W

WABASH BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Jun46; MP650.

WABASH CANNON BALL. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R. C. M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec46; MP1408.

WABBIT TWOUBLE. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies, no. 413) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Sid Sutherland; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec41; MP12015.

WACKY BLACKOUT. c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Looney Tunes) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 11Jul42; MP12658.

WACKY BYE BABY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune).

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgrift; animation, Les Kline, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 16Jul48; MP3267.

WACKY QUACKY. Screen Gems, Inc., c1947. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Phantasy Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Alex Lovy; story, Cal Howard.

© Screen Gems, Inc., 20Mar47; LP964.

THE WACKY WEED. c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Laverne Harding, Grim Natwick; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 26Sep46; MP1125.

WACKY WIGWAMS. c1942. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 734 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 82)

Credits: Director, Alec Geiss; animation, Volus Jones; music, Paul Worth. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 22Feb42; LP11084.

WACKY WILD LIFE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Story, Dave Monahan; animation, Virgil Ross.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 9Nov40; MP10598.

THE WACKY WORM. c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Merrie Melodies) Leon Schlesinger Productions.

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Dave Monahan; animation, Cal Dalton; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 21Jun41; MP11252.

WADERS OF THE DEEP. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 6 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 6)

Summary: Shows various water sports at Waikiki Beach, at Wakulla Springs, Fla., and at Silver Springs, Fla.

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

© RKO Pathe. Inc.; 11Feb49; MP4067.

WAGON HEELS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc. c1945. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert Clampett; story, Warren Foster; animation, Emanuel Gould; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 10Oct45; MP16382.

WAGON TRACKS WEST. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, William Lively; music score, Mort Glickman; photography, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Charles Craft.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 13Jul43; LP12163.

WAGON TRAIN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 59 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Edward Killy; story, Bernard McConville; screenplay, Morton Grant; music score, Paul Sawtell; editors, Frederic Knudtson, Harry Marker.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 4Oct40; LP10053.

WAGON WHEELS WEST. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 20 min., sd. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, B. Reaves Eason; original story, William Jacobs; screenplay, Ed. Earl Repp; narrator, Lou Marcelle.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov43; LP12360.

WAGON WHEELS WESTWARD. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on Fred Harman's NEA Comic, "Red Ryder."

Credits: Associate producer; Sidney Picker; director, R. G. Springsteen; original story, Gerald Geraghty; screenplay, Earle Snell; music director, Richard Cherwin; photographer, William Bradford; film editor, Fred Allen.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Cor.; 11Dec45; LP44.

THE WAGONS ROLL AT NIGHT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 9 reels. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. Suggested by a story by Francis Wallace.

Credits: Director, Ray Enright; screenplay, Fred Niblo, Jr., Barry Trivers.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 26Apr41; LP10429.

WAGONS WESTWARD. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Armand Schaefer; director, Lew Landers; original screenplay, Joseph Moncure March, Harrison Jacobs; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Ernest Miller; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jun40; LP9739.

WAGS TO RICHES. Loew's Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM Cartoon.

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; story, Jack Cosgriff, Rich Hogan; animation, Michael Lah, Grant Simmons, Walter Clinton, Bob Cannon; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2457.

WAIKIKI MELODY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Irving A. Applebaum.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jul45; LP13487.

WAIT 'TILL THE SUN SHINES, NELLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11869.

WAIT 'TILL THE SUN SHINES, NELLIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Apr43; MP13506.

WAITIN' FOR THE TRAIN TO COME IN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16586.

WAITING. Presented by Frigidaire Division of General Motors Corp. 4 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 25Apr46; MU498.

WAITING FOR BABY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10210.

WAITING FOR THE ROBERT E. LEE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Oct41; MP11710.

WAKE ISLAND. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 9 reels sd.

Credits: Director, John Farrow; original story, U. S. Marine Corps; screenplay, W. R. Burnett, Frank Butler; photographer, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, LeRoy Stone.

© Paramount Pictures Inc,; 25Sep42; LP11606.

WAKE OF THE RED WITCH. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Garland Roark.

Summary: A sea adventure in which a ship's captain and a prosperous trader are rivals in the pursuit of gold, pearls, and women. Setting, the Dutch East Indies in the 1860's.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmund Grainger; director, Edward Ludwig; screenplay, Harry Brown, Kenneth Gamet; music, Nathan Scott; film editor, Richard L. Van Enger.

Cast: John Wayne, Gail Russell, Gig Young, Adele Mara, Luther Adler.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Feb49; LP2138.

WAKE UP AND DREAM. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 92 min., sd., color, 35mm. From the novel "The Enchanted Voyage" by Robert Nathan.

Credits: Director, Lloyd Bacon; screenplay, Elick Moll; music director, Emil Newman.

Cast: June Haver, John Payne, Charlotte Greenwood, Connie Marshall, John Ireland.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Nov46; LP825.

WALDO'S LAST STAND. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 1 reel, sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Oct40; LP10010.

WALK A CROOKED MILE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. An Edward Small production. Based on a story by Bertram Millhauser.

Summary: With semi-documentary technique, this melodrama shows how agents of the F. B. I. and Scotland Yard track down and apprehend Russian spies. Actual scenes of San Francisco, Los Angeles, and the Lakeview Nuclear Research Laboratory.

Credits: Producer, Grant Whytock; director, Gordon Douglas; screenplay, George Bruce; narration, Reed Hadley; music, Paul Sawtell; film editor, James E. Newcom.

Cast: Louis Hayward, Dennis O'Keefe, Louise Allbritton, Carl Esmond, Onslow Stevens.

© Columbia Pictures Corp; 15Sep48; LP1934.

WALKIN' BY THE RIVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Sep41; MP11545.

THE WALKING HILLS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949, 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western about a search for gold hidden in a wagon train buried in the sand dunes. Filmed in Death Valley National Park.

Credits: Producer, Harry Joe Brown; director, John Sturges; story and screenplay, Alan LeMay; music score, Arthur Morton, music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, William Lyon.

Cast: Randolph Scott, Ella Raines, William Bishop, Edgar Buchanan, Arthur Kennedy.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 25Feb49; LP2149.

THE WALKING MACHINE. American Foot Care Institute, Inc., c1949. 14 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Presents the essentials of foot care—foot hygiene, the selection of footwear, treatment by podiatrists.

Credits: Script, P. J. McLarney; narrator, Albert Grobe; editor, Rosemarie Hickson.

© American Foot Care Institute, Inc.; 25May49; MP4327.

WALKING ON AIR. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Jun41; MP11273.

WALKING WITH MY HONEY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16180.

WALKY TALKY HAWKY. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1946. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, Robert McKimson; story, Warren Foster, Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 31Aug46; MP1056.

WALL STREET BLUES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 17 min., sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; story, Les Goodwins, George Jeske; screenplay, Russ Green, George Bilson; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 12Jul46; LP703.

THE WALLFLOWER. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 556 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 9)

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

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 24May41; LP10479.

WALLFLOWER. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Reginald Denham and Mary Orr.

Summary: A comedy, in which two stepsisters of college age become rivals for the affections of the same young man.

Credits: Producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Frederick de Cordova; screenplay, Phoebe Ephron, Henry Ephron; music, Edward Hollander; film editor, Folmar Blangsted.

Cast: Joyce Reynolds, Robert Hutton, Janis Paige, Edward Arnold, Barbara Brown.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc,; 12Jun48; LP1659.

THE WALLS CAME TUMBLING DOWN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 9 reels, sd., Based upon the novel by Jo Eisinger.

Credits; Producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Lothar Mendes; screenplay, Wilfrid H. Pettitt; music score. Marlin Skiles; music director, M. W. Stoloff.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Jun46; LP509.

THE WALLS KEEP TALKING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Apr42; MP12422.

THE WALLS OF JERICHO. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Paul Wellman.

Summary: A study of life in a small-town, featuring a man's struggle for political success while racked by unhappy personal conflicts. Setting, Kansas, in 1908.

Credits: Producer, Lamar Trotti; director, John M. Stahl; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, Cyril Mockridge, music director, Lionel Newman; orchestra arrangements, Herbert Spencer, Maurice de Packh; film editor, James B. Clark.

Cast: Cornel Wilde, Linda Darnell, Anne Baxter, Kirk Douglas, Ann Dvorak.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Aug48; LP2031.

THE WALTZ. Folke Robert Espling, c1942. 1 reel.

© Folke Robert Espling; 10Feb42; MP12163.

WALTZ A LA ACCORDION. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Dec46; MP1396.

WANDERER OF THE WASTELAND. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 67 min., sd. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; directors, Edward Killy, Wallace Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, J. R. Whittredge.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13668.

WANDERERS OF THE DESERT. World Window, Inc., London, c1938. Distributed by United Artists. 1 reel, sd., color. (World Window Series, no. 5)

Credits: Producers, E. S. and F. W. Keller; director and film editor, Hans Nieter; commentator, Niel Arden; music, Ludwig Brav; photography, Jack Cardiff. Technicolor.

© World Window, Inc.; 1Nov38; MP10034.

WANDERERS OF THE WEST. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1941. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Tansey; director, Robert F. Hill; original story, Robert Emmett; photography, Jack Young; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 25Jun41; LP10707.

WANDERING HERE AND THERE. c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 795 ft., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

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

© Loew's Inc.; 14Dec44; MP486.

WANDERING THROUGH WALES. Loew's Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks) An MGM picture.

Summary: A photographic study of the Welsh countryside, including historic shrines and quaint villages in mountain and pastoral settings.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston.

© Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; 13Oct48; MP3418.

WANTED FOR MURDER. c1946. Presented by Excelsior Film Productions, Ltd. 10 reels, sd., 35mm. From the stage play by Percy Robinson and Terence de Marney.

Credits: Producer, Marcel Hellman; director, Lawrence Huntington; screenplay, Emeric Pressburger, Rodney Ackland; scenario, Percy Robinson, Terence de Marney; music, Mischa Spoliansky; cameraman, R. Franckie; editor, E. B. Jarvis.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Nov46; LP727.

THE WAR AGAINST MRS. HADLEY. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Irving Asher; director, Harold S. Bucquet; original screenplay, George Oppenheimer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Elmo Veron.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Aug42; LP11536.

WAR CAME TO AMERICA. Army Pictorial Service, c1948. Released by American Film Services, Inc. 58 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A documentary film which shows the early history of the United States, American life of the 1920's and 1930's, and the important national and international events which led to United States' participation in World War II.

Credits: Narrator, Walter Huston; editor, Frank Capra.

© American Film Services, Inc.; 11Oct48; MP3532.

WAR CLOUDS IN THE PACIFIC. Loew's Inc., c1941. 2 reels, sd.

© Loew's Inc.; 19Dec41; MP12839.

WAR DANCE FOR WOODEN INDIANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Aug41; MP11458.

WAR DOGS. Loew's Inc., c1943. 627 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Directors, William Hanna, Joseph Barbera; animation, Pete Burness, Kenneth Muse, Irven Spence, Jack Zander; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Sep43; MP14244.

WAR DOGS. Range Busters, Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Ande Lamb.

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; screenplay, John Vlahos; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 9Oct42; LP11655.

WAR FOR MEN'S MINDS. c1943. Presented by United Artists. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 25Aug43; MP13974.

WAR IN THE DESERT. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, Herman Blumenfeld; narrator, Quentin Reynolds.

© Twentieth Century Fox-Film Corp.; 18Jul41; MP11489.

WAR OF THE WILDCATS. SEE In Old Oklahoma.

WAR ON THE SEAS. Time, Inc., c1943. 1 reel. U. S. Navy.

© Time, Inc.; 2Nov43; MP14260.

WAR SURGERY UP FRONT. William Carmel Roberts. 15 min., si., color, 16mm.

Summary: Actual photographs of surgery and medical treatments at the 74th Field Hospital, which was constructed on Okinawa Shima during the campaign in 1945.

© William Carmel Roberts; title, descr., & 8 prints, 18Aug48; MU3236.

WAR TASK; assignment for the Weirton Steel Co. Presented by Weirton Steel Co.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 29Nov45; 10 prints, 3Dec45; MU16570.

THE WARM FRONT. Walt Disney Productions. sd., color.

© Walt Disney Productions, title, descr. 2 prints, 22Aug44; MU15127.

WARNER PATHE NEWS. Warner News, Inc., c1948–49. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 35mm. © Warner News, Inc.

Volume 20, 1948–49.

16. Oct. 14, 1948. World series; first and second games. 23 rescued in Bahamas air crash. Air lift pilots aid Berlin kids. People in the news: President Truman, John Foster Dulles, Sir Stafford Cripps. United Nations news [highlights of Paris meeting]. Great American: John Adams, Oct. 19, 1735.

© 14Oct48; MP3520.

17. Oct. 18, 1948. Cleveland wins series; Fifth and sixth games. Football: Southern California-Rice; Northwestern-Minnesota. Churchill, "Don't give up atom bomb." People in the news: Candidate Truman, Candidate Dewey, Secretary Marshall.

© 18Oct48; MP3521.

18. Oct, 21, 1948. The Dewey story

© 21Oct48; MP3522.

19. Oct. 25, 1948. The Truman story, 2d of two special features of the coming election. General Clay visits Ruhr. Michigan swamps Northwestern.

© 25Oct48; MP3537.

20. Oct. 28, 1948. People in the news: General Clay, Thomas E. Dewey, Secretary Marshall, General MacArthur and Korean President Rhee. American Legion captures Miami. French country fashions. Sports: California whips Oregon State; Gallic grunts and groans [Pierre and Gaston wrestle in Paris]. Great American: Theodore Roosevelt, Oct. 27, 1858.

© 28Oct48; MP3523.

21. Nov. 1, 1948. Troops subdue rioting [French] miners. First D. P.'s sail for U. S. People in the News: President Truman, S. Perry Brown, Catherine Rickert. Dude ranch fashions. Aerial acrobat stunts over Italy. Football: Army-Cornell; Michigan-Minnesota.

© 1Nov48; MP3524.

22. Nov. 4, 1948. Troops, miners in pitched battle [in France]. Operation Combine. People in the news: Mrs. Roosevelt, Denmark's King and Queen, England's King and Queen, Paul Hoffman. The Navy's new look. Assembly line grocery store. Sports: Eagles vs. Bears; Roller Derby. Great American: Daniel Boone, Nov. 2, 1734.

© 4Nov48; MP3525.

23. Nov. 8, 1948. Mystery fog kills twenty. First D. P.'s reach America. Exclusive report from German Ruhr. Football: California-U.S.C.; Northwestern-Ohio State. Morgenthau in Palestine. New Harvest by helicopter. Life on rope half mile up. Charm school turns out PHD's.

© 8Nov48; MP3526.

24. Nov. 11, 1948. Truman wins! Warner Pathe news records the most stunning political upset in U. S. history as the Democrats win Senate, House, and White House.

© 11Nov48; MP3538.

25. Nov. 15, 1948. Colorado fashions [skiing and swimming styles shown at Colorado Springs]. Washington hails Truman and Barkley. First inductees find it's a "new" Army. Air lift delivers new "secret weapon"

© 15Nov48; MP3539.

26. Nov. 18, 1948. West opens new airlift base [in French sector of Berlin]. People in the news: Danny Kaye in wax at Mme. Tussaudes' in London; Dr. Paul Muller, Swiss chemist, wins Nobel prize for medicine; Mrs. Roosevelt receives degree at the University of Lyon. The [new] General Patton tank [at Aberdeen]. Giant magnet is most attractive [used in Columbia University's new cyclotron]. Maulers vs. Terrors [in biggest battle of the small fry season]. Ski season starts [at Mount Rainier National Park]. Miami goes to the dogs [dog racing season].

© 18Nov48; MP3610.

27. Nov. 22, 1948. A prince is born [at Buckingham Palace]. Tojo sentenced for war crimes. Reds in Berlin mark Soviet anniversary. President Truman and Vice President-Elect Barkley confer in Key West. The Red Dean of Canterbury arrives in New York. Field Marshall Montgomery meets with the West's Military Governors. Football: Notre Dame vs. Northwestern; SMU vs. Arkansas. Italian smoke-eaters drill [firemen in Rome]. Florida "peaches" and grapefruit.

© 22Nov48; MP3611.

28. Nov. 25, 1948. The Truman family [relaxes in Florida]. Louis St. Laurent becomes Canada's Prime Minister. Defense Secretary [pays a whirlwind visit to Berlin]. Browns beat Forty-Niners. Disaster rides miniature rails [train built by amateur movie makers]. Paris fashions [glove styles]. Variety Club cheers polio victims. Thanksgiving—underwater [in Florida].

© 25Nov48; MP3612.

29. Nov. 29, 1948. People in the news: [The Trumans return to Washington; Truman Welcomes Secretary Marshall home from Europe; Mrs. Kasenkina leaves hospital; Salvador Dali studies Rome's ruins]. Aviation news [Navy's ZF7U–1 "Flying Wing"; the giant Constitution]. Berlin GI's take lessons in Russian. Small fry fashions from France. Baby bedlam in Florida [with four-month-old chimp]. Football: [Michigan-Ohio State; North Carolina-Duke].

© 29Nov48; MP3876.

30. Dec. 2, 1948. UN news: [East and West clash in Paris over outlawing of atom bomb]. Red fliers [who fled Russia are interviewed in Austria]. Levi Jackson [first Negro captain of the Yale football team]. Santa Claus [stops off in Canada]. The latest in cameras: the smallest camera; the fastest camera. The "Wee-Bee" [the world's smallest piloted plane, makes test run in California]. Tropical ice harvest [salt harvested in Puerto Rico]. Pitt upsets Penn State.

© 2Dec48; MP3661.

31. Dec. 6, 1948. Army-Navy game of the year. [President Truman among spectators at Philadelphia as Navy ties score]. Cornell upsets Penn. Tulane swamps LSU. Nation-wide news: Santa Claus arrives; Variety Clubs honor Boys' Town Founder [unveil a statue of Father Flanagan].

© 6Dec48; MP3650.

32. Dec. 9, 1948. Battle for Suchow [Nationalists abandon city]. Key elections split Berlin. Mme. Chiang Kai-Shek arrives in U. S. to seek aid for China. Former Queen Wilhelmina plants trees. President Truman and Secretary Marshall meet with America's European recovery experts in Washington. The "Kitty Hawk" comes home [to Smithsonian Institute]. The two-way [brake] propeller. Browns beat '49ers. Water skiing at Cypress Gardens, Fla.

© 9Dec48; MP3651.

33. Dec. 13, 1948. The Collier's All-America [football team selected by top college coaches. Washington press corps honors capitol's outstanding fathers and daughters, including Harry Truman and daughter Margaret. WAC director Colonel Mary Hallaren becomes first woman officer sworn into the regular Army. Whittaker Chambers reveals microfilms said to be top-secret State Department documents. The people of France thank America for the Friendship Train.] London's worst fog. Livestock championship [49th International Livestock Exposition at Chicago].

© 13Dec48; MP3652.

34. Dec. 16, 1948. Reds routed in Berlin elections. Americans flee Red tide in China. [U. S. marines sail into Tsingtao. President Truman welcomes Cuba's President Prio. Barkley and Warren meet in Los Angeles. Doak Walker is named year's outstanding football player.] Unusual automobiles [the Phibian and two-in-one car from Italy]. T-men nab passer of "near perfect" bills [in Baltimore]. Wild geese. Great American: Clara Barton.

© 16Dec48; MP3653.

35. Dec. 20, 1948. Christmas, 1948. The Boys' Choir of New York's St. Thomas Church sings "Silent Night." In Europe, Japan, Canada, and Mexico cameramen record Christmas spirit of Peace on Earth, Good Will Toward Men. Citation still winning in California [Tanforan Handicap]. Bills vs. Colts [for AAC's eastern championship].

© 20Dec48; MP3654.

36. Dec. 23, 1948. Florida fashions. 2,900 Chinese die in sea tragedy. UN ends Paris session. Americas investigate Costa Rica invasion. [Cardinal Spellman gives party for] kids at Christmas. Endurance flyers. Great events: Washington crosses the Delaware, Dec. 25, 1776.

© 23Dec48; MP3736.

37. Dec. 27, 1948. First pictures of royal baby [Prince Charles of Edinburgh]. 33 saved in Pacific rescue. People in the news: [Alger Hiss indicted for perjury; General De Gaulle outlines program; Barbara Ann Scott makes professional debut in New York]. Year's biggest snow blankets East coast. America remembers Kitty Hawk flight. Football: Browns-Bills; Eagles-Cards.

© 27Dec48; MP3816.

38. Dec. 30, 1948. Airlift Christmas [Christmas gifts for Berlin children]. People in the news: [President Truman promotes Colonel Landry; General Bradley honored by chief of Italy's General Staff; Italy's President Einaudi pays official visit to Vatican; Madame Schiaparelli shows hat creations]. Teen-age fashions. [Miniature] clockwork community [displayed in San Francisco]. Marines vs. soldiers [interservice football].

© 30Dec48; MP3817.

39. Jan. 3, 1949. Race to rescue airmen on icecap. Berlin keeps warm [during blockade]. Shanghai gold rush. Truman at home. Paris ski fashions. [Michelangelo's] "David" comes to U. S. Aussies a-weigh [weight-lifting championship].

© 3Jan49; MP3818.

40. Jan. 6, 1949. News of 1948 in review.

© 6Jan49; MP3861.

41. Jan. 10, 1949. Bowl games: Rose Bowl, Sugar Bowl, Cotton Bowl. 81st Congress opens. Rescued airmen arrive in New York. "Airlift follies" for Berlin GI's. Puerto Rico installs 1st elected governor.

© 10Jan49; MP3862.

42. Jan. 13, 1949. President reports to 81st Congress. Tornado levels Arkansas town. Royalty [Edward VIII of England and Leopold III of Belgium] on the Riviera. Germans ask for world citizenship. Ships in the news: [Queen Mary repaired in England; German liner, New York, raised at Kiel]. Boxing: Golden Gloves. Great American: Alexander Hamilton.

© 13Jan49; MP3863.

43. Jan. 17, 1949. Marshall resigns; Acheson named Secretary of State. Miami air show. Strange news from abroad [hobble skirts in Paris; London plumber atop a Piccadilly statue]. People in the news: [Egypt pays tribute to assassinated Premier Nokrashy Pasha; Yoshihisa Kuzu freed as General MacArthur grants amnesty to 19; barbecue follows inauguration of Florida's governor, Fuller Warren]. Photographers pick a queen [Jeanne Crow].

