Apr46; MP429.

70. General MacArthur asks nations to ban war. 1946 baseball season begins. Auto industry marks its golden jubilee. Dreams come true for a dying boy. Hirohito and family—first portrait. Army wives, kids sail for Europe. "Missouri" carries [Turkish] Envoy's body [to Istanbul].

© 23Apr46; MP454.

71. Japs at polls in first free election. U. S. must conserve, or Europe starves. Cadets at Annapolis—Middies at West Point [on a three-day visit]. Million New Yorkers in biggest Easter parade.

© 25Apr46; MP476.

72. The occupation job [in Germany]—one year after victory. Truman reviews 8th Fleet's maneuvers. Byrnes off to Big Four Paris talks. Royalty [of Sweden and Holland] meet amid old splendor. Khaki University [in England] for vets only. Airborne lifeboat drops from sky.

© 30Apr46; MP499.

73. Big Four [Byrnes, Molotov, Bevin and Bidault] in Paris Conference. Forty-five dead, one hundred hurt in [Naperville] Illinois train wreck. La Guardia seeks aid of Midwest farmers. Army reveals Flying Wing bomber. President Truman on vacation cruise. Mrs. MacArthur at Jap tea party. Famed auto race resumed at Nice [France].

© 2May46; MP506.

74. Seized films of Nazi V–2 launchings. Roxas is elected new Philippines President. Jap silver hoard taken from sea. Plastic lung aids polio victims. Deliveries from sky by parachute. Lightning rods for Eiffel Tower.

© 7May46; MP536.

75. Alcatraz riot. Kentucky Derby. Name [Mrs. Emma Clement, of Louisville] American Mother of 1946. May Day celebrated in Paris.

© 9May46; MP551.

76. Army wives and children join dads in Berlin. France votes down new constitution. May Day in Tokyo, Prague and Berlin. President Truman aids famine relief. Operation Musk-ox is completed. Policewomen are "Tokyo's finest." Marshal Montgomery home [in England] to stay.

© 14May46; MP553.

77. Jap war lords on trial. Army tests Nazis' deadly V–2 rocket [in the New Mexico desert]. President-elect Roxas [of the Philippines] in U. S. meets Truman. Yank raiders combat China's black market. Assault wins the Preakness.

© 16May46; MP564.

78. Pearl Harbor—a Jap's-eye view. Hoover home from world food tour. Disabled vets train for a normal life. President [Truman] honors movies for $4,279,000 [Red Cross] drive.

© 21May46; MP574.

79. Plane crashes into New York skyscraper. Byrnes reports on Big Four Paris meeting. First "new Americans" since war land in New York. UNRRA clothing, food saves lives in Europe. Berlin and Paris mark VE-Day. Memphis holds Cotton Carnival.

© 23May46; MP590.

80. Rail strike paralyzes nation. Work goes ahead on atom bomb test. General Eisenhower on Far East tour. Variety Club award to Evangeline Booth.

© 28May46; MP604.

81. Railroad strike ends. Truman entertains 1200 wounded vets [in Washington]. Louis, Conn train for championship battle.

© 31May46; MP605.

82. Coal strike settled. One billion, four hundred million-dollar loan to France. Hold national spelling bee finals. Target-animals for atomic test. Bust [added to New York University's Hall of Fame] honors Booker Washington. Repair U. S.-Britain cable link. Henry Ford, shows first flivver.

© 4Jun46; MP606.

83. Destroyer of Lidice hanged. Robson wins 500 mile Indianapolis [auto racing] classic. Assault takes Belmont—wears triple crown. Eisenhower speaks [in Washington, D. C.] on anniversary of D-day. First films—Panama's wild Choco Indians.

© 6Jun46; MP619.

84. Fifty-eight killed in Chicago hotel [La Salle] fire. Report on Hiroshima atomic bomb damage. Elections in France, Czechoslovakia, Italy. Industry celebrates fifty years of autos.

© 11Jun46; MP652.

85. Britons parade on Victory Day. Allied dead honored on D-day anniversary [in France]. China national government back in old capital [of Nanking]. G. I. families settle in Berlin. England holds its Derby classic [at Epsom Downs].

© 13Jun46; MP657.

86. London erupts in mammoth celebration [on the eve of Victory Day]. Gandhi leads Hindus in public prayers. News cameramen get ready for atom test. U. S. Ambassador Smith in Moscow. Big oil blaze rages in [Whiting] Indiana. Jap pearl growers back at work. Australia sees richest foot race.

© 18Jun46; MP671.

87. Baruch on atom control. Big Four [Byrnes, Bevin, Molotov and Bidault] meet again in Paris. Peron inaugurated as Argentine President. [Howard Hughes'] largest flying-boat moved to launching. Mangrum wins National Open championship.

© 20Jun46; MP684.

88. Japan today. Christen baby prince [Carl Gustaf of Sweden] amid royal pageantry. Italians hail their new republican government. General de Gaulle takes the limelight again. Train future Filipino envoys at State Department [in Washington].

© 25Jun46; MP696.

89. Vinson sworn in as U. S. Chief Justice. Campaign for Mexico's presidency [led by Miguel Aleman]. Open New York to Prague air service. Select [nation's] best barber shop quartet. Paris fashions are in news again. Illinois takes national [collegiate] track crown. Cornell wins international regatta.

© 27Jun46; MP735.

90. Famine in China. [Staten Island] ferry station burns in $2,000,000 fire. Army's [XB–35] Flying Wing in maiden flight. New posts for Steelman, Snyder. Jap Crown Prince [Akihito] enters school. Berlin carnival aids destitute. Grand Steeplechase run in Paris.

© 2Jul46; MP760.

91. Operation Crossroads [at Bikini]. Truman on prices. Hirohito attends 90th Jap Diet. Helicopter aids war on insects [in Yakima, Washington].

© 4Jul46; MP785.

92. Allies on guard in Trieste. UNRRA fights famine in Hunan Province. British women rebel at bread rationing. GI families take up new homes in Japan. Nisei war heroes return to U. S. Britons bid for war surplus cars.

© 9Jul46; MP770.

93. Bikini atom explosion—Operation Crossroads. Able Day [in the Pacific]. The atom explosion. Aftermath [59 ships destroyed or damaged].

© 11Jul46; MP808.

94. [Ted] Williams stars in All-Star game [Boston]. Aleman wins quiet Mexican election. Philippines Army now under own flag. Truman visits Gettysburg shrine. Benes is Czech President again. Japanese in Corpus Christi rites. Clark honors Italian partisans.

© 16Jul46; MP841.

95. Philippines gain independence. New boundaries set in Big Four agreements. Byrnes returns home—hopeful for Big Four. Hamburg mob protests Allied eviction order. Britain begins move out of Egypt. Princesses [Elizabeth and Margaret] attend Henley Regatta.

© 18Jul46; MP861.

96. King's death is Siam mystery. France marks Bastille Day. British bombers begin U. S. tour. San Francisco trolleys make news. GI's enjoy Pyle roof garden [in Tokyo].

© 23Jul46; MP941.

97. Exclusive films of George Bernard Shaw. Hindus in weird Juggernaut rites. Last German prisoners leave United States. Two-section bus is Kaiser's latest. Anything goes in Siamese boxing. France seizes German horsepower. Ship kept from Nazis is launched [in Holland].

© 25Jul46; MP942.

98. Shriners parade in San Francisco. Chinese Ambassador [Wellington Koo] answers press. Paris hears choir boys' congress. McNarney opens the Patton bridge [across the Rhine]. Germans make old rags into cloth. Rubber boats ride Australia surf. Britain thanks U. S. for loan.

© 30Jul46; MP943.

99. Byrnes flies to Paris Peace Conference. Sister Kenny in U. S. to fight epidemics [of infantile paralysis]. Eisenhower honors Army Medical Corps. UNRRA chief La Guardia on tour in Italy. New York welcomes Europe's homeless. Water ski champs in national meet [in] Holland, Michigan.

© 1Aug46; MP944.

100. Paris Peace Conference opens. De Gaulle calls for France-Britain pact. Russia's might in Red Square parade.

© 6Aug46; MP945.

101. Underwater atom blast. Operation Crossroads—blast number 2. Test Baker. Zero hour. Results of the blast.

© 8Aug46; MP946.

102. Inside Oak Ridge [Tennessee]. Voting causes Peace Conference conflict [at Paris]. Truman, in Missouri, votes in primary.

© 13Aug46; MP947.

103. Palestine violence breaks out anew. UNRRA conference hears La Guardia [at Geneva, Switzerland]. Rio De Janeiro roars welcome to General Eisenhower. Send gas-laden ship to bottom of [North] Sea. [Jehovah's Witnesses] hold mass baptism in Lake Erie. Mash 2 million pounds of potatoes [in Washington].

© 15Aug46; MP948.

104. Biggest bomber [Army's new XB–36] in first air test. President Truman on famed 6:30 a. m. walk. Trieste mob protests. Big Four decision to place zone under international control. Monks rebuild Cassino monastery. Big show staged for General "Ike" [in Brazil]. Huge French dam near completion.

© 20Aug46; MP972.

Volume 18. 1946/47.

1. Palestine: terrorists on trial; refugees shut out. Fourteen-year-old takes Soap-box Derby. Russia rebuilds Dnieper [hydro-electric] dam. Churchill gets ancient honors. Truman begins an ocean vacation. National sweepstakes regatta [between American and Canadian speed demons].

© 22Aug46; MP983.

2. New riots flare in Trieste zone. Price Decontrol Board sets new rules. LaGuardia hailed by Czechs. New airplane [the Lockheed Constitution] is Navy's biggest. Admiral Blandy asks atom control. Women's champ swimming meet.

© 27Aug46; MP1008.

3. Sum up case against Nazi war criminals [at Nuremberg]. College All-Stars crush Rams, 16–0 [in Chicago's Soldier Field]. Truman in Bermuda on vacation cruise. Parachute supplies to Mt. Blanc. Rome seeks relief from the heat.

© 29Aug46; MP1019.

4. Palestine-bound Jews riot at Cyprus camp. Talbert and Mulloy win national tennis doubles. President Truman goes fishing. Revive wild Italian horse race. Hawaii welcomes Nisei fighters. Chileans bag undersea monsters.

© 3Sep46; MP1023.

5. Yugoslavs deliver bodies of U. S. fliers. National air races flown in Cleveland. Safety device hurls pilot from his plane. Louis, Mauriello train for bout. Italy burns 25 billion lire. New [Liberty] highway follows Patton route [across France]. Entire Mexican city of Guanajuato holds picnic.

© 5Sep46; MP1038.

6. General Eisenhower speaks at VFW encampment. King [George II] of Greece regains throne. Camps care for Italy's children. LaGuardia interviewed in London [as UNRRA director]. De Gaule honors heroic island [Ile de Sein]. New thrills in famed Ice-capades.

© 10Sep46; MP1055.

7. Byrnes speaks in Stuttgart. Betz, Kramer win national tennis finals. Meet Marilyn Buferd "Miss America, '46." First native [Jesus A. Pinero] is named Puerto Rico Governor. Record wheat harvest eases world's famine.

© 12Sep46; MP1060.

8. U. S. Fleet's goodwill visit to Greece. France gives peace delegates a party. Monty [Field Marshal Montgomery] visits West Point and Washington. Former Nazi captives give thanks at Lourdes. General Mark Clark home to discuss Austria. Howard Hughes flies continent in a B–23.

© 17Sep46; MP1071.

9. Camera catches crack-up of C–54. La Guardia gives views on Europe. Ted Bishop wins the national amateur crown. Tests [at U. S. Bureau of Mines] show causes of mine explosions. Queen Wilhelmina, sixty-six, feted by her people. "Land yacht" is hotel on wheels. Amphibian takes family on picnic.

© 19Sep46; MP1082.

10. Wallace sees Truman—cancels all speeches. [Army's new XP–84] jet plane shatters U. S. speed record. First big apartments are opened for vets [in Washington, D. C.] Jews in Austria camp seek Palestine home. Repair radioactive atom-bombed ship [USS Laffey, back from Bikini]. Czechs honor fallen U. S. airmen. Korea observes year of freedom.

© 24Sep46; MP1095.

11. Rescue [Newfoundland] plane-crash survivors. Wallace resigns [as Secretary of Commerce] at President's request. General Clark honored [in Salerno, Italy] at site of invasion. Illini and Bears win as '46 grid season opens.

© 26Sep46; MP1114.

12. Inflation, crowds plague Shanghai. Start flood control on vital Yellow River [in China]. A British mother on a pilgrimage to Arnhem. Truman and 50,000 see President's Cup regatta [in Washington, D. C.]. Five thousand [Italian] Boy Scouts are honored by Pope Pius. Flying post office on first mail run.

© 1Oct46; MP1115.

13. Football: Army-Oklahoma; Notre Dame-Illinois. Funeral of Kalinin former Russian President. Riots give way to floods in Bombay. British designs make bid for world trade. U. S. freighter is split off Britain.

© 3Oct46: MP1122.

14. Navy's "Turtle" sets non-stop air record. Greeks hail return of King George II. American Legion in San Francisco parade. Truman asks aid for community Chest, USO. Five hundred thousand pounds of TNT in great test blast. Missionaries set sail for war-torn China.

© 8Oct46; MP1147.

15. Nuremberg: 19 Nazi leaders found guilty. St. Louis: World Series opens.

© 10Oct46; MP1157.

16. Byrnes asks war talk end. Open Alcan highway to civilian traffic. Red Cross clothing for China's children. Cotton pickers vie for national title. British Stage their biggest fashion show. Jack L. Warner is honored by Mexico.

© 15Oct46; MP1181.

17. Truman lifts meat price controls. Actors urge end of movie strike. Columbia and Texas win grid thrillers.

© 17Oct46; MP1190.

18. Paris parley ends; Byrnes reports to U. S. Cardinals win World Series.

© 22Oct46; MP1210.

19. "Queen Elizabeth" arrives [in New York]—brings Molotov. Nazis' families pay their final visits. Tiny republic [of San Marino] claims $10,000,000 war damage. Czech mine is named for President Truman. U.C.L.A. tops California; Army routs Columbia.

© 24Oct46; MP1211.

20. United Nations meet in New York. Celebrate festival of Buddha's tooth [in Ceylon]. Push-button parking for tomorrow's cars [in Los Angeles].

© 29Oct46; MP1223.

21. Football: Penn smothers Navy; Oregon State tops Washington State. Navy tests world's largest helicopter [XHJD–1]. "Queen" leaves New York, bound for London. Gala audience as Paris opera opens. Slowest entry wins strange motor race.

© 31Oct46; MP1257.

22. Molotov, Austin debate disarmament. Atomic Commission created by Truman. "Winnie" [Winston Churchill] and "Monty" [Field Marshall Montgomery] mark El Alamein. Motorcycle racers thrill 10,000 Germans.

© 5Nov46; MP1276.

23. Big Four meet in New York. United Nation delegates visit Roosevelt grave. Lord Mountbatten's daughter is married. Acrobats defy death in high wire stunts. Football: Ohio State vs. Northwestern; Georgia vs. Alabama.

© 7Nov46; MP1282.

24. Landslide sweeps G. O. P. to power. Movie stars meet the King and Queen [London]. Canada stages its biggest log drive. Skiers tackle Mount Rainier.

© 12Nov46; MP1290.

25. Army vs. Notre Dame, game of the year. V–2 goes 104 miles up, another crashes. Molotov calls on President Truman. Big names arrive on Queen Elizabeth. Demonstrate unique automobile-airplane.

© 14Nov46; MP1299.

26. Truman, Martin pledge cooperation. Hunt U. S. flyers in distant "Lolo Land" [in China]. Navy's constitution is biggest transport. Take 1,250 refugees off listing ship [in Palestine]. Hindus, Moslems form government for self rule. One hundred and ten thousand turn out for Melbourne cup race.

© 19Nov46; MP1325.

27. Army beats Penn. G. O. P. committees plan new program. Bombs thrown in Hollywood strike. Sink captured Nazi sub off Cape Cod. Hirohito at Diet, cheered by mobs.

© 21Nov46; MP1326.

28. Coal strike threatens U. S. Amazing films taken of earth from a V–2. Zionist leaders are freed by the British. Last Germans shipped from Czechoslovakia. Aviation groups join in fight against fog. Germans rebuild blasted cities. GI's rest in "Japanese Alps."

© 26Nov46; MP1345.

29. Football! U.C.L.A. tops Southern California. Yale beats Harvard. Gonzales Videla is inaugurated in Chile. British people plan memorial to F. D. R. War correspondents are honored by Army. Supplies by plane to Alps weather station.

© 29Nov46; MP1346.

30. Strikers riot at Allis-Chalmers. Nazis on trial for war murder of 335. Auto phone brings calls to motorists. Salvaged tanker aids west coast lumber mills. U. S. books exhibited in Czechoslovakia. Paris sees wheelbarrow wedding. School kids tour Banff by bike.

© 3Dec46; MP1348.

31. Army-Navy game one of the most thrilling battles in gridiron history. Alpine plane crash rescue.

© 5Dec46; MP1349.

32. Strike news! Biggest expedition sails [from Norfolk] for Antarctic. Court rules Cyprus deportations legal. Mexico inaugurates its new president [Miguel Aleman]. Dunkirk, New York aids Dunkerque, France. Search for parents of 30,000 children [in Germany].

© 10Dec46; MP1375.

33. One hundred and nineteen die in Atlanta hotel fire; Lewis calls off the coal strike. Bombed Eder Dam [in Germany] operates again. UNRRA supplies aid Formosa rice crop. Giants whip Redskins, enter League final.

© 12Dec46; MP1381.

34. Forty-six dead, missing in tenement blast [in New York]. LaGuardia in final report to UNRRA. China holds first National Assembly. Crippled B–25 makes crash landing. Horse racing is resumed in Japan.

© 17Dec46; MP1388.

35. United Nations, a Pathe News report. Storms and high water sweep U. S. Northwest. Bears beat Giants for National League title.

© 19Dec46; MP1405.

36. Rocket plane has 1,700 m.p.h. speed. Danube is opened to free shipping. Leon Blum heads new French government. Delegates meet on India Constitution. Stalin sees big Soviet air show. Army fires huge V–2 at night. Fur breeders [in Alberta] get record crop.

© 24Dec46; MP1418.

37. Browns win AAC football title. UNRRA goes to work on China's roads. Parisian crowds demand more meat. Ex-Navy ship now hauls locomotives. Montparnasse [in Paris] sees gay student parade. Boys learn cooking in Swedish schools.

© 26Dec46; MP1419.

38. Truman sees hope for secure peace. Veterans draw for 86 farms in West. Television included in new 5–year plan. British chief visits troops in Austria. Doll house museum recalls Paris' past.

© 31Dec46; MP1426.

39. © 3Jan47; MP1427.

40. © 7Jan47; MP1448.

41. © 9Jan47; MP1484.

42. © 14Jan47; MP1508.

43. © 16Jan47; MP1509.

44. © 21Jan47; MP1518.

45. © 23Jan47; MP1547.

46. © 28Jan47; MP1610.

47. © 30Jan47; MP1582.

48. © 4Feb47; MP1594.

49. © 6Feb47; MP1611.

50. © 11Feb47; MP1646.

51. © 13Feb47; MP1647.

52. © 18Feb47; MP1667.

53. © 20Feb47; MP1668.

54. © 25Feb47; MP1707.

55. © 27Feb47; MP1729.

56. © 4Mar47; MP1743.

57. © 6Mar47; MP1744.

58. © 11Mar47; MP1792.

59. © 13Mar47; MP1793.

60. © 18Mar47; MP1803.

61. © 20Mar47; MP1816.

62. © 25Mar47; MP1818.

63. © 27Mar47; MP1827.

64. © 1Apr47; MP1882.

65. © 3Apr47; MP1883.

66. © 8Apr47; MP1932.

67. © 10Apr47; MP1897.

68. © 18Apr47; MP1933.

69. © 17Apr47; MP1958.

70. © 22Apr47; MP1959.

71. © 24Apr47; MP1982.

72. © 29Apr47; MP1975.

73. © 1May47; MP1983.

74. © 6May47; MP1988.

75. © 8May47; MP1993.

76. © 13May47; MP2002.

77. © 15May47; MP2028.

78. © 20May47; MP2029.

79. © 22May47; MP2036.

80. © 27May47; MP2082.

81. © 29May47; MP2075.

82. © 3Jun47; MP2083.

83. © 5Jun47; MP2111.

84. © 10Jun47; MP2092.

85. © 12Jun47; MP2112.

86. © 17Jun47; MP2137.

87. © 19Jun47; MP2119.

88. © 24Jun47; MP2138.

89. © 26Jun47; MP2145.

90. © 1Jul47; MP2153.

91. © 3Jul47; MP2158.

92. © 8Jul47; MP2206.

93. © 10Jul47; MP2207.

94. © 15Jul47; MP2169.

95. © 17Jul47; MP2208.

96. © 22Jul47; MP2209.

97. © 24Jul47; MP2240.

98. © 29Jul47; MP2241.

99. © 31Jul47; MP2242.

100. © 5Aug47; MP2243.

101. © 7Aug47; MP2244.

102. © 12Aug47; MP2245.

SEE ALSO Warner Pathe News.

RABBIT PUNCH. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese; animation, Phil Monroe, Ken Harris, Lloyd Vaughan, Ben Washam; music director, Carl Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Dec47; MP2882.

RABBIT TRANSIT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes) (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Michael Maltese, Tedd Pierce.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec46; MP2052.

THE RACE. 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; MU1946.

RACE HORSES ARE BORN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946, 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (A Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrators, Ted Husing, Ward Wilson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Oct46; MP1179.

THE RACE RIDER. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. Warner Bros. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade).

Summary: Shows the career of a jockey from the time he is a stable boy to the important moment when as a full-fledged race rider he guides his mount into the winner's circle.

Credits: Director, Harry O. Hoyt; script, Saul Elkins; narrator, Knox Manning; film editor, Rex Steele.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Dec47; MP3149.

RACE STREET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 79 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Dore Schary production.

Summary: An underworld melodrama, climaxed by a gun battle.

Credits: Producer, Nat Holt; director, Edwin L. Marin; original story, Maurice Davis; screenplay, Martin Rackin; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music score, Roy Webb; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: George Raft, William Bendix, Marilyn Maxwell, Frank Faylen, Henry Morgan.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Jul48; LP1763.

RACHEL. SEE Rachel and the Stranger.

RACHEL AND THE STRANGER. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. Presented by Dore Schary. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel, "Rachel," by Howard Fast.

Summary: A bondwoman bride is unloved by her husband until a roaming hunter notices her charms. Shows pioneer life, including struggles with the Indians, in the Ohio frontier territory in the early 1800's.

Credits: Producer, Richard H. Berger; director, Norman Foster; film editor, Lea Milbrook; screenplay and lyrics, Waldo Salt; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Sep48; LP1864.

RACING DAY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 5)

Summary: Behind the scenes at Hialeah Park, Florida. The film describes activities after the last race is run.

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

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 31Dec47; MP2773.

RACING GREYHOUNDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Summary: An exhibition of dog racing in Miami.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26May49; MP4343.

RACING LUCK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A race-track story about a brother and sister who inherit two race horses.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman, director, William Berke; original screenplay, Joseph Carole, Al Martin, Harvey Gates; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Henry Batista.

Cast: Gloria Henry, Stanley Clements, David Bruce, Paula Raymond, Harry Cheshire.

© Columbia Pictures Corp,; 8Nov48; LP1901.

RACING SLEUTHS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 9)

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

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 2May47; MP2146.

RACK 'EM UP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1 reel each, sd. (The World of Sports, no. 75)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Dec41; MP12042, 19Dec41; MP12262.

THE RACKET MAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Casey Robinson.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, D. Ross Lederman; screenplay, Paul Yawitz, Howard J. Green; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Mar44; LP12555.

RACKETEER RABBIT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes) (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Michael Maltese.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 18Oct46; MP2447.

RADIO AND RELATIVES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1938. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Variety)

Credits: Director, Roy Mack.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec38; MP10206.

RADIO AND TELEVISION. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1940. Presented by Vocational Guidance Films, Inc. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series)

Credits: Manuscripts by Arthur P. Twogood.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 1Apr40; MP10202.

RADIO BROADCASTING TODAY. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

RADIO BUGS. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 989 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Cyril Endfield; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Mar44; LP235.

RADIO MELODIES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Harry D'Arcy; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Norman A. Cerf.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22Oct43; LP12352.

RADIO PARADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar43; MP13401.

RADIO RAMPAGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Direction and original screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Apr44; LP12796.

RADIO RANCH. Mascot Pictures, c1940. Presented by Nat Levine. 7 reels, sd. A feature version of the 1935 serial motion picture "Phantom Empire."

Credits: Directors, Otto Brower, Breezy Easton; story, Wallace McDonald, Gerald Geraghty, H. Freedman; continuity, John Rathmell, Armand Schaefer; photography, Ernest Miller, William Nobles; editor, Earl Turner.

© Mascot Pictures; 25Mar40; LP9501.

RADIO RECEPTION. De Forest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 ft., b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics. Reel lesson 10)

Summary: Demonstrates how converted sound waves modulate a radiated carrier at the transmitter, and how the carrier is demodulated at the receiver so that the original signals are reproduced by the loudspeaker.

© De Forest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP3903.

RADIO RIOT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (All Star Comedy)

Summary: A slapstick comedy short.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Harry Von Zell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Feb49; LP2182.

RADIO ROMEO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Harry Von Zell has domestic troubles of his own when he attempts to give advice to the lovelorn.

Credits: Directed and written by Edward Bernds.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Dec47; LP1403.

RADIO RUNAROUND. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Lambert Hillyer; story, Leslie Goodwins, Charles E. Roberts; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 7May43; LP12155.

RADIO SHOP TECHNIQUES. sd., 16mm.

© Burton Holmes Films, Inc.; title, descr., & 25 prints, 21Oct43; MU14119.

