P

PBM MARINER. 3/4 reel, sd., b&w, 35mm. United States Navy.

Appl. author: Harvey J. Plants.

© Pathescope-Ideal Productions; title, descr., & 3 prints, 18Mar44; MU14606.

PACEMAKERS FOR INDUSTRY. Presented by Jervis B. Webb Co., 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 17Nov44; 5 prints, 18Nov44; MU15393.

PACIFIC ADVENTURE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 97 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the life of Sir Charles Kingsford Smith.

Credits: Director, Ken G. Hall; screenplay, John Chandler, Alex Coppel; adaptation, Ken G. Hall, Max Afford; music director, Henry Krips; film editor, Terry Banks.

Cast: Ron Randell, Muriel Steinbeck.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Jul47; LP1090.

PACIFIC BLACKOUT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on a story by Franz Spencer and Curt Siodmak.

Credits: Producer, Sol. C. Siegel; director, Ralph Murphy; screenplay, Lester Cole, W. F. Lipscomb; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Thomas Scott.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 31Dec41; LP10957.

PACIFIC CANADA. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Dec43; MP14746.

THE PACIFIC COAST. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PACIFIC FRONTIER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd., color. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Written and edited by Frederick Richards; narrator, Raine Bennett.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 20Jun42; LP11402.

PACIFIC PARADISE. Dunning Process Co., c1940. Presented by Paramount. 892 ft., sd., color. (Paramount Color Cruises)

Credits: Narrator, Gregory Abbott; photography, John W. Boyle. Magnacolor.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jun40; MP10296.

PACIFIC RENDEZVOUS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, B. F. Ziedman; director, George Sidney; screenplay, Harry Kurnitz, P. J. Wolfson, George Oppenheimer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 19May42; LP11310.

PACKAGE FOR JASPER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. George Pal Productions, Inc.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Jan44; LP12455.

PADDLE YOUR OWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russell T. Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9Nov45; MP16492.

PADDLIN' MADELINE HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jul43; MP13714.

PADDY CALLAHAN HAS JOINED THE ARMY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Jul42; MP12816.

PAGLIACCI SWINGS IT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Cowan; director, Lewis D. Collins; music director, Edward Ward; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 22May44; LP12659.

THE PAINT FILM. Paul Hance Productions, Inc., for the New Jersey Zinc Company, c1947. 29 min., sd., color, 16mm.

© Paul Hance Productions; 5Dec47; MP2537.

THE PAINTER AND THE POINTER. c1945. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walt Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Emery Hawkins; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 4Jan45; MP15567.

PAINTING AND DECORATING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 20Sep45; MP16610.

PAINTING REFLECTIONS IN WATER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Eliot O'Hara, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Jun47; MP2113.

PAISAN. Made for Organization Films International in collaboration with Foreign Film Productions, Italy, c1947. Released in the U. S. by Mayer-Burstyn, Inc., 1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. In Italian with English titles.

Summary: Six episodes which show the relationship between the Italian people and the men of various nationalities who invaded their homeland during World War II.

Credits: Producer and director, Roberto Rossellini; screenplay, Alfred Hayes, Frederico Fellini, Sergio Amidei, Marcelloa Pagliero, Roberto Rossellini; scenario and dialogue, Sergio Amidei; American version, Stuart Legg, Raymond Spottiswoode; English titles, Herman G. Weinberg; music, Renzo Rossellini.

Cast: Carmela Salzo, Robert Von Loon, Dots M. Johnson, Alfonsino, Maria Michi.

© Mayer-Burstyn, Inc.; 1Dec47; LP2486.

THE PALEFACE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A burlesque of the horse opera. A timid, traveling dentist, mistaken for a federal agent, despite gun duels and an attempted burning at the stake, escapes the Indians on the warpath, outwits the outlaws, and wins the love of a gun-toting cowgirl.

Credits: Producer, Robert L. Welch; director, Norman Z. McLeod; original screenplay, Edmund Hartmann, Frank Tashlin; music score, Victor Young; editor, Ellsworth Hoagland.

Cast: Bob Hope, Jane Russell, Robert Armstrong, Iris Adrian, Robert Watson.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Dec48; LP2183.

PALESTINE. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PALM BEACH STORY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Paul Jones; written and directed by Preston Sturges; music score, Victor Young; editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Nov42; LP11763.

PALM TREE POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1163.

PALMETTO QUAIL. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd., 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 12)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, William Deeke; written by Burton Benjamin; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Clare Grundman; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 12Jul46; MP1061.

LA PALOMA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

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

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1701.

PAL'S ADVENTURE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of a small boy and the dog who helps to clear him of an unjust accusation of robbery.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; original story, Otto Englander; screenplay, James Bloodworth; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Ted Donaldson, Sharyn Moffett, Flame, Rudy Wissler, Billy Cummings.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Sep48; LP1863.

PALS OF THE PECOS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Lester Orlebeck; original story, Oliver Drake; screenplay, Oliver Drake, Herbert Dalmas; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 8Apr41; LP10414.

PALS OF THE SILVER SAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Robert Emmett; photography, Marcel A. LePicard; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 11Apr40; LP9596.

PAL'S RETURN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Pal saves the life of a small boy and is thereafter accepted by the boy's parents into their home.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Leslie Goodwins; story and screenplay, Stephen Moore; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

Cast: Gary Gray, John Ridgely, Anne Nagel, Robert Bray, Flame.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 26Nov48; LP2009.

PANAMA. RKO-Pathe, Inc. in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This Is America, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Dudley Hale; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Harold Anderson; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO-Pathe, Inc.; 31May46; MP840.

PANAMA: CROSSROADS OF THE WESTERN WORLD. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Locates Panama and the strategic Canal on the map, shows that the early Spanish influence lingers in the architecture of the country and religious customs of the people, and gives an over-all survey of the climate, the industries, and the products of the country.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Clyde Kohn.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 15Aug47; MP3691.

PANAMA HATTIE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Herbert Fields and B. G. DeSylva, produced by B. G. DeSylva, music and lyrics by Cole Porter.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Norman Z. McLeod; screenplay, Jack McGowan, Wilkie Mahoney; music adaptation, Roger Edens; music direction, Georgie Stoll; orchestrations, Leo Arnaud, George Bassman, Conrad Salinger; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11530.

PAN-AMERICANA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 84 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, John H. Auer; original story, Frederick Kohner, John A. Auer; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; orchestrations, Gene Rose; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb45; LP13169.

PAN-AMERICONGA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb41; MP10847.

PANCHO'S RAINBOW. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Pancho seeks for a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow and finds a cooler full of Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 23Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2614.

PANCHROMATIC MAKE-UP FOR CINEMATOGRAPHY. c1947. 4 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Henry Macy Dollison.

© Photographic Technicians, Inc.; 1Mar47; MP1748.

PANDORA'S BOX. Terrytoons, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Jun43; MP14904.

PANHANDLE. Allied Artists Productions, Inc., c1948. 85 min., sd., sepia, 35mm.

Summary: A Western melodrama in which a former marshal returns to a lawless Texas town in order to avenge the murder of his brother.

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

Cast: Rod Cameron, Cathy Downs, Reed Hadley, Anne Gwynne, Blake Edwards.

© Allied Artists Productions, Inc.; 7Mar48; LP1541.

PANIC. Filmsonor, Paris, c1946. 9 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Georges Simenon's novel "Les Fiançailles de Mr. Hire."

Credits: Scenario and dialogue, Charles Spaak, Julien Duvivier.

© Tricolore Films, Inc.; 11Dec46; LP1257.

A PANIC IN THE PARLOR. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock: director, Charles Roberts: story, Charles Roberts, George Jeske; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Jun41; LP10557.

THE PANTHER'S CLAW. Producers Releasing Corp., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Lester Cutler; director, William Beaudine; original story, Anthony Abbott; screenplay, Martin Mooney; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 3Mar42; LP11184.

PANTRY PIRATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Jan41; LP10275.

PAPA GETS THE BIRD. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 727 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep40; MP10648.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jan42; MP12048.

PAPER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, C. E. Libby.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Sep46; MP1145.

PAPER BULLETS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice Kozinsky; director, Phil Rosen; original story and screenplay, Martin Mooney; music direction, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; cinematographer, Arthur Martinelli; film editor, Martin G. Cohn.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 6Jun41; LP10576.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Dec42; MP13128.

PAPER FORESTS. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (America's Resources Series)

Summary: Shows every phase of the work of the Canadian lumbermen, from the felling of the trees to the arrival of the logs at the paper mill.

Credits: Director and photographer, Duncan MacD. Little.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4083.

PAPER MAGIC. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 146)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Ben Grauer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Oct45; MP16421.

PAPER MAKING. Coronet, c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Educational authors, J. E. Hansen, Freeman H. Brown; narrator, Vincent Pelletier; cameraman, James A. Larsen.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 29Oct41; MP1531.

PARACHUTE ATHLETES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jun42; MP12598.

PARACHUTE BATTALION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 75 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, John Twist, Hugh Fite; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Aug41; LP10700. (See also Parachute Battalion, 1Aug41; LP10646)

PARACHUTE BATTALION. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 75 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Leslie Goodwins; original screenplay, John Twist, Hugh Fite; music score, Roy Webb; editor, Theron Warth.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Aug41; LP10646. (See also Parachute Battalion, 14Aug41; LP10700)

PARACHUTE NURSE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on a story by Elizabeth Meehan.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Charles Barton; screenplay, Rian James; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27May42; LP11331.

PARADE OF PROGRESS. Hugh Harman Productions, Inc., c1945. 1,800 ft., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Wallace Bosco; narration, Emory Green.

© Hugh Harman Productions, Inc.; 15Oct45; MP16543.

PARADE OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS. Globe Productions, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Soundies, no. 1–E)

© Globe Productions, Inc.; 10Aug40; MP11486.

PARADE OF THE WOODEN SOLDIERS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar43; MP13348.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar41; MP10966.

THE PARADINE CASE. Vanguard Films, Inc., c1947. 132 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Robert Hichens' novel.

Summary: A melodrama in which a famous lawyer becomes infatuated with his client, a woman accused of murdering her blind husband. Glimpses of gay, luxurious living contrast with the principal setting, a courtroom in Old Bailey, London.

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, Alfred Hitchcock; screenplay, David O. Selznick; adaptation, Alma Reville; music, Franz Waxman; film editor, Hal C. Kern.

Cast: Gregory Peck, Ann Todd, Charles Laughton, Charles Coburn, Ethel Barrymore.

© Vanguard Films, Inc.; 27Dec47; LP1489.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Sep43; MP13928.

PARAMOUNT NEWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1939–49. 1 reel each, unless otherwise indicated, sd. © Paramount Pictures Inc.

1939/40.

1. © 30Aug39; MP9888.

2. © 3Sep39; MP9889.

3. © 7Sep39; MP9890.

4. © 11Sep39; MP9891.

5. © 14Sep39; MP9892.

6. © 18Sep39; MP9893.

7. © 21Sep39; MP9894.

8. © 25Sep39; MP9895.

9. © 28Sep39; MP9896.

10. © 2Oct39; MP9897.

11. © 5Oct39; MP9898.

12. © 9Oct39; MP9899.

13. © 12Oct39; MP9900.

14. © 16Oct39; MP9901.

15. © 19Oct39; MP9902.

16. © 23Oct39; MP9903.

17. © 26Oct39; MP9904.

18. © 30Oct39; MP9905.

19. © 2Nov39; MP9906.

20. © 6Nov39; MP9907.

21. © 9Nov39; MP9908.

22. © 13Nov39; MP9909.

23. © 16Nov39; MP9910.

24. © 20Nov39; MP9911.

25. © 23Nov39; MP9918.

26. © 27Nov39; MP9919.

27. © 30Nov39; MP9920.

28. © 4Dec39; MP9921.

29. © 7Dec39; MP9922.

30. © 11Dec39; MP9923.

31. © 14Dec39; MP9924.

32. © 18Dec39; MP9925.

33. © 21Dec39; MP9926.

34. © 25Dec39; MP9927.

35. © 28Dec39; MP9928.

36. © 1Jan40; MP9970.

37. © 4Jan40; MP9971.

38. © 8Jan40; MP9972.

39. © 11Jan40; MP9973.

40. © 15Jan40; MP9974.

41. © 18Jan40; MP9975.

42. © 22Jan40; MP9976.

43. © 25Jan40; MP9977.

44. © 29Jan40; MP10142.

45. © 1Feb40; MP10143.

46. © 5Feb40; MP10144.

47. © 8Feb40; MP10145.

48. © 12Feb40; MP10146.

49. © 15Feb40; MP10147.

50. © 19Feb40; MP10148.

51. © 22Feb40; MP10149.

52. © 26Feb40; MP10150.

53. © 29Feb40; MP10151.

54. © 4Mar40; MP10152.

55. © 7Mar40; MP10153.

56. © 11Mar40; MP10154.

57. © 14Mar40; MP10155.

58. © 18Mar40; MP10156.

59. © 21Mar40; MP10157.

60. © 25Mar40; MP10158.

61. © 28Mar40; MP10241.

62. © 1Apr40; MP10242.

63. © 4Apr40; MP10243.

64. © 8Apr40; MP10244.

65. © 11Apr40; MP10245.

66. © 15Apr40; MP10246.

67. © 18Apr40; MP10247.

68. © 22Apr40; MP10248.

69. © 25Apr40; MP10249.

70. © 29Apr40; MP10250.

71. © 2May40; MP10251.

72. © 6May40; MP10252.

73. © 9May40; MP10364.

74. © 13May40; MP10365.

75. © 16May40; MP10366.

76. 2 reels. © 20May40; MP10372.

77. © 23May40; MP10367.

78. © 27May40; MP10368.

79. © 30May40; MP10369.

80. © 3Jun40; MP10373.

81. © 6Jun40; MP10374.

82. © 10Jun40; MP10375.

83. © 13Jun40; MP10376.

84. © 17Jun40; MP10377.

85. © 20Jun40; MP10378.

86. © 24Jun40; MP10379.

87. © 27Jun40; MP10551.

88. © 1Jul40; MP10552.

89. © 4Jul40; MP10553.

90. © 8Jul40; MP10554.

91. © 11Jul40; MP10555.

92. © 15Jul40; MP10556.

93. © 18Jul40; MP10557.

94. © 22Jul40; MP10558.

95. © 25Jul40; MP10559.

96. © 29Jul40; MP10560.

97. © 1Aug40; MP10561.

98. © 5Aug40; MP10562.

99. © 8Aug40; MP10563.

100. © 12Aug40; MP10564.

101. © 15Aug40; MP10565.

102. 2 reels. © 19Aug40; MP10566.

103. © 22Aug40; MP10567.

104. © 26Aug40; MP10568.

1940/41.

1. © 29Aug40; MP10569.

2. © 2Sep40; MP10570.

3. © 5Sep40; MP10571.

4. © 9Sep40; MP10572.

5. © 12Sep40; MP10573.

6. © 16Sep40; MP10574.

7. © 19Sep40; MP10716.

8. © 23Sep40; MP10717.

9. © 26Sep40; MP10718.

10. © 30Sep40; MP10719.

11. © 3Oct40; MP10720.

12. © 7Oct40; MP10721.

13. © 10Oct40; MP10722.

14. © 14Oct40; MP10723.

15. © 17Oct40; MP10724.

16. © 21Oct40; MP10725.

17. © 24Oct40; MP10726.

18. © 28Oct40; MP10727.

19. © 31Oct40; MP10728.

20. © 4Nov40; MP10729.

21. © 7Nov40; MP10730.

22. © 11Nov40; MP10731.

23. © 14Nov40; MP10732.

24. © 18Nov40; MP10733.

25. © 21Nov40; MP10734.

26. © 25Nov40; MP10735.

27. © 28Nov40; MP10736.

28. © 2Dec40; MP10737.

29. © 5Dec40; MP10738.

30. © 9Dec40; MP10739.

31. © 12Dec40; MP11001.

32. © 16Dec40; MP11002.

33. © 19Dec40; MP11003.

34. © 23Dec40; MP11004.

35. © 26Dec40; MP11005.

36. © 30Dec40; MP11006.

37. © 2Jan41; MP11007.

38. © 6Jan41; MP11008.

39. 2 reels. © 9Jan41; MP11009.

40. © 13Jan41; MP11010.

41. © 16Jan41; MP11011.

42. © 20Jan41; MP11012.

43. © 23Jan41; MP11013.

44. © 27Jan41; MP11014.

45. © 30Jan41; MP11015.

46. © 3Feb41; MP11016.

47. © 6Feb41; MP11017.

48. © 10Feb41; MP11018.

49. © 13Feb41; MP11019.

50. © 17Feb41; MP11020.

51. © 20Feb41; MP11021.

52. © 24Feb41; MP11022.

53. © 27Feb41; MP11023.

54. © 3Mar41; MP11024.

55. © 6Mar41; MP11387.

56. © 10Mar41; MP11388.

57. © 13Mar41; MP11389.

58. © 17Mar41; MP11390.

59. © 20Mar41; MP11391.

60. © 24Mar41; MP11392.

61. © 27Mar41; MP11393.

62. © 31Mar41; MP11394.

63. © 3Apr41; MP11395.

64. © 7Apr41; MP11396.

65. © 10Apr41; MP11397.

66. © 14Apr41; MP11398.

67. © 17Apr41; MP11399.

68. © 21Apr41; MP11400.

69. © 24Apr41; MP11401.

70. © 28Apr41; MP11402.

71. © 1May41; MP11403.

72. © 5May41; MP11404.

73. © 8May41; MP11405.

74. © 12May41; MP11406.

75. © 15May41; MP11407.

76. © 19May41; MP11408.

77. © 22May41; MP11409.

78. © 26May41; MP11410.

79. © 29May41; MP11461.

80. © 2Jun41; MP11791.

81. © 5Jun41; MP11792.

82. © 9Jun41; MP11793.

83. © 12Jun41; MP11794.

84. © 16Jun41; MP11795.

85. © 19Jun41; MP11796.

86. © 23Jun41; MP11797.

87. © 26Jun41; MP11798.

88. © 30Jun41; MP11799.

89. © 3Jul41; MP11800.

90. © 7Jul41; MP11801.

91. © 10Jul41; MP11802.

92. © 14Jul41; MP11803.

93. © 17Jul41; MP11804.

94. © 21Jul41; MP11805.

95. © 24Jul41; MP11806.

96. © 28Jul41; MP11807.

97. © 31Jul41; MP11808.

98. © 4Aug41; MP11809.

99. © 7Aug41; MP11810.

100. © 11Aug41; MP11811.

101. © 14Aug41; MP11812.

102. © 18Aug41; MP11813.

103. © 21Aug41; MP11814.

104. © 25Aug41; MP11815.

1941/42.

1. © 28Aug41; MP11816.

2. © 1Sep41; MP11817.

3. © 4Sep41; MP11818.

4. © 8Sep41; MP11819.

5. © 11Sep41; MP11820.

6. © 15Sep41; MP11821.

7. © 18Sep41; MP11822.

8. © 22Sep41; MP11823.

9. © 25Sep41; MP11824.

10. © 29Sep41; MP11825.

11. © 3Oct41; MP11826.

12. © 7Oct41; MP11827.

13. © 10Oct41; MP12096.

14. © 14Oct41; MP12097.

15. © 17Oct41; MP12098.

16. © 21Oct41; MP12099.

17. © 24Oct41; MP12100.

18. © 28Oct41; MP12101.

19. © 31Oct41; MP12102.

20. © 4Nov41; MP12103.

21. © 7Nov41; MP12104.

22. © 11Nov41; MP12105.

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27. © 28Nov41; MP12110.

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30. 2 reels. © 9Dec41; MP12113.

31. 2 reels. © 12Dec41; MP12114.

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1942/43.

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1943/44.

1. © 1Sep43; MP14057.

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87. © 28Jun44; MP15040.

88. © 2Jul44; MP15041.

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91. © 12Jul44; MP15142.

92. © 16Jul44; MP15143.

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1944/45.

1. © 31Aug44; MP15277.

2. © 4Sep44; MP15278.

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1945/46.

1. © 1Sep45; MP16512.

2. © 5Sep45; MP16513.

3. © 8Sep45; MP16514.

4. © 12Sep45; MP16515.

5. © 15Sep45. MP16516.

6. © 19Sep45; MP16517.

7. © 22Sep45; MP16518.

8. © 26Sep45; MP16519.

9. © 29Sep45; MP16520.

10. © 3Oct45; MP16521.

11. © 6Oct45; MP16522.

12. © 10Oct45; MP16523.

13. © 13Oct45; MP16524.

14. © 17Oct45; MP16525.

15. © 20Oct45; MP16526.

16. Oct. 24, 1945. British miracle—air strips that float. Duke [of Windsor] visits Queen Mother [Mary]. Tomorrow's flying flivvers. Death for Laval. The fleet comes back.

© 24Oct45; MP2.

17. Oct. 27, 1945. "Big 10" upset! Purdue vs. Ohio State. Navy releases submarine films. Allied justice—24 Nazis indicted.

© 27Oct45; MP3.

18. Oct. 31, 1945. British test German terror weapon [V–2 rocket bomb]. "Big Mo" [USS Missouri] comes home. Shangri-La [aircraft carrier] returns. Truman asks for military training. The V-T [proximity] fuse.

© 31Oct45; MP4.

19. Nov. 3, 1945. Season's thriller! Last minute Navy victory. Salute the Navy [Navy Day in ports of the nation].

© 3Nov45; MP5.

20. Nov. 7, 1945. Chicago fire razes grain elevator. President opens Victory Loan drive. For sale: 30,000 GI horses. Nazi aftermath—displaced Germans. World Charter becomes law of nations. Thunder over Japan [war crimes trial begins].

© 7Nov45; MP6.

21. Nov. 10, 1945. Management, Labor meet. Thanksgiving turkeys learn fate. GI road to Rome. Jap fleet passes in review. Yanks seize Jap gold. Navy vs. Notre Dame. Battle of the six-inch line.

© 10Nov45; MP7.

22. Nov. 14, 1945. World's mightiest mortar. Home town welcomes Halsey. Underwater Thanksgiving. Inside Berlin. Election roundup [in New York City and Detroit].

© 14Nov45; MP8.

23. Nov. 17, 1945. Three-wheel whizzer [automobile]. Bye-bye baby—by air. [RAF Gloster] Meteor breaks air records. Attlee, Truman face peace problems. Service Juggernauts roll! Navy vs. Michigan; Army vs. Notre Dame.

© 17Nov45; MP9.

24. Nov. 21, 1945. Eisenhower says, "Train or perish." Inside Japan. Holiday on the Rhine. Headlines for history: Pearl Harbor inquiry open; we keep the atom bomb [announcement by Truman, Attlee and MacKenzie King].

© 21Nov45; MP10.

25. Nov. 24, 1945. Billion dollar scrap-heap [of Navy planes and Army bombers]. Fashion goes to school [at U.C.L.A.]. Behind Pearl Harbor. Unified command drama. Pigskin parade nears climax! Irish wallop Wildcats! Army vs. Penn.

© 24Nov45; MP11.

26. Nov. 28, 1945. Legion takes Chicago. Nation watches strike scene. GI dream comes true. Jap atrocities revealed [in trial of Yamashita].

© 28Nov45; MP12.

27. Dec. 1, 1945. Sea heroes end voyage [Admiral Halsey retires]. U. S. jails top [German] generals. Pearl Harbor inquiry widens. Play-off games [football]. Indiana vs. Purdue.

© 1Dec45; MP13.

28. Dec. 5, 1945. Inside Japan with GI Joe. Hirohito reports to ancestors. History's greatest trial [in Nuremberg].

© 5Dec45; MP14.

29. Dec. 8, 1945. Army vs. Navy ... the year's number one classic.

© 8Dec45; MP15.

30. Dec. 12, 1945. For Christmas—gifts across the sea. Open wide-scale war on cancer. Hurley takes the stand. Film industry honored for war service. Death rides the school bus. Basketball: big town debut.

© 12Dec45; MP16.

31. Dec. 15, 1945. "Pinball" target plane. "The Hat" set to music [La Guardia retires as Mayor of New York]. Washington headlines: Byrnes answers Hurley; Marshal testifies; Eisenhower takes over. The "Bobby-sox" Bowl.

© 15Dec45; MP219.

32. Dec. 19, 1945. Names in the news: Halsey becomes "5–star" admiral; Byrnes leaves for Moscow. Death of a Nazi [General Anton Dostler executed]. Something new down on the farm. Army destroys Japanese atom-smasher. Successful designer [Annabelle Graham] and she's only eleven.

© 19Dec45; MP220.

33. Dec. 22, 1945. Halsey sails into New York. Navy reveals bat bombs. Headline people: General Marshall leaves for China; Admiral King receives D. S. M.; Admiral Nimitz takes naval command. Nuremberg—new drama in history's greatest trial [American-made atrocity films are shown to defendants]. Football! Rams win pro title [Cleveland defeats Washington].

© 22Dec45; MP221.

34. Dec. 26, 1945. Boom in winter sports [ski school on Mt. Hood]. Candy-cane King. Atom bomb aftermath [changes in animals at Alamogordo, New Mexico]. Japs leave Korea. Indo-China water festival. Home from the wars [men and ships]. Record blizzard [in Buffalo and New York].

© 26Dec45; MP222.

35. Dec. 29, 1945. Housing crisis

© 29Dec45; MP223.

36. Jan. 2, 1946. Airborne homecoming [Pacific GI's home for Christmas]. Washington holiday [community Christmas tree]. George S. Patton, 1885–1945 [camera highlights of his career]. Nobel prizes honor world's great: Professor Wolfgang Pauli, Cordell Hull, Dr. Alexander Fleming, Dr. Ernest Chain, Dr. Howard Florey and Miss Gabriela Mistral. Yamashita guilty.

© 2Jan46; MP224.

37. Jan. 5, 1946. [Marine tanks] destroy Jap planes [in giant barn-fire]. Thirty-two new cardinals named. President at home. Diving—mid-winter spring [at Miami Beach]. Holiday disasters [explosion at Santa Barbara and fire at Cambridge, Massachusetts]. One world; nations sign Bretton Woods [agreement]. Cage season hits peak [North Carolina University defeats New York University at basketball].

© 5Jan46; MP225.

38. Jan. 9, 1946. Twenty-four dead in mine disaster. Soldier's dog waits two years. General Patton laid to rest. Truman addresses nation. 1946 Bowl games [Cotton Bowl, Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl and Orange Bowl].

© 9Jan46; MP226.

39. Jan. 12, 1946. 2 reels. History, 1945

© 12Jan46; MP227.

40. Jan. 16, 1946. Yokohama, 400,000–dollar PX fire. Pow! Sock! Golden Gloves [1946 tournament]. A hero comes home [Sinbad, the Coast Guard's mongrel]. March of Dimes—'46 campaign under way. UNO delegates visit U. S. On the labor front [strike news and a statement by Henry Ford, Jr.].

© 16Jan46; MP228.

41. Jan. 19, 1946. Helicopter sets new world records [Sikorsky's R–5]. "Keep us flying" [veterans wish to use immobilized Army transports]. U. S. holiday for "Winnie" [Churchill]. Death rides South's rivers [floods]. Victory parade [in New York]; mighty GI tribute [skytroopers led by Major General Gavin].

© 19Jan46; MP229.

42. Jan. 23, 1946. Autos in the sky [auto-airplanes]. Washington headlines: Kimmel's own story; Eisenhower on demobilization. Strike report. UNO Assembly opens in London [George VI welcomes the delegates at a banquet; UNO's first President, Paul-Henri Spaak, is elected; Prime Minister Clement Attlee speaks].

© 23Jan46; MP230.

43. Jan. 26, 1946. Churchill in Florida. New F. D. R. dimes. Seventeen dead in plane crash [Miami-to-Boston plane]. Eumetopias (seal, to you) sets record. Jungle saga; rescue [of wounded air pilot] in Burma. President Truman honors draft boards. Sports! Turf fever [at Hialeah].

© 26Jan46; MP231.

44. Jan. 30, 1946. Operation Crossroads; atom bomb versus naval vessels [tests on Bikini Atoll]. Best film; New York critics make award [to "The Lost Week End">[. Nation's highest tribute [Congressional Medals awarded to Sergeant John McKinney, Lieutenant Daniel Lee, Lieutenant Donald Gary and Commander Joseph O'Callahan]. Fashions for dimes [fashion show for the March of Dimes]. Newest jet fighter [the XP–81]. Sky high skiing [revival of Norge Ski Club tournament].

© 30Jan46; MP232.

45. Feb. 2, 1946. Coast-to-coast in 4 hours, 13 minutes [three jet-propelled P–80's break coast-to-coast records at 585 m.p.h.]. Crow menace; farmers fight new plague [with bombs, in Kansas]. Hardware headware [hats made of kitchenware]. UNO meets first tests [dealing with African colonies and Iranian affairs]. "FDR" [carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt] on shakedown cruise.

© 2Feb46; MP403.

46. Feb. 6, 1946. Submarine fleet, resting but not rusting [de-commissioned at Mare Island Navy Yard, but kept ready for future use]. Headline People: Pope honors [Major General William J.] Donovan; Lewis back in A. F. L.; champ [Joe Louis] in the groove. Franklin D. Roosevelt—the Nation remembers [polio celebration in Washington]. Gouin succeeds DeGaulle. Reaching for the moon—first man-made contact achieved with radar.

© 6Feb46; MP404.

47. Feb. 9, 1946. Big League tryouts for ex-GI's. Chinese take over [in Manchuria]. Airliner [TWA Constellation] smashes record. Churchill's busy days. UNO names site [on New York and Connecticut borders]. Here come the (war) brides.

© 9Feb46; MP405.

48. Feb. 13, 1946. Brazil inaugurates new President. Yards and yards of hats. Middle East spotlight [King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia visits King Farouk of Egypt; General Sir Alan Cunningham deals with riots in Jerusalem]. Koreans come home. Louis vs. Conn. March of Dimes in France.

© 13Feb46; MP406.

49. Feb. 16, 1946. Army reveals mine clearing equipment. Exit the Jap [from China]. China's first cardinal. Sponge divers back in action [in the Gulf of Mexico]. New awards honor film industry.

© 16Feb46; MP407.

50. Feb. 20, 1946. So, you want a new car

© 20Feb46; MP408.

51. Feb. 23, 1946. Atom tests—the Navy gets set [preparations at Bremerton, Washington and San Francisco]. New cardinals—prelates at Rome ceremony. Back to work—in steel. Film stars inaugurate new flights. [SS] Yukon survivors back in States. The "Quints," first pictures since '43.

© 23Feb46; MP409.

52. Feb. 27, 1946. New sky giant [Douglas DC–6] makes its bid. UNO: America's delegates back home. Housing action for vets. Five die in mystery blast [New Orleans apartment building]. Operation Musk-ox; Canada probes Arctic wastes. Golden Gloves, tomorrow's champs.

© 27Feb46; MP410.

53. Mar. 2, 1946. Bob-sled championships. More war brides. Taxi trouble; 700 vets storm Capital. India wedding without a bride. New cardinals; ceremony in Rome.