© 17Jan49; MP3864.

44. Jan. 20, 1949. Senate hears Dean Acheson. Caronia ends maiden voyage. Snow blankets California. France sends U. S. "Gratitude Train". Moppet melodrama [refugee children in Germany see first puppet show]. Sports [25th Silver Skates races in New York; basketball team of St. Louis University vs. Long Island University]. Great American: John Hancock.

© 20Jan49; MP3865.

45. Jan. 24, 1949. Air news [Air Force's XF–11 climbs at three miles a minute; Navy's Ram-jet Robot sets record; Bill Odom sets new mark]. Reds go on trial [Federal Court in New York]. [Planes] rescue starving cattle. Paris hats for 1949. "Miss March of Dimes". Bitsy bow-bows [Mexican chihuahua show in Miami]. Norge ski meet.

© 24Jan49; MP3866.

46. Jan. 27, 1949. The inauguration of President Truman. Includes pre-inauguration festivities, scenes from the inauguration of Wilson, Coolidge, Hoover, and Franklin Roosevelt, the inaugural parade, and the President's address.

© 27Jan49; MP4104.

47. Jan. 31, 1949. People in the news: Dean Acheson sworn in as Secretary of State; French Foreign Minister Schumann honored at London reception; Paris hails Winston Churchill; Mildred Gillars [Axis Sally] starts trial for treason. The [Italian] car that flies. New York critics make film awards. Diamond fashions. Ice sports: [International Championships for iceboats at Fox Lake, Ill; Sonja Henie in ice revue in New York].

© 31Jan49; MP4023.

48. Feb. 3, 1949. Overseas news: in Berlin, West installs anti-Red government and coal is located under the city; in Monte Carlo, Monacan army has ceremonial review; in Marseilles, construction begins on skyscraper on stilts. Koala bear sanctuary [Australia]. United States-Canada pulp project opens. Bathing suits of metal. Sports: baseball [Rip Sewell's Florida baseball school; Lou Boudreau signs two-year contract]; water ski jumpers [Cypress Gardens, Fla.] Great American: Thomas Alva Edison.

© 3Feb49; MP4024.

49. Feb, 7, 1949. Report from Israel. Clipper survives mid-air crash. Three-mile parade spurs March of Dimes [Los Angeles]. Parliament opens in Canada. Sports: [Millrose Games; Down Hill Ski Championships in the French Alps; Santa Anita Maturity].

© 7Feb49; MP4025.

50. Feb. 10, 1949. New York hails "Gratitude Train." Fashions in color. A U. S. soldier is buried at home [in Japan]. 19 nations map unity in Asia. Sports: [Marcel Choisnet sets gliding record in French Alps; trotting races; skiers at Mount Blanc, France, compete for European ski jumping crown]. Great Americans quiz: Benjamin Franklin.

© 10Feb49; MP4026.

51. Feb. 14, 1949. "Gratitude Train" starts historic U. S. journey. People in the news: Norway's Foreign Minister Lange arrives in America; two escaped Russian fliers arrive in Washington; General MacArthur welcomes Secretary Royall in Tokyo; National Conference of Christians and Jews honors Irene Dunne and Ned Depinet. Last days of Nanking. Biggest airliner [92–ton Constitution] hops continent. Sports: rodeo championship [Palm Springs, Calif.]

© 14Feb49; MP4027.

52. Feb. 17, 1949. Nation protests Mindszenty sentence. People in the news: General Eisenhower, on leave of absence from Columbia University, is welcomed in Washington; Mrs. Truman sees new portraits of husband and daughter; General Marshall returns to Washington; Chinese nationalist government transfers Japanese prisoners of war; Governor Dewey gives his version of Republican defeat. Paris gloves. A special feature [an incident in life of George Washington, in observance of National Brotherhood Week]. Sports: ski jumping [Leavenworth, Wash., and Duluth, Minn.]

© 17Feb49; MP4028.

53. Feb. 21, 1949. Washington welcomes Canadian Premier [Louis St. Laurent]. Hitler's chancellory blown up by Russians. Kids' pet show [Madison Square Garden]. Flying Wing sets record. School days in the pyramids [Step Pyramid is classroom for Cairo University students]. Sports: [in New York, Holland's Slykhuis captures Baxter Mile; American Bowling Congress opens in Atlantic City; St. Paul's Winter Carnival]. A special feature [in cooperation with the American Heart Association].

© 21Feb49; MP4029.

54. Feb. 24, 1949. Greatest air show [at Andrews Field, Md., to show Congress where Air Force money goes]. New tire: no tube, no blowout. People in the news: Holland's Prince Bernhard and daughters vacation in Swiss Alps; Berlin's Mayor Reuter goes to Paris; General De Gaulle's RPF Party holds convention [in Lille]. Gratitude Train speeds west. Sports: [slow motion pictures of Fanny Blankers-Koen; Westminster Kennel Club Show in New York]. Great Americans quiz: Daniel Webster.

© 24Feb49; MP4030.

55. Feb. 28, 1949. Israel's new government meets for first time. Overseas news: [London charwomen request raise; in Berlin, Western Allies tighten their counter-blockade against Russians; workmen get the city of Viareggio, Italy, ready for carnival]. Navy blasts giant hangar [Houma, La.]. Pets in the news: [pet sparrow in Los Angeles; flea actors in Paris; uncooked rooster, chef's specialty in Tours, Paris. Sports: surf board riders off Mokopuu Point in Hawaii; motorcycle on skis at Liberty, N. Y.; winter games in Czechoslovakia].

© 28Feb49; MP431.

56. Mar. 3, 1949. Israeli president inaugurated. Reds deport Anna Strong as spy. Fritz Kuhn freed by German court. Chicago photogs pick a queen. West Coast hails Gratitude Train. Pope denounces Mindszenty trial. Santa Anita derby. World's bobsled titles. Ski jumping championships.

© 3Mar49; MP4094.

57. Mar. 7, 1949. Berlin: giant parade marks Red Army Day. Labor Party wins key British election. Mauna Loa volcano on the rampage. POW's freed in Holy Land truce. Air news: Caroline Mars sets passenger mark, 222 mph; the Navy Mauler, a flying arsenal. Nassau: cliff diving in the Bahamas. Fort Myer, Va.: Army's world boxing championships. Iron Mountain, Mich.: five record leaps in one ski meet. Santa Anita handicap. San Francisco: "Merci train" arrives.

© 7Mar49; MP4095.

58. Mar. 10, 1949. B–50 flies around the world, non-stop. Reds fail to stop Churchill speech. Army convicts 5 in Germany spy ring. DP's cross U. S. on long voyage home. Mardi Gras merriment reigns supreme. French beach styles have a new twist. Bavaria: western zone ski championships. Do you remember?—Styles of 1927.

© 10Mar49; MP4096.

59. Mar. 14, 1949. UN Security Council votes on Israel. Blockaded Reds quit U. S. zone. Netherlands: dramatic pictures of rescue at sea. New York: FBI arrests Red spy suspects. Washington: Johnson takes over from Secretary Forrestal. Tokyo: another Red flyer deserts to U. S. zone. Winnipeg, Man.: Canadian university honors Mrs. F. D. Roosevelt. New York: press fetes Marshall and Acheson, Washington: 75–passenger stratocruiser christened. Boston Braves hit spring training trail. World champion Indians open '49 season. West's best slug it out in Golden Gloves.

© 14Mar49; MP4097.

60. Mar. 17, 1949. Views of the airlift to Berlin. Axis Sally found guilty of treason. Train robbers captured in gun battle. Bill Odom sets flivver plane record. Rollins College honors President Truman. Ice breaks, floods threaten midwest. Brazilian bark visits Golden Gate. Russia returns lend-lease cruiser. U.S.S. Tarawa heads for moth balls. Joe Louis gets himself a new job. Whitefish, Mont.: the downhill skiing championships. Great American quiz: Daniel Boone.

© 17Mar49; MP4098.

61. Mar. 21, 1949. U. S. parades armed might in Germany. Truman and Vinson relax in the [Florida] sun. Egypt restores fabulous Karnak temple. New Jap police force marches on review. Brownsville, Tex.: two nations hail film premiere. Parisian lives as though today were 1800. Paris spring fashions. New York: kids battle for boxing crowns. Australia: dramatic wild horse roundup. Daytona Beach, Fla.: national motorcycle championship race. Pittsburgh Pirates start training.

© 21Mar49; MP4099.

62. Mar. 24, 1949. $1,000,000 Oakland pier fire. Eight Atlantic Pact nations meet. S.S. Haifa enters Israel-U. 5. service. Cruiser leased to Russia rejoins Navy. "Orphan airlift" flies 67 to new homes. British workers start U. S. study tour. Navy vet builds push-button paradise. American judo girl rolls her own. "Hobby horses" star in colorful derby. Great American quiz: Stephen Decatur.

© 24Mar49; MP4100.

63. Mar. 28, 1949. Acheson praises Atlantic Pact. France mourns General Giraud. Hirohito opens Japanese Parliament. British fleet in Mediterranean war games, Truman honors press; press honors Truman. Foreign press picks best films of 1948. Seattle: motorcycle racing in the mud. New York: basketball; national invitation finals. Do you remember?—Treaty of Versailles. Nation hails $20,000,000 [Houston] Texas hotel.

© 28Mar49; MP4105.

64. Mar. 31, 1949. Churchill arrives in U. S. Shostakovitch and Reds in New York for conference. In the news: French Army Chief of Staff; Lord Mayor of Berlin; Greek King's Honor Guard. Allies ban Soviet money in Berlin. Canada trains paratroops for Arctic. Lavish evening gowns from France. Racing: French thoroughbreds in action [at Chantilly]. New York: eastern college finals in basketball.

© 31Mar49; MP4106.

65. Apr. 4, 1949. Filmdom gives Oscars for 1948's best. 66–1 shot wins Grand National. Washington: Churchill visits wartime U. S. colleagues, Argentina celebrates new constitution. Fleet Admiral Leahy, retiring, decorated. Teenaged girl heroine gets a dream house. Johnson sworn in as Defense Secretary. Seattle: intercollegiate basketball championship. New York: meet the sweepstakes winners.

© 4Apr49; MP4107.

66. Apr, 7, 1949. Europe's top diplomats here; Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin; Premier Paul-Henri Spaak; Gromyko here for UN Assembly. Annual French tidal wave arrives on time. Spring is sheer beauty to sheep ranchers. Vacation fashions in the Bahamas. Golden Gloves: East-West finals. Paris: world's toughest sport—Rugby football. Cypress Gardens, Fla.: women's champ is a water-ski wizard. Great Americans quiz: Robert E. Peary. Bing Crosby asks help for cancer drive.

© 7Apr49; MP4108.

67. Apr. 11, 1949. Atlantic Pact signed. Churchill [speaks] on Russia [at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston]. Daytona Beach, Fla.: National AAU swim championships. New York: All-star basketball; East nips West.

© 11Apr49; MP4109.

68. Apr. 14, 1949. UN General Assembly opens [Flushing Meadow, N. Y.]. In color: Hawaiian fashions. Pope celebrates 50th year as a priest. FBI catches $880,000 runaway banker. Armed Forces parade on "Army Day." The lights go on again in London. Four-alarm tenement fire in Harlem. Downhill skiing; Harriman Cup races, Boston; National AAU boxing championships.

© 14Apr49; MP4381.

69. Apr. 18, 1949. The tragedy of Kathy Fiscus. Church explodes; 6 dead, 47 hurt. Key West, Fla.: U. S. joint chiefs of staff meet. Burbank, Calif.: France honors Harry M. Warner. Britain's Bevin sails for home. Ex-Reds fete Greek King and Queen. Clay reviews U. S. might in Germany. Sydney, Australia: an Easter feature; rock-a-bye rabbit. A dog plays the pinball machines. Sam Snead wins Masters Golf crown. Annapolis: Navy kids set pace in boxing classic.

© 18Apr49; MP4110.

70. Apr. 21, 1949. Quake rocks Northwest. Truman marks fourth year as president. Israeli President arrives in U. S. Delaware Bay: ships burn after collision in fog. Norway launches new liner in Holland. Paris introduces the "hobo handbag." Rome: blindfolded boxers dance in the dark. Hemlines are up on Dior's newest look. Europe's kids say thanks for CARE.

© 21Apr49; MP4111.

71. Apr. 25, 1949. Flivver fliers smash world endurance mark. Easter 1949: sunrise service in the Hollywood Bowl; GI's and Germans attend first joint rites [in Berlin]; record crowds jam the Easter parade [in New York City]. Do you remember?—1890's Easter parade. Liberty Bend, Mo.: engineers move mighty Missouri River. Ex-Premier Reynaud arrives in U. S. Syracuse "miracle" draws big crowds. New York: Palestine mediator home to report. San Juan, P. R.: world's largest trade school opens. Pitcher Truman opens baseball season.

© 25Apr49; MP4112.

72. Apr. 28, 1949. The Irish Republic is born. Secretary Hull leaves the hospital. Yankee Stadium: plaque unveiled to immortal "Babe." Egypt's royalty opens "world's fair." New bill keeps aid flowing to Europe. Truman lauds bond drive "forty-niners." Square dance craze sweeps Japan. Berlin: 1383–flight day sets airlift record. Newhall, Calif.: flying jalopies in race thriller. Great American quiz: James Madison.

© 28Apr49; MP4113.

73. May 2, 1949. Shelled British ships reach Shanghai. The Trumans are hosts to the Weizmanns. Acheson asks for one and one-half billion dollars for arms for Europe. King George meets Dominion premiers. Shirley Temple celebrates 21st birthday. Acrobats defy death 13 floors over city. New Brunswick, N. J.: 96 men paint a house in two and one-half minutes. Gruelling Paris-Roubaix bicycle race. Los Angeles: "hell drivers" star in thrill show. Derby favorite wins Wood Memorial.

© 2May49; MP4114.

74. May 5, 1949. Atlantic Pact before Senate. Texas housewife named mother of the year. Kalavrites, Greece: Greek King and Queen visit martyred town. New York: Diplomats discuss ending Berlin blockade. Fullerton, Calif.: Endurance fliers end 6 weeks in the air. He should have stood in bed! National AAU women's swim meet. Australia: They ax for it; chopper championships.

© 5May49; MP4382.

75. May 9, 1949. Evacuation of Shanghai. Steve Early returns to public life. Frankfurt: Allied governors of Germany meet. Princess Margaret Rose goes on vacation. Winchester, Va.: Shenandoah Apple Blossom Festival. Former DP's build useful lives in U. S. National AAU gymnastic championships. Daredevils afloat; water ski maniacs. Do you remember?—New York World's Fair. Loyalty marchers outstrip Reds on May Day. Chicago to shine in "forty-nine."

© 9May49; MP4383.

76. May 12, 1949. Four powers agree to lift Berlin blockade. India's ambassador arrives. Dewey off on European tour. Academy winner Jane Wyman sails. Weizmann starts back to Israel. Kansas City, Mo.: "Opportunity bond drive" gets big start. Israel's first anniversary hailed in U. S. Jap firemen put out big Tokyo blaze. 500 yachts in Pacific "shakedown" race. Durocher, cleared, is back in uniform. Miami Beach: fancy new twists to fancy diving.

© 12May49; MP4597.

77. May 16, 1949. 16–to–1 shot [Ponder] wins Kentucky Derby thriller. Shanghai under siege. Amazing pictures of Mt. Vesuvius' crater. Princess Margaret goes sailing at Capri. The Collins quads. Variety Clubs honor Herbert Hoover. Fire razes $5,000,000 Hollywood park. Wenatchee apple blossom festival.

© 16May49; MP4598.

78. May 19, 1949. Berlin blockade lifted. Israel wins United Nations membership. Parades in Israel mark first anniversary. General Ike [Eisenhower] back on duty [in Washington] after illness. UN mediator for Palestine honored. Mahatma Gandhi's son arrives in U. S. Secretary Snyder's daughter aids bond drive. Miami: model art students go to work. Quantico, Va.: Marines in air-ground maneuvers. Great American quiz: Grover Cleveland. Memphis Cotton Carnival.

© 19May49; MP4599.

79. May 23, 1949. Holland Tunnel blast. Berlin hails the end of the blockade. Dewey in Europe on vacation. Washington: Press Club honors women of the year. Hirohito and Empress hail Jap anniversary. The Vatican's Swiss guard takes its oath. Seals find haven on remote Pacific Isle. Paris: burlap becomes latest cloth for milady. Daring gown makes Paris a "whistle stop". Capot wins Preakness in photo-finish.

© 23May49; MP4600.

80. May 26, 1949. General Clay gets hero's welcome. Washington: President of Brazil in U. S. McCloy named U. S. boss in Germany. F.D.R., Jr., elected to Congress. Clear record snows from Pacific peaks. Thousands of sheep cross Grand Coulee. Washington: Newsboys turn opportunity bond salesmen. Independence, Mo.: 'Forty-niners parade opens bond drive. Geneva: Swiss acrobat becomes steeple-chaser. Cypress Gardens, Fla.: latest in sport thrills—skim boats. International Golden Gloves boxing. Great American quiz: James Lawrence.

© 26May49; MP4601.

81. May 30, 1949. Strikers riot against Reds in Berlin. Paris: Big Four foreign ministers meet. Air Force latest is needle-nosed F–90. 308 passengers fly on one plane. Bermuda: these spring hats are really flowery. Push-button special: good night nurse. P.A.L. boxing championships. Fanny Blankers-Koen in U. S. debut.

© 30May49; MP4602.

82. June 2, 1949. Forestal buried at Arlington. Big Four ministers open Paris talks. Fort Bragg, N. C.: exercise Tarheel—assault by air. Queen Fredericka visits Greek orphans. Queen Juliana helps rebuild Rotterdam. Pretty and practical outdoor fashions. DiMaggio tests heel—it still hurts. All-Navy boxing championships. Great American quiz: Theodore Roosevelt.

© 2Jun49; MP4603.

83. June 6, 1949. Nation honors U. S. dads: mediator Bunche is father of year; greatgrandad has family of 108; seven times a father in 3–1/2 years. Los Angeles: man survives 240 degrees in "hotbox" test. Wales: helicopter crash. Crystal Lake, Ill.; first look at tomorrow's trailers. Boston, Mass.; canine campus; every dog a gentleman. Michigan State coeds sponsor push-car thriller. Oklahoma A & M, the roughest rodeo of them all.

© 6Jun49; MP4604.

84. June 9, 1949. 500–mile auto race classic at Indianapolis. Sam Snead wins PGA crown. Nagasaki: Hirohito visits A-bombed city. Alger Hiss Perjury trial opens. Rita [Hayworth] and Aly [Khan] are married. King George honors Welsh guard. General Clay retires from Army. D-day newsmen to retrace invasion. British film awards. Styles go slats-happy.

© 9Jun49; MP4605.

85. June 13, 1949. 16 nations honor Marshall. English Derby photo finish. Star-studded golf match [National Celebrities Golf Tournament at Washington]. DP's—then and now. Margaret Truman is bridesmaid. Kensington, Eng.: new honor for Winston Churchill. English lords hear Danny Kaye. Atlantic City: Miss National Press Photog. Toronto: Canada opens international trade fair.

© 13Jun49; MP4606.

86. June 16, 1949. West Point on parade. National Motorcycle Championship [Richmond, Va.] $1,000,000 fire razes Havana waterfront. Normandy: D-day plus five years. Rockford, Ill.: spills mark summer ski meet. Nagasaki: Christian rites held in Japan. Bermuda: latest honeymoon fashions. Big Bear Lake, Calif.: here's how not to fly. Great events quiz: Bunker Hill.

© 16Jun49; MP4651.

87. June 20, 1949. Truman [makes address at Little Rock, Ark., and says] "We have turned the tide." Capot wins Belmont Stakes. Middlecoff wins National Open. London: King and Princess "troop the color." Baltimore harbor: test of fastest lifeboat rescue rig. New York City: national sewing contest winners. Saranac Lake, N. Y.: Variety Clubs take over hospital. Australia shows champion sheet.

© 20Jun49; MP4652.

88. June 23, 1949. West wins in Trieste elections. F.D.R., Jr., takes oath in Congress. Frankie Frisch takes over the Chicago Cubs. Jap crown prince takes up tennis. Manus Island, million dollar junk pile. Latest in hat fashion, kid's style. Rye Beach, N.Y.: pick national "Swim for health" queen. Miami: trouble a-bruin; bear wrestling. Bridgehampton, N. Y.: sports car road racing. Great cities of America: San Francisco.

© 23Jun49; MP4653.

89. June 27, 1949. Tense Paris hears De Gaulle. Gordon Gray sworn in as Army Secretary. Detroit: world's largest American flag unfurled. Australia: happily married for seventy-two years. Kid artists show their stuff in London. Ludlow, Mass.: New England's tallest chimney blasted. Chantilly Castle, France, backdrop for fashion. Los Angeles: machine age catches up with beach combers. Martinsburg, W. Va.: airplane acrobats stunt to defy death. Washington: mammoth mat match mangles many maulers.

© 27Jun49; MP4654.

90. June 30, 1949. Big Four talks end; Acheson home. Germany: poultry city—5,000 babies born each day. Paris designers run wild on bike fashions. Mrs. Mesta named Minister to Luxembourg. Bao-Dai returns to be Emperor of Viet-Nam, Indo-China. Comedian Milton Berle goes to Hollywood. Charles whips Walcott for Louis' crown. Bellingham, Wash.: Indians race war canoes for world title. Crack-up champions in circus of thrills.

© 30Jun49; MP4655.

91. July 4, 1949. Poughkeepsie Regatta. Tennis: Riggs vs. Budge. Governor of Florida marries a California girl. Ex-GI weds the Kaiser's granddaughter. China dolls compete in kids' beauty show. Asbury Park, N. J.: National Marbles Championships. Pittsfield, Mass.: man-made lightning—15,000,000 volts. Round-world plane can land anywhere, too. Marlton, N. J.: new paraplane comes almost straight down. Do you remember?—Blizzard of 1947.

© 4Jul49; MP4656.

92. July 7, 1949. Canadian Liberals sweep key election. T-men seize $100,000 in bogus bills. Shelton, Conn.: home, sweet cave; underground house. Cotton mill town springs up in Sahara. 10,000 at square dance in Central Park. Paris: thrill-packed finish marks the Grand Prix. Japan's no. 1 swimmer breaks world mark. Czechoslovakia: canoes battle big rapids in 100–mile race. Great American quiz: Custer's last stand.