RADIO STARS ON PARADE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 69 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Leslie Goodwins; original story, Robert E. Kent; screenplay, Robert E. Kent, Monte Brice; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestral arrangements, Gene Rose; editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Aug45; LP13667.

RADIO, TAKE IT AWAY! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Justin Herman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Jan47; LP810.

RADIO TRANSMISSION. De Forest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 ft., b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics. Reel lesson 9)

Summary: Follows an audio signal from its origin in the broadcast station to its radiation into space.

© De Forest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP3902.

RADIORRECEPCIÓN. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Wilbur L. Beauchamp, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Receiving Radio Messages."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1692.

RAFFLES. Released through United Artists, c1940. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 8 reels, sd. Based upon "The Amateur Cracksman" by E. W. Hornung.

Credits: Producer. Samuel Goldwyn; director, Sam Wood; screenplay, John Van Druten, Sidney Howard; music, Victor Young; cinematography, Gregg Toland; film editor, Sherman Todd.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 24Jan40; LP9378.

RAGE IN HEAVEN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by James Hilton.

Credits: Producer, Gottfried Reinhardt; director, W. S. Van Dyke II; screenplay, Christopher Isherwood, Robert Thoeren; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Mar41; LP10319.

RAGGEDY ANN AND RAGGEDY ANDY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner, Worth Gruelle.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Apr41; MP11069.

RAGGEDY ANN HOE DOWN. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shorty Warren and his six-piece cowboy orchestra play the "Raggedy Ann Hoe Down" and square dancers perform during the chorus.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr. 13Sep49; 3 prints. 18May49; MU4524.

RAGS TO RICHES. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, James Webb; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31Jul41; LP10665.

THE RAGTIME BEAR. United Productions of America. Released through Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Jolly Frolics)

Credits: Producer, Ed Gershman; director, John Hubley; story, Willard Kaufman; animation, Art Babbitt, Pat Matthews, Rudy Larriva, Willy Pyle; music, Del Castillo.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Sep49; LP2571.

RAGTIME COWBOY JOE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18May42; MP12575.

RAGTIME COWBOY JOE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Sherman Lowe; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Jerry Ash; film editor, Paul Landers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 12Sep40; LP9907.

THE RAIDER. SEE Western Approaches.

RAIDERS OF GHOST CITY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Director, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Luci Ward, Morgan B. Cox.

1. Murder by Accident. © 28Jul44; LP12852.

2. Flaming Treachery. © 28Jul44; LP12853.

3. Death rides Double. ©28Jul44; LP12854

4. Ghost City Terror. © 28Jul44; LP12855.

5. The Fatal Lariat. © 28Jul44; LP12856.

6. Water Rising. © 29Aug44; LP12857.

7. Bullet Avalanche. © 29Aug44; LP12858.

8. Death Laughs Last. © 29Aug44; LP12859

9. Cold Steel. © 29Aug44; LP12860.

10. Showdown. © 14Sep44; LP12899.

11. The Trail to Torture. © 14Sep44; LP12900.

12. Calling all Buckboards. © 14Sep44; LP12901.

13. Golden Vengeance. © 14Sep44; LP12902.

RAIDERS OF RED GAP. P R C Pictures. Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Joe O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 10Oct43; LP12311.

RAIDERS OF SAN JOAQUIN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Lewis D. Collins; original story, Patricia Harper; screenplay, Elmer Clifton, Morgan B. Cox; photography, William Sickner; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Sep42; LP11586.

RAIDERS OF SUNSET PASS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; original screenplay, John K. Butler; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, John MacBurnie; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 20Dec43; LP12460.

RAIDERS OF THE BORDER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, John P. McCarthy; story, Johnston McCulley; screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Jan44; LP12468.

RAIDERS OF THE DESERT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, John Rawlins; original screenplay, Maurice Tombragel, Victor I. McLeod; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Maurice Wright.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Jul41; LP10592.

RAIDERS OF THE RANGE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Albert Demond. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; screenplay, Barry Shipman; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, John Lockert.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Mar42; LP11155.

RAIDERS OF THE SOUTH. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay and story, J. Benton Cheney.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton, Evelyn Brent.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 18Jan47; LP826.

RAIDERS OF THE WEST. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, Oliver Drake; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 15Jan42; LP11131.

RAILROADED. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Ben Stoloff production.

Credits: Producer, Charles F. Riesner; director, Anthony Mann; original story, Gertrude Walker; screenplay, John C. Higgins; music, Alvin Levin; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Louis H. Sackin.

Cast: John Ireland, Sheila Ryan, Hugh Beaumont, Jane Randolph.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 2Sep47; LP1250.

RAIN ON THE ROOF. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12May41; MP11139.

RAINBOW ISLAND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 10 reels, sd., color. From a story by Seena Owen.

Credits: Director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Walter DeLeon, Arthur Phillips; photography, Karl Struss; film editor, Arthur Schmidt. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Aug44; LP 12865.

RAINBOW OVER TEXAS. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust]

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, Frank McDonald; screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; music director, Morton Scott; orchestral arrangements, Dale Butts; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; LP372.

RAINBOW OVER THE RANGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Robert Emmet; photographer, Marcel A. LePicard.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23Jul40; LP9834.

RAINBOW OVER THE ROCKIES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, director and original story, Oliver Drake; screenplay, Elmer Clifton; photographer, Marcel LePicard.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Nov46; LP694.

RAINBOW RHYTHMS. 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, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29Apr42; LP11249.

A RAINY DAY. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 645 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2May40; MP10232.

THE RAISING OF LAZARUS. Church-Craft Pictures, Inc., c1948. 13 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the 11th chapter of John.

Summary: Mary and Martha are reunited with their brother Lazarus. This film teaches that eternal life is the certain hope of every Christian.

© Church-Craft Pictures, Inc.; 20Oct48; MP3623.

AS RAÍZES DAS PLANTAS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946, 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clyde Fisher.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., 17Jun46; MP780.

THE RAKE'S PROGRESS. SEE Bedlam.

THE RAMPARTS WE WATCH. c1940. Presented by the editors of Life and the editors of Time. 99 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, the Staff of The March of Time.

© Time, Inc.; 16Aug40; LP9956. (See also The Ramparts We Watch; 30Aug40; LP10015.)

THE RAMPARTS WE WATCH. Time, Inc., c1940. Presented by the editors of Time and Life. 87 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Staff of The March of Time.

© Time, Inc.; 30Aug40; LP10015. (See also The Ramparts We Watch; 16Aug40; LP9956.)

RAMROD. Harry Sherman Pictures, Inc., c1947. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Luke Short [pseud. of Frederick Dilley Glidden].

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Andre de Toth; screenplay, Jack Moffitt, Graham Baker, Cecile Kramer; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Rudolph Polk; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

Cast: Joel McCrea, Veronica Lake, Donald Crisp, Don DeFore, Preston Foster.

© Harry Sherman Pictures, Inc.; 2May47; LP976.

THE RANCH. 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., 25Apr40; 18 prints, 26Apr40; MU10165.

RANCH IN WHITE. Released by Warner Bros., c1946. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; narrator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Sep46; MP1183.

RANCHO GRANDE. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Berke; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Peter Milne, Connie Lee; screenplay, Bradford Ropes, Betty Burbridge, Peter Milne; photography, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Mar40; LP9581.

EL RANCHO GRANDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Apr42; MP 12463.

RANCHO GRANDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Sep42; MP13037.

THE RANDOLPH FAMILY. English Films, Inc., London, c1945. 9 reels, sd. Based on the play "Dear Octapus" by Dodie Smith.

Credits: Producer, Paul Soskin; director, Harold French; music director, Louis Levy; photography, Arthur Crabtree; editor, Michael Chorlton.

© English Films, Inc.; 15Jun45; LP13319.

RANDOM HARVEST. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. A Mervyn LeRoy production. Based upon the novel by James Hilton.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, Claudine West, George Froeschel, Arthur Wimperis; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Harold F. Kress.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Oct42; LP11666.

RANGE BEYOND THE BLUE. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Patricia Harper; film editor, Hugh Winns.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Flash, Roscoe Ates, Helen Mowery, Bob Duncan.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 17Mar47; LP892.

THE RANGE BUSTERS. Phoenix Productions, Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, Roy Luby; screenplay, John Rathmell; photography, Edward Linden; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Phoenix Productions, Inc.; 22Aug40; LP9955.

RANGE JUSTICE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a ranchhand foils the plans of the foreman and his cohorts who are attempting to destroy the ranch.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Ronald Davidson; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Felice Ingersoll, Sarah Padden, Riley Hill.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Aug49; LP2513.

RANGE LAND. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: While investigating a series of robberies, Whip Wilson uncovers two murders.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Whip Wilson, Andy Clyde, Reno Browne, Leonard M. Penn, John L. Cason.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Dec49; LP2713.

RANGE LAW. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; story and screenplay, Frank H. Young; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 20May44; LP 12689.

RANGE RENEGADES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 54 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A frontier marshal's son, duped by a woman who is the head of a band of outlaws, is saved from death by Jimmy Wakely, hero of the western plains.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Ronald Davidson, William Lively; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, Dub Taylor, Jennifer Holt, Riley Hill, Johnny James.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Jun48; LP1696.

RANGE RHYTHM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Charles Roberts; story, Max Bercutt, Charles Roberts; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 17Jul42; LP11559.

THE RANGER AND THE LADY. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on original story by Bernard McConville.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; screenplay, Stuart Anthony, Gerald Geraghty; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Jul40; LP9890.

RANGER OF CHEROKEE STRIP. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a Ranger, coming to the aid of the Cherokee Nation, traps the conniving cattlemen who are gaining control of the Indian territory.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, Philip Ford; story, Earle Snell; screenplay, Bob Williams; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Irving M. Schoenberg.

Cast: Monte Hale, Paul Hurst, Alice Talton. Roy Barcroft, Douglas Kennedy.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Oct49; LP2603.

RANGERS OF FORTUNE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Dale Van Every; director, Sam Wood; original screenplay, Frank Butler; photographer, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Eda Warren.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Sep40; LP9978.

THE RANGERS RIDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which Jimmy Wakely and Cannonball Taylor bring extortionists to justice and establish law and order.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Derwin Abrahams; screenplay, Basil Dickey; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, "Cannonball" Taylor, Virginia Belmont, Riley Hill, Marshall Reed.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Sep48; LP1856.

THE RANGERS TAKE OVER. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943, 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Alfred Stem, Arthur Alexander; director, Albert Herman; original story and screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Robert Cline; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11815.

THE RAPTURE. c1941. 420 ft., 16mm.

© C. O. Baptista; 7Apr41; MP11087.

RASSLIN' RIOT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Summary: An exhibition of wrestling by Abe Stein and Stu Hart.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; film editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Jun49; MP4341.

RASSLIN' ROMEOS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 876 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Jan46; MP383.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Mar44; MP14664.

RATION BORED. c1943. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Directors, Emery Hawkins, Milt Schaffer; story, Ben Hardaway; animation, Bob Bentley; music, Darrel Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 7Aug43; MP13851.

RATION FER THE DURATION. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Jack Mercer, Jack Ward; animation, Dave Tendlar, Tom Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28May43; LP12076.

RATIONED RHYTHM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Paramount Headliner)

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; narrator, David Ross; photographer, Irving Browning.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Jun43; MP13657.

RATIONING. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Orville O. Dull; director, Willis Goldbeck; original screenplay, William R. Lipman, Grant Garrett, Harry Ruskin; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Jan44; LP12503.

THE RATTLED ROOSTER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, Dave Monahan.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Aug48; MP3432.

THE RAVEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Carl Meyer, Pinto Colvig.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Apr42; LP11191.

THE RAVEN. SEE Le Corbeau.

RAW DEAL. Reliance Pictures, Inc., c1948. Presented by Edward Small, 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which the principal character is an escaped convict.

Credits: Director, Anthony Mann; original story, Arnold B. Armstrong, Audrey Ashley; written by Leopold Atlas, John C. Higgins; music director, Irving Friedman; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Alfred DeGaetano.

Cast: Dennis O'Keefe, Claire Trevor, Marsha Hunt, John Ireland, Raymond Burr.

© Reliance Pictures, Inc.; 10May48; LP1638.

RAWHIDE RANGERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp; cameraman, William Sickner; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Jun41; LP10554.

RAY FABING'S VERSATILE INGENUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Dec42; MP13127.

RAZOR SHAPING. Beauty Culture Films, Inc., c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The swirl and "Updo" styles of hairdressing. As taught by John J. Mueller.

© Beauty Culture Films, Inc.; 1Aug48; MP3301.

THE RAZOR'S EDGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 146 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Somerset Maugham.

Credits: Director, Edmund Goulding; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music director, Alfred Newman.

Cast: Tyrone Power, Gene Tierney, John Payne, Anne Baxter, Clifton Webb.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Nov46; LP785.

REACHING FOR THE SUN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based on a story by Wessel Smitter.

Credits: Producer and director, William A. Wellman; screenplay, W. L. River; photographer, William Mellor; film editor, Thomas Scott.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2May41; LP10448.

READIN', RITIN', AND RHYTHMETIC. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, I. Klein; animation, Al Eugster, Bill Hudson; scenics, Tom Ford; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Oct48; LP1936.

READING A DRAWING OF A VALVE BONNET.

Appl. author: John G. Curtis.

© Atlas Educational Film Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 5Jun44; MU14909.

READING AND RIDING. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 13)

Credits: Producer. Jay Bonafield; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Ted Barber; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 22Aug47; MP2337.

READY FOR ACTION. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min.

Appl, author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Div., General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 70 prints, 4Oct41; MU11694.

READY FOR ANYTHING. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows how the farmer uses the Ford tractor and the Dearborn Motors field cultivator for preparing seedbeds, controlling weeds, and cultivating.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 7 prints, 13Apr49; MU4004.

READY TO SERVE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows a tractor at work, emphasizing that it needs to be checked, serviced, and overhauled at regular periods.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 13Apr49; MU4000.

READY TO TYPE. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, D. D. Lessenberry.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 30Oct47; MP2556.

READY, WILLING, BUT UNABLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30May41; LP10465.

THE REAL THING. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Productions, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Adapted from the story by Henry James.

Summary: An artist finds that using the "real thing" for a model does not guarantee a successful picture.

Credits: Director, Charles Haas; screenplay Elihu Winer; editor, Daniel Cahn.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 23Mar49; LP2194.

A REALLY IMPORTANT PERSON. Loew's Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade) An MGM picture. Based on an original story by B. J. Chute.

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; screenplay, Harriet Frank, Jr., George B. Seitz, Jr.; narrator, John Nesbitt; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Chester Schaeffer.

Cast: Dean Stockwell, Connie Gilchrist, Clancy Cooper, Chick York.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jan47; LP761.

REALM OF ROYALTY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; photography, John W. Boyle; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Feb44; MP14582.

REALM OF THE REDWOODS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A visit to California, including scenes of San Francisco, Mt. Shasta and the new Shasta Dam, Mt. Lassen, Sacramento, Monterey, Yosemite National Park, and the redwood forests.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. deFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Val Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22Jul49 (in notice: 1948); MP4824.

REAP THE WILD WIND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 13 reels. Based on a story by Thelma Strabel.

Credits: Director, Cecil B. DeMille; screenplay, Alan Le May, Charles Bennett, Jesse Lasky, Jr.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Jan42; LP11062.

THE REAR GUNNER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., with War Dept. cooperation, c1943. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; written by Edwin Gilbert.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 17Apr43; LP11981.

REASON AND EMOTION. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel. A Walt Disney production.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Jul43; MP13965.

REBECCA. Released by United Artists, c1940. 14 reels, sd. From the novel by Daphne Du Maurier.

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, Robert E. Sherwood, Joan Harrison; adaptation, Philip MacDonald, Michael Hogan; music, Franz Waxman; photography, George Barnes; film editor, James Newcom.

© Selznick International Pictures, Inc.; 16Apr40; LP9550.

REBEL RABBIT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Charles McKimson, Manny Gould, John Carey, Philip DeLara.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec47; MP4073.

RECEIVING RADIO MESSAGES. SEE Radiorrecepción.

RECKLESS AGE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Felix E. Feist; original story, Al Martin; screenplay, Gertrude Purcell, Henry Blankfort; music director, Sam Freed, Jr.; film editor, Ray Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Oct44; LP12943.

THE RECKLESS DRIVER. c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Lantz Woody Woodpecker Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Grim Natwick; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; & Walter Lantz Productions; 8Jul46; MP896.

THE RECKLESS MOMENT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel, "The Blank Wall," by Elisabeth Sanxay Holding.

Summary: As a result of her daughter's romantic entanglement with a man of questionable character, a woman becomes involved in murder and blackmail.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, Max Opuls; screenplay, Henry Garson, Robert W. Soderberg; adaptation, Mel Dinelli, Robert E. Kent; music score, Hans Salter; music director, Morris Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

Cast: James Mason, Joan Bennett, Geraldine Brooks, Henry O'Neill, Shepperd Strudwick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Oct49; LP2575.

RECORD PARTY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 15 min., sd., b&w. 35mm.

Credits: Director, Will Cowan; film editor, Ted Kent.

Cast: The Pied Pipers, Connie Haines, the Page Cavanaugh Trio, Jackie Greene.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27May47; LP1048.

THE RECORDING AND REPRODUCTION OF SOUND FOR MOTION PICTURES. Electrical Research Products, Inc. sd.

© Electrical Research Products, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 21Jun41; MU11250.

RECRUITING DAZE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 6 min. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Oct40; MP10542.

RED CANYON. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. Released through Universal-International Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 82 min., sd., color. 35mm. Based on the novel "Wildfire" by Zane Grey.

Summary: A Western in which a rancher's daughter aids the son of a notorious outlaw in training a wild stallion to compete against her father's prize thoroughbred. Setting, southern Utah.

Credits: Producer, Leonard Goldstein; director, George Sherman; screenplay, Maurice Geraghty; music, Walter Scharf; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Ann Blyth, Howard Duff, George Brent, Edgar Buchanan, John McIntire.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar49 (in notice: 1948); LP2271.

THE RED DANUBE. Loew's Inc., c1949. 119 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the novel "Vespers in Vienna" by Bruce Marshall.

Summary: In Vienna in 1945, a British colonel, a mother superior, a young major, and a ballerina unite in the struggle against the forcible repatriation of Russian refugees by the Soviet authorities.

Credits: Producer, Carey Wilson; director, George Sidney; screenplay, Gina Kaus, Arthur Wimperis; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, James E. Newcom.

Cast: Walter Pigeon, Ethel Barrymore. Peter Lawford, Angela Lansbury, Janet Leigh.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Sep49; LP2555.

THE RED DRAGON. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the character "Charlie Chan" created by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Callahan; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, Vincent Farrar; editor, Ace Herman.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 22Dec45; LP74.

RED FURY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series, no. 4)

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

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 25Mar47; MP1902.

RED HOT RANGERS. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair, Walter Clinton, Ed Love; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 14May47; LP1027.

RED HOT RIDING HOOD. Loew's Inc., c1943. 662 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery, Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May43; LP12071.

THE RED HOUSE. Thalia Productions. Inc., c1947, 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on George Agnew Chamberlain's novel.

Credits: Producer, Sol Lesser; director, Delmer Daves; screenplay, Delmer Daves; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Merrill White.

Cast: Edward G. Robinson, Lon McCallister, Judith Anderson, Rory Calhoun, Allene Roberts.

© Thalia Productions, Inc.; 7Feb47; LP864.

RED INGLE AND HIS NATURAL SEVEN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Ted Kent.

Cast: Red Ingle and his Natural Seven, The Albins, Karen Tedder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Jun48; MP3492.

RED LIGHT. Roy Del Ruth Productions. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama about a man's relentless search for the murderer of his brother.

Credits: Producer and director, Roy Del Ruth; screenplay, George Callahan; music director, Dmitri Tiomkin; film editor, Richard Heermance.

Cast: George Raft, Virginia Mayo, Gene Lockhart; Barton MacLane, Henry Morgan.

© Pioneer Pictures Corp.; 15Oct49; LP2587.

RED MEN ON PARADE. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 819 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.; 31Dec40; MP10855.

THE RED MENACE. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 87 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A disgruntled war veteran is converted to Communism, learns the insidious and brutal methods employed by the Communists, and finally breaks from the Party.

Credits: Executive producer, Herbert J. Yates; director, R. G. Springsteen; story, Albert DeMond; screenplay, Albert DeMond, Gerald Geraghty; music, Nathan Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Robert Rockwell, Hanne Axman, Betty Lou Gerson, Barbra Fuller, Shepard Menken.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1Aug49; LP2448.

THE RED PONY. Chas. K. Feldman Group Productions-Lewis Milestone Productions, Inc. Released by Republic Pictures Corp., c1949. 89 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by John Steinbeck.

Summary: A study of the emotions of a small boy. Experiencing grief and despair over the death of his pony, the boy loses faith in those he loves until the birth of a colt brings him an understanding of life.

Credits: Producer and director, Lewis Milestone; screenplay, John Steinbeck; music, Aaron Copland; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Myrna Loy, Robert Mitchum, Louis Calhern, Shepperd Strudwick, Peter Miles.

© Chas. K. Feldman Group Productions and Lewis Milestone Productions, Inc.; 2Feb49; LP2200.

RED RIDING HOOD RIDES AGAIN. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 640 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 80)

Credits: Director, Sid Marcus; animation, Bob Wickersham, Bill Hamner; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 15Jan42; LP11008.

RED RIVER, Monterey Productions. Released through United Artists, c1948. 126 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story, "The Chisholm Trail" by Borden Chase.

Summary: A Western melodrama about the first cattle drive over the Chisholm Trail, from Texas to Kansas. The plot concerns a quarrel between the leader of the cattlemen and his adopted son, and their eventual reconciliation. Period: from 1847 to 1865.

Credits: Producer and director, Howard Hawks; screenplay, Borden Chase, Charles Schnee; music director and composer, Dimitri Tiomkin; film editor, Christian Nyby.

Cast: John Wayne, Montgomery Clift, Joanne Dru, Walter Brennan, Coleen Gray.

© Monterey Productions; 17Sep48; LP1809.

RED RIVER MOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945, 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP110.

RED RIVER RENEGADES. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures, 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Bennett Cohen; director, Thomas Carr; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music director, Mort Glickman; cinematographer, William Bradford; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Jul46; LP451.

RED RIVER ROBIN HOOD. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 57 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Lesley Selander; story, Whitney J. Stanton; original screenplay, Bennett R. Cohen; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures. Inc.; 6Nov42; LP11727.

RED RIVER VALLEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Oct44; MP15361.

RED RIVER VALLEY. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shorty Warren and his six-piece cowboy orchestra play "Red River Valley" and square dancers perform during the chorus.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 4 prints. 18May49; MU4527.

RED RYDER. SEE

California Gold Rush.

Colorado Pioneers.

Conquest of Cheyenne.

Cowboy and the Prize Fighter.

The Fighting Redhead.

Great Stagecoach Robbery.

Homesteaders of Paradise Valley.

Lone Texas Ranger.

Marshal of Cripple Creek.

Oregon Trail Scouts.

Phantom of the Plains.

Ride, Ryder, Ride.

Roll, Thunder, Roll!

Rustlers of Devil's Canyon.

The San Antonio Kid.

Santa Fe Uprising.

Sheriff of Las Vegas.

Sheriff of Redwood Valley.

Stagecoach to Denver.

Sun Valley Cyclone.

Tuscon Raiders.

Vigilantes of Boomtown.

Vigilantes of Dodge City.

Wagon Wheels Westward.

THE RED SHOES. The Archers Film Productions, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 133 min., sd., color, 35mm. A J. Arthur Rank presentation.

Summary: A drama about the backstage life of a ballet troupe whose director demands that his dancers sacrifice everything for their art. Featured is a ballet based on the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale.

Credits: Produced, directed, and written by Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger; music, Brian Easdale; choreography, Robert Helpmann; editor, Reginald Mills.

Cast: Anton Walbrook, Marius Goring, Moira Shearer, Robert Helpmann, Leonide Massine.

© Independent Producers, Ltd.; 15Oct48; LP2216.

THE RED STALLION. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 82 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Bryan Foy production.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Robert E. Kent, Crane Wilbur; music director, Irving Friedman; music, Frederick Hollander; film editor, Fred Allen.

Cast: Robert Paige, Noreen Nash, Ted Donaldson, Jane Darwell, Daisy.

© Pathe Industries, Inc,; 13Jun47; LP1216.

RED STALLION IN THE ROCKIES. Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 85 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: In this Western two ex-circus performers capture the stallion which is the leader of a herd of wild horses.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Ralph Murphy; story, Francis Rosenwald; screenplay, Tom Reed; music score, Lucien Cailliet; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: Arthur Franz, Jean Heather, Jim Davis, Ray Collins, Wallace Ford.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 2Mar49; LP2184.

RED WAGON. American Film Center, Inc.

Appl. author: Donald Slesinger.

© American Film Center, Inc.; title, descr., & 65 prints, 16May45; LU13369.

RED WHEELS ROLLING. SEE Chad Hanna.

RED, WHITE, AND BLUE HAWAII. Dunning Process Co., c1941. Presented by Paramount. 1 reel. sd., color. (Paramount Paragraphics)

Credits: Narrator, Gregory Abbott; photographer, John W. Boyle. Magnacolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 28Feb41; MP12032.

REDDY MADE MAGIC. c1946. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer.

Appl. author: Walter Lantz.

© Ashton B. Collins, d.b.a. Reddy Kilowatt; 25Mar46; LP400.

REDHEAD. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Vera Brown.

Credits: Producer, I. E. Chadwick; director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Conrad Seiler, Dorothy Reid; music director, Paul Sawtell; photography, Andre Barlatier; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21May41; LP10512.

REDHEAD FROM MANHATTAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Lew Landers; story, Rex Taylor; screenplay, Joseph Hoffman; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Apr43; LP12013.