© 2Mar46; MP411.

54. Mar. 6, 1946. One million tires up in smoke [in Atlanta]. Headline people: Chiang Kai-Shek returns to Shanghai; Mrs. Roosevelt reports on UNO; Churchill's school days [honorary degree at Miami University]. Housing crisis; help for the homeless. Death claims Jap war criminals. Zoo news; it must be spring.

© 6Mar46; MP412.

55. Mar. 9, 1946. Hirohito meets the people. U. S. acts in world food crisis Famine [Commission meets in Washington with Henry Luce, Eric Johnston, Secretary Anderson and Herbert Hoover]. Barnyard penthouse. Peace problems—UNO's gravest test [trouble spots: Spain and Iran; Greenwich, Connecticut, votes on home for UNO; Byrnes' address on U. S. policy toward Russia]. National Leaguers get set.

© 9Mar46; MP413.

56. Mar. 13, 1946. Baseball: those Yankees are back. Clear the tracks [the President runs a train and speaks at a meeting of the Federal Council of Churches]. Argentina's battle of ballots. Students [in Shanghai] demonstrate against Reds. Churchill's Missouri address.

© 13Mar46; MP414.

57. Mar. 16, 1946. One hundred and one thousand dollars by a nose [War Knight wins Santa Anita race]. Hollywood awards new "Oscars." Freak glacier. Winnie [Churchill] says goodbye to South. British loan; Truman gets report. Atom bomb test; Bikini gets ready; [also scenes at] Clovis, New Mexico. Piano prodigy [Frankie "Sugar Chile" Robinson] wows Nation.

© 16Mar46; MP415.

58. Mar. 20, 1946. Monster out of the sea

© 20Mar46; MP416.

59. Mar. 23, 1946. World's Series of bowling. Princess [Elizabeth] at England's West Point. Headline people [General George C. Marshall reports to President Truman and Secretary of State Byrnes on Manchuria; former President Hoover begins a survey of starvation areas in Europe; British Field Marshal Montgomery returns to Germany]. Campaign with a sock [free nylons]. Argentina: Peron conceded election.

© 23Mar46; MP577.

60. Mar. 27, 1946. War-weary planes go boom [obsolete planes in Europe destroyed]. Red Cross [Commissioner Stanton Griffis awarded] medal for merit. Housing, definitely the newest [round, aluminum, and plastics houses]. Portrait of a statesman [Churchill painted by Douglas Chandor]. Bluebeard murder trial [Paris]. Basketball: cage finale [Rhode Island State vs. Kentucky at Madison Square Garden].

© 27Mar46; MP578.

61. Mar. 30, 1946. Swiss holiday. Bedell Smith [goes] to Russia [as U. S. Ambassador]. Hoover in Europe [as Honorary Chairman of the Famine Emergency Committee]. Last voyage for [Turkish] Envoy. Capital blossoms out. New Jap clean-up. Navy tests; carrier [Midway] meets the Arctic. UNO Security Council starts sessions in New York.

© 30Mar46; MP579.

62. Apr. 3, 1946. National champs [basketball]. Valentine [former New York Police Commissioner] patrols Tokyo beat. U. A. W. picks Reuther. Navy reveals airborne television. UNO crisis [Soviet-Iranian dispute].

© 3Apr46; MP580.

63. Apr. 6, 1946. Paris in the spring. Safer flying-plane-testing lab revealed. Educators hear Eisenhower. FBI nabs Russian on spy charges. Romance; GI dream comes true. Basketball wow finish [Madison Square Garden].

© 6Apr46; MP581.

64. Apr. 10, 1946. Spotlight on labor. Republicans name new chairman [Carroll B. Reece]. First pictures [of] Warsaw today. War on cancer; 12 million dollar drive opens. Nature on the rampage: Pacific tidal wave; Jap volcano cuts loose.

© 10Apr46; MP582.

65. Apr. 13, 1946. Boxing: ring veterans climax season [naval officers' sons at Annapolis]. Masters' tournament: golf's big plum [Herman Keiser defeats Ben Hogan; Bobby Jones also plays]. Army Day, 1946 [in] Washington, D. C., San Francisco, [and] New York City.

© 13Apr46; MP583.

66. Apr. 17, 1946. Navy news: wings over Manhattan [planes from the carrier Midway]; warships check in; Operation Road's End [Jap subs sunk]. Movie theatres organize for public service. Cypress trees aid housing shortage. League of Nations in final session. Baseball fever grips U. S.

© 17Apr46; MP584.

67. Apr. 20, 1946. Play ball [first post-war baseball season]. In memoriam [scenes at Hyde Park and Warm Springs].

© 20Apr46; MP585.

68. Apr. 24, 1946. Home rule for India (so near, so far). A boy named Buster [cancer victim]. Now GI wives go over there. Fifty years on wheels [automobile's Golden Jubilee]. Japan—royal tintype. Shall we waltz? England says yes!

© 24Apr46; MP586.

69. Apr. 27, 1946. Nippon votes. Food crisis. Army-Navy—the switched week end. Harlan F. Stone, 1872–1946. Easter—on parade [in New York]. Easter—renewal of faith [at Hollywood Bowl].

© 27Apr46; MP587.

70. May 1, 1946. Truman turns sailor for fleet review. Dancing—low-down from London. Baruch tackles atom job—on park bench. Animal headliners [Smoky, Yorkshire terrier; Oofy, year-old chimpanzee]. Big Four meet in Paris [to draft peace treaties].

© 1May46; MP588.

71. May 4, 1946. Big Four in session. Forty-four dead in train wreck [at Naperville, Illinois]. "Ike" leaves for the Pacific. Aviation—preview of tomorrow: the Flying Wing; super rocket engine. La Guardia pleads for more wheat. Auto grand prix [at Nice, France].

© 4May46; MP602.

72. May 8, 1946. Warship blows up at pier [in Earle, New Jersey]. New President [Manuel Roxas] elected in the Philippines. Tokyo Bay—Army recovers hidden silver. New German films—the V–2. The inside story of Mexican baseball.

© 8May46; MP603.

73. May 11, 1946. Kentucky Derby! You name it, they've got it ... south of the Border. Louis and Conn—now it's official. National disaster. [Strike of 400,000 soft coal miners]. Swim and sway [at Smith College]. Alcatraz—the break that failed.

© 11May46; MP608.

74. May 15, 1946. Berlin—one year after V-E. Japan [free speech in the Imperial Park Plaza]. First GI wives arrive in Europe. Navy tests "eggbeater" propeller. Now—lady cops for Tokyo. Packages rushed to hungry Europe. Russia votes.

© 15May46; MP609.

75. May 18, 1946. Assault wins Preakness. Jap war lords face justice [in Tokyo trial]. Sheep flood Coulee Dam. Ku Klux Klan back in South. Seventy-five miles up—rocket tests forecast new age.

© 18May46; MP655.

76. May 22, 1946. Harness racing: test new starting gate. House [boats] for sail. World famine—Hoover reports. Fashion notes—hats that bloom, tra-la. Death rides the skies [as airliner crashes near Richmond, Virginia]. Italy at the crossroads [monarchy or republic].

© 22May46; MP656.

77. May 25, 1946. Britain reshapes empire. "In sickness and in health" [Major Hornbostel seeks to join wife, a leprosy victim]. Tulip time in Holland, Michigan—once again. Byrnes reports on peace failure. War victims find haven in America.

© 25May46; MP681.

78. May 29, 1946. Railroad showdown [in strike]. Evangeline Booth honored. General Eisenhower visits Japan. Atom bomb number 4—zero hour near in Pacific.

© 29May46; MP682.

79. June 1, 1946. Louis and Conn—rarin' to go. World's biggest dog show [at Madison, New Jersey]. Days of crisis: [Nation-wide rail strike; coal strike].

© 1Jun46; MP713.

80. June 5, 1946. West Pointers honor "50–year man" [Marty Maher]. Clear the track [for model trains]. Atomic "ark" [with 4100 animals aboard 22 ships for target area]. UNRRA in action [to improve world food position]. Baseball highlights [at Yankee Stadium; in Chicago]. Egypt's new status [as British promise to evacuate].

© 5Jun46; MP714.

81. June 8, 1946. Horse of the year [Assault, winner of Derby and Preakness]. Wild tribes [of Central America] aid food drive. Duke, Duchess [of Windsor] return to Riviera. Five hundred mile speedway [at Indianapolis]. Two years after D-Day: England, France, Belgium and Washington remember [in ceremonies].

© 8Jun46; MP768.

82. June 12, 1946. Europe's elections: France votes; Italy votes. President appoints Vinson and Snyder. Is the automobile here to stay? "Yes," says Detroit. Chicago fire shocks nation—58 dead in hotel disaster. Poland—the road back [in devastated Warsaw]. To keep America strong—West Point and Annapolis graduations.

© 12Jun46; MP769.

83. June 15, 1946. Amazing air age gadgets: push button planes; pilot ejector seat. One and one-half million dollar [Hessian] jewel robbery [investigated]. Torpedo: San Francisco's close call revealed. London's great victory parade: at Buckingham Palace, the Mall, Hyde Park.

© 15Jun46; MP822.

84. June 19, 1946. Oil fire [at Whiting, Indiana]. Furs—seeing is believing. Big four—Byrnes leaves for showdown in Paris. Spotlight on Palestine. Rescue! Demonstrate new life-saving device. Victory Day finale [in London].

© 19Jun46; MP823.

85. June 22, 1946. Peron takes over [in Buenos Aires]. Marriage in Kentucky [of Mr. and Mrs. Sprouse, eighteen and seventy-nine years]. Big Four meet in Paris. Baruch's atom bomb plan. Sports headlines [Cleveland, golf; New York, horse racing].

© 22Jun46; MP848.

86. June 26, 1946. Report from Tokyo [on black market and food shortage]. Jewel suspects [Colonel Jack Durant and his Wac captain wife] fly to trial [in Frankfurt, Germany]. Midget Michelangelo [Chicago's five-year old Skippy Miller]. Germany [Nazi steel helmets turned into utensils]. Tornado! 14 dead in freak disaster [in Detroit]. The winner and still the champion [Joe Louis retains title in New York].

© 26Jun46; MP849.

87. June 29, 1946. Vinson takes oath as new Chief Justice. The "Chimp-ion ship" wild west show [at St. Louis zoo]. For sale! Jeeps! Jeeps! Jeeps [at the Atlanta ordnance depot]. Berlin rebuilds. War on famine—Hoover sees hope. Rush relief shipment [to Europe and Asia]. Egypt's grain for India. Speed! College track champs.

© 29Jun46; MP867.

88. July 3, 1946. $2,000,000, ferry fire [at Staten Island]. Browder back from Russia. Operation Bow-wow [as St. Bernards fly to dog show]. Rare pictures: Japan's Crown Prince. China; 30,000,000 face starvation. The biggest plane that ever flew [the XB–35, Northrop Flying Wing].

© 3Jul46; MP868.

89. July 6, 1946. Bug menace! Helicopter wars on farm pests. Hirohito visits new Diet. What price OPA? Bikini—zero hour [before Operation Crossroads].

© 6Jul46; MP902.

90. July 10, 1946. Track Olympic style. Congress honors Roosevelt. Spotlight on Trieste. China! UNRRA sends help. Nisei vets come home [to New York].

© 10Jul46; MP903.

91. July 13, 1946. Bikini [camera story of Atom bomb number 4, history's greatest military experiment].

© 13Jul46; MP927.

92. July 17, 1946. All-star baseball! Headline plane wrecks: [Howard Hughes cracks up; B–17 crashes, 25 dead]. Mother Cabrini canonized. Report from Palestine [British warships stop refugees]. Jumbo [trained seal] s(t)eals the show.

© 17Jul46; MP928.

93. July 20, 1946. Tennis: Riggs wins pro title. Washington headlines: [Byrnes returns from Paris; Truman signs British loan]. Record smasher! Around the world in 12 years [Larry Hightower, wheelbarrow pusher]. The People ask, OPA or no OPA? [The threat of runaway inflation].

© 20Jul46; MP939.

94. July 24, 1946. Operation Goodwill [RAF Lancaster bombers tour U. S.]. Seattle Russian cleared of espionage. Churchill keeps a promise [visits Metz, France]. Palestine—days of crisis [between British and Jewish Army] Royal mystery in Siam [death of King]. France celebrates [peacetime Bastille Day].

© 24Jul46; MP940.

95. July 27, 1946. Small-fry speedway [National Soapbox Derby in Akron]. Action on the food front [cattle for Europe] canning for peace; packages [for France]. Bus-king size! Last German war prisoners leave America. Blame it on the heat [1,250,000 Americans at Coney Island].

© 27Jul46; MP975.

96. July 31, 1946. Shriners on parade [in San Francisco]. One world—youth shows the way [Youth Hostels help rebuilding in Europe]. "Doodlebug" fights fires under docks. Ham's harvest—radios at 20 cents a pound! Planes vs. weather! Army probes mysteries of thunderstorms. This really takes the cake [amazing artistry in icing].

© 31Jul46; MP976.

97. Aug. 3, 1946. Water ski champs [at Holland, Michigan]. Paris peace puzzle—Byrnes sets policy. Golf's biggest plum [Herman Barron winner in tournament]. Palestine explosion kills 76. Crisis! Can the Dodgers make it?

© 3Aug46; MP1009.

98. Aug. 7, 1946. Super air giants [the HK-I]. Whisker Derby [at Palisades Park, New Jersey]. World awaits Nuremberg verdict. Paris—the search for peace. Russia parades might!

© 7Aug46; MP1010.

99. Aug. 10, 1946. Atomic bombs. [Bikini Blast.] Explosion of atomic bomb number 5; [the aftermath]. Hiroshima—one year after [grim monument to the power of the atom]. "Can man control atomic power?"

© 10Aug46; MP1053.

100. Aug. 14, 1946. Lightning sets tanker afire. The Trumans go home [to Independence, Missouri] to vote. Earthquakes. Caribbean area hit. Tribute to F. D. R. [at Campobello Island, New Brunswick]. Atom bomb city [Oak Ridge, Tennessee].

© 14Aug46; MP1054.

101. Aug. 17, 1946. Postscripts to war! Film report from Germany: U-boat nest destroyed; dump Nazi poison gas. Palestine! New tension grips Middle East. Rio hails Eisenhower. Welsh bards honor Princess Elizabeth.

© 17Aug46; MP1066.

102. Aug. 21, 1946. National aquaplane regatta [at Hermosa Beach, California]. Brazil—new honors for Ike! Crisis over Trieste. Mr. Truman takes a walk. U. S., Britain clash over ship rescue. World's largest bomber [the XB–36].

© 21Aug46; MP1067.

103. Aug. 24, 1946. Truman on vacation voyage. Tornado twisters hit Minnesota! Rumanian war criminals on trial. Rebuild Dnieprostroy Dam [in Russia]. Palestine ... British tighten grip. Soap-box Derby—big league stuff [at Akron, Ohio].

© 24Aug46; MP1077.

104. Aug. 28, 1946. Peace crisis! Ultimatum to Marshal Tito. Atom bomb—Blandy brings Bikini report. Near East—Trans-Jordan awaits UN decision. What to wear? Designers say, "Scarfs." The farmer takes a tank. Climbing season at new peak [at Canada's Bugaboo Glacier].

© 28Aug46; MP1078.

1946/47.

1. Aug. 31, 1946. Football is back! Cyprus—British intern 2,000 refugees. Film log: President's cruise. Top of the world! New supplies for Mont Blanc. Everything goes double in Pawpaw [Michigan].

© 31Aug46; MP1096.

2. Sept. 4, 1946. Cloudburst isolates resort [at York Beach, Maine]. Football! Joe College grooms for record year. Estonian refugees get temporary haven [Miami, Florida]. Bermuda—Presidential fish story. Baby contest: small fry sizzle [at Asbury Park, New Jersey]. Paris incident [Foreign Minister Molotov walks out on festivities]. Thar she blows! Boom in whaling industry [off the coast of Chile].

© 4Sep46; MP1097.

3. Sept. 7, 1946. Yugoslavia—last chapter? Mediterranean: U. S. Navy on the move. Sky rescue: soldier shot out of P–61. Dame Fashion says, "Put a feather in your cap." First pictures—crisis in India. World's speedboat record.

© 7Sep46; MP1117.

4. Sept. 11, 1946. Ice show aids vets. First pictures—Greek King regains throne. Football—who will stop Army's march? Veterans of Foreign Wars, 47th National Encampment. World Series of the dance.

© 11Sep46; MP1118.

5. Sept. 14, 1946. Golf—$10,000—winner takes all. A voyage to Palestine. Beauty, talent, brains! Miss America 1946. Byrnes on Germany.

© 14Sep46; MP1174.

6. Sept. 18, 1946. Headline people: Mark Clark reports on Austria; Howard Hughes flies again; Monty makes first visit to U. S. Lourdes—prisoners' pilgrimage. Dodgers vs. Cardinals.

© 18Sep46; MP1175.

7. Sept. 21, 1946. Labor crisis grips U. S. Crash landing; burning plane lands safely. Is this the world's fattest man? Aftermath of Yugoslavia incident. World Series fever.

© 21Sep46; MP1176.

8. Sept. 25, 1946. Little Olympics [in Berlin]. Squatters' siege ends. Truman silences Wallace. Man meets gorilla [at Bronx zoo]. Battle of Britain—six years after.

© 25Sep46; MP1177.

9. Sept. 28, 1946. Wallace ouster ends Capital crisis. Happy birthday! Fabulous party for Maharajah. First pictures: Newfoundland air rescue. Army rolls on [West Point vs. Villanova]; Chicago Bears vs. Washington Redskins.

© 28Sep46; MP1208.

10. Oct. 2, 1946. World's championship rodeo. Report from Shanghai. "Oscars" for fashion designers. First flying post office. Employ the handicapped—America mobilizes.

© 2Oct46; MP1209.

11. Oct. 5, 1946. Greek King goes home. Indians charge Manhattan fraud. Moscow mourns [Mikhail Ivanovich Kalinin]. President sees some football [Oklahoma vs. Army].

© 5Oct46; MP1232.

12. Oct. 9, 1946. First pictures—Greek King in Athens! Headline people: U. S.-British beauty swap; Eisenhower back in Europe; humanitarian award [to Barney Balaban]. Voyage of the "Turtle!" Navy plane spans globe.

© 9Oct46; MP1233.

13. Oct. 12, 1946. World Series 1946. Historic pictures—Nuremberg last chapter. Football—Columbia sinks Navy.

© 12Oct46; MP1278.

14. Oct. 16, 1946. B–29 flies across top of the world. Voilà, Paris rides again. Bundles for China. Mexico honors U. S. motion pictures. Air disaster in French Alps. Scotland—5–star invasion [Eisenhower on tour].

© 16Oct46; MP1279.

15. Oct. 19, 1946. Truman's speech on meat. Movies strike; film stars urge arbitration. Nation's two top teams win tough ones [Texas vs. Oklahoma; Army vs. Michigan].

© 19Oct46; MP1297.

16. Oct. 23, 1946. Byrnes reports on Paris. British Legion hails Churchill. First Pictures—Windsors in England. Housing—Wyatt sees end of lumber "bottleneck." Cards win wildest World Series.

© 23Oct46; MP1298.

17. Oct. 26, 1946. Twenty-three straight for Army. SS Queen Elizabeth—greatest liner sails in peace. Navy Day, 1946.

© 26Oct46; MP1321.

18. Oct. 30, 1946. Clothing gifts—war babies give thanks. Nazi's last mile. The search for peace: New York City—the opening of the United Nations.

© 30Oct46; MP1322.

19. Nov. 2, 1946. Navy introduces world's largest helicopter. What's new at the zoo?—Antelope cervicapra. Latest hair styles from Paris. Ship news—headline people sail for Europe. Battle of the century: [Army—Notre Dame].

© 2Nov46; MP1341.

20. Nov. 6, 1946. Speed—Austrian Motorcycle Derby. United Nations—clash of words. A rugged individualist [Jimmy Garvin age thirteen]. Remember Lidice. The old college try—pro style [New York Giants win over Chicago Bears].

© 6Nov46; MP1342.

21. Nov. 9, 1946. Remember "Da Preem"; or, Can this be wrestling? New housing speeds up! England—royal wedding bells. Big Four meet in New York. Season roars to climax [for football].

© 9Nov46; MP1370.

22. Nov. 13, 1946. Early-birds hit ski trails. London—movie stars on command performance. G.O.P. sweeps nation. Football—Eagles beat Giants.

© 13Nov46; MP1371.

23. Nov. 16, 1946. New Mexico—Army sends V–2 rocket 102 miles up. Inventor—Robert Fulton—1946. "The battle of the century"—Army vs. Notre Dame.

© 16Nov46; MP1379.

24. Nov. 20, 1946. Biggest navy skyship! One hundred and eighty passenger plane makes debut. Divers take fish census. Truman offers cooperation with G.O.P. Oklahoma—moving day for houses. "Mercy mission"—aid flown to Colorado snow captives. SS America makes gala maiden voyage.

© 20Nov46; MP1380.

25. Nov. 23, 1946. Army wallops Penn. Report from Japan—Hirohito marks new democracy. Jurisdictional dispute—new flare ups in movie strike. New torpedo sinks U-boat in 10 seconds.

© 23Nov46; MP1403.

26. Nov. 27, 1946. Coal crisis!—U. S. acts against Lewis. New York says farewell to Jimmy Walker. Tension in India. Nehru in crisis meeting. Moslems pray. Thousands flee riot areas. Gandhi tours riot area. Aviation news! New glider—no wings. Raymond Duncan comes home.

© 27Nov46; MP1404.

27. Nov. 30, 1946. Bowl fever [football]. War on intolerance. The days are flying—towards Christmas. Ready for the holidays. Toys. Television.

© 30Nov46; MP1416.

28. Dec. 4, 1946. Paramount News presents its 1946 All-America football team—the eleven greatest.

© 4Dec46: MP1417.

29. © 7Dec46; MP1468.

30. © 11Dec46; MP1469.

31. © 14Dec46; MP1478.

32. © 18Dec46; MP1479.

33. © 21Dec46; MP1506.

34. © 25Dec46; MP1507.

35. © 28Dec46; MP1519.

36. © 1Jan47; MP1520.

37. 2 reels. © 4Jan47; MP1580.

38. © 8Jan47; MP1581.

39. © 11Jan47; MP1603.

40. © 15Jan47; MP1604.

41. © 18Jan47; MP1644.

42. © 22Jan47; MP1645.

43. © 25Jan47; MP1665.

44. © 29Jan47; MP1666.

45. © 1Feb47; MP1726.

46. © 5Feb47; MP1727.

47. © 8Feb47; MP1734.

48. © 12Feb47; MP1735.

49. © 15Feb47; MP1784.

50. © 19Feb47; MP1785.

51. © 22Feb47; MP1811.

52. © 26Feb47; MP1812.

53. © 1Mar47; MP1823.

54. © 5Mar47; MP1824.

55. © 8Mar47; MP1880.

56. © 12Mar47; MP1881.

57. © 15Mar47; MP1895.

58. © 19Mar47; MP1896.

59. © 22Mar47; MP1940.

60. © 26Mar47; MP1941.

61. © 29Mar47; MP1967.

62. © 2Apr47; MP1968.

63. © 5Apr47; MP1976.

64. © 9Apr47; MP1977.

65. © 12Apr47; MP1989.

66. © 16Apr47; MP1990.

67. © 19Apr47; MP2006.

68. © 23Apr47; MP2007.

69. © 26Apr47; MP2038.

70. © 30Apr47; MP2039.

71. © 3May47; MP2070.

72. © 7May47; MP2071.

73. © 10May47; MP2085.

74. © 14May47; MP2086.

75. © 17May47; MP2109.

76. © 21May47; MP2110.

77. © 24May47; MP2117.

78. © 28May47; MP2118.

79. © 31May47; MP2141.

80. © 4Jun47; MP2142.

81. © 7Jun47; MP2156.

82. © 11Jun47; MP2157.

83. © 14Jun47; MP2161.

84. © 18Jun47; MP2162.

85. © 21Jun47; MP2190.

86. © 25Jun47; MP2191.

87. © 28Jun47; MP2212.

88. © 2Jul47; MP2213.

89. © 5Jul47; MP2218.

90. © 9Jul47; MP2219.

91. © 12Jul47; MP2228.

92. © 16Jul47; MP2229.

93. © 19Jul47; MP2251.

94. © 23Jul47; MP2252.

95. © 26Jul47; MP2270.

96. © 30Jul47; MP2271.

97. © 2Aug47; MP2292.

98. © 6Aug47; MP2279.

99. © 9Aug47; MP2293.

100. © 13Aug47; MP2294.

101. © 16Aug47; MP2309.

102. © 20Aug47; MP2310.

103. © 23Aug47; MP2323.

104. © 27Aug47; MP2324.

1947/48.

1. © 30Aug47; MP2345.

2. © 3Sep47; MP2346.

3. © 6Sep47; MP2352.

4. © 10Sep47; MP2353.

5. © 13Sep47; MP2359.

6. © 17Sep47; MP2360.

7. © 20Sep47; MP2397.

8. © 24Sep47; MP2398.

9. © 27Sep47; MP2394.

10. © 1Oct47; MP2395.

11. © 4Oct47; MP2402.

12. © 8Oct47; MP2403.

13. © 11Oct47; MP2439.

14. © 15Oct47; MP2440.

15. © 18Oct47; MP2443.

16. © 22Oct47; MP2444.

17. © 25Oct47; MP2451.

18. © 29Oct47; MP2452.

19. © 1Nov47; MP2481.

20. © 5Nov47; MP2482.

21. © 8Nov47; MP2484.

22. © 12Nov47; MP2485.

23. © 15Nov47; MP2532.

24. © 19Nov47; MP2533.

25. © 22Nov47; MP2546.

26. © 26Nov47; MP2547.

27. © 29Nov47; MP2576.

28. © 3Dec47; MP2577.

29. © 6Dec47; MP2579.

30. © 10Dec47; MP2580.

31. Dec. 13, 1947. Walcott's claim to heavyweight title denied. Days of violence in Palestine. France: Government demands strike showdown [Communist leader, Maurice Thorez, speaks]. 105,000 see Notre Dame crush USC. Bowl game junior size [Philadelphia high school football championship].

© 13Dec47; MP2593.

32. Dec. 17, 1947. Slowest round-world flight [by George Truman and Clifford Evans in Piper Cubs]. Plight of Navajo Indians arouses Nation. T-Men smash counterfeit ring. Santa Claus hits a home run ["Babe" Ruth entertains polio victims]. U.S. skiers ready for winter Olympics.

© 17Dec47; MP2594.

33. Dec. 20, 1947. U.S. transfers gun boats to Greek Navy. Million ducks invade Louisiana rice field. Hirohito visits [Hiroshima] first atomic bomb target. Australia hails sheep dog champion. Big Four parley fails [end of London Conference and scenes of the dismantling of German plants for mass shipment to Russia].

© 20Dec47; MP2648.

34. Dec. 24, 1947. NYU cagers outshoot Connecticut. Alan Ladd and William Demarest [speak in behalf of the Citizens' Food Committee]. To be young at holiday time ... [Santa Claus visits American boys and girls and war orphans abroad].

© 24Dec47; MP2649.

35. Dec. 27, 1947. Ice-skate ball makes bow [basketball game on ice]. People in the eyes of the world: "The Angel" [Maurice Tillet, French wrestler] returns; Russia sends new envoy [Alexandre Paniushkin, Ambassador to the U.S.]. Police drive homeless from Jap catacombs. Marshall reports on Big Four [London conference]. Friendship by the shipload [President Auriol expresses the gratitude of the French for American food].

© 27Dec47; MP2656.

36. Dec. 31, 1947. 1947 sports in review: track and field [Harrison Dillard, Mel Patton]; swimming [Jimmy McLane]; boxing [Joe Walcott vs. Joe Louis]; tennis [Jack Kramer]; golf [Lew Worsham, Sammy Snead, Babe Didrikson Zaharias]; turf [Jet Pilot]; baseball [Yankees vs. Dodgers]; football [Notre Dame team, Johnny Lujack].

© 31Dec47; MP2657.

37. Jan. 3, 1948. 2 reels. 1947, year of division: Blasts wreck Texas City; Palestine partition approved; Washington hearings hold the headlines; fashions, the new look; veto battle makes labor history; politics—who will it be in '48? The story of the East-West split.

© 3Jan48; MP2690.

38. Jan. 7, 1948. New York digs out [greatest snowfall in city's history]. Miss Truman meets the press. Silver Jubilee: Maharajah of Jaipur honored. Football: Blanchard, Davis, Tucker [of West Point] in news again.

© 7Jan48; MP2691.

39. Jan. 10, 1948. 1948 Bowl games: Orange Bowl; Cotton Bowl; Rose Bowl; Sugar Bowl.

© 10Jan48; MP2713.

40. Jan. 14, 1948. Leathernecks sail for Mediterranean. First Friendship Food arrives in Italy [Naples and Rome]. Ex-King Michael reaches exile in Switzerland. Congress hears Truman [State of the Union message].

© 14Jan48; MP2714.

41. Jan. 17, 1948. Winter sports: hockey squads sail for Olympics; high flying hickory aces [skiing at Bear Mountain, N. Y.]. European aid program debated [Secretary Marshall before Senate Foreign Affairs Committee]. Guerrillas on Konitsa front [border warfare in northern Greece]. Thrill-a-minute air show [Miami].

© 17Jan48; MP2715.

42. Jan. 21, 1948. Silver Skates classic thrills New York. Anti-royalist riots in Rome. Time for dimes [Margaret Truman; three-year-old poster-baby, Terry Tullos; the President]. General Chennault and bride. Montgomery's mission to Ethiopia. Survival in the air age [report by Chairman Finletter of the President's Air Policy Commission and a newsreel report on our aircraft industry].

© 21Jan48; MP2716.

43. Jan. 24, 1948. Cold breezes, hot racing at Hialeah. Eisenhower honored in Philadelphia. Baruch on foreign aid: "Mobilize for peace." Winter Olympics, last minute preparations [St. Moritz, Switzerland]. Danger rides the hickory boards [ski-jumping tournament at Fox River Grove, Ill.].

© 24Jan48; MP2722.

44. Jan. 28, 1948. Secret Nazi papers bared. Russo-German plot revealed. Innovations: Japan [war widows make toy automobiles from beer cans]; anti-freeze sailor suit [Navy suits to prevent freezing in coldest waters]; the newer look [venetian blinds made into a dress]. Petrillo goes on the record for Congress. U.S.-Canada win European figure skating championships.

© 28Jan48; MP2723.

45. Jan. 31, 1948. Speed on the boards; Mr. [Gil] Dodds goes to town again [Knights of Columbus track meet in Boston]. Stronger voice for U.S. abroad [Foreign Information Service]. News around the globe: Gandhi breaks five-day fast; [Princess] Elizabeth's food gifts feed needy; mass marriages in China. Charges and denials; Stassen vs. Pauley. Wintry regatta for ice boats [Hamilton Bay, Ont.]