© 7Jul49; MP4657.

93. July 11, 1949. Judith Coplon is guilty. Katonah, N. Y.: rubber-band catapult makes yard an airport. Australia ravaged by worst floods. Notre Dame University honors Irene Dunne. A Chinese orphan's Cinderella story. Baseball star faces girl who shot him. Behind the newsreel camera. Tie triumph; four-in-hand fashions. Puerto Rico: spectacular water-skiing by torchlight.

© 11Jul49; MP4658.

94. July 14, 1949. MacArthur reviews biggest parade [in Tokyo]. Schroeder wins at Wimbledon. Jap war prisoners home from Russian camps. European Union stages first fleet maneuvers. Housing problem: Congress moves. General Patton is honored by France. Tokyo Rose goes on trial for treason. Chicago: Paul Bunyan comes back at railroad fair. San Francisco Chinatown's beauties. Detroit: Gold Cup speedboat racing classic. Lake Placid: sun-baked ski jumpers.

© 14Jul49; MP4691.

95. July 18, 1949. Jury fails to decide on Hiss; Chambers speaks. London: troops called in dock strike. Danny Kaye safe in air accident. Israel: Rebury Jews killed by Nazis. Senator Johnson asks movie tax cut. New York: girl warms up for Channel swim. Lady wrestlers waltz in Vienna. Los Angeles: Machine Age restaurant.

© 18Jul49; MP4692.

96. July 21, 1949. All-star Baseball [National Leaguers vs. American Leaguers at Brooklyn]. Air crashes kill 79 [near Bombay, India, and Los Angeles], "No depression"—Truman. First combined fleet maneuvers off Europe. Freeport, L. I.: speedboat "soapbox derby." Cowboy fashions for kids.

© 21Jul49; MP4693.

97. July 25, 1949. Bonnie Prince Charlie poses with his parents. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.: U. S. chiefs of staff take a "vacation." President signs biggest housing bill. Los Angeles: Italy honors Harry M. Warner. Benthoscope—diving bell on wheels. Navy's newest for submarine rescues. Paris lights up for Bastille Day. Spectacular fire razes Munich studio. Four-year-old is a real water skeezix. Hollywood Gold Cup, world's richest race. Westbury, N. Y.: photo finish in national pacing derby.

© 25Jul49; MP4694.

98. July 28, 1949. Jackie Robinson answers Paul Robeson. New York: 15,000 Lions parade down Fifth Avenue. Chicago: 15,000 Shriners parade, hear Truman. Ejector seat "shoots" pilot from plane. Ernie Pyle is buried in Hawaii. Seattle: plane hits houses; seven killed. Navy fires new rockets 65 miles up. Hot fashions; summer furs from Paris. Atlantic City: spectacular and gala aquashow.

© 28Jul49; MP4695.

99. Aug. 1, 1949. Truman signs Atlantic Pact. Newfoundland opens its new parliament. Parade marks Israel's first Army Day. Royal garden party at Buckingham Palace. Vienna zoo: international monkey business. International honeymoon at Niagara Falls. Great cities of America: Chicago. Minneapolis; Aquatennial; aquabatic aquabelles. Navy fliers practice football at sea. Martin Lagood, Md.: national water ski championships.

© 1Aug49; MP4696.

100. Aug. 4, 1949. Private Rodger Young is buried at home. Churchill opens Tory election campaign. Bernard Baruch comes home from England. Gary Cooper made "governor" of Montana. New "Ile de France" ends maiden voyage. France: month-long, 3,000–mile bike race. San Antonio, Tex.: Mayors race in soap box derby. Vienna: international motorcycle championships.

© 4Aug49; MP4697.

101. Aug. 8, 1949. Navy plane hits airliner [near Fort Dix, N. J.] Acheson asks arms for Europe. Germany: U. S. chiefs of staff map defense. Truman appoints Clark and McGrath. Dallas: one-year-old high diving star. Helicopter serves flagpole sitter. Dog and duck in summer romance. Beauty contest for tall girls only. Italian hairdressers go wild. Chicago: railroad hat is strangest of year. Ponder takes Arlington Classic. Great Americans: John Paul Jones.

© 8Aug49; MP4698.

102. Aug. 11, 1949. Marshall speaks on the cold war. Exclusive films of spectacular fire [in San Francisco]. Honor heroes of Berlin airlift. Hill shoots Niagara's rapids. Washington: "Boy State" takes over government. Hoover marks his 74th birthday. Fashions for white collar girls. Pooches on parade in Miami.

© 11Aug49; MP4907.

103. Aug. 15, 1949. Philippine president on way to see Truman. Eight feet seven, he's world's tallest man. Want-ad romances climaxes in double wedding. Britain's "Comet," world's first jet airliner. Sicily: fisherman in thrilling tuna treasure hunt. Cardston, Alta.: treaty money; Canada pays off the Indians. Hollywood: new coast business opens with a splash. Norwalk, Conn.: outboard races turn into bank-up classic.

© 15Aug49; MP4908.

104. Aug, 18, 1949. Ecuador earthquake. President signs bill to unify armed forces. U. S. Ambassador to China is called home. Philippines President addresses Congress. Herbert Hoover hailed on 75th birthday. Coast Guard celebrates its 159th birthday. Mangrum edges Snead in All-American golf. Miss Tilly, outsider, wins Hambletonian. Do you remember?—Corbett-Courtenay fight.

© 18Aug49; MP4765.

Volume 21, 1949.

1. Aug. 22, 1949. First free German elections. Five nations test Britain's air defenses. Ottawa: Canadian lab; baby, it's cold inside. Ocean City, N. J.: sleepiest baby parade in modern history. Ruins provide swimming hole for Berlin kids. Germany: International auto championship races. Red Bank, N. J.: National Sweepstakes Speed Boat Regatta. Akron: All-American Soap Box Derby.

© 22Aug49; MP4766.

2. Aug. 25, 1949. Congress probes five-percenters. Council of Europe meets in Strasbourg. Bridges pickets in Hawaii dock strike. Barton sets depth record 4,500 feet down. Bradley becomes head of joint staff chiefs. Collins sworn in as Army Chief of Staff. Navy, Marines in mass helicopter maneuver. Washington: airmen fly donkeys in weird baseball game. Los Angeles sheriff's championship rodeo.

© 25Aug49; MP4767.

3. Aug. 29, 1949. Bernarr Macfadden marks 81st birthday with parachute jump. British jet refuels in mid-air. Double-hulled ship can't rock or roll. Style prediction: fur flurry in California. Baseball hails Connie Mack. Cuban forced back in English Channel swim. Horse-jumping record set in Netherlands. Japanese set world marks in AAU swim.

© 29Aug49; MP4768.

4. Sept. 1, 1949. Rescue Ecuador 'quake victims. "Father of Zionism" reburied in Israel. Miami: Navy's "hurricane hunters" in action. Vast forest fires raging in France. Wedding bells; couple married under water. National AAU women's swimming meet. Reno, Nev.: ancient autos in mountain race thriller. Miami: cops on parade; motorcycle miracles.

© 1Sep49; MP4769.

5. Sept. 5, 1949. Hurricane lashes Florida. Philadelphia: American Legion meets; hears Truman. Austrian POW's back from Russia. Roughest rodeo, the Pendleton round-up. Westwood Village, Calif.: girls' rifle team practices—underwater. Davis Cup: Aussies win doubles thriller. Williamsport, Pa.: "Little League" baseball world series.

© 5Sep49; MP4770.

6. Sept. 8, 1949. General Vaughan takes the stand in five-percent hearings. American Legion on parade in Philadelphia. Multimillion-dollar fire in San Francisco. Aid rushed to polio victim in mid-ocean. Atlantic City: curtain going up; Ice Capades of 1950. Westbury, N. Y.: outsider wins $50,000 trotting classic.

© 8Sep49; MP4771.

7. Sept. 12, 1949. Grand Army of the Republic [meets in Indianapolis for] the last encampment. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., weds in New York. Gary Cooper honored by the Navy. World War II Vet heads American Legion. Bevin and Cripps sail for U. S. talks. Kids visit Santa's workshop. Are fashions going back to the twenties? Football: Eastern All-Stars vs. Giants.

© 12Sep49; MP4774.

8. Sept. 15, 1949. Crazed veteran kills 13 [in Camden, N. J.] Cleveland: national air races; Odom in fatal crash. Washington: U. S., Britain, Canada open dollar talks. Atlantic City: nation's prettiest in Miss America parade. Shirley May loses game fight vs. Channel. Gonzales wins national tennis crown.

© 15Sep49; MP4775.

9. Sept. 19, 1949. Meet Miss and Mrs. America. Titusville, Pa.; first U. S. oil well pumps again. A new German republic is born. Canadian Army shows off its firepower. Tacoma, Wash.: rebuild famous "Galloping Gertie" bridge. Do you remember—Tacomas bridge disaster. Aqua toddlers; tiny tots go high diving. Hybla Valley Airport, Va.: plane crashes wall in air thrill circus.

© 19Sep49; MP4776.

10. Sept. 22, 1949. Navy's newest rocket [Viking II]. Washington: International monetary conference meets. Western Germany elects first president. Theatre owners of America meet in Hollywood. Vienna: news for kids—world's smallest horse. Hamburg: news for the jaded—"The witch's kettle!" Rug-cutters jitter at Harvest Moon Ball. Out on a limb: world's prettiest legs. First Paris fall fashions. Historic America: Williamsburg, Va.

© 22Sep49; MP4909.

11. Sept. 26, 1949. Toronto ship fire. Vishinsky arrives for UN General Assembly. Atlantic Pact Council meets in Washington. Theatre owners hear Secretary Johnson. Glittering jewel fashions from France. Westbury, N. Y.: International championships in polo. Whole family tackles long New York Harbor swim. Spills galore mark championship roller derby.

© 26Sep49; MP4910.

12. Sept. 29, 1949. College football kickoff: [Santa Clara vs. California Golden Bears]. UN Assembly meets; Romulo named president. Air Force dedicates the McGuire Air Force Base. Barbara Hutton back in U. S. after illness. "Task Force" twin premiere in two oceans. Meet Miss National Sweater Girl of 1949. Golden Gate swimming classic. Germany: daredevil acrobats, 6,000 feet up.

© 29Sep49; MP4978.

13. Oct. 3, 1949. Russia's atomic explosion rocks the western world. Homecoming clambake greets Shirley May France. Polesitting fan gives up; sets record. It's already 1950 in California bathing fashions. Behind the newsreel camera: the Empire State. Football: Michigan vs. Michigan State; Stanford vs. Harvard.

© 3Oct49; MP4911.

14. Oct. 6, 1949. Defense chiefs go to sea [to observe Navy's carrier-based air power]. San Francisco: world leaders of the Episcopal church meet. "World citizen" Davis jailed in Paris. Miami University, Fla.: new angles on the campus. Ultra modern garage ends parking problems. Princeton, N. J.: scientists build "house of illusions." The creed of the U. S. motion picture industry. Italy: Kids' band, Hot-Tot Quintetto. Germany: Yogis show new twists. Rodeo: New York goes to the broncs.

©6Oct49; MP4912.

15. Oct. 10, 1949. Baseball's excitingest finish [Brooklyn Dodgers vs. Phillies; Yankees honor Joe DiMaggio]. Reds [in Germany] release 2 vacationing U. S. students. Truman spends 2 hectic days in Missouri. Steel strike begins as 200,000 walk out. London: royal wedding; King's nephew weds commoner. Footwear fashions. Football: Pittsburgh upsets powerful Northwestern; Penn whips Dartmouth.

© 10Oct49; MP4979.

16. Oct. 13, 1949. World series: first and second games. UN flag raised over new skyscraper home. Fort Bragg, N. C.: airborne army goes on parade. President opens Community Chest drive. Bathing beauty contest under water. Confederate veterans hold 59th reunion.

© 13Oct49; MP4913.

17. Oct. 17, 1949. Yanks win World series. Washington: North Atlantic Council chiefs meet. Cardinal Spellman visits the Pope. Daring Arab horsemen in desert festival. French styles for dinner, by Dior. Football: Army upsets mighty Michigan; Southern California and Ohio State tie.

© 17Oct49; MP4914.

18. Oct. 20, 1949. Germany: Reds create East-Zone state; Allies parade might. Nehru of India visits the United States. Greta Garbo comes home, flees photographers. Blissful bus-full; family of 18 goes west. AFL meets; leaders cite U. S. films. Marineland, Fla.: porpoises with purposes—fish high jump. Seal sets English Channel swim record. Colorado river outboard marathon.

© 20Oct49; MP4924.

19. Oct. 24, 1949. U. S. Red leaders convicted. Chinese Reds in Shanghai victory parade. Britain girds for Reds siege in Hong Kong. "Americans in Paris" fashions. Great American quiz: Clara Barton. Football: Cornell overpowers Yale; Notre Dame pulverizes Tulane; California nips Southern California.

© 24Oct49; MP4925.

20. Oct. 27, 1949. Top U. S. brass speaks out in service wrangle. Another royal Briton to wed a Mrs. Simpson. U. S. wedding bells ring for Sarah Churchill. Winston Churchill can still dish it out. Vishinsky storms as UN picks Yugoslavia. San Francisco ball teams on tour in Japan. Pro football: Bears whip Eagles.

© 27Oct49; MP4926.

21. Oct. 31, 1949. Truman and world leaders hail new UN home. Children's party for UN's 4th birthday. Puppy auction. Greek kids make own shoes from UN leather. Diamond fashion show. Great cities of America: Philadelphia. Football: Army outflanks Columbia; Michigan upsets Minnesota; Pennsylvania scuttles Navy.

© 31Oct49; MP4927.

22. Nov. 3, 1949. Pro tennis: Kramer vs. Gonzales. Danes welcome first U. S. woman ambassador. America's top envoys in Paris for talks. New French honors for Jack L. Warner. Girl quads born to Canadian family. Aviation sensation: channel wing airplane. Aaronsburg, Pa., marks 150 years of brotherhood. Modern glass house brings outdoors indoors. Stars model chinchilla furs. Pro football: Yankees whip Forty-Niners.

© 3Nov49; MP4928.

23. Nov. 7, 1949. Football highlights: Notre Dame vs. Navy; SMU vs. Texas; California vs. UCLA. 100,000th displaced person arrives in U. S. Hawaii's $100,000,000 dock strike ends. Bidault forms cabinet to end French crisis. Eric Johnston reports on Marshall Plan trip. West Coast grandma makes news with dolls. East Coast grandma makes news with a piano. Capot whips Coaltown in the Pimlico Special.

© 7Nov49; MP4929.

24. Nov. 10, 1949, 55 die in mid-air crash [at Washington National Airport]. Sherman in, Denfeld out as Navy Chief. Spectacular fire sweeps California hills. Brooklyn boy [Danny Kaye] makes good. National horseshow highlights. Pro football: Rams nip Bears in thriller.

© 10Nov49; MP4930.

25. Nov. 14, 1949. Football highlights: Army vs. Fordham; Notre Dame vs. Michigan State; Stanford vs. USC. Big freighter goes on rocks near Seattle. ECA chief asks Europe to end trade barriers. Weizmann Institute dedicated in Israel. Admiral Sherman on deck as brass sees Army show. Meet "Droopert" the screw driver.

© 14Nov49; MP4931.

26. Nov. 17, 1949. Democrats win New York elections; Truman's happy. Vishinsky plays host at embassy party. "Veep" Barkley named "Grandfather of year." Churchill attends grandchild's christening. John L. Lewis calls the mine strike off. HMS Amethyst comes home to hero's welcome. Hawaii celebrates Aloha Week festival. Pro football: Eagles overwhelm Rams. Kids football: Maulers whip Avengers.

© 17Nov49; MP4932.

27. Nov. 21, 1949. Football highlights: Notre Dame vs. North Carolina; Army vs. Penn; Ohio State vs. Illinois; Dartmouth vs. Cornell. President helps plan Brotherhood Week, 1950. Boxer Marcel Cerdan is buried in Casablanca. Cow "milks" Canadians to aid UN children. Duel settles an affair of honor in Paris.

© 21Nov49; MP4933.

28. Nov. 24, 1949. Navy rocket launched from sub. Acheson home from Big Three meeting. Iran's Shah arrives for state visit. Negro women honor Bunche and Mme. Pandit. Air Force unveils a XB–51, a 3–jet bomber. Airlines unveil a surprise: an air-born baby. Kids' winter fashions go to the zoo. New York: celebrities' art show. Silver Springs, Fla.: new sport that they do on porpoise boards. Pro football: Browns battle Bills to tie.

© 24Nov49; MP4934.

29. Nov. 28, 1949. B–29's in land and sea crashes [Stockton, Calif. and the Atlantic] Vice President Barkley takes a wife. Viscount Montgomery arrives for a visit. Jimmy Roosevelt enters California Governor race. Film stars at royal command performance. Football: Ohio State vs. Michigan; California vs. Stanford; North Carolina vs. Duke; Tulane vs. Virginia.

© 28Nov49; MP4935.

30. Dec. 1, 1949. [Football Yankees meet the Cleveland Browns]. Huntington, Ind.; razzle dazzle basketball queens. Jackie Robinson named most valuable player. General Ike [Eisenhower] at freedom rites at Valley Forge. General MacArthur greets Secretary Snyder in Japan. Military parade marks Turkish independence. Yakima, Wash.: world championship apple packing contest. England pets go to church on "Animal Sunday." Dog acrobat makes a wow of a bow. Even the cows wear stylish hats in Paris.

© 1Dec49; MP4980.

31. Dec. 5, 1949. Football: Army vs. Navy; Cornell vs. Penn; Notre Dame vs. Southern California. Peron welcomes new U. S. envoy Griffis. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas goes on trial. Princess Elizabeth visits Philip at Malta. Lilienthal resigns as Atomic Energy head. Santa Claus on parade [in New York, Philadelphia and Hollywood].

© 5Dec49; MP4936.

32. Dec. 8, 1949. 28 dead in Dallas air crash. Truman on vacation in Key West. Tiny Monaco hails its new monarch. Lewis orders miners back 3 days a week. Montgomery urges Western unity against Reds. Camp Lee, Va.: Wacs and packs on bivouac. Memo from Hollywood: mail early for Xmas. Army team wins the Lambert trophy. Pro football: Eagles vs. Steelers. Kids football classic: Half Pint Bowl [in Washington].

© 8Dec49; MP4937.

33. Dec. 12, 1949. Navy jet [Douglas Skyrocket] flies faster than sound. Winston Churchill hale and hearty at 75. Montgomery leaves the U. S. Vice President and Mrs. Barkley at $100 Democrat dinner. Wife awaits flier held by China Reds. Airmen start new gold rush of forty-nine. France: wheel of progress—the umbrella bicycle. Italy: cycle of inventions—the lie-down bike. SMU gives Notre Dame its closest call.

© 12Dec49; MP4938.

34. Dec. 15, 1949. Inside Tito's Yugoslavia. Physician, 84, named doctor of the year. President of Nationalist China in U. S. Vishinsky wishes all a happy new year. Congress probes atom shipments to Reds. Get ready kids, Santa Claus is coming. Canada: family of muscles—6 brothers of brawn. Notre Dame's Hart wins Heisman trophy. Cardinals nip Rams in pro grid thriller.

© 15Dec49; MP4939.

35. Dec. 19, 1949. Rep. J. Parnell Thomas jailed for fraud. Judge Medina on vacation in Bermuda. Shah of Iran visits great Hoover Dam. Doolittle raider now preaches in Japan. Jerusalem Jews in mass oath to Israel. HMS Implacable sent to the bottom. Australian farmers battles flying foxes. New assault transport is "flying LST." New gadget makes tough parking easy. Holiday fashion highlights from France. Historic America: Sutter's Mill.

© 19Dec49; MP4940.

36. Dec. 22, 1949. Christmas 1949; a stirring film record of the holiday spirit everywhere in the world. Browns beat '49ers for pro championship. Fogbound airliner falls into Potomac near Washington.

© 22Dec49; MP4958.

38. Dec. 29, 1949. China Reds free Angus Ward. Mayor O'Dwyer wed to Sloan Simpson. France: jet-propelled helicopter. Startling ski fashions from France. Navy task force tackles the Arctic. Hawaii takes to the surf en masse. Basketball: NYU whips California; LIU smothers USC.

© 29Dec49; MP4960.

See also RKO Pathe News.

WARRIORS OF ANOTHER WORLD: a drama of insects and spiders.

© Richard Lambson Cassell; title, descr., & 14 prints, 25Oct43; MU14073.

WASHINGTON IRVING. Emerson Film Corp. Released by Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Traces Washington Irving's early life in New York as a lawyer and writer; describes his travels and life abroad, highlighting the incidents which influenced the writing of his best-known literary works. For junior and senior high school and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Leon Howard.

© Emerson Film Corp.; 27Sep49; MP4733.

WASHINGTON MELODRAMA. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on a play by L. du Rocher Macpherson.

Credits: Producer, Edgar Selwyn; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Marion Parsonnet, Roy Chanslor; music score, David Snell; film editor, Gene Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Apr41; LP10433.

WASHINGTON—THE SHRINE OF AMERICAN PATRIOTISM. The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Narrator, Alois Havrilla.

© The Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Co.; 15Jan40; MP9883.

WASTAGE OF HUMAN RESOURCES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16 mm.

Summary: This film deals with human beings as resources of the nation, and shows such causes of wastage as accidents, disease, neglect, and maltreatment. For junior and senior high schools and adult groups.

Credits: Collaborator, Lawrence K. Frank.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 12Dec47; MP2643.

WATCH ON THE RHINE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 114 min., sd. A Hal B. Wallis production. A Warner Bros.-First National picture. From the stage play by Lillian Hellman.

Credits: Director, Herman Shumlin; screenplay, Dashiell Hammett; music, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; orchestral arrangements, Hugo Friedhofer; film editor, Rudi Fehr.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 4Sep43; LP12239.

WATCH OUT! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13May46; MP556.

WATCH THAT QUOTATION. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the importance of accuracy in the use of oral and written quotations. For children in intermediate and junior high grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, J. Paul Leonard.

© David A. Smart; 12Jul49; MP4495.

WATCH THE BIRDIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Aug42; MP12883.

THE WATCHDOG. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. Presented by Paul Terry. (A Terrytoon) (Aesop's Fable)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 28Sep45; LP13617.

THE WATCHDOG. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Eddie Donnelly; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 20Oct39; MP10068.