REDSKINS AND REDHEADS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; direction and story, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Apr41; LP10571.

REED RAPTURE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12352.

REELING COWBOY DANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Aug44; MP15096.

REFRESHMENT THROUGH THE YEARS. Trailer. Produced for the Louisville Coca-Cola Bottling Works. 90 ft., si.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© The Coca-Cola Co.; title & descr., 25Apr40; 55 prints, 26Apr40; MU10168.

REFRESHMENT THROUGH THE YEARS. Presented by The Coca-Cola Co.

Appl. author; Jam Handy Pictures Service, Inc.

© The Coca-Cola Co., title & descr., 3May40; 900 prints, 4May40; LU9613.

LA REGIÓN ALIMENTARIA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with A. J. Carlson and H. G. Swann, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "The Alimentary Tract."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 27Jan47; MP1890.

LA REGION CENTRAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., 5Aug46; MP974.

LA REGION DEL OESTE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Howard W. Odlum. c1947. 1 reel. sd., b&w. 16mm. Spanish version of "The Far Western States."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Aug47; MP2304.

REG'LAR FELLERS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on the comic strip by Gene Byrnes.

Credits: Director, Arthur Dreifuss; original story, Arthur Hoerl; screenplay, Arthur Hoerl, Arthur Dreifuss, William C. Kent; music score, Ross DiMaggio; film editor, Carl Peirson.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 15Aug41; LP10785.

REGULAÇÃO DA TEMPERATURA DO CORPO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, A. J. Carlson, F. J. Mullin, H. G. Swann.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Jun46; MP717.

REIGN OF TERROR. Walter Wanger Pictures, Inc. Released by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A cloak and dagger drama about the machinations of the bloodthirsty Robespierre in seeking the dictatorship of France in 1794.

Credits: Producer, William Cameron Menzies; director, Anthony Mann; story and screenplay, Philip Yordan, Aeneas MacKenzie; music, Sol Kaplan; film editor, Fred Allen.

Cast: Robert Cummings, Richard Basehart, Richard Hart, Arlene Dahl, Arnold Moss.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 10Jun49; LP2374.

RELENTLESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 93 min., sd., color, 35mm. A Cavalier production. Based on a story by Kenneth Perkins.

Summary: A Western drama in which a cowboy who is accused of the murder of two prospectors eludes the law in an effort to capture the real culprits.

Credits: Producer, Eugene B. Rodney; director, George Sherman; screenplay, Winston Miller; music score, Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

Cast: Robert Young, Marguerite Chapman, Willard Parker, Akim Tamiroff, Barton MacLane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Jan48; LP1426.

RELIGION IN THE FAMILY. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Narration, Jesse William Stitt.

Appl. author: Donn Marvin.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 29Oct45; MP139.

THE RELUCTANT DRAGON. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd., b&w, with color sequences. Based on the story by Kenneth Grahame.

Credits: Director, Alfred L. Werker, cartoon sequences director, Hamilton Luske; screenplay, Ted Sears, Al Perkins, Larry Clemmons, Bill Cottrell, Larry Clork; animation, Ward Kimball, Walt Kelly, Fred Moore, and others; music score Frank Churchill, Larry Morey; editor, Paul Weatherwax. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 12Mar41; LP10502.

THE REMARKABLE ANDREW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd. Novel by Dalton Trumbo.

Credits: Director, Stuart Heisler; screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; photographer, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Jan42; LP11227.

REMEDY FOR RICHES. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 68 min., sd. A Stephens-Lang production.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Lee Loeb; music, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

Appl. author: Stephens-Lang Productions, Inc.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 29Nov40; LP10212.

REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR! c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Joseph Santley; original screenplay, Malcolm Stuart Boylan, Isabel Dawn; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18May42; LP11316.

REMEMBER THE DAY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,700 ft., sd. Based on the play by Philo Higley and Philip Dunning.

Credits: Director, Henry King; screenplay, Tess Slesinger, Frank Davis, Allan Scott; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Dec41; LP11019.

REMEMBER THE NIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Mitchell Leisen; original screenplay, Preston Sturges; photographer, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jan40; LP9372.

REMEMBER WHEN. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lloyd French; story, Cyrus D. Wood, Eddie Forman.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Dec39; LP9424.

REMOTE CONTROL. Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 10Dec41; 473 prints, 11Dec41; MU11883.

RENDEZVOUS 24. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 6,625 ft., sd., 35mm. A Sol M. Wurtzel production.

Credits: Director, James Tinling; original story and screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21May46; LP394.

RENDEZVOUS WITH ANNIE. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 9 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Mary Loos and Richard Sale.

Credits: Director, Allan Dwan; screenplay, Mary Loos, Richard Sale; music, Joseph Dubin; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 4Jun46; LP425.

RENEGADE GIRL. Affiliated Pictures, Inc., c1946. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, William Berke; original screenplay, Edwin V. Westrate.

© Screen Guild Productions, Inc.; 15Nov46; LP779.

THE RENEGADES. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story, George Milton; screenplay, Joe O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 1Jul43; LP13612.

RENEGADES. Columbia Corp., c1946. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Michel Kraike; director, George Sherman; story, Harold Shumate; screenplay, Melvin Levy, Francis Edward Faragoh; music score, Paul Sawtell; music director, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Jun46; LP381.

RENEGADES OF SONORA. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which "Rocky" Lane averts an Indian uprising by catching the murderer of an Indian chief.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, R. G. Springsteen; written by M. Coates Webster; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Roy Barcroft, Frank Fenton, Mauritz Hugo.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Nov48; LP2040.

RENEGADES OF THE RIO GRANDE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Oliver Drake; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Ande Lamb; photographer, Maury Gertsman; film editor, Ed Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12976.

RENEGADES OF THE SAGE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a Secret Service agent hunts down the outlaws who are sabotaging the construction of vitally-needed telegraph lines.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; story and screenplay, Earle Snell; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Leslie Banning, Trevor Bardette, Douglas Fowley.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Nov49; LP2607.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN CRASHING THRU. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp., c1939. 6 reels. Suggested by the novel "Renfrew Rides the Range" by Laurie York Erskine.

Credits: Director, Elmer Clifton; screenplay, Sherman Lowe.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 11Dec39; LP9309.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN DANGER AHEAD. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp, c1940. 6 reels. Suggested by the novel "Renfrew's Long Trail" by Laurie York Erskine.

Credits: Director, Ralph Staub; screenplay, Edward Halperin.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 23Mar40; LP9509.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN FIGHTING MAD. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp., c1939, 6 reels. Suggested by the novel "Renfrew Rides the Range" by Laurie York Erskine.

Credits: Director, Sam Newfield; screenplay, George Rosener, John Rathmell.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 19Dec39; LP9310.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN MURDER ON THE YUKON. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels. Suggested by the novel "Renfrew Rides North" by Laurie York Erskine.

Credits: Director, Louis Gasnier; screenplay, Milton Raison.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 23Mar40; LP9492.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN SKY BANDITS. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Ralph Staub; screenplay, Edward Halperin.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 3Jul40; LP9767.

RENFREW OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED IN YUKON FLIGHT. Criterion Pictures Corp. Released by Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels. Suggested by the novel "Renfrew Rides North" by Laurie York Erskine.

Credits: Director, Ralph Staub; screenplay, Edward Halperin.

© Criterion Pictures Corp.; 2Jan40; LP9318.

RENFREW RIDES NORTH. SEE

Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Murder on the Yukon.

Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Yukon Flight.

RENFREW RIDES THE RANGE. SEE

Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Crashing thru.

Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Fighting Mad.

RENFREW'S LONG TRAIL. SEE Renfrew of the Royal Mounted in Danger Ahead.

RENO. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1939. 73 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, John Farrow; story, Ellis St. Joseph; screenplay, John Twist; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Dec39; LP9357.

RENO-VATED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Zion Myers.

Cast: Vera Vague.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Nov46; LP1084.

REPAIR OF INGUINAL HERNIA INDIRECT AND DIRECT. Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan, c1944. 1 reel.

© Evelyn Mallory Tate Buchanan; 28Dec44; MP15504.

REPEAT PERFORMANCE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Bryan Foy production. Based on the novel of the same title by William O'Farrell.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Alfred Werker; screenplay, Walter Bullock; music, George Antheil.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Joan Leslie, Virginia Field, Tom Conway, Richard Basehart.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 13May47; LP1135.

REPENT AT LEISURE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Frank Woodruff; story, James Gow, Arnaud d'Usseau; screenplay, Jerry Cady; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Apr41; LP10427.

REPLACING OIL COOLER TUBES. Presented by Airesearch Mfg. Co. 16mm.

Appl. author: Edward J. Pyle, Jr.

© The Garrett Corp.; title, descr., & 8 prints, 15May44; MU14912.

REPORT ON JAPAN. RKO Pathe, Inc. in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 19 min., sd., 35mm. (This Is America, no. 4)

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

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 8Feb46; MP455.

REPORT ON JET PROPULSION. Bell Aircraft Corp. Motion Picture Division. 25 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Norman Mathews, Harold Kopel; cameramen, J. Townsend, R. Woolsey. Kodachrome.

© Bell Aircraft Corp.; title, descr., & 26 prints, 14Nov45; MU16503.

REPORT ON THE ATOM. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 4.

A REPORT TO THE PEOPLE. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Inc., c1941. 10 min.

Credit: Director, Julian Roffman.

© National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Inc.; 27Nov41; MP12013.

THE REPUBLIC OF FINLAND. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 6.

THE REPUBLIC OF ITALY. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

LA REPÚBLICA ARGENTINA. SEE Argentina.

RESCUE DOG. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Jerry Hathcock, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Sep46; LP1124.

RESERVATIONS PLEASE. United Air Lines. Inc. sd., color, 16mm.

© United Air Lines, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 4Jan47; MU1483.

RESPECT THE LAW. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Joe Newman; original story and screenplay, Howard Dimsdale; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Jan41; LP10198.

REST AND HEALTH. Coronet. c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Emphasizes the importance of rest and sleep, showing various ways of obtaining rest, the results of insufficient rest, and how to build correct rest habits. For high school grades.

Credits: Educational collaborators, Dean P. Smiley, Fred V. Hein.

© David A. Smart; 18Feb49; MP4216.

THE RESTAURANT OPERATOR. Burton Holmes Films. Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 15Mar46; MP596.

THE RETURN OF DANIEL BOONE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; story, Paul Franklin; screenplay, Paul Franklin, Joseph Hoffman; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp,; 7May41; LP10763.

THE RETURN OF FRANK JAMES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 8,440 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Fritz Lang; original screenplay, Sam Heilman; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Aug40; LP10088.

THE RETURN OF MONTE CRISTO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An Edward Small production. Based on the character created by Alexandre Dumas.

Credits: Producer, Grant Whytock; director, Henry Levin; original story, Curt Siodmak, Arnold Phillips; screenplay, George Bruce, Alfred Neumann; music score, Lucien Moraweck; music director, Lud Gluskin; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Barbara Britton, George Macready, Una O'Connor, Henry Stephenson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Dec46; LP743.

THE RETURN OF OCTOBER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 87 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A comedy about a young girl's belief that a racehorse named October is in reality the reincarnation of her Uncle Willie.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph Mate; director, Joseph H. Lewis; story, Connie Lee, Karen DeWolf; screenplay, Norman Panama, Melvin Frank; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, George Duning; film editor, Eugene Havlick.

Cast: Glenn Ford, Terry Moore, James Gleason, Dame May Whitty, Albert Sharpe.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Nov48; LP1907.

THE RETURN OF RIN TIN TIN. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., for Romay Pictures, Inc., c1947. 68 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on an original idea by William Stephens.

Credits: Producer, William Stephens; director, Max Nosseck; screenplay, Jack De Witt; film editors, Michael Luciano, Elmo J. Veron.

Cast: Rin Tin Tin, Donald Woods, Bobby Blake.

© Romay Pictures, Inc.; 15Nov47; LP1304.

THE RETURN OF RUSTY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based upon characters created by Al Martin.

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, William Castle; story, Lewis Helmar Herman; screenplay, Lewis Helmar Herman, William B. Sackheim; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Jun46; LP391.

RETURN OF THE APE MAN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Sam Katzman, Jack Dietz; director, Phil Rosen; screenplay, Robert Charles; photographer, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13May44; LP12655.

RETURN OF THE BAD MEN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Oklahoma Territory at the time of the 1889 land rush becomes a haven for several infamous outlaws. After a bitter struggle, a frontier marshal proves more than a match for them.

Credits: Producer, Nat Holt; director, Ray Enright; story, Jack Natteford, Luci Ward; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: Randolph Scott, Robert Ryan, Anne Jeffreys, George "Gabby" Hayes, Jacqueline White.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Jun48; LP1727.

THE RETURN OF THE DURANGO KID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 58 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Derwin Abrahams; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; film editor, Aaran Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr45; LP13278.

RETURN OF THE LASH. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" LaRue, Al "Fuzzy" St. John.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 23Jul47; LP1251.

RETURN OF THE RANGERS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

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

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 26Oct43; LP13596.

THE RETURN OF THE VAMPIRE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd. Based upon an idea by Kurt Neumann.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Lew Landers; screenplay, Griffin Jay; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Nov43; LP12353.

THE RETURN OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 63 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System program "The Whistler."

Summary: A crime melodrama in which the hero comes to the rescue of a rich young widow. When he finds her illegally detained in an institution for the insane, he releases her and blocks the efforts of a villainous family to steal her fortune.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, D. Ross Lederman; story, Cornell Woolrich; screenplay, Edward Bock, Maurice Tombragel; "Whistler" theme music by Wilbur Hatch; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

Cast: Michael Duane, Lenore Aubert, Richard Lane, James Cardwell, Ann Shoemaker.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Mar48; LP1823.

THE RETURN OF WILD BILL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Joseph H. Lewis; story, Walt Coburn; screenplay, Robert Lee Johnson, Fred K. Myton; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Jun40; LP9712.

THE RETURN OF WILDFIRE. Crestwood Pictures, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1948. Presented by Robert L. Lippert. 80 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a cowboy saves two sisters from being swindled by a dishonest horse trader.

Credits: Producer, Carl K. Hittleman; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Elizabeth Burbridge, Carl K. Hittleman; music, Albert Glasser; film editor, Paul Landres.

Cast: Richard Arlen, Patricia Morison, Mary Beth Hughes, James Millican, Reed Hadley.

© Crestwood Pictures, Inc.; 1Oct48; LP1885.

REUNION. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the original story by Ladislas Bus-Fekete.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, Jules Dassin; screenplay, Jan Lustig, Marvin Borowsky, Marc Connelly; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec42; LP11739.

REVEILLE WITH BEVERLY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam White; director, Charles Barton; original screenplay, Howard J. Green, Jack Henley, Albert Duffy; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Feb43; LP11058.

REVENGE OF THE ZOMBIES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Steve Sekely; original screenplay, Edmund Kelso, Van Norcross; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Aug43; LP12266.

A REVOLUÇAO INDUSTRIAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, M. D. C. Crawford.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. Inc.; 24Oct46; MP1287.

REWARD UNLIMITED. For U. S. Public Health Service. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Mary McCall, Jr.

© The National Nursing Council for War Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 22 prints, 13Jun44; LU12730.

REYNOLDS RIFF. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1336.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13676.

RHAPSODY IN BLUE; the story of George Gershwin. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 139 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Jesse L. Lasky; director, Irving Rapper; original story, Sonya Levien; screenplay, Howard Koch, Elliot Paul; music, George Gershwin; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Ray Heindorf; photographer, Sol Polito; film editor, Folmer Blangsted.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Sep45; LP13486.

RHAPSODY IN RED WHITE AND BLUE. Presented by Musicolor Features. 16mm. color.

Credits: Producer, Burke Ewing; Director, Maurice Wetzel; music score, George Gershwin.

© Maurice Swaby Wetzel; title & descr., 24Jun40; 19 prints, 4Oct40; MU10514.

RHAPSODY IN RIVETS. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Gil Turner; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 11Dec41; MP11884.

RHAPSODY IN WOOD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Puppetoon)

Credits: Director, George Pal; story, Jack Miller.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Dec47; LP1369.

RHAPSODY OF LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Jul44; MP15028.

RHAPSODY ON ICE. Audio Pictures, Inc., c1948. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Presents Barbara Ann Scott, 1948 Olympic ice skating champion.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Dec48; MP3843.

RHAPSODY RABBIT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special) (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Nov46; MP1373.

THE RHETORLOGUE. SEE Governor William Bradford.

RHUMBA HOLIDAY. SEE Variety Views, no. 159.

RHUMBA NEW YORK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP16102.

RHUMBA REBOP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec46; MP1459.

RHUMBA RHYTHMS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 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.; 24Dec41; LP10928.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jan41; MP11623.

A RHUMBA SPECIALTY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jan43; MP13276.

RHUMBA SWING. 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; MP1561.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14462.

RHYTHM AND WEEP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Oct46; LP781.

RHYTHM IN A RIFF. 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; MP1558.

RHYTHM IN MY HEART. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13976.

RHYTHM IN THE RANKS. George Pal Productions, Inc. Released through Paramount, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (George Pal's Madcap Models)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Dec41; LP10931.

RHYTHM IS EVERYWHERE. Teaching Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Written by Friedlich; editor, Amster.

© Teaching Films, Inc.; 30Sep47; MP2441.

RHYTHM JAMBOREE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Larry Ceballos; music director, Charles Previn; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Jan40; LP9324.

RHYTHM MAD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14088.

RHYTHM MASTERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short presenting a decade of band hits. Includes Jack Teagarden and the orchestras of Henry Busse, Sonny Dunham, Stan Kenton, Frankie Masters, Harry Owens, and Louis Prima.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Jan49 (in notice: 1948); MP4088.

RHYTHM OF A BIG CITY. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A tour of New York City includes such landmarks as Central Park, Trinity Church, the Old Merchant's House, Cooper Union, and Grant's Tomb.

Credits: Director, Carl Dudley; narrator, Marvin Miller; editor, De Leon Anthony.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 6Mar48; MP2846.

RHYTHM OF THE ISLANDS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard W. Burton; director, Roy William Neill; original story, Oscar Brodney; screenplay, Oscar Brodney, M. M. Musselman; photography, George Robinson; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Apr43; LP12037.

RHYTHM OF THE MAMBO. Universal International 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: Carlos Molina and his orchestra, Clark Dennis, Pierre Andre & Darrelle, Eddie Gomez.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29Nov49; LP2702.

RHYTHM OF THE RHUMBA. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, LeRoy Prinz.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec44; MP15595.

RHYTHM OF THE RHYTHM BAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Sep43; LP13964.

RHYTHM OF THE RIO GRANDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Robert Emmett; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel A. LePicard.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1Mar40; LP9472.

RHYTHM ON BLADES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Mar46; MP259.

RHYTHM ON ICE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., 35mm. (Melody Masters Bands)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, Jack Scholl.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 15Apr46; MP485.

RHYTHM ON THE RIVER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 10 reels, sd. Based on a story by Billy Wilder and Jacques Thery.

Credits: Producer, William LeBaron; director, Victor Schertzinger; screenplay, Dwight Taylor; photography, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Hugh Bennett.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Sep40; LP9896.

RHYTHM ON THE RIVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Mar44; MP14576.

RHYTHM PARADE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sydney Williams; directors, Howard Bretherton, Dave Gould; original screenplay, Carl Foreman, Charles R. Marion; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Nov42; LP11713.

RHYTHM REVEL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 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.; 5Aug41; LP10632.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16318.

RHYTHM ROUND-UP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on a work by Jack Frost.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Vernon Keays; story, Louise Rousseau; screenplay, Charles Marion; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Jun45; LP13310.

RHYTHM SAM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel. sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP810.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14084.

RIB STITCHING.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 21Jan42; 132 prints, 15Jan42; MU12057.

THE RICH FULL LIFE. SEE Cynthia.

THE RICHEST MAN IN TOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Charles Barton; story, Jerry Sackheim; screenplay, Fanya Foss, Jerry Sackheim; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Jun41; LP10643.

RICKETY RICKSHAW MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Aug44; MP15117.

RIDDLE OF RHODESIA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A camera tour of parts of the Union of South Africa and Rhodesia. Shows diamond and gold mining near Kimberley; various forms of wild life, including the eland, rhinoceros, and penguin; prehistoric ruins at Zimbabwe; and the mighty Victoria Falls of the Zambezi River.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, George Carson Putnam; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Feb48; MP3238.

RIDE 'EM COWBOY. Presented by Chevrolet. color.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 28Oct40; 66 prints, 30Oct40; MU10587.

RIDE 'EM COWBOY. c1941. Presented by Universal Studios.

Credits: Associate producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Arthur Lubin; original story, Edmund L. Hartmann; screenplay, True Boardman, John Grant; adaptation, Harold Shumate; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Phil Kahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Dec41; LP10889.

RIDE KELLY RIDE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,345 ft., sd. Based on a story by Peter B. Kyne.

Credits: Director, Norman Foster; screenplay, William Conselman, Jr., Irving Cummings, Jr.; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Feb41; LP10249.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jun44; MP14992.

RIDE ON VAQUERO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,744 ft., sd. Suggested by the character "The Cisco Kid" created by William Sydney Porter (O. Henry).

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; original screenplay, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Apr41; LP10466.

RIDE, RANCHERO, RIDE. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color. 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: The ranchers near Zaca Lake, California, have a spring fiesta.

Credits: Director, Roger Sumner.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Feb48; MP2819.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Sep41; MP11546.

RIDE, RYDER, RIDE. Equity Pictures. Released through Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 58 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the "Red Ryder" comic.

Summary: A Western about the capture of an outlaw and his gang who are attempting to gain control of the town.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; music, Darrell Calker; film editor, Joseph Gluck.

Cast: Jim Bannon, Little Brown Jug, Emmett Lynn, Marin Sais, Edwin Max.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 23Feb49 (in notice: 1948); LP2140.

RIDE, TENDERFOOT, RIDE. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Berke; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Betty Burbridge, Connie Lee; screenplay, Winston Miller; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Sep40; LP9972.

RIDE THE PINK HORSE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. Presented by Universal-International. 101 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Dorothy B. Hughes' novel.

Credits: Producer, Joan Harrison; director, Robert Montgomery; screenplay, Ben Hecht, Charles Lederer; music, Frank Skinner; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

Cast: Robert Montgomery, Wanda Hendrix, Thomas Gomez, Andrea King, Fred Clark.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Oct47; LP1338.

RIDERS FROM NOWHERE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Harry S. Webb; director, Raymond K. Johnson; story, Richard D. Pearsall; screenplay, Carl Krusada; music directors, Lange & Porter; photography, Edward A. Kull, William Hyer; film editor. Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 4Jun40; LP9709.

RIDERS IN THE SKY. Gene Autry Productions. Released through Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western about a singing County investigator who tracks down the evidence necessary to convict a gambler of murder.

Credits: Producer, Armand Schaefer; director, John English; story, Herbert A. Woodbury; screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Henry Batista.

Cast: Gene Autry, Gloria Henry, Pat Buttram, Mary Beth Hughes, Robert Livingston.

© Gene Autry Productions; 15Nov49; LP2626.

RIDERS OF BLACK MOUNTAIN. Producers Releasing Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell; music director, Lew Porter; photography, Jack Greenhalgh; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 2Nov40; LP10059.

RIDERS OF DEATH VALLEY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ford Beebe, Ray Taylor; screenplay, Sherman Lowe, George Plympton, Basil Dickey, Jack Connell.

1. Death Marks the Trail! © 6Mar41; LP10299.

2. The Menacing Herd! © 6Mar41; LP10300.

3. The Plunge of Peril! © 31Mar41; LP10362.

4. Flaming Fury! © 31Mar41; LP10363.

5. The Avalanche of Doom! © 2Apr41; LP10365.

6. Blood and Gold! © 2Apr41; LP10366.

7. Death Rides the Storm! © 8Apr41; LP10377.

8. Descending Doom! © 8Apr41; LP10384.

9. Death Holds the Reins! © 10Apr41; LP10400.

10. Devouring Flames! © 10Apr41; LP10401.

11. The Fatal Blast! © 14Apr41; LP10402.

12. Thundering Doom! © 14Apr41; LP10403.

13. © 17Apr41; LP10411.

14. © 17Apr41; LP10412.

15. © 21Apr41; LP10418.

RIDERS OF THE BADLANDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Betty Burbridge; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec41; LP10942.

RIDERS OF THE DAWN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Oliver Drake; original story, Bert Horswell; screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Frank Sannucci; photographer, William Sickner; editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Oct45; LP13602.

RIDERS OF THE DEADLINE. Released thru United Artists Corp., c1943. Presented by Harry Sherman Productions. 67 min., sd. A Pine-Thomas production. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Bennett Cohen; music direction, Irvin Talbot; photography, Russell Harlan; film editor, Walter Hannemann.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 27Sep43; LP12394.

RIDERS OF THE DUSK. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Whip Wilson, deputy U. S. marshal runs down a mysterious cattle Rustler.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Jess Bowers, Robert Tansey; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Whip Wilson, Andy Clyde, Reno Browne, Lee Roberts, Myron Healey.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23Oct49; LP2635.

RIDERS OF THE LONE STAR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Derwin Abrahams; original screenplay, Barry Shipman; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Virginia Hunter, Curly Williams and his Georgia Peach Pickers.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Jul47; LP1087.

RIDERS OF THE NORTHLAND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Jun42; LP11458.

RIDERS OF THE NORTHWEST MOUNTED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Feb43; LP11927.

RIDERS OF THE PONY EXPRESS. Kayson Productions, Inc., Released through Screencraft Pictures, Inc., c1949. 51 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A Western dealing with the difficulties encountered in establishing the Pony Express.

Credits: Producers, Richard Kay, D. A. Anderson; directed and written by Michael Salle; music director, Raoul Kraushaar; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Cast: Ken Curtis, Shug Fisher, Cathy Douglas, Billy Benedict, Billy Hammond.