© 31Jan48; MP2741.

46. Feb. 4, 1948. U.S. faces crisis in oil. Aid from those who care [Paulette Goddard distributes CARE packages to French war orphans]. News from fields of science and invention: Navy develops "walking" barge; safety, no-burn door demonstrated; science probes mysteries of "silent sound" [at Penn. State College]. Skiing on the land [Rossland, British Columbia]. Skiing on the sea [Bruce Parker at Nassau].

© 4Feb48; MP2742.

47. Feb. 7, 1948. Winter Olympics [at] St. Moritz. Canada welcomes new pioneers [displaced persons from Europe]. India without Gandhi [includes highlights of his career]. Record indoor mile; Gil Dodds breaks own world mark [Madison Square Garden].

© 7Feb48; MP2765.

48. Feb. 11, 1948. Hearings on legislation to curb Reds [Representative Mundt and Attorney General Tom Clark testify]. Gandhi's funeral rites. Skiing [at Leavenworth, Wash., Mont Gabriel, Que., and by lamplight near Seattle].

© 11Feb48; MP2766.

49. Feb. 14, 1948. Landmark burns; fire destroys historic inn [18th century stagecoach stop in New Hampshire]. Ike [General Eisenhower] retires; Bradley new chief of staff. U.S. makes Olympic history [at St. Moritz: Mrs. Gretchen Fraser is skiing champion; Dick Button is skating champion. Barbara Ann Scott of Canada is women's figure skating champion].

© 14Feb48; MP2771.

50. Feb. 18, 1948. Carnival season; fun along the Riviera [from Nice to Viareggio]. Miracle of Syracuse

© 18Feb48; MP2772.

51. Feb. 21, 1948. First floods of '48 [Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee Rivers]. [Winthrop] Rockefeller weds a "Cinderella" [Mrs. Barbara Sears]. Dewey opens campaign. Irish elections. French-Spanish frontier reopened. Pope Pius says: use atom solely for peace. Sports: table tennis, Britisher [Richard Bergmann] wins world's championship; farewell to Switzerland [U.S. four-man bobsled team wins one of final events in 1948 Olympics].

© 21Feb48; MP2799.

52. Feb. 25, 1948. Basketball; hottest in the East [NYU vs. Manhattan College at Madison Square Garden]. Gandhi ashes scattered on sacred waters. In brotherhood there is strength [messages for Brotherhood Week from General Eisenhower and high school students]. King and queen of figure skating [Dick Button and Barbara Ann Scott win world championships at Davos, Switzerland].

© 25Feb48; MP2798.

53. Feb. 28, 1948. Joe Louis—gloves across the sea [Mr. and Mrs. Joe Louis sail for England on the "Queen Mary.">[ Ethiopia: Selassie attends Epiphany rites. India: Mountbatten calls on Maharajah [of Bikaner]. Fashions. Political fireworks begin [President Truman speaks at Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner; Henry Wallace speaks in Florida; Governor Jim Folsom of Alabama speaks on the Solid South's political dissatisfaction].

© 28Feb48; MP2820.

54. Mar. 3, 1948. Communists control Czechoslovakia. Truman the tourist [in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands]. Eisenhower in civilian clothes. Palestine and the United Nations: Warren R. Austin outlines the position of the U.S.; illegal immigrants to Palestine intercepted by British Navy; Arab volunteers trained for guerilla warfare against the Jews; the Ben Yehuda street explosion in Jerusalem.

© 3Mar48; MP2809.

55. Mar. 6, 1948. Turf classic [Santa Anita Handicap in California]. Greek Army traps rebels at frontier [Yanina, near the Albanian frontier]. A soldier remembers a promise [Colonel John Hanlon returns bedsheets borrowed in 1944 from the housewives of Hemroulle, Belgium]. First pictures from Czechoslovakia [Communist Premier Klement Gottwald denounces ministers of the former government; President Benes bows to Red demands].

© 6Mar48; MP2831.

56. Mar. 10, 1948. Basketball: Notre Dame ends NYU's [winning] streak. Washington: Czech envoy quits to oppose Reds. Republicans name Stassen and Warren. Earl Long wins in Louisiana. Sport season hears the call of the mild; [ski-jumping on Iron Mountain, Michigan; New York Giants at Phoenix, Arizona; Boston Red Sox at Sarasota, Florida].

© 10Mar48; MP2830.

57. Mar. 13, 1948. Baseball: world champions [Yankees] warm up in Florida; [Pittsburgh Pirates in Hollywood]. Truman and MacArthur will accept if nominated. Greek Army pushes border offensive. A queen comes home [figure-skating champion, Barbara Ann Scott in Montreal]. Top Turf thriller [Salmagundi wins Santa Anita Derby].

© 13Mar48; MP2856.

58. Mar. 17, 1948. Ship news: "Elizabeth" brings in celebrities [J. Arthur Rank, Mrs. Gretchen Fraser, Dick Button, former King Michael and Queen Helen of Rumania]. Dewey wins first primary [New Hampshire]. All eyes on ice champion [Barbara Ann Scott welcomed by Prime Minister Mackenzie King in Ottawa]. Tragedy behind the Iron Curtain [suicide of Czech Foreign Minister—Jan Masaryk; other scenes in Prague].

© 17Mar48; MP2857.

59. Mar. 20, 1948. Eighty-day pin derby [American Bowling Conference Annual Tournament in Detroit]. Spring football: civilian coach [George Sauer] leads Navy. British repeal 75 per cent tax on U.S. films [comments by Eric Johnston]. People in the eyes of the world: [Dick Button, figure skating champion]; romance out of a story book [radio singer Jane Froman marries airline pilot John Curtis Burn in South Miami]; [Major General Bennett E.] Meyers goes to prison. Byrnes asks action on Russia. Baseball: life with the Dodgers [in Ciudad Trujillo, Dominican Republic].

© 20Mar48; MP2884.

60. Mar. 24, 1948. Peace in a free world: America hears the price [as President] Truman denounces Soviet. Prague [Jan Masaryk's funeral]. Brussels [Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg sign a 50–year agreement]. Paris [meeting of the 16 nations which are cooperating in the European Recovery Program]. [President Truman in New York for St. Patrick's Day ceremonies; shakes hands with Governor Dewey].

© 24Mar48; MP2885.

61. Mar. 27, 1948. Twisters rip through nine states. Hollywood awards its Oscars [Academy awards presented to Celeste Holm, Loretta Young, and Ronald Colman]. 50–1 shot captures Grand National [Sheila's Cottage wins at Aintree, England; two typical Sweepstakes winners in New York City].

© 27Mar48; MP2915.

62. Mar. 31, 1948. Report on U.S. defense; match Russia's might [Secretary of Defense Forrestal makes recommendations to Senate Armed Services Committee for expansion of U.S. military forces; Secretary of the Navy Sullivan reports the presence of alien submarines off our shores]. Art with war record [German art treasures exhibited at the National Gallery of Art in Washington]. New tests for American buzz bombs [JB–2's tested at Eglin Field, Fla.]. Golden Gloves: East vs. West [Dick Guerrero vs. Leland Pillen and Luis Ortiz vs. Wallace Smith at Madison Square Garden].

© 31Mar48; MP2916.

63. Apr. 3, 1948. [Guy] Lombardo sets speedboat mark. Air Force honors a pioneer [Brigadier General Billy Mitchell]. Roosevelt sons back Ike [Eisenhower]. Italy at the crossroads [of Democracy and Communism]. The light of faith: [Hollywood Bowl for Easter; cherry blossoms in Washington, D. C.; Easter parade on New York's Fifth Avenue].

© 3Apr48; MP2937.

64. Apr. 7, 1948. Top-flight basketball; Oilers [of Oklahoma] win Olympic trials [from Kentucky University]. Fashion news: special from Paris. Senate [Armed Services] Committee hears Wallace. A salute to the U.S. Army [Army Day, 1948].

© 7Apr48; MP2938.

65. Apr. 10, 1948. Foreign aid rushed under new law [Marshall Plan]. Ex-dishwasher [Greek immigrant] buys a [Pennsylvania] town. Canada-U.S. amity hailed at Williamsburg, Va. Now it's Grandpa Ike. Trousseau for a princess [Ann of Bourbon-Parma]. Mountbatten visits Burma.

© 10Apr48; MP2956.

66. Apr. 14, 1948. Water classic [Dixie water ski championships, Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Hoffman heads E.R.P. [European Recovery Program]. Marshall leads U.S. at parley of the Americas [at Bogota, Colombia]. Primary upset: [Harold E.] Stassen victor in Wisconsin. First pictures: Soviet, British planes crash in Berlin.

© 14Apr48; MP2957.

67. Apr. 17, 1948. Hockey champions [Toronto team defeats Detroit team in Stanley Cup finals]. Lewis ends coal strike [meeting of Senator Styles Bridges, Mr. Lewis, and Ezra Van Horn]. Kiddie on the keys [four-year old Jerard Jennings plays the piano, xylophone, and drums]. Italy's hour of decision [pre-election demonstrations].

© 17Apr48; MP2987.

68. Apr, 21, 1948. Bogota's reign of terror [scenes of the rioting which followed the assassination of Jorge Gaitan]. Fur crying out loud [fur coats for men in Hollywood]. Russia's Supreme Council in session [Stalin applauded]. England pays homage to an American [royal family present as Mrs. Roosevelt unveils statue of her husband in Grosvenor Square, London].

© 21Apr48; MP2988.

69. Apr. 24, 1948. Citation wins pre-Derby turf classic! [The Chesapeake Stakes at Havre De Grace, Md.]. Bogota, Colombia: Savage revolt leaves its mark [after revolt following assassination of Jorge Gaitan]. Play ball! [President Truman throws first ball to start major-league season, at New York-Washington game]. First pictures: Italy goes to the polls [scenes at April 14 elections, ending campaign between Communists and Christian Democrats].

© 24Apr48; MP3006.

70. Apr. 28, 1948. Air Forces stockpile in Texas [planes being taken from storage at Kelly Field, in Air Force expansion program]. Cross-wind landing gear introduced. Variety Clubs honor Marshall [present Humanitarian Award to Secretary of State George Marshall]. America sends subs to Turkey [scenes of transfer of vessels, New London, Conn.]. Reuther shooting stirs nation [United Automobile Workers' head is victim of murder attempt]. 100,000 hear De Gaulle attack Soviet Union [at Marseilles].

© 28Apr48; MP3007.

71. May 1, 1948. Famed warship ["Texas">[ becomes state shrine. Mrs. Roosevelt warmly greeted in Holland. Marshall home from Bogota. Zero hour in the Holy Land. Wrestling gets a new-looker [Gorgeous George in Los Angeles].

© 1May48; MP3044.

72. May 5, 1948. Reds riot in Milan. Circus thrills amid ruins [Frankfurt, Germany]. Royalty's hour in England: [installation of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh into the Most Noble Order of the Garter; Silver Wedding Anniversary of the King and Queen].

© 5May48; MP3045.

73. May 8, 1948. Apple blossom time [at Winchester, Va.]. General [Eisenhower] takes leave of his troops at Fort Meyer, Va. May Day around the globe—Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, New York. 1948 Kentucky Derby [won by Citation].

© 8May48; MP3057.

74. May 12, 1948. Taft vs. Stassen in Ohio. Alabama rejects Truman. Dewey stumps Oregon. "Lillipup" [Chihuahua] wows Texas. Truman on housing; family life meeting hears President. Uncle Sam's women divers show form [Las Vegas, Nev.].

© 12May48; MP3058.

75. May 15, 1948. Road to friendship; Canada, U.S. hail newest highway link. News in art: fresh air sculpture in Washington Square, New York. Record exhibit: 23 countries show products at Paris fair. [In Birmingham, England, the British Industries Fair reaches record proportions]. Rail strike averted [by President].

© 15May48; MP3059.

76. May 19, 1948. Churchill sees hope in unified Europe. Wilhelmina announces abdication. Soviet-U.S. notes discussed by Marshall. French greet first ship in [Marshall] aid plan. "Right-to-work" law is urged by Cecil B. DeMille. Palestine: last films before end of mandate. Skyful of silk: Army's largest peacetime 'chute maneuver.

© 19May48; MP3060.

77. May 22, 1948. People in the eyes of the world. Paris "falls" to visitors from London [Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh]. Big names tee off in benefit drive [in Washington, Bing Crosby, General Bradley, and Attorney-General Clark lead the parade in National Celebrities Golf Tournament]. Young Democrats hear Truman in Washington. Meat strike: Minnesota calls out National Guard. Mr. America muscles in [George Zifferman of California wins weight-lifting and beauty contest]. Rally hails new state in Palestine.

© 22May48; MP3061.

78. May 26, 1948. Report from Palestine [Sir Alan Cunningham, British High Commissioner, leaves Jerusalem; new state of Israel proclaimed in Tel Aviv; Haganah troops prepare for attack; refugees set sail from Europe for Palestine; American Jewish volunteers interned at Lebanon]. Bob Hope dad to 4,000 kids [in Helldorado celebration at Las Vegas, Nev.]. Sports flash: the Paris walk [postmen's walking race]. Election in South Korea [in U.S. zone].

© 26May48; MP3092.

79. May 29, 1948. Dogdom's high society [18th Annual Morris and Essex Dog show at Madison, N.J.] U.S. meets first President of Israel [Dr. Chaim Weizmann confers with President Truman]. "Queen Mary" brings many celebrities [Ambassador Stanton Griffis, Russian Ambassador Jacob A. Malik, Mae West]. GOP hopefuls set for battle of delegates [Stassen, Dewey, Taft, and Vandenberg].

© 29May48; MP3157.

80. June 2, 1948. Palestine: days of trial [Dr. Chaim Weizmann guest of President Truman at the White House; Jewish refugees arrive at Tel Aviv]. Father Flanagan: Boys Town says farewell [mourns priest's death]. 2,460 sheep cross Coulee [Dam]. Jesse James reported alive [Colonel Frank Dalton claims to be former outlaw]. Golf classic: Hogan wins second PGA championship [St. Louis].

© 2Jun48; MP3158.

81. June 5, 1948. Taps for "Salt Lake City"; Navy sinks cruiser used in atom test. Drew Pearson receives "Father of the Year" award from [General] Eisenhower. World premiere [of "The Emperor Waltz">[ in Hollywood. News on the novel side: the human fish [Margaret Hutton demonstrates swimming technique in a Los Angeles Pool; three bears in the Vienna woods].

© 5Jun48; MP3159.

82. June 9, 1948. Floods take toll. Pacific Northwest hit by raging waters [Vanport and Portland, Or.; Fraser River Valley, B.C.] News around the globe: Smuts loses in South African elections; Italy greets aid cargo from U.S.; new stamps honor heroic clergymen [the four chaplains who died on a torpedoed transport in 1943]; U.S. statesmen [James F. Byrnes and Senator Arthur Vandenberg] honored at Columbia [University]; at Brest, France, President Auriol reviews fleet. Heavyweight boxing: German champ [Hein Ten Hoff] retains title.

© 9Jun48; MP3160.

83. June 12, 1948. Heel 'n' toe classic: Harry Laskau walks into America's Olympic line-up. Canada: show window of the world. [Viscount Alexander, Canada's Governor General, opens Canadian International Trade Fair in Toronto]. Inside Czechoslovakia: [Communists take over Czechoslovakia's Parliament]. President Benes: last films before resigning. President Truman makes 10,000 mile speaking tour. English Derby run before million fans.

© 12Jun48; MP3166.

84. June 16, 1948. Water sports: tuna fish on the hook [in the Bahamas]. Three Americans [Barney Balaban, John W. McCormick, William F. Halsey] honored by inter-faith group. It's here again: the great vacation season. "Queen Mary" brings popular English actor [Sir Ralph Richardson to begin work on film adaptation of "The Heiress">[. Vandenberg assails cut in foreign aid. Palestine: cease-fire showdown [Bernadotte's truce].

© 16Jun48; MP3167.

85. June 19, 1948. Freedom train begins 10th month of tour. Zoo circus: chimps no chumps at clowning. New look gets into the swim [Paris beach wear]. Politics: presidential fireworks [Republicans in Philadelphia; Truman continues western tour]. Babe Ruth: his number becomes immortal.

© 19Jun48; MP3168.

86. June 23, 1948. U.S. sailors fight for Olympic berths. American girls rout British at Wimbledon. Nippon goes to the races. France remembers: memorial to fallen Yanks dedicated. Truman family [on West Coast]. New ocean phenomena uncovered [Swedish oceanographers film undersea life].

© 23Jun48; MP3169.

87. June 26, 1948. GOP meets to name '48 ticket. Republican National Convention opens in Philadelphia. 1094 delegates weigh the chances of favored and dark-horse candidates. Taft, Stassen, and Dewey hold featured spotlight. Governor Dwight H. Green delivers keynote address.

© 26Jun48; MP3170.

88. June 30, 1948. Dewey wins! Republican candidate for president chosen by unanimous vote. Comprehensive newsreel round-up of last days of convention. Dewey appears before convention to deliver victory address.

© 30Jun48; MP3171.

89. July 3, 1948. Berlin: new days of crisis [U.S. airplanes fly food into city; Germans exchange marks for new currency]. [Lord Louis] Mountbatten's farewell to India [retires as Governor-General]. Palestine: Haganah, Irgun clash over arms ship [at Tel Aviv]. Dewey and Warren: GOP set for big campaign [first press conference of Republican nominees; Dewey attends church at Pawling, N.Y.]. Joe Louis: champ says he'll retire [after victory over Joe Walcott]. Patty Berg wins Western [Open] Golf title [at Chicago].

© 3Jul48; MP3192.

90. July 7, 1948. Rhodes: world watches [Count Folke] Bernadotte's peace moves [for solution of Palestine problem]. Eric Johnston protests British film quota [in Washington]. Pawling, New York: the Deweys hosts to the Warrens. "Adopted" town [Maille, France] meets U.S. benefactors [Mr. and Mrs. Girard Hale of Santa Barbara, Calif.]. Eyes of the sports world on Olympics [National Track and Field Meet at University of Minnesota]. San Diego: women aquatic hopefuls.

© 7Jul48; MP3193.

91. July 10, 1948. France's turf classic: "My Love" wins the Grand Prix [de Paris]. Hero of Israel [Colonel David Marcus] brought home for burial [at U.S. Military Academy]. Czechoslovakia: first Red president [Clement Gottwald] takes over. Fashion news: furs look ahead. Good government, junior style [Youth Month in Kansas City, Mo.]. Mt. Rainier: summer skiers beat the heat.

© 10Jul48; MP3214.

92. July 14, 1948. Jap 'quake destroys an entire city [Fukui]. Bavarian Alps: tight-rope sensation two miles up [acrobatic act by Siegward Bach]. Personalities in the news: [General Eisenhower greets classes at Columbia University; leaves home for a game of golf with George Allen; California Democrats seek to draft Eisenhower for nomination; Truman is host to President Gallegos of Venezuela.] Heat-beaters: ice-cold ski-jumping [at Lake Placid, N.Y.].

© 14Jul48; MP3215.

93. July 17, 1948. Democrats take over in Philadelphia. [Eisenhower headquarters close. Pepper announces candidacy.] U.S. ready for Olympics. Final track tryouts [in Evanston, Ill.] marked by upsets. Olympic teams picked for swimming, diving [in Detroit].

© 17Jul48; MP3221.

94. July 21, 1948. Crucial test confronts Democrats. Truman and Barkley nominated at heated session. [Delegates from Alabama and Mississippi bolt convention. Truman delivers acceptance speech. Barkley is awarded vice-presidential nomination by acclamation.]

© 21Jul48; MP3222.

95. July 24, 1948. New truce for Palestine. Jews, Arabs heed order by UN. Nominees of South: states' rights convention names ticket [Thurmond of South Carolina and Wright of Mississippi]. Dodgers-to-Giants: Durocher astounds baseball [becomes new boss of the Giants]. Pershing goes to rest; U.S. in last tribute to AEF chief.

© 24Jul48; MP3223.

96. July 28, 1948. Gymnastic eyeful: 20,000 women in biggest Sokol drill [in Prague]. Vanport: flood city lifts head above waters [of Columbia River]. Master's voice saves dog [flying 3,000 miles, Queenie rejoins her master in Los Angeles]. The international scene: Berlin crisis holds number one spot [Berliners protest Russian blockade]; Clay recalled from Berlin; FBI arrests top Reds [Foster and others]; draft plans announced. [Major General Lewis B. Hershey assumes charge of draft]. B–29's arrive in England.

© 28Jul48; MP3227.

97. July 31, 1948. 1948 Olympiad: London host to topflight athletes. Week end at Pawling: Dewey keeps pace with world issues. Aquatennial: Minneapolis stages great water spectacle. Wallace party states policy; pro-Soviet line upheld by convention.

© 31Jul48; MP3242.

98. Aug. 4, 1948. Canadian ship crashes on reef [off of British Columbia]. Chicago hails 100 years of railroading. West Point goes Hollywood [and awards "Oscars">[. President calls 80th Congress in special session. Summer sports flashes: underwater aquaplanes [Silver Springs, Fla.]; Stymie retires [as world's biggest moneymaking race horse]; Cheyenne rodeo; Calgary Stampede.

© 4Aug48; MP3243.

99. Aug. 7, 1948. Aerial crossroads of the world [Truman and Dewey are present at dedication of New York's International Airport]. Israel salutes heroes on "Nation Day" [at Tel Aviv]. Blast wrecks [I. G. Farben] chemical plant in [Ludwigshafen] Germany. Spectacle and thrills mark Olympic Games [at Wembley Stadium, London. The Royal Family attends opening ceremonies.]

© 7Aug48; MP3264.

100. Aug. 11, 1948. [American Legion] Boys Forum sees government at work [in Washington]. America dominates Olympics: [record of winning performances by Uncle Sam's team in London Olympiad].

© 11Aug48; MP3265.

101. Aug. 14, 1948. Greek army advances [toward the Albanian border]; regulars close in on rebels. Canada: St. Laurent to succeed Mackenzie King. New Olympic films; sports report from London.

© 14Aug48; MP3270.

102. Aug. 18, 1948. The strange case of the Soviet teachers [Oksana Stepanova Kosenkina and Mikhail Ivanovitch Samarin]. New films from London climax action in Olympic track events.

© 18Aug48; MP3271.

103. Aug. 21, 1948. Accent on Young America; new program rallies nation to its youth; [President Truman receives new stamps commemorating Youth Month]. Babe Ruth, 1895–1948 [dies in New York]. Hiroshima, three years after [destruction by atomic attack]. Palestine: incident in no-man's land [bodies exchanged under UN observation]. Largest airborne lifeboat 'chuted from B–29 [at Mitchell Field, N.Y.]. Greatest woman Olympic star comes home [Fanny Blankers-Koen returns to Amsterdam, Holland].

© 21Aug48; MP3307.

104. Aug. 25, 1948. Greatest oil discovery in Canada [new field opened at Edmonton, Alberta; gusher out of control]. Babe Ruth goes to rest [body lies in state; requiem mass at St. Patrick's, New York]. Korea republic proclaimed. [New President Rhee greets General MacArthur]. Olympic fade-out: final events and closing ceremonies [at London].

© 25Aug48; MP3308.

1948/49.

1. Aug. 28, 1948. Middies, cadets join forces in amphibious test [on Virginia coast]. Cologne Cathedral reopened for seven hundredth anniversary. [Secretary of Defense] Forrestal talks defense plans with Canada [at Ottawa, attends policy meeting at Newport, R.I.]. Axis Sally [Mildred Elizabeth Gillars] faces trial for treason [in Washington]. [Tokyo Rose (Iva Toguri) also under charges]. Grid preview: [Chicago] Cardinals beat [College] All-Stars [in Chicago]. Seattle, Washington sail classic [North American Star Boat Sailing Championships].

© 28Aug48; MP3312.

2. Sept. 1, 1948. Soviet rejects U.S. note on teachers [severs consular relations after Kosenkina protest]. Back to school fashions. [Alger] Hiss vs. [Whittaker] Chambers: key witnesses face to face at spy hearing [before House Un-American Activities Committee]. Heat wave [temperatures near record levels in New York].

© 1Sep48; MP3313.

3. Sept. 4, 1948. Best on the ice; skate stars preview gayest carnival [Ice Capades of 1949]. World churchmen meet in Amsterdam. Headlines, news, and people: draft call inductions set for November; Soviet Consul [Jacob Lomakin] sails from New York; U.S. Olympic stars home after London sweep. Red hot football; temperature 99 degrees [Dodgers vs. Yankees].

© 4Sep48; MP3353.

4. Sept. 8, 1948. Ship news; celebrities sail aboard Queen Mary. Wilhelmina of Holland ends 50 year reign. Football, collegians get ready: Irish eye third straight national crown; Army rated tops in East; Navy faces tough schedule.

© 8Sep48; MP3354.

5. Sept. 11, 1948. UN moves to France; Paris ready for delegates of 58 nations. School daze; twirlers learn tricks with the sticks [Huntsville, Texas]. Aid for Greece; U.S. builds bridges to speed recovery. The novel in fashions. China fights inflation with money reforms.

© 11Sep48; MP3371.

6. Sept. 15, 1948. Spirit of the dance; amateur hoofers wow crowds at Harvest Ball [Madison Square Garden, New York]. Campaign fireworks; Truman, Stassen deliver opening verbal blasts. Juliana takes oath as Dutch ruler.

© 15Sep48; MP3372.

7. Sept. 18, 1948. Boston baseball fever; Beantown eyes first subway series [as Braves and Red Sox lead major leagues]. Russia drives for rule of Berlin. U.S. united on foreign policy, says Vandenberg. Pope spurs anti-Red campaign. Stars aid charity; Hollywood under the big top.

© 18Sep48; MP3393.

8. Sept. 22, 1948. Newest on the rails [20th Century Limited]. Elections: "As Maine goes, so goes ...?" [Maine goes Republican]. Campaign for packages aids European needy. Ground broken for UN capitol [in New York City]. Youth of the Year [Bob Mathias and Arthur Cook greeted by Truman]. Brandenburg Gate incident in Berlin. Czechoslovakia mourns Benes. Football: Giants trim Bears for charity.

© 22Sep48; MP3394.

9. Sept. 25, 1948. Presidential race quickens; Truman, Dewey swing West on big tours. Babes in the news [quadruplets in Great Britain]. Marshall's busy days: [receives Humanitarian Award of 1947 by Variety Clubs International; flys to Paris for meeting of United Nations General Assembly]. Bernadotte assassination rocks UN. Jet plane sets world speed mark, 671 m.p.h.

© 25Sep48; MP3398.

10. Sept. 29, 1948. Winds on rampage; $25,000,000 loss as hurricane rips Florida. Vive Cerdan; French battler wins middleweight boxing crown. Bernadotte: body of slain UN mediator flown home. Dewey vs. Truman; highlights of Western campaign trips. Amazing new aircraft "Parasite Jet" [XF–85] flown for first time.

© 29Sep48; MP3399.

11. Oct. 2, 1948. Top performers keep 'em laughing at AAF reunion [boxing bout between Bob Hope and Jack Dempsey]. Last rites for Bernadotte in Sweden. Nation hails return of King Football [California vs. Navy; Notre Dame vs. Purdue; Army vs. Villanova].

© 2Oct48; MP3425.

12. Oct. 6, 1948. Truman or Dewey? Presidential race enters final weeks. "Lab in sky" speeds television, radar progress [I. T. & T. electronic engineers probe the secrets of microwaves]. United Nations, new war of words [debate in Paris]. Italian Reds rally for Togliatti in Rome. First pictures of Politburo at Zhdanov funeral in Moscow. Break-neck stunts [Joie Chitwood and his Auto Daredevils].

© 6Oct48; MP3426.

13. Oct. 9, 1948. World Series fever: Cleveland meets Braves, with [Bob] Hope. President Truman's Washington homecoming. GI's insurance sends Jap ex-pilot to U.S. college. Sports: Citation wins Belmont classic by 8 lengths; Northwestern upsets Purdue; North Carolina beats Georgia.

© 9Oct48; MP3446.

14. Oct. 13, 1948. Coast Guard saves 23 from plane on [Florida] Keys. Report on Palestine [Bartley Crum returns from the Holy Land]. 1948 World Series.

© 13Oct48; MP3447.

15. Oct. 16, 1948. Marshall's flying visit from Paris. Churchill urges U.S. to keep atom bomb. Cleveland takes the [World] Series. Football game of the week: Army vs. Illinois.

© 16Oct48; MP3480.

16. Oct. 20, 1948. "Little Henry," world's first ram-jet helicopter. Speedboat racing; weirdest water arena [Danbury, Conn.] The Dewey story

© 20Oct48; MP3481.

17. Oct. 23, 1948. Gridiron heat wave: 86,000 see mighty Michigan crush [Northwestern] Wildcats; Penn beats Columbia in final seconds. The Truman story

© 23Oct48; MP3482.

18. Oct. 27, 1948. Stephenson paces Army win over Harvard. North Japan floods take awful toll. General Clay [gives] first hand report on Berlin. General MacArthur host to President [Syngman Rhee] of Korea. Eric Johnston gives views after trip to Russia. Governor Dewey calls for unity in world affairs. Invasion; American Legion wins Miami "beachhead" [10,000 attend National Convention].

© 27Oct48; MP3483.

19. Oct. 30, 1948. UN, Paris: Reds veto bid to end Berlin crisis. France seeks showdown in mine strike. First DPs sail under new U.S. law. Coast-to-coast battle of ballots. College football parade: Penn state vs. Michigan State; Minnesota vs. Michigan.

© 30Oct48; MP3527.

20. Nov. 3, 1948. France's labor crisis; latest films of mine strike. Troubled China celebrates Independence Day. Fashions: Navy goes overboard for new look. The story behind the airlift, Berlin. Roller Derby highlights fall sports.

© 3Nov48; MP3528.

21. Nov. 6, 1948. Nation hails Marine Corps on anniversary. First DPs arrive in New York. Morgenthau reports on Palestine trip. Football's parade of champions: California vs. USC, Georgia Tech vs. Duke, Notre Dame vs. Navy.

© 6Nov48; MP3533.

22. Nov, 10, 1948. Israeli victory in Negeb desert fighting. Truman's smashing victory [with 304 electoral votes].

© 10Nov48; MP3534.

23. Nov. 13, 1948. Washington's greatest victory show. Capital welcomes Truman. Football: Army power crushes Stanford. 80,000 see Penn State topple Penn.

© 13Nov48; MP3544.

24. Nov. 17, 1948. Snowbirds [on Mt. Rainier] rush season for ski doings. France: Troops restore order in mine crisis. Tanks come out of mothballs [Tacoma, Wash.]; Army introduces its newest tank [the General Patton] at Maryland's Aberdeen Proving Ground. Fashions? Look what Paris has! Touchdown parade: Missouri is shown by Oklahoma.

© 17Nov48; MP3545.

25. Nov. 20, 1948. Riots in Paris; police battle Reds on peace anniversary. Justice—Tojo and company sentenced. It's a boy for Princess Elizabeth. Patton tank christened by widow. "Red Dean" [Hewlett Johnson] visits U.S. Fightin' football: Irish rally to beat Northwestern; Army vs. Penn, Cadets win in final seconds.