THE WATCHMAN TAKES A WIFE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1,461 ft.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Feb41; LP10282.

WATER AS NATURE MEANT IT TO BE. c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. authors: William Rogers, Louis Rogers, John A. Stewart.

© Modern Home Improvement, Inc.; 14Feb47; MP1809.

WATER BABIES. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Producers, Blumenthal, Heilner; director, Andre de La Varre. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Jun45; MP16016.

WATER BATTLERS. Universal Pictures Co. Inc., c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series)

Credits: Producer, Harry A. Kapit; director, Benjamin R. Parker; editor, Lewis D. Pollack.

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Nov48; MP3556.

WATER BIRDS. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 30Dec44; MP15990.

WATER BUGS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 917 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

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

© Loew's Inc.: 28Aug41; LP10743.

THE WATER CYCLE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with S. Ralph Powers, c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Feb47; MP1671.

WATER CYCLE. SEE Le Cycle de l'Eau.

WATER—FRIEND OR ENEMY. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 6Apr43; MP13620.

WATER IN THE AIR. Radford Pictures Inc., c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A city boy visits the farm and discovers how water is drawn up from the earth. Simple kitchen experiments explain evaporation, condensation, and what causes water in the air to return to the earth as rain. An elementary science film.

© Radford Pictures Inc.; 1Mar49; MP4834.

WATER POWER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with George T. Renner, Jr., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w. 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Waterkrag."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 20Jul46; MP1871.

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

Summary: Presents outstanding men and women swimmers—Jackie Levine and Walter Riss, free style champions; Nancy Merki Lees, Keith Carter, and Joe Verdeur, butterfly breast stroke champions; and Maureen O'Brien and Alan Stack, back stroke champions.

Credits: Producer, Jack Eaton; narrator, Ted Husing; music, Harry D. Glass.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Oct49; MP4659.

WATER SPORTS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; commentator, Knox Manning. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15Nov41; MP11745.

WATER TRIX. Loew's Inc., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Charles T. Trego photographs daring water sports from his helicopter.

Credits: Producer and narrator, Pete Smith; director and photographer, Charles T. Trego; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 26Oct49 (in notice: 1948); MP4709.

WATER WISDOM. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 826 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credit: Film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec43; MP14420.

WATER WIZARDS. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (The Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Underwater formation swimming and other water sports are shown at Wickiwachee Springs, Florida.

Credits: Written by Saul Elkins; narrator, Art Gilmore; editor, Rex Steele.

© Vitaphone Corp.; 3Aug49; MP4380.

WATER WONDERLAND. Vitaphone Corp., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Sports Parade) Warner Bros.

Summary: Famous resorts in Southern California provide the settings for the water sports that are highlighted in this film.

Credits: Director, Virgil E. Ellsworth; written by Charles Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 4Mar49; MP3964.

WATER WORKS FOR US. Young America Films, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the basic principle of water pressure and shows the many ways in which water works for us. For elementary school science classes.

Credits: Advisers, Gerald S. Craig, Helen Warrin.

Appl. author: Leonard Peck.

© Leonard Peck Productions; 15Mar49; MP4063.

WATERCOLOR TECHNIQUE. c1939. 1 reel, si., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Eliot O'Hara.

© Indiana University, Bureau of Visual Instruction; 15Dec39; MP10474.

WATERFRONT. c1944. Presented by P.R.C. Pictures, Inc. 7 reels, sd. An Alexander-Stern production.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Steve Sekely; original screenplay, Martin Mooney, Irwin R. Franklyn; music director, Lee Zahler; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 27May44; LP12668.

WATERFRONT AT MIDNIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A melodrama in which a New York police officer brings to justice the leader of a gang of waterfront thieves.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, William Berke; original screenplay, Bernard Girard; music score, Harry Lubin; film editor, Howard Smith.

Cast: William Gargan, Mary Beth Hughes, Richard Travis, Richard Crane, Cheryl Walker.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 25Jun48; LP1693.

WATERKRAG. SEE Water Power.

WATERLOO BRIDGE. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. A Mervyn LeRoy production. Based on the play by Robert E. Sherwood.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, S. N. Behrman, Hans Rameau, George Froeschel; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 15May40; LP9661.

WATERLOO ROAD. Gainsborough Pictures, Ltd., London., c1945. Released in the U. S. by Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. A J. Arthur Rank presentation. 77 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A semi-documentary drama which probes the domestic problems that arise in wartime as a result of loneliness and difficult living conditions. Setting, London during World War II.

Credits: Producer, Edward Black; directed and written by Sidney Gilliat; story, Val Valentine; music director, Louis Levy; editor, Alfred Roome.

Cast: John Mills, Stewart Granger, Alastair Sim, Joy Shelton, Alison Leggatt.

© General Film Distributors, Ltd.; 7Feb45; LP2249.

WATTS EXPLOSION TESTS.

Appl. author: Wendell M. Dillon.

© Watts Regulator Co.; title, descr., & 6 prints, 29Apr40; MU10164.

THE WATUSSI OF AFRICA. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1939. 1 reel.

Appl. author: George Herzog.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 21Nov39; MP9870.

DIE WATUSSI VAN AFRIKA. SEE A Giant People.

WAVE-A-STICK BLUES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 15Jun42; MP12668.

A WAVE, A WAC AND A MARINE. Biltmore Productions, c1944. 8 reels, sd. An Edward Sherman production.

Credits: Producer, Sebastian Cristillo; director, Phil Karlstein; original story, Lillian Planer, Dick Hyland; screenplay, Hal Fimberg; music director, Freddie Rich; photography, Maury Gertsman; film editor, William Zeigler.

© Monogram Pictures Corp., 26Aug44; LP12837.

WAY BACK WHEN A NAG WAS ONLY A HORSE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Joseph Stultz; animation, Myron Waldman, George Moreno.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Mar40; LP9475.

WAY BACK WHEN A NIGHT CLUB WAS A STICK. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, David Tendlar, Edwain Rehberg.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar40; LP9628.

WAY BACK WHEN A RAZZBERRY WAS A FRUIT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Dan Gordan; animation, James Culhane, Alfred Eugster.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jul40; LP9808.

WAY BACK WHEN A TRIANGLE HAD ITS POINTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, William Turner; animation, David Tendlar, Thomas Golden.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Jan40; LP9566.

WAY BACK WHEN WOMEN HAD THEIR WEIGH; Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Thomas Johnson, Harold Walker.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Sep40; LP9979.

WAY DOWN YONDER IN NEW ORLEANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Dec41; MP11870.

WAY DOWN YONDER IN THE CORN. c1943. Presented by Columbia. 659 ft., sd., color. (A Fox and Crow)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; story, Sam Cobean; animation, Phil Duncan, Basil Davidovich; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 25Nov43; LP12766.

A WAY IN THE WILDERNESS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 950 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Fred Zinnemann; screenplay, Herman Boxer; music score, David Snell; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9845.

THE WAY OF ALL FLESH. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on a story by Lajos Biro and Jules Furthman.

Credits: Associate producer, Eugene Zukor; director, Louis King; screenplay, Lenore Coffee; photography, Theodor Sparkuhl; film editor, Stuart Gilmore.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul40; LP9760.

THE WAY OF ALL PESTS. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 655 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 74)

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

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 1May41; LP10516.

THE WAY OF PEACE. East-West Studio for the Wartburg Press, c1947. 18 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Written and directed by Frank Tashlin; narration, Lew Ayres.

Appl. authors: H. K. Rasbach, Frank Tashlin.

© Wartburg Press; 23Apr47; MP1980.

WAY OF THE PADRES. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone Adventures)

Summary: Shows the present day appearance of the country traversed by the friars of the old missions: Mt. Whitney and its mountain trails, Death Valley, Imperial Valley, and Palm Springs with its rodeo grounds and western pageantry. The municipal buildings of Los Angeles and Hollywood, the homes of the stars, the 20th Century-Fox lot, the radio studios, and Grauman's Chinese Theatre, are viewed from a blimp. In the heart of the mission country, the Rancheros Visitadores, in traditional costumes, line up for the blessing of the Franciscan friars.

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; music score, L. De Francesco; film editor, Valeska Weidig.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Sep48; MP3657.

THE WAY TO HEAVEN. C. O. Baptista Films, c1946. 700 ft., sd., b&w, 16mm.

© C.O. Baptista Films, sole owner of Scriptures Visualized Institute; 1Nov46; MP1320.

WAYS TO GOOD HABITS. Coronet, c1949. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Illustrates that recognition of bad habits and continued effort to correct them is necessary in building good habits.

Credits: Educational collaborator, William E. Young.

© David A. Smart; 15Feb49; MP4235.

WE ARE AMERICANS TOO; Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct43; MP14082.

WE CAN LIVE ON LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Aug41; MP11375.

WE CAN MAKE SUCH BEAUTIFUL MUSIC TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10908.

WE DID IT. 16 mm.

Appl. author: W. D. Mattison.

© General Cable Corp.; title, descr., & 3 prints; 21Sep46; MU1106.

WE DID IT BEFORE AND WE'LL DO IT AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Mar42; MP12350.

WE DISCOVER FRACTIONS. Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Introduces the idea of dividing a unit into equal parts, equips the student with appropriate symbols for the idea, and by example shows the division of concrete units (e.g. boards, apples, and pies) into fractions. For the intermediate grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Harold P. Fawcett.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 2Jan48; MP3689.

WE DISCOVER THE DICTIONARY. Coronet in collaboration with Viola Theman, c1946. 1 reel, sd., color, 16mm.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 22Mar46; MP2025.

WE DO IT BECAUSE-. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 918 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; original story, Harry Poppe, Jr.; screenplay, Douglas Foster, Harry Poppe, Jr.; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Feb42; MP12545.

WE GO FAST. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 5,790 ft., sd. Based on the story by Doug Welch.

Credits: Director, William McGann; screen story, Thomas Lennon, Adrian Scott; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 19Sep41; LP10733.

WE GO TO SCHOOL. Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the activities of typical seven-year-old school children in the classroom and on the playground.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Frederick G. Neel.

© David A. Smart; 3Aug48; MP3718.

WE GO TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Jun41; MP11238.

WE MAKE A FIRE. Radford Pictures Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A father and his three children go on a picnic and learn how to build a fire, how to make it burn, and how to extinguish it. An elementary science film.

© Radford Pictures Inc.; 15Dec48; MP4833.

WE MAKE BUTTER. Scenograph Film Co., Inc., c1949. 15 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Two small children join their mother in the milk-room and learn how to make butter. For primary grades.

Appl. author: Grace Peticlere.

© Seenograph Film Co., Inc.; 3Feb49; MP4629.

WE MAKE MUSIC. SEE Wir Machen Musik.

WE MUST HAVE MUSIC. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w. (A Romance of Celluloid)

© Loew's Inc.; 2Dec41; LP10954.

WE PITCHED A BOOGIE WOOGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Mar46; MP353.

WE REFUSE TO DIE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William C. Thomas; director, William H. Pine; screenplay, Maxwell Shane; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; editor, Howard A. Smith.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 13Oct42; LP11661.

WE THE CATS SHALL HEP YA. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16589.

WE VISIT THE SEASHORE. Young America Films, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: This educational film for primary school children shows the activities of a young boy and girl during a typical day at the beach.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 30Dec48; MP3743.

WE WERE DANCING. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. Based in part on "Tonight at 8:30" by Noel Coward.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Claudine West, Hans Rameau, George Froeschel; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, George Boemler.

© Loew's Inc.; 5Feb42; LP11370.

WE WERE STRANGERS. Horizon Pictures. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 106 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on an episode in the novel "Rough Sketch," by Robert Sylvester.

Summary: A group of underground revolutionists organize in order to overthrow the tyrannical leaders of the Machado government in Cuba in the early 1930's.

Credits: Producer, S. P. Eagle; director, John Huston; screenplay, Peter Viertel, John Huston; music director, M. W. Stoloff; music score, George Antheil; film editor, Al Clark.

Cast: Jennifer Jones, John Garfield, Pedro Armendariz, Gilbert Roland, Ramon Novarro.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2May49; LP2310.

WE WHO ARE YOUNG. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzahl; director, Harold S. Bucquet; original screenplay, Dalton Trumbo; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Howard O'Neill.

© Loew's Inc.; 16Jul40; LP9811.

WE WORK FOR VICTORY AND WE PLAN FOR PEACE. Allis Chalmers. 2 reels.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Allis Chalmers Co.; title & descr., 10Oct42; 161 prints, 9Oct42; MU12907.

THE WEAKLY REPORTER. Released by Warner Bros., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Ben Washam. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 24May44; MP14647.

WEAPONS FOR VICTORY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

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

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 7May43; MP14907.

THE WEATHER. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With a guide.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP14205.

THE WEATHER. SEE Le Temps.

WEATHER AND RADAR—A TEAM FOR ACTION. Presented by U. S. Office of Scientific Research and Development. 25 min., sd., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 20Apr46; 14 prints, 22Apr46; MU479.

WEATHER AT A GLANCE. 47 feet, b&w, 8mm.

Summary: Varying weather conditions in Maryland and in other states. A map giving comparative temperatures in different cities of the United States is shown.

© John Schneider III, title & descr., 4Jan49; 1c, 14Dec48; MU3642.

THE WEATHER GIRL. Edward C. Gruber. 200 ft., 16mm.

Summary: A television commercial, with twelve different weather forecasts to be used with advertisements of the sponsor's products.

© Edward C. Gruber; title, descr., & 4 prints, 28Feb49; MU3821.

WEAVING HOMESPUN. Flory Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm. (American Folkway Series)

Summary: Traces the steps in cloth-making—shearing of sheep, washing and carding of wool, spinning the thread, winding the skeins, dressing the loom, and weaving a piece of cloth.

© Flory Films, Inc.; 1Dec48; MP4557.

THE WEB. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Harry Kurnitz.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Bresler; director, Michael Gordon; screenplay, William Bowers, Bertram Millhauser; music, Hans J. Salter; orchestral arrangements, David Tamkin; film editor, Russell Schoengarth.

Cast: Ella Raines, Edmond O'Brien, William Bendix, Vincent Price.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 9Jun47; LP1085.

WEB OF DANGER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Donald H. Brown; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, David Lang, Milton M. Raison; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, William Thompson.

Cast: Adele Mara, Bill Kennedy, Damian O'Flynn, Richard Loo.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP974.

WEDDED BLISS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1,529 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Harry Edwards, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 11Sep44; LP12819.

WEDDED BLITZ. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Henry James; story, Lew Lipton, Arthur Ripley; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Mar42; LP11422.

WEDDING BELLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

Cast: Gus Schilling, Richard Lane.

© Columbia Pictures Corp., 9Oct47; LP1301.

WEDDING BELTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell; animation, David Tendlar, Stephen Muffati.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 5Jul40; LP9761.

WEDDING BILLS. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 885 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Roy Mack; original story and screenplay, E. Maurice Adler.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Dec40; LP10116.

A WEDDING IN BIKANER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp. c1942. 1 reel, sd., color. (Lowell Thomas' Magic Carpet of Movietone)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; photography, John W. Boyle; film editor, Russ Sheilds. Cinecolor.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Aug42; MP13298.

WEDDING WORRIES. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 995 ft., sd., b&w.

Credits: Director, Edward Cahn; screenplay, Hal Law, Robert McGowan; film editor, Leon Bourgeau.

© Loew's Inc.; 22Dec41; LP11345.

WEDDING YELLS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1942. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevities) Adapted from a Mack Sennett comedy.

Credits: Narrator, Knox Manning.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 18Apr42; LP11209.

WEDLOCK DEADLOCK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A young couple's honeymoon is interrupted by an unwelcome visit from the bride's relatives.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1404.

WEDLOCK DEADLOCK. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In this comedy, a honeymooning couple find their bliss threatened by the intrusions of greedy relatives. Friends posing as maniacs drive out the unwelcome group.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; director, Edward Bernds; screenplay, Elwood Ullman; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: Joe DeRita.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec47; LP1724.

WEDNESDAY'S CHILD. SEE Child of Divorce.

WEDTIME STORIES. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1943. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Ben Holmes; story, Jean Yarbrough, Jack Townley; film editor, Robert Swink.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 24Dec43; LP12793.

A WEE BIT OF SCOTCH. Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Producer, Mario Castegnaro; written and directed by Roy Mack; music director, Lud Gluskin; photography, Ralph Hammeras.

© Techniprocess & Special Effects Corp.; 26Oct41; MP12010.

A WEE BIT OF SCOTLAND. Loew's Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (James A. FitzPatrick Traveltalk) An MGM picture.

Summary: Shows many points of interest in Scotland, including scenes of the City of Perth, Inverness, Loch Ness, the Battlefield of Culloden, Glencoe, fields of heather, and the town of Saint Andrews.

Credits: Producer and narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; music score, Nat Finston; photographers, Virgil Miller, S. D. Onions.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Nov49 (in notice: 1947); MP4756.

THE WEE COOPER O'FIFE. Bil Baird's Marionettes, sd.

Appl. author: William Britton Baird.

Credits: Writer, William Britton Baird; scored by George Steiner.

© Bil Baird's Marionettes; title, descr., & 2 prints, 4Jun47; MU2090.

THE WEE MEN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

Credits: Director, Bill Tytle; story, Ewald Ludwig, I. Klein, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug47; LP1149.

WEEK-END AT THE WALDORF. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w. A Robert Z. Leonard production. Suggested by a play by Vicki Baum.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Hornblow, Jr.; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, Sam and Bella Spewack; adaptation, Guy Bolton; music direction and incidental score, Johnny Green; orchestration, Ted Duncan; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jul45; LP13442.

A WEEKEND AT WHITE SULPHUR. Time, Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Sketches the historical background of the Greenbrier Hotel at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, and includes scenes of guests spending a week-end at the hotel in 1948.

© Time, Inc.; 3Sep48; MP3846.

WEEKEND FOR THREE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 66 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Tay Garnett; director, Irving Reis; story, Budd Schulberg; screenplay, Dorothy Parker, Alan Campbell; music, Roy Webb; music director, A. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Desmond Marquette.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc,; 23Oct41; LP10868.

WEEKEND IN BERMUDA. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Archer Winsten.

© Pan American World Airways; title, descr., & 2 prints, 20Oct45; MU16435.

WEEK-END IN HAVANA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 7,461 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Lang; original screenplay, Karl Tunberg, Darrell Ware; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Oct41; LP10792.

WEEK-END PASS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Warren Wilson; director, Jean Yarbrough; original story, Warren Wilson; screenplay, Clyde Bruckman; music director, Don George.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 7Feb44; LP12506.

WEIGHT EVENTS; shot, discus, javelin and hammer. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Amateur Athletic Union, Lawson Robertson, Dean Cromwell, and Brutus Hamilton, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Gewigstoot."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 24Jun46; MP1672.

WEIGHT EVENTS. SEE Pesas: Tiro, Disco, Jabalina, Martillo.

WEIRD WOMAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd. (An Inner Sanctum Mystery) From the novel by Fritz Leiber, Jr.

Credits: Associate producer, Oliver Drake; director, Reginald Le Borg; screenplay, Brenda Weisberg; adaptation, W. Scott Darling; music director, Paul Sawtell; film editor, Milton Carruth.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 10Mar44; LP12575.

WEISSE TRAUME (WHITE DREAMS) b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Wien Film.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 22Dec46; LU725.

WELCOME DANGER. Harold Lloyd Corp., c1929. 12 reels.

Credits: Director, Clyde Bruckman; story, Felix Adler, Lex Neal, Clyde Bruckman; dialogue, Paul Gerard Smith.

© Harold Lloyd Corp.; 20Oct29; LP13476. (See also Welcome Danger; 20Oct29; LP777)

WELCOME DANGER. Paramount Famous Lasky Corp., c1929. 12 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Clyde Bruckman; story, Felix Adler, Lex Neal, Clyde Bruckman; dialogue, Paul Gerard Smith.

© Paramount Famous Lasky Corp.; 20Oct29; LP777. (See also Welcome Danger; 20Oct29; LP13476)

WELCOME LITTLE STRANGER. Released by Twentieth Century-Fox, c1941. Presented by Terry-Toons. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terry-Toon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terry-Toons, Inc.; 3Oct41; MP12518.

WELCOME STRANGER. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 107 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Elliott Nugent; story, Frank Butler; adaptation, Arthur Sheekman, N. Richard Nash; screenplay, Arthur Sheekman; editor, Everett Douglas; music score, Robert Emmett Dolan.

Cast: Bing Crosby, Joan Caulfield, Barry Fitzgerald.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 9May47; LP1172.

WELL ALL RIGHT! Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Sep42; MP12985.

THE WELL GROOMED BRIDE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1946. 75 min., sd., 35mm. Based on a story by Robert Russell.

Credits: Producer, Fred Kohlmar; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Claude Binyon, Robert Russell; music score, Roy Webb; editor, William Shea.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Feb46; LP327.

WELL OILED. Walter Lantz Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune) A Universal picture.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animators, Les Kline, Pat Mathews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions and Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 19Jun47; MP2217.

WE'LL REST AT THE END OF THE TRAIL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Sep43; MP13929.

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

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Tom Cummiskey; music score, L. De Francesco; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 14Aug42; MP13301.

WE'LL SLAP THE JAPS (RIGHT INTO THE LAPS OF THE NAZIS). Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Jan42; MP11988.

WELLS FARGO DAYS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd., color. (Santa Fe Trail Western)

Credits: Director, Mack V. Wright; story and dialogue, Stuart N. Lake; commentator, Art Baker. Cinecolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Apr44; LP12621.

WEN DIE GOTTER LIEBEN (WHOM THE GODS LOVE). A Wien Film presented by Austria Film, Vienna. c1942. 12 reels, b&w, 35mm. A film relating to the life of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, from a novel by R. Billinger and Ed Strzygowski.

Credits: Director, Karl Hartl; scenario, Eduard von Borsody.

© Casino Film Exchange, Inc.; 15Sep42; LP1081.

THE WENCH (LA BAGARRE) Georges Legrand Productions, France. c1948. Released in the U. S. through Spalter International Pictures, Inc., 1949. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The voluptuous affairs of a young cocotte who bedevils a wealthy farmer into making her his heiress.

Credits: Producer, Georges Legrand; director, Henri Calef; music, Joseph Kosma.

Cast: Maria Casares, Roger Piguat, Jean Murat, Jean Brochard, Orane Demazis.

© Spalter International Pictures, Inc.; 6Nov48; LP2238.