© Kayson Productions, Inc.; 15May49; LP2304.

RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Director, James Tinling; screenplay, William Bruckner, Robert Metzler; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Oct41; LP10837.

RIDERS OF THE RANGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Two cowboys, hired to untangle the financial difficulties of a ranch-owner's brother, become involved in gambling, rustling, and murder.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Norman Houston; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Robert Swink.

Cast: Tim Holt, Richard Martin, Jacqueline White, Reed Hadley, Robert Barrat.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Oct49; LP2676.

RIDERS OF THE RIO GRANDE. c1943. 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, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Albert Demond; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10May43; LP12088.

RIDERS OF THE SANTA FE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Oliver Drake; director, Wallace W. Fox; original screenplay, Ande Lamb; music director, Ted Cain; cameraman, Henry Gertsman; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5Oct44; LP12903.

RIDERS OF THE TIMBERLINE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; photography, Russell Harlan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Dec41; LP10864.

RIDERS OF THE WEST. 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.; 17Jul42; LP11534.

RIDERS OF THE WHISTLING PINES. Gene Autry Productions. Released through Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 70 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A Western about the solving of a murder perpetrated by a band of timber thieves.

Credits: Producer, Armand Schaefer; director, John English.

Cast: Gene Autry, Patricia White, Jimmy Lloyd.

© Gene Autry Productions; 10Mar49; LP2150.

RIDIN' DOWN THE CANYON. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Joseph Kane; original story, Robert Williams, Norman Houston; screenplay, Albert DeMond; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Dec42; LP11759.

RIDIN' DOWN THE TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Bennett Cohen; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Bennett Cohen; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, "Cannonball" Taylor.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23Aug47; LP1193.

RIDIN' HERD ON A CLOUD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Jul44; MP15025.

RIDIN' ON A RAINBOW. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Lew Landers; original story, Bradford Ropes; screenplay, Bradford Ropes, Doris Malloy; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Jan41; LP10243.

RIDIN' THE CHEROKEE TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Spencer Gordon Bennet; screenplay, Edmund Kelso; photography, Marcel A. Le Picard; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures, Inc.; 2Feb41; LP10441.

RIDIN' THE RED CABOOSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America. Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Dec42; MP13150.

RIDING HABITS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Summary: The film shows women famous for their horsemanship: Pat North, Audrey Scott, the Lucas girls, and Fern Sawyer.

Credits: Producer, Jack Eaton; narrator, Bill Slater.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Apr48; MP2936.

THE RIDING HANNEFORDS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1946. 10 min., sd., 35mm. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; narration, Louis Pollock; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 25Jun46; MP762.

RIDING HIGH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Associate producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, George Marshall; screenplay, Walter DeLeon, Arthur Phillips, Art Arthur; music direction, Victor Young; editor, LeRoy Stone. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Nov43; LP12430.

RIDING HIGH. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp., title, descr., & 44 prints, 10Oct40; MU10536.

RIDING INTO SOCIETY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 19 min., sd. (Elsa Maxwell Blue Ribbon Comedy) From an original story by Elsa Maxwell.

Credits: Director, William McGann; screenplay, Owen Crump, Tom McKnight.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Sep40; LP9911.

RIDING THE CALIFORNIA TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the character "The Cisco Kid" created by O. Henry [pseud. of William Sidney Porter].

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, William Nigh; original story and screenplay, Clarence Upson Young; film editor, Fred Maguire.

Cast: Gilbert Roland, Frank Yaconelli, Teala Loring.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 27Jan47; LP813.

RIDING THE HICKORIES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24May46; MP601.

RIDING THE SUNSET TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Sep41; LP10916.

RIDING THE WAVES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Oct47; MP2355.

RIDING THE WIND. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 60 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Edward Killy; story, Bernard McConville; screenplay, Morton Grant, Earle Snell; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Nov41; LP10849.

RIDING THROUGH NEVADA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Oct42; LP11922.

RIDING WEST. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Luci Ward; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18May44; LP12784.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Dec43; MP14264.

RIFF RAFFY DAFFY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, William Scott, Lloyd Turner; animation, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez; music director, Carl Stabling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Nov48; MP3536.

RIFFRAFF. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 80 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Nat Holt; director, Ted Tetzlaff; original screenplay, Martin Rackin; music, Roy Webb; musical director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Philip Martin.

Cast: Pat O'Brien, Walter Slezak, Anne Jeffreys.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Jun47; LP1148.

RIGGING PROBLEMS. MN1371g. Walter Lantz Productions for the U. S. Navy Bomb Disposal School. 710 ft.

© Walter Lantz Productions; title & descr., 27May43; 4 prints, 10May43; MU13614.

RIGHT DOWN THE LINE. 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; MU1947.

RIGHT FROM THE START. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A six-year-old girl, sitting in the back seat of a Chevrolet sedan with a box of day-old chicks beside her, is driven rapidly home by her father.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 19Apr48; 9 prints, 23Apr48; MU3021.

THE RIGHT KIND OF GIRL. 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; MP11966.

RIGHT ON THE NOSE. Presented by American Optical Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© American Optical Co.; title, descr., & 176 prints, 9Oct43; MU14056.

RIGHT, SAFE, AND GRATEFUL. C. O. Baptista Film, c1948. 21 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An evangelical sermon by Dr. Bob Jones, Sr., president of Bob Jones University.

© C. O. Baptista Films; 10Jan48; MP2824.

RIGHT SIDE UP.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 880 prints, 20Mar41; MU10948.

THE RIGHT SPARK PLUG IN THE RIGHT PLACE. Walt Disney Productions, c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 17Jan45; MP15654.

RIGHT TO THE HEART. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,783 ft., sd. Based on the story by Harold MacGrath.

Credits: Director, Eugene Forde; screenplay, Walter Bullock; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Jan42; LP11119.

RIGHT TO THE POINT. c1945. Presented by The W. A. Sheaffer Pen Co. 4 reels, b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title & descr., 3Jun45; 11 prints, 2Jun45; MU15999.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16104.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11735.

RIKKI, THE BABY MONKEY. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The life of a baby Rhesus monkey shown in five sequences: Rikki and his family, Rikki has breakfast, Rikki finds a playmate, Rikki has an adventure, Rikki returns home.

Credits: Collaborator, Frederick A. Ulmer, Jr.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 22Apr49; MP4051.

RIM OF THE CANYON. Gene Autry Productions, c1949. 70 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Three desperadoes, released from prison after serving twenty-year sentences, meet their death when they return to a western ghost town for a cache of stolen money.

Credits: Producer, Armand Schaeffer; director, John English; screenplay, John K. Butler; film editor, Aaron Stell.

Cast: Gene Autry, Nan Leslie, Walter Sande, Jocko Mahoney, Champion.

© Gene Autry Productions; 26Jul49; LP2440.

RIMFIRE. Lippert Productions, Inc. Released through Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1949. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western about an undercover agent who, in his search for hidden gold, solves a series of ghostly killings. Setting, a frontier town in the post-Civil war period.

Credits: Producer, Ron Ormond; director, B. Reeves Eason; original story and screenplay, Arthur St. Clair, Frank Wisbar, Ron Ormond; music director, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: James Millican, Mary Beth Hughes, Reed Hadley, Henry Hull, Margie Stapp.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 1May49; LP2261.

THE RING AND THE BELLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels.

Credits: Director, Del Lord; story, Andy Clyde, George Gray; screenplay, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2May41; LP10496.

RINGS ON HER FINGERS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,761 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Rouben Mamoulian; original story, Robert Pirosh, Joseph Schrank; screenplay, Ken Englund; music director, Cyril Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Mar42; LP11174.

RINGSIDE. Lippert Productions, Inc. Released by Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a concert pianist becomes a prizefighter in order to kill the man who had blinded his brother during a middleweight championship match.

Credits: Producer, Ron Ormond; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Daniel Ullman; adaptation, Ron Ormond; music, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Don Barry, Tom Brown, Sheila Ryan, Joey Adams, Tony Canzoneri, Mark Plant.

© Lippert Productions, Inc.; 11Jul49; LP2410.

RINGSIDE MAISIE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, J. Walter Ruben; director, Edwin L. Marin; original screenplay, Mary C. McCall, Jr.; music score, David Snell; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Jul41; LP10671.

RINKA TINKA MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jun44; MP14931.

RIO DE JANEIRO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Sep45; MP16258.

RIO GRANDE RAIDERS. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 56 min., sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Norman S. Hall.

Credits: Associate producer, Bennett Cohen; director, Thomas Carr; screenplay, Norton S. Parker; music director, Mort Glickman; photographer, Alfred Keller; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Sep46; LP592.

RIO RITA. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music director, Herbert Stothart; orchestrations, Murray Cutter, Leo Arnaud, Paul Marquardt; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Mar42; LP11252.

RIOT SQUAD. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Al Herman; director, Edward Finney; original screenplay, C. C. Coons; photography, Marcel Le Picard; music director, Frank Sanucci; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Dec41; LP10925.

RIP TEASE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec42; MP13174.

RIP VAN WINKLE'S DAUGHTER. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Roy Mack.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12680.

RIPPLING ROMANCE. c1945. Presented by Columbia. 710 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; animation, Chic Otterstrom, Volus Jones, Ben Lloyd; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 21Jun45; LP13556.

THE RISE AND FALL OF NAZI GERMANY. SEE The March of Time, 1947.

RISE AND SHINE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,266 ft., sd. Based on the book "My Life and Hard Times" by James Thurber.

Credits: Director, Allan Dwan; screenplay, Herman J. Mankiewicz; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Nov41; LP10902.

RIVER GANG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd. From the story "Fairy Tale Murder" by Charles David and Hugh Gray.

Credits: Director, Charles David; screenplay, Leslie Charteris; adaptation, Dwight V. Babcock; music director, H. J. Salter; film editor, Saul A. Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13645.

RIVER LADY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 78 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by Houston Branch and Frank Waters.

Summary: A Mississippi River gambling-boat queen gains control of a timber syndicate and tries to buy the love of an independent logger. Setting, the 1860's.

Credits: Producer, Leonard Goldstein; director, George Sherman; screenplay, D. D. Beauchamp, William Bowers; orchestration, David Tamkin; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Otto Ludwig;

Cast: Yvonne DeCarlo, Dan Duryea, Rod Cameron, Helena Carter, Lloyd Gough.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Jun48; LP1915.

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

Summary: A musical short which features the old favorites: "On Moonlight Bay," "On the Banks of the Wabash Far Away," "M-i-s-s-i-s-s-i-p-p-i," and "Swanee." Designed for audience, Benjamin R. Parker; screenplay, Courtney Leigh; editor, Leonard Anderson.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Nov48; MP3555.

RIVER RIBBER. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 562 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Director, Paul Sommer; story, John McLeish; animation, Paul Sommer, Jack Gayek; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 5Apr46; LP550.

RIVER THAMES—YESTERDAY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (Fascinating Journeys)

Credits: Producers, E. S. & F. W. Keller; director, Hans Nieter; photographer, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Nov40; MP10604.

RIVERBOAT RHYTHM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 65 min., sd. Based upon the story by Robert Faber.

Credits: Producer, Nat Holt; director, Leslie Goodwins; screenplay, Charles Roberts; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Marvin Coyle.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Jan46; LP134.

RIVER'S END. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Original story by James Oliver Curwood.

Credits: Associate producer, William Jacobs; director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Barry Trivers, Bertram Millhauser; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Aug40; LP9836.

RIVERS OF THE PACIFIC SLOPE. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clifford M. Zierer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 15Sep47; MP2568.

THE RIVETER. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Feb40; LP9464.

RIVETING. United States Navy. Aviation Service Schools. sd.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 26Mar42; 143 prints, 30Mar42; MU12314.

ROAD AGENT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ben Pivar; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Sherman Lowe, Arthur St. Claire; screenplay, Morgan Cox, Arthur Strawn, Maurice Tombragel; photographer, Jerome Ash.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec41; LP10884.

ROAD BUILDERS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the diversified uses that can be made of a 1949 Chevrolet dump truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 5 prints, 31May49; MU4175.

ROAD HOUSE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 95 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A triangle melodrama about a torch singer. Setting, a small town on the Canadian border.

Credits: Producer, Edward Chodorov; director, Jean Negulesco; screenplay, Edward Chodorov; story, Margaret Gruen and Oscar Saul; music, Cyril Mockridge, Lionel Newman; editor, James B. Clark.

Cast: Ida Lupino, Cornel Wilde, Celeste Holm, Richard Widmark, O. Z. Whitehead.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31Oct48; LP2199.

A ROAD IN INDIA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1938. 923 ft., sd., color. (Fascinating Journeys)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director, Hans Nieter; photographer, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Oct38; MP12030.

ROAD SHOW. Released through United Artists, c1941. Presented by Hal Roach. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Eric Hatch.

Credits: Director, Hal Roach; screenplay, Arnold Belgard, Harry Langdon, Mickell Novak; music score, Georgie Stoll; editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Jan41; LP10169.

ROAD TO ALCATRAZ. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, Nick Grinde; original story, Francis K. Allen; screenplay, Dwight V. Babcock, Jerry Sackheim; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Jul45; LP13379.

THE ROAD TO CARMICHAEL'S. SEE The Big Steal.

ROAD TO HAPPINESS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd. From the story "First Performance" by Matt Taylor.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Phil Rosen; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Jan42; LP11180.

THE ROAD TO MOROCCO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Jones; director, David Butler; original screenplay, Frank Butler, Don Hartman; music direction, Victor Young; editor, Irene Morra.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Oct42; LP11703.

ROAD TO RIO. Bing Crosby Enterprises, Inc., and Hope Enterprises, Inc., c1947. 100 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Norman Z. McLeod; original story and screenplay, Edmund Beloin, Jack Rose.

Cast: Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Dorothy Lamour, Gale Sondergaard.

© Bing Crosby Enterprises, Inc. & Hope Enterprises, Inc.; 25Aug47; LP1171.

ROAD TO SINGAPORE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Harry Hervey.

Credits: Producer, Harlan Thompson; director, Victor Schertzinger; screenplay, Don Hartman, Frank Butler; photography, William Mellor; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9497.

ROAD TO THE BIG HOUSE. Somerset Pictures Corp., c1947. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A drama of crime in which a bank clerk turns thief.

Credits: Producer and director, Walter Colmes; original screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music score, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Jason Bernie.

Cast: John Shelton, Ann Doran, Guinn Williams.

© Somerset Pictures Corp.; 27Dec47; LP1460.

THE ROAD TO TOKYO. National Film Board, Ottawa. c1943. Presented by United Artists. 2 reels, sd. (World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 5Apr43; MP13637.

ROAD TO UTOPIA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 89 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Hal Walker; original screenplay, Norman Panama, Melvin Frank; animations, Jerry Fairbanks; music score, Leigh Harline.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Mar46; LP159.

THE ROAD TO VICTORY. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., for the War

## Activities Committee, Motion Picture Industry, c1944. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack L. Warner.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 25May44; MP14951.

ROAD TO ZANZIBAR. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Don Hartman and Sy Bartlett.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Victor Schertzinger; screenplay, Frank Butler, Don Hartman; photographer, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Alma Macrorie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Apr41; LP10409.

ROADS TO ROMANCE. Presented by Chevrolet. 3 min. each, color. © Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.

Credits: Technicolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

Zion National Park. © title & descr., 27Sep41; 80 prints, 12Sep41; MU11602.

Grand Canyon. © title & descr., 27Sep41; 110 prints, 12Sep41; MU11603.

Death Valley. © title & descr., 27Sep41; 100 prints, 12Sep41; MU11604.

ROADSIDE REPORT. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 3 prints, 21Apr47; MU1956.

ROAMING THROUGH ARIZONA. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 859 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, Charles Boyle. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jun44; MP14901.

ROAMING THROUGH NORTHERN IRELAND. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick Traveltalk) An MGM picture.

Summary: A tour through northern Ireland, including scenes of the city of Enniskillen, the Cathedral of Down Patrick, Port Rush, the Castle of Dunluce, the County Down countryside, Bangor, and the Giant's Causeway.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Virgil Miller, S. D. Onions; music score, Nat Finston.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun49 (in notice: 1947); MP4385.

ROAR, NAVY, ROAR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; script, Henry Clay Bate; narrators, Ed Herlihy, Charles Woods.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22Dec42; LP11788.

ROAR OF THE PRESS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Phil Rosen; original story, Alfred Block; screenplay, Albert Duffy; cameraman, Harry Neumann; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Apr41; LP10442.

ROARING FRONTIERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Robert Lee Johnson; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Oct41; LP10940.

ROARING GUNS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco; original story, Clements Ripley; screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp; narrator, Art Baker.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Feb44; LP12500.

ROARING RANGERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Barry Shipman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Feb46: LP274.

ROARING WESTWARD. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Jimmy and Cannonball save the school of the Sheriff's Association by proving that one of the students has been wrongly accused of murder.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Oliver Drake; screenplay, Ronald Davidson; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, "Cannonball" Taylor, Lois Hall, Jack Ingram, Claire Whitney.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 4Sep49; LP2646.

ROARING WHEELS. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sports News Review) Warner Bros.

Summary: A review of a half century of auto racing. Setting: The Indianapolis Speedway and the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah.

Credits: Directed and written by Robert Youngson; narrator, Jackson Beck.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Oct48; MP3390.

ROBBERS OF THE RANGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 62 min., sd.

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

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr41; LP10485.

ROBIN HOOD OF MONTEREY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jeffrey Bernerd; director, Christy Cabanne; original story and screenplay, Bennett R. Cohen; dialogue, film editor, Roy Livingston.

Cast: Gilbert Roland, Evelyn Brent, Jack La Rue.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Aug47; LP1143.

ROBIN HOOD OF TEXAS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, John K. Butler, Earle Snell; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Gene Autry, Champion, Jr., Lynne Roberts, Sterling Holloway, Adele Mara.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP1137.

ROBIN HOOD OF THE PECOS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; original story, Hal Long; screenplay, Olive Cooper; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp,; 14Jan41; LP10223.

ROBIN HOOD OF THE RANGE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Betty Burbridge; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jul43; LP12403.

ROBIN HOOD WINKED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color. 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; animation, Tom Johnson, Frank Endres; music, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Nov48; LP1933.

ROBIN HOODLUM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody) (Fox and Crow Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Steve Bosuston; director, John Hubley; story, Sol Barzman, Phil Eastman; animation, Bob Cannon, Willy Pyle, Pat Matthews, Rudy Larriva; music, Del Castillo.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Dec48; LP2037.

ROBINSON CRUSOE, JR. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, Veve Risto; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 1Nov41; MP11706.

ROBOT WRECKS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 993 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Jul41; LP10610.

ROCCO BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14579.

ROCK IT FOR ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Dec43; MP14322.

ROCK RIVER RENEGADES. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 13)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Faith Thomas; screenplay, Earle Snell, John Vlahos; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 3Mar42; LP11218.

ROCKABYE BABY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14405.

ROCKABYE RHYTHM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; film editor, Irving A. Applebaum.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Apr45; LP13248.

ROCKET TO MARS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, Bill Turner, Otto Messmer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Aug46; LP489.

ROCKETS OF THE FUTURE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series)

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

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Jun48; MP3502.

ROCKIN' CHAIR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Nov42; MP13094.

ROCKIN' IN THE ROCKIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Vernon Keays; story, Louise Rousseau, Gail Davenport; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney, John Grey; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr45; LP13309.

ROCKIN' THRU THE ROCKIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Feb40; LP9476.

ROCKY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The story of a dog wrongfully suspected of being a sheep-killer.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Phil Karlson; original story, George Wallace Sayre; screenplay, Jack de Witt; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Ace Harman.

Cast: Roddy McDowall, Edgar Barrier, Nita Hunter, Gale Sherwood, Jonathan Hale.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Feb48; LP1558.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN BIG GAME. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Narration, Bob Edge; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 10Jun42; MP12647.

ROCKY MOUNTAIN RANGERS. 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, J. Benton Cheney; screenplay, Barry Shipmen, Earle Snell; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24May40; LP9741.

THE ROCKY ROAD TO RUIN. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 753 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Paul Sommer; story, John McLeish; animation, Jim Armstrong, Basil Davidovich; music, Edward Paul. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 23Sep43; LP12296.

RODEO DOUGH. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 934 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer, Louis Lewyn; director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Marion Mack; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Nov40; LP10096.

THE RODEO GOES TO TOWN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; described by Ed Thorgersen; photographer, Jack Kuhne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Dec40; MP10818.

RODEO RHYTHM. c1941. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, Fred Newmeyer; original story, Leo J. McCarthy; screenplay, Gene Tuttle, Eugene Allen.

Appl. author: Leo J. McCarthy.

© Del Cal Theatres, Inc.; 8Dec41; LP10914.

RODEO ROMEO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, I. Klein, Joe Stultz.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Aug46; LP508.

RODEO THRILLS AND SPILLS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 135)

Summary: Many of the nation's top rodeo performers are featured in this film.

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jan48; MP2921.

ROGER TOUHY, GANGSTER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 5,886 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Robert Florey; original story, Crane Wilbur; screenplay, Crane Wilbur, Jerry Cady; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Jun44; LP12952.

ROGUES' GALLERY. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Donald C. McKean, Albert Herman; director, Albert Herman; original screenplay, John T. Neville; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Fred Bain.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 1Jan45; LP13558.

ROGUE'S REGIMENT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 86 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A U. S. Army Intelligence officer joins the French Foreign Legion in Indo-China and tracks down a missing Nazi war criminal.

Credits: Producer, Robert Buckner; director, Robert Florey; original story, Robert Buckner, Robert Florey; screenplay, Robert Buckner; music, Daniele Amfitheatrof; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

Cast: Dick Powell, Marta Toren, Vincent Price, Stephen McNally, Edgar Barrier.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Nov48; LP1943.

LE RÔLE DE L'ATMOSPHÈRE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 8Jun46; MP802.

THE ROLE OF GASTROSCOPY IN THE DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF GASTRIC PATHOLOGY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Leo L. Hardt. 3–1/2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11Jun47; 32 prints, 16Jun47; MU2133.

THE ROLE OF THE HYPOTHALAMUS IN BEHAVIOR AND NEUROSIS. Jules H. Masserman. 30 min., 16mm.

© Jules H. Masserman; title, descr., & 2 prints, 23Mar44; MU14641.

THE ROLE OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH NURSE. SEE Home Care of Tuberculosis.

ROLL 'EM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Apr44; MP14689.

ROLL ON TEXAS MOON. c1946. 68 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Edward J. White; director, William Witney; original story, Jean Murray; screenplay, Paul Gangelin, Mauri Grashin; music score, Dale Butts; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Sep46; LP595.

ROLL, THUNDER, ROLL! Equity Pictures, Inc., Released through Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 58 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the "Red Ryder" comic strip.

Summary: Red Ryder traps the bandit raiders who have framed an innocent Mexican.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; music, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Frank Baldridge.

Cast: Jim Bannon, Little Brown Jug, Emmett Lynn, Marin Sais, I. Stanford Jolley.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 23Mar49 (in notice: 1948); LP2433.

ROLL WAGONS ROLL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; story and screenplay, Victor Adamson, Edmond Kelso, Roger Merton; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel A. LePicard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Jan40; LP9303.

ROLLEO ROLLIN' ALONG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec42; MP13156.

ROLLER CRAZY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP703.

ROLLER DERBY GIRL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pacemaker Series)

Summary: Presents scenes of the Brooklyn and New York Roller Derby teams.

Credits: Directed and written by Justin Herman; music director, Winston Sharples; editor, Robert Blauvelt.

Cast: Jean Porter, Midge Brasuhn, Brooklyn and New York Roller Derby teams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Jul49; MP4324.

ROLLING DOWN THE GREAT DIVIDE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, George Milton; music, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 8Apr42; LP11299.

ROLLING DOWN TO RIO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director and author of screenplay, Jules White; story, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: Harry Von Zell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Sep47; LP1196.

ROLLING HOME. Affiliated Productions, Inc. Released through Screen Guild Productions, Inc., c1946. Presented by Robert L. Lippert. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Production, direction and original story, William Berke; screenplay, Edwin V. Westrate; music score, Darrell Calker; photographer, Benjamin Kline; film editor, Arthur A. Brooks.

© Screen Guild Productions; 15Nov46; LP668.

ROLLING 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; MU2386.

ROLLING THRILLS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 11)

Summary: Shows the thrills of roller hockey and the Roller Derby with shots of outstanding roller skaters, including Patricia Johnson, Diana Lonzetti, Jude Cull, and Charlotte Ludwig.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Andre Baruch; editor, Gene Milford.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 1Jul49; MP4544.

ROLY POLY. 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; MP1310.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb41; MP11624.

ROMANCE AND DANCE. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Luis Osorno Barona; narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 3Sep47; MP2335.

ROMANCE IN RHYTHM. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Melody Master)

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Feb40; MP10063.

THE ROMANCE OF LEADERSHIP. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 28 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The film traces the rise of Chevrolet to leadership in the automotive industry.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 34 prints, 25Mar48; MU2911.

THE ROMANCE OF ROSY RIDGE. Loew's Inc., c1947. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on MacKinlay Kantor's story.

Credits: Producer, Jack Cummings; director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, Lester Cole; music score, George Bassman; film editor, Ralph E. Winters.

Cast: Van Johnson. Thomas Mitchell, Janet Leigh, Guy Kibbee.

© Loew's Inc.; 14May47; LP1019.

ROMANCE OF THE FJORDS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: The film depicts the rugged coast of Norway, the small peasant-owned farms, and a wedding at which traditional costumes are worn and ancient rituals are enacted.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; narrator, Hugh James; music score, L. DeFrancesco; editor, Earl Allvine.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Jun47; MP2629.

ROMANCE OF THE POTATO. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 778 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story, Fred Frank, Pierre Lamure; screenplay, Jerry Hoffman; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Dec39; LP9572.