© 20Nov48; MP3571.

26. Nov. 24, 1948. Bikini vet ends career; Navy sinks cruiser Pensacola. An American family [the Trumans] vacations in Florida. Canada welcomes new Prime Minister [Louis St. Laurent]. Nation's youngest Governor [Herman Eugene Talmadge of Georgia]. Milady looks to '49; hats on to fashions. Cleveland wins 10th straight to top pro grid.

© 24Nov48; MP3585.

27. Nov. 27, 1948. Latest jet: Navy's "flying wing" fighter [XF7U–1]. Hollywood stars off to London via Canada. Our busy President [in Key West, Fla., at Blair House, Washington, and at the Washington airport greeting Secretary of State Marshall]. Football: Southern Methodist vs. Baylor; Michigan vs. Ohio State; Harvard vs. Yale.

© 27Nov48; MP3589.

28. Dec. 1, 1948. Aviation's mighty mite: Wee-Bee plane in debut. Amazing salt harvest, Puerto Rico. 1948 touchdown review; the season's All-America plays.

© 1Dec48; MP3590.

29. Dec. 4, 1948. Army vs. Navy. Underdog Navy ties unbeaten Army [in football game.] President Truman sees game.

© 4Dec48; MP3604.

30. Dec. 8, 1948. Flight tests prove worth of air brakes [at Caldwell, N.J.] "Yankee Doodle" in Tokyo [children play tunes learned from GI's]. [Baby six months old floats in swimming pool.] From Hollywood sheer nonsense [stockings]. Reds claim Suchow. Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek seeks aid for China's government. From Suchow [combat pictures of crucial battle].

© 8Dec48; MP3605.

31. Dec. 11, 1948. New spy evidence. Government seizes microfilms of stolen data [found in pumpkin]. Stars over London [screen luminaries, Billy de Wolfe and others, meet the Royal Family]. President salutes the "Mighty Mo" at Norfolk, Virginia. Christmas comes but once a year. Upset! USC ties mighty Notre Dame.

© 11Dec48; MP3640.

32. Dec. 15, 1948. World's biggest warplane, B–36, gets screen test. Washington: new sensations at spy inquiry [by House Un-American Activities Committee]. Bogus $10 and $20 bills flood big cities. Report from China: evacuation of U.S. civilians from Shanghai; 1200 U.S. marines arrive at Tsingtao.

© 15Dec48; MP3641.

33. Dec. 18, 1948. [Kaman] helicopter magic. Preview of tomorrow's flight [in Windsor Locks, Conn.]. Women [Wacs and Waves] in uniform make news. Quebec welcomes a favorite son [Louis St. Laurent, Prime Minister of Canada]. Newfoundland signs to join Canada. Pre-holiday visit with President Truman. Palm Desert, Calif.—wasteland to wonderland.

© 18Dec48; MP3665.

34. Dec. 22, 1948. Gloves in bloom; from New York sidewalks to boxing fame [Madison Square Boys' Clubs]. "Sinbad" [gorilla] makes debut [in Chicago zoo]. China ship [Kianyga] disaster. UN ends Paris session. Charity at Yuletide [Cardinal Spellman at New York foundling hospital].

© 22Dec48; MP3666.

35. Dec. 25, 1948. Kitty Hawk presented to National Museum. Baby Prince [Charles of Edinburgh] makes debut before cameras [at christening]. Movie celebrities [Alan Ladd, Sue Carol, and Joan Caulfield] home for the holidays. Attorney General Clark urges stronger espionage laws. Pro grid finals: Cleveland routs Buffalo; "Snow Bowl" Eagles down Cardinals in blizzard [at Philadelphia].

© 25Dec48; MP3678.

36. Dec. 29, 1948. Intersectional basketball thrills big city [at Madison Square Garden]. French raze Red radio towers [in Berlin]. From Paris, a hat to fit your profile. Ku Klux Klan initiation ceremonies [in Georgia; Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt cites child membership as hate-breeding].

© 29Dec48; MP3679.

37. Jan. 1, 1949. Headline news stories of 1948: Harry S. Truman, man of the year; revolt in Bogota; Hiss versus Chambers; Oksana Kosenkina; Olympic games; Gandhi, India's last tribute; Palestine, a state is born; the Berlin crisis; the airlift; the UN in 1948.

© 1Jan49; MP3730.

38. Jan. 5, 1949. Atom ore; pitchblende bonanza in Colorado. U.S. returns original Magna Carta to England. Pact signed ending ban on recordings. 1948 in sports.

© 5Jan49; MP3731.

39. Jan. 8, 1949. Football welcomes New Year. 1949 Bowl games: [The Longhorns of Texas meet the Bulldogs of Georgia in the Orange Bowl; Northwestern and California fight in Rose Bowl; Southern Methodists triumph over Oregon in the Cotton Bowl]. Stars over Berlin: Operation Good Cheer. [Prominent American entertainers and public figures bring a touch of home to the men of the Berlin Airlift].

© 8Jan49; MP3760.

40. Jan. 12, 1949. Nature hits hard across the nation. [Blizzard strikes in the Rocky Mountain states, sweeping eastward across the Middle West. 120 homes demolished by tornado in Warren, Ark.] Truman asks: Tax boost, inflation control, Labor Act repeal. President outlines "Fair Deal" program as Congress meets with Democrats in control. Sports highlights: Clemson noses out Missouri [at Jacksonville's Gator Bowl]; Skiing—at your door [on the slopes of Mt. Hood, Oregon].

© 12Jan49; MP3761.

41. Jan. 15, 1949. Rockies area hit anew in worst winter. Cairo: last rites for [Nokrashy Pasha], Egypt's slain premier. George C. Marshall—a statesman steps down. Child minister's wedding rite stirs debate.

© 15Jan49; MP3801.

42. Jan. 19, 1949. Russia's big show; 31st anniversary of Bolshevik Revolution. Weather flash; snow in California. Dean Acheson testifies before Senate Committee. U.S. tightens patrol on Mexico border [to check illegal immigration of Mexican laborers]. Curtain time for kiddies [Punch and Judy shows in Austria].

© 19Jan49; MP3802.

43. Jan. 22, 1949. Pilotless jet [Gorgon IV] in longest flight. Rocket ship climbs 13,000 feet in a minute. Lookin' to spring, "Miss Budget" picks cotton. Washington: Truman "joins" a union [American Federation of Musicians]. Paris: Garry Davis opens drive for "world citizens." New York: top U.S. Reds go on trial. Ski jump classic [Fox River Grove, Ill.]; Olympic champ from Norway wins U.S. meet.

© 22Jan49; MP3807.

44. Jan. 26, 1949. The inauguration of Harry S. Truman.

© 26Jan49; MP3808.

45. Jan. 29, 1949. China at the crossroads [Chiang Kai-Shek leaves for a self-imposed exile and General Li Tsung-jen, successor to Chiang, sues for peace with Communists]. Rhodes: Egypt-Israel armistice talks. Palestine: Israel air force at rites for RAF pilot. Near Haifa [young people from Canada, United States, and Mexico arrive to build "All-American" Israel settlement]. Acheson officially takes over [as Secretary of State]. Skate festival [Hollywood Ice Revue].

© 29Jan49; MP3809.

46. Feb. 2, 1949. Film record of Russia's "peace offensive." "Cold war" over best seller ["I Chose Freedom" by Victor Kravchenko]. News on the novel side: [Willa Worthington makes bathing suits of metalic fabrics. Tiny Koala bears in Australia.] Fastest bomber [XB–47] in super-jet take-off.

© 2Feb49; MP3810.

47. Feb. 5, 1949. Israel 8 months after statehood [holds first election]. Canadian Parliament opens. Report from the western blizzard front. Distance Stars from Europe in Millrose meet [at Madison Square Garden].

© 5Feb49; MP3837.

48. Feb. 9, 1949. French say 'merci' for our bounty [with Gratitude Train]. UN commission pushed search for Palestine peace. Senate debates new labor bill. First pictures: Soviet moves all troops from Korea. Norwegian wings 290 feet in U.S. ski meet.

© 9Feb49; MP3838.

49. Feb. 12, 1949. Baseball's $100,000 success story; a guy named Joe [DiMaggio]. Tokyo: Royall begins tour of Pacific defenses. Pilots who fled Russia start tour. Marshall Plan youth [high school students from 14 nations] meet President Truman. Capital hails 'thank you' train [from Paris]. Dramatic first films: retreat from Nanking.

© 12Feb49; MP3839.

50. Feb. 16, 1949. Protests grow over sentencing of Mindszenty. Washington: Dewey gives formula for saving G.O.P. India: one year after death of Gandhi. "Most popular star": fans again pick Crosby. A salute to Brotherhood Week.

© 16Feb49; MP3840.

51. Feb. 19, 1949. Bridge collapses on trains near Paris. Boy Scouts report to the "Boss" [twelve Eagle Scouts visit President Truman]. Cairo students study world's oldest pyramid. Canada's Premier visits Washington for major talks. Bowling Congress [annual tournament in Atlantic City]. Varsity skiing: Washington U. wins from Canada's best [Banff, Alberta]. Yachting special: rough winter skippers in Miami classic [16th annual Lipton Cup Race].

© 19Feb49; MP3885.

52. Feb. 23, 1949. Consistory in Rome [denounces the Hungarian trial of Cardinal Mindszenty]. Baseball's Gardella case. A night at the dog show [73rd Westminster Kennel Club show in New York]. Sky power: President sees Air Force's biggest show [at Andrews Field, Maryland].

© 23Feb49; MP3886.

53. Feb. 26, 1949. Royall reports on the Far East. For Milady, scarves set new style note. Romance rumor links Princess Margaret to a commoner [former Army Captain Tom Egerton]. Bob Hope receives "Achievement Award" [presented by Look Magazine]. Israel makes history: First Assembly convenes in Jerusalem.

© 26Feb49; MP3905.

54. Mar. 2, 1949. 300,000 hear Pope denounce Communism. Israel, Egypt sign armistice. [First films of the inaugural of Dr. Chaim Weizmann as President of Israel]. The economic state of the Union [Leon H. Keyserling surveys America's economic condition].

© 2Mar49; MP3906.

55. Mar. 5, 1949. War report from Greece. Israel, Arabs begin exchange of prisoners. News from Germany: Red troops mark Army Day in Berlin; Fritz Kuhn freed, seeks U.S. citizenship. Fashion debate—hemlines long or short?

© 5Mar49; MP3940.

56. Mar. 9, 1949. Spring and baseball, they'll soon be here [New York Yankees at St. Petersburg, Fla.] Cardinal Spellman leads students digging graves. B–50 hops around globe non-stop. The champ hangs up his gloves [Joe Louis officially retires and turns promoter].

© 9Mar49; MP3941.

57. Mar. 12, 1949. Baseball's world champions [Cleveland Indians] look to '49—with [Bob] Hope. Soviet mission forced to quit U.S. zone [Frankfurt]. News diary of the First Family [President Truman receives outgoing and incoming Secretaries of Defense; leaves for Key West, Fla. Margaret Truman christens the "Clipper America.">[ Security Council votes Israel's admission to UN. Sports spectacle; basketball's greatest "freeze" [Minnesota Lakers vs. Harlem Globe Trotters].

© 12Mar49; MP3948.

58. Mar. 16, 1949. Odom flies Hawaii-N.J.; gas costs $75. Russia returns lend-leased U.S. cruiser [the Milwaukee]. Danish minister [Gustav Rasmussen] in U.S. for pact talks. Axis Sally guilty of treason. Modern version: Great train robbery! [Two desperadoes rob a B&O express near Martinsburg, W. Va.] Smallest engine, smallest car [makes its debut in Munich, Germany].

© 16Mar49; MP3961.

59. Mar. 19. 1949. Baseball's "elder statesman" [Connie Mack in Florida with the Philadelphia Athletics]. Restore temple [at Karnak on the Nile] destroyed by 'quake in 27 B.C. "Canada Day" at West Point. Science news: world's lightest solid [plastic foam]. Czechoslovakia, one year after the Red seizure. Speed in sports: 200–mile cycle derby [Daytona Beach, Fla.]; amateur Grand National [Hunt Steeplechase at Cheltenham, Eng.].

© 19Mar49; MP3983.

60. Mar. 23, 1949. Springtime on skis in Alberta [new ski lift opens at Banff]. Israel's first trans-Atlantic cargo ship [the S. S. Haifa is dedicated in New York. Moshe Sharett, Israeli Foreign Minister, comes to U.S. for conference on the United Jewish Appeal]. For atom workers: remote control hands [shown at the Argonne National laboratory in Chicago]. Russians transfer "Milwaukee." [Lend-leased vessel reverts to the American Navy]. Spectacular waterfront fire in California [Army dock and warehouse at Oakland become smoking ruins].

© 23Mar49; MP3962.

61. Mar. 26, 1949. The Atlantic Pact. An analysis of the significant aims embodied in the proposed twenty-year treaty.

© 26Mar49; MP3984.

62. Mar. 30, 1949. West Berlin outlaws Red currency. Graphic report on China's "Last Bastion" [on the island of Formosa]. Easter fashions are "ooh la la." Welcome for Winnie [Churchill arrives in America]. When in Greece, Yankee sees, Yankee does [members of American armed forces sight-see in Athens].

© 30Mar49; MP3985.

63. Apr. 2, 1949. Peace parley [of the Cultural and Scientific Conference for World Peace meeting in New York]. Oscars: Hollywood makes annual awards. Peron takes oath of new constitution. Grand National: 66–1 shot wins classic at Aintree [England].

© 2Apr49; MP4012.

64. Apr. 6, 1949. Water artistry [at Cypress Gardens, Fla., by Willa Worthington, water-ski champion]. Queen Mary docks in New York with Andrei Gromyko and foreign ministers of Belgium, Luxembourg and England aboard. New Defense chief [Louis Johnson] meets the press. UN seeks peace for the entire Middle East. "Gorilla" flees zoo; climbs Eiffel Tower.

© 6Apr49; MP4013.

65. Apr. 9, 1949. Newcomers win titles in National AAU swim meet. Newfoundland welcomed as 10th province. For the cause of peace, twelve nations sign [North Atlantic] pact in Washington.

© 9Apr49; MP4032.

66. Apr. 13, 1949. Nation salutes men in khaki: Army Day, 1949. Tragic hospital fire in [Effingham] Illinois. Mailman makes "gem" of a delivery [$1,500,000 worth of precious stones]. Pope Pius XII marks 50 years of priesthood. General Assembly [of UN] meets in New York.

© 13Apr49; MP4033.

67. Apr. 16, 1949. The Kathy drama [body of Kathy Fiscus recovered from abandoned well at San Marino, Calif.] Greek King re-opens historic Corinth Canal. China: tension mounts amid bids for peace. Speed in sports: break-neck cycle race [at the Montreuil motor course, France]; dressy turf opening at Longchamp [in Paris].

© 16Apr49; MP4059.

68. Apr. 20, 1949. What price housing? [Analysis of the need for new homes, as Congressional debate on the Government's housing bill is opened].

© 20Apr49; MP4060.

69. Apr. 23, 1949. Acting UN mediator, Ralph Bunche, arrives in New York from Palestine. Stephen T. Early appointed first Undersecretary of Defense. Burt Lancaster returns to the circus. A day of devotions [Easter]. Baseball gets down to business [President Truman throws the first pitch in the 1949 season; Red Cross distributes booklet "Care and Protection of Dodger Fans"; Grantland Rice selects Boston Red Sox and Pittsburgh Pirates].

© 23Apr49; MP4089.

70. Apr. 27, 1949. DP's stage anti-Communist demonstration [Munich]. Taxes slashed in Canada. News portraits of Farouk and beautiful sisters. Truman rallies nation to bond drive. Erin hails birth of Republic of Ireland.

© 27Apr49; MP4090.

71. Apr. 30, 1949. Olympia wins Wood Memorial by a neck [at Jamaica race-track]. World's record: [96 painters] paint vet's house in 2 min., 32 seconds. New "cure" reported [Ringling Bros. Barnum & Bailey circus visits Bellevue Hospital]. China: decisive stage of civil war.

© 30Apr49; MP4091.

72. May 4, 1949. California fliers set endurance mark [1008 hours in the air]. Philip Jessup and Andrei Gromyko arrive to open negotiations on lifting Berlin blockade. Secretary of State Acheson speaks before Senate Foreign Relations Committee for ratification of North Atlantic Pact. World Congress of Partisans of Peace assembles in Paris. Steve Belloise scores technical knockout over Jean Stock [Paris].

© 4May49; MP4092.

73. May 7, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted! May Day, U.S. and abroad: orations delivered by Communists and pro-Allies at Brandenburg Gate, Berlin; Communists' parade, and DeGaulle's rightists stage rally in Paris; parades in New York City. Runnin' on water; zany skiers skip over the waves [Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Shanghai—the great exodus. Blossom Festival [Winchester, Va.]; [Bob] Hope bobs for the apple.

© 7May49; MP4139.

74. May 18, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted: [preparations being made in Berlin; New York City is scene of historic agreement.] Freedom's timetable: European Recovery Program; Western European defensive unity; North Atlantic Pact; agreement on Berlin. Frankfort, Germany: report on steps toward Western German Republic. Exclusive interview with Gen. Lucius D. Clay. Tribute to the men of the Berlin airlift.

© 18May49; MP4140.

75. May 21, 1949. $5,000,000 race track fire [Hollywood Park]. Variety Clubs honor [Herbert] Hoover. Report from Shanghai; last-ditch defenses. "Little Four" [Collins quadruplets] born in New York. Ponder, 16–1 wins Kentucky Derby.

© 21May49; MP4158.

76. May 25, 1949. Executions in streets of Shanghai. Hague machine smashed in Jersey City. Israel wins United Nations membership. Marines test "invasion" with helicopters [at Quantico war games]. The amazing Acrojets [F–80 Jet planes presented by Air Force].

© 25May49; MP4157.

77. May 28, 1949. Thrill-packed Preakness: Capot beats Palestinian by a head. Berlin freed from the blockade. I am an American: we reaffirm faith in our government. [U.S. citizens restate their allegiance on "I am an American Day.">[

© 28May49; MP4209.

78. June 1, 1949. [Hollywood] stars help launch big bond drive [in Independence, Mo.] Washington greets Brazil's chief executive [Eurico Gaspar Dutra]. F.D.R., Jr. [of New York] elected to Congress. U.S. salutes hero of the peace: General Clay honored as he retires.

© 1Jun49; MP4210.

79. June 4, 1949. Big Four open talks on Germany. Nation mourns Forrestal. Border fiesta; eyes of Texas on Laredo. Names and events on the sports scene: crown new Mr. America; one-woman track team [Fanny Blankers-Koen winner at Ninth Annual Coliseum Relays at Los Angeles]; Dempsey referees mat title bout.

© 4Jun49; MP4249.

80. June 8, 1949. Key issues debated by Big Four Council in Paris. Lest we forget [program on Memorial Day and the fifth anniversary of D-Day].

© 8Jun49; MP4250.

81. June 11, 1949. West Germany constitution comes into force. Newest [trailer] coaches hit the open road. President Dutra Inspects TVA installations. Admiral Kirk sworn in as ambassador to Russia. Lilienthal testifies at atom probe. News on the novel side: unicycle demonstrated in Bordeaux, France; 55 Hamadryads arrive at the Munich, Germany, zoo.

© 11Jun49; MP4251.

82. June 15, 1949. Snead wins PGA title 2nd time. Eisler freed; will not return to U.S. General Clay bids the army farewell. British royalty sees "trooping the colors." Rita [Hayworth] and Aly [Khan] take their vows.

© 15Jun49; MP4252.

83. June 18, 1949. Crosby, Hope tee off with Capital "brass." Marshall honored for aid to world. Russia's biggest show of might [May Day parade in Moscow].

© 18Jun49; MP4258.

84. June 22, 1949. Soviet aims enforced at Czech Congress. Workers' protest rally turns into riot [Tokyo]. Franco opens Spanish Parliament. Congressman Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., in Israel. First woman U.S. Treasurer takes over [Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark]. Next heavy champ—Walcott or Charles? Tuna stalkers have field day in Bahamas.

© 22Jun49; MP4259.

85. June 25, 1949. Close finish in National Open golf. Truman meets buddies [in Little Rock, Ark.]; makes major address. Will Rogers Hospital taken over by Variety Clubs. Britain honors George VI on 53rd birthday.

© 25Jun49; MP4325.

86. June 29, 1949. Ku Klux Klan in headlines again [initiates new members at Stone Mountain, Ga.] "Little England" puts on the dog [annual dog show at Hyde Park, London]. Mr. [Franklin D.] Roosevelt [Jr.] goes to Washington. Stand up and be counted, a preview of the 1950 census.

© 29Jun49; MP4326.

87. July 2, 1949. Cyclists from U.S. and Canada ride in New Hampshire. Financial page: how a crisis in wheat was averted. Gaullist, Red rallies bring out 20,000 police. Cleveland: baseball fan a pole-sitter 'til tribe leads. Beach styles in a "glass" by themselves. Mister, your hat [hats for men by West Coast designer].

© 2Jul49; MP4347.

88. July 6, 1949. Ezzard Charles beats Walcott in title bout. July Fourth, a salute to our country—a special documentary-newsreel production.

© 6Jul49; MP4348.

89. July 9, 1949. U.S. stars aid French charity drive. Texan weds granddaughter of late Kaiser [Wilhelm]. Florida Governor [Fuller Warren] weds girl from California. Greatest show of man-made lightning [General Electric's high-voltage engineering laboratory at Pittsfield, Mass.] Premier Tito bids for trade with the West. Regatta: Golden Bears win on the Hudson.

© 9Jul49; MP4357.

90. July 13, 1949. Unique rites mark feast of St. Paulinus [at Nola, Italy]. U.S. mobilization plan urged by Baruch. Canada votes; Liberal Party wins in landslide. Baseball: Joe DiMaggio returns to line-up. Square dancing by moonlight [New York Central Park].

© 13Jul49; MP4358.

91. July 16, 1949. Nocturnal aquatics in Puerto Rico. New president of World Bank [Eugene R. Black]. Irene Dunne receives award from Notre Dame. Judith Coplon convicted of espionage. American GI [welcomes] Chinese orphan [in New York].

© 16Jul49; MP4373.

92. July 20, 1949. 2900–mile bike race; 120 cyclists begin grueling "Tour de France." Western Europe unites in mass fleet maneuvers. New Red menace for Japan [2,000 Japanese soldiers return from Soviet prison camps]. Lake Placid, N.Y., ice-cold ski jumping. Wimbledon: America's Ted Schroeder wins tennis final.

© 20Jul49; MP4374.

93. July 23, 1949. "All star" baseball; movie favorites go to bat for hospital fund. New drive on for cuts in luxury taxes [Senator Edwin C. Johnson explains the bill]. Automatic drive in; hamburgers a la push button. Crippling dock strikes [in Honolulu and London].

© 23Jul49; MP4388.

94. July 27, 1949. Tragic air crashes in California and India. Truman reports on economic state of the nation. American League All Stars whip Nationals.

© 27Jul49; MP4389.

95. July 30, 1949. Gay Paris celebrates Bastille Day. Fire destroys big movie stage in Munich. Tokyo receives gift of animals from Salt Lake City. President signs bill for vast building program. Rare films of a future king [Prince Charles of England].

© 30Jul49; MP4509.

96. Aug. 3, 1949. Truman speech follows 5–hour Shriner parade [in Chicago]. Jackie Robinson testifies on Negro loyalty. Airliner crashes into homes [Seattle]. France bids for return to sea power [luxury liner, Ile de France returns to trans-Atlantic passenger service].

© 3Aug49; MP4510.

97. Aug. 6, 1949. Latest films from strike waterfronts: London walkout ends; Hawaii sees violence. President Truman signs North Atlantic Treaty. Israel honors heroes on first Army Day [in Tel Aviv]. Minnesota celebrates Aquatennial [in Minneapolis]. Argentina hails 133rd year of independence [in Buenos Aires]. U.S. Tars make flat top their training field [the football squad of the Pacific Fleet on the U.S.S. Boxer].

© 6Aug49; MP4436.

98. Aug. 10, 1949. Ile de France makes Atlantic postwar debut. 1,000,000 attend funeral of Korean patriot [Kim Koo, in Seoul]. Churchill blasts British Labor Party. Sport news around the globe: Charles, Lesnevich set for bout for heavyweight crown; new swim stars thrill Japan [Konishin Furuhashi and Shirou Hashizume, in Tokyo].

© 10Aug49; MP4437.

99. Aug. 13, 1949. 1,000,000 hear Pandit Nehru hit Communism. Danes re-invade Britain after 1,500 years

© 13Aug49; MP4438.

100. Aug. 17, 1949. U.S. declares war on grasshoppers. Local boys meet their government [100 boys of the American Legion Forum, in Washington]. Greece: guerilla power wanes; refugees flock back home. A 75th birthday salute [to] Herbert Hoover, only living ex-president of the United States.

© 17Aug49; MP4439.

101. Aug. 20, 1949. Watercade thrills 3,000 at benefit show [for the Lou Costello Jr. Youth Foundation, in Hollywood]. Sawdust trail to the silver screen [Cecil B. DeMille studies the Ringling Brothers' Circus, in Chicago]. China, the story of a nation's defeat: State Department's "White Paper" on China reveals failure of Nationalist regime; new course charted for America's anti-Communist policy in Far East.

© 20Aug49; MP4452.

102. Aug. 24, 1949. The tops in sports. "Miss Tilly" trots off with the Hambletonian. Mangrum wins rich golf prize by a 3–foot putt [in Chicago]. President of Philippines [Elpidio Quirino] in New York. Monkey vs. parrot [at the Parrot Jungle, in Miami]. On-the-spot-coverage: Ecuador earthquake.

© 24Aug49; MP4453.

103. Aug. 27, 1949. Hometown boy winner of Soapbox Derby [Freddie Derks of Akron]. Syria's President [Husni Zayim] and Premier [Muhsen Berazi] are executed. Dame fashion says, ties right. Barkley dedicates airport [Paducah, Ky.] West Germany goes to the polls.

© 27Aug49; MP4511.

104. Aug. 31, 1949. World's biggest rodeo [Los Angeles Coliseum]. The Senate "5 percenter" investigation. Atlanta mourns a first citizen [Margaret Mitchell]. [Dr. Otis Barton goes] down under the sea in a steel ball [off Santa Cruz Island, Calif.] New steps toward a unified Europe [at the Alsatian city of Strasbourg].

© 31Aug49; MP4512.

1949.

1. Sept. 3, 1949. Greatest swim performance on record [Tokyo team at the National AAU meet]. Harry Truman's busy day: Washington to Miami [to attend the national convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars] and back. First tests for Gar Wood's "no-roll" boat. Honor baseball's "elder statesman" [Connie Mack].

© 3Sep49; MP4546.

2. Sept. 14, 1949. Forest fires hit southwest France. Theodor Herzl reburied in Jerusalem. President Truman [signs proclamation for the Atlantic Pact]. Tom C. Clark [sworn in as member of Supreme Court]. Philip Mickman [youngest person to swim the English channel]. Ecuador—how a stunned nation is digging out [from an earthquake].

© 14Sep49; MP4547.

3. Sept. 17, 1949. The great Florida hurricane. Canada opens biggest "show window" [70th annual National Exhibition in Toronto]. Truman tells aims of British-U.S. dollar talks. "Little World Series" [Pensacola, Fla., vs. Hammonton, N.J.]. U.S. retains Davis Cup.

© 17Sep49; MP4548.

4. Sept. 21, 1949. [American] Legion "invades" Philadelphia [at their 31st annual convention]. Drama on the Washington scene [Senate Committee investigating five-percenters questions John Maragon and Major General Vaughan]. Fancy blades in hot capers on frozen stage [Ice Capades of 1950 at Atlantic City].

© 21Sep49; MP4549.

5. Sept. 24, 1949. Football back in headlines [Notre Dame, the New York Giants, and University of Georgia]. Shoes to conquer dame fashion. Spotlight on the Balkans [Marshal Tito closes Yugoslav-Greek frontier; Greek Army fights Communist guerrillas].

© 24Sep49; MP4592.

6. Sept. 28, 1949. President Truman [makes a policy address in Pittsburgh]. Shirley May France [fails in attempt to swim English Channel]. Robeson concert erupts into violence [Peekskill, N.Y.] [British officials arrive in New York to discuss] the big dollar question. Gonzales beats Schroeder for U.S. singles title.

© 28Sep49; MP4593.

7. Oct. 1, 1949. Sports special. Baseball's big push. [Behind the scenes with the St. Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Yankees, and Boston Red Sox; last-minute predictions.]

© 1Oct49; MP4594.

8. Oct. 5, 1949. Mercy mission in the Arctic [supplies parachuted to polar explorers marooned for three months]. New German Parliament gets down to business. Theatre owners get together in movie capital. "World Series" of the dance [Harvest Moon Ball].

© 5Oct49; MP4595.

9. Oct. 8, 1949. Vishinsky speaks (in English) for stronger UN. "Wrestling on wheels" hits big time [Roller Derby at Madison Square Garden]. Defense Secretary [Louis Johnson] praises record of film industry. Tragic ship fire at Toronto pier.

© 8Oct49; MP4621.

10. Oct. 12, 1949. UN tackles problems of the hour. King Abdullah of Jordan hailed in Spain. The pound; the story behind devaluation. Navy previews newest in "soot suits" [fireproof suits]. Remove wraps from [Peruvian] mummy 3,000 years old. Wired for high thrills [European aerialists in Bavaria].

© 12Oct49; MP4622.

11. Oct. 15, 1949. Russia and the atom. Football season opens with spectacular performances; USC vs. Navy; Michigan vs. Michigan State; Notre Dame vs. Indiana; Georgia Tech vs. Vanderbilt.

© 15Oct49; MP4660.

12. Oct. 19, 1949. Football; Rose Bowl champ wins opener [Northwestern vs. Purdue]. Film industry pledges to guard freedom. Fashions: Paris and New York. Yoga experts in fantastic gymnastics. Unification aboard a carrier [Defense chiefs meet on the aircraft carrier, Franklin D. Roosevelt].

© 19Oct49; MP4661.

13. Oct. 22, 1949. New York gets a subway series [New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers to meet in 1949 World Series]. Royal family goes to the wedding [of the Earl of Harewood]. Football: Penn State vs. Army; Pittsburgh vs. Northwestern; North Carolina vs. Georgia.

© 22Oct49; MP4662.

14. Oct. 26, 1949. 82nd Airborne puts on show for President [at Fort Bragg, N.C.] 1949 World Series: Yankees win opening game; Dodgers win second.

© 26Oct49; MP4663.

15. Oct. 29, 1949. World Series finale: Yankees defeat Dodgers in 5th game to win title. Football: Navy vs. Duke; West Point vs. Michigan.

© 29Oct49; MP4664.