WE'RE ALL AMERICANS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jul41; MP11352.

WE'RE IN THE HONEY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Noveltoon)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Mar48; LP1517.

WE'RE ON OUR WAY TO RIO. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story. Jack Mercer, Jack Ward.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Apr44; LP12681.

WE'RE STEPPING OUT TONIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Sep45; MP16302.

WE'RE THE COUPLE IN THE CASTLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Feb42; MP12170.

HET WERK VAN DE ATMOSFEER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP799.

DIE WERK VAN DIE NIERE. SEE The Work of the Kidneys.

THE WEST INDIES. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1944. 1 reel. (Caribbean Region, 1)

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 28Jun44; MP15912.

WEST INDIES. SEE Las Antillas.

WEST OF ABILENE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Ralph Ceder; original screenplay, Paul Franklin; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 29Jun40; LP9754.

WEST OF DODGE CITY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Bert Horswell; film editor, Paul Borofsky.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Nancy Saunders, Mustard and Gravy.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Mar47; LP930.

WEST OF ELDORADO. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which a bandit is killed when he robs a stagecoach, and his henchmen captured when they search for the stolen money.

Credits: Producer, Barney Sarecky; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward Kay; film editor, John C. Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Reno Browne, Teddy Infuhr, Milburn Moranti.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 5Jun49; LP2415.

WEST OF LARAMIE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1949. 23 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western about homesteading in Wyoming.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; adapted from the screenplay by Bennett Cohn; music arrangement, Milton Schwarzwald; film editor, E. Curtis.

Cast: "Tex" Williams, "Smokey" Rogers, Patricia Alphin, "Deuce" Spriggens, Patricia Hall.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Mar49; LP2364.

WEST OF PINTO BASIN. Phoenix Productions, Inc., c1940, 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 3)

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Elmer Clifton; screen adaptation, Earl Snell; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Ed Linden; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Phoenix Productions, Inc.; 1Oct40; LP10158.

WEST OF SONORA. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 55 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western in which the Durango Kid brings to a happy conclusion the feud between the grandfathers of an eight-year-old orphan girl.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Ray Nazarro; original screenplay, Barry Shipman; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Steve Darrell, George Chesebro, Anita Castle.

© Columbia Picture Corp.; 25Mar48; LP1530.

WEST OF TEXAS. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, Alfred Stern, Arthur Alexander; direction and original screenplay, Oliver Drake; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Ira Morgan; film editor, Charles Henkel, Jr.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 16May43; LP12060.

WEST OF THE ALAMO. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Glenn Cook; director, Oliver Drake; original screenplay, Louise Rousseau; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Harry Neumann; film editor, William Austin.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 27Mar46; LP238.

WEST OF THE LAW. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Scott R. Dunlap; director, Howard P. Bretherton; original screenplay, Jess Bowers; photography, Harry Neumann; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Oct42; LP11656.

WEST OF THE PECOS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 66 min., sd. From the novel by Zane Grey.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Edward Killy; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakleinikoff; editor, Roland Gross.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 8Jun45; LP13341.

WEST OF THE RIO GRANDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; story and screenplay, Betty Burbridge; music director, Edward Kay; photographer, Arthur Martinelli; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jun44; LP12719.

WEST OF THE ROCKIES. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd. (Broadway Brevity)

Credits: Director, Bobby Connolly; screenplay, Hal Yates.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 29Nov41; LP10852.

WEST OF TOMBSTONE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, William Berke; director, Howard Bretherton; original screenplay, Maurice Geraghty; film editor, Mel Thorsen.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 15Jan42; LP11351.

WEST POINT ON THE HUDSON. c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 811 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photography, William Steiner. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Jan42; MP12488.

WEST POINT WIDOW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 7 reels, sd. Based on story by Anne Wormser.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Robert Siodmak; screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Hans Kraly; editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 20Jun41; LP10549.

THE WEST SIDE KID. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Sherman; screenplay, Albert Beich, Anthony Coldeway; music director, Morton Scott; photographer. Jack Marta; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 5Aug43; LP12257.

WEST TO GLORY. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Elmer Clifton, Robert B. Churchill; orchestration, Walter Greene; film editor, Joseph Gluck.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Flash, Roscoe Ates, Dolores Castle, Gregg Barton.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 22Apr47; LP951.

WESTBOUND STAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Edward Finney; director, Spencer Gordon Bennett; story, John Foster; screenplay, Robert Emmett; music score and direction, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Jan40; LP9312.

WESTERN APPROACHES. English Films, Inc., c1945. 7 reels. Title subsequently changed to "The Raider."

Credits: Direction and script, Pat Jackson; continuity, Phil Ross.

© English Films, Inc.; 1Mar45; LP157.

WESTERN COWGIRL. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 123)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Bill Hightower.

© Universal Pictures, Co., Inc.; 25Jun43; MP13707.

WESTERN CYCLONE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Patricia Harper; music, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 10May43; LP12055.

WESTERN DAZE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Madcap Models UO–1)

Credits: Story, Vic McLeod, Norm Blackburn.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 17Jan41; LP10189.

WESTERN HERITAGE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 61 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A band of outlaws makes use of a forged Spanish land grant in an effort to deprive ranchers of their land.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Wallace A. Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Desmond Marquette.

Cast: Tim Holt, Nan Leslie, Richard Martin.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 11Feb48; LP1495.

WESTERN MAIL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photographer, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 13Feb42; LP11265.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jun43; MP13677.

WESTERN RENEGADES. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 56 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The U. S. marshal upsets the Laren gang's plot to acquire a rich rancher's estate.

Credits: Director, Wallace Fox; screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Johnny Fuller.

Cast: Johnny Mack Brown, Max Terhune, Riley Hill, Jane Adams, Steve Clark.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 2Oct49; LP2645.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc; 3May43; MP13535.

WESTERN UNION. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 8,450 ft., sd. By Zane Grey.

Credits: Director, Fritz Lang; screenplay, Robert Carson; music director, David Buttolph.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Feb41; LP10385.

WESTERN WHOOPEE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Otto Ludwig.

Cast: Tex Williams and his orchestra. Patricia Alphin, Smokey Rogers, Judy Clark, Jimmie Dodd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Jun48; MP3491.

WESTERN WHOOPEE. SEE Variety Views, no. 113.

WESTERN WONDERLAND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 831 ft., sd. (Columbia Tour, series 4, no. 8)

Credits: Producer, André De La Varre; music director, Jack Schaindlin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 28Feb41; MP11167.

THE WESTERNER. Released thru United Artists, c1940. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 10 reels, sd. From the story by Stuart N. Lake.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, William Wyler; screenplay, Jo Swerling, Niven Busch; music score, Dimitri Tiomkin; cinematography, Gregg Toland; film editor, Daniel Mandell.

© Samuel Goldwyn; 7Oct40; LP9962.

WESTWARD BOUND. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, John C. Fuller.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 3Dec43; LP12402.

WESTWARD HO. c1942. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd. Based on the characters "The Three Mesquiteers" created by William Colt MacDonald.

Credits: Associate producer, Louis Gray; director, John English; original story, Morton Grant; screenplay, Morton Grant, Doris Schroeder; music score, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, William Thompson.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 24Apr42; LP11318.

WESTWARD HO-HUM. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 16 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Clem Beauchamp; story, Clem Beauchamp, George Jeske; film editor, Les Millbrook.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 5Sep41; LP10750.

THE WESTWARD MOVEMENT. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. With teacher's handbook.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 22Oct41. MP14197.

THE WESTWARD TRAIL. Producers Releasing Corp., Inc., c1947. 58 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical Western in which Eddie Dean, as a representative of the U. S. Marshal, prevents a band of outlaws from stealing a young girl's ranch.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Arthur Allan Miller; music, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Copper, Roscoe Ates, Phyllis Planchard, Eileen Hardin.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 25Oct47; LP1526.

WET BLANKET POLICY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. Released by United Artists, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Heck Allen; animation, Les Kline, Ken O'Brien.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 20Aug48; MP3475.

WET PAINT. Walt Disney Productions, c1946. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, Roy Williams; animation, Don Towsley, Bill Justice, Hal King, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace.

© Walt Disney Productions; 18Mar46; LP1125.

WE'VE NEVER BEEN LICKED. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 10 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, John Rawlins; original story, Norman Reilly Raine; screenplay, Norman Reilly Raine, Nick Grinde.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 18Aug43; LP12198.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Sep43; MP13937.

WHAT A BLONDE. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 71 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Ben Stoloff; director, Leslie Goodwins; original story, Oscar Brodney; screenplay, Charles Roberts; music, Leigh Harline; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Edward W. Williams.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 27Jan45; LP13167.

WHAT A DIFFERENCE A DAY MAKES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Apr46; MP396.

WHAT A LITTLE SNEEZE WILL DO. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 10Jan41; MP10925.

WHAT A LOVELY AFTERNOON. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp, of America, Inc.; 9Sep46; MP1161.

WHAT A MAN! Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Barney A. Sarecky; director, William Beaudine; original screenplay, William N. Crowley, Beryl Sachs; photography, Marcel LePicard; film editor, Carl Himm.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 3Jan44; LP12488.

WHAT A MESS. General Electric Co., c1949. 1/2 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows the modern conveniences of a General Electric Combination Refrigerator with an automatic defroster.

© General Electric Co.; 22Apr49; MP4410.

WHAT A PICNIC. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945, 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Sep45; MP16377.

WHAT A THRILL. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Girl meets boy who is driving a new Oldsmobile with luxurious interior, Hydra-matic drive, and floorboard uncluttered by clutch pedal.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 5 prints, 10May48; MU3000.

WHAT A THRILL TO TAKE THE WHEEL OF A SMART NEW OLDSMOBILE! Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Nov47; 3 prints, 1Dec47; MU2490.

WHAT A WOMAN. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 10 reels, sd. Based on an original story by Erik Charell.

Credits: Director, Irving Cummings; screenplay, Therese Lewis, Barry Trivers; music score, John Leipold; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Al Clark.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 2Dec43; LP12415.

WHAT ABOUT DADDY? Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 909 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Feb42; LP11369.

WHAT DO YOU DO IN THE INFANTRY? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944, 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14650.

WHAT D'YA HEAR FROM YOUR HEART? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 22Dec41; MP11951.

WHAT D'YA KNOW. Loew's Inc., c1947. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty. What's Your I.Q.? No. 14) An MGM picture.

Credits: Produced and narrated by Pete Smith; screenplay, Joe Ansen; film editor, Joseph Dietrick.

© Loew's Inc.; 3Sep47; LP1231.

WHAT GOOD AM I WITHOUT YOU. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec46; MP1411.

WHAT GOOD IS HIS LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Apr43; MP13503.

WHAT HAPPENS AT NIGHT. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Connie Rasinski; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 30May41; MP11324.

WHAT HAS THE LADY GOT? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jun43; MP13651.

WHAT I WANT NEXT. Loew's Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture. Based on material appearing in Science Illustrated Magazine.

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

Cast: Dave O'Brien.

© Loew's Inc.; 31Jan49 (in notice: 1948); LP2097.

WHAT IS A CONTRACT? Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: A study covering the basic elements of contracts and the types and uses of contracts. For senior high schools and colleges.

Credits: Collaborator, Dwight A. Pomeroy.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 17May48; MP3115.

WHAT IS A CORPORATION? Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the three principal types of business ownership—single proprietorship, partnership, and corporation—and shows the advantages and disadvantages of each type. For high school and college students, and adults.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Raymond E. Glos.

© David A. Smart; 17Jun49; MP4222.

WHAT IS A MAP? Teaching Films, Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Credits: Writer, Hall; editor, Stenius.

© Teaching Films, Inc.; 16May47; MP2134.

WHAT IS BUSINESS? Coronet, c1948. 10 min., sd., b&w. 16mm.

Summary: Production, distribution, and service are shown as the three major phases of business activity, and related to the life of the average American family. For junior and senior high schools.

Credits: Collaborator, Paul L. Salsgiver.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 25Mar48; MP3109.

WHAT IS CLOTH? Coronet. c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates simple home tests for the recognition of basic materials; shows the three basic weaves and the characteristics of finished textiles; and establishes a basis for a more detailed course of study on textiles. For classes in home economics.

Credits: Collaborator, Florence M. King.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 11Mar48; MP3108.

WHAT IS FOUR? Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 15 min. (Primary Arithmetic Series) With Teachers' Guide.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Mar46; MP381.

WHAT IS MONEY? Coronet, c1947. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Collaborator, Paul L. Salsgiver.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 26Jun47; MP2498.

WHAT IS SCIENCE? Coronet, c1947. 10 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains that science is knowledge of the world about us. Two children, curious about common phenomena, conduct simple experiments and find their answers by using the scientific method: by observing experimenting, drawing conclusions, and testing the results. For intermediate and junior high school pupils.

Credits: Educational collaborator, N. E. Bingham.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 3Oct47; MP3690.

WHAT IT TAKES TO MAKE A STAR. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Movietone's Feminine World)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director Vyvyan Donner; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. deFrancesco; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., 6Jul45; MP16287.

WHAT MAKES A FINE WATCH FINE? Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Hamilton Watch Co. 2 reels, sd., b&w.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 16May47; 25 prints, 20May47; MU2033.

WHAT MAKES DAFFY DUCK? Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Arthur Davis; story, William Scott, Lloyd Turner; animation, Basil Davidovich, J. C. Melendez, Don Williams, Emery Hawkins.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 14Feb48; MP2755.

WHAT MAKES DAY AND NIGHT. Young America Films, Inc., c1947. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 15Feb47; MP1658.

WHAT MAKES LIZZY DIZZY? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,536 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Philip L. Leslie; screenplay, Ewart Adamson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Mar42; LP11168.

WHAT MAKES RAIN. Young America Films, Inc., c1946. 10 min., 16mm.

Credits: Advisor, Gerald S. Craig.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 31Dec46; MP1591.

WHAT MAKES THINGS FLOAT? Key Productions, Inc., c1949. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Two small boys go fishing and experiment to find out what makes things float. Laboratory experiments show that objects will float if they are no heavier than the amount of water they displace.

© Key Productions, Inc.; 1Dec49; MP4849.

WHAT NEXT, CORPORAL HARGROVE? Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based upon the characters created by Marion Hargrove.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, Richard Thorpe; story and screenplay, Harry Kurnitz; music score, David Snell; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Nov45; LP10.

WHAT, NO CIGARETTES? RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. 18 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director, Hal Yates; screenplay, George Bilson, Felix Adler; film editor, Lyle Boyer.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 13Jul45; LP13684.

WHAT PRICE FLEADOM. Loew's Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (An MGM Cartoon)

Credits: Producer, Fred Quimby; director, Tex Avery; animation, Walter Clinton, Robert Bentley, Gil Turner; music, Scott Bradley.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Mar48; LP1508.

WHAT SHALL I WEAR? 2 reels, sd. Research Dept. of Household Finance.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc.

© Household Finance Corp.; title, descr., & 132 prints; 20Mar41; MU10952.

WHAT THE COUNTRY NEEDS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Mar41; MP10884.

WHAT THE RED LILLY MEANS TO YOU. Eli Lilly & Co., c1942. 2 reels.

Appl. author: James L. McDowell, Jr.

© Eli Lilly & Co.; 30Jan42; MP12394.

WHAT THIS COUNTRY NEEDS IS MORE LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jul41; MP11330.

WHAT TO DO. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4May42; MP12493.

WHAT TO DO BEFORE TAKING OFF. Presented by United States Navy, Naval Air Operational Training Command. 1 reel, sd.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 8Jul43; 99 prints, 5Jul43; MU14003.

WHAT TO DO IN A GAS ATTACK. Filmedia Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Sherman Price.

© Filmedia Corp.; 15Oct42; MP13310.

WHAT TO DO IN A GAS ATTACK. Filmedia Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. New version.

Appl. author: Sherman Price.

© Filmedia Corp.; 1May43; MP13710.

WHAT WE ARE FIGHTING FOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (America Speaks Featurette)

Credits: Associate producer. Will Cowan; director, Erle C. Kenton; original screenplay, Paul Huston; music director, H. J. Salter; film editor, Alvin Todd.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 5May43; MP13550.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Aug43; MP13815.

WHATCHA KNOW, JOE? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10981.

WHAT'S BREWIN' BRUIN? Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Director, Charles M. Jones; story, Tedd Pierce, Michael Maltese; animation, Phil Monroe, Ken Harris, Lloyd Vaughan, Ben Washam; music director, Carl Stalling.

©The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec47; MP2852.

WHAT'S BUZZIN' BUZZARD. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 751 ft., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; animation, Ed Love, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 1Dec43; MP14425.

WHAT'S BUZZIN' COUSIN? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 8 reels, sd. Based upon a story by Aben Kandel.

Credits: Producer, Jack Fier; director, Charles Barton; screenplay, Harry Sauber; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, James Sweeney.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Jul43; LP12132.

WHAT'S COOKIN? c1941. Presented by Universal 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, L. E. Elliott; artists, Alex Lovy, Lester Kline; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc, & Walter Lantz Productions; 27Oct41; MP11701.

WHAT'S COOKIN'. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Edward F. Cline; Original story, Edgar Allan Woolf; screenplay, Jerry Cady, Stanley Roberts; adaptation, Haworth Bromley.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Feb42; LP11079.

WHAT'S COOKIN', DOC? The Vitaphone Corp., c1944. 7 min., sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Michael Sasanoff; animation, Bob McKimson; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jan44; MP14442.

WHAT'S HATCHIN'? Vitaphone Corp., c1948. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. Warner Bros.

Summary: Scenes of a poultry-farm school on Long Island. The film shows eggs hatching in a large incubator, and traces the embryonic development of a chick.

Credits: Director, Alan Wilder; script, Charles L. Tedford; narrator, Art Gilmore.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 28Feb48; MP2756.

WHAT'S LACROSSE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Aug41; MP11468.

WHAT'S THE MATADOR. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1,483 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story, Jack White; screenplay, Jack White, Saul Ward.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 9Mar42; LP11123.

WHAT'S YOUR I. Q.? Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 727 ft., sd., sepia. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Music, William Axt, Lee Zahler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 8Feb40; MP10064.

WHAT'S YOUR I. Q.? Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 782 ft., sd. (A Pete Smith Specialty) (What's Your I. Q., no. 2)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; screenplay, E. Maurice Adler; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Jun40; MP10322.

WHATSOEVER YE SHALL ASK. SEE Sons of God.

WHATTA BUILT. SEE Variety Views, no 170.

THE WHEAT FARMER. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Arabic.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films. Inc.; 18Jul46; MP986.

WHEEL SENSE. Transfilm, Inc., c1949. 21 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: The story of Torpedo Jones, an Indianapolis race driver, who tells young drivers the dangers of reckless driving and teaches them proper driving procedures. Designed for use in high school driver-training classes.

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

© The Studebaker Corp.; 18Jan49; MP4187.

WHEELS ACROSS INDIA. c1940. 5,385 ft.

Appl. author: Armand Dennis.

© Dennis-Roosevelt Expeditions, Inc.; 16Sep40; MP11065.

WHEELS OF FATE. SEE Dawn on the Great Divide.

WHEN A GIRL'S BEAUTIFUL. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 68 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Frank McDonald; story, Henry K. Moritz; screenplay, Brenda Weisbert.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 23Sep47; LP1199.

WHEN A GYPSY MAKES HIS VIOLIN CRY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Jul41; MP11333.

WHEN AIR RAIDS STRIKE. SEE The March of Time, v. 8, no. 6.

WHEN ARE WE GOING TO LAND ABROAD? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11May42; MP12544.

WHEN ASIA SPEAKS. Released through United Artists, c1944. 2 reels, sd. (The World in Action)

© Warwick Pictures, Inc.; 17Nov44; MP15587.

WHEN AUNT MINNIE PLAYS THE MINUET IN G. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16173.

WHEN BOBBY GOES TO SCHOOL. 800 ft., sd., 16mm.

Appl. author: Arthur Hawley Parmelee.

© American Academy of Pediatrics, Inc.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 26Apr40; MU10136.

WHEN BOBBY GOES TO SCHOOL. SEE

Cuando Bobby Va a la Escuela.

Quando Boby Vai para a Escola.

WHEN FIRE BOMBS FALL. Time, Inc., c1942. 2 reels, sd.

© Time, Inc.; 9Jul42; MP13820.

WHEN G. I. JOHNNY COMES HOME. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Feb45; MP15933.

WHEN GOOD FELLOWS GET TOGETHER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Dec42; MP13228.

WHEN HITLER KICKS THE BUCKET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Oct43; MP14025.

WHEN I GROW TOO OLD TO DREAM. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar41; MP10909.

WHEN I GROW UP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Apr44; MP14729.

WHEN IRISH EYES ARE SMILIN'. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 17Feb42; MP12215.

WHEN IRISH EYES ARE SMILING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 13Oct41; MP11662.

WHEN IT RAINS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Dec43; MP14410.

WHEN IT'S SLEEPYTIME DOWN SOUTH. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Feb46; MP244.

WHEN IT'S SPRINGTIME IN THE ROCKIES. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Jul41; MP11348.

WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13980.

WHEN JOHNNY COMES MARCHING HOME. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Bernard Burton; director, Charles Lamont; original screenplay, Oscar Brodney, Dorothy Bennett; music, Ted Cain; photographer, George Robinson; film editor, Charles Maynard.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 24Nov42; LP11696.

WHEN KNIGHTS WERE BOLD. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 21Mar41; MP10971.

WHEN LADIES MEET. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 10 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Rachel Crothers.

Credits: Producers, Robert Z. Leonard, Orville O. Dull; director, Robert Z. Leonard; screenplay, S. K. Lauren, Anita Loos; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 28Aug41; LP10713.

WHEN MY BABY SMILES AT ME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 98 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on the play "Burlesque" by George Manker Watters.

Summary: This musical of backstage life is about the marital vicissitudes of an alcoholic comedian.

Credits: Producer, George Jessel; director, Walter Lang; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; adaptation, Elizabeth Reinhardt; music director, Alfred Newman; editor, Barbara McLean.

Cast: Betty Grable, Dan Dailey, Jack Oakie, June Havoc, Richard Arlen.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 5Nov48; LP2130.

WHEN MY SUGAR WALKS DOWN THE STREET. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18May42; MP12578.

WHEN PADDY MCGINTY PLAYS THE HARP. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Warren Murray.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Sep41; MP11632.