ROMANCE OF THE RIO GRANDE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6,555 ft., sd. Based on the novel "Conquistador" by Katherine Fullerton Gerould. Suggested by the character "The Cisco Kid" created by William Sydney Porter (O. Henry)

Credits: Director, Herbert I. Leeds; screenplay, Harold Buchman, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Jan41; LP10398.

ROMANCE OF THE WEST. PRC Pictures. Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Director, Robert Emmett; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Carl Hoefle; film editor, Hugh Winn. Cinecolor.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 10Feb46; LP98.

ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS. Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc. Released by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 99 min., sd., color, 35mm. From a story by S. Pondal Rios and Carlos A. Olivari.

Summary: Marital jealousy and mistaken identity motivate the plot of this musical comedy. A luxury liner on a South American cruise provides the setting.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, Jule Styne, Sammy Cahn; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

Cast: Jack Carson, Janis Paige, Don DeFore, Doris Day, Oscar Levant.

© Michael Curtiz Productions, Inc.; 26Jun48; LP1698.

ROMANCE ON THE RANGE. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Joseph Kane; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, William Nobles; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18May42; LP11408.

ROMANCE WITHOUT FINANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec45; MP149.

ROMANTIC NEVADA. c1943. 807 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William Snyder. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr43; MP13495.

ROMANTIC RUMBOLIA. Impossible Pictures, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Jerky Journeys)

Credits: Produced, directed, and written by Leonard Louis Levinson; painted by Paul Julian; narration, Frank Nelson.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31May49 (in notice: 1948); LP2318.

ROME DIVIDED. Union Films, c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Actual documentary footage shows Rome as a city of contrasts, both political and economic. The film compares these contrasts, showing the great wealth of the few and the bitter poverty of the many, and examines the struggle between conflicting political ideologies.

© Carl A. Marzani, d.b.a. Union Films; 25Aug49; MP4832.

ROME SYMPHONY. Distributed by United Artists, c1939. Presented by F. W. Keller. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 3) A World Window production.

Credits: Producer, John Hanau; director, Giacomo Gentilomo; music, Enzo Masetti; photography, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© United Artists Corp.; 25Feb39; MP10039.

ROMEO IN RHYTHM. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 756 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Aug40; MP10662.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Nov44; MP15387.

THE ROOKIE BEAR. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., color. (An M. G. M. Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21May41; LP10586.

ROOKIE REVUE. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies) Leon Schlesinger productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Richard Bickenbach; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 25Oct41; MP11690.

A ROOKIE'S COOKIE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,570 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Oct43; LP12376.

ROOKIES IN BURMA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 62 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, Edward James; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10Dec43; LP12449.

ROOKIES ON PARADE. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Joseph Santley; original story, Sammy Cahn, Saul Chaplin; screenplay, Karl Brown, Jack Townley, Milt Gross; music director, Cy Feuer; orchestrations, Gene Rose, Walter Scharf; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Apr41; LP10456.

ROOM AND BORED. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 676 ft., sd., color. (Fox and Crow)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; direction, Bob Wickersham; story, John McLeish; music, Eddie Kilfeather; animation, Phil Duncan, Ben Lloyd. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Sep43; LP12372.

ROOM FOR TWO. SEE Rosie, the Riveter.

ROOM 40, O. B. SEE Secrets of Scotland Yard.

ROOM SERVICE. SEE Step Lively.

ROOM TO GROW IN. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Div., General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 60 prints, 4Oct41; MU11699.

THE ROOSEVELT STORY. Tola Productions, Inc., c1947. 81 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producers, Martin Levine and Oliver Unger; original script, Lawrence Klee; music director, Jack Shaindlin; music score, Earl Robinson.

© Tola Productions, Inc.; 19Jun47; MP2136.

ROOTS IN THE SOIL. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. Distributed by Deere & Co., c1949. 61 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A drama of life in a rural community and of a man's love for the land. Prepared especially for farm audiences.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; story, James P. Prindle; film editor, John Cook.

Cast: Richard Travis, Michael Whalen, Rochelle Hudson.

© Deere & Co.; 12Sep49; LP2588.

ROOTS OF PLANTS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Clyde Fisher, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Wortels van Plante."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul46; MP2303.

LA ROPA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Wallace W. Atwood, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Clothing."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1689.

THE ROPE. Transatlantic Pictures Corp., c1948. 80 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the play by Patrick Hamilton.

Summary: A story of two sadists who murder their friend, hide his body in a chest, and invite the victim's friends and relatives to a dinner-party to celebrate the event.

Credits: Director, Alfred Hitchcock; adaptation, Hume Cronyn; screenplay, Arthur Laurents; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, William H. Ziegler.

Cast: James Stewart, John Dall, Farley Granger, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Constance Collier.

© Transatlantic Pictures Corp.; 25Sep48; LP1845.

ROPE OF SAND. Wallis-Hazen, Inc. Released through Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 12 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The sadistic commandant of a South African diamond company resorts to intrigue, double-dealing, and murder in order to protect his holdings.

Credits: Producer, Hal B. Wallis; director, William Dieterle; story and screenplay, Walter Doniger.

Cast: Burt Lancaster, Paul Henreid, Claude Rains, Corinne Calvet, Peter Lorre.

© Wallis-Hazen, Inc.; 3Jun49; LP2315.

ROSE O'DAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jan42; MP12060.

ROSE OF NO MAN'S LAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Dec42; MP13148.

ROSE OF SANTA ROSA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Music and romance in a Mexican night club.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Barry Shipman; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Patricia White, Eduardo Moriega, Fortunio Bonanova, The Hoosier Hot Shots.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Dec47; LP1436.

ROSE OF THE YUKON. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which an Army Intelligence Officer tracks down and captures a traitorous murderer in Alaska.

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, George Blair; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Steve Brodie, Myrna Dell, William Wright, Emory Parnell, Jonathan Hale.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 10Jan49; LP2090.

THE ROSE OF TRALEE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11298.

ROSEANNA McCOY. Samuel Goldwyn Productions, Inc. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Alberta Hannum.

Summary: A pastoral drama of young love in the midst of the smoldering feud between the West Virginia Hatfields and the Kentucky McCoys.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Irving Reis; screenplay, John Collier; music, David Buttolph; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

Cast: Farley Granger, Charles Bickford, Raymond Massey, Richard Basehart, Joan Evans.

© Samuel Goldwyn Productions, Inc.; 16Aug49; LP2496.

ROSES ARE RED. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 67 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A murder melodrama, the plot of which hinges on the resemblance of an honest district attorney to a criminal.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, James Tinling; story and screenplay, Irving Elman; music score, Rudy Schrager; film editor, Frank Baldridge.

Cast: Don Castle, Peggy Knudsen, Patricia Knight, Joe Sawyer, Edward Keane.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 30Oct47; LP1768.

ROSIE THE RIVETER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Feb43; MP13271.

ROSIE, THE RIVETER. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. Based on the story "Room for Two" by Dorothy Curnow Handley.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Joseph Santley; screenplay, Jack Townley, Aleen Leslie; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Feb44; LP12558.

LA ROSITA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Oct43; MP14027.

ROTARY SWING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Dec43; MP14302.

ROUGH AND TUMBLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 894 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Mar45; MP16077.

ROUGH ON RENTS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, Harry D'Arcy, Lloyd French; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 30Oct42; LP11804.

ROUGH RIDERS OF CHEYENNE. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bennett Cohen; director, Thomas Carr; original screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Oct45; LP13628.

ROUGH RIDIN' JUSTICE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Derwin Abrahams; original screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Feb45; LP13085.

ROUGH SKETCH. SEE We Were Strangers.

ROUGH, TOUGH, AND READY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Alexis Thurn-Taxis; director, Del Lord; original screenplay, Edward T. Lowe; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Mar45; LP13317.

ROUGH TURNING BETWEEN CENTERS. Presented by the United States Office of Education. sd.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title & descr., 18Aug41; 143 prints, 24Jul41; MU11462.

ROUGHHOUSE FIESTA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 907 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Feb40; MP10002.

ROUGHLY SPEAKING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 128 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From Louise Randall Pierson's book.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Louise Randall Pierson; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestrations, Hugo Friedhofer; film editor, David Weisbart.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Mar45; LP13139.

ROUGHLY SQUEAKING. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese, Tedd Pierce. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Nov46; MP1350.

ROUGHSHOD. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 88 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western of pioneer days. Fearing the vengeance of a trio of escaped convicts, a rancher treks from Nevada to California with his teen-aged brother, a herd of thoroughbred horses, and four gambling-house girls.

Credits: Producer, Richard H. Berger; director, Mark Robson; story, Peter Viertel; screenplay, Geoffrey Homes, Hugo Butler; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Marston Fay.

Cast: Robert Sterling, Gloria Grahame, Claude Jarman, Jr., John Ireland, Jeff Donnell.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Jun49; LP2382.

A ROUND TURN AND TWO HALF HITCHES. Presented by United States Navy. sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 25Feb44; 9 prints, 21Feb44; MU14516.

THE ROUND UP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd. Based on the play by Edmund Day.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Harold Shumate; music score, Victor Young; photography, Russell Harlan.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Apr41; LP10376.

ROUPAS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Wallace W. Atwood, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "Clothing."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jan47; MP1620.

ROVER'S BIG CHANCE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Herbert Glazer; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Aug42; LP11594.

ROVER'S RANGERS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Written and directed by Larry Lansburgh; narrator, Art Gilmore. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29May43; MP13616.

ROVER'S RESCUE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Volney White; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 28Jun40; MP10325.

ROW THAT ROWBOAT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jun42; MP12710.

ROXIE HART. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,680 ft., sd. Based upon the play "Chicago" by Maurine Watkins.

Credits: Director, William A. Wellman; screenplay, Nunnally Johnson; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Feb42; LP11111.

ROYAL ARABY. 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.; 23Oct42; MP13303.

ROYAL DUCK SHOOT. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: In India's Bharatpur state, seventy guests of the Maharajah spend the day hunting ducks.

Credits: Written by Charles L. Tedford.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec48; MP3868.

THE ROYAL FOUR-FLUSHER. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Direction, Seymour Kneitel; story, Joe Stultz, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Sep47; LP1343.

THE ROYAL FOUR FLUSHER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Joe Stultz, Carl Meyer; animation, Tom Johnson, Frank Enders.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Sep47; LP1626.

THE ROYAL MOUNTED PATROL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Winston Miller; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Nov41; LP10941.

THE ROYAL MOUNTED RIDES AGAIN; Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels each, sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell, Tom Gibson, Harold C. Wire.

1. Canaska Gold. © 25Oct45; LP60.

2. The Avalanche Trap. © 25Oct45; LP61.

3. River on Fire. © 25Oct45; LP62.

4. Skyline Target. © 25Oct45; LP63.

5. Murder Toboggan. © 11Dec45; LP64.

6. Ore Car Accident. © 11Dec45; LP65.

7. Buckboard Runaway. © 11Dec45; LP66.

8. Thundering Water. © 11Dec45; LP67.

9. Dead Men for Decoys. © 11Dec45; LP68.

10. Derringer Death. © 11Dec45; LP69.

11. Night Trail Danger. © 13Dec45; LP70.

12. Twenty Dollar Doublecross. © 13Dec45; LP71.

13. Flaming Showdown. © 13Dec45; LP72.

A ROYAL SCANDAL; Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 8,400 ft., sd. From a play by Lajos Biro and Melchior Lengyel.

Credits: Director, Otto Preminger; screenplay, Edwin Justus Mayer; adaptation, Bruno Frank; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Apr45; LP13297.

ROYALTY OF THE RANGE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Earl Allvine; continuity, Phil Shea; music score, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7Mar47; MP2094.

RUBBER RACKETEERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice King; director, Harold Young; original screenplay, Henry Blankfort; music direction, David Chudnow; photography, L. William O'Connell; film editor, Jack Dennis.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 26Jun42; LP11487.

RUBBER RIVER. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Sullivan C. Richardson; narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 9Oct47; MP2427.

RUBINOFF AND HIS VIOLIN. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros. Originally released in 1939.

Credits: Director, Roy Mack.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 17Jan48; MP2708.

THE RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD. Coronet, c1942. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Script, O. S. Pettingill, Jr.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 31Dec42; MP1537.

RUDOLPH, THE RED-NOSED REINDEER. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Montgomery Ward & Co., Inc. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon for children, telling the story of Rudolph, a small reindeer, whose nose is so red and shiny that Santa Claus selects him to be his head reindeer.

Credits: Director, Max Fleischer; original story, Robert L. May; narrator, Paul Wing; animation, Fletcher Smith, William Sturm, Robinson McKee, Howard Kakudo; music director, Samuel Benavie.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 10Sep48; 13 prints, 13Sep48; MU3302.

RUDYARD KIPLING'S JUNGLE BOOK. Released thru United Artists, c1942. Presented by Alexander Korda. 105 min., sd., color. A Zoltan Korda film.

Credits: Producer, Alexander Korda; director, Zoltan Korda; adaptation, screenplay and dialogue, Laurence Stallings; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, William Hornbeck. Technicolor.

© Alexander Korda Films, Inc.; 13Apr42; LP11215.

RUFF AND TUFF. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Mar44; MP14835.

RUFF 'N' REDDY. Herman Kroll. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Two children, stowaways on a fishing boat, become involved in the capture of two bank robbers.

© Herman Kroll; title & descr., 9Aug49, 1 roll, 12Aug49; LU2482.

RUG CUTTERS HOLIDAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Mar43; MP13313.

RUINS OF PALMYRA AND BAALBEK. World Window, Inc., London, c1938. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 8)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director, John Hanau; photography, Jack Cardiff; film editor, H. Nieter. Technicolor.

© World Window, Inc.; 1Nov38; MP10104.

RULES OF THE NAUTICAL ROAD. Walt Disney Productions. 2 reels, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; title, descr., & 51 prints, 25Jan44; MU14434.

RUM AND COCA COLA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Feb45; MP15630.

THE RUMBA. Folke Robert Espling, c1942. 1 reel.

© Folke Robert Espling; 10Feb42; MP12165.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Aug45; MP16224.

THE RUNAROUND. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 10 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Joe Gershenson; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Arthur T. Horman, Walter Wise; screenplay, Arthur T. Horman, Sam Hellman; music score and direction, Frank Skinner; film editor, Ted J. Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Jun46; LP405.

RUNNING THE HOUNDS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Commentary by Justin Herman; narrator, Ward Wilson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Nov47; MP2438.

RUNNING THE KEYES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Summary: Views of the Florida Keys, showing why they are a fisherman's paradise and a yachtsman's haven.

Credits: Director and photographer, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Bill Slater.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Sep49; MP4552.

RUNNING THE TEAM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Dec45; MP170.

RUNNING THE TEAM. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Dec45; MP599.

RUPERT THE RUNT. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 12Jul40; MP10370.

RURAL AMERICA REVIEW. Vol. 1, no. 1. Samuel P. Orleans & Associates, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Farm families view year's results with pride [at Indiana State Fair]. Tennessee scientists develop blight-resistant pear. Rural America takes to the air [Flying Farmers meet at Oklahoma A & M College]. Farm wives flame-proof children's clothing. New England farmers get lesson in fire fighting. Latest farm equipment interests 4–H'ers and Future Farmers of America alike. Texas 4–H'ers attend annual round-up [at College Station].

Credits: Narrator, Nate Way; editor, Herb Gough.

Appl. author: Sam Orleans.

© Sam Orleans & Associates, Inc.; 20Nov47; MP3099.

RURAL LIFE OF MEXICO. Coronet, 1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Educational author, P. R. Hershey.

© Esquire, Inc.; 9Mar46; MP1540.

RURAL RHAPSODY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Person-Oddity, no. 157)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Aug46; MP1029.

RURAL RHAPSODY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 157)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Douglas Browning.

© On changes and additions; Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Sep46; MP1152.

RUSSIA AT WAR. Time, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. (Forum Edition)

© Time, Inc.; 1Sep45; MP16391.

RUSSIAN GUITARS. 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; MP1570.

RUSSIAN PEASANT DANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Oct45; MP16364.

RUSSIAN REVELS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Apr43; MP13454.

RUSSIAN REVELS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Gregory Stone; film editor, John T. Dolan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Apr43; MP13530.

RUSSIAN RHAPSODY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14459.

RUSSIAN RHAPSODY. c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Lou Lilly; animation, Rod Scribner. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Jun44; MP14961.

RUSSIA'S FOREIGN POLICY. Released thru United Artists, c1943. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP14574.

RUSTLERS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a pair of cow-punchers, accused of rustling cattle for ransom, catch the real culprits.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Jack Natteford, Luci Ward; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Frank Doyle.

Cast: Tim Holt, Richard Martin, Martha Hyer, Steve Brodie, Lois Andrews.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10Apr49; LP2279.

RUSTLERS' HIDEOUT. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Joe O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 2Sep44; LP13608.

RUSTLERS OF DEVIL'S CANYON. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 58 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, Harry Keller.

Cast: Allan Lane, Bobby Blake, Martha Wentworth, Peggy Stewart.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP1167.

RUSTLERS OF THE BADLANDS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 58 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Derwin Abrahams; story, Richard Wilkinson; screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jun45; LP13388.

RUSTLER'S ROUNDUP. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Sherman Lowe and Victor McLeod.

Credits: Producer and director, Wallace W. Fox; screenplay, Jack Natteford; cinematography, Maury Gertsman; film editor, Sol Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Aug46; LP543.

RUSTY LEADS THE WAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based upon characters created by Al Martin.

Summary: Depicts the emotional struggles of Penny Waters, who is sent to a school for the blind where she is trained to use a seeing-eye dog.

Credits: Producer, Robert Cohn; director, Will Jason; story, Nedrick Young; screenplay, Arthur Ross; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, Sharyn Moffett, John Litel, Ann Doran, Flame, the dog.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Oct48; LP1835.

RUSTY SAVES A LIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 67 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based upon characters created by Al Martin.

Summary: An embittered man's misanthropic attitude is changed when a dog saves him from drowning.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Seymour Friedman; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, Gloria Henry, Stephen Dunne, John Litel, Ann Doran.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Apr49; LP2481.

RUTHLESS. Producing Artists, Inc., c1948. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel, "Prelude to Night," by Dayton Stoddart.

Summary: The drama of a self-made man whose ruthless pursuit of success brings misfortune to himself, as well as to the victims of his selfishness.

Credits: Producer, Arthur S. Lyons; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; screenplay, S. K. Lauren, Gordon Kahn; music score, Werner Janssen.

Cast: Zachary Scott, Louis Hayward, Diana Lynn, Sydney Greenstreet, Lucille Bremer.

© Producing Artists, Inc.; 20Feb48; LP1597.

S

S O S COAST GUARD. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, William Witney, Alan James; original story, Morgan Cox, Ronald Davidson; screenplay, Barry Shipman, Franklyn Adreon; music director, Raoul Kraushaar; photography, William Nobles; film editors, Helen Turner, Edward Todd.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Apr42; LP11264.

SB2C HELLDIVER. 3/4 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. United States Navy.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Mar44; MU14605.

SABOTAGE SQUAD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Lew Landers; story, Bernice Petkere, Wallace Sullivan; screenplay, Bernice Petkere, Wallace Sullivan, David Silverstein; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Aug42; LP11491.

SABOTEUR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. Presented by Frank Lloyd Productions. 11 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Jack Skirball; director, Alfred Hitchcock; original screenplay, Peter Viertel, Joan Harrison, Dorothy Parker; photography, Joseph Valentine; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29Apr42; LP11248.

THE SABOTEURS. SEE Secret Command.

THE SACRED GANGES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (Fascinating Journeys)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director, Hans Nieter; narrator, Frank Gallop; photographer, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Dec40; MP10699.

SACRED SONGS; an organ medley. Walter Tyler and A. Earl Hedrick, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Ruth Tyler plays the organ while pictures of rivers and waterfalls are shown.

© Walter Tyler and A. Earl Hedrick; 1Dec48; MP3740.

SACRIFICE. SEE Opfergong.

SADDLE BOY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jul43; MP13729.

SADDLE LEATHER LAW. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Benjamin Kline; original screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Dec44; LP13092.

SADDLE MOUNTAIN ROUNDUP. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, William L. Nolte; screen adaptation and dialogue, Earle Snell, John Vlahos; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 31Aug41; LP10702.

SADDLE PALS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, Lesley Selander; original story, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart E. McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Harry Keller.

Cast: Gene Autry, Champion, Jr., Lynne Roberts, Sterling Holloway, the Cass County Boys.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Jun47; LP1113.

SADDLE SERENADE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Strohbach; director, Oliver Drake; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; photography, William A. Sickner; film editor, W. Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Aug45; LP13697.

SADDLE SILLY. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies) Leon Schlesinger productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Philip de Lara; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 15Nov41; MP11746.

SADDLE UP. Vitaphone Corp., c1947. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm. Warner Bros.

Credits: Director, Luis Osorno Barona; narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Knox Manning.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 11Mar47; MP1838.

SADDLEMATES. c1941. 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, Les Orlebeck; original story, Bernard McConville, Karen DeWolf; screenplay, Albert DeMond, Herbert Dalmas; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, William Nobles; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26May41; LP10537.

SADDLES AND SAGEBRUSH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Ed Earl Repp.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Mar43; LP11928.

SADIE HAWKINS DAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Aug42; MP12875.

SADIE HAWKINS DAY. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 683 ft., sd., color. Adapted from the "Li'l Abner" cartoon strip by Al Capp.

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Al Geiss; animation, Chick Otterstrom, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 4May44; LP12767.

SAFARI. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Paul Hervey Fox.

Credits: Director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Delmer Daves; photography, Ted Tetzlaff; film editor, Eda Warren.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Jun40; LP9704.

SAFARI SO GOOD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Larz Bourne.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Nov47; LP1329.

SAFE EXIT. Argo Films, Inc., for the Vonnegut Hardware Co. 20 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents the need for adequate exits in combating the dangers of fire and panic, illustrating the function of panic exit hardware manufactured by the Von Duprin Division of the Vonnegut Hardware Co.

Credits: Original story and script, Richard Weaver.

© Vonnegut Hardware Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 13Jun49; MU4246.

SAFE JOBS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 2 prints, 21Apr47; MU1957.

SAFE LIVING AT SCHOOL. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates safety in the school in terms of three basic principles: good housekeeping, skillful and correct actions, and courtesy. For primary and high school children.

Credits: Author collaborator, Vivian Weedon.

© David A. Smart; 30Sep48; MP3722.

THE SAFEST WAY. American Automobile Association, c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: This educational film for elementary grades demonstrates a classroom traffic safety project.

Credits: Director, Frank Neusbaum.

© American Automobile Assn.; 1Aug48; MP3416.

SAFETY AHOY. Aetna Life Affiliated Companies, c1946. 2 reels, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Leslie Coleman.

© Aetna Life Affiliated Companies; 1Oct46; MP1551.

SAFETY AT HOME; primary grades. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1940. 483 ft. (Safety Series)

Appl. author: C. E. Turner.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 1Apr40; MP10335.

SAFETY AT KODAK PARK. Eastman Kodak Co. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Lloyd Reber.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 15Jan47; MU1515.

SAFETY AT PLAY. Eastman Kodak Co., c1941. 549 ft. (Safety Series)

Appl. author: C. E. Turner.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; 18Jul41; MP11991.

SAFETY BEGINS AT HOME. Young America Films, Inc., c1945. 10 min., sd., 16mm.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP195.

SAFETY IN AIR STATIONS.

© Roland Reed Productions; title, descr., & 5 prints, 24Feb45; MU15873.

SAFETY IN THE CHEMISTRY LABORATORY. Audio-Visual Center, Indiana University, c1949. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents basic safety rules to be followed in the laboratory, and illustrates safety procedures to be observed. Emphasizes the fact that constant use of safety procedures leads to habit-forming patterns which allow the individual to work more easily and efficiently.

Credits: Educational authors, John S. Peake, Charles S. Rohrer.

© Indiana University; 15Nov49; MP4745.

SAFETY IN THE HOME. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 10Oct40; MP10689.

SAFETY IN WARTIME AIRCRAFT PRODUCTION. Sound Masters, Inc., for the Training Film Branch, Photographic Section, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: Owen Murphy.

© Sound Masters, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 20Nov43; MU14173.

SAFETY SLEUTH. Loew's Inc. with the cooperation of the War Department Safety Council, c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 860 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, John Durant.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12964.

SAFETY SLEUTH. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 860 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; narrator and producer, Pete Smith; film editor, John Durant.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Nov44; LP13017.

SAFETY STANDARD OF THE WORLD. Presented by Bendix-Westinghouse Automotive Air Brake Company. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 20Apr46; 14 prints, 22Apr46; MU481.

SAFETY TO AND FROM SCHOOL. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 10 min., sd. With Teachers' Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Mar46; MP346.

THE SAGA OF BILLY THE KID. SEE Billy the Kid.

SAGEBRUSH AND SILVER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; music score, L. De Francesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Aug41; MP11490.

SAGEBRUSH HEROES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Benjamin Kline; original screenplay, Luci Ward; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Feb45; LP13091.

SAGEBRUSH LAW. RKO Radio Pictures. Inc., c1942. 56 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Sam Nelson; original screenplay, Bennett R. Cohen; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Dec42; LP11737.

SAHARA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 10 reels, sd. Based upon an incident in the Soviet photoplay, "The Thirteen."

Credits: Director, Zolton Korda; story, Philip MacDonald; screenplay, John Howard Lawson, Zolton Korda; adaptation, James O'Hanlon; music score, Miklos Rozsa; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Sep43; LP12260.

SAIGON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Julian Zimet.

Summary: The adventures of three Air Force veterans and a girl who are traveling by plane and river boat from Shanghai to Saigon. Scenes of the Far East provide the background.