16. Nov. 2, 1949. Wild West goes to prison [18th Annual Texas Prison Rodeo]. A report on American films abroad. Nehru here on visit of state. Air Force-Navy controversy gets hearing.

© 2Nov49; MP4665.

17. Nov. 5, 1949. Report on Communism. Eleven leaders of U.S. Communist party found guilty; parade welcomes Nehru to New York. The British authorities prepare for possible Communist difficulties in Hong Kong; liner arrives in Hong Kong with pictures of the Communist entry into Shanghai. Football: Notre Dame 46, Tulane 7.

© 5Nov49; MP4716.

18. Nov. 9, 1949. Russia protests, but Yugoslavia wins UN seat. What's swimmin' for '50? [California styles]. B–36 rebuttal; airmen and Army answer charges of Navy. Football: Minnesota vs. Ohio State; Southern Methodist vs. Rice.

© 9Nov49; MP4717.

19. Nov. 12, 1949. Truman attends UN cornerstone ceremony. Eyeful of stars at Hollywood premiere [of "The Heiress">[. Portugal cheers visit of Franco. Football: Michigan vs. Minnesota; Army vs. Columbia.

© 12Nov49; MP4746.

20. Nov. 16, 1949. Tennis: Gonzales loses to Kramer in pro debut. Oldest known Bible scrolls on display [at the Library of Congress, Washington]. Highlights of Franco's visit to Portugal. Newest in aviation: new channel wing plane is shown in Maryland; two Italian pilots introduce an air-car in Milan. Eisenhower urges parley on nation's welfare.

© 16Nov49; MP4747.

21. Nov. 19, 1949. King leads Greece in war remembrance. Bidault takes over reins of French government. First U.S. woman ambassador sworn in [Mrs. Eugenie Anderson, Ambassador to Denmark]. Barkley and Mrs. Hadley set the date. Eric Johnston reports on tour of Europe. [Direct broadcast from the delivery room to fathers-to-be at California hospital.] Football: Irish roll over Navy.

© 19Nov49; MP4748.

22. Nov. 23, 1949. Horse is king at big show [61st National Horse Show at Madison Square Garden]. Pre-wedding portraits: Barkley and Mrs. Hadley. New Navy chief Sherman succeeds Denfeld. America's worst civil air crash [airliner and P–38 crash over Washington's National Airport]. The height of diving thrills [at Miami Beach].

© 23Nov49; MP4749.

23. Nov. 26, 1949. Defense chiefs attend big firepower show. Minnesota "wild about Harry" [President Truman celebrates two anniversaries in St. Paul and Minneapolis]. First tests for the water-walker [in Bavaria]. Bathing suits "arty." Football: Army 35, Fordham 0; Notre Dame 34, Michigan State 21.

© 26Nov49; MP4758.

24. Nov. 30, 1949. Big top goes to college [Florida State University studies about the circus]. Coal strike truce. The top political story of '49 [November elections]. Soviet embassy [in Washington] stages lavish reception. Pro grid thriller [Philadelphia Eagles vs. Los Angeles Rams].

© 30Nov49; MP4759.

25. Dec. 3, 1949. Student riders in Texas "Bronco Bowl." Acheson promises Germany support. Washington: tribute to Unknown Soldier. Football: Ohio State 30, Illinois 17; Army 14, Penn 13; Notre Dame 42, North Carolina 6.

© 3Dec49; MP4825.

26. Dec. 7, 1949. Pioneer days recalled at photo museum [the home of George Eastman]. The meaning of Thanksgiving, featuring At home, The pilgrim, and The spirit of Thanksgiving.

© 7Dec49; MP4826.

27. Dec. 10, 1949. Happy ending to search for B–29 [northeast of Bermuda]. Vice President Barkley and bride win hearts of nation. Gridiron climax: California 33, Stanford 14; Ohio State 7, Michigan 7; North Carolina 21, Duke 20.

© 10Dec49; MP4827.

28. Dec. 14, 1949. Honors for promoting American Way. The hot dog makes a hit in Tokyo. 1949 All-America football team.

© 14Dec49; MP4828.

29. Dec. 17, 1949. Santa Claus Lane opens in Hollywood. Stanton Griffis, new Ambassador to Argentina, presents credentials to President Peron. Vice President Barkley and bride at Sea Island, Ga. Princess Elizabeth joins Duke of Edinburgh. Broadway says its farewell to Bill Robinson. The Army-Navy game.

© 17Dec49; MP4950.

30. Dec. 21, 1949. Baseball in December; behind the scenes with Big League performers during the off-season.

© 21Dec49; MP4951.

31. Dec. 24, 1949. Evacuation from Greece. The Trumans: happy holiday [at Key West] but no fish. Mrs. Barkley joins Vice President's party [at Democratic dinner in New York]. Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery of Alamein [reports on his] impressions of U. S. Fashions in the sky. Football: near upset at Dallas [Notre Dame vs. Southern Methodist].

© 24Dec49; MP4973.

32. Dec. 28, 1949. Comeback for Joe Louis? [Louis knocks out Valentino in 8th round]. General Li Tsung Jen in New York for medical care. Shah of Iran honored by our Navy. Andrei Vishinsky sails for home. Report on Tito's Yugoslavia.

© 28Dec49; MP4952.

33. Dec. 31, 1949. Battle of basketball giants [CCNY vs. Southern Methodist]. Santa makes a preview appearance. Princess Elizabeth at Malta. Grand National Bakeoff [at New York's Waldorf Astoria]. Stork knocks five times in one year [Mrs. Thelma Gibbs has twins and triplets]. London honors men of Berlin airlift.

© 31Dec49; MP4953.

PARAMOUNT PICTORIAL. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel each, sd. (Paramount Paragraphics) © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Written by Justin Herman; editors, Leslie Roush, Robert Blauvelt.

2. Tonsorial Trouble. © 9Aug40; MP10412.

6. © 16Feb40; MP9985.

PARAN-PAN-PAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10979.

PARDON ME, BUT YOU LOOK JUST LIKE MARGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Jun43; MP13704.

PARDON MY BERTH MARKS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Mar40; LP9502.

PARDON MY CLUTCH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 7 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Clyde Bruckman.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Feb48; LP1454.

PARDON MY GUN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Wyndham Gittens; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Dec42; LP11924.

PARDON MY LAMB CHOP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Broad comedy antics occur in the kitchen.

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

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane, Dorothy Granger.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Jun48; LP1684.

PARDON MY PAST. c1945. Presented by Columbia Pictures. 10 reels, sd. A Mutual production.

Credits: Producer and director, Leslie Fenton; original story, Patterson McNutt, Harlan Ware; screenplay, Earl Felton, Karl Kamb; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; film editor, Richard Heermance.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Sep45; LP13679.

PARDON MY RHYTHM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on short story by Hurd Barrett.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Felix E. Feist; screenplay, Val Burton, Eugene Conrad; photographer, Paul Ivano; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May44; LP12880.

PARDON MY SARONG. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, True Boardman, Nat Perrin, John Grant; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Jul42; LP11466.

PARDON MY STRIPES. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. Based on an idea by Adrian Johnson.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, John H. Auer; original story, Mauri Grashin, Robert T. Shannon; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Stuart Palmer; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Howard O'Neill.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jan42; LP11188.

PARDON MY TERROR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Edward Bernds.

Cast: Schilling and Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Nov46; LP1378.

PARIS AFTER DARK. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 7,734 ft., sd. Based on a story by Georges Kessel.

Credits: Director, Leonide Moguy; screenplay, Harold Buchman; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Oct43; LP12652.

PARIS CALLING. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Benjamin Glazer; director, Edwin L. Marin; screenplay, Benjamin Glazer, Charles S. Kaufman; original story collaboration, John S. Toldy; cameraman, Milton Krasner; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec41; LP10890.

PARIS IN THE SPRING. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Parade Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Harry Grey; director, Mel Epstein; original screenplay, Jack Roberts, Peter R. Brooke; music direction, Irvin Talbot; music score, Van Cleave; editor, Everett Douglas.

Cast: Roger Dann, Sally Rawlinson, Max Willenz, Guy de Vestel, Bob Baker's marionettes.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Sep47; LP1331.

PARIS IS GAY AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Nov44; MP15397.

PARIS ON THE PLATA. SEE Variety Views, no. 172.

PARIS UNDERGROUND. Released through United Artists, c1945. 96 min., sd. Based on the book by Etta Shiber in collaboration with Anne and Paul Dupre and Oscar Ray.

Credits: Producer, Constance Bennett; director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Boris Ingster, Gertrude Purcell; music score and direction, Alexander Tansman; cinematographer, Lee Garmes; film editor, Hanson Fritch.

© Constance Bennett Productions, Inc.; 14Sep45; LP13477.

PARLIAMENTARY PROCEDURE IN ACTION. Coronet Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Educational authors, Harold H. Crabill in collaboration with the Bureau of Visual Aids, Extension Division, Indiana University.

© Coronet Productions; 8Oct41; MP1724.

PARLOR, BEDROOM, AND WRATH. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Columbia All-Star comedy.

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

Cast: Eddie Quillan, Wally Vernon, Christine McIntyre, Vernon Dent.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Dec48; LP2019.

PAROLE FIXER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 6 reels, sd. Based on J. Edgar Hoover's "Persons in Hiding."

Credits: Director, Robert Florey; screenplay, William R. Lipman, Horace McCoy; photographer, Harry Fishbeck; film editor, Harvey Johnston.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Feb40; LP9401.

PAROLE, INC. Equity Pictures. Released by Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1948. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A parole board is controlled by the underworld until a government investigator assists local police in exposing the schemes of a group of criminals.

Credits: Producer, Constantin J. David; director, Alfred Zeisler; original story, Royal K. Cole, Sherman L. Lowe; screenplay, Sherman L. Lowe; music score, Alexander Laszlo; film editor, John D. Faure.

Cast: Michael O'Shea, Turhan Bey, Evelyn Ankers, Virginia Lee, Charles Bradstreet.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 11Dec48; LP2026.

THE PARSON OF PANAMINT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Peter B. Kyne.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, William McGann; screenplay, Harold Shumate, Adrian Scott; photographer, Russell Harlan; editor, Carrol Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Jun41; LP10677.

PART TIME PAL. Loew's Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Michael Lah, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Mar47; LP868.

PARTNERS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Ralston Purina Co. 1,670 ft., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Emphasizes the necessity for careful breeding, training, and nutrition in the development of superior dogs. Setters, pointers, and retrievers are shown in hunting scenes.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 16Aug48; MU3226.

PARTNERS IN PRODUCTION. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co., c1946. Presented by Aetna Life Affiliated Companies of Hartford, Conn. 2 reels, sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Leslie Coleman.

© Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.; 1Oct46; MP1550.

PARTNERS IN PROGRESS. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co., Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how the Southern Bell Telephone Company is meeting the increasing demand for rural telephone service.

© Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., Inc.; 16Jul49; MP4550.

PARTNERS IN PROSPERITY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by The Ralston-Purina Co. 1,133 ft., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows how plant design, sales promotion, and training of employees aid Purina dealers in developing a prosperous business in a Texas farming community.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 12 prints, 31May49; MU4169.

PARTNERS IN TIME. c1946. Presented by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc. 74 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Ben Hersh; director, William Nigh; original screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Lud Gluskin; editor, S. Roy Luby.

© Jack Wm. Votion Productions, Inc.; 18Apr46; LP377.

PARTNERS OF THE SUNSET. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 53 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A series of crimes follows the marriage of a middle-aged rancher to an unscrupulous young woman.

Credits: Producer, Louis Gray; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Jimmy Wakely, Dub Taylor, Christine Larson, J. Kirby, Leonard Penn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 9May48; LP1630.

PARTNERS OF THE TRAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay and story, Frank H. Young; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Heim.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 19Feb44; LP12644.

PARTNERSHIP OF FAITH. Transfilm Inc., for the Studebaker Corp., c1949. 24 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Designed for use as an employee orientation and indoctrination film in the various Studebaker plants. Through scenes photographed at the South Bend plant, the history, traditions, current practices, and aspirations of the company and employees are shown.

Credits: Producer, Walter Lowendahl; director, Marvin Rothenberg; written by Burton Rowles, Jr.; editor, Robert Klaeger.

© The Studebaker Corp.; 14Mar49; MP4837.

PARTS OF NINE. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Advisers, William A. Brownell, Laura K. Eads; script advisers, Ruth Barrell, Gladys Greenman, Brenda Lansdown, Eleanor Martin.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 10Dec47; MP2543.

PARTS OF THINGS. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Advisers, William A. Brownell, Laura K. Eads; script advisers, Ruth Barrell, Gladys Greenman, Brenda Lansdown, Eleanor Martin.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 25Nov47; MP2487.

PASO POR AQUI. SEE Four faces west.

PASS THE BISCUITS MIRANDY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4May42; MP12495.

PASS THE BISCUITS MIRANDY! c1943. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 27Aug43; MP13907.

PASSAGE TO MARSEILLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 109 min., sd. A Hal B. Wallis production. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a novel by Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall.

Credits: Director, Michael Curtiz; screenplay, Casey Robinson, Jack Moffitt; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Owen Marks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 11Mar44; LP12525.

THE PASSENGER TRAIN. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 29Aug40; MP10688.

THE PASSING OF BLACK EAGLE. SEE Black Eagle.

PASSKEY TO DANGER. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, William J. O'Sullivan; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, O'Leta Rhinehart, William Hagens; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Harry Keller.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 18Apr46; LP321.

PASSPORT TO ALCATRAZ. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Larry Darmour; director, Lewis D. Collins; original screenplay, Albert DeMond; music, Lee Zahler; film editor, Dwight Caldwell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25May40; LP9666.

PASSPORT TO DESTINY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 63 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Ray McCarey; original screenplay, Val Burton, Muriel Roy Bolton; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 25Feb44; LP12586.

PASSPORT TO HEAVEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15516.

PASSPORT TO NOWHERE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 27Jun47; MP2239.

PASSPORT TO SUEZ. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Andre de Toth; story, Alden Nash; screenplay, John Stone; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Aug43; LP12386.

PASTEUR'S LEGACY. Loew's International Corp., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on the life of Louis Pasteur.

© Loew's International Corp.; 12Mar47; MP1791.

PASTOR HALL. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by James Roosevelt. 10 reels, sd. Based on a story by Ernst Toller.

Credits: Producer, John Boulting; director, Roy Boulting; screen story, Leslie Arliss, Anna Reiner, Haworth Bromley; original music, Charles Brill, Mac Adams; music director, Charles Brill; photography, Mutz Greenbaum.

Appl. author: Charter Film Productions.

© United Artists Corp.; 5Jul40; LP9933.

PASTORALE. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Narration, Jesse William Stitt.

Appl. author: Donn Marvin.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 24Apr46; MP592.

PATHWAYS TO PROGRESS. Presented by The Clark Equipment Co. 2–1/2 reels, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Mar45; 5 prints, 9Mar45; MU15668.

PATIENCE AND FORTITUDE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Apr46; MP539.

PATIENT PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Norman McCabe; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Aug40; MP10427.

THE PATIENT VANISHES. Pathe Pictures, Ltd., England. Released through Film Classics, Inc., c1947. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the Mick Cardby detective story "They Called Him Death" by David Hume [pseud. of John Victor Turner]

Credits: Producer, John Argyle; director, Lawrence Huntington; screenplay, Edward Dryhurst, John Argyle.

Cast: James Mason, Mary Clare, Margaret Vyner, Gordon McLeod, Frederick Valk.

© Film Classics, Inc.; 1Jun47; LP1065.

PATIO MUSEUM. SEE Variety Views, no. 164.

PATRICK THE GREAT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. From an original story by Jane Hall, Frederick Kohner, Ralph Block.

Credits: Director, Frank Ryan; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser, Dorothy Bennett; music director, Don George; photographer, Frank Redman; film editor, Theodore J. Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12966.

PATRIOTIC POOCHES. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 9Apr43; LP12895.

PATROL AND TROOP CAMPING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 19 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the preparation necessary for troop camping, with camping scenes which show some of the best aspects of Scouting.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2226.

PATROL AND TROOP HIKING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Contrasts the right and wrong way to conduct hiking activities.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2225.

PATROL AND TROOP MEETINGS. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows a regular meeting of a Boy Scout troop.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2224.

PATROL AND TROOP PROGRAM PLANNING. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A scoutmaster training film indicating the need for preparatory work and demonstrating the place of the Troop Committee, the parents, the patrol, and the troop in a planned program.

© Boy Scouts of America; 30Mar48; LP2223.

PATROL BOMBER EQUIPMENT. 1 reel each, sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics. © Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

1. Cruising Gear. © title & descr., 14Jan43; 209 prints, 13Jan43; MU13195.

2. Abandon Ship. © title & descr., 11Nov43; 5 prints, 13Nov43; MU14131.

PATROLLING THE ETHER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Paul Burnford; original story and screenplay, De Vallon Scott, Alan Friedman; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr44; LP212.

PATTERN FOR PROGRESS. Charles D. Beeland Co., c1948. Presented by the Greater Atlanta Community Chest, Inc. 6 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the work of many of the agencies in the Atlanta Community Chest, emphasizing their contribution to the welfare of the city.

Credits: Director and photographer, Charles D. Beeland; technical adviser for the Community Chest and story by Arthur E. Burdge; narrator, Sid Lasher; film editor, Victor A. Lambert.

© Greater Atlanta Community Chest, Inc.; 20Aug48; MP4421.

PATTY CAKE, BAKER MAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jul43; MP13726.

PAUNCH 'N JUDY. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 595 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 9)

Credits: Story, Manny Gould; animation, Ben Harrison; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Dec40; LP10258.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Apr41; MP11033.

PAY DAY ROLLS AROUND. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Apr46; MP488.

PAYDAY—SOMEDAY. Robert Greene Lee, c1948. 80 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: An illustrated sermon based on the Old Testament story of Ahab, King of Israel.

© Robert Greene Lee; 6Dec48; MP4422.

PAY DIRT. Presented by Dow Chemical Co.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Dow Chemical Co.; title, descr., & 207 prints, 3Feb41; MU10807.

PAY LOADS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Introduces the 1949 Chevrolet truck line, and features the versatility of the new 1949 Chevrolet stake truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 4 prints, 31May49; MU4176.

PAY LOADS PAY OFF. William J. Ganz Co., c1947. Presented by the Institute of Visual Training. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© William J. Ganz Co.; 1Mar47; MP1920.

PAY TO LEARN. SEE The Navy Comes Through.

PAYING THE PIPER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster; animation, Manny Gould, John Carey, Charles McKimson, Phil DeLara.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 15Dec47; MP3966.

THE PAYOFF. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Jack Schwarz; director, Arthur Dreifuss; original story, Arthur Hoerl; screenplay, Edward Dein; music score, Charles Dant; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 30Jan43; LP11817.

THE PAY-OFF PENCIL. SEE The Pil'o Money Pencil.

PEABODY'S MERMAID. SEE Mr. Peabody and the Mermaid.

PEACE BY ADOLF HITLER. SEE The March of Time, v. 7, no. 13.

PEACE MARSHAL. SEE The Kansan.

PEACE ON EARTH. Loew's Inc., c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 804 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Hugh Harman production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Dec39; MP10210.

PEACEFUL QUEBEC AT WAR. SEE Variety Views, no. 102.

PEACHY PRODUCTIONS PRESENT—.

© Calvin Herbert Besore; title, descr., & 3 prints. 12Oct47; MU2396.

PEACOCK'S FEATHER. SEE Night in Paradise.

THE PEARL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An F.A.M.A.-Aguila production. Based on the story by John Steinbeck.

Summary: An allegorical picture about the disastrous effect of sudden riches on the fortunes of a Mexican fisherman.

Credits: Producer, Oscar Dancigers; director, Emilio Fernandez; screenplay, John Steinbeck, Emilio Fernandez, Jackson Wagner; music, Antonio Diaz Conde; film editor, Gloria Schoemann.

Cast: Pedro Armendariz, Maria Elena Marques, Fernando Wagner, Charles Rooner.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec47; LP1584.

PEARL OF DEATH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. Based on "The Six Napoleons" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Producer and director, Roy William Neill; screenplay, Bertram Milhauser; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Aug44; LP12882.

PÉČE O OČI. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP794.

PÊCHEURS DE LA NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 29Jun46; MP838.

PECK UP YOUR TROUBLES. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 22Oct45; MP16430.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Nov42; MP13100.

PEDAGOGICAL INSTITUTION (COLLEGE TO YOU). Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph Stultz; animation, Abner Kneitel, Arnold Gillespie.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Sep40; LP9917.

PEDESTRIAN PATTERNS. 400 ft.

Credits: Producer and director, Edward Thomas Myers.

© Edward Thomas Myers; title, descr., & 4 prints, 11Apr45; MU15833.

PEDRO. SEE Saludos Amigos.

A PEE-KOOL-YAR-SIT-CHEE-AY-SHUN. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 657 ft., sd., color. Adapted from the "Li'l Abner" cartoon strip by Al Capp.

Credits: Story and direction, Sid Marcus; animation, Jim Armstrong, Grant Simmons; music, Edward Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 11Sep44; LP12817.

PEEKS AT HOLLYWOOD. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd. (Vitaphone Varieties)

Credits: Director, Irving Applebaum; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec45; MP155.

A PEEP IN THE DEEP. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 570 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 6)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Harry Love, Louie Lilly; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Aug40; LP9852.

PEEP IN THE DEEP. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 1 reel.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar46; LP350.

PEG LEG PETE, THE PIRATE. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP12005.

PEGGY O'NEILL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16129.

PEIPING FAMILY. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1948. 21 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A documentary film showing the traditions and customs of middle-class Chinese life, with emphasis on the struggles of an American-educated Chinese man to support and educate his large family.

Credits: Director, William James; narration, Basil Beyea.

© International Film Foundation, Inc.; 30Sep48; MP3763.

THE PELICAN AND THE SNIPE. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd. A Walt Disney South American production.

© Walt Disney Productions; 29Nov43; LP12603.

PELICAN PRANKS. SEE Variety Views, no. 158.

THE PENALTY. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a play by Martin Berkeley.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Harry Ruskin, John C. Higgins; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Mar41; LP10318.

PENNSYLVANIA LOCAL GOVERNMENT IN ACTION. Pennsylvania State College, c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Directed and written by Frank Neusbaum; narrator, William S. Livengood, Jr.

© The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; 1Dec45; MP29.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Aug42; MP12822.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Jul42; MP12817.

PENNY SERENADE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 12 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Martha Cheavens.

Credits: Producer and director, George Stevens; story, Martha Cheavens; screenplay, Morrie Ryskind; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Otto Meyer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 24Apr41; LP10421.

PENNY TO THE RESCUE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 954 ft., sd., color. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 23Jan41; LP10345.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec44; MP15513.

PENTHOUSE RHYTHM. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Frank Gross; director, Eddie Cline; story, Min Selvin, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Stanley Roberts, Howard Dimsdale; photographer, William Sickner; film editor, Russel Schoengarth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 20Nov44; LP12974.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5May41; MP11123.

PEOPLE ARE FUNNY. c1946. Presented by Paramount. 10 reels, sd. A Pine-Thomas production. Based on John Guedel's radio program.

Credits: Producer and director, Sam White; original story, David Lang; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, David Lang; editor, Henry Adams.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Jan46; LP22.

PEOPLE OF HAWAII. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 17Dec40; MP10829.

PEOPLE OF HAWAII. SEE Habitantes del Hawaii.

PEOPLE OF MEXICO. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Wallace W. Atwood.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Mar39; MP9820.

PEOPLE OF MEXICO. SEE A Vida Rural No México.

PEOPLE OF RUSSIA. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 922 ft., sd., b&w. (A FitzPatrick Miniature)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Jan43; MP13212.

PEOPLE OF SABA. Coronet, c1945. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: CIF Staff.

© Esquire, Inc.; 31Dec45; MP1534.

A PEOPLE OF THE CONGO; THE MANGBETU. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: James P. Chapin.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Jul39; MP9825.

A PEOPLE OF THE CONGO: THE MANGBETU. SEE La Tribu Mangbetu.

PEOPLE OF WESTERN CHINA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 26Dec40; MP10830.

PEOPLE OF WESTERN CHINA. SEE Los Chinos Occidentales.

PEOPLE ON PAPER. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 972 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Herbert Morgan; original story and screenplay, John Nesbitt; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Oct45; LP13623.

THE PEOPLE VS. DR. KILDARE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on an original story by Lawrence P. Bachmann and Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust]

Credits: Director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Willis Goldbeck, Harry Ruskin; music score, David Snell; film editor, Ralph Winters.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Apr41; LP10443.

PEOPLES OF THE SOVIET UNION. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1946. 33 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Robert Spencer Carr.

© International Film Foundation, Inc.; 1Oct46; MP2210.

PEPE LE MOKO. SEE Casbah.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr43; MP13437.

PERCENT IN EVERYDAY LIFE. Coronet, c1948. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: This film motivates an interest in the study of percent, clarifies the meaning of percent, and explains the use of percent in everyday activities. For 6th to 9th grade levels.

Credits: Educational collaborator, H. C. Christofferson.

© David A. Smart; 31Aug48; MP3716.

PERFECT FORM. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., color.

Credits: Cinecolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 40 prints, 21Oct40; MU10540.

THE PERFECT CASE. SEE Boomerang.

THE PERFECT MARRIAGE. Hal Wallis Productions, Inc., c1946. 9 reels. Based upon the play by Samson Raphaelson.

Credits: Director, Lewis Allen; screenplay, Leonard Spigelgass.

© Hal Wallis Productions, Inc.; 18Jul46; LP436.

A PERFECT PAIR. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Introduces the complete line of Dearborn Motors plows, showing a Ford tractor at work with a variety of plows.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 13Apr40; MU3993.

THE PERFECT POWERS GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Sep41; MP11501.

THE PERFECT SNOB. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,600 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Ray McCarey, original screenplay, Lee Loeb, Harold Buchman; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Dec41; LP11020.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10906.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11077.

PERFORMANCE PLUS. Presented by Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp.; title & descr., 22Jun40; 253 prints, 24Jun40; MU10301.

PERILOUS HOLIDAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 9 reels, sd. Based upon the magazine serial by Robert Carson.

Credits: Producer, Phil L. Ryan; director, Edward H. Griffith; screenplay, Roy Chanslor; music score, Paul Sawtell; music direction, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 21Mar46; LP250.

PERILOUS WATERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the story "Search" by Leon Ware.

Summary: A Navy veteran is hired by a racketeer to kill a newspaper publisher, a crusader against gambling. Action takes place on board the publisher's yacht.

Credits: Producer, Jack Wrather; director, Jack Bernhard; screenplay, Richard Wormser, Francis Rosenwald; music score, Rudy Schrager; film editor, Stewart S. Frye.

Cast: Don Castle, Audrey Long, Peggy Knudsen, Samuel S. Hinds, Gloria Holden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Feb48; LP1570.

PERILS OF NYOKA. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; 27Jun42; no. 1–5, LP11567; no. 6–10, LP11613; no. 11–15, LP11633.

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

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. Desert Intrigue.

2. Death's Chariot.

3. Devil's Crucible.

4. Ascending Doom.

5. Fatal Second.

6. Human Sacrifice.

7. Monster's Clutch.

8. Tuareg Vengeance.

9. Burned Alive.

10. Treacherous Trail.

11. Unknown Peril.

12. Underground Tornado.

13. Thundering Death.

14. Blazing Barrier.

15. Satan's Fury.

THE PERILS OF PAULINE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 92 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a story by P. J. Wolfson, with a salute to Charles W. Goddard who wrote the original serial "The Perils of Pauline."

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, George Marshall; screenplay, P. J. Wolfson, Frank Butler; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan; editor, Arthur Schmidt.

Cast: Betty Hutton, John Lund, Billy De Wolfe, William Demarest, Constance Collier.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4Jul47; LP1080.

PERILS OF THE JUNGLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities)

Credits: Producer, Attilio Gatti; written by Herald Medford; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 21Oct41; MP11664.

PERILS OF THE ROYAL MOUNTED. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, James W. Horne; original screenplay, Basil Dickey, Scott Littleton, Louis Heifetz, Jesse A. Duffy.

1. The Totem Talks. © 25May42; LP11444.

2. The Night Raiders. © 27May42; LP11445.

3. The Water God's Revenge. © 27May42; LP11446.

4. Beware, The Vigilantes. © 15Jun42; LP11447.

5. The Masked Mountie. © 19Jun42; LP11448.

6. Underwater Gold. © 22Jun42; LP11449.

7. Bridge to the Sky. © 1Jul42; LP11450.

8. Lost in the Mine. © 6Jul42; LP11499.

9. Into the Trap. © 13Jul42; LP11500.

10. Betrayed by Law. © 20Jul42; LP11496.

11. Blazing Beacons. © 27Jul42; LP11497.

12. The Mountie's Last Chance. © 14Aug42; LP11516.

13. Painted White Man. © 15Aug42; LP11517.

14. Burned at the Stake. © 28Aug42; LP11550.

15. The Mountie Gets His Man. © 1Sep42; LP11551.

PERSONALITY DEVELOPMENT SERIES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.

Credits: Collaborator, Lawrence K. Frank.

Helping the Child to Face the Don'ts. © 13Dec48; MP3682.

Helping the Child to Accept the Do's. © 13Dec48; MP3683.

Emergence of Personality; baby meets his parents. © 28Dec48; MP3822.

PERSONALITY KID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, George Sherman; story, Cromwell MacKechnie; screenplay, Lewis Helmar Herman; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Aug46; LP590.

PERSONALITY! PLUS!! Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Apr42; MP12412.

PERSONALIZED LUBRICATION SERVICE. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), c1946. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, M. Constable; story, James P. Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 1Sep46; LP980.

PERSONALIZED PRODUCT DISPLAY. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Co. (Indiana), c1947. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Director, O. P. Lippert; story, James Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 25Jun47; MP2545.

PERSONALIZED SERVICE. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc. for the Standard Oil Company (Indiana), c1946. 3 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Director, M. Constable; story, James P. Prindle.

© Standard Oil Co. (Indiana); 15Jul46; LP979.

PERSONS IN HIDING. SEE

Parole Fixer.

Queen of the Mob.

PERU; ein Volk der Berge. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. German version of "Peru; People of the Mountains."

Summary: Contrasts Peru's modern capital city, Lima, with the ruins of the ancient Inca empire and with Cuzco, contemporary Indian city. The simple, almost primitive customs of the descendants of the once-proud Indian peoples are exemplified by the activities of an Indian family in a remote plateau village. For middle grades, high school, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Earle K. James.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Aug49; MP4614.

PERU; people of the mountains. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 26Dec40; MP10831.

PERU; people of the mountains. SEE Peru; ein Volk der Berge.

PESAS: TIRO, DISCO, JABALINA, MARTILLO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Lawson Robertson, Dean Cromwell and the Amateur Athletic Union, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "Weight Events."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Feb47; MP1675.

A PEST IN THE HOUSE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 8Aug47; MP2255.

PEST PILOT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug41; MP11436.

THE PEST THAT CAME TO DINNER. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, George Hill; animation, John Carey, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 7Oct49 (in notice: 1947); MP4586.