WHEN STRANGERS MARRY. Monogram Pictures Inc., c1944. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Maurice King; director, William Castle; original screenplay, Philip Yordan, Dennis J. Cooper; photography, Ira Morgan; film editor, Martin Cohn.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 19Aug44; LP12838.

WHEN THE BLOOM IS ON THE SAGE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Aug45; MP16177.

WHEN THE CIRCUS COMES TO TOWN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10982.

WHEN THE DALTONS RODE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 9 reels, sd. Based on the book by Emmett Dalton and Jack Jungmeyer, Sr.

Credits: Director, George Marshall; original screenplay, Harold Shumate; photography, Hal Mohr; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 2Aug40; LP9829.

WHEN THE LIGHTS GO ON AGAIN. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Fromkess; director, William K. Howard; original story, Frank Craven; screenplay, Milton Lazarus; music score, W. Franke Harling; music supervision, David Chudnow; film editor, Donn Hayes.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 23Oct44; LP13593.

WHEN THE ROSES BLOOM AGAIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Jun42; MP12633.

WHEN THE WIFE'S AWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1946. 2 reels.

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

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Feb46; LP193.

WHEN WIFIE'S AWAY. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 20 min., sd.

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

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 14Feb41; LP10272.

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

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Ed Thorgersen; music score, L. de Francesco; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 25Dec42; MP15402.

WHEN YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R. C. M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Nov46; MP1311.

WHEN YOU AND I WERE YOUNG, MAGGIE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Sep44; MP15167.

WHEN YOU WERE SWEET SIXTEEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Apr46; MP519.

WHEN YOUR HEAD'S IN THE CLOUDS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

Cast: Johnny Thompson, Marian Kerrigan.

© Soundies Films, Inc. (in notice: Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.); 30Dec46; MP1702.

WHERE ARE YOUR CHILDREN. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1944. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, William Nigh; original story, Hilary Lynn; screenplay, Hilary Lynn, George Wallace Sayre; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Dick Currier.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21Jan44; LP12448.

WHERE CACTUS GROWS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credit: Narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar44; MP14665.

WHERE DID YOU GET THAT GIRL? c1940. Presented by Universal Studios. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate Producer, Joseph G. Sanford; director, Arthur Lubin; original story. Jay Dratler; screenplay, Jay Dratler, Paul Franklin, Stanley Crea Rubin; music director, Charles Previn; cameraman, John Boyle; film editor, Philip Cahn.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Dec40; LP10134.

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 7,000 ft., sd. From a story by Morrie Ryskind and Sig Herzig.

Credits: Director, Gregory Ratoff; screenplay, Morrie Ryskind; music directors, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 29May45; LP13389.

WHERE HAS MY LITTLE DOG GONE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar42; MP12384.

WHERE IS THE CHICKEN IN THE CHICKEN CHOW MEIN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Jun45; MP16107.

WHERE THE EAGLE FLIES. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Richfield Oil Corp. of New York. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 24Mar47; 27 prints, 23Mar47; MU1819.

WHERE THE MOUNTAINS MEET THE SKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Dec42; MP13126.

WHERE THE MOUNTAINS MEET THE SKY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr45; MP15781.

WHERE THE NORTH BEGINS. Bali Pictures, Inc., c1947. 41 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by James Oliver Curwood.

Summary: Sergeant Lucky Sanderson, as member of the Canadian Mounted Police, brings to justice a band of whiskey traders.

Credits: Producer, Carl K. Hittleman; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Leslie Schwabacher; screenplay, Elizabeth Burbridge; music score, Albert Glasser; film editor, Paul Landres.

Cast: Russell Hayden, Jennifer Holt.

© Bali Pictures, Inc.; 13Dec47; LP1487.

WHERE THE PEST BEGINS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,580 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Edward Bernds, Russell Malmgren.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 4Oct45; LP13543.

WHERE THE SWEET MAMAS GROW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 3Nov41; MP11734.

WHERE THERE'S LIFE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 75 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Melville Shavelson.

Credits: Producer, Paul Jones; director, Sidney Lanfield; screenplay, Allen Boretz, Melville Shavelson; music director, Irvin Talbot; editor, Archie Marshek.

Cast: Bob Hope, Signe Hasso, William Bendix, George Coulouris, Harry von Zell.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 21Nov47; LP1313.

WHERE TIME STANDS STILL. c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 806 ft., sd., color. (James A. FitzPatrick's Traveltalks)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Sep45; MP16379.

WHERE TRAILS END. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1942. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Tansey; original story, Robert Emmett, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 1May42; LP11325.

WHERE TURF MEETS SURF. c1939. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 986 ft., sd., sepia.

Credits: Producer, Louis Lewyn; director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Marion Mack; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 18Dec49; LP9587.

WHERE WERE YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Nov43; MP14248.

WHERE WILL YOU HIDE? Audiographic Institute, c1948. 2 reels, sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: An animated cartoon which shows what the horrors of a third World War might be, and sets forth the premise that there will be no refuge from danger in an atomic war.

© Audiographic Institute; 11Jun48; MP3234.

WHEREVER THERE'S ME, THERE'S YOU. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 14Oct46; MP1198.

WHEREEVER YOU GO. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 18Apr47; 4 prints, 21Apr47; MU1948.

WHEREVER YOU GO, MIDO GOES. Presented by Mido Watch Company of America, Inc. A John Sutherland production.

Credits: Supervised by St. Georges and Keyes, Inc.

© Mido Watch Company of America, Inc.; title, descr., & 11 prints, 9Dec47; MU2536.

WHICH IS WITCH. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

Credits: Story, Tedd Pierce; animation, Ken Champion, Virgil Ross, Arthur Davis, Gerry Chiniquy.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 13Dec49 (in notice: 1948); MP4839.

A WHIFF OF HELIOTROPE. SEE A Gentleman After Dark.

WHIPLASH. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1949. 91 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A prizefighter, after a series of battles in and out of the ring, retires from boxing and becomes a painter.

Credits: Producer, William Jacobs; director, Lew Seiler; original story, Kenneth Earl; screenplay, Maurice Geraghty, Harriet Frank, Jr.; adaptation, Gordon Kahn; music, Franz Waxman; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Frank Magee.

Cast: Dane Clark, Alexis Smith, Zachary Scott, Eve Arden, Jeffrey Lynn.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc,; 15Jan49; LP2089.

WHIPS AND TRICKS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Apr45; MP15686.

WHIRLWIND RAIDERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 6 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The Durango Kid brings to justice the corrupt State Police force that has temporarily replaced the Texas Rangers.

Credits: Producer, Colbert Clark; director, Vernon Keays; original screenplay, Norman Hall.

Cast: Charles Starrett, Smiley Burnette, Fred Sears, Philip Morris.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 19Apr48; LP1561.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Jul46; MP905.

WHISPERING CITY. Quebec Productions Corp., Montreal, c1947. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Marton; director, Fedor Ozep; original story, George Zuckerman, Michael Lennox; screenplay, Rian James, Leonard Lee; music composed by Morris C. Davis; musical direction and arrangements, Jean Deslauriers; film editors, Douglas Bagier, Richard J. Jarvis.

Cast: Helmut Dantine, Mary Anderson, Paul Lukas, John Pratt, Joy LaFleur.

Appl. author: Eagle Lion Films, Inc.

© Quebec Productions Corp.; 15Nov47; LP1358.

WHISPERING FOOTSTEPS. c1943. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, George Blair; director, Howard Bretherton; original story, Gertrude Walker; screenplay, Gertrude Walker, Dane Lussier; music direction, Morton Scott; photographer, Jack Marta; film editor, Ralph Dixon.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 30Nov43; LP12412.

WHISPERING GHOSTS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 6,745 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Alfred Werker; original story, Philip MacDonald; screenplay, Lou Breslow; music direction, Emil Newman, Leigh Harline.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 22May42; LP11340.

THE WHISPERING SKULL. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Alexander; director, Elmer Clifton; original screenplay, Harry Frazer; music director, Lee Zahler; photographer, Edward Kull; film editor, Hugh Winn.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 29Dec44; LP13565.

WHISPERING SMITH. Paramount Pictures Inc. c1949. 88 min., sd., color, 35mm. Based on a novel by Frank H. Spearman.

Summary: A Western in which a soft-spoken railroad agent outshoots a gang of train-robbers. Setting, the frontier country of 1890.

Credits: Associate producer, Mel Epstein; director, Leslie Fenton; screenplay, Frank Butler, Karl Kamb; music score, Adolph Deutsch; editor, Archie Marshek.

Cast: Alan Ladd, Robert Preston, Brenda Marshall, Donald Crisp, William Demarest.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Feb49; LP2128.

WHISPERS. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 941 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Basil Wrangell; original story and screenplay, Herman Boxer; music score, Daniele Amfitheatrof; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 6Feb41; LP10326.

WHISTLE IN THE NIGHT. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 10)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Larry O'Reilly; written by Philip Reisman, Jr.; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 25Jul47; MP2288.

WHISTLE STOP. Released through United Artists, c1946. Presented by Nero Films. 83 min., sd. From an original novel by Maritta M. Wolff.

Credits: Producer, Seymour Nebenzal; director, Leonide Moguy; written for the screen by Philip Yordan; cinematographer, Russell Metty; film editor, Gregg Tallas.

© Nero Productions, Inc.; 25Jan46; LP75.

THE WHISTLER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd. Suggested by The Columbia Broadcasting System program.

Credits: Producer, Rudolph C. Flothow; director, William Castle; story, J. Donald Wilson; screenplay, Eric Taylor; film editor, Jerome Thoms.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Mar44; LP12806.

THE WHISTLER. SEE

The Mark of the Whistler.

Power of the Whistler.

The Return of the Whistler.

The Secret of the Whistler.

The Thirteenth Hour.

The Voice of the Whistler.

THE WHISTLER AND HIS DOG. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Mar41; MP10983.

THE WHISTLER'S MOTHER-IN-LAW. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Mar42; MP12340.

WHISTLING IN BROOKLYN. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Nat Perrin; music score, George Bassman; film editor, Ben Lewis.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Sep43; LP12334.

WHISTLING IN DIXIE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Nat Perrin; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 2Sep42; LP11619.

WHISTLING IN THE DARK. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Laurence Gross and Edward Childs Carpenter.

Credits: Producer, George Haight; director, S. Sylvan Simon; screenplay, Robert MacGunigle, Harry Clork, Albert Mannhaimer; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank E. Hull.

© Loew's Inc.; 4Aug41; LP10670.

WHITE BLOSSOMS OF TAH-NI. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 28Aug44; MP15151.

WHITE CARGO. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd., b&w. From the stage play by Leon Gordon; based on the novel "Hell's Playground" by Ida Vera Simonton.

Credits: Producer, Victor Saville; director, Richard Thorpe; screenplay, Leon Gordon; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Fredrick Y. Smith.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Sep42; LP11668.

THE WHITE CLIFFS. SEE The White Cliffs of Dover.

THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER. Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 13 reels, sd., b&w. A Clarence Brown production. Based on the poem "The White Cliffs" by Alice Duer Miller.

Credits: Producer, Sidney Franklin; director, Clarence Brown; screenplay, Claudine West, Jan Lustig, George Froeschel; music score, Herbert Stothart; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Apr44; LP12695.

THE WHITE CLIFFS OF DOVER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 16Feb42; MP12209.

WHITE DREAMS. SEE Weisse Traume.

WHITE EAGLE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels) © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Director: James W. Horne; story, Fred Myton; screenplay. Arch Heath, Morgan B. Cox, John Cutting, Lawrence E. Taylor.

Cast: Buck Jones, Chief Yowlachie, James Craven, Dorothy Fay.

1. Flaming Tepees. © 4Jan41; LP10215.

2. The Jail Delivery. © 11Jan41; LP10240.

3. The Dive into Quicksands. © 18Jan41; LP10255.

4. The Warning Death Knife. © 25Jan41; LP10264.

5. Treachery at the Stockade. © 1Feb41; LP10283.

6. The Gun-Cane Murder. © 8Feb41; LP10290.

7. The Revealing Blotter. © 15Feb41; LP10315.

8. Bird-Calls of Deliverance. © 22Feb41; LP10332.

9. The Fake Telegram. © 1Mar41; LP10352.

10. Mystic Dots and Dashes. © 8Mar41; LP10374.

11. The Ear at the Window. © 15Mar41; LP10378.

12. The Massacre Invitation. © 22Mar41; LP10408.

13. The Framed-Up Showdown. © 29Mar41; LP10422.

14. The Fake Army General. © 5Apr41; LP10446.

15. Treachery Downed. © 12Apr41; LP10460.

THE WHITE GORILLA. Louis Weiss, c1945. 6 reels, sd. From a story by Monro Talbot.

Credits: Director, H. L. Fraser.

© Louis Weiss; 12Jul45; LP13381.

WHITE HEAT. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 114 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The bloody career of a paranoiac gangleader is finally ended by Treasury Department agents, who use the most modern scientific detection methods.

Credits: Producer, Louis F. Edelman; director, Raoul Walsh; story, Virginia Kellogg; screenplay, Ivan Goff, Ben Roberts; music, Max Steiner; orchestral arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: James Cagney, Virginia Mayo, Edmond O'Brien, Margaret Wycherly, Steve Cochran.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 28Nov49; LP2638.

WHITE HOUSE. RKO Pathe, Inc., in collaboration with the editors of This Week magazine, c1946. 19 min., sd,. 35mm. (This is America, no. 12)

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director and photographer, Harry W. Smith; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist; music, Nathaniel Shilkret; editor, Dudley Hale.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 20Sep46; MP1390.

THE WHITE HOUSE. SEE The March of Time, 1948.

WHITE LADY. SEE Isle of Missing Men.

WHITE MAGIC.

© Jam Handy Picture Service, Inc., d.b.a. The Jam Handy Organization; title, descr., & 649 prints, 20Jul40; MU10358.

WHITE PONGO. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Raymond L. Schrock; music director, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 10Aug45; LP13598.

WHITE RHAPSODY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd. (Grantland Rice Sportlight)

Credits: Director, Russel Ervin; narrator, Ted Husing.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 4May45; MP15918.

WHITE SAILS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with Walter A. Futter, c1941. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties)

Credits: Commentator, Owen Crump.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 8Nov41; MP11730.

WHITE SAVAGE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 8 reels, sd., color with b&w sequences.

Credits: Producer, George Waggner; director, Arthur Lubin; original story, Peter Milne; screenplay, Richard Brooks; photography, William Snyder, Lester White; film editor, Russell Schoengarth. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Apr43; LP12021.

WHITE TIE AND TAILS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 9 reels, sd., 35mm. Based on "The Victoria Docks at 8" by Rufus King and Charles Beahan.

Credits: Producer, Howard Benedict; director, Charles T. Barton; screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; music score and direction, Milton Rosen; film editor, Ray Snyder.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc; 19Sep46; LP586.

WHITE TREASURE. SEE Variety Views, no. 138.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Mar42; MP12304.

WHO DONE IT? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The adventures of the Three Stooges as detectives.

Credits: Producer, Hugh McCollum; direction and screenplay, Edward Bernds; film editor, Henry DeMond.

Cast: The Three Stooges.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Mar49; LP2153.

WHO DONE IT? Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1942. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Alex Gottlieb; director, Erle C. Kenton; original story, Stanley Roberts; screenplay, Stanley Roberts, Edmund Joseph, John Grant; photography, Charles Van Enger; film editor, Arthur Hilton.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 26Oct42; LP11741.

WHO DUNIT TO WHO. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1338.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Aug44; MP15115.

WHO GETS THE CREDIT? Wilding Picture Productions, Inc., c1949. 8 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Explains the purpose and policies of small-loan companies.

Appl. author: James P. Prindle.

© National Consumer Finance Association; 17Jan49; LP2122.

WHO IS GUILTY? Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 8 reels. Based on the play "I Killed the Count" by Alec Coppel.

Credits: Producer, I. Goldsmith; director, Fred Zelnik; screenplay, Laurence Huntington, Alec Coppel.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 6Sep40; LP9934.

WHO IS HOPE SCHUYLER? Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 5,159 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Stephen Ransome.

Credits: Director, Thomas Z. Loring; screenplay, Arnaud d'Usseau; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Apr42; LP11241.

WHO KILLED AUNT MAGGIE? Presented by Republic Pictures, c1940. 8 reels, sd. Based on the novel by Medora Field.

Credits: Associate producer, Albert J. Cohen; director, Arthur Lubin; screenplay, Stuart Palmer; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 1Nov40; LP10076.

WHO KILLED DOC ROBBIN. Hal Roach Studios, Inc., c1948. 50 min., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy, with most of the action taking place in an abandoned dwelling. After a scientist disappears in a blast that wrecks a house on his estate, a group of children help to place responsibility for the disaster.

Credits: Producer, Robert F. McGowan; director, Bernard Carr; screenplay, Maurice Geraghty, Dorothy Reid; music director, Heinz Roemheld; film editor, Arthur Seid.

Cast: Virginia Grey, Don Castle, George Zucco, Whitford Kane, Claire Dubrey.

© Hal Roach Studios, Inc.; 9Apr48; LP1756.

WHO KILLED WHO? Loew's Inc., c1943. 715 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 17Jun43; LP12143.

WHO MAKES WORDS? Coronet, c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how new words come into a language. They may be borrowed from another language, invented to meet new needs or formed by changing the spelling or meaning of existing words. A classroom film for junior high pupils.

Credits: Collaborator, Viola Theman.

© Coronet Instructional Films, a division of Esquire, Inc.; 5Apr48; MP3275.

WHO THREW THE OVERALLS IN MISTRESS MURPHY'S CHOWDER? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 6Oct41; MP11646.

WHO THREW THE TURTLE IN MRS. MURPHY'S GIRDLE. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. A Filmcraft production.

Credits: Producer and director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Nov46; MP1337.

WHO THREW THE WHISKEY IN THE WELL? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP115.

A WHOLE BUNCH OF SOMETHING. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 8Nov43; MP14126.

THE WHOLE WAY. Presented by Chevrolet Motor Division of General Motors Corp. 20 min., b&w.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc., title & descr., 20Apr46; 12 prints, 22Apr46; MU482.

WHOM THE GODS LOVE. SEE Wen die Gotter Lieben.

WHOOZIT. Dorland, Inc., c1948. 1 min. each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Dorland, Inc.

Summary: Spot ads for A. S. Beck men's shoes.

Appl. authors: Mark Lawrence, Howard G. Barnes.

Series A.

1. © 6Oct48; MP3774.

2. © 6Oct48; MP3775.

3. © 19Nov48; MP3776.

4. © 26Nov48; MP3777.

5. © 12Nov48; MP3778.

6. © 5NOV48; MP3779.

WHO'S A DUMMY? RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1941. 17 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Bert Gilroy; director, Harry D'Arcy; story, Clem Beauchamp, George Jeske; film editor, John Lockert.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Nov41; LP10908.

WHO'S BEEN EATING MY PORRIDGE? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 20Mar44; MP14652.

WHO'S COOKIN' WHO? c1946. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm, (A Walt Lantz Swing Symphony) (A Woody Woodpecker Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walter Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Les Kline, Grim Natwick; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Walter Lantz Productions & Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13May46; MP912.

WHO'S DELINQUENT? RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 13)

Summary: Shows that lack of recreational facilities and crowded schools contribute to juvenile delinquency in a typical American town, and calls for community action.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Edward Montagne; written by Ardis Smith; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 15Oct48; MP3658.

WHO'S GUILTY? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945–46. 2 reels each (no. 1, 3 reels), sd. © Columbia Pictures Corp.

Credits: Directors, Howard Bretherton, Wallace Grissell; original screenplay, Ande Lamb, George Plympton.

1. Avenging Visitor. © 13Dec45; LP107.

2. The Unknown Strikes, © 20Dec45; LP108.

3. Held for Murder. © 27Dec45; LP109.

4. A Killer at Bay. © 3Jan46; LP110.

5. Human Bait. © 10Jan46; LP112.

6. The Plunge of Doom. © 17Jan46; LP118.

7. A Date with Fate. © 24Jan46; LP141.

8. Invisible Hands. © 31Jan46; LP148.

9. Fate's Vengeance. © 7Feb46; LP164.

10. The Unknown Killer. © 14Feb46; LP187.

11. Riding to Oblivion. © 21Feb46; LP217.

12. The Tank of Terror. © 28Feb46; LP225.

13. White Terror. © 7Mar46; LP242.

14. A Cry in the Night. © 14Mar46; LP273.

15. The Guilty One. © 21Mar46; LP289.

WHO'S HUGH? Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,466 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards; story and screenplay, Monty Collins, Elwood Ullman.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 30Nov43; LP12375.

WHO'S NEXT. SEE Variety Views, no. 122.

WHO'S SUPERSTITIOUS? Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 933 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; screenplay, Douglas Foster, Richard Landau; film editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Loew's Inc.; 20Apr43; MP13514.

WHO'S WHO IN THE ZOO. Released by Warner Bros., c1942. 7 min., sd. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Melvin Millar; animation, John Carey; music director, Carl W. Stalling.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 26Mar42; MP12334.

WHO'S YEHOODI? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 2Apr43; MP13433.

WHO'S ZOO IN HOLLYWOOD. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 668 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 78)

Credits: Director, Art Davis; music, Eddie Kilfeather.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 17Oct41; MP12066.

WHY DADDY? Loew's Inc., c1944. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 929 ft., sd. (A Robert Benchley Miniature)

Credits: Director, Will Jason; original story and screenplay, Robert Benchley; film editor, Tom Biggart.

© Loew's Inc.; 17May44; LP12682.

WHY DID I FALL FOR ABNER. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 9Jul45; MP16136.

WHY DID I KISS THAT GIRL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 29Oct45; MP16448.

WHY DON'T WE DO THIS MORE OFTEN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov41; MP11753.

WHY DON'TCHA KISS ME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Dave Gould.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Mar46; MP358.

WHY DREAM OF LOVE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Sep46; MP1162.

WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1945. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sam Sax; director, William Berke; original story, Fanya Foss Lawrence; screenplay, Fanya Foss Lawrence, Bradford Ropes; music director, Walter Green; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 5Nov45; LP13590.

WHY IS IT? Loew's Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Pete Smith Specialty) An MGM picture.

Summary: Pete encounters some of life's minor annoyances—the alarm clock that doesn't go off, the broken shoe string, and the pests in the public library.

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

Cast: Dave O'Brien.

© Loew's Inc.; 15Sep48; LP1820.

