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.

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225. © 12Dec39; MP9855.

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227. © 19Dec39; MP9880.

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229. © 26Dec39; MP9916.

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238. © 25Jan40; MP9984.

239. © 30Jan40; MP9994.

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Volume 12, 1940/41.

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263. © 22Apr41; MP11146.

264. © 24Apr41; MP11147.

265. © 29Apr41; MP11171.

266. © 1May41; MP11172.

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268. © 8May41; MP11186.

269. © 15May41; MP11208.

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271. © 22May41; MP11228.

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273. © 27May41; MP11260.

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278. © 12Jun41; MP11306.

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Volume 13, 1941/42.

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213. © 28Oct41; MP11782.

214. © 30Oct41; MP11783.

215. © 4Nov41; MP11847.

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233. © 6Jan42; MP12182.

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239. © 27Jan42; MP12200.

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242. © 5Feb42; MP12219.

243. © 10Feb42; MP12248.

244. © 12Feb42; MP12249.

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246. © 19Feb42; MP12265.

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249. © 3Mar42; MP12318.

250. © 5Mar42; MP12319.

251. © 10Mar42; MP12348.

252. © 12Mar42; MP12349.

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254. © 19Mar42; MP12380.

255. © 24Mar42; MP12392.

256. © 26Mar42; MP12393.

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259. © 7Apr42; MP12426.

260. © 9Apr42; MP12427.

261. © 14Apr42; MP12472.

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263. © 21Apr42; MP12484.

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265. © 28Apr42; MP12506.

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268. © 7May42; MP12524.

269. © 12May42; MP12552.

270. © 14May42; MP12553.

271. © 19May42; MP12568.

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273. © 26May42; MP12590.

274. © 28May42; MP12591.

275. © 2Jun42; MP12629.

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277. © 9Jun42; MP12650.

278. © 11Jun42; MP12651.

279. © 16Jun42; MP12665.

280. © 18Jun42; MP12666.

281. © 23Jun42; MP12696.

282. © 25Jun42; MP12697.

283. © 30Jun42; MP12705.

284. © 2Jul42; MP12706.

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286. © 9Jul42; MP12728.

287. © 14Jul42; MP12743.

288. © 16Jul42; MP12744.

289. © 21Jul42; MP12763.

290. © 23Jul42; MP12764.

291. © 28Jul42; MP12794.

292. © 30Jul42; MP12795.

293. © 3Aug42; MP12805.

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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.

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280. © 18Jun43; MP13763.

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284. © 2Jul43; MP13822.

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286. © 9Jul43; MP13824.

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288. © 16Jul43; MP13839.

289. © 21Jul43; MP13849.

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293. © 4Aug43; MP13894.

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296. © 13Aug43; MP13906.

297. © 18Aug43; MP13913.

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299. © 25Aug43; MP13955.

300. © 27Aug43; MP13956.

301. © 1Sep43; MP13984.

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224. © 1Dec44; MP15525.

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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.

259. © 4Apr45; MP15906.

260. © 6Apr45; MP15907.

261. © 11Apr45; MP16064.

262. © 13Apr45; MP16065.

263. © 18Apr45; MP16066.

264. © 20Apr45; MP16067.

265. © 25Apr45; MP16068.

266. © 27Apr45; MP16082.

267. © 2May45; MP16083.

268. © 4May45; MP16084.

269. © 9May45; MP16085.

270. © 11May45; MP16086.

271. © 16May45; MP16087.

272. © 18May45; MP16088.

273. © 23May45; MP16089.

274. © 25May45; MP16090.

275. © 30May45; MP16091.

276. © 1Jun45; MP16092.

277. © 6Jun45; MP16247.

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

© 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.