PET PEEVES. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David Barclay; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen, David Barclay; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun47; LP1156.

PETE ROLEUM AND HIS COUSINS. Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc., color.

Credits: Production and scenario, Joseph Losey; animation, Charley Bowers; music, Hanns Eisler; photography, Harold Muller; editor, Helen Van Dongen.

© Petroleum Industry Exhibition, Inc.; title, descr., & 149 prints, 31May41; LU10506.

PETE SMITH'S SCRAPBOOK. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 850 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; MP12628.

PETE THE PIPER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar41; MP10967.

PETER RABBIT'S ADVENTURES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, si., b&w, 8mm.

Summary: Shows what happens to Peter when he leaves home to eat the farmer's lettuce.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Feb48; MP3141.

PETRA. World Window, Inc., London, c1938. Distributed by United Artists. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 6)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director and film editor, Hans Nieter; music, Ludwig Brav; photography, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© World Window, Inc.; 1Nov38; MP10035.

PETROLEUM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Lester E. Klimm, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (World Energy Resources Series)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1697.

PETROLEUM. SEE Erdoel.

PETTICOAT LARCENY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 61 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Jack Townley, Stuart Palmer; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Jul43; LP12152.

PETTICOAT POLITICS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd. (The Higgins Family)

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Taylor Caven; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 31Jan41; LP10252.

THE PHANTOM. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943–44. 2 reels each. Based on the cartoon character created by Leon Falk and Ray Moore. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; screenplay, Leslie J. Swabacker, Morgan B. Cox, Victor McLeod, Sherman Lowe.

1. The Sign of the Skull. © 24Dec43; LP12529.

2. The Man Who Never Dies. © 31Dec43; LP12537.

3. A Traitor's Code. © 7Jan44; LP12560.

4. The Seat of Judgment. © 15Jan44; LP12567.

5. The Ghost Who Walks. © 22Jan44; LP12583.

6. Jungle Whispers. © 29Jan44; LP12608.

7. The Mystery Well. © 5Feb44; LP12779.

8. In Quest of the Keys. © 12Feb44; LP12617.

9. The Fire Princess. © 19Feb44; LP12632.

10. The Chamber of Death. © 26Feb44; LP12641.

11. The Emerald Key. © 5Mar44; LP12648.

12. The Fangs of the Beast. © 12Mar44; LP12780.

13. The Road to Zoloz. © 17Mar44; LP12684.

14. The Lost City. © 24Mar44; LP12691.

15. Peace in the Jungle. © 31Mar44; LP12714.

THE PHANTOM COWBOY. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; original screenplay, Doris Schroeder; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 14Feb41; LP10303.

PHANTOM EMPIRE. SEE Radio Ranch.

THE PHANTOM FILLY. SEE Home in Indiana.

PHANTOM KILLER. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, A. W. Hackel; director, William Beaudine; screenplay, Karl Brown; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 28Aug42; LP11546.

PHANTOM LADY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. Based on the novel by William Irish.

Credits: Associate producer, Joan Harrison; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, Bernard C. Schoenfeld; music director, Don George; photographer, Elwood Bredell; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Feb44; LP12505.

PHANTOM OF CHINATOWN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Paul Malvern; director, Phil Rosen; original story, Ralph Bettinson; screenplay, Joseph West; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 18Nov40; LP10160.

PHANTOM OF 42nd STREET. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Jack Harvey and Milton Raison.

Credits: Associate producers, Martin Mooney, Albert Herman; director, Albert Herman; screenplay, Milton Raison; music, Karl Hajos; film editor, Hugh Winn.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 2May45; LP13570.

THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd., color. Based on the composition by Gaston Leroux.

Credits: Producer, George Waggner; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Eric Taylor, Samuel Hoffenstein; music director, Edward Ward; cameraman, Hal Mohr. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 30Sep43; LP12298.

PHANTOM OF THE PLAINS. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Red Harman's comic "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer, R. G. Springsteen; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Earle Snell, Charles Kenyon; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Aug45; LP13494.

THE PHANTOM PINTO. Ellkay Productions, c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Richard C. Kahn.

© Ellkay Productions; 30Dec40; LP10147.

THE PHANTOM PLAINSMEN. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Robert Yost. Based on characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; screenplay, Robert Yost, Barry Shipman; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 16Jun42; LP11510.

PHANTOM RAIDERS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. (A Nick Carter Adventure)

Credits: Producer, Frederick Stephani; director, Jacques Tourneur; original story, Jonathan Latimer; screenplay, William R. Lipman; music score, David Snell; film editor, Conrad A. Nervig.

© Loew's Inc.; 31May40; LP9684.

THE PHANTOM RIDER. c1945–46. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each, sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; [no. 1–6], 26Oct45; LP13678; no. 7–12, 8Jan46; LP106.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Fred Brannon; original screenplay, Albert DeMond, Basil Dickey, Jesse Duffy, Lynn Perkins, Barney Sarecky; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold R. Minter.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Avenging Spirit.

2. Flaming Ambush.

3. Hoofs of Doom.

4. Murder Masquerade.

5. Flying Fury.

6. Blazing Peril.

7. Gauntlet of Guns.

8. Behind the Mask.

9. The Captive Chief.

10. Beasts at Bay.

11. The Death House.

12. The Last Stand.

THE PHANTOM SPEAKS. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, John English; original screenplay, John K. Butler; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1May45; LP13243.

THE PHANTOM SUBMARINE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Ralph Cohn; director, Charles Barton; story, Augustus Muir; screenplay, Joseph Krumgold; music director, M. W. Stoloff; photography, Barney McGill; film editor, William Lyon.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Dec40; LP10981.

THE PHANTOM THIEF. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 7 reels, sd. Based upon the character created by Jack Boyle.

Credits: Producer, John Stone; director, D. Ross Lederman; story, G. A. Snow; screenplay, Richard Wormser, Richard Weil; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2May46; LP392.

PHANTOM VALLEY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In attempting to bring peace to warring ranchers and homesteaders, the Durango Kid discovers that the leader of the troublemakers is a young girl trying to obtain by murder all the lands in Phantom Valley.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Virginia Hunter, Ozie Waters and his Colorado Rangers.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Dec47; LP1402.

PHANTOMS INC. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Harold Young; original story, Brainerd Duffield; screenplay, Edward Bock; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun45; LP13392.

THE PHARMACIST. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Sep46; MP1191.

PHIL THE FLUTER'S BALL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Jun42; MP12714.

THE PHILADELPHIA STORY. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Philip Barry.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, George Cukor; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Nov40; LP10102.

THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. Eastman Kodak Co., c1942. 954 ft. Revised.

Appl. author: George W. Hoke.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; 11Jun42; MP12720.

THE PHILIPPINE REPUBLIC. SEE The March of Time, 1946.

THE PHILIPPINES 1898–1946. SEE The March of Time, v. 6, no. 10.

PHILMONT ADVENTURE. Boy Scouts of America, c1949. 1,275 ft., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The significance of the phrase "Scouting in the out-of-doors" is illustrated by the activities of the Philmont Scout Ranch in New Mexico.

© Boy Scouts of America; 15Apr49; LP2660.

PHILO VANCE RETURNS. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, Robert E. Kent; music, Albert Glasser; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Gene Fowler, Jr.

Cast: William Wright, Terry Austin, Leon Belasco.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 14Jun47; LP1052.

PHILO VANCE'S GAMBLE. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 62 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Basil Wrangell; original story, Lawrence Edmund Taylor; screenplay, Eugene Conrad, Arthur St. Claire; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

Cast: Alan Curtis, Terry Austin, Frank Jenks, Tala Birell.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 12Mar47; LP1205.

PHILO VANCE'S SECRET MISSION. Eagle Lion Films, Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Howard Welsch; director, Reginald Le Borg; original screenplay, Lawrence Edmund Taylor; film editor, W. Donn Hayes.

Cast: Alan Curtis, Sheila Ryan, Tala Birell.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 5Aug47; LP1180.

PHONEY BALONEY. Screen Gems, Inc., c1945. 670 ft., sd., color. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sid Marcus; animation, Paul Sommer, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 1Nov45; LP99.

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

Summary: Pat shows his puppet, Pirro, how to play records on the phonograph.

Credits: Directed and written by Alvin J. Gordon.

© Gateway Productions, Inc.; 26Jan49; (in notice: 1948); LP2337.

PHONY CRONIES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,492 ft., sd.

Credits: Producers, Del Lord, Hugh McCollum; direction, story, and screenplay, Harry Edwards; film editor, Burton Kramer.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Aug42; LP12058.

PHONY EXPRESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,562 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Nov43; LP12344.

PHOTO FRENZY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 5)

Summary: A film on photography that shows technical procedures, members of a camera club on a field trip, and some of the masterpieces that camera enthusiasts produce.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Larry O'Reilly; script, Jerome Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 5Mar48; MP2894.

PHOTO-LITHOGRAPHY. Eastman Kodak Co. 44 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Presents to photo-lithographers the advantages that result from using Kodak products.

Appl. author: Lloyd Reber.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 20Aug48; MU3347.

PHOTOGRAPHY. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© Arthur P. Twogood; 15Aug46; MP1075.

THE PHYSIOLOGY OF NORMAL MENSTRUATION. Schering Corp., c1948. 29 min., color, sd., 16mm.

Summary: A scientific presentation of the basic physiology of menstruation. A film for the medical profession to be used as a review of the subject for professional groups and as an aid in the instruction of students.

Appl. author: Norman L. Heminway.

© Schering Corp.; 23Jul48; MP4039.

PIANO MOONER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,572 ft., sd.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Langdon; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Dec42; LP12047.

PIANO RHYTHM. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Screenliner, no. 1)

Summary: Presents Jan August who plays "Malaguena" and "Nola" and Kitty Kallen who sings "Kiss Me Sweet."

Credits: Producer, Burton Benjamin; director, Herman Fuchs; editor, Isaac Kleinerman.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 9Sep49; MP4810.

PIANO SERENADE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Nov46; MP1309.

PICK A PECK OF PLUMBERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,575 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Aug44; LP13201.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12May41; MP11134.

PICKLED PUSS. Screen Gems, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Color Rhapsody, no. 133)

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Cal Howard; animation, Grant Simmons, Paul Sommers, Morey Reden.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Sep48; LP1826.

PICKUPS PAY OFF. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by General Motors Corp., Chevrolet Division. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the diversified uses that can be made of a 1949 Chevrolet pickup truck.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 4 prints, 31May49; MU4180.

PICNIC PANIC. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 857 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Direction and story, Bob Wickersham; animation, Chick Otterstrom, Paul Sommer; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 20Jun46; LP549.

THE PICTURE OF DORIAN GRAY. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w with color sequences. Based on the novel by Oscar Wilde.

Credits: Producer, Pandro S. Berman; direction and screenplay, Albert Lewin; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Mar45; LP13198.

PICTURE PIONEER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 35mm. (Person-Oddity, no. 153)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; script, Frank Kelly; narration, Douglas Browning.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Jun46; MP741.

PICTURESQUE MASSACHUSETTS. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 844 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Oct42; MP12908.

PICTURESQUE PATZCUARO. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 846 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Wilfrid Cline. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; MP12589.

PIE IN THE EYE. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: A slapstick comedy adapted from the old Mack Sennett comedies.

Credits: Narration, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore; film editor, DeLeon Anthony.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Dec48; MP3738.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15572.

THE PIED PIPER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 7,859 ft. Based on the novel by Nevil Shute.

Credits: Director, Irving Pichel; written for the screen by Nunnally Johnson; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Aug42; LP12949.

THE PIED PIPER OF BASIN STREET. c1944. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walt Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Verne Harding, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 27Nov44; MP15492.

PIER 13. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 5,970 ft., sd. Based on a story by Barry Conners and Philip Klein.

Credits: Director, Eugene Forde; screenplay, Stanley Rauh, Clark Andrews; music director, Cyril J. Mockridge.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 23Aug40; LP9863.

PIERRE OF THE PLAINS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the play by Edgar Selwyn.

Credits: Producer, Edgar Selwyn; director, George B. Seitz; screenplay, Lawrence Kimble, Bertram Millhauser; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Jun42; LP11425.

PIG FOOT PETE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP56.

PIG MEAT THROWS THE BULL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Dec45; MP150.

PIGEON PATROL. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Ralph Somerville; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions; 17Jul42; MP12691.

PIGS AND ELEPHANTS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The characteristics and habits of domestic pigs, of foreign relatives of the domestic pig, of hippopotami, and of African and Indian elephants.

Credits: Collaborators, Eliot C. Williams, Donald M. Hatfield.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 28Feb47; MP2586.

PIGS IN A POLKA. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Blue Ribbon Cartoon) A re-release.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Oct49 (in notice: 1942); MP4648.

PIGSKIN PASSES. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Spectacular plays from outstanding football games of the past and present.

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

© The Vitaphone Corp., 23Sep49; MP4582.

PIGSKIN SKILL. Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Presents the skill and talents of football players who have brought fame to the Los Angeles Rams.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, Carl Dudley; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Sep48; MP3269.

PIGTAIL PILOT. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 138)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Irwin Darlington.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 6Dec44; MP15490.

LA PILA SIMPLE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Morris Meister, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Spanish version of "The Primary Cell."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 6Feb47; MP1676.

THE PILGRIM LADY. c1946. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, William J. O'Sullivan; director, Lesley Selander; original screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Richard Cherwin; cinematographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Nov46; LP670.

PILGRIM PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Warren Foster; animation, Norman McCabe.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Mar40; MP10046.

A PILGRIMAGE TO AMSTERDAM FOR THE WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES, 1948. 900 ft., color, 16mm.

Summary: Scenes of a trip from New York to the meeting of the World Council of Churches in Amsterdam, including views of Paris, London, Stockholm, and Copenhagen.

Credits: Produced, photographed, and narrated by Edwin L. Whisler.

© Edwin L. Whisler; title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Sep49; MU4563.

A PILHA ELÉTRICA. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Morris Meister, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "The Primary Cell."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Jan47; MP1624.

PILLOW OF DEATH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; original story, Dwight V. Babcock; screenplay, George Bricker; photographer, Jerry Ash; film editor, Edward Curtis.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 3Oct45; LP13649.

PILLOW TO POST. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 92 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stageplay by Rose Simon Kohn.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Vincent Sherman; screenplay, Charles Hoffman; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Jerome Moross; film editor, Alan Crosland, Jr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Jun45; LP13304.

THE PIL'O MONEY PENCIL; or, THE PAY-OFF PENCIL. c1940. 1 reel.

© Frank Duffy; 20Mar40; MP10079.

PILOT NO. 5. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 7 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, B. P. Fineman; director, George Sidney; original story and screenplay, David Hertz; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Apr43; LP11995.

PILOTING. Springer Pictures, Inc. for the United States Navy.

Appl. author: John H. Obold.

© Springer Pictures, Inc.; title, descr., & 6 prints each, 26Jun43; pt. 1, MU13705; pt. 2, MU13706.

PIN GAMES. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 4)

Summary: An explanation of different types of bowling; scenes of bowling at Worcester, Massachusetts, and of the bowling stars and champions, Michael Litrenta, Elizabeth Barger, Ralph Keeney, and Joe Norris.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; narrator, Red Barber; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 21Dec47; MP2650.

PIN MARIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Apr46; MP426.

PIN UP GIRL. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 7,450 ft., sd. Based on a story by Libbie Block.

Credits: Director, Bruce Humberstone; screenplay, Robert Ellis, Helen Logan, Earl Baldwin; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10May44; LP12839.

PIN-UP POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Jul44; MP14999.

PIN-UPS ON PARADE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14647.

A PINCH IN TIME. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Hugh Herbert is mistaken for a pearl thief.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Del Lord; screenplay, Edward Ullman; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Hugh Herbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Nov48; LP1956.

PINKY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1949. 102 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Cid Ricketts Sumner's novel, "Quality."

Summary: A drama dealing with the racial question as it affects a light-skinned Negress who returns to the South after being accepted as a white girl in Boston.

Credits: Producer, Darryl F. Zanuck; director, Elia Kazan; screenplay, Philip Dunne, Dudley Nichols; music director, Alfred Newman; film editor, Harmon Jones.

Cast: Jeanne Crain, Ethel Barrymore, Ethel Waters, William Lundigan, Basil Ruysdael.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29Sep49; LP2671.

PINKY TOMLIN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; photographers, George Webber, J. Burgi Contner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Jul40; MP10381.

PINOCCHIO. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 10 reels. From the story by Collodi.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Jan40; LP9415.

PINS AND CUSHIONS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Paul Douglas' Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photographer, Jack Kuhne; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Feb46; MP360.

THE PINTO BANDIT. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Alfred Stern; direction and original screenplay, Elmer Clifton; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 27Apr44; LP12618.

THE PINTO KID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Nov40; LP10084.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec43; MP14810.

PIONEER DAYS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry S. Webb; story, Forrest Sheldon; screenplay, Bennett Cohen; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 17Jan40; LP9380.

A PIONEER HOME. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A general view of pioneer life showing the furnishings and physical surroundings of the home, the hard work and simple pleasures of family life. For primary and intermediate grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Viola Theman.

© David A. Smart; 17Nov48; MP3721.

PIONEER JUSTICE. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Adrian Page; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: "Lash" La Rue, Al "Fuzzy" St. John, Jennifer Holt.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 29May47; LP1133.

THE PIONEERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. From the novel by James Fenimore Cooper.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Al Herman; screenplay, Charles Andersen; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 10May41; LP10468.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Aug43; MP13854.

PIONEERS OF THE FRONTIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Nelson; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Jan40; LP9369.

PIONEERS OF THE PLAINS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP14213.

PIONEERS OF THE WEST. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Harry Grey; director, Lester Orlebeck; original screenplay, Jack Natteford, Karen DeWolf, Gerry Geraghty; music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Mar40; LP9533.

PIP-EYE, PUP-EYE, POOP-EYE AND PEEP-EYE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Seymour Kneitel; animation, Seymour Kneitel, George Germanetti.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Apr42; LP11213.

PIPE DREAMS. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov46; MP1291.

THE PIPE OF PLENTY. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Michigan Consolidated Gas Company. 811 ft., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates how the Michigan Consolidated Gas Company serves the community, and features the planning and construction of a new pipe line.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 27May49; 11 prints, 31May49; MU4181.

THE PIRATE. Loew's Inc., c1948. 102 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture. Based on the play by S. N. Behrman.

Summary: In this musical comedy, with the setting laid in a mythical Caribbean seaport, a clever traveling actor and his troupe detect the disguise of a pirate and rescue a maiden from his power.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Vincente Minnelli; screenplay, Albert Hackett, Frances Goodrich; music director, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Blanche Sewell.

Cast: Judy Garland, Gene Kelly, Walter Slezak, Gladys Cooper, Reginald Owen.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Mar48 (in notice: 1947); LP1556.

THE PIRATES OF CAPRI. Film Classics, Inc., c1949. 94 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An historical adventure drama filmed in Italy about a nobleman who secretly leads the people of Naples to revolt against the tyrannical Bourbon rule in 1799.

Credits: Producer, Victor Pahlen; director, Edgar G. Ulmer; story and adaptation, G. A. Colonna, George Moser, B. Valeri; screenplay, Sidney Alexander; music, Nina Rota; film editor, R. Lucidi.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Binnie Barnes, Mariella Lotti, Rudolph Serato, Alan Curtis.

© Industrie Cinematografiche Socali S.R.L.; 1Dec49; LP2705.

PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 57 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Howard Bretherton; story, Berne Giler; screenplay, Doris Schroeder, J. Benton Cheney; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Oct42; LP11723.

PIRATES ON HORSEBACK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Ethel La Blanche, J. Benton Cheney; photography, Russell Harlan; film editor, Sherman A. Rose.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23May41; LP10525.

PIRATE'S TREASURE. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After digging madly all over the beach, the pirates find a treasure chest containing ice-cold Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 19Sep49 (in notice: 1948); LP2612.

PISTOL PACKIN' MAMA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Sep43; MP13932.

PISTOL PACKIN' MAMA. c1943. 7 reels, sd. Based on the song by Al Dexter.

Credits: Associate producer, Eddy White; director, Frank Woodruff; original story, Arthur Caesar, Edward Dein; screenplay, Edward Dein, Fred Schiller; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Tony Martinelli.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Dec43; LP12457.

PISTOL PACKIN' NITWITS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,558 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Apr45; LP13538.

PISTOL PACKIN' PAPA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Dec43; MP14317.

PITCH A BOOGIE WOOGIE. Lord-Warner Pictures, Inc., c1948. 4 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Musical short, with a brief plot that offers an opportunity for slapstick.

Credits: Director, William Lord.

© Lord-Warner Pictures, Inc.; 15Jan48; LP1414.

PITCHIN' IN THE KITCHEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,671 ft., sd.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 10Sep43; LP12258.

PITCHIN' WOO AT THE ZOO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 1Sep44; LP12936.

PITFALL. Regal Films, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1948. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Jay Dratler.

Summary: A crime melodrama in which an insurance agent, bored with the routine of domesticity and business, seeks excitement and finds disaster.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Bischoff; director, Andre de Toth; screenplay, Karl Kamb; music director, Louis Forbes; film editor, Walter Thompson.

Cast: Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott, Jane Wyatt, Raymond Burr, John Litel.

© Regal Films, Inc.; 13Aug48; LP1760.

PITTSBURGH. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Lewis Seiler; original story, George Owen, Tom Reed; screenplay, Kenneth Gamet, Tom Reed; music director, Charles Previn; photography, Robert DeGrasse; film editor, Paul Landers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Dec42; LP11720.

THE PITTSBURGH KID. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd. Based on a novel by Octavus Roy Cohen.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Jack Townley; screenplay, Earl Felton, Houston Branch; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 29Aug41; LP10697.

PIXIE PICNIC. Walter Lantz Productions, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Musical Miniatures)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Verne Harding, Fred Moore; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 3Sep48; MP3435.

PLA-LADY. 1 reel, 16mm.

Summary: Performed by children under eight years of age who imitate the actions of their elders when they dress and rehearse for a musical show and attend a banquet.

Credits: Produced and written by William M. Riddick.

© Stanley Riddick Studio; title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Sep49; MU4838.

PLAIN FACTS. American Social Hygiene Association, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Narrator, Walter Clarke.

© American Social Hygiene Association; 31Jul41; MP11700.

PLAIN FACTS. SEE La Escueta Verdad.

PLAIN TURNING ON THE METAL WORKING LATHE. Burton Holmes Films, Inc. for South Bend Lathe Works, c1941. 1 reel, sd. Based on the handbook "How To Run a Lathe."

Appl. authors: John J. O'Brien, Russel E. Frushour.

© South Bend Lathe Works; 15Aug41; MP11541.

PLAINSMAN AND THE LADY. c1946. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Joseph Kane; original story, Michael Uris, Ralph Spence; screenplay, Richard Wormser; music, George Antheil; music director, Cy Feuer.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 2Sep46; LP683.

PLAN FOR DESTRUCTION. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; original story and screenplay, Karl Kamb, John C. Higgins; music score, Nathaniel Shilkret; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Mar43; LP11891.

PLANE DAFFY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Frank Tashlin; story, Warren Foster; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 16Oct44; MP15305.

PLANE GOOFY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 22Nov40; MP10802.

PLANER AND SHAPER OPERATION. Film Productions Co., c1941. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Roy Arthur Clapp.

© Film Productions Co.; 1Sep41; MP11610.

PLANES OF THE U. S. NAVY. Time, Inc., c1942. 2 reels.

© Time, Inc.; 9Jul42; MP13785.

PLANES WITHOUT PILOTS, sd., 16mm.

© Bell Aircraft Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 18Dec46; MP1402.

PLANNING FOR GOOD EATING. Walt Disney Productions, for the Institute of Inter-American Affairs, c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm. (Health for the Americas)

Summary: A film showing that variety in diet is necessary for good health.

© Walt Disney Productions; 3Apr46; MP2726.

PLANT A LITTLE GARDEN IN YOUR OWN BACK YARD. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17May43; MP13591.

PLANTATION MELODIES. Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, LeRoy Prinz; screenplay, Jack Scholl.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 17May45; LP13255.

A PLANTER OF COLONIAL VIRGINIA (1740–1765) Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 25Jun40; MP10692.

PLANTS AND RESEARCH LABORATORIES OF HOUDRY. The Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Houdry Process Corp. 1–1/2 reels, sd. Narration in Russian.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 12 prints, 17Jun45; MU16034.

PLASTIC ART. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Forest Grant.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 6Jul39; MP9824.

PLASTIC ART. SEE Escultura.

PLASTICS. Caravel Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel each, 16mm. © Caravel Films, Inc.

1. Origin and Synthesis of Plastics Materials. © 1Feb46; MP434.

2. Methods of Processing Plastics Materials. © 1Feb46; MP435.

3. Compression Molding. pt. 1: Preparing the Charge and Loading the Mold. © 1Feb46; MP436.

5. Transfer Molding, Molding a Part with Inserts. © 1Feb46; MP437.

6. Semi-Automatic and Hand Molding of Intricate Parts. © 1Feb46; MP438.

7. Injection Molding. pt. 1: Setting Up the Press and Molding a Part. © 1Feb46; MP439.

9. Finishing Molded Parts. © 1Feb46; MP440.

10. Machining Laminated Plastics. © 1Feb46; MP441.

THE PLASTICS INVENTOR. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Jack Hannah, Dick Shaw; animation, Don Towsley, Bill Justice, Paul Allen, Brad Case; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 5Jul44; LP13106.

PLAY AND PLENTY. SEE Variety Views, no. 162.

PLAY BALL, SON! Herb Lamb Productions, Inc., c1946. 3 reels, sd. & si., 16mm. Based on the book by Bert V. Dunne.

© Herb Lamb Productions, Inc.; 30Apr46; MP522.

PLAY GIRL. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 77 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Frank Woodruff; story and screenplay, Jerry Cady; music director, Paul Sawtelle; editor, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10473.

PLAY IN THE SNOW. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul45; MP16393.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28May45; MP15971.

PLAYBILL. Presented by Chevrolet. sd.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.; title, descr., & 66 prints, 10Oct40; MU10531.

PLAYFUL PELICAN. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Ed Love, Ken O'Brien; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 8Oct48; MP3441.

THE PLAYFUL PEST. Screen Gems, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Paul Sommer; story, Sam Cobean.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 3Dec43; LP12486.

PLAYGIRL POLKA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jul46; MP859.

THE PLAYGIRLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Melody Masters Band)

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Dec41; MP12378.

PLAYGROUND SAFETY. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Vivian Weedon.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Apr47; MP2496.

PLAYING BY EAR. Loew's Inc., c1946. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director, David O'Brien; screenplay, David Barclay, Joe Ansen; music, Max Terr; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Dec46; MP1503.

PLAYING GROWNUPS. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 min., sd., color.

Credits: Technicolor.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title, descr., & 22 prints, 26Apr40; MU10219.

PLAYING IN THE PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Jun45; MP16074.

PLAYING THE PIED PIPER. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 641 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 14)

Credits: Director, Lou Lilly; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 3Aug41; LP10826.

PLAYING WITH NEPTUNE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Russ Sheilds; described by Ed Thorgersen.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Feb41; MP10893.

PLAYLANDS OF MICHIGAN. Loew's Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: Views of the wonders of Michigan's resort towns, rivers, and lakes.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, Virgil Miller; music arranger, Joseph Nussbaum.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Mar49; MP3944.

PLAYMATES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 96 min., sd.

Credits: Producer and director, David Butler; story, James V. Kern, M. M. Musselman; screenplay, James V. Kern; music, James Van Heusen; music director, Roy Webb; music arrangements, George Duning; editor, Irene Morra.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Nov41; LP10850.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14915.

PLAYMATES FROM THE WILD. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17May40; MP10226.

PLAYTIME IN HAWAII. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Ed Thorgersen's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; music score, L. DeFrancesco; photography, Al Brick; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Dec41; MP12251.

PLAYTIME IN RIO. Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Rio de Janeiro is the setting of this film in which golf, swimming, soccer, horse racing, and the rigorous training of members of the Brazilian police force are featured.

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Dec48; MP3869.

PLAYTIME IN SCANDINAVIA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: At Soliden, the summer capital of Sweden, King Gustav, nonagenarian sportsman, plays croquet, and his subjects enjoy the favorite summer sports of Sweden—gymnastics, swimming, and skiing. Scenes of the yacht race for Kattegat Cup, between Swedish and Norwegian boats, are included.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Earl Allvine; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. deFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Apr48; MP3244.

PLAYTIME'S JOURNEY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Mel Allen; music, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Dec48; MP2342.

PLEASE ANSWER. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., sepia. (What's Your I.Q., no. 3) (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Roy Rowland; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Ferris Webster.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Aug40; LP10111.

PLEASE TAKE A LETTER, MISS BROWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Jun41; MP11213.

PLEASED TO MITT YOU. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp,; 6Jul40; LP9753.

PLEASUREBOUND IN CANADA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 797 ft., sd. (A Columbia Tour, series 3, no. 7)

Credits: Narrator, John Martin; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18May40; MP10205.

PLEDGE TO BATAAN. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Gordon Hollingshead; director, David Griffin; narration, Ralph Schoolman, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Truman Bradley. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 19Mar45; LP13173.

PLENTY BELOW ZERO. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 653 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody) (Fox and Crow)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Leo Salkin; animation, Howard Swift; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 23Apr43; LP12049.

THE PLOT TO KILL ROOSEVELT. Selected Films, Inc., England. Released in the U. S. by United Artists Corp., c1948. 83 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Originally entitled "Teheran."

Summary: A ficticious melodrama about an English war correspondent who thwarts a Persian plot to murder Roosevelt at the Teheran Conference in 1943.

Credits: Director, William Freshman.

Cast: Derek Farr, Marta Labarr, Manning Whiley, Pamela Stirling, John Slater.

© Selected Films, Inc.; 22Oct48; LP2070.

PLUMBING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 20Sep45; MP16611.

THE PLUNDERERS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1948. 87 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A U.S. Cavalry officer, having disguised himself as a badman, apprehends a desperado and his gang. Sioux Indians attack the party and kill the outlaw, thereby relieving the officer of the unhappy task of hanging him. Setting, the West of 1870.

Credits: Associate producer-director, Joseph Kane; original story, James Edward Grant; screenplay, Gerald Geraghty, Gerald Adams; music, Dale Butts; music director, Morton Scott; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: Rod Cameron, Ilona Massey, Adrian Booth, Forrest Tucker, George Cleveland.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Nov48; LP1999.

PLUTO AND THE ARMADILLO. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Wall Disney Productions; 27Aug42; LP11871.

PLUTO AT THE ZOO. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 20May42; LP11694.

PLUTO, JUNIOR. Walt Disney Productions, c1942. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jan42; LP11126.

PLUTO'S BLUE NOTE. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Jack Huber; animation, Jerry Hathcock, George Kreisl, George Nicholas, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 4Sep47; LP1376.

PLUTO'S DREAM HOUSE. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 17Jul40; LP9866.