WHY KICK. c1942. 1 reel.

Appl. author: Castleman De Tolly Chesley.

© Atlantic Refining Co.; 1Apr42; MP12433.

WHY PLAY LEAP FROG? John Sutherland Productions, Inc., c1949. 10 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates the relationship between wages and prices, and concludes that only with increased productivity can wages outstrip prices. An animated cartoon.

© Harding College; 1Mar49; MP4165.

WHY PUNCTUATE. Centron Corp., c1948. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The film illustrates how good punctuation is essential in writing, and summarizes basic rules for use of the most important punctuation marks. For junior-senior high school English classes.

Credits: Adviser, Hardy R. Finch.

© Young America Films, Inc.; 20Nov48; MP3591.

WHY RADIO WORKS. 3 reel, sd.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© National Association of Broadcasters; title & descr., 18Mar44; 11 prints, 21Mar44; MU14617.

WHY STUDY FOREIGN LANGUAGES? Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Demonstrates that the study of foreign languages contributes to the enjoyment of travel, the success of commerce, the appreciation of literature, and the understanding of people both at home and abroad. For high school, college, and adult groups.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Henry Grattan Doyle.

© Davie A. Smart; 17Aug49; MP4499.

WHY THOMAS WAS DISCHARGED. Marshall Grant-Realm Television Production, c1949. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 16mm. Based on a story by George Arnold.

Summary: After courting two heiresses unsuccessfully, a pair of fortune-hunting young blades are chagrinned when their valet marries a rich wife. Setting, a sea-side resort in the gay nineties.

Credits: Producer, Stanley Rubin; director, Sobey Martin; screenplay, Millard Kaufmann; editor, Jodie Copelan.

© Realm Television Productions, Inc.; 27Jun49; LP2417.

THE WICKED LADY. Released by Universal-International, c1946. Presented by J. Arthur Rank. 11 reels, sd., 35mm. A Gainsborough Picture. From the novel "The Life and Death of the Wicked Lady Skelton" by Magdalen King-Hall.

Credits: Producer, R. J. Minney; direction and screenplay, Leslie Arliss; music director, Louis Levy; editor, Terence Fisher.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 13Nov46; LP683.

A WICKY, WACKY ROMANCE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1939. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Producer, Paul Terry; director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster; music, Philip A. Scheib; Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 17Nov49; MP10434.

WIDE OPEN SPACES. Walt Disney Productions, c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

Credits: Director, Jack King; story, MacDonald MacPherson, Jack Huber; animation, Don Towsley, Paul Allen, Emery Hawkins, Sandy Strother; music, Oliver Wallace. Technicolor.

© Walt Disney Productions; 24Apr47; LP1375.

WIDE OPEN TOWN. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd. Based on characters created by Clarence E. Mulford.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, Lesley Selander; screenplay, Harrison Jacobs, J. Benton Cheney; music direction, Irvin Talbot, John Leipold; photographer, Russell Harlan; film editor, Carroll Lewis.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Aug41; LP10667.

WIFE DECOY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 2 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Harry Edwards.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 16Apr45; LP13361.

THE WIFE OF MONTE CRISTO. c1946. 8 reels, sd. PRC Productions, Inc. Suggested by the novel by Alexandre Dumas.

Credits: Director, Edgar G. Ulmer; adaptation, Franz Rosenwald, Edgar G. Ulmer.

App. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 18Jun46; LP387.

THE WIFE OF THE MAN ON THE FLYING TRAPEZE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 25Aug41; MP11476.

THE WIFE TAKES A FLYER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, B. P. Schulberg; director, Richard Wallace; story, Gina Kaus; screenplay, Gina Kaus, Jay Dratler; music, Werner R. Heymann; music director, M. W. Stoloff; film editor, Gene Havlick.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 17Apr42; LP11216.

WIFE TAMES WOLF. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 17 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, George Bilson; director and author of screenplay, Hal Yates; film editor, Edward W. Williams.

Cast: Leon Errol, Dorothy Granger, Eddie Kane.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Mar47; LP996.

WIFE TO SPARE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Director, Edward Bernds; story and screenplay, Elwood Ullman.

Cast: Andy Clyde.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Nov47; LP1318.

WIFE WANTED. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1946. 8 reels, sd., 35mm. Suggested by the novel by Robert Callahan.

Credits: Producers, Jeffrey Bernerd, Kay Francis; director, Phil Karlson; screenplay, Caryl Coleman, Sidney Sutherland; music director, Edward J. Kay; photographer, Harry Newmann.

© Monogram Pictures Corp,; 14Oct46; LP639.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Oct44; MP15360.

WIGWAM WHOOPEE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, I. Klein, Jack Mercer; animation, Tom Johnson, William Henning.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Feb48; LP1525.

WILBUR THE LION. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 10 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Puppetoon) Story based on an idea by William E. Molett.

Credits: Director, George Pal; screenplay, Jack Miller.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 18Apr47; LP956.

WILD AND WOODY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists, c1948. 6 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Heck Allen; animation, Ed Love, Pat Matthews; music, Darrell Calker.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 31Dec48; MP3742.

WILD AND WOOLFY. Loew's Inc., c1945. 698 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Tex Avery; story, Heck Allen; animation, Ed Love, Ray Abrams, Preston Blair, Walt Clinton; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 21Sep45; LP13535.

THE WILD AND WOOZY WEST. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 666 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 16)

Credits: Direction and animation, Allen Rose, Lou Lilly; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 16Apr42; LP11207.

WILD BEAUTY. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Wallace W. Fox; original screenplay, Adele Buffington; music director, Paul Sawtell; cinematographer, Maury Gertsman; film editor, D. Patrick Kelly.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc,; 21Aug46; LP512.

WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES. Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc., c1942. 82 min., sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Edmond Grainger; director, Ray Enright; original screenplay, Charles Grayson, Paul Gerard Smith, Raymond Schrock; music, Howard Jackson; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

© Warner Brothers Pictures, Inc.; 31Jan42; LP11085.

WILD BOAR HUNT. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 10 min., sd. (Hollywood Novelties) (Bow and Arrow Adventures)

Credits: Written by De Leon Anthony; narrator, Knox Manning.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 23Dec40; MP11025.

WILD CALENDAR. SEE Caught.

WILD COUNTRY. PRC Pictures, Inc., c1947. 57 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Jerry Thomas; director, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, Arthur E. Orloff; orchestration, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn.

Cast: Eddie Dean, Flash, Roscoe Ates, Peggy Wynne, Douglas Fowley.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 7Jan47; LP778.

THE WILD FRONTIER. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 59 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Philip Ford; original screenplay, Albert DeMond; music director, Mort Glickman; film editor, Les Orlebeck.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Lane, Black Jack, Jack Holt, Eddy Waller.

© Republic Pictures Corps; 13Nov47; LP1327.

WILD GEESE CALLING. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941, 7,100 ft., sd. Based on the novel by Stewart Edward White.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; screenplay, Horace McCoy; music director, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 15Aug41; LP10881.

A WILD HARE. The Vitaphone Corp., c1940. 1 reel, sd., color. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Rich Hogan; animation, Virgil Ross; music direction, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Jul40; MP10385.

WILD HARVEST. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 92 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Houston Branch.

Credits: Producer, Robert Fellows; director, Tay Garnett; screenplay, John Monks, Jr.; music score, Hugo Friedhofer; editor, George Tomasini.

Cast: Alan Ladd, Dorothy Lamour, Robert Preston.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 26Sep47; LP1227.

WILD HONEY. Loew's Inc., c1942. 758 ft., sd., color. (A Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Cartoon) A Rudolf Ising production.

Credits: Story, Henry Allen; animation, Michael Lah, Rudy Zamora, Don Williams; music, Scott Bradley. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 12Nov42; LP11700.

WILD HORSE MESA. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on Zane Grey's novel.

Credits: Producer, Herman Schlom; director, Wallace A. Grissell; screenplay, Norman Houston; music, Paul Sawtell; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Desmond Marquette.

Cast: Tim Holt, Nan Leslie, Richard Martin, Richard Powers, Jason Robards.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 19Nov47; LP1334.

WILD HORSE PHANTOM. P.R.C. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

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

© P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.; 28Oct44; LP13564.

WILD HORSE RANGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Harry S. Webb; director, Raymond K. Johnson; story, Tom Gibson; screenplay, Carl Krusada; music directors, Lange & Porter; photography, Edward A. Kull, William Hyer; film editor, Robert Golden.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 24Jun40; LP9727.

WILD HORSE ROUNDUP. SEE Northwestern Stampede.

WILD HORSE RUSTLERS. c1943. Presented by Producers Releasing Corp. 6 reels, sd., 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original screenplay, Steve Braxton; music, Leo Erdody; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

Appl. author: P.R.C. Pictures, Inc.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 10Feb43; LP530.

WILD HORSE STAMPEDE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Robert Tansey; director, Alan James; original story, Frances Kavanaugh; screenplay, Elizabeth Beecher; music director, Frank Sanucci; photography, Marcel Le Picard; film editor, Fred Bain.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 16Apr43; LP11990.

WILD HORSES. Loew's Inc., c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 713 ft., sd., b&w. (A Pete Smith Specialty)

Credits: Screenplay, Jameson Brewer, Irwin Braun; film editor, Philip Anderson.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Apr43; MP13494.

THE WILD MAN OF BORNEO. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 8 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Marc Connelly and Herman J. Mankiewicz.

Credits: Director, Robert B. Sinclair; screenplay, Waldo Salt, John McClain; music score, David Snell; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 24Jan41; LP10218.

WILD TURKEY. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1947. 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Sportscope, no. 8)

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

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 4Apr47; MP2030.

WILD WEST. c1946. Presented by PRC Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Producer and director, Robert Emmett Tansey; original screenplay, Frances Kavanaugh; music director, Karl Hajos; orchestral arrangements, Walter Greene; film editor, Hugh Winn. Cinecolor.

© Pathe Industries, Inc.; 1Dec46; LP712.

WILD WEST CHIMP. SEE Variety Views, no. 160.

WILDCAT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original story, North Bigbee; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Richard Murphy; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 27Aug42; LP11670.

WILDCAT BUS. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1940. 64 min., sd.

Credits: Producer, Cliff Reid; director, Frank Woodruff; story and screenplay, Lou Lusty; editor, George Crone.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 23Aug40; LP9900.

THE WILDCAT OF TUCSON. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, Lambert Hillyer; original screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec40; LP10208.

WILDFIRE. SEE Red Canyon.

WILEING AWAY THE TIME. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Mar43; MP13421.

WILFUL WILLIE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 26Jun42; MP14668.

WILL IT HAPPEN AGAIN. American Film Producers, c1948. Presented by Navy Club of the United States, Rockford, Illinois. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A picture designed to show the personal degradation of the Nazi leaders and the decadence of their regime. The last reel emphasizes the need for military preparation in the United States. Made from captured German film.

© American Film Producers; 15May48; LP1622.

WILL YA BE MY DARLIN'. Distributed by Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. Presented by R.C.M. Productions, Inc. 1 reel, sd.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Nov46; MP1293.

A WILLIAM DAMON CHALK TALK. William Damon Productions, c1946. 1 reel, si., 16mm.

© William Damon Productions, William T. Damon, sole owner; 10Sep46; MP1207.

WILLIAM TELL OVERTURE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Sep44; MP15168.

WILLIE AND THE MOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 986 ft., sd., b&w. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, George Sidney; original story and screenplay, Julian Hochfelder; film editor, Albert Akst.

© Loew's Inc.; 19May41; LP10519.

WILLIE, THE WINDOW WASHER. Featurettes, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Appl. author; Roy Mack.

© Featurettes, Inc.; 31Dec41; MP12684.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 1Feb43; MP13243.

WILLIE, WILLIE, WILL YA? Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 21Apr41; MP11081.

WILLOUGHBY'S MAGIC HAT. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 659 ft., sd. (Phantasy, no. 25)

Credits: Producer, Dave Fleischer; director, Bob Wickersham; animation, Phil Duncan, Howard Swift; music, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Apr43; LP11959.

WILSON. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 13,861 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry King; screenplay, Lamar Trotti; music, Alfred Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 1Aug44; LP12861.

WIMMIN HADN'T OUGHTA DRIVE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, George Manuell.

© Paramount Pictures Inc,; 16Aug40; LP9850.

WIMMIN IS A MYSKERY. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Dave Fleischer; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Willard Bowsky, Joseph D'Igalo.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 7Jun40; MP10268.

WIND, CURVES, AND TRAP DOOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. Presented by Albert Mitchell. 10 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Answer Man Series, no. 1–B)

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

© Universal International Pictures Co., Inc.; 16Feb48; MP3072.

THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS. SEE The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad.

THE WINDBLOWN HARE. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1949. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Bugs Bunny Special)

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 30Aug49 (in notice: 1948); MP4505.

THE WINDOW. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 73 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" by Cornell Woolrich.

Summary: A drama of terror. When an imaginative boy gives an eye-witness account of a murder, no one believes him except the murderers, who decide to kill him. Filmed in a tenement district in New York.

Credits: Producer, Frederic Ullman, Jr.; director, Ted Tetzlaff; screenplay, Mel Dinelli; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Frederic Knudtson. Cast: Bobby Driscoll, Barbara Hale, Arthur Kennedy, Paul Stewart, Ruth Roman.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 10May49; LP2327.

WINDOW CLEANERS. Walt Disney Productions, c1940. 1 reel. (A Walt Disney Donald Duck)

© Walt Disney Productions; 22Aug40; LP9936.

WINDOW-SHOPPING. 300 feet.

Summary: A presentation of outstanding window displays by such stores as Gimbel's, Saks', and Best's in New York City.

Appl. author: Samuel Momrod Lewton.

© Teletime, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 18Aug48; MU3229.

WINDOW SHOPPING NEWSREEL, no. 1. 400 ft.

Summary: A television film program designed to show and describe fashionable apparel displayed in the shop windows of New York.

© Richard Barron; title, descr., & 4 prints, 31Aug48; MU3266.

WINDOW WASHERMAN. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 11Mar46; MP284.

WINDS AND THEIR CAUSES. Coronet, c1948. 12 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: When his gasoline-powered model airplane crashes over a bare field, Pete becomes interested in winds and obtains information from personal observation, from books, and from an aviator.

Credits: Educational collaborator, Walter A. Thurber.

© David A. Smart; 14Dec48; MP3723.

WING AND A PRAYER. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 9,223 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Henry Hathaway; story and screenplay, Jerome Cady; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 28Jul44; LP13125.

THE WINGED SCOURGE. Walt Disney Productions, c1943. 1 reel.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Jan43; MP13619.

WINGED TARGETS, Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

Credit: Commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 7Jan44; MP14478.

WINGED VICTORY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. 15 reels, sd.

Credits: Director, George Cukor; screenplay, Moss Hart; music, David Rose.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 20Dec44; LP13061.

WINGMEN OF TOMORROW. SEE Variety Views, no. 140.

WINGS AND THE WOMAN. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1942. 91 min., sd. A Herbert Wilcox production. By Viscount Castleross.

Credits: Associate producer, Victor Hanbury; director, Herbert Wilcox; scenario and screenplay, Miles Malleson; music score, William Alwyn; photography, Mutz Greenbaum; editor, Geoffrey Foot.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 18Sep42; LP11639.

WINGS FOR FREEDOM. SEE Variety Views, no. 108.

WINGS FOR THE FLEDGLING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942, 913 ft. (Victory Short, no. 1)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; continuity, George Blake; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Dec42; MP14316.

WINGS IN RECORD TIME. SEE Variety Views, no. 128.

WINGS OF COURAGE. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 149)

Credits: Producer, Thomas Mead; narration, Alois Havrilla.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 21Mar46; MP307.

WINGS OF DEFENSE. Movietone. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Continuity, Russ Sheilds; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. De Francesco; photography. Jack Kuhne.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 10Apr42; MP12397.

WINGS OF STEEL; Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. in cooperation with the United States Army Air Corps, c1941. 20 min., sd., color.

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

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 12Apr41; LP10379.

WINGS OF THE WIND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1947, 8 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Summary: Sand-sailing on the beach; water-skiing in Florida; skate-sailing and iceboating in Wisconsin: and flying in a glider, supported by the "wings of the wind."

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco; film editor, Arthur Lincer.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 18Jul47; MP2624.

WINGS OVER LATIN AMERICA. sd., color, 16mm.

Appl. author: Archer Winsten.

© Pan American World Airways; title, descr., & 2 prints, 20Oct45; MU16434.

WINGS OVER THE PACIFIC. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, J. Bernard; director, Phil Rosen; original screenplay, George Wallace Sayre; music director, Edward Kay; photography, Mack Stengler; film editor, Carl Pierson.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 21May43; LP12066.

WINGS TO NEW YORK. Charles D. Beeland for Pan American World Airways, Atlantic Division. 1,145 feet, sd.

Summary: Arriving in New York by Pan American's Flying Clipper a visitor sees many things of interest in the Wonder City.

© Pan American Airways, Inc.; title & descr., 16Feb49; 2 prints, 21Dec48; MU3795.

WINKY THE WATCHMAN, c1945. 1 reel.

© Hugh Harman Productions, Inc,; 31Oct45; LP13656.

WINNER TAKE ALL. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1948. 64 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A prizefight melodrama in which Joe Palooka makes a cross-country tour and wins the big fight.

Credits: Producer, Hal E. Chester; director, Reginald LeBorg; screenplay, Stanley Rubin; music director, Edward J. Kay.

Cast: Joe Kirkwood, Elyse Knox, William Frawley, Stanley Clements, John Shelton.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Sep48; LP1951.

WINNER TAKE BOSCO. Cinepuppet Productions, Inc. 500 ft., color, 16mm. (Bosco, Ciné Pup)

Summary: Bosco performs the three good deeds necessary to enter Dog-Heaven.

Credits: Authors, Buell Fuller, John Fuller, Julian R. Seide.

© Julian R. Seide, Cinepuppet Productions, Inc.; title, descr., & 2 prints, 3Nov48; MU3451.

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1948. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Featuring races from the time of Man O' War to the present, this semi-documentary film shows the life of a race horse, its training, its failures, and its triumphs.

Credits: Producer, Richard K. Polimer; director, Felix E. Feist; screenplay, Harold J. Green.

Cast: Jean Willes, Morgan Garley, Johnny Longden, Bob Howard, William Gould.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21May48; LP1860.

THE WINNER'S CIRCLE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1944. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producers, Heilner, Blumenthal; director, Andre DeLaVarre; narration, Roger Q. Denny. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 7Jun44; LP12688.

WINNERS OF THE WEST. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1940. 2 reels each. © Universal Pictures Co., Inc.

Credits: Directors, Ford Beebe, Ray Taylor; original screenplay, George H. Plympton, Basil Dickey, Charles R. Condon.

Cast: Dick Foran, Anne Nagel, James Craig, Tom Fadden, Harry Woods.

1. Redskins Ride Again! © 30Apr40; LP9598.

2. The Wreck at Red River Gorge! © 30Apr40; LP9599.

3. The Bridge of Disaster! © 30Apr49; LP9600.

4. Trapped by Redskins! © 16May40; LP9643.

5. Death Strikes the Trail! © 22May40; LP9655.

6. A Leap For Life! © 22May40; LP9656.

7. Thundering Terror! © 6Jun40; LP9685.

8. The Flaming Arsenal! © 6Jun40; LP9686.

9. Sacrificed by Savages! © 11Jun40; LP9698.

10. Under Crashing Timbers. © 19Jun40; LP9718.

11. Bullets in the Dark. © 19Jun40; LP9719.

12. The Battle of Blackhawk. © 25Jun40; LP9735.

13. Barricades Blasted. © 10Jul40; LP9758.

WINNING BASKETBALL. RKO Pathe, Inc. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1946. 8 min., sd. (Sportscope, no. 6)

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director, Joseph Walsh; written by Jerry Brondfield; narrator, Andre Baruch; music, Harold Anderson; photographer, Anthony Caputo; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 25Jan46; MP249.

THE WINSLOW BOY. London Film Productions, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through London Film Productions, Inc., 1949. 117 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the play by Terence Rattigan.

Summary: Belief in the innocence of his naval-cadet son, who is accused of stealing and expelled from school, leads a father to a full-scaled fight for justice, which culminates in a triumphant action against the Crown.

Credits: Producer, Anatole de Grunwald; director, Anthony Asquith; screenplay, Terence Rattigan, Anatole de Grunwald; music, William Alwyn; editor, Gerald Turney Smith.

Cast: Robert Donat, Margaret Leighton, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Marie Lohr, Neil North.

© London Film Productions, Inc.; 23Sep48; LP2578.

WINTER CAPERS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1949. 9 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (The World of Sports)

Summary: Hannes Schmid and George Von Birgelen demonstrate their skill in skiing and skating.

Credits: Producer and director, Harry Foster; commentator, Bill Stern; music, Jack Shaindlin; photographer, Jack Etra; editor, Dan Heiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 27Oct49; MP4640.

WINTER DRAWS ON. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Screen Song)

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 19Mar48; LP1518.

WINTER HOLIDAY. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1946. 8 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Movietone's Sports Review)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; continuity, Valeska Weidig; narrator, Mel Allen; music score, L. DeFrancesco.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp; 27Sep46; MP1963.

WINTER IN ESKIMO LAND. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Father Hubbard's Adventures)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; narrators, Father Hubbard, Lowell Thomas; music score, L. De Francesco; editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 4Jul41; MP11311.

WINTER MEETING. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 104 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Ethel Vance [pseud. of Grace Zaring Stone].

Summary: A romantic drama about the thwarted love of a poetess and a war hero. New England setting.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Bretaigne Windust; screen play, Catherine Turney; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; music, Max Steiner; orchestra arrangements, Murray Cutter; film editor, Owen Marks.

Cast: Bette Davis, Janis Paige, James Davis, John Hoyt, Florence Bates.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., 24Apr48; LP1580.

WINTER ON THE FARM. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1948. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A classroom film for primary and middle grades, showing how Joan and Jerry spend the winter months on the farm.

Credits: Collaborator, E. Laurence Palmer.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 9Jul48; MP3261.

WINTER PARADISE, Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 907 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 84)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 8Dec42; MP13460.

WINTER SPORTS JAMBOREE. SEE Variety Views, no. 116.

WINTER STORAGE. Walt Disney Productions. Distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm, (Donald Duck Cartoon)

Credits: Director, Jack Hannah; story, Bill Berg, Nick George; music, Oliver Wallace; animation, Bob Carlson, Bill Justice, Volus Jones, Jack Boyd.

© Walt Disney Productions; 11Jun48; LP2351.

WINTER THRILLS AND SPILLS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Feb46; MP190.

WINTER WONDERLAND. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a story by Fred Schiller.

Credits: Associate producers, Walter Colmes, Henry Sokal; director, Bernard Vorhaus; screenplay, Peter Goldbaum, David Chandler, Arthur Marx, Gertrude Purcell; music, Paul Dessau; film editor, Robert Jahns.

Cast: Lynne Roberts, Charles Drake, Roman Bohnen, Eric Blore.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 17Mar47; LP904.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 10Dec45; MP16590.

WINTERTIME. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 7,416 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, John Brahm; story, Arthur Kober; screenplay, E. Edwin Moran, Jack Jevne, Lynn Starling; music direction, Emil Newman, Charles Henderson.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 17Sep43; LP12454.

WIR MACHEN MUSIK (We Make Music) sd., b&w, 16mm.

Appl. author: Terra Filmkunst.

© Levinson-Finney Enterprises, Inc.; title, descr., & 10 prints, 22Dec46; LU724.

THE WISE CHOICE. Wilding Picture Productions for the Dearborn Motors Corp., c1948. 24 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: The merits of the Ford tractor are presented to a farm boy and his uncle.

Appl. author: Joseph H. Mayne.

© Dearborn Motors Corp,; 15Apr48; LP1624.

THE WISE LITTLE WOODCHOPPER. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc., For the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After the animals of the forest offer him a cart of Coca-Cola, the woodchopper spares the big tree which is their home. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 25Jul49 (in notice: 1948); LP2610.

WISE MAN SAY. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, William Forest Crouch.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 30Dec45; MP108.

THE WISE OLD OWL. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11297.

WISE OWL. Released by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1940. 678 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 71)

Credits: Director, U. B. Iwerks; music, Eddie Kilfeather; music director, Joe De Nat. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 5Dec40; LP10265.

WISE QUACKERS. Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc., c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Merrie Melodies)

Credits: Director, I. Freleng; story, Ted Pierce; animation, Manuel Perez, Gerry Chiniquy, Pete Burness, Ken Champion, Virgil Ross.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec48; MP3737.

THE WISE QUACKING DUCK. The Vitaphone Corp., c1943. 7 min., sd., color. (Looney Tunes)

Credits: Producer, Leon Schlesinger; story, Warren Foster; animation, Phil Monroe; music director, Carl W. Stalling. Technicolor.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 12May43; MP13584.

WISH YOU WERE HERE. SEE The March of Time, v. 15, no. 3.

THE WISTFUL WIDOW OF WAGON GAP. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1947. 78 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A slapstick comedy which satirizes Westerns. A huckster, unjustly convicted of murder, is reprieved by an old Montana law which makes it mandatory for him to be responsible for the murdered man's wife, children, and debts.

Credits: Producer, Robert Arthur; director, Charles T. Barton; original story, D. D. Beauchamp, William Bowers; screenplay, Robert Lees, Frederic I. Rinaldo, John Grant; music, Walter Schumann; orchestrations, David Tamkin; film editor, Frank Gross.

Cast: Bud Abbott, Lou Costello, Marjorie Main, Audrey Young, George Cleveland.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & C S Co.; 31Oct47; LP1919.

WITH A TWIST OF THE WRIST. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 7Jul41; MP11301.

WITH ROD AND GUN IN CANADA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1945. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

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

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec45; MP278.

WITH ROD AND REEL ON ANTICOSTI ISLAND. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (The Sports Parade)

Credits: Producer, Pam Blumenthal; director, Van Campen Heilner. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15May43; MP13573.

WITH THE GREATEST OF EASE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Dearborn Motors Corp. 40 ft., sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: Shows that Ford tractors with the Dearborn Motors lift-type tandem disc harrows are fast, convenient, and inexpensive for the farmer to operate.

© Dearborn Motors Corp.; title, descr., & 5 prints, 13Apr49; MU4002.

WITH THESE WEAPONS. Willard Pictures, c1939. Presented by the National Anti-Syphilis Committee of the American Social Hygiene Association. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Russell S. Bushnell; script, Robert T. Furman; narration, David Ross.

© American Social Hygiene Assn., Inc.; 14Dec39; MP9875.

WITHIN THESE WALLS. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1945. 6,406 ft., sd. From a story by Coles Trapnell and James B. Fisher.

Credits: Director, Bruce Humberstone; screenplay, Eugene Ling, Wanda Tuchock; music director, Emil Newman.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 27Jun45; LP13450.

WITHOUT HONOR. Strand Productions, Inc. Released through United Artists Corp., c1949. 76 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A domestic melodrama in which a man, obsessed with jealous hatred for his brother's wife, becomes involved with a supposed murder, a disappearing corpse, and an attempted suicide.

Credits: Producers, Robert and Raymond Hakim; director, Irving Pichel; original screenplay, James Poe; music, Max Steiner; film editor, Gregg Tallas.

Cast: Laraine Day, Dane Clark, Franchot Tone, Agnes Moorehead, Bruce Bennett.

© Strand Productions, Inc.; 21Oct49; LP2581.

WITHOUT LOVE. Loew's Inc., c1945. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 11 reels, sd., b&w. Based on the play by Philip Barry.

Credits: Producer, Lawrence Weingarten; director, Harold S. Bucquet; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Mar45; LP13205.

WITHOUT RESERVATIONS. Released by RKO Radio, c1946. Presented by Jesse L. Lasky and Walter MacEwen. 107 min., sd., 35mm. From the novel by Jane Allen and Mae Livingston.

Credits: Producer, Jesse L. Lasky; director, Mervyn LeRoy; screenplay, Andrew Solt; music, Roy Webb; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; editor, Jack Ruggiero.

© Jesse L. Lasky Productions, Inc.; 3Jun46; LP433.

THE WITNESS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, Leslie Rousch; photographer, William Steiner.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 11Mar42; LP11162.

THE WIZARD OF ARTS. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 1 reel, sd.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Aug41; MP11437.

WIZARD OF AUTOS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 124)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; script, Frank Kelly; narrator, Larry Elliott.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Sep43; MP13997.

WIZARD OF THE FAIRWAY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 1 reel, sd. (World of Sports, no. 83)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 6Nov42; MP13459.

WOLF CHASES PIGS. Distributed by Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 664 ft., sd. (Fable, no. 18)

Credits: Frank Taslin; Bob Wickersham, Leo Salkin, John Hubley, Paul Sommer, Paul Worth.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 30Apr42; LP11462.

THE WOLF HUNTERS. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1949. 70 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on James Oliver Curwood's novel.

Summary: A Mountie, aided by his dog, proves that a local trader is responsible for both a fur-thievery plot and several murders.

Credits: Producer, Lindsley Parsons; director, Oscar Boetticher; screenplay, W. Scott Darling; music director, Edward J. Kay; film editor, Ace Herman.

Cast: Kirby Grant, Jan Clayton, Chinook (dog), Edward Norris, Helen Parrish.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 30Oct49; LP2666.

WOLF IN SHEIK'S CLOTHING. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon) Paramount Pictures Inc., c1948. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Larry Riley, I. Klein; animation, Tom Johnson, George Rufle.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 30Jul48; LP1740.

WOLF IN THIEF'S CLOTHING. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1943. 1,658 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; screenplay, Ewart Adamson, Jack White; film editor, Charles Hochberg.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 12Feb43; LP12118.

THE WOLF MAN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer and director, George Waggner; original screenplay, Curt Siodmak; photography, Joseph Valentine; film editor, Ted Kent.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 15Dec41; LP10910.

WOLF OF NEW YORK. c1940. Presented by Republic Pictures. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Robert North; director, William McGann; original story, Leslie T. White, Arnold Belgard; screenplay, Gordon Kahn, Lionell Houser; music director, Cy Feuer; photographer, Reggie Lanning; film editor, Ernest Nims.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 25Jan40; LP9434.

THE WOLF'S PARDON. (Terrytoons) Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 5Dec47; LP1538.

A WOLF'S TALE. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1944. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 27Oct44; LP13330.

WOLVES OF THE RANGE. Producers Releasing Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sigmund Neufeld; director, Sam Newfield; original story and screenplay, Joe O'Donnell; film editor, Holbrook N. Todd.

© Producers Releasing Corp.; 18Jun43; LP12099.

THE WOMAN FROM TANGIER. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1947. 65 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: An American dancer, who is traveling by boat to Gibraltar, stops in Tangier, where she becomes involved in theft and murder.

Credits: Producer, Martin Mooney; director, Harold Daniels; original screenplay, Irwin Franklyn; music director, Paul Donnelly; film editor, Richard Fantl.

Cast: Adele Jergens, Stephen Dunne, Michael Duane, Denis Green, Ian MacDonald.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 31Dec47; LP1435.

THE WOMAN IN GREEN. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., 1945. 7 reels, sd. Based on the "Sherlock Holmes" characters created by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

Credits: Director, Roy William Neill; original screenplay, Bertram Millhauser; music director, Mark Levant; film editor, Edward Curtiss.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 27Jul45; LP13455.

THE WOMAN IN RED. SEE My Name Is Julia Ross.

WOMAN IN THE HALL. Wessex Film Productions, Ltd., London, c1948. Released in the U. S. through Eagle Lion Films, Inc., 1949. 93 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel of the same title by G. B. Stern.

Summary: An unscrupulous mother who has supported herself and her two daughters by mulcting unsuspecting philanthropists, acknowledges her responsibility for her young daughter's warped sense of honesty when the girl is brought to trial for stealing.

Credits: Producer, Ian Dalrymple; director, Jack Lee; screenplay, Ian Dalrymple, G. B. Stern, Jack Lee; music, Temple Abady; film editor, John Krish.

Cast: Ursula Jeans, Jean Simmons, Cecil Parker, Jill Raymond, Edward Underdown.

© Independent Producers, Ltd.; 10Mar48; LP2356.

THE WOMAN IN THE HOUSE. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 988 ft., sd., sepia. (John Nesbitt's Passing Parade)

Credits: Director, Sammy Lee; original story, John Nesbitt; screenplay, Warner Law; music score, Lennie Hayton; film editor, Harry Komer.

© Loew's Inc.; 30Apr42; LP11313.

THE WOMAN IN THE WINDOW. c1944. Presented by International Pictures, Inc., 99 min., sd. From a novel by J. H. Wallis.

Credits: Produced and written for the screen by Nunnally Johnson; music score, Arthur Lange; film editor, Marjorie Johnson.

© The Christie Corp.; 11Oct44; LP12883.

THE WOMAN IN WHITE. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1948. 109 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel by Wilkie Collins.

Summary: In this melodrama, two unscrupulous men seek to steal the fortune of an heiress. The plot is complicated by the existence of an insane "double" of the young woman. Setting, a village near London in the 1850's.

Credits: Producer, Henry Blanke; director, Peter Godfrey; screenplay, Stephen Morehouse Avery; music score, Max Steiner; music director, Leo F. Forbstein; film editor, Clarence Kolster.

Cast: Alexis Smith, Eleanor Parker, Sydney Greenstreet, Gig Young, Agnes Moorehead.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 15May48; LP1609.

THE WOMAN OF THE TOWN. Released thru United Artists Corp., c1943. Presented by Harry Sherman. 89 min., sd. From an original story by Norman Houston.

Credits: Producer, Harry Sherman; director, George Archainbaud; screenplay, Aeneas MacKenzie; music score, Miklos Rozsa; music direction, Irvin Talbot; film editor, Carrol Lewis.

© United Artists Productions, Inc.; 20Dec43; LP12490.

WOMAN OF THE YEAR. Loew's Inc., c1942. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. A George Stevens' Production.

Credits: Producer, Joseph L. Mankiewicz; director, George Stevens; original screenplay, Ring Lardner, Jr., Michael Kanin; music score, Franz Waxman; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Jan42; LP11036.

THE WOMAN ON THE BEACH. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 71 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the novel "None So Blind" by Mitchell Wilson.

Credits: Associate producer, Will Price; director, Jean Renoir; screenplay, Frank Davis, Jean Renoir; adaptation, Michael Hogan; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; music, Hannis Eisler; film editors, Roland Gross, Lyle Boyer.

Cast: Joan Bennett, Robert Ryan, Charles Bickford.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 3Jun47; LP1073.

WOMAN SPEAKS. Film Studios of Chicago, c1945–47. 1 reel each, sd., b&w, 16mm. © Hans August Spanuth, d.b.a. Film Studios of Chicago.

Credits: Narration, Virginia Gregg, Ann Tobin.

Volume 1, 1945/47.

1. © 2Dec45; MP246.

2. © 2Dec45; MP247.

3. © 1Nov46; MP1384.

4. © 1Dec46; MP1385.

5. © 28Feb47; MP1825.

6. © 28Feb47; MP1826.

WOMAN WHO CAME BACK. c1945. Presented by Republic Pictures, 68 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Walter Colmes; story, John Kafka; screenplay, Dennis Cooper, Lee Willis; music score, Edward Plumb; music director, Walter Scharf; photographer, Henry Sharp; film editor, John Link.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 28Nov45; LP13677.

A WOMAN'S FACE. Loew's Inc., c1941. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 12 reels, sd., b&w. From the play "Il Etait Une Fois" by Francis de Croisset.

Credits: Producer, Victor Saville; director, George Cukor; screenplay, Donald Ogden Stewart, Elliot Paul; music score, Bronislau Kaper; film editor, Frank Sullivan.

© Loew's Inc.; 6May41; LP10462.

A WOMAN'S SECRET. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1949. 85 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. A Dore Schary presentation. Based on the novel "Mortgage on Life" by Vicki Baum.

Summary: A mystery melodrama in which an innocent ex-singer confesses to the shooting of her successful protégée.

Credits: Produced and written by Herman J. Mankiewicz; director, Nicholas Ray; music, Frederick Hollander; music director, C. Bakaleinikoff; film editor, Sherman Todd.

Cast: Maureen O'Hara, Melvyn Douglas, Gloria Grahame, Bill Williams, Victor Jory.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 9Mar49; LP2213.

A WOMAN'S VENGEANCE. Universal International Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 96 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on the story, "The Gioconda Smile," by Aldous Huxley.

Summary: Domestic hatred, extra-marital intrigue, and murder in an upper class English home.

Credits: Producer and director, Zoltan Korda; screenplay, Aldous Huxley; music, Miklos Rozsa; film editor, Jack Wheeler.

Cast: Charles Boyer, Ann Blyth, Jessica Tandy, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Mildred Natwick.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 8Mar48; LP1648.

WOMEN ARE NO ANGELS. SEE Frauen Sind Keine Engel.

WOMEN AT WAR. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., in cooperation with the U. S. Army, c1943. 20 min., sd., color.

Credits: Director, Jean Negulesco. Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 9Oct43; LP12302.

WOMEN IN BLUE. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1943. 1 reel, sd. (The World Today)

Credits: Producer, Edmund Reek; director, Vyvyan Donner; described by Hugh James; photography, William Storz; film editor, Russ Sheilds.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 16Jul43; MP14822.

WOMEN IN BONDAGE. Monogram Pictures Corp., c1943. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Herman Millakowsky; director, Steve Sekely; original story, Frank Bentick Wisbar; screenplay, Houston Branch; photographer, Mack Stengler.

© Monogram Pictures Corp.; 12Nov43; LP12390.

WOMEN IN HIDING. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 2 reels, sd., b&w. (A Crime Does Not Pay Subject)

Credits: Director, Joe Newman; original screenplay, Howard Dimsdale; film editor, Adrienne Fazan.

© Loew's Inc.; 25Jun40; LP9779.

WOMEN IN PHOTOGRAPHY. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Cinescope, no. 19)

Credits: Narrator, Millicent Robin.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 1Nov41; MP11855.

WOMEN IN SPORTS. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., c1943. 10 min., sd., color. (Sports Parade)

Credits: Director, Del Frazier; narrator, Knox Manning, Technicolor.

© Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.; 23Feb43; MP13288.

WOMEN IN THE NIGHT. Southern California Pictures, c1947. 90 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. Based on a report issued by the United Nations Information Office.

Summary: A melodrama which has for its theme the mistreatment of white women by the German and Japanese forces in Shanghai shortly before the collapse of the Japanese government.

Credits: Producer, Louis K. Ansell; director, William Rowland.

Cast: Tala Birell, William Henry, Virginia Christine.

© Southern California Pictures; 30Dec47; LP1548.

WOMEN IN THE NIGHT. Southern California Pictures, S. A., c1947. 10 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Producer, Louis K. Ansell; director, William Rowland.

Cast: Tala Birell, William Henry, Virginia Christine.

© Southern California Pictures, S. A.; 7Oct47; LP1246.

WOMEN IN WAR. c1940. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, John H. Auer; original screenplay, F. Hugh Herbert, Doris Anderson; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, Jack Marta; film editor, Edward Mann.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 3Jul40; LP9785.

WOMEN WITHOUT NAMES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd. Based on a play by Ernest Booth.

Credits: Director, Robert Florey; screenplay, William R. Lipman, Horace McCoy; photography, Charles Lang; film editor, Anne Bauchens.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 15Mar40; LP9482.

WONDER HOUSE. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm. (This Is America, no. 6)

Summary: A report on the American Museum of Natural History in New York. Shows the different departments of the Museum and the people who prepare the exhibits. Includes scenes of the Museum's expeditions, showing how giant lizards are trapped in the East Indies and how the first dinosaur eggs were discovered.

Credits: Producer, Jay Bonafield; director and photographer, Larry O'Reilly; written by Dudley Hale; narrator, Dwight Weist; editor, David Cooper.

© RKO Pathe, Inc.; 1Apr49; MP4271.

WONDER MAN. Released through RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1945. Presented by Samuel Goldwyn. 98 min., sd., color.

Credits: Producer, Samuel Goldwyn; director, Bruce Humberstone; original story, Arthur Sheekman; screenplay, Don Hartman, Melville Shavelson, Philip Rapp; adaptation, Jack Jevne, Eddie Moran; music director, Louis Forbes; film editor, Daniel Mandell. Technicolor.

© Beverly Productions, Inc.; 8Jun45; LP13339.

THE WONDER MINERAL. Jam Handy Organization, Inc., for Universal Zonolite Insulation Co. 1–1/2 reels, b&w, 35mm.

Summary: The properties of Zonolite brand vermiculite are demonstrated in a laboratory. Closing sequences show the advantages of using this material as fill-type insulation, as a plaster and concrete aggregate, and as a sound absorption material.

© The Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 11May48; 36 prints, 10May48; MU2971.

THE WONDERFUL STORY OF SANTA CLAUS. Fantasy Productions, c1948. 16 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A Christmas story about Santa Claus and his helpers.

Credits: Producer and director, James Blakeley; original story, Patrick D. Dignan.

© Fantasy Productions; 6Dec48; LP2186.

WONDERS OF THE SEA. Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1941. 1 reel, sd. (Adventures of the Newsreel Cameraman)

Credits: Producer, Truman Talley; continuity, David Cooper; narration, Paul Douglas; music score, L. De Francesco; photography, Bruce Cummings; editor, Jack Darrock.

© Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; 21Nov41; MP11844.

WOO WOO. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1945. 1,440 ft., sd.

Credits: Director, Jules White; story and screenplay, Felix Adler.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 5Jan45; LP13117.

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

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 23Dec43; MP14378.

WOOD GOES TO WAR. c1943. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 915 ft., sd., color. (A FitzPatrick Miniature)

Credits: Narrator, James A. FitzPatrick; photographer, William E. Snyder. Technicolor.

© Loew's Inc.; 13Apr43; MP13513.

WOOD-PECKIN'. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1943. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Joe Stultz.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 6Aug43; LP12189.

THE WOODLAND SYMPHONY. Walter Lantz Productions, Inc. for the Coca-Cola Company, c1949. 1 reel, sd., color, 35mm.

Summary: After giving a concert with improvised instruments for the animals of the forest, the pixies dance around a bottle of Coca-Cola. An animated cartoon.

© Walter Lantz Productions, Inc.; 17Sep49 (in notice: 1948); LP2609.

WOODMAN SPARE THAT TREE. c1942. Presented by Columbia Pictures Corp. 677 ft., sd., color. (Color Rhapsody, no. 85)

Credits: Director, Bob Wickersham; story, Jack Cosgriff; animation, Phil Duncan; music, Eddie Kilfeather. Technicolor.

© Screen Gems, Inc.; 2Jul42; LP11706.

THE WOODWORKER. Burton Holmes Films, Inc., c1940. Presented by Vocational Guidance Films, Inc. 1 reel. (Your Life Work Series)

© Arthur P. Twogood; 19Sep40; MP10752.

WOODY GROWS UP. Walter W. Bennett, c1945. 11 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Credits: Producer, director and narrator, Walter W. Bennett.

© Walter W. Bennett; 1Dec45; MP1577.

WOODY HERMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1948. 15 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A musical short.

Credits: Producer and director, Will Cowan; film editor, Eugene De Rue.

Cast: Woody Herman and his orchestra, The Modernaires, Don and Beverly, The Woodchoppers.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 23Jun48; MP3490.

WOODY HERMAN AND HIS ORCHESTRA. The Vitaphone Corp., c1938. 10 min., sd.

Credits: Director, Roy Mack.

© The Vitaphone Corp.; 27Dec38; MP10386.

WOODY, THE GIANT KILLER. Walter Lantz Productions, c1948. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Walter Lantz Cartune) A Universal Picture.

Credits: Director, Dick Lundy; story, Ben Hardaway, Webb Smith; animation, Verne Harding, Ed Love; music, Darrell Calker.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc,; 23Jun48 (in notice: 1947); MP3493.

WOODY WOODPECKER. Universal Pictures Co., Inc. and Walter Lantz Productions, c1941. 1 reel. (A Walter Lantz Cartoon)

Credits: Story, Ben Hardaway, Jack Cosgriff; artists, Alex Lovy, Ray Fahringer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 19Jun41; MP11256.

WOODY WOODPECKER IN WOODY DINES OUT. c1945. Presented by Universal. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walt Lantz Cartune)

Credits: Producer, Walt Lantz; director, James Culhane; story, Ben Hardaway, Milt Schaffer; animation, Don William; music, Darrell Calker. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc., and Walter Lantz Productions; 23Apr45; MP16093.

WOODY WOODPECKER THE SCREWDRIVER. Presented by