Credits: Producer, P. J. Wolfson; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, P. J. Wolfson, Arthur Sheekman; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; film editor, William Shea.

Cast: Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake, Douglas Dick, Wally Cassell, Luther Adler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Mar48; LP1523.

SAIL HO. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Written and directed by Del Frazier; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Jun41; MP11227.

SAILBOAT IN THE SKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar42; MP12344.

SAILING WITH A SONG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sing and Be Happy Series, no. 8)

Summary: A musical short featuring the songs "By the Sea," "Row, Row, Row," and "My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean." Designed for audience participation.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Apr49; MP4317.

SAILOR-BOY JOE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar43; MP13402.

THE SAILOR TAKES A WIFE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd. Based on the play by Chester Erskine.

Credits: Producer, Edwin H. Knopf; director, Richard Whorf; screenplay, Chester Erskine, Anne Morrison Chapin, Whitfield Cook; music score, Johnny Green; film editor, Irvine Warburton.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Dec45; LP4.

THE SAILOR WITH THE NAVY BLUE EYES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Sep42; MP12982.

SAILOR'S HOLIDAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Manny Seff; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Feb44; LP12509.

SAILORS HORN PIPE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Feb45; MP15611.

SAILOR'S LADY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 6,005 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Allan Dwan; original story, Frank Wead; screenplay, Frederick Hazlitt Brennan; music director, Samuel Kaylin.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Jul40; LP10119.

SAILORS ON LEAVE. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Albert S. Rogell; original story, Herbert Dalmas; screenplay, Art Arthur, Malcolm Stuart Boylan; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Sep41; LP10795.

SAILORS WITH WINGS. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 3.

SAILS ALOFT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Movietone Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Jack Gordon; narrator, Hugh James; music score, L. de Francesco; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 31Mar43; MP14776.

THE SAINT IN PALM SPRINGS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director and editor, Jack Hively; story, Leslie Charteris; screenplay, Jerry Cady; music score, Roy Webb.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10267.

ST. IVES. SEE The Secret of St. Ives.

ST. JAMES INFIRMARY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18May42; MP12577.

ST. LOUIS BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel. sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11122.

ST. MARTIN'S LANE. SEE Sidewalks of London.

THE SAINT MEETS THE TIGER. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. From the novel "Meet the Tiger" by Leslie Charteris.

Credits: Producer, William Sistrom; director, Paul Stein; screenplay, Leslie Arliss, Wolfgang Wilhelm, James Seymour; photographer, Bob Krasker; editor, Ralph Kemplen.

Appl. author: RKO Radio British Productions, Ltd.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Jul43; LP12253.

ST. PETER'S AND THE VATICAN. Salvator M. Burgio. c1948. 38 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The film shows the Vatican City and the Cathedral of St. Peter at Rome, with scenes of the Ceremony of Canonization.

© Salvator M. Burgio; 1Dec48; MP3991.

THE SAINT TAKES OVER. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 69 min., sd. Featuring "The Saint," created by Leslie Charteris.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Jack Hively; screenplay, Lynn Root, Frank Fenton; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 20May40; LP9646.

THE SAINTED SISTERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 89 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Elisa Bialk and a play by Elisa Bialk and Alden Nash.

Summary: Two sisters, fugitives from the law, are stranded in a Maine village. Light comedy.

Credits: Producer, Richard Maibaum; director, William D. Russell; screenplay, Harry Clork, N. Richard Nash; screenplay adaptation, Mindret Lord; music score. Van Cleave; film editor, Everett Douglas.

Cast: Veronica Lake, Joan Caulfield, Barry Fitzgerald, William Demarest, George Reeves.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Apr48; LP1582.

SAINTS AND SINNERS, London Film Productions, Ltd., c1949. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An ex-convict returns to his native Irish village to prove his innocence. In the process he inadvertently reveals the true character of the villagers who condemned him.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Arliss; story, Paul Vincent Carroll, screenplay, Paul Vincent Carroll, Leslie Arliss; music, Philip Green; film editor, David Newhouse.

Cast: Kieron Moore, Christine Norden, Sheila Manahan, Michael Dolan, Maire O'Neill.

© London Film Productions, Inc.; 22Jun49; LP2656.

THE SAINTS COME MARCHING IN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Apr43; MP13621.

THE SAINT'S DOUBLE TROUBLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 68 min., sd. From the story by Leslie Charteris.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Jack Hively; screenplay, Ben Holmes; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Jan40; LP9392.

THE SAINT'S VACATION. c1941. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 61 min., sd. From the story by Leslie Charteris.

Credits: Producer, William Sistrom; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Leslie Charteris, Jeffrey Dell; music direction, Bretton Byrd; photography, Bernard Knowles; editors, Al Barnes, Ralph Kemplen.

Appl. author: RKO Radio British Productions.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Jun41; LP10635.

SALES A'POPPIN'. Presented by Frigidaire. sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Frigidaire Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 25Apr40; 132 prints, 26Apr40; MU10211.

SALMON FISHING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 788 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shilkret; photographer, Parris Emery.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Sep45; MP267.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Sep43; MP13960.

SALOME, WHERE SHE DANCED. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 10 reels, sd., color. From an original story by Michael J. Phillips.

Credits: Producer, Walter Wanger; director, Charles Lamont; screenplay, Laurence Stallings; music director, Edward Ward; cameraman, W. Howard Green; film editor, Russell Schoengarth. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Apr45; LP13195.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16584.

SALT LAKE DIVERSIONS. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 777 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, Charles Boyle, Virgil Miller. Technicolor.

© Loew's, Inc.; 14Dec43; MP14344.

SALT WATER DAFFY. c1941. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story Ben Hardaway, Lowell Elliott; artists, Alex Lovey, Lester Kline; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 4Jun41; MP11210.

SALT WATER TABBY. Loew's Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) An MGM cartoon.

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ed Barge, Mitchell Lah, Kenneth Muse; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun47; LP1158.

SALTOS CON GARROCHA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Lawson Robertson, Dean Cromwell, Brutus Hamilton, and the Amateur Athletic Union, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Jumps and Pole Vault."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 27Jan47; MP1888.

SALTY O'ROURKE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 11 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, E. D. Leshin; director, Raoul Walsh; original story and screenplay, Milton Holmes; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Feb45; LP13241.

SALUDOS AMIGOS (GREETINGS, FRIENDS). Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 4 reels, sd. Contents: Lake Titicaca.-Pedro.-El Gaucho Goofy.-Aquarela do Brasil.

Credits: Story, Homer Brightman, Ralph Wright, Roy Williams, Harry Reeves, Dick Huemer, Merle Cox; narration, Fred Shields.

© Walt Disney Productions; 9Jul42; LP12268.

THE SALUTE. Presented by United States Coast Guard. sd.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11Nov43; 5 prints, 13Nov43; MU14132.

SALUTE FOR THREE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Ralph Murphy; story, Art Arthur; screenplay, Doris Anderson, Curtis Kenyon, Hugh Wedlock, Jr., Howard Snyder; music direction, Victor Young; editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 16Jul43; LP12191.

SALUTE TO THE MARINES. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., color.

Credits: Producer, John W. Considine, Jr.; director, S. Sylvan Simon; story, Robert D. Andrews; screenplay, George Bruce; adaptation, Wells Root; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Jul43; LP12197.

SAMBA-MANIA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 18 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Harry Grey; director, Billy Daniels; screenplay, Jack Roberts; music director, Irvin Talbot; music score, Van Cleave; editor, Tom McAdoo.

Cast: Isabelita, Russ Vincent, Billy Daniels, Betty Hannon, The Bombalera Girls.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Feb48; LP1492.

THE SAME OLD STORY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10980.

THE SAME OLD STORY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11078.

SAMSON JUNIOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Person-Oddity, no. 156)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narration, Henry Gladstone.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Aug46; MP1028.

SAN ANTONE AMBUSH. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which an army officer clears an innocent rancher and captures a gang of bandits.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, Philip Ford; written by Norman S. Hall; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Cast: Monte Hale, Bette Daniels, Paul Hurst, Roy Barcroft, James Cardwell.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Oct49; LP2566.

SAN ANTONIO. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 111 min., sd., color. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Producer, Robert Buckner; director, David Butler; original screenplay, Alan LeMay, W. R. Burnett; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; photographer, Bert Glennon; film editor, Irene Morra. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 5Jan46; LP9.

THE SAN ANTONIO KID. Republic Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Stephen Auer; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Norman S. Hall; music score, Joseph Dubin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Jul44; LP12778.

SAN ANTONIO ROSE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar41; MP10937.

SAN ANTONIO ROSE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Ken Goldsmith; director, Charles Lamont; original story, Jack Lait, Jr.; screenplay, Hugh Wedlock, Jr., Howard Snyder, Paul Gerard Smith; photography, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Jun41; LP10551.

SAN DIEGO, I LOVE YOU. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. From a story by Ruth McKenney and Richard Branstein.

Credits: Production and screenplay, Michael Fessier, Ernest Pagano; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Don George; cameraman, Hal Mohr; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Sep44; LP12905.

SAN FERNANDO VALLEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Apr44; MP14706.

SAN FERNANDO VALLEY. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, John English; original screenplay, Dorrell McGowan, Stuart McGowan; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Aug44; LP12830.

SAN FRANCISCO; metropolis of the West. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 950 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, s. 4, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, André De La Varre; music, Edward Craig.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Apr41; MP11143.

SAN FRANCISCO DOCKS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 7 reels.

Credits: Director, Arthur Lubin; original screenplay, Stanley Crea Rubin; Edmund L. Hartmann.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec40; LP10103.

SAN FRANCISCO—PACIFIC GATEWAY. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 5)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Harry W. Smith; written by Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 7Mar47; MP2004.

SAN QUENTIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Martin Mooney; director, Gordon M. Douglas; original screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Arthur A. Ross, Howard J. Green; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Marvin Coil.

Cast: Lawrence Tierney, Marian Carr, Barton MacLane.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Dec46; LP867.

SAN SALVADOR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Nov42; MP13119.

SAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 78 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel of the same title by Will James.

Summary: Wealthy sportsman and ranch girl join forces to recapture a pampered show horse which has escaped and reverted to the ways of the wild.

Credits: Producer, Robert Bassler; director, Louis King; screenplay, Martin Berkeley, Jerome Cady; music, Daniele Amphitheatrof; film editor, Nick DeMaggio.

Cast: Mark Stevens, Coleen Gray, Rory Calhoun, Charley Grapewin, Bob Patten.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Jun49; LP2454.

SANDIN' JOE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16299.

SANDY GETS HER MAN! Universal Pictures Company, Inc., c1940. 7 reels.

Credits: Directors, Otis Garrett, Paul Gerard Smith; original screenplay, Sy Bartlett, Jane Storm.

© Universal Pictures Company, Inc.; 1Nov40; LP10019.

SANDY IS A LADY. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Burt Kelly; director, Charles Lamont; original screenplay, Charles Grayson; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28May40; LP9668.

SANTA CLAUS IS IN THE DOG HOUSE NOW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Nov45; MP16534.

SANTA FE MARSHAL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. A Harry Sherman production. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Harrison Jacobs; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jan40; LP9384.

SANTA FE SCOUTS. c1943. 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, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Morton Grant, Betty Burbridge; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7Apr43; LP12007.

SANTA FE TRAIL. 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.; 28Dec40; LP10140.

SANTA FE UPRISING. c1946. 56 min., sd., 35mm. Based on Fred Harman's comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Mort Glickman; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, William P. Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Sep46; LP622.

SANTA'S SURPRISE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Larz Bourne.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Dec47; LP1330.

SANTE FE SADDLEMATES. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Thomas Carr; original screenplay, Bennett Cohen; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 21May45; LP13323.

SAPPY BIRTHDAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,496 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, John Grey, Lloyd A. French.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Feb42; LP11083.

SAPPY PAPPY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,458 ft.

Credits: Director, story, and screenplay, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Oct42; LP12000.

SAPS AT SEA. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Hal Roach. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Gordon Douglas; original story and screenplay, Charles Rogers, Felix Adler, Gil Pratt, Harry Langdon; music score, Marvin Hatley; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc,; 26Apr40; LP9591.

SAPS IN CHAPS. Released by Warner Bros., c1942. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Manuel Perez; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9May42; MP12451.

SARATOGA TRUNK. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 135 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. A Hal B. Wallis production. From the novel by Edna Ferber.

Credits: Director, Sam Wood; screenplay, Casey Robinson; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Ralph Dawson.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 30Mar46; LP188.

SARGE GOES TO COLLEGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 63 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Jason; original story, Henry Edwards; screenplay, Hal Collins; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Jason Bernie.

Cast: Alan Hale, Jr., Freddie Stewart, June Preisser, Russ Morgan, Jack McVea.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 23May47; LP1082.

SARONG GIRL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Philip N. Krasne; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original screenplay, Arthur Hoerl, Charles R. Marion; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Apr43; LP12038.

SATCHEL MOUTH BABY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jul46; MP901.

SATISFIED SAURIANS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Lew Lehr's Dribble Puss Parade)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; music score, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Mar49; MP4147.

SATURDAY NIGHT IN OUR HOME TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Aug45; MP16228.

SATURDAY NIGHT (IS THE LONELIEST NIGHT IN THE WEEK). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr45; MP15840.

SATURDAY NIGHT SWING CLUB. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Melody Master Bands) Warner Bros. Originally released in 1938.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Director, Lloyd French.

Cast: Paul Douglas, Leith Stevens and orchestra, Bobby Hackett and orchestra, Edith Dick, Chauncey Moorehouse.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Jun48; MP3146.

SATURDAY'S CHILDREN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 11 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based on the play by Maxwell Anderson.

Credits: Director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11May40; LP9629.

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

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Mar46; MP285.

SAVAGE BRIDE. H. K. S. Producers and Distributors, c1948. 8 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Adapted from the motion picture "Cain."

Summary: A jewel thief leaves civilization to live on a remote South Sea Island.

© H. K. S. Producers and Distributors; 15Nov48; LP1906.

SAVAGE SPLENDOR. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A pictorial record of the 22,000–mile trek of the Armand Denis-Lewis Cotlow African Expedition.

Credits: Producers, Armand Denis, Lewis Cotlow; written by Richard Hanser; music score, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, William Thompson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Jul49; LP2498.

SAVE THOSE TEETH. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Emphasizes the importance of cleansing teeth properly, illustrates how teeth are affected by excessive use of sugar, and prescribes specific rules to be followed in the care of teeth. For middle grades and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborators, James R. Blayney, Walter G. Zoller.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 21Sep49; MP4560.

SAVING STROKES WITH SAM SNEAD. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 920 ft., sd. (The World of Sports, no. 61)

Credits: Narrator, Dan Seymour; photographer, Irving Browning; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jun40; MP10329.

THE SAVIOUR IS BORN. Foundation Films Corp., c1947. 30 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The story of the birth of Christ, with dialogue taken from Biblical texts.

Credits: Director, Harry S. Webb.

© Foundation Films Corp.; 8Nov47; LP1529.

SAVOY IN THE ALPS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 951 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, Series 4, no. 2)

Credits: Producer, André De La Varre; music, Edward Craig.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Aug40; MP10432.

SAWDUST CANARY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Aug43; MP13853.

THE SAXON CHARM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 88 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Frederic Wakeman.

Summary: A character study about an egocentric Broadway producer named Saxon.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Sistrom; director, Claude Binyon; screenplay, Claude Binyon; music, Walter Scharf; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Paul Weatherwax.

Cast: Robert Montgomery, Susan Hayward, John Payne, Audrey Totter, Henry Morgan.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Nov48; LP1948.

SAY AH, JASPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Mar44; LP12536.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr41; MP11050.

SAY UNCLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; direction and screenplay, Ben Holmes; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Feb44; LP12800.

THE SCALE. Gateway Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (The Pirro Series, no. 7)

Summary: Pat explains to his puppet, Pirro, how scales are used, and teaches him how to weigh himself.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2340.

A SCANDAL IN PARIS. Arnold Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by Arnold Pressburger. 100 min., sd., 35mm. Based on the life of Eugene Francois Vidocq.

Credits: Producer, Arnold Pressburger; director, Douglas Sirk; screenplay, Ellis St. Joseph; composer, Hanns Eisler; editor, Al Joseph.

© Arnold Productions, Inc.; 11Jul46; LP458.

SCARED STIFF. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; screenplay, Geoffrey Homes, Maxwell Shane; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Apr45; LP13334.

SCARED TO DEATH. Golden Gate Pictures, Inc., c1946. 65 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, William B. David; director, Christy Cabanne; original story and screenplay, W. J. Abbott; music score, Carl Hoefle; film editor, George McGuire.

Cast: Bela Lugosi, George Zucco, Nat Pendleton, Molly Lamont.

© Golden Gate Pictures, Inc.; 15Aug46; LP963.

SCAREDY CAT. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Lloyd Vaughan, Ken Harris, Phil Monroe.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 21Dec48; MP3614.

SCARF DANCE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Mar46; MP256.

THE SCARLET CLAW. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 74 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Roy William Neill; original story, Paul Gangelin, Brenda Weisberg; screenplay, Edmund L. Hartmann, Roy William Neill; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Paul Landres.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May44; LP12904.

THE SCARLET CLUE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the "Charlie Chan" character by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Callahan; photography, William A. Sickner; film editor, Richard Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1Apr45; LP13234.

THE SCARLET HORSEMAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell, Tom Gibson, Patricia Harper.

1. Scarlet for a Champion. © 30Jan46; LP195.

2. Dry grass Danger. © 30Jan46; LP196.

3. Railroad Rescue. © 30Jan46; LP197.

4. Staked Plains Stampede. © 30Jan46; LP198.

5. Death Shifts Passengers. © 27Feb46; LP199.

6. Stop That Stage. © 27Feb46; LP200.

7. Blunderbuss Broadside. © 27Feb46; LP201.

8. Scarlet Doublecross. © 27Feb46; LP202.

9. Doom Beyond the Door. © 27Feb46; LP203.

10. The Edge of Danger. © 21Mar46; LP204.

11. Comanche Avalanche. © 21Mar46; LP205.

12. Staked Plains Massacre. © 21Mar46; LP206.

13. Scarlet Showdown. © 21Mar46; LP207.

SCARLET STREET. Released by Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. Presented by Walter Wanger. 11 reels, sd. A Diana production. Based upon the novel and play "La Chienne" by George de la Fouchardiere, in collaboration with Mouezy-Eon.

Credits: Producer and director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Dudley Nichols; music score, H. J. Salter; photographer, John P. Fulton; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Dec45; LP30.

SCATTERBRAIN. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Gus Meins; original screenplay, Jack Townley, Val Burton; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 20Jul40; LP9794.

SCATTERGOOD BAINES. c1941. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 69 min., sd. Adapted from the "Scattergood Baines" stories by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Jerrold T. Brandt; director, Christy Cabanne; original screenplay, Michael L. Simmons, Edward T. Lowe; music score, Constantin Bakaleinikoff; editor, Henry Berman.

© Pyramid Pictures Corp.; 21Feb41; LP10333.

SCATTERGOOD MEETS BROADWAY. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 68 min., sd. Adapted from the Scattergood Baines stories by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Jerrold T. Brandt; director, Christy Cabanne; original screenplay, Ethel B. Stone, Michael L. Simmons; music score, Dmitri Tiomkin; editor, John Sturges.

© Pyramid Pictures Corp.; 22Aug41; LP10739.

SCATTERGOOD PULLS THE STRINGS. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 67 min., sd. Adapted from stories by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Jerrold T. Brandt; director, Christy Cabanne; original screenplay, Christy Cabanne, Bernard Schubert; music score, Constantin Bakaleinikoff; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© Pyramid Pictures Corp.; 23May41; LP10555.

SCATTERGOOD RIDES HIGH. c1942. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 66 min., sd. Adapted from the Scattergood Baines stories by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Jerrold T. Brandt; director, Christy Cabanne; original screenplay, Michael L. Simmons; music score, Paul Sawtell; editor, Henry Berman.

© Pyramid Pictures Corp.; 8May42; LP11355.

SCATTERGOOD SURVIVES A MURDER. c1942. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 66 min., sd. Adapted from the Scattergood Baines stories by Clarence Budington Kelland.

Credits: Producer, Jerrold T. Brandt; director, Christy Cabanne; original screenplay, Michael L. Simmons; music score, Paul Sawtell; editor, Richard Cahoon.

© Pyramid Pictures Corp.; 16Oct42; LP11953.

SCENE OF THE CRIME. Loew's Inc., c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A Los Angeles detective tracks down the killers of a police officer.

Credits: Producer, Harry Rapf; director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, Charles Schnee; music score, Andre Previn; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

Cast: Van Johnson, Arlene Dahl, Gloria De Haven, Tom Drake, Leon Ames.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Jun49; LP2460.

SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF PETER. Trinity Methodist Church, Rochester, New York. 1900 ft., si.

© Trinity Methodist Church, Youth Fellowship; title, descr., & 22 prints, 26Jan48; LU1431.

SCENES OF NAPLES, ITALY. Charles Stuart Eubank. 15 min., si., color, 16mm.

© Charles Stuart Eubank; title & descr., 30May47; 10 prints, 16May47; MU2084.

SCENIC GRANDEUR. c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 752 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographers, Bob Carney, Art Arling. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Oct41; MP11865.

SCENIC OREGON. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 885 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William Snyder. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun43; MP13759.

SCENIC SWEDEN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A travel film, showing scenes along the Gota Canal between Gothenberg and Stockholm, and other picturesque areas. Includes glimpses of castles, farm areas, and the University of Upsala, and shows some of the native handicrafts, folk ceremonies, and dances.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Earl Allvine; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Jun48; MP3309.

SCENT-IMENTAL OVER YOU. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 3Apr47; MP1934.

SCHEEMANN (Snowman) sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Fischer Koesen Film Pr.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title & descr., 5Dec46; 6 prints, 2Nov46; LU697.

SCHNITZELBANK. John F. Trommer. Inc. 1–1/2 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A television spot commercial advertising Trommer's Beer.

© John F. Trommer, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul49, 1 roll, 6Jun49; MU4280.

SCHOLASTIC ENGLAND. Loew's Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: Shows the historic schools and universities of England, and emphasizes the contribution which their graduates have made to civilization.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Dec48 (in notice: 1947); MP3575.

SCHOOL DAZE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Terrytoons. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon) Based on the United Feature Comic "Nancy" by Ernie Bushmiller.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 18Sep42; MP13967.

SCHOOL FOR MERMAIDS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 139)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Sep45; MP16311.

SCHOOL TIME IN CAMP. Time, Inc., c1948. 2 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: An educational experiment sponsored by a school board. City children from the fifth and seventh grades attend a camp school for three weeks during the regular term.

© Life Camps, Inc.; 13Jan48; MP2858.

SCHOOLBOY DREAMS. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 532 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 7)

Credits: Story, Harry Love; animation, Allen Rose; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 21Sep40; LP9975.

SCHOOLHOUSE JIVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jul45; MP16148.

SCHOOLS OF MEXICO. Coronet, c1946. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the Department of Public Education in Mexico City, the National Normal School, the elementary schools, the agricultural schools, and the rural schools and play grounds, all of which aid in teaching democracy and raising the standard of living of the Mexican people.

Credits: Educational collaborator, P. R. Hershey.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 30Apr46 (in notice: 1945); MP3692.

THE SCHOONER THE BETTER. Screen Gems, Inc., c1948. 611 ft., sd., 35mm. (Phantasy, no. 47)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Cal Howard; animation, Grant Simmons, Morey Reden; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 4Jul46; LP647.

SCHRAFFT'S. Presented by Frank G. Shattuch Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Frank G. Shattuck Co.; title, descr., & 15 prints, 9Oct44; MU15266.

SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE; the soy bean. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: W. L. Burlison.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 21Dec39; MP9868.

SCIENCE AND SUPERSTITION. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Ira C. Davis.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 6May47; MP2506.

SCIENCE AND WOOD UTILIZATION. Coronet, c1946. 6 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborators, J. E. Hansen, F. H. Brown.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP2564.

THE SCIENCE OF MILK PRODUCTION. Presented by Purina Mills. 45 min., sd., color.

Credits: Kodachrome.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Mar45; 7 prints, 9Mar45; MU15669.

SCIENTIFICALLY STUNG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Person-Oddity, no. 150)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narration, Fred B. Cole.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13May46; MP620.

SCIENTIFIQUIZ. Loew's Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q.? No. 15) An MGM picture.

Summary: Pete Smith gives information on various subjects, including aviation, insects, and newspapers.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Mar49 (in notice: 1947); MP4009.

SCINTILLATING SIRENS. Quality Pictures Co., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Series 24)

Summary: Six burlesque dances.

Cast: Billie Mayshell, Princess Rouhia Bey, Be Be Fox, Fina and Roman, Irene Gale.

© W. Merle Connell, Nathan Robin, d.b.a. Quality Pictures Co.; 21Jan47; MP2813.

SCIUSCIA. SEE Shoe-Shine.

THE SCOOPER DOOPER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; written by Clyde Bruckman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Feb47; LP917.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16303.

SCOTLAND: BACKGROUND OF LITERATURE. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16 mm.

Summary: In order to provide students with a better understanding of Scottish literature, the film shows places made famous by Burns, Scott, Stevenson, Carlyle, and Shakespeare. Included are Abbotsford, Scott's home; Holyrood House, the home of Mary, Queen of Scots; Cawdor Castle; the village of Ayr; the city of Edinburgh; Loch Lomond; and the Firth of Forth.

Credits: Collaborator, John J. De Boer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 28Nov47; MP3103.

SCOTLAND YARD. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 6,380 ft., sd. Based on the play by Denison Clift.

Credits: Director, Norman Foster; screenplay, Samuel G. Engel, John Balderston; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Apr41; LP10395.

SCOTLAND YARD INVESTIGATOR. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Blair; original screenplay, Randall Faye; music score, Charles Maxwell; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographers, Ernest Miller, William Bradford; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 21Sep45; LP13534.