PLUTO'S FLEDGLING. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Eric Gurney; animation, Phil Duncan, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 6Nov47; LP1970.

PLUTO'S HOUSEWARMING. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, Jerry Hathcock, Marvin Woodward, Blaine Gibson.

© Walt Disney Productions; 19Aug46; LP1128.

PLUTO'S KID BROTHER. Walt Disney Productions, c1945. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Harry Reeves, Jesse Marsh; animation, George Nicholas, Gerry Hathcock, Robert Youngquist, Jack Boyd; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 25Jul45; LP155.

PLUTO'S PLAYMATE. Walt Disney Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 2Jan41; LP10286.

PLUTO'S PURCHASE. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Bill de la Torre; animation, George Nicholas, Robert Youngquist, George Kreisl, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 7Aug47; LP1718.

PLUTO'S SURPRISE PACKAGE. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Milt Schaffer, Eric Gurney; animation, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Hugh Fraser, George Rowley; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 19Apr48; LP1986.

PLUTO'S SWEATER. Walt Disney Productions. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Milt Schaffer; music, Oliver Wallace; animation, Phil Duncan, Hugh Fraser, George Nicholas, Dan MacManus.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18May48; LP2347.

PNEUMONIA. Encyclopaedia Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Chinese.

© Encyclopaedia Films, Inc.; 30May46; MP951.

PNEUMONIA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 3Oct41; MP14226.

POBYEDA. SEE Counter-Attack.

THE POCKET BOOK OF BASIC ENGLISH. SEE Basic English.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19May41; MP11165.

POET AND PEASANT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 19Feb45; MP15633.

THE POET AND PEASANT, c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walter Lantz; director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Paul Smith; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Walter Lantz Productions & Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Feb46; MP786.

POI MY BOY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by RCM Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

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

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1698.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 12Jun44; MP14930.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; how to plan a victory vegetable garden. The Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 2Jul43; MP13809.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; preserving the victory garden crop. Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: F. W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 15Aug43; MP14840.

POINTERS FOR PLANTERS; summer care of the victory garden. The Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 15Jul43; MP13858.

POINTS FOR PEDALERS. Motion Picture Bureau of the Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. of Hartford, Conn., c1943. Presented by The Aetna Life Affiliated Companies. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Frederick W. Bright.

© Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.; 1Nov43; MP14189.

POINTS ON ARROWS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 27Dec41; MP11941.

POLAND. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 17Jan39; MP9847.

POLAR PEST. Loew's Inc., c1944. 609 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Arnold Gillespie, Michael Lah, Ed. Barge, Jack Carr; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Dec44; LP13082.

POLAR PEST. Loew's Inc., c1944. 609 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Animation, Arnold Gillespie, Michael Lah, Ed Barge, Jack Carr; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.: 21Dec44: LP260.

POLAR PLAYMATES. Screen Gems, Inc., c1946. 605 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Howard Swift; story, Volus Jones; animation, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 25Apr46; LP551.

THE POLE VAULT. Coronet, c1945. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Physical Education Series)

Credits: Produced under the supervision of Dean B. Cromwell.

© Coronet Productions, proprietorship of David A. Smart; 22Dec45; MP1539.

POLICE BULLETS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Ande Lamb.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Jean Yarbrough; screenplay, Edmond Kelso, Ande Lamb; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Jack Ogilvie.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Aug42; LP11589.

THE POLICEMAN. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 30Nov40; MP10693.

POLICEMAN'S HOLIDAY. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 9.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Sep45; MP16320.

POLITICAL PARTIES. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, J. Donald Kingsley.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 7Jul47; MP2505.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 24Apr44; MP14763.

POLKA-DOT PUSS. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 9Feb49; LP2141.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Nov44; MP15390.

THE POLLARD JUMP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Apr46; MP355.

POLLY WANTS A DOCTOR. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 587 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 33)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Howard Swift; story, Dun Roman; animation, Jim Armstrong, Grant Simmons; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12495.

POLO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports, no. 125)

Credits: Director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Jan47; MP1970.

POLO CHAMPIONS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 869 ft., sd. (The World of Sports, no. 74)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, William Kelly; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Nov41; MP12064.

A POLO PHONY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 18 min., sd.

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

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc,; 16May41; LP10570.

POLO WITH THE STARS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Director, Paul R. Thoma; commentator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 22Sep41; MP11573.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16588.

POLSKA NIE ZGINEŁA (POLAND IS NOT LOST). c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Narration, St. Sobieniowski.

Appl. authors: John Milo and Aurelio Battistoni.

© Roma Film Co.; 10Dec40; MP10753.

PONTOON ASSEMBLY AND UTILIZATION; pontoon floating drydock. Sound Masters, Inc. for the Training Film Section, Photographic Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. © Sound Masters, Inc.

Appl. author: J. F. Clemenger.

1. String and Deck Assembly. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14160.

2. Stabilizer Powers and Catwalks. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14161.

3. Ramp and Air Feed System. © title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Nov43; MU14162.

4. Adjustable Boat Cradle. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 19Nov43; MU14163.

5. Testing and Operation. © title, descr., & 6 prints, 19Nov43; MU14164.

PONTOON ASSEMBLY AND UTILIZATION. Sound Masters, Inc., for Training Film Section, Photographic Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, United States Navy. © Sound Masters, Inc.

Appl. author: James F. Clemenger.

3. Assembling a Pontoon Bridge. © title, descr., & 8 prints, 25Mar43; MU13396.

5. The Pontoon Wharf. © title, descr., & 4 prints, 12Jun43; MU13648.

PONY EXPRESS DAYS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 19 min., color.

Credits: Director, B. Reeves Eason; original screenplay, Charles L. Tedford. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Jul40; LP9762.

PONY POST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 6 reels.

Credits: Director, Ray Taylor; original story and screenplay, Sherman Lowe.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Oct40; LP9997.

THE POOCH PARADE. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Fable, no. 5)

Credits: Story, Allen Rose; animation, Harry Love, Louie Lilly; music, Joe De Nat.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Jun40; LP9717.

POOPDECK PAPPY. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, Bill Nolan, Winfield Hoskins.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Nov40; LP10054.

POP ALWAYS PAYS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 67 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Leslie Goodwins; story, Arthur J. Beckhard; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts; music director, Paul Sawtell; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Jun40; LP9785.

POP AND MOM IN WILD OYSTERS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Animated Antics, HO–5)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10262.

POP GOES THE WEASEL, Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13227.

POP-PIE A LA MODE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Dave Tendlar.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Jun45; LP13370.

POP RINGS THE BELL. Presented by National School Service Institute. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© National School Service Institute; title & descr., 18Mar44; 5 prints, 21Mar44; MU14616.

POPE LEO XIII. Creative Arts Studio, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Howard Lamarr Walls.

© Creative Arts Studio, Inc.; 11Aug47; MP2237.

POPEYE AND THE PIRATES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 12Sep47; LP1226.

POPEYE MEETS HERCULES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytla; story, I. Klein; animation, George Germanetti, Tom Moore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Jun48; LP1677.

POPEYE MEETS RIP VAN WINKLE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordon; animation, Myron Waldman, Sidney Pillet.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9May41; LP10459.

POPEYE MEETS WILLIAM TELL. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordon; animation, James Culhane, Alfred Eugster.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Sep40; LP9931.

POPEYE'S PREMIERE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Story, Bill Turner, I. Klein; animation, Dave Tendlar, John Gentiella.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Mar49; LP2190.

POPPA KNOWS WORST. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; direction and screenplay, Ben Holmes; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Apr44; LP12797.

POPPIN' THE CORK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13678.

POP'S COMIN' HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jun44; MP14913.

POPULAR SCIENCE. Paramount Pictures, Inc., c1939–49. 1 reel each, sd., 35mm. © Paramount Pictures, Inc.

Credits: Writers, Gayne Whitman, Walter Anthony, George Brandt; narrators, Gayne Whitman, Van Des Autels.

J9–3. © 15Dec39; MP9854.

J9–4. © 16Feb40; MP9982.

J9–5. © 26Apr40; MP10185.

J9–6. © 28Jun40; MP10313.

J0–1. © 6Sep40; MP10455.

J0–2. © 1Nov40; MP10592.

J0–3. © 20Dec40; MP10679.

J0–4. © 21Feb41; MP10865.

J0–5. © 2May41; MP11114.

J0–6. © 4Jul41; MP11307.

J1–1. © 19Sep41; MP11574.

J1–2. © 7Nov41; MP12031.

J1–3. © 30Jan42; MP13412.

J1–4. © 3Apr42; MP12347.

J1–5. © 12Jun42; MP12586.

J1–6. © 31Jul42; MP12730.

J2–1. © 2Oct42; MP12892.

J2–2. © 27Nov42; MP13067.

J2–3. © 5Feb43; MP13246.

J2–4. © 5Apr43; MP13446.

J2–5. © 11Jun43; MP13656.

J2–6. © 6Aug43; MP13870.

J3–1. © 15Oct43; MP14104.

J3–2. © 10Dec43; MP14360.

J3–3. © 25Feb44; MP14554.

J3–4. © 31Mar44; MP14823.

J3–5. © 12Jun44; MP14964.

J3–6. © 4Aug44; MP15090.

J4–1. © 6Oct44; MP15404.

J4–2. © 22Dec44; MP15502.

J4–3. © 16Feb45; MP15653.

J4–4. © 6Apr45; MP15808.

J4–5. © 1Jun45; MP16014.

J4–6. © 10Aug45; MP16234.

J5–1. © 12Oct45; MP16469.

J5–2. © 7Dec45; MP16592.

J5–3. © 8Feb46; MP273.

J5–4. © 8Apr46; MP513.

J5–5. © 21Jun46; MP712.

J5–6. © 16Aug46; MP979.

J6–1. © 11Oct46; MP1180.

J6–2. © 27Dec46; MP1480.

J6–3. © 28Feb47; MP1737.

J6–4. © 4Apr47; MP1894.

J6–5. Moon Rocket. After a brief reference to an electric toothbrush and other minor inventions, the film shows how V–2 rockets, equipped with recording devices, aid man in learning about the ionosphere 100 miles above the earth.

© 31May47; MP2632.

J6–6. Twentieth Century Vikings.

© 25Jul47; MP2214.

J7–1. Radar Fishermen.

© 17Oct47; MP2390.

J7–2. Desert Destroyers. The raising of oysters near Conway Castle, Wales; the household devices invented by Mr. W. J. Haynes of Kansas City; and the testing of airborne rockets at the Inyokern Naval Ordnance Test Station in the Mojave Desert.

© 26Dec47; MP2590.

J7–3. Streamlined luxury. New kitchen appliances; apparatus for testing landing gear and brakes of airplanes; new machines for harvesting and canning pineapple in Hawaii; and a train that is the forerunner of our trains of tomorrow.

© 20Feb48; MP2731.

J7–4. Fog Fighters. The making of Johansson gage blocks at Eskilstuna, Sweden; the scientific barber shop at Westwood Village, California; and the new methods used to assure safe landings of planes in fog at Arcata, California.

© 2Apr48; MP2851.

J7–5. The Big Eye. The gigantic telescope and 200–inch mirror at Mt. Palomar, Calif. Shots of two new types of cars that show the influence of aircraft construction methods.

© 21May48; MP3005.

J7–6. The Flying Wing. Demonstrates scientific marvels of the present day. Partially pre-cooked food eliminates drudgery for mother; a "mechanical brain" at UCLA does arithmetic for aeronautical engineers; and the new Flying Wing jet plane demolishes distance for travellers.

© 6Aug48; MP3349.

J8–1. Solar Secrets. Kitchen appliances, including an air conditioner and an electronic range, are demonstrated. A mechanical whirlwind turns soil on a Texas farm. A New York girl creates dolls who resemble their "mothers." Fred MacMurray demonstrates exercise devices at Bing Crosby's Research Foundation. In Colorado, scientists study solar secrets by means of a total solar eclipse made to order.

© 24Dec48; MP3649.

J8–2. The Stocking Yarn. Shows the David Taylor Model Basin near Washington, D. C., where the Navy conducts scientific experiments on model ships and planes; shows the rose gardens of Tyler, Texas, from which flowers are shipped to all parts of the country; and traces the history of the knitting of stockings from the time of Queen Elizabeth to the present.

© 4Feb49; MP3798.

J8–3. White Magic. Shows the processing of gypsum and demonstrates the varied uses of the mineral. A new method for creating Photoware is developed. "Hot rod" enthusiasts compete in home-built racing cars at El Mirage Dry Lake.

© 1Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP3959.

J8–4. Air Force Fire Fighters. In Illinois, Arthur Hammerstein, retired, becomes a successful inventor of household gadgets; in Chile, the tunnels of a coal mine extend a thousand miles under the ocean's floor; in Peoria, Illinois, the Department of Agriculture converts corncobs into liquid motor fuel; at Lowry Base in Denver, the Air Force personnel is trained in structural firefighting and aircraft crash rescue work.

© 29Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4034.

J8–5. Seaweed Science. Demonstrates how a ten-ten scientific beachcomber cleans a sandy beach; shows how synthetic gems are produced; shows how children are taught aviation sciences at Weed Patch, Calif.; and shows how seaweed is gathered off the coast of Florida and processed for agar.

© 17Jun49; MP4265.

J8–6. Talking Turkey. Shows the mechanical bucking horse used to teach beginners at the ranch of Bill Pace; demonstrates machinery used for improved soil tillage methods; demonstrates a new paint which defies flames; and shows how methods for production of turkeys have been improved by science.

© 19Aug49; MP4514.

PORKY CHOPS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; animation, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Dec48 (in notice: 1947); MP3804.

PORKY PIG'S FEAT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, Phil Monroe; music director, Carl. W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jul43; MP13795.

PORKY THE GIANT KILLER. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Melvin Millar; animation, Gil Turner.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 18Nov39; MP10005.

PORKYLIAR PIGGY. c1944. Presented by Columbia. 679 ft., sd., color. Adapted from the "Li'l Abner" cartoon strip by Al Capp.

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Al Geiss; animation, Chic Ollerstrom, Ben Lloyd; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Oct44; LP13260.

PORKY'S ANT. Leon Schlesinger Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Rudolph Larriva; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9May41; MP11128.

PORKY'S BASEBALL BROADCAST. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 6Jul40; MP10318.

PORKY'S BEAR FACTS. The Vitaphone Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Maltese; animation, Manuel Perez; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Mar41; MP11026.

PORKY'S CAFE. c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Rudolph Larriva; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Mar42; MP12238.

PORKY'S HIRED HAND. c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Richard Bickenbach; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec40; MP11259.

PORKY'S LAST STAND. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, I. Ellis; music direction, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec39; MP9852.

PORKY'S MIDNIGHT MATINEE. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; animation, Robert Cannon; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Dec41; MP12285.

PORKY'S PASTRY PIRATES, c1942. 1 reel, sd. Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Gerald Chiniquy; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24Jan42; MP12068.

PORKY'S PASTRY PIRATES. Released by Warner Bros., c1942. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Gerald Chiniquy; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Mar42; MP12324.

PORKY'S POOCH. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, I. Ellis; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 29Dec41; MP11947.

PORKY'S POOR FISH. c1940. 1 reel. sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, David Hoffman; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Apr40; MP10137.

PORKY'S PREVIEW. Leon Schlesinger Productions, c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Vergil Ross; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Apr41; MP11089.

PORKY'S PRIZE PONY. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Ken Harris; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Jun41; MP11251.

PORKY'S SNOOZE REEL. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Warren Foster; animation, John Carey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 20Dec40; MP10762.

THE PORT OF FORTY THIEVES, c1944. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Walter H. Goetz; director, John English; original screenplay, Dane Lussier; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Richard Van Enger.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 26Jun44; LP12731.

PORT OF NEW YORK. Contemporary Productions, Inc. Released through Eagle-Lion Films, Inc., c1949. 82 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which the Bureau of Customs of the U. S. Treasury Department copes with illicit traffic in narcotics. Filmed in New York. Given semi-documentary treatment.

Credits: Producer, Aubrey Schenck; director, Laslo Benedek; story, Arthur A. Ross, Bert Murray; screenplay, Eugene Ling; music, Sol Kaplan; music director, Irving Friedman; film editor, Norman Colbert.

Cast: Scott Brady, Richard Rober, K. T. Stevens, Yul Brynner, Arthur Blake.

© Contemporary Productions, Inc.; 10Nov49; LP2625.

PORT OF NEW YORK. RKO Pathe, Inc. in collaboration with the editors of This Week Magazine, c1946. 16 min., sd., 35mm. (This is America, no. 9)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Jerry Brondfield; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Alan Shulman; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 28Jun46; MP1072.

PORT SAID. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A story of murder in Port Said. The principal characters are a young author and his theatrical acquaintances.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, Reginald Le Borg; story, Louis Pollock; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg.

Cast: William Bishop, Edgar Barrier, Gloria Henry, Richard Hale, Stephen Geray.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Apr48; LP1536.

PORTRAIT OF A GENIUS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 990 ft., sd., b&w. (A Carey Wilson Miniature)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story and screenplay, Carl Ward Dudley; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jan43; LP11864.

PORTRAIT OF JENNIE. Vanguard Films, Inc. Released through Selznick, c1949, 86 min., sd., b&w with sepia, and color sequences, 35mm. Based on the novel by Robert Nathan.

Summary: The story of a disillusioned New York painter who falls in love with a vision of a young girl from a bygone day who had drowned in a New England hurricane.

Credits: Producer, David O. Selznick; director, William Dieterle; screenplay, Paul Osborne, Peter Berneis; adaptation, Leonardo Bercovici; music, Dimitri Tiomkin; photography, Joseph August; film editor, William Morgan.

Cast: Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotton, Ethel Barrymore, Lillian Gish, Cecil Kellaway.

© Vanguard Films, Inc.; 29Mar49 (in notice: 1948); LP2188.

PORTRAIT OF THE WEST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: A survey of Nevada: trails, ranches, sand dunes, ghost towns, resorts, gold and silver mines, the Hoover Dam, Lake Mead, and Pyramid Lake.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Aug48; MP3606.

PORTUGAL. Time, Inc., c1944. 2 reels.

© Time. Inc.; 2Oct44; MP15217.

A POSIÇÃO E O EXERCÍCIO FÍSICO. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Arthur H. Steinhaus.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 18Jun46; MP772.

POSSESSED. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. 108 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Rita Weiman.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Curtis Bernhardt; screenplay, Silvia Richards, Ranald MacDougall; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

Cast: Joan Crawford, Van Heflin, Raymond Massey, Geraldine Brooks, Stanley Ridges.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Jul47; LP1160.

POST OFFICE INVESTIGATOR. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: When a collection of rare stamps is stolen, the chief suspect turns sleuth and solves the crime.

Credits: Associate producer, Sidney Picker; director, George Blair; written by John K. Butler; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Audrey Long, Warren Douglas, Jeff Donnell, Marcel Journet, Tony Cannon.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Aug49; LP2510.

POST OPERATIVE CARE.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct43; MU14012.

THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE. Loew's Inc., c1946. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by James M. Cain.

Credits: Producer, Carey Wilson; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, Harry Ruskin, Niven Busch; music score, George Bassman; orchestration, Ted Duncan; film editor, George White.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Mar46; LP146.

THE POSTMAN DIDN'T RING. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,131 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harold Schuster; original story, Mortimer Braus, Leon Ware; screenplay, Mortimer Braus; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 3Jul42; LP11475.

POSTMARK: U. S. A. Educational Film Division of Paramount Pictures Inc., in cooperation with National Association of Manufacturers for the National Industrial Information Committee, c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Roush; written by Justin Herman; photography, George Webber.

© National Association of Manufacturers of the United States of America; 15Jan43; MP13215.

POSTURE AND EXERCISE. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 19Dec41; MP14212.

POSTURE HABITS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Erwin F. Beyer.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 29Aug47; MP2559.

POSTWAR SALES REGARDING THOUGHT STARTERS. Presented by General Motors. sd., b&w.

Appl. author: The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15352.

POT O' GOLD. Released thru United Artists, c1941. Presented by James Roosevelt. 7,697 ft., sd. A George Marshall production.

Credits: Producer, James Roosevelt; director, George Marshall; story, Monte Brice, Andrew Bennison, Harry Tugend; screenplay, Walter De Leon; music director, Lou Forbes; film editor, Lloyd Nosler.

© James Roosevelt; 8Apr41; LP10413.

POTTERY MAKING. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Forest Grant.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 23Jun39; MP9823.

POTTERY MAKING. SEE Alfarería.

POTTERY POETS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 147)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narrator, Larry Elliott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Oct45; MP16422.

POULTRY ON THE FARM. SEE

Cría de Gallinas.

Os Galináceos na Herdade.

POULTRY RAISING. c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 15Nov45; MP42.

POUND FOOLISH. Loew's Inc., c1938. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Felix E. Feist; original story, Doane Hoag, Alan Friedman; screenplay, Doane Hoag, Felix E. Feist; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 29Dec39; LP9403.

O POVO DA CHINA OCIDENTAL. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Collaborator, O. J. Caldwell.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Jul46; MP895.

O POVOS DAS PLANTAÇÕES. SEE Brasil (O Povos das Plantações)

POWDER RIVER GUNFIRE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 24 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The capture of the gang trying to steal a gold claim provides the excitement in this musical Western.

Credits: Director, Harold James Moore; story and screenplay, Irwin Winehouse; film editor, Leonard Anderson.

Cast: Kenne Duncan, Royal Raymond, Don Douglas, Dick Thomas, The Santa Fe Rangers.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Mar48; MP2855.

POWDER RIVER RUSTLERS. Republic Pictures Corp., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Rocky Lane exposes a plot to defraud the citizens of El Dorado.

Credits: Director, Philip Ford; screenplay, Richard Wormser; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Robert M. Leeds.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Eddy Waller, Gerry Ganzer, Roy Barcroft, Francis McDonald.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 22Nov49 (in notice: 1950); LP2643.

POWDER TOWN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 79 min., sd. From an original idea by Vicki Baum and the novel by Max Brand [pseud. of Frederick Faust]

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Rowland V. Lee; screenplay, David Boehm; music director, Roy Webb; editor, Samuel E. Beetley.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11May42; LP11372.

POWER AND THE LAND. c1940. 36 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Joris Ivens; commentary, Stephen Vincent Benet.

© Dept. of Agriculture, Rural Electrification Administration and M. L. Ramsay; 19Aug40; MP10425.

THE POWER BEHIND THE NATION. Norfolk & Western Railway Co., c1940. 38 min., sd., color.

Credits: Narrator, Bob Trout.

Appl. author: Waldo E. Austin.

© Norfolk & Western Railway Co,; 1Nov40; MP10711.

POWER BEHIND THE NATION. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1947. Presented by the Motion Picture Association of America. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Narration, Saul Elkins; narrator, Art Gilmore; music, William Lava; editor, De Leon Anthony. Technicolor.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 28Sep47; LP1228.

POWER DIVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Paul Franklin.

Credits: Producer, William C. Thomas; director, James Hogan; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Edward Churchill; photographer, John Alton; film editor, Bob Crandall.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Apr41; LP10435.

POWER FOR DEFENSE. National Defense Advisory Commission in cooperation with the Tennessee Valley Authority, c1940. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Arch Andrew Mercey; commentary, Robert Collyer; narrator, Thomas Chalmers; photography, Floyd Crosby, Carl Pryer.

© National Defense Advisory Commission; 20Nov40; MP10873.

THE POWER HOUSE OF AVIATION.

Appl. author: Allan Poucher Snody.

© Wright Aeronautical Corporation; title, descr., & 2 prints, 26Jul45; MU16171.

THE POWER OF DECISION. SEE Night Life in a Modern Tavern.

THE POWER OF FREE PEOPLE. Presented by Wisconsin Power and Light Co. 3 reels, sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 14Feb46; 130 prints, 17Feb46; MU205.

THE POWER OF THE BLOOD. c1946. 800 ft., sd., b&w or color, 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista Films.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 1Apr46; MP466.

POWER OF THE PRESS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lew Landers; story, Sam Fuller; screenplay, Robert D. Andrews; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 13Aug43; LP12188.

THE POWER OF THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 66 min., sd. Suggested by the Columbia Broadcasting System radio program entitled "The Whistler."

Credits: Producer, Leonard S. Picker; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Aubrey Wisberg; music, Wilbur Hatch; film editor, Reg Browne.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr45; LP13270.

POWER PLUS. Presented by Chevrolet. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Sales Corp.; title & descr., 12Feb42; 66 prints, 9Feb42; MU12160.

THE POWERS GIRL. Released thru United Artists, c1943. Presented by Charles R. Rogers. 93 min., sd. Based on a play by William A. Pierce and Malvin Wald.

Credits: Producer, Charles R. Rogers; director, Norman Z. McLeod; screenplay, E. Edwin Moran, Harry Segall; music, Jule Styne; music director, Louis Silvers; film editor, George Arthur.

© Rogers Productions, Inc.; 27Jan43; LP11881.

THE POWERS OF CONGRESS. Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, John Day Larkin.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 30Sep47; MP2561.

THE PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF FREE GUNNERY PRINCIPLES IN THE AIR; fire doctrine for aerial free gunnery. Presented by the United States Navy, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11Nov43; 11 prints, 13Nov43; MU14133.

THE PRACTICAL JOKER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 963 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director. Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Jan44; LP12518.

PRACTICALLY YOURS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 9 reels, sd. A Mitchell Leisen production.

Credits: Producer, Harry Tugend; director, Mitchell Leisen; written by Norman Krasna; music score, Victor Young; editor, Doane Harrison.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 14Dec44; LP13138.

PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 532 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 3)

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

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 13Mar40; LP9517.

THE PRAIRIE. Zenith Pictures, Inc., c1948. 66 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An Edward F. Finney production. Based on the story by James Fenimore Cooper.

Summary: A story of pioneer days on the western plains. The plot centers in the adventures of a white girl, who is rescued from the Indians, and the misfortunes of her sweetheart, who is unwittingly involved in a murder.

Credits: Producer, George Moskov; director, Frank Wisbar; screenplay, Arthur St. Claire; music direction and score, Alexander Steinert; film editor, Douglas Bacier.

Cast: Lenore Aubert, Alan Baxter, Russ Vincent, Jack Mitchum, Charles Evans.

© Zenith Pictures, Inc.; 29May48; LP1715.

PRAIRIE BADMEN. c1946. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

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

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 9Jul46; LP479.

PRAIRIE CHICKENS. Released through United Artists, c1942. Presented by Hal Roach. 5 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Fred Guiol; director, Hal Roach, Jr.; original story, Donald Hough; screenplay, Arnold Belgard, Earle Snell; music score, Edward Ward; film editor, Bert Jordan.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 13Oct42; LP11937.

PRAIRIE CHICKENS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Pictures of the Missouri prairie chicken in action.

Appl. author: Anthony A. Sassano.

© Missouri Conservation Commission; 3Feb49; MP3797.

PRAIRIE EXPRESS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1947. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Barney A. Sarecky; director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, J. Benton Cheney, Anthony Coldewey; film editor, Fred Maguire.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Raymond Hatton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Oct47; LP1275.

PRAIRIE GUNSMOKE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, Lambert Hillyer; story. Jack Ganzhorn; screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Arthur Seid.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Jul42; LP11459.

PRAIRIE LAW. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, David Howard; story, Bernard McConville; screenplay, Doris Schroeder, Arthur V. Jones; music director, Paul Sawtelle; editor, Frederic Knudtson.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Jun40; LP9738.

PRAIRIE OUTLAWS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1948. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western, in which Eddie Dean helps a telegraph company put its line through bandit territory.

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

Cast: Eddie Dean, Roscoe Ates, Sarah Padden, Al Larue.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 12May48; LP1669.

PRAIRIE PALS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Newfeld; director, Peter Stewart; original screenplay, Patricia Harper; music, Johnny Lange, Lew Porter; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 19Feb43; LP11873.

PRAIRIE PIONEERS. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. From an original idea by Karl Brown. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Lester Orlebeck; screenplay, Barry Shipman, music score, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ray Snyder.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures, Inc.; 16Feb41; LP10304.

PRAIRIE PIRATES. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 23 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; adapted from the screenplay by Sherman L. Lowe; music arranger, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, Ted J. Kent.

Cast: Tex Williams, Smokey Rogers, Patricia Hall, Deuce Spriggens, William Haade.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar49; MP4086.

PRAIRIE PROVINCES OF CANADA. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Dec43; MP14747.

PRAIRIE RAIDERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 54 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

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

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Nancy Saunders, Robert Scott, Ozie Waters.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29May47; LP1037.

PRAIRIE RUSTLERS. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 6 reels, sd.

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

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 20Nov45; LP13569.

PRAIRIE SCHOONERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Sam Nelson; story, George Cory Franklin; original screenplay, Fred Myton, Robert Lee Johnson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Oct40; LP9966.

PRAIRIE SPOONERS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 13 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Lou Brock; direction and story, Harry D'Arcy; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 21Jan41; LP10221.

PRAIRIE STRANGER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd. Based upon a book by James L. Rubel.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Lambert Hillyer; screenplay, Winston Miller; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 14Aug41; LP10780.

PRAIRIE WINGS. Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1948. 18 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A film about the ducks and geese in Arkansas' Grand Prairie: the types of ducks found in the region, the techniques involved in many phases of flight, and tactics used in hunting the birds.

Appl. author: Anthony A. Sassano.

© Ducks Unlimited, Inc.; 25Oct48; MP3686.

THE PRAIRIE'S NOT SO FAR AWAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc,; 14May45; MP15940.

PRANCING IN THE PARK. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec43; MP14484.

PREACHER AND THE BEAR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Apr45; MP15847.

PRECIOUS CARGO. Jam Handy Organization. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 4 prints, 21Apr47; MU1955.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; fundamentals of patternmaking. c1945. 1 reel each, sd., 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Making a One-Piece Flat Pattern. © 1Jun45; MP746.

4. Making a Pattern with a Tail Print. © 1Jun45; MP756.

4A. Making a Core Box for a Tail Print. © 1Jun45; MP503.

8. Making a Matchboard Pattern. © 1Jun45; MP752.

9. Making a Core Box for a Vertical Core. © 1Jun45; MP755.

10. Making a Core Box for a Flanged Pipe Elbow. © 1Jun45; MP753.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; fundamentals of patternmaking. Photo and Sound, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each, sd., 16mm. © Photo and Sound, Inc.

2. Making a Pattern with a Vertical Core. © 1Sep45; MP387.

3. Making a Pattern with a Horizontal Core. © 1Sep45; MP388.

5. Making a Segmented Pattern. © 1Sep45; MP389.

6. Making a Pattern for a Three-part Mold. © 1Sep45; MP390.

7. Making a Pattern for a Flanged Pipe Elbow. © 1Sep45; MP391.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the band saw. c1945. 1 reel, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Sawing with Jig and Changing Band. © 1Jun45; MP502.

2. Sawing a Reverse Curve and a Bevel Reverse Curve. © 1Jun45; MP754.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the jointer, c1945. 1 reel each. © R.C.M. Productions, Inc.