SCOTT OF THE ANTARCTIC. Ealing Studios, Ltd., London. Released in the U. S. by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 111 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A dramatization of Captain Robert F. Scott's ill-fated expedition to the South Pole in 1911. Filmed in Norway and Switzerland.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director, Charles Frend; screenplay, Walter Meade, Ivor Montagu; photography, Jack Cardiff, Osmond Borradaile, Geoffrey Unsworth; music, Vaughan Williams; editor, Peter Tanner.

Cast: John Mills, Derek Bond, Harold Warrender, James Robertson Justice, Reginald Beckwith.

© Ealing Studios, Ltd.; 20Apr49 (in notice: 1948); LP2470.

THE SCOUT TRAIL TO CITIZENSHIP. Boy Scouts of America, c1946. 4 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

© Boy Scouts of America; 1Dec46; LP710.

A SCOUT WITH THE GOUT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Little Lulu Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Mar47; LP882.

SCRAP FOR VICTORY. Terrytoons. Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Jan43; MP14672.

SCRAP HAPPY. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 754 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Jameson Brewer; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Aug43; LP12241.

SCRAP THE JAPS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Carl Meyer; animation, Tom Johnson, Ben Solomon.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Nov42; LP11702.

SCRAPPILY MARRIED. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 20 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; director, Arthur Ripley; screenplay, Arthur V. Jones; photography, Russell Metty; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures Inc.; 9Feb40; LP9453.

SCRAPPILY MARRIED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, William Turner, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar45; LP13276.

SCRAPPY BIRTHDAY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Henry Allen; animation, Verne Harding, Lee Kline; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 8Apr49; MP4093.

A SCREAM IN THE DARK. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the novel "The Morgue is always open" by Jerome Odlum.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; screenplay, Gerald Schnitzer, Anthony Coldewey; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 7Sep43; LP12276.

SCREEN SNAPSHOTS. Columbia Pictures Corp., 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. c1939–49. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, Ralph Staub.

Series 19, 1939.

4. © 31Dec39; MP9857.

Series 20, 1940/41.

1. © 6Sep40; MP10686.

3. © 22Nov40; MP10663.

6. © 15Mar41; MP11275.

8. © 1Jun41; MP11786.

9. © 7Jul41; MP11787.

Series 21, 1941/42.

1. © 15Aug41; MP12062.

2. © 12Sep41; MP12074.

3. © 17Oct41; MP11928.

4. © 21Nov41; MP11974.

5. © 26Dec41; MP12041.

6. © 31Dec41; MP12034.

7. © 6Mar42; MP13131.

8. © 6Apr42; MP12345.

9. © 8May42; MP12533.

10. © 19Jun42; MP12872.

Series 22, 1942/43.

1. © 7Aug42; MP13521.

2. © 11Sep42; MP13470.

3. © 23Oct42; MP13509.

4. © 26Nov42; MP13471.

5. © 25Dec42; MP13510.

6. © 29Jan43; MP13472.

7. © 26Feb43; MP13511.

8. © 31Mar43; MP13523.

9. © 4May43; MP13529.

10. © 8Jun43; MP13644.

Series 23, 1943/44.

1. Hollywood in Uniform. © 15Aug43; MP14039.

2. © 23Aug43; MP13876.

3. © 28Sep43; MP13982.

4. © 28Oct43; MP14081.

5. © 23Nov43; MP14175.

6. © 20Dec43; MP14301.

7. © 9Feb44; MP14464.

8. © 18Mar44; MP14631.

9. © 21Apr44; MP15084.

10. © 2Jun44; MP15109.

Series 24, 1944/45.

1. Seeing Hollywood with Two G. I. Joes. © 25Aug44; MP15300.

2. © 22Sep44; MP15961.

3. © 19Oct44; MP15739.

4. Seeing Hollywood. © 22Nov44; MP15957.

5. Three G. I. Janes in Hollywood. © 28Dec44; MP15958.

6. © 26Jan45; MP16080.

7. © 25Feb45; MP16081.

8. A Letter from Home. © 29Mar45; MP16410.

9. Doctors in Grease Paint. © 22Apr45; MP16411.

10. Seeing Hollywood. © 26May45; MP16412.

Series 25, 1945/46.

1. © 7Sep45; MP338.

2. © 11Oct45; MP339.

3. © 15Nov45; MP340.

4. Holiday in Hollywood. © 13Dec45; MP385.

5. Thrills 'n' Spills. © 17Jan46; MP1649.

6. © 15Feb46; MP980.

7. © 15Mar46; MP1004.

8. © 25Apr46; MP981.

9. © 23May46; MP1014.

10. © 10Jun46; MP982.

Series 26, 1946/47.

1. Radio Characters of 1946. © 5Sep46; MP1492.

2. Looking Down on Hollywood. © 3Oct46; MP2167.

3. Rodeo. © 7Nov46; MP1493.

4. The Skolsky Party. © 26Dec46; MP1512.

5. Behind the Mike. © 23Jan47; MP1974.

8. Behind the Mike. © 6Feb47; MP2349.

7. Holiday in Las Begas. © 13Mar47; MP1942.

8. My Pal Ringeye. © 10Apr47; MP1944.

9. Famous Hollywood Mothers. © 1May47; MP2031.

10. So This Is 'ollywood. © 10Jun47; MP2168.

Series 27, 1947/48.

1. Hollywood Cowboys. © 4Sep47; MP2340.

2. Laguna. U. S. A. © 9Oct47; MP2434.

3. Out of This World Series. © 27Nov47; MP2555.

4. Off the Air. © 18Dec47; MP3624.

5. Hawaii in Hollywood. © 22Jan48; LP1458.

6. Photoplay Magazine's Gold Medal Awards. © 18Mar48; LP1702.

7. Smiles and Styles. © 1Apr48 (in notice: 1947); MP2922.

8. Jean Hersholt Party. © 6May48; MP2974.

9. Hollywood Party. © 10Jun48; LP1664.

10. Hollywood Friars Honor George Jessel. © 17Sep48; MP3397.

Series 28, 1948/49.

1. A Day at C. B. S. © 7Oct48; LP1870.

2. Hollywood Holiday. © 2Sep48; MP3506.

Stars to Remember. © 1c, 12Nov48; MP3562.

Hollywood's Santa Claus Lane. © 23Dec48; MP3933.

A Rainy Day in Hollywood. © 27Jan49; MP3892.

Series 28.

Frank Borzage Golf Tournament. © 3Mar49; MP3912.

Medals for Hollywood Stars. © 14Apr49; MP4052.

Hollywood's Happy Homes. © 16Jun49; MP4162.

Howdy Podner. © 20Jul49 (in notice: 1948); MP4513.

Series 29. 1949.

Motion Picture Mothers, Inc. © 13Oct49; MP4627.

Spin That Platter. © 25Oct49; MP4670.

THE SCREWBALL. c1943. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Verne Harding; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 3Feb43; MP13845.

SCREWBALL SQUIRREL. Loew's Inc., c1944. 678 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Preston Blair, Ed Love, Ray Abrams; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Apr44; LP189.

THE SCREWY TRUANT. Loew's Inc., c1945. 645 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Preston Blair, Ed Love, Ray Abrams; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Jan45; LP13064.

SCRIPT TEAS. SEE Variety Views, no. 151.

SCRUB ME MAMA WITH A BOOGIE BEAT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr41; MP11057.

SCRUB ME MAMA WITH A BOOGIE BEAT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (Walter Lantz Color Cartoon) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway; artists, Alex Lovy, Frank Tipper; words and music, Don Raye; music arrangement, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Company, Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 25Apr41; MP11106.

SCUDDA-HOO! SCUDDA-HAY! Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 95 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the novel by George Agnew Chamberlain.

Summary: A drama about a poor farm boy and his two mules.

Credits: Producer, Walter Morosco; direction and screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert; music, Cyril Mockridge; film editor, Harmon Jones.

Cast: June Haver, Lon McAllister, Walter Brennan, Anne Revere, Natalie Wood.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 11Mar48; LP1865.

SEA-FOOD MAMAS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Lew Lehr's Dribble Puss Parade)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. de Francesco; editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Oct44; MP15328.

SEA FOR YOURSELF. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 946 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Charles T. Trego; screenplay, Harold Messinger.

© Loew's Inc.; 27Jan41; LP10201.

THE SEA HAWK. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1940. 13 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Howard Koch, Seton I. Miller; music, Erich Wolfgang Korngold.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 3Sep40; LP9873.

THE SEA HOUND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the radio program and cartoon magazine.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Directors, Walter B. Eason, Mack Wright; screenplay, George H. Plympton, Lewis Clay, Arthur Hoerl.

1. Captain Silver Sails Again. © 4Sep47; LP1241.

2. Spanish Gold. © 11Sep47; LP1247.

3. The Mystery of the Map. © 18Sep47; LP1267.

4. Menaced by Ryaks. © 25Sep47; LP1272.

5. Captain Silver's Strategy. © 2Oct47; LP1278.

6. The Sea Hound at Bay. © 9Oct47; LP1300.

7. Rand's Treachery. © 16Oct47; LP1310.

8. In the Admiral's Lair. © 23Oct47; LP1320.

9. On the Water Wheel. © 30Oct47; LP1340.

10. On the Treasure Trail. © 6Nov47; LP1349.

11. Sea Hound Attacked. © 13Nov47; LP1367.

12. Dangerous Waters. © 20Nov47; LP1368.

13. The Panther's Prey. © 27Nov47; LP1386.

14. The Fatal Doublecross. © 4Dec47; LP1408.

15. Captain Silver's Last Stand. © 11Dec47; LP1417.

SEA LION CAVES. Parris Everett Emery, c1948. 4 min., si, b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of seals, with close-up shots of their caves.

© Parris Everett Emery; 1Oct48; MP3833.

THE SEA OF GRASS. Loew's Inc., c1946. 13 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the novel by Conrad Richter.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Elia Kazan; screenplay, Marguerite Roberts, Vincent Lawrence; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

Cast: Spencer Tracy, Katharine Hepburn, Robert Walker, Melvyn Douglas.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Dec46; LP786.

SEA RAIDERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ford Beebe, John Rawlins; original screenplay, Clarence Upson Young, Paul Huston.

1. The Raider Strikes. © 30Jun41; LP10564.

2. Flaming Torture. © 30Jun41; LP10565.

3. The Tragic Crash. © 30Jun41; LP10566.

4. The Raider Strikes Again! © 3Jul41; LP10567.

5. Flames of Fury! © 11Jul41; LP10583.

6. Blasted from the Air! © 11Jul41; LP10584.

7. Victims of the Storm! © 16Jul41; LP10591.

8. Dragged to Their Doom! © 4Aug41; LP10623.

9. Battling the Sea Beast! © 4Aug41; LP10624.

10. Periled by a Panther! © 4Aug41; LP10625.

11. Entombed in the Tunnel! © 4Aug41; LP10626.

12. Paying the Penalty! © 6Aug41; LP10634.

SEA SALTS. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Donald Duck Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Bill Berg, Nick George; animation, Bill Justice, John Sibley, Bob Carlson, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18May48; LP1985.

SEA SIRENS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Paul Douglas' Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Technicolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10May46; MP572.

THE SEA WOLF. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 11 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the novel by Jack London.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Robert Rossen; music, Wolfgang Korngold.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Feb41; LP10338.

SEAL ISLAND. Walt Disney Productions. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 27 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A True-Life Adventure)

Summary: A study of the characteristics of the fur-bearing Alaskan seals during the mating season when the seals return to the place of their own birth to breed. Filmed on one of the Pribilof Islands in the Bering Sea by special permission of the Fish and Wild Life Service of the U. S. Department of the Interior.

Credits: Director, James Algar; photographer, Alfred G. Milotte; research, Leo Thiele, Jack Jungmeyer, Elma Milotte; music, Oliver Wallace; narrator, Winston Hibler; film editor, Anthony Gerard.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Aug48; LP2357.

SEALED LIPS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Jack Bernhard; direction and original screenplay, George Waggner; photography, Stanley Cortez; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5Dec41; LP10875.

SEALED VERDICT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Lionel Shapiro.

Summary: A dramatization of life in postwar Germany, emphasizing the efforts of the Allied authorities to administer justice at the Nürnburg war-crimes trials.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Jonathan Latimer; music score, Hugo Friedhofer; editor, Alma Macrorie.

Cast: Ray Milland, Florence Marly, Broderick Crawford, John Hoyt, John Ridgely.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Nov48; LP1900.

SEAPORTS OF THE PACIFIC COAST. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Clifford M. Zierer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire. Inc.; 8Jul47; MP2569.

THE SEARCH. Praesens-Film, Zurich for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, c1948. 105 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Portions of the film were produced in the U. S. Occupied Zone of Germany through the permission of the U. S. Army and the cooperation of I. R. O.

Summary: With semi-documentary technique, the film depicts the tragic plight of the displaced children of Europe and tells how a Czech boy, aided by UNNRA, is united with his mother.

Credits: Producer, Lazar Wechsler; director, Fred Zinnemann; original screenplay, Richard Schweizer; collaborator on screenplay, David Wechsler; music score, Robert Blum; film editor, Hermann Haller.

Cast: Montgomery Clift, Aline MacMahon, Jarmila Novotna, Wendell Corey, Ivan Jandl.

Appl. author: Loew's, Inc.

© Loew's International Corp.; 31Mar48; LP1571.

SEARCH. SEE Perilous Waters.

SEARCH FOR DANGER. Falcon Productions, Inc. Released through Film Classics, Inc., c1949. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the character, "The Falcon," created by Michael Arlen.

Summary: The Falcon solves the murders that are committed after a gambler absconds with $100,000.

Credits: Associate producer, George Moskov; director, Jack Bernhard; original story, Jerome Epstein; screenplay, Don Martin; music, Karl Hajos; film editor, Asa Boyd Clark.

Cast: John Calvert, Albert Dekker, Myrna Dell, Ben Welden, Douglas Fowley.

© Falcon Productions, Inc.; 21Apr49; LP2264.

SEARCH FOR HAPPINESS. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

THE SEARCHING WIND. Hal Wallis Productions, Inc., c1946. 12 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on a play by Lillian Hellman.

Credits: Director, Herman Shumlin; screenplay, Lillian Hellman.

© Hal Wallis Productions, Inc.; 3May46; LP278.

SEASONAL CHANGES IN TREES. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Children study the common trees near their school and note the seasonal changes which occur in the different varieties.

Credits: Educational collaborator, N. E. Bingham.

© David A. Smart; 17Aug49; MP4497.

SEASON'S THE REASON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8May44; MP14806.

SEATTLE GATEWAY TO THE NORTHWEST. c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 842 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nathaniel Finston, C. Bakaleinikoff; photographer, Bob Carney. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Feb40; MP10130.

SECOND CHANCE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947. 62 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sol M. Wurtzel; director, James S. Tinling; original story, Lou Breslow, John Patrick; screenplay, Arnold Belgard; music director, Morton Scott; music score, Dale Butts; film editor, Frank Baldridge.

Cast: Kent Taylor, Louise Currie, Dennis Hoey, Larry Blake.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Jul47; LP1262.

SECOND CHORUS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Boris Morros; director, H. C. Potter; original story, Frank Cavett; screenplay, Elaine Ryan, Ian McLellan Hunter; photographer, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Jack Dennis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 3Jan41; LP10155.

THE SECOND PHASE OF THE KENNY TREATMENT. c1945. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Reid H. Ray.

© Sister Elizabeth Kenny; 18Jul45; MP16172.

SECRET AGENT OF JAPAN. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,448 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Irving Pichel; original screenplay, John Larkin; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Apr42; LP11258.

SECRET AGENT X–9. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. c1945. 2 reels each, sd. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ray Taylor, Lewis D. Collins; original story, Joseph O'Donnell, Harold C. Wire; screenplay, Joseph O'Donnell, Patricia Harper.

1. Torpedo Rendezvous. © 30Jul45; LP13488

2. Ringed by Fire. © 30Jul45; LP13489.

3. Death Curve. © 30Jul45; LP13490.

4. Floodlight Murder. © 27Aug45; LP13491.

5. Doom Downgrade. © 27Aug45; LP13492.

6. Strafed by a Zero. © 27Aug45; LP13493.

7. High Pressure Deadline. © 7Sep45; LP13497.

8. The Dropping Floor. © 7Sep45; LP13498.

9. The Danger Point. © 7Sep45; LP13499.

10. Japanese Burial. © 27Sep45; LP38.

11. Fireworks for Deadmen. © 27Sep45; LP39.

12. Big Gun Fusillade. © 27Sep45; LP40.

13. Zero Minute. © 27Sep45; LP41.

SECRET BEYOND THE DOOR. Diana Productions, Inc. Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. Presented by Walter Wanger. 98 min., sd., b&w. 35mm. Based on the story, "Museum Piece No. 13." by Rufus King.

Summary: After her marriage to a magazine publisher, an American heiress discovers her husband is afflicted with homicidal mania, the result of childhood persecution. After harrowing experiences, the wife succeeds in averting tragedy.

Credits: Producer and director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Silvia Richards; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

Cast: Joan Bennett, Michael Redgrave, Anne Revere, Barbara O'Neil.

© Diana Productions, Inc.; 8Mar48; LP1656.

THE SECRET CODE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels). © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, Spencer G. Bennett; original screenplay, Basil Dickey, Leighton Brill, Robert Beche.

1. Enemy Passport. © 4Sep42; LP11609.

2. The Shadow of the Swastika. © 11Sep42; LP11610.

3. Nerve Gas. © 18Sep42; LP11611.

4. The Sea Spy Strikes. © 25Sep42; LP11614.

5. Wireless Warning. © 2Oct42; LP11625.

6. Flaming Oil. © 9Oct42; LP11626.

7. Submarine Signal. © 9Oct42; LP11627.

8. The Missing Key. © 23Oct42; LP11651.

9. The Radio Bomb. © 30Oct42; LP11669.

10. Blind Bombardment. © 7Nov42; LP11687.

11. Ears of the Enemy. © 14Nov42; LP11707.

12. Scourge of the Orient. © 21Nov42; LP11708.

13. Pawn of the Spy Ring. © 28Nov42; LP11709.

14. Dead Men of the Deep. © 5Dec42; LP11710.

15. The Secret Code Smashed. © 12Dec42; LP11744.

SECRET COMMAND. c1944. 9 reels, sd. Terneen Productions. Adapted from the story "The Saboteurs" by John Hawkins and Ward Hawkins.

Credits: Producer, Phil L. Ryan; director, Eddie Sutherland; screenplay, Roy Chanslor; music score, Paul Sawtell; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Viola Lawrence.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jun44; LP12704.

SECRET ENEMIES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 58 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture.

Credits: Director, Ben Stoloff; screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; film editor, Doug Gould.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 7Nov42; LP11675.

SECRET EVIDENCE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, E. B. Derr; director, William Nigh; original story, Edward Bennett; screenplay, Brenda Cline; editor, Elaine Turner.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 8Feb41; LP10235.

THE SECRET 4. Monogram, c1940. 9 reels, sd. From the novel by Edgar Wallace.

Credits: Producer, Michael Balcon; director, Walter Forde; screenplay, Angus MacPhail, Sergei Nolbandov, Roland Pertwee; music, Ernest Irving; photography, Ronald Neame; editor, Charles Saunders.

© York Pictures Co., Inc.; 17Jan40; LP9364.

THE SECRET GARDEN. Loew's Inc., c1949. 92 min., sd., b&w with color sequences, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett.

Summary: Following the death of her parents in India, a little girl is installed in her wealthy uncle's austere British home and transforms the entire household.

Credits: Producer, Clarence Brown; director, Fred M. Wilcox; screenplay, Robert Ardrey; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

Cast: Margaret O'Brien, Herbert Marshall, Dean Stockwell, Gladys Cooper, Elsa Lanchester.

© Loew's Inc.; 10Mar49; LP2237.

THE SECRET HEART. Loew's Inc., c1946. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer, Edwin H. Knopf; director, Robert Z. Leonard; original story and adaptation, Rose Franken, William Brown Meloney; screenplay, Whitfield Cook, Anne Morrison Chapin; music, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

Cast: Claudette Colbert, Walter Pidgeon, June Allison, Lionel Barrymore.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Dec46; LP737.

THE SECRET LAND. Loew's Inc., c1948. 71 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: In 1947, Admiral Richard E. Byrd, sailing from Norfolk, Va., bound for Antarctica, leads the Navy's "Operation High Jump" 12,000 miles south in search of scientific data on the natural resources of the Polar region. Photographed by Navy, Army, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard personnel.

Credits: Producer, Orville O. Dull; commentary written by Harvey S. Haislip, William C. Park; narrators, Robert Montgomery, Robert Taylor, Van Heflin; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frederick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Aug48; LP1807.

THE SECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY. Samuel Goldwyn Productions, Inc., c1947. 110 min., sd., color, 35mm. From a story by James Thurber.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Norman Z. McLeod; screenplay, Ken Englund, Everett Freeman; music, David Raksin; music director, Emil Newman; film editor, Monica Collingwood.

Cast: Danny Kaye, Virginia Mayo, Boris Karloff, Fay Bainter, Ann Rutherford.

© Samuel Goldwyn Productions, Inc.; 4Aug47; LP1176.

SECRET MISSION. Distributed by General Film Distributors, Ltd. c1945. Presented by Excelsior Film Productions, Ltd. 8 reels, sd. From an original story by Shaun Terence Young.

Credits: Producer, Marcel Hellman; director, Harold French; screenplay, Anatole De Grunwald, Basil Bartlett; music, Mischa Spoliansky; cameraman, Cyril Knowles; editor, E. B. Jarvis.

© English Films, Inc.; 4Jan45; LP13210.

THE SECRET OF AMERICAN PROSPERITY. John Sutherland Productions, Inc., for Harding College, c1947. 24 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The film points out that the freedom enjoyed by our Nation is endangered by conflicts between capital and labor, and among racial and religious groups. Animated cartoon.

© Harding College; 26Sep47; MP2653.

THE SECRET OF ST. IVES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "St. Ives" by Robert Louis Stevenson.

Summary: The adventures of a young Frenchman who escapes from his imprisonment in Edinburgh Castle during the Napoleonic wars.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Philip Rosen; screenplay, Eric Taylor; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Richard Ney, Vanessa Brown, Henry Daniell, Edgar Barrier, Aubrey Mather.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Jun49; LP2376.

SECRET OF THE FJORD. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Father Hubbard's Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; described by Father Hubbard and Lowell Thomas; music score, L. De Francesco; editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Feb42; MP12302.

SECRET OF THE WASTELANDS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based upon the story by Bliss Lomax and characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Derwin Abrahams; screenplay, Gerald Geraghty; photographer, Russell Harlan; editor, Carrol Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Nov41; LP10813.

THE SECRET OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System program "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, George Sherman; story, Richard H. Landau; screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; music, Wilbur Hatch; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Nov46; LP690.

SECRET SERVICE IN DARKEST AFRICA. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–5, 6Aug43; LP12255; no. 6–10, 18Aug43; LP12256.

Credits: Associate producer, W. J. O'Sullivan; director, Spencer Bennet; original screenplay, Royal Cole, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Ronald Davidson, Joseph O'Donnell, Joseph Poland; musical score, Mort Glickman; photographer, William Bradford; film editors, Wallace Grissell, Thomas Malloy.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. North African Intrigue.

2. The Charred Witness.

3. Double Death.

4. The Open Grave.

5. Cloaked in Flame.

6. Dial of Doom.

7. Murder Dungeon.

8. Funeral Arrangements Completed.

9. Invisible Menace.

10. Racing Peril.

SECRET SERVICE INVESTIGATOR. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A veteran assumes the role of an ex-convict whom he resembles, and helps the Secret Service track down a band of counterfeiters.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Lloyd Bridges, George Zucco, June Storey.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24May48; LP1709.

THE SECRET SEVEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, James Moore; story, Dean Jennings, Robert Tasker; screenplay, Robert Tasker; photography, John Stumer; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jul40; LP9826.

THE SECRETARY TAKES DICTATION. Coronet, in collaboration with Peter L. Agnew, c1947.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 16Jan47; MP2021.

THE SECRETARY TRANSCRIBES. Coronet, in collaboration with Peter L. Agnew, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 9Apr47; MP2027.

SECRETARY TROUBLE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

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

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Amelita Ward, Michael Harvey.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 9Apr48; LP1604.

THE SECRETARY'S DAY. Coronet, in collaboration with Peter L. Agnew, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 25Mar47; MP2020.

SECRETS. sd., color, 35mm.

Appl. author: Irving Auerbach.

© Myrtle L. Auerbach; title, descr., & 34 prints, 11Apr42; MU12361.

SECRETS OF A CO-ED. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Alfred Stern, Arthur Alexander; director, Joseph H. Lewis; original screenplay, George W. Sayre; music direction, Lee Zahler; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11820.

SECRETS OF A SORORITY GIRL. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures. 6 reels, sd., 35mm. An Alexander-Stern production.

Credits: Producers, Max Alexander, Alfred Stern; director, Frank Wisbar; original story, George Wallace Sayre; screenplay, George Wallace Sayre, Arthur St. Claire; music director, Karl Hajos; film editor, Roy Livingston.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 15Aug46; LP501.

SECRETS OF SCOTLAND YARD. c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Adapted from the story "Room 40, O. B." by Denison Clift.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Blair; screenplay, Denison Clift; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Jun44; LP12701.

SECRETS OF THE LONE WOLF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based upon a work by Louis Joseph Vance.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Edward Dmytryk; story and screenplay, Stuart Palmer; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Richard Fantl.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Nov41; LP10842.

SECRETS OF THE ORCHID. Sherwood Pictures, c1947. 17 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Scenario, Renee Black.

© T. Marc Sherwood, d.b.a. Sherwood Pictures; 1Nov47; MP2486.

SECRETS OF THE UNDERGROUND. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Leonard Fields; director, William Morgan; original story, Geoffrey Homes; screenplay, Robert Tasker, Geoffrey Homes; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Dec42; LP11796.

SECTIONS. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (McGraw-Hill Text Films. Mechanical Drawing Series, no. 4)

Summary: The film demonstrates the construction of a sectional view which reveals interior details, and explains the symbols used in sectioning.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 1Jul48; MP3580.

SECTIONS AND CONVENTIONS. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1947. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Engineering drawing, film 5)

Summary: This instructional film in the field of engineering drawing indicates that important interior views of objects should be revealed sectionally, and shows how to construct sectional views.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 29Dec47; MP3065.

SECURITY—24 HOURS A DAY.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© General Exchange Insurance Corp.; title & descr., 24Feb41; 153 prints, 26Feb41; MU10867.

SEE HERE, PRIVATE HARGROVE. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the book by Marion Hargrove.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Wesley Ruggles; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Feb44; LP174.

SEE MY LAWYER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd. From the play by Harry Clork and Richard Maibaum.

Credits: Producer, Edmund L. Hartmann; director, Edward Francis Cline; screenplay, Edmund L. Hartmann, Stanley Davis; cameraman, Paul Ivano; film editor, Paul Landers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12969.

SEE-SAW ZOO. Carter Publications, Inc. 15 min. each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Carter Publications, Inc.

2. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct49; LU2550.

3. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct49; LU2551.

SEE THE BIRDIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Jul44; MP14984.

SEE WHATCHA DO. 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.; 2Dec46; MP1360.

SEE YOUR DOCTOR. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 699 ft., sd., b&w. Based upon an idea by Parkyakarkus.

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Nov39; LP9314.

SEEDS OF DESTRUCTION. 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. 4)

Summary: Shows how federal, state, and private conservation agencies cooperate in preventing the depletion of natural resources and in preserving the land. 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; MP3453.

SEEIN' RED, WHITE 'N' BLUE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dan Gordon; story, Joe Stultz; animation, Jim Tyler, Ben Solomon.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Feb43; LP11880.

SEEING EL SALVADOR. c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 814 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Apr45; MP15974.

THE SEEING EYE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 2 reels.

Credits: Producer, Jerome Hillman.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 9May41; MP11129.

SEEING GHOSTS. Terrytoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 4Aug48; LP1804.

SEEING HANDS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 958 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Gunther V. Fritsch; screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Jul43; LP12137.

SEEING IS BELIEVING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Paramount Paragraphics)

Credits: Written by Justin Herman; narrator, Bill Farren; editor, Leslie Roush.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Nov40; MP10628.

SEEING IS BELIEVING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Mar43; MP13418.

SEEING NELLIE HOME. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; original story, Elizabeth Holding; screenplay, Leslie Goodwins, Monte Collins; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3Sep43; LP12320.

THE SEESAW AND THE SHOES. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 962 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Douglas Foster; original story and screenplay, Rosemary Foster; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 1May45; LP13286; LP13298.

SELECTING QUALITY CHEVROLET SALESMEN. Presented by the Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 13 prints, 5Oct46; MU1143.

SELECTION OF DIMENSIONS. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Engineering Drawing, film 7)

Summary: Principles governing the choice of dimensions of objects reproduced by students of engineering drawing are explained in their relation to the fundamental characteristics of the object and the manufacturing methods to be used in its production.

© McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc.; 29Dec47; MP3067.

SELF-DEFENSE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 942 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Philip Anderson; original story, Richard Landau, David Lang; screenplay, Richard Landau.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Jul42; MP12785.

SELF DISCOVERY IN A MIRROR. 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; MP1589.

A SELF-MADE MONGREL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Story, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 29Jun45; LP13703.

SELL—AS CUSTOMERS LIKE IT. X. F. Sutton Associates, Inc. for Johnson & Johnson. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents to drug store employees six basic principles of selling.

© Johnson & Johnson; title, descr., & 2 prints, 27Jul49; MU4356.

SELLING KODAK FLASH BANTAM CAMERAS. Eastman Kodak Co. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A film designed to promote the sale of Kodak Flash Bantam Cameras, indicating new markets and stressing the simplicity and size of the camera.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 14Apr49; MU3980.

SELLING THE SUN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing; commentator, Justin Herman.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Jan47; MP1609.

SEMAPHORES. Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc. for the United States Navy Aviation Training Schools.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 88 prints, 14Mar42; MU12260.

A SEMINOLE LOVE STORY. Rainbow Pictures, c1947. 1 reel, color, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, Walter Resce.

© Walter Resce d.b.a. Rainbow Pictures; 13May47; MP2116.

SEMPER FIDELIS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Nov43; MP14095.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15515.

THE SENATOR WAS INDISCREET. Inter-John, Inc., c1948. Presented by Universal International Pictures Co., Inc. 88 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A satire on the American political scene, involving a pompous and bombastic senator with presidential aspirations.

Credits: Producer, Nunnally Johnson; director, George S. Kaufman; story, Edwin Lanham; screenplay, Charles MacArthur; music, Daniele Amfitheatrof; orchestration, David Lamkin; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

Cast: William Powell, Ella Raines, Peter Lind Hayes, Arleen Whelan, Ray Collins.

© Inter-John, Inc.; 8Mar48; LP1657.

SEND ANOTHER COFFIN. SEE Slightly Honorable.

SENDING RADIO MESSAGES. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Principles of Radio, pt. 1)

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 2Jun43; MP14229.

SENOR DROOPY. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Rich Hogan; music, Scott Bradley; animation, Grant Simmons, Walter Clinton, Bob Cannon, Michael Lah, Preston Blair.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Mar49; LP2197.

SENORITA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14578.

SENORITA FROM THE WEST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Frank Strayer; original screenplay, Howard Dimsdale.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Oct45; LP13648.

SENSATION HUNTERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Kaufman; director, Christy Cabanne; original story, John Faxon; screenplay, Dennis Cooper; cinematographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Martin Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 7Oct45; LP13615.

SENSATIONS OF 1945. Released through United Artists, c1944. Presented by Andrew Stone. 86 min., sd. An Andrew Stone production.

Credits: Associate producer, James Nasser; director, Andrew Stone; original story, Frederick Jackson; screenplay, Dorothy Bennett; music director, Mahlon Merrick; film editor, James E. Smith.

© Andrew Stone Pictures Corp.; 30Jun44; LP12825.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16135.

SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8,100 ft., sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Nelia Gardner White.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Samuel Hoffenstein, Elizabeth Reinhardt; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Feb46; LP363.

SEPTEMBER IN THE RAIN. c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Blue Ribbon Hit Parade Cartoon) A Reissue.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Oct44; MP15292.

SERENADE IN SWING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Reginald LeBorg; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Milton Schwarz.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Aug42; LP11555.

SERGEANT MIKE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Henry Levin; original screenplay, Robert Lee Johnson; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Reg Browne.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Nov44; LP13457.

SERGEANT YORK. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 14 reels, sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Based upon the diary of Sergeant York.

Credits: Producers, Jesse L. Lasky, Hal B. Wallis; director, Howard Hawks; original screenplay, Abem Finkel, Harry Chandlee, Howard Koch, John Huston; music, Max Steiner.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Sep41; LP10720.

SERIES AND PARALLEL CIRCUITS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Apr44; MP15911.

SERIES AND PARALLEL CIRCUITS. De Forest's Training, Inc., c1948. 100 ft., b&w, 16mm. (Radio Electronics. Reel lesson 2)

Summary: Demonstrates how the various elements in a circuit can be connected either in series or in parallel, and how the voltage and current are distributed in these systems.

© De Forest's Training, Inc.; 1Oct48; MP3895.

SERIES AND PARALLEL CIRCUITS. SEE Circuitos em Séries e em Paralelo. Circuitos en Serie y Paralelos.

SERVANT OF MANKIND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 804 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Original screenplay, Herman Hoffman; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Roy Brickner.

© Loew's Inc.; 14May40; LP9673.

SERVICE WITH A GUILE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, Jack Ward, Carl Meyer.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Dec45; LP262.

SERVICING P–39. Bell Aircraft Corp., for the United States Army Air Forces. 2 reels each, sd., 16mm. © Bell Aircraft Corp.

Removal and Installation of Alighting Gear Struts. Director, W. T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 15Sep42; MU12828.

Wheels and Tires. Director, W. T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 15Sep42; MU12829.

Operation and Adjustment Landing Gear Clutch Shift Rod. Director, W. T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 11 prints, 15Sep42; MU12830.

Servicing Landing Gear Struts and Nose Wheel Shimmy Damper. Director, W. T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 13 prints, 15Sep42; MU12831.

Removal and Installation of Main Wheel Spindle assembly. Director, W. T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 11 prints, 15Sep42; MU12871.

Removal and Installation of Ailerons and Tabs. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 17 prints, 29Dec43; MU14323.

Removal and Installation of the Vacuum Pump and Adjustment of the Relief Valve. Director, Ralph Woolsey. © title, descr., & 12 prints, 20Dec43; MU14324.

Synchronizing of the Landing Gear. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 14 prints, 29Dec43; MU14325.

Removal and Installation of .30 Caliber Wing Guns. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14326.

Removal, Installation of the M–2 Automatic Gun. Director, Norman Mathews. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14327.

Synchronizing .50 Caliber Guns. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 17 prints, 29Dec43; MU14328.

Removal and Installation of Gear Box and Extension Driveshaft Assembly. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 11 prints, 29Dec43; MU14329.

Procedure for Uncrating. Director, Ralph Woolsey. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14330.

Removal and Installation of Generator and Adjustment of Generator Circuit. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 16 prints, 29Dec43; MU14331.

Removal and Installation of the Two .50 Caliber Synchronized Guns. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 16 prints, 29Dec43; MU14332.

Removal and Installation of Engine Oil Tanks and Coolers. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 6 prints, 29Dec43; MU14333.

Removal and Installation of Coolant Radiator and Expansion Tank. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 13 prints, 29Dec43; MU14334.

Alignment Check of Engine, Extension Driveshaft, Gear Box and Propeller Shaft. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 13 prints, 29Dec43; MU14335.

Cleaning and Servicing the M–4 Automatic Gun. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 13 prints, 29Dec43; MU14336.

Removal and Installation of the M–4 Automatic Gun 37mm. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14338.

Removal and Installation of Self-Sealing Fuel Tank and Adjustment of Fuel Level Gauge. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 17 prints, 29Dec43; MU14339.

Removal and Installation of Cabin Glass, Door Hinges and Locks. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 17 prints, 29Dec43; MU14340.

Removal, Installation, Adjustment of Empennage Assembly. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14341.

Removal, Installation and Adjustment of Wing Flaps. Director, Harold Kopel. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 29Dec43; MU14342.

Boresighting of All Guns. Director, William T. Clifford. © title, descr., & 14 prints, 29Dec43; MU14347.

Boresighting of All Guns. Director, William Clifford. © title, descr., & 15 prints, 14Nov45; MU16506.

SERVICIO SURGE. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Narrator, Emil Limes. Kodachrome.

Appl. author: George Mather.

© Babson Bros. Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 28Mar45; MU15755.

THE SET-UP. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a narrative poem by Joseph Moncure March.

Summary: A presentation of the events which take place during the evening of a worn-out prizefighter's last fight. Actual settings are used.

Credits: Producer, Richard Goldstone; director, Robert Wise; screenplay, Art Cohn; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Roland Gross.

Cast: Robert Ryan, Audrey Totter, George Tobias, Alan Baxter, Wallace Ford.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 15Mar49; LP2147.

SETTING THE PACE. Movietone. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Director, Tom Cummiskey; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 24Apr42; MP12491.

SEVEN BEERS WITH THE WRONG MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11127.

SEVEN BEERS WITH THE WRONG WOMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP11961.

SEVEN DAYS A WEEK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jul46; MP814.

SEVEN DAYS ASHORE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 74 min., sd. Based on an original story by Jacques Deval.

Credits: Director, John H. Auer; screenplay, Edward Verdier, Irving Phillips, Lawrence Kimble; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestra arrangements, Gene Rose; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Apr44; LP12707.

SEVEN DAYS' LEAVE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 87 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Tim Whelan; original screenplay, William Bowers, Ralph Spence, Curtis Kenyon, Kenneth Earl; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Robert Wise.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Nov42; LP11724.

SEVEN DOORS TO DEATH. c1944. Presented by PRC Pictures, Inc., 7 reels, sd. Alexander-Stern production.

Credits: Producer, Alfred Stern; director, Elmer Clifton; original story, Helen Kiely; screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© PRC Pictures, Inc.; 25Jul44; LP13620.

SEVEN KEYS TO BALDPATE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Earl Derr Biggers and the dramatization by George M. Cohen.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Lew Landers; screenplay, Lee Loeb; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, J. R. Whittredge.

Cast: Phillip Terry, Jacqueline White.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Jul47; LP1175.

SEVEN MILES FROM ALCATRAZ. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 62 min., sd. From a story by John D. Klorer.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Edward Dmytryk; screenplay, Joseph Krumgold; music, Roy Webb; editor, George Crone.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Jan43; LP11912.

SEVEN MILLION IN SEVEN YEARS. Presented by Chevrolet.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division; General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 275 prints; 3Feb41; MU10805.

SEVEN SINNERS. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 9 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Ladislas Fodor and Laszlo Vadnay.

Credits: Producer, Joe Pasternak; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, John Meehan, Harry Tugend; music director, Charles Previn; photographer, Rudolph Mate; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Nov40; LP10024.

SEVEN SWEETHEARTS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. A Frank Borzage production.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Pasternak; director, Frank Borzage; original screenplay, Walter Reisch, Leo Townsend; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Aug42; LP11525.

SEVEN WERE SAVED. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 72 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on an original story by Maxwell Shane and Julian Harmon.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William H. Pine; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: Richard Denning, Catherine Craig, Russell Hayden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Feb47; LP900.

SEVEN YEARS WITH THE WRONG WOMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Nov43; MP14247.

SEVENTEEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on the story by Booth Tarkington and the play by Stuart Walker, Hugh Stanislaus Stange and Stannard Mears.

Credits: Director, Louis King; screenplay, Agnes Christine Johnston, Stuart Palmer; photography, Victor Milne; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Mar40; LP9462.

SEVENTH COLUMN. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 839 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.; 13Jul43; LP12172.

THE SEVENTH CROSS. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the novel by Anna Seghers.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; director, Fred Zinnemann; screenplay, Helen Deutsch; music score, Roy Webb; film editor, Thomas Richards.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jul44; LP180.

THE SEVENTH VEIL. Released by Universal, c1946. Presented by C. C. F. 11 reels, sd., 35mm. A Sidney Box-Ortus production.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Box; director, Compton Bennett; original story and screenplay, Muriel and Sidney Box; music score, Ben Frankel; cinematographers, Reginald H. Webb, Bert Mason; film editor, Gordon Hales.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Jul46; LP473.

THE SEVENTH VICTIM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 71 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Val Lewton; director, Mark Robson; written by Charles O'Neal, DeWitt Bodeen; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Aug43; LP12249.

SEWING ADVANCED SEAMS. Centron Corp., Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 27Oct47; MP2437.

SEWING: CHARACTERISTICS AND HANDLING OF MATERIALS. Young America Films, Inc., for Centron Corp., Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how to select suitable fabrics for dressmaking. A film for home economics classes in high school and college.

Credits: Adviser, Helen Lohr.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 9Apr48; MP2951.

SEWING FUNDAMENTALS. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A teaching film which explains the use of measuring devices, tailor's chalk, shears, irons, and other sewing tools. For home economics classes in high school and college.

Credits: Adviser, Helen Lohr; author, Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 15Dec47; MP2581.

SEWING: PATTERN INTERPRETATION. Young America Films, Inc., for Centron Corp., Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Explains the markings and instructions used on McCall, Simplicity, Butterick, and Vogue patterns. For home economics classes in high school and college.

Credits: Collaborator, Helen Lohr.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 30Dec47; MP2688.

SEWING SIMPLE SEAMS. Centron Corp., Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Arthur F. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 10Oct47; MP2379.

SEWING SLIDE FASTENERS. Young America Films, Inc., for Centron Corp., Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: How to put slide fasteners in blouses, skirts, and dresses. For home economics classes in high school and college.

Credits: Collaborator, Helen Lohr.

Appl. author: Arthur H. Wolf.

© Centron Corp., Inc.; 29Dec47; MP2689.

SEX HORMONES—PHYSIOLOGY, DIAGNOSIS, THERAPY. Presented by the Research Laboratories of Parke, Davis and Co. sd.

Appl. author: John D. Ralston.

© Parke, Davis & Co.; title & descr., 28Jun41; 42 prints, 12Jul41; MU11319.

SEX HYGIENE. Audio Productions, Inc., with the cooperation of the U. S. Navy.

© Audio Productions, Inc.; title, descr., & 4 prints, 5Feb42; MU12151.

THE SEXTANT. Springer Pictures, Inc., for the United States Navy. sd., 35mm.

© Springer Pictures, Inc.

Appl. author: Arno Herman Schneiding.

1. © title, descr., & 5 prints, 18Aug43; MU13859.

2. Adjustment of the Sextant. © title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Aug43; MU13860.

3. Practical Operation. © title, descr., & 2 prints, 18Aug43; MU13861.

SH! SH! SOMEBODY BLABBED. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr43; MP13488.

THE SHADOW. Columbia Pictures Corp., 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels) © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, James W. Horne; screenplay, Joseph Poland, Ned Dandy, Joseph O'Donnell.

1. The Doomed City. © 1Jan40; LP9394.

2. The Shadow Attacks. © 20Jan40; LP9360.

3. The Shadow's Peril. © 27Jan40; LP9382.

4. In the Tiger's Lair. © 3Feb40; LP9396.

5. Danger Above. © 10Feb40; LP9411.

6. The Shadow's Trap. © 17Feb40; LP9422.

7. Where Horror Waits. © 24Feb40; LP9438.

8. The Shadow Rides the Rails. © 2Mar40; LP9457.

9. The Devil in White. © 9Mar40; LP9469.

10. The Underground Trap. © 16Mar40; LP9484.

11. Chinatown Night. © 23Mar40; LP9491.

12. Murder by Remote Control. © 30Mar40; LP9510.

13. Wheels of Death. © 6Apr40; LP9519.

14. The Sealed Room. © 13Apr40; LP9534.

15. The Shadow's Net Closes. © 20Apr40; LP9567.

THE SHADOW. SEE Chick Carter, Detective.

SHADOW OF A DOUBT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 11 reels. From an original story by Gordon McDonell.

Credits: Director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, Thornton Wilder, Sally Benson, Alma Reville.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 31Dec42; LP11785.

SHADOW OF A WOMAN. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1946. 78 min., sd., 35mm. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Virginia Perdue.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Joseph Santley; screenplay, Whitman Chambers, C. Graham Baker; music, Adolph Deutsch; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Christian Nyby.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Sep46; LP566.

SHADOW OF SUSPICION. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, William Beaudine; original story, Harold Goldman; screenplay, Albert Demond, Earle Snell; photography, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp., 23Sep44; LP12847.

SHADOW OF TERROR. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lew Landers; original story, Sheldon Leonard; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire; music director, Karl Hajos.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 5Nov45; LP415.

SHADOW OF THE THIN MAN. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. From a story by Harry Kurnitz. Based upon characters created by Dashiell Hammett.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, W. S. Van Dyke, II; screenplay, Irving Brecher, Harry Kurnitz; music score, David Snell; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Oct41; LP10854.

SHADOW ON THE WALL. Loew's Inc., c1949. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An MGM picture. Formerly entitled "The Open Door."

Summary: When a six-year-old child's memory is restored by a psychiatrist, her testimony leads to the conviction of the real murderer of her mother.

Credits: Producer, Robert Sisk; director, Patrick Jackson; story, Hannah Lees, Lawrence P. Bachmann; screenplay, William Ludwig; music, Andre Previn; film editor, Irvine Wareburton.

Cast: Ann Sothern, Zachary Scott, Gigi Perreau, Nancy Davis, John McIntire.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Nov49; LP2682.

THE SHADOW RETURNS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd. Based upon stories in the Shadow Magazine.

Credits: Producer, Joe Kaufman; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Callahan; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, William Sickner; editor, Ace Herman.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 31Jan46; LP137.

SHADOW VALLEY. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Arthur Sherman; music, Pete Gates; film editor, Joe Gluck.

Cast: Eddie Dean, White Cloud, Roscoe Ates, Jennifer Holt, George Chesebro.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 29Nov47; LP1322.

SHADOWED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. From a story by Julian Harmon.

Credits: Producer, John Haggott; director, John Sturges; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 26Sep46; LP664.

SHADOWS IN SWING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William Cowan; director, Reginald Le Borg; music director, Charles Previn; orchestrations, Milton Rosen; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May41; LP10450.

SHADOWS IN THE NIGHT. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on the radio program "Crime Doctor" by Max Marcin.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Eugene J. Forde; story and screenplay, Eric Taylor; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Jul44; LP13084.

SHADOWS OF DEATH. 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.; 19Apr45; LP13559.

SHADOWS OF HATE. Time, Inc., for United Jewish Appeal, c1947. 2 reels, b&w, 16mm.

© Time, Inc.; 10Apr47; MP2064.

SHADOWS OF THE WEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a young man, jailed for a holdup murder, is exonerated when the real outlaw is exposed.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Whip Wilson, Andy Clyde, Reno Browne, Riley Hill, Bill Kennedy.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jul49; LP2512.

SHADOWS ON THE RANGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Jess Bowers; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, James S. Brown; film editor, Fred Maguire.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Jul46; LP502.

SHADOWS ON THE SAGE. c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Les Orlebeck; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, Edgar Lyons; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Aug42; LP11568.

SHADOWS ON THE SNOW. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone Specialty) A Rudolph Carlson production.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director and photographer, Arne Sucksdorff; music, Erland von Koch; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Sep49; MP4708.

SHADOWS ON THE STAIRS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 7 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the play by Frank Vosper.

Credits: Director, D. Ross Lederman; screenplay, Anthony Coldeway.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Mar41; LP10285.

SHADOWS OVER CHINATOWN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based on the character "Charlie Chan" created by Earl Derr Biggers.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, Terry Morse; original screenplay, Raymond Schrock; photographer, William Sickner; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Jul46; LP420.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Oct41; MP11712.

SHADY LADY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, George Waggner; original screenplay, Curt Siodmak, Gerald Geraghty, M. M. Musselman; cinematographer, Hal Mohr; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Sep45; LP13478.

SHAGGY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 72 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: This film, with scenes laid in the mountainous sheep-raising country of the West, relates the story of a boy's love for his dog, and of a new stepmother's efforts to win the child's affection.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Robert Emmett Tansey; original screenplay, Maxwell Shane; music, Ralph Stanley; film editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: George Nokes, Brenda Joyce, Robert Shayne, Ralph Sanford, "Shaggy."

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Jun48 (in notice: 1947); LP1665.

SHAKE HANDS WITH MURDER. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. for American Productions, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Albert Herman; original story, Martin Mooney; screenplay, John T. Neville; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, George Merrick.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 22Apr44; LP13591.

SHAKE HANDS WITH SUCCESS. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 6)

Summary: Illustrates how characteristics of an individual may be determined from a study of his hands.

Credits: Producer, Duke Goldstone; director, W. Zolley Lerner; original story, Josef Ranald; editor, Henry Coswick.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 18Mar49; MP4061.

SHAKE MY HAND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jul43; MP13790.

SHAKESPEARIAN SPINACH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel. (Popeye the Sailor)

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuel; animation, Roland Crandall, Ben Solomon.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jan40; LP9368.

SHALLOW WATER DIVING. Leon Schlesinger Productions for the U. S. Navy.

Appl. author: Hugh MacMullan.

© Leon Schlesinger Productions; title & descr., 21Dec43; 5 prints, 22Jan44; MU14436.

SHAM BATTLE SHENANIGANS. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Mar42; MP12299.

SHAME ON YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Oct45; MP16398.

SHAMROCK HILL. Vinson Pictures Corp. Released through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1949. Presented by Equity Pictures, Inc. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical comedy in which a young girl's faith in leprechauns mellows a hard-hearted industrialist.

Credits: Producer and director, Arthur Dreifuss; original story, Arthur Hoerl; screenplay, Arthur Hoerl, McElbert Moore; music director, Herschel Gilbert.

Cast: Peggy Ryan, Ray McDonald, Trudy Marshall, Rick Vallin, John Litel.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 15May49; LP2387.

THE SHANGHAI CHEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: After Charlie Chan discovers that the fingerprints found at the scene of the crime are the cleverly duplicated print of a dead man, he is enabled to solve a triple murder.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, William Beaudine; original story, Sam Newman; screenplay, W. Scott Darling, Sam Newman; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Roland Winters, Mantan Moreland. Deannie Best, John Alvin, Victor Sen Young.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Jul48; LP1879.

THE SHANGHAI COBRA. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, James S. Burkett; director, Phil Karlson; original story, George Callahan; screenplay, George Callahan, George Wallace Sayre; photographer, Vince Farrar; film editor, Ace Herman.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Aug45; LP56.

THE SHANGHAI GESTURE. Released thru United Artists, c1941. Presented by Arnold Pressburger. 98 min., sd. From the play by John Colton.

Credits: Producer, Arnold Pressburger; director, Josef von Sternberg; adaptation, Josef von Sternberg; collaboration, Geza Herczeg, Karl Vollmoeller and Jules Furthman; music, Richard Hageman; photography, Paul Ivano; film editor, Sam Winston.

© Arnold Productions, Inc.; 25Dec41; LP11051.

SHANTYTOWN. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Adaptation of a play by Henry Moritz.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Joseph Santley; screenplay, Olive Cooper; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Thomas Richards.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Apr43; LP12005.

SHAPE AHOY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Jack Ward, Irving Dressler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Apr45; LP13473.

SHAPE DESCRIPTION,