1. Jointing Edges and Ends 90 Degrees to Face. © 1Feb45; MP15643.

2. Beveling, Stop Chamfering, and Tapering Square Stock. © 1Feb45; MP15642.

3. Face Planing Uneven Surfaces. © 1Feb45; MP15645.

4. Jointing an Edge for Gluing—Installing Knives. © 1Feb45; MP15644.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the sander. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Sanding Flat and Irregular Surfaces. © 1Jun45; MP749.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the single face surfacer. c1945. 1 reel each. © R.C.M. Productions, Inc.

1. Planing Rough Surfaces to Dimensions. © 1Feb45; MP15641.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the spindle shaper. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Rabbeting and shaping an Edge on Straight Stock. © 1Jun45; MP748.

2. Shaping after Template and Shaping Curved Edges. © 1Jun45; MP751.

3. Cutting Grooves with Circular Saw Blades. © 1Jun45; MP747.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the variety saw. c1945. 1 reel each, 16mm. © RCM Productions, Inc.

1. Ripping and Cross-Cutting. © 1Jun45; MP750.

2. Beveling, Mitering, Rabbeting, Dadoing. © 1Jun45; MP500.

3. Cutting Tenons and Segments. © 1Jun45; MP501.

4. Cutting Cove Molding and a Corebox. © 1Jun45; MP953.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; operations on the wood lathe, c1945. 1 reel each. © Photo & Sound, Inc.

Appl. author: William Betts.

1. Turning a Cylinder Between Centers. © 1Mar45; MP15721.

2. Turning Taper Work. © 1Mar45; MP15722.

3. Turning Work on a Face Plate. © 1Mar45; MP15723.

4. Turning Work on a Chuck. © 1Mar45; MP15724.

5. Face Turning a collar. © 1Mar45; MP15725.

PRECISION WOOD MACHINING; problems in patternmaking. The Jam Handy Organization, c1945. 1 reel each. © The Jam Handy Organization.

Designing Core Boxes for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16017.

Designing a Pattern for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16018.

Making a Pattern Requiring a Cover Core. © 15May45; MP16019.

Making Pattern, Coreboxes, and Assembling Cores for a Water-Cooled Motor Block. © 15May45; MP16023.

Making a Pattern Requiring Segmental Construction. © 15May45; MP16024.

Making a Pattern for a Machine Molded Steel Globe and Angle Valve. © 15May45; MP16025.

Making a Core Box for a Machine Base. © 15May45; MP16026.

Redesigning a Pattern for Production Purposes. © 15May45; MP16027.

Making a Pattern using a Green and a Dry Sand Core. © 15May45; MP16029.

Making a Pattern Requiring Box Construction. © 15May45; MP16030.

PREFLIGHT AND DAILY INSPECTION P–63. Bell Aircraft Corp. Motion Picture Division. 22 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Directed and written by Harold Kopel; cameraman, Edward Bollinger.

© Bell Aircraft Corp.; title, descr. and 12 prints, 14Nov45; MU16502.

PREHISTORIC PORKY. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Story, Melvin Millar; animation, John Carey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12Oct40; MP10517.

PRE-HYSTERICAL MAN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Seymour Kneitel; story, Carl Meyer, Jack Mercer; animation, Dave Tendlar, Mary Reden; music arranger, Winston Sharples.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Mar48; LP1555.

PRELUDE TO NIGHT. SEE Ruthless.

PRE-OPERATIVE CARE.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© Chicago Film Laboratory, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 6Oct43; MU14013.

PREPARATION OF THE MOUTH FOR DENTURES BY ELECTRO SURGICAL METHODS, si., color, 16mm.

© William A. Coles; title & descr., 15Apr40; 9 prints, 3Apr40; MU10112.

PRESENTING LILY MARS. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the novel by Booth Tarkington.

Credits: Producer, Joseph Pasternak; director, Norman Taurog; screenplay, Richard Connell, Gladys Lehman; music director, Georgie Stoll; music adaptation, Roger Edens; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May43; LP12080.

PRESERVING FOOD. Coronet, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows why preservation of food is necessary, and explains the reasons behind methods of short-term and long-term preservation.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Ritta Whitesel.

© David A. Smart; 17Jun49; MP4234.

PRESERVING THE VICTORY GARDEN CROP. SEE Pointers for planters.

PRESTRESSED CONCRETE. Gustave A. Magnel. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents a review of the use of concrete, explains the method of prestressing developed by Messrs. Blaton and Magnel, and shows the construction of recent structures using prestressed concrete.

© Gustave A. Magnel; title, descr., & 4 prints, 15Jul49; MU4331.

THE PRETENDER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 69 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, W. Lee Wilder; original screenplay, Don Martin; music director, Paul Dessau; film editor, Asa Boyd Clark.

Cast: Albert Dekker, Catherine Craig.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Jul47; LP1166.

PRETTY DOLLY. RKO Radio Pictures. Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; story, Charles E. Roberts, Ewart Adamson; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 1Jan43; LP11810.

PRETTY KITTY BLUE EYES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec44; MP15600.

PREVIEWS OF TOMORROW. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Buick Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 2 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 16Feb47; 5 prints, 18Feb47; MU1663.

THE PREY. 2 reels, sd. U. S. Navy.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 2Jul43; 40 prints, 1Jul43; MU13802.

THE PRICE OF FREEDOM. Apex Film Corp., c1949. Presented by the National Association of Manufacturers. 23 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The son of a newspaper editor visits his uncle in Germany and learns how government control gradually took away the freedom of the people. He returns and influences his father to print news items which will lead the people of their community to see the world situation as it is instead of as they want to believe it is.

Credits: Producer, Jack Chertok; director, William J. Thiele; story, Holcombe Parkes; screenplay, William J. Thiele, David P. Sheppard, Thomas M. Wolff; music, David Chudnow; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

Cast: Arthur Franz, Ray Collins, Michael Chekov, Will Wright.

© Apex Film Corp.; 29Apr49; MP4393.

THE PRICE OF VICTORY. c1942. 13 min., sd. A Pine-Thomas production.

Credits: Director, William H. Pine; screen adaptation, Howard J. Green; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; editor, Howard A. Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Oct42; MP14666.

PRICELESS CARGO. Presented by Superior Coach Corp. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title, descr., & 13 prints, 5Aug46; MU921.

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the dramatization of Jane Austen's novel written by Helen Jerome.

Credits: Producer, Hunt Stromberg; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Aldous Huxley, Jane Murfin; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Jul40; LP9764.

PRIDE OF THE BOWERY. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Joseph H. Lewis; story, Steven Clensos; screenplay, George Plympton; photography, Robert Cline.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 15Dec40; LP10470.

PRIDE OF THE MARINES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 119 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From a book by Roger Butterfield.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Wald; director, Delmer Daves, screenplay, Albert Maltz; adaptation, Marvin Borowsky; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Leonid Raab; photographer, Peverall Marley; film editor, Owen Marks.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 1Sep45; LP13451.

PRIDE OF THE PLAINS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Oliver Drake.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, John K. Butler, Bob Williams; music score, Mort Glickman; photographer, John MacBurnie; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Dec43; LP12411.

THE PRIDE OF THE YANKEES. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 128 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Sam Wood; original story, Paul Gallico; screenplay, Jo Swerling, Herman J. Mankiewicz; music, Leigh Harline; photography, Rudolph Mate; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 15Jul42; LP11486.

PRIMARY AND ADVANCED FLYING INSTRUCTION.

© Edwin Clarence Hedler; title, descr., & small roll, 15Jan40; MU9949.

THE PRIMARY CELL; electricity from chemical action. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 2Jun44; MP15910.

THE PRIMARY CELL. SEE

La Pila Simple.

A Pilha Elétrica.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE A. sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics Training Division.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 87 prints, 5Jul43; MU13998.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE B. sd. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics Training Division.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 84 prints, 5Jul43; MU13999.

PRIMARY FLIGHT TRAINING, STAGE C. United States Navy, Bureau of Aeronautics, Training Division. 1 reel, sd.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 14Jan44; 5 prints, 13Jan44; MU14402.

PRIMROSE PATH. RKO Radio Pictures. Inc., c1940. 93 min., sd. A Gregory LaCava production. From the play by Robert L. Buckner and Walter Hart, as produced by George Abbott.

Credits: Director, Gregory LaCava; screenplay, Allan Scott, Gregory LaCava; music score, Werner R. Heymann; editor, William Hamilton.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 22Mar40; LP9647.

PRINCE OF THE PLAINS. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western based on the life of Bat Masterson, a defender of law and order in the early bandit-ridden West.

Credits: Associate producer, Melville Tucker; director, Philip Ford; written by Louise Rousseau, Albert DeMond; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: Monte Hale, Paul Hurst, Shirley Davis, Roy Barcroft, Rory Mallinson.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 9May49; LP2294.

THE PRINCE OF THIEVES. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 8 reels, sd., color, 35mm. Based on Alexandre Dumas' story.

Credits: Producer, Sam Katzman; director, Howard Bretherton; screenplay, Maurice Tombragel; adaptation, Charles H. Schneer; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: John Hall, Patricia Morison, Adele Jergens, Alan Mowbray, Michael Duane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1356.

PRINCELY INDIA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 20 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Shows some of the 600 states of India, the men who rule them, the religious ceremonies of the natives, their dances, and the magnificent architecture of the country.

Credits: Written by Owen Crump; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 3Jan49; MP3655.

THE PRINCESS AND THE PIRATE. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1944. 94 min., sd., color. Suggested by a story by Sy Bartlett.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, David Butler; screenplay, Don Hartman, Melville Shavelson, Everett Freeman; adaptation, Allen Boretz, Curtis Kenyon; music, David Rose; film editor, Daniel Mandell. Technicolor.

© Regent Pictures, Inc.; 1Nov44; LP12987.

PRINCESS O'HARA. SEE It Ain't Hay.

PRINCESS O'ROURKE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 94 min., sd. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. A Hal B. Wallis production.

Credits: Written and directed by Norman Krasna; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Warren Low.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct43; LP12336.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14May45; MP15939.

PRINCESS POO-POO-LY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Dec42; MP13154.

PRINCIPAL DIMENSIONS, REFERENCE SURFACES, AND TOLERANCES.

Appl. author: John G. Curtis.

© Atlas Educational Film Co.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 5Jun44; MU14910.

PRINCIPES FONDAMENTAUX DE L'ACCOUSTIQUE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. French version of "Fundamentals of Acoustics."

Summary: By means of animated diagrams, the range and physiology of hearing, and the principles of velocity and refraction of sound are explained. Engineering problems, such as the elimination of high and low frequencies, are also considered.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 15Nov48; MP3599.

PRINCIPLES OF BAKING (FLOUR MIXTURES). c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 16Dec43; MP14748.

PRINCIPLES OF COOKING (MEATS AND VEGETABLES). c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 15Dec43; MP14749.

PRINCIPLES OF FLIGHT. Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division, c1940. 987 ft.

Appl. author: Clarence E. Baer.

© Eastman Kodak Co., Teaching Films Division; 28Nov40; MP10709.

PRINCIPLES OF HOME CANNING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 25Oct44; MP15987.

PRINCIPLES OF RADIO. c1943. 1 reel each. © Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.

Appl. author: Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.

2. Receiving Radio Messages. © 17Dec43; MP14750.

3. Vacuum Tubes. © 28Dec43; MP14751.

PRINCIPLES OF SCALE DRAWING. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how to make scale drawings, how to interpret the drawings, and how the drawings are used. For junior and senior high school grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Harold P. Fawcett.

© David A. Smart; 28Jan49; MP4217.

PRINTING. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. (Your Life Work Series) Vocational Guidance Films, Inc.

© A. P. Twogood; 15May47; MP2078.

PRIORITIES ON PARADE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Albert S. Rogell; original screenplay, Art Arthur, Frank Loesser; music direction, Victor Young; photographer, Daniel Fapp; film editor, Arthur Schmidt.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 22Jul42; LP11617.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Sep42; MP12981.

PRISON SHIP. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 60 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Alexis Thurn-Taxis; director, Arthur Dreifuss; story, Josef Mischel; screenplay, Josef Mischel, Ben Markson; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Aaron Stell.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Nov45; LP13698.

PRISON WARDEN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 62 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a newly-appointed warden attempts to reform a mismanaged prison while his wife schemes to aid a convict who is her former sweetheart.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, Seymour Friedman; screenplay, Eric Taylor; music, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Warner Baxter, Anna Lee, James Flavin, Harlan Warde, Charles Cane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Oct49; LP2576.

PRISONER OF JAPAN. c1942. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 7 reels, sd. Atlantis Picture Corp. An Arthur Ripley Production. Based on a story by Edgar C. Ulmer.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Arthur Ripley; original screenplay, Robert Chapin, Arthur Ripley; music score, Leon Erdody; film editor, Holbrook Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp., 3Jul42; LP11480.

PRISONER OF LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, William D. Alexander; director, Leonard Anderson.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1781.

PRIVATE AFFAIRS. c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 8 reels, sd. Based on the story "One of the Boston Bullertons" by Walter Greene.

Credits: Associate producer, Glenn Tryon; director, Albert S. Rogell; screenplay, Leonard Spigelgass, Charles Grayson; photography, Milton Krasner; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures, Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9734.

THE PRIVATE AFFAIRS OF BEL AMI. Loew-Lewin, Inc., c1947. 119 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. From the novel "Bel Ami" by Guy de Maupassant.

Credits: Producer, David L. Loew; director, Albert Lewin; screenplay, Albert Lewin; music score, Darius Milhaud; film editor, Albrecht Joseph.

Cast: George Sanders, Angela Lansbury, Ann Dvorak, Warren William, Francis Dee.

© Loew-Lewin, Inc.; 7Mar47; LP887.

PRIVATE BUCKAROO. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Cline; original story, Paul Gerard Smith; screenplay, Edmund Kelso, Edward James.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 29May42; LP11334.

PRIVATE MISS JONES. SEE Thousands Cheer.

PRIVATE NURSE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,450 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, David Burton; original screenplay, Samuel G. Engel; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22Aug41; LP10791.

PRIVATE PLUTO. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

© Walt Disney Productions; 1Feb43; LP11950.

PRIVATE SNUFFY SMITH. Capital Productions, c1942. 7 reels, sd. From "Barney Google and Snuffy Smith" by Billy De Beck.

Credits: Producer, Edward Gross; director, Edward Cline; original screenplay, John Grey, Jack Henley, Lloyd French, Donoho Hall; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Robert Crandall.

© Capital Productions; 16Jan42; LP11565.

PRIZE FIGHTER. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 1)

Summary: Introduces Roland La Starza, a promising heavyweight fighter, and shows his daily routine during the training period before a fight.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Edward Rice; narrator, Bill Corum; editor, Gene Milford.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 23Sep49; MP4809.

PRIZE MAID. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The domestic bliss of the Newlyweds is disrupted when they win a maid on a radio program.

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

Cast: Robert Neil, Suzi Crandall, Patsy Moran, Marlo Dwyer, Joe Devlin.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Sep49; LP2598.

PROBLEM PAPPY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Myron Waldman, Sidney Pillet.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 10Jan41; LP10168.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Caravel Films, Inc., c1945. 1 reel each. © Caravel Films, Inc.

Instructing the Blind Worker on the Job. © 1Jun45; MP30.

Employing Workers in Industry. © 1Jun45; MP31.

Employing Disabled Workers in Industry. © 1Jul45; MP431.

Establishing Working Relations for the Disabled Worker. © 1Jul45; MP432.

Instructing the Disabled Worker on the Job. © 1Jul45; MP433.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Caravel Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel each, sd. © Caravel Films, Inc.

Appl. author: F. Burnham MacLeary.

A New Supervisor Takes a Look at His Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 35 prints, 9Sep44; MU15197.

© 1Nov44; MP15769.

Introducing the New Worker to His Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 35 prints, 9Sep44; MU15200.

© 1Nov44; MP15770.

Instructing the New Worker on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 29 prints, 9Sep44; MU15199.

© 1Nov44; MP15771.

Placing the Right Man on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 51 prints, 9Sep44; MU15202.

© 1Nov44; MP15773.

Supervising Workers on the Job.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 39 prints, 9Sep44; MU15201.

© 1Nov44; MP15774.

Maintaining Workers' Interest.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 25 prints, 9Sep44; MU15198.

© 1Nov44; MP15772.

The Supervisor as a Leader, pt. 1.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 33 prints, 9Sep44; MU15195.

© 1Nov44; MP15767.

The Supervisor as a Leader, pt. 2.

© title & descr., 27Sep44; 36 prints, 9Sep44; MU15196.

© 1Nov44; MP15768.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Century Productions, Inc., c1945. 1 reel. © Century Productions, Inc.

Safety in the Shop. © 1Oct45; MP91.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Division of Visual Aids, U. S. Office of Education, c1944–45. 1 reel each. © Herbert Kerkow.

Supervising Women Workers.

© 25Aug44; MP15156.

© 1Aug45; MP363.

Every Minute Counts.

© 25Aug44; MP15157.

© 1Aug45; MP364.

Using Visual Aids in Training.

© 13Jul44; MP15022.

© 1Aug45; MP365.

PROBLEMS IN SUPERVISION. Mode-Art Pictures, Inc., c1944. 1 reel each. © Mode-Art Pictures, Inc.

Improving the Job. © 17Jul44; MP15576.

Maintaining Good Working Conditions. © 17Jul44; MP15577.

Maintaining Quality Standards. © 17Jul44; MP15578.

Planning and Laying Out Work. © 17Jul44; MP15579.

Working with Other Supervisors. © 17Jul44; MP15580.

PROBLEMS OF FLIGHT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 12Jun41; MP14211.

PROBLEMS OF HOUSING; the individual home. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15988.

PROCESSING EKTACHROME COLOR FILM. 167 ft., color, 16mm.

Credits: Kodachrome.

Appl. author: A. Lloyd Reber, Jr.

© Eastman Kodak Co.; title, descr., & 9 prints, 16Aug46; MU977.

THE PRODIGAL SON. c1944. 1,000 ft., 16mm.

Appl. author: C. O. Baptista.

© Scriptures Visualized Institute; 15May44; LP12734.

PRODUCTION CONTROL. Production Research Co. 825 ft., sd.

Credits: Directed and written by Charles J. Hupp.

© Charles J. Hupp, d.b.a. Production Research Co.; title, descr., & 50 prints, 3Jul46; MU839.

PRODUCTION OF FOODS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. (World Food Problems, no. 2)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9May46; MP591.

PRODUCTIVITY—KEY TO PLENTY. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Traces the development of machine power in the United States from 1850 to date, emphasizing that the United States has achieved great production, a large income, and a high standard of living because of the mastery of machine power.

Credits: Collaborator, J. Frederic Dewhurst.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Mar49; MP3990.

PROEM. [A. F. Films, Inc.] c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon presenting the figures of a chess set made of modeling clay.

Credits: Music, William Smith.

Appl. authors: Leonard Tregillus, Ralph W. Luce, Jr., William Smith.

© Ralph W. Luce, Jr.; 7Oct49; MP4668.

PROFESSIONALISM IN RETAILING. Presented by Butler Bros. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Butler Bros.; title & descr., 17Jan40; 128 prints, 19Jan40; MU9942.

PROF. OFFKEYSKY. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 14Jun40; MP10285.

PROF. PEABODY'S BANJO SCHOOL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Dec42; MP13169.

PROF. SMALL AND MR. TALL. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 691 ft., sd., color. (A Color Rhapsody)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; directors, Paul Sommer, John Hubley; story, John McLeish; animation, Jim Armstrong, Volus Jones; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 26Mar43; LP11977.

PROFESSOR TOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Kenneth Muse, Ed Barge; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Oct48; LP1923.

PROGRESS REPORT—1943. Presented by General Motors. 4 reels, sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Public relations; title, descr., & 264 prints, 29Nov43; MU14230.

PROGRESS THROUGH ENGINEERING. Presented by General Motors Corp. 20 min., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 9May46; 12 prints, 13May46; MU559.

PROGRESSIVE HONING WITH AUTOMATIC SIZING. Presented by Micromatic Hone Corp. 1–1/2 reels, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 13 prints, 3Dec45; MU16573.

O PROGRESSO DAS COMUNICAÇÕES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Portuguese version of "The Development of Communication."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 10Mar47; MP1840.

PROJECT X. Transcontinental Productions, Inc. Released through Film Classics Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Joining forces with Federal agents, a young physicist tracks down a Communist spy ring seeking atomic energy secrets.

Credits: Producer, Edward Leven; director, Edward J. Montagne; screenplay, Gene Hurley, Earl Kennedy; film editor, Theodore Waldeyer.

Cast: Keith Andes, Rita Colton, Jack Lord, Kit Russell, Joyce Quinlan.

© Transcontinental Productions, Inc.; 14Oct49; LP2553.

PROJECTIVE MOVEMENT SEQUENCES. Produced in the Audio-Visual Laboratory of Teachers College, Columbia University under the direction of William H. Lundin. 4 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A film showing continuously moving metallic particles. To be used by psychologists as an instrument for evaluating personality.

© William Howard Lundin; title, descr., & 8 prints, 25Mar48; MU2826.

THE PROMISED LAND. 60 min., sd., color.

Appl. author: T. R. Jackman.

© DeVry Corp.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 20Jul40; MU10403.

PROMISES WE LIVE BY. SEE Back of Every Promise.

PRONTO SOCÔRRO; ferimentos e fraturas. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., em colaboraçao com a Cruz Vermelha Americana, c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 4Jun46; MP719.

PROOF FOR ANY MAN. Presented by Associated Lines of the B. F. Goodrich Co. (Hood) 2 reels.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© B. F. Goodrich Associated Lines; title, descr., & 231 prints, 19May41; LU10464.

PROPAGAÇAO DO CALOR. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, H. Horton Sheldon.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Jun46; MP777.

PROPAGANDA TECHNIQUES. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Outlines a procedure for recognizing propaganda, explains the purposes and techniques of propaganda, and stresses the importance of critical evaluation of propaganda.

Credits: Educational collaborator, William G. Brink.

© David A. Smart; 14Jul49; MP4490.

PROPER STEPS. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (Personal Guidance Series)

Summary: A health film based on medical research, showing how walking habits cause common foot abuses and how these habits may be corrected.

Credits: Director and photographer, Josef Bohmer.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4556.

PROPERTIES OF WATER. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Simple experiments are conducted to show the chemical composition of water and its properties as a solid, a liquid, and a gas.

Appl. authors: E. C. Waggoner, Gilbert I. Renner.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 8Sep47; MP2585.

PROPERTY TAXATION; arithmetic of taxes. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 14Mar46; MP334.

THE PROSPECTING BEAR. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 808 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolph Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Mar41; LP10340.

PROSPECTING FOR PETROLEUM. George Pal production, sponsored by the Shell Oil Co., Inc., c1948. 26 min., sd., color, 16mm. (This Is Oil, no. 1)

Summary: The story of petroleum; how it was formed through ages of geological change, and how it is found, extracted, and put to use by man today.

Credits: Producer, George Pal; director, Duke Goldston; animation, Erwin Broner.

© Shell Oil Co., Inc.; 12Feb48; LP1778.

THE PROSPERITY PRESS OPERATOR TRAINING BUNDLE.

Appl. author: H. H. Brown Lee.

© The Prosperity Co., Inc.; title & descr., 13Jan41; 17 prints, 18Dec40; MU10756.

PROSPERITY 2–GIRL SHIRT FINISHING UNIT. Prosperity Co., Inc., c1947. 2 reels, b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: M. C. Ritter.

© Prosperity Co., Inc.; 21Apr47; MP2184.

PROTECTING ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT FROM HIGH IMPACT SHOCK. Presented by the U. S. Navy. 1–1/2 reels, b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 13 prints, 5Aug46; MU918.

PROTECTIVE CUSTODY. Letha McHale and Robert S. Wilson. b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film reproduces drawings of scenes of Santo Tomas Internment Camp in the Philippines and shows portraits of internees.

© Letha McHale, Robert S. Wilson; title, descr., & 2 prints, 14May48; MU2992.

PROUDLY WE SERVE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Marine Corps, c1944. 20 min., sd. (Featurette)

Credits: Written and directed by Crane Wilbur.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 14Oct44; LP12898.

PROVE IT BY THE THINGS YOU DO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Feb46; MP243.

PROVING GROUND. Presented by Celanese Celluloid Corp., Plastics Division of Celanese Corp. of America. b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© Celanese Celluloid Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 5 prints, 31Oct44; MU15346.

PRUNES AND POLITICS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; screenplay, Charles E. Roberts, George Jeske; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 31Dec43; LP12441.

PSALMODY. Square Deal Pictures Corp., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Narration, Jesse William Stitt.

© Square Deal Pictures Corp.; 1Jun46; MP870.

PUBLIC DEB. NO. 1. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. 7,247 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Gregory Ratoff; story, Karl Tunberg, Don Ettlinger; screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 13Sep40; LP9929.

PUBLIC ENEMIES. c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on a story by Michael Burke.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, Albert S. Rogell; screenplay, Edward T. Lowe, Lawrence Kimble; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Oct41; LP10903.

PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. c1943. 1 reel.

Appl. authors: Marjorie F. Ellis, Kenneth R. Edwards.

© Eastman Kodak Co., 28Sep43; MP14297.

PUBLIC JITTERBUG NO. 1. The Vitaphone Corp., c1939. 20 min., sd. (Broad Brevity)

Credits: Director, Joseph Henabery; story, Burnet Hershey.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Dec39; LP9604.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jun43; MP13640.

PUBLIC OPINION. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Harold D. Lasswell.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 21Nov46; MP1383.

PUBLIC OPINION POLLS. United Productions of America, c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© United Productions of America; 15Feb47; MP2012.

PUBLIC RELATIONS. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

PUCK CHASERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 942 ft., sd. (The World of Sports)

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Oct45; MP193.

PUDDIN' HEAD. c1941. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Joseph Santley; original story, Jack Townley; screenplay, Jack Townley, Milt Gross; music director, Cy Feuer; orchestrations, Walter Scharf; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Jun41; LP10613.

PUDENDAL BLOCK WITH DEMEROL AND INTRACAINE. Lees Malcolm Schadel, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows in detail the use of the pudendal block with Demerol and Intracaine.

© Lees Malcolm Schadel, Jr.; 14Jul49; MP4540.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11May42; MP12543.

PUEBLO PLUTO. Walt Disney Productions, c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (Pluto Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Eric Gurney, Milt Schaffer; animation, Phil Duncan, George Nicholas, George Kreisl, Dan MacManus; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 15Jan48; LP1984.

PULLING FOR PROFITS. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Detroit Automotive Products Corp. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Detroit Automotive Products Corp.; title & descr., 8May47; 14 prints, 12May47; MU2000.

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

Summary: Demonstrates the power of the Chevrolet truck as it carries milk over rough country roads to a railroad stop.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 11 prints, 10May48; MU3028.

PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 17Oct40; MP10690.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr45; MP15779.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec43; MP14409.

PUNCTUATION—MARK YOUR MEANING. Coronet, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The true significance of the various symbols of punctuation and their relation to the written expression of thought is made clear, when a young student struggles to clarify the meaning of his unpunctuated story. For junior high school classes.

Credits: Collaborator, Viola Theman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 19Nov47; MP3278.

THE PUNJAB. SEE India.

PUPPET LOVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Aug44; LP12885.

PUPPETRY; string marionettes. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Hansel, a puppet, takes a little boy on a tour of a workshop where puppets are made. The film includes a visit to the rehearsal room, explains the plan of the puppet theatre, and presents a brief episode from "Hansel and Gretel." A teaching film for intermediate grades, high schools, and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborators, Frank and Elizabeth Haines.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 26Nov47; MP2639.

PURITY SQUAD. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1,798 ft., sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Harold Kress; original story and screenplay, Charles Francis Royal; music score, Max Terr; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep45; LP13520.

THE PURLOINED PUP. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Pluto)

Credits: Director, Charles Nichols; story, Harry Reeves, Jesse Marsh; animation, George Nicholas, Robert Youngquist, Gerry Hathcock, Ernie Lynch; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Apr46; LP337.

THE PURPLE HEART. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 8,962 ft., sd. From a story by Melville Crossman.

Credits: Director, Lewis Milestone; written for the screen by Jerome Cady; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Mar44; LP12811.

THE PURPLE MONSTER STRIKES. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Republic Pictures Corp.; no. 1–6; 3Aug45; LP13462; no. 7–15, 11Oct45; LP13532.

Credits: Associate producer, Ronald Davidson; directors, Spencer Bennet, Fred Brannon; original screenplay, Royal Cole, Albert DeMond, Basil Dickey, Lynn Perkins, Joseph Poland, Barney Sarecky; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, Bud Thackery; film editors, Cliff Bell, Harold Minter.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

1. The Man in the Meteor.

2. The Time Trap.

3. Flaming Avalanche.

4. The Lethal Pit.

5. Death on the Beam.

6. The Demon Killer.

7. The Evil Eye.

8. Descending Doom.

9. The Living Dead.

10. House of Horror.

11. Menace from Mars.

12. Perilous Plunge.

13. Fiery Shroud.

14. The Fatal Trail.

15. Take-Off to Destruction.

THE PURPLE V. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. From a story by Robert R. Mill.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Sherman; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser, Curt Siodmak; adaptation, Bertram Millhauser; music director, Morton Scott; photographer, Ernest Miller; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author; Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 12Mar43, LP12019.

PURSUED. Hemisphere Films, Inc., c1947. Presented by Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. 101 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Milton Sperling; director, Raoul Walsh; original screenplay, Niven Busch; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Christian Nyby.

Cast: Teresa Wright, Robert Mitchum, Judith Anderson, Dean Jagger, Alan Hale.

© Hemisphere Films, Inc.; 8Mar47; LP1108.

PURSUIT TO ALGIERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the "Sherlock Holmes" characters created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Director, Roy William Neill; original screenplay, Leonard Lee; music director, Edgar Fairchild; film editor, Saul A. Goodkind.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 25Oct45; LP13642.

PUSS GETS THE BOOTS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 838 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 14Feb40; MP10323.

PUSS N' TOOTS. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 681 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28May42; LP11429.

PUT-PUT-PUT (YOUR ARMS AROUND ME). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Jul42; MP12803.

PUT-PUT TROUBLES. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel, sd. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 15May40; LP9716.

PUT YOUR ARMS AROUND ME, HONEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Sep43; MP13990.

PUT YOUR LITTLE FOOT RIGHT OUT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Aug46; MP925.

PUTTIN' ON THE ACT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, Dave Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Aug40; LP9877.

PUTTIN' ON THE DOG. Loew's Inc., c1944. 645 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ben Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Oct44; LP12963.

PUTTIN' ON THE DOG. Loew's Inc., c1944. 645 ft., sd., color. (An MGM Tom and Jerry Cartoon) (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Ray Patterson, Irven Spence, Ben Muse; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Oct44; LP13018.

PUTTING ON THE DOG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec43; MP14432.

PYGMIES OF AFRICA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 2 reels, sd.

Appl. author: H. C. Raven.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 4Oct39; MP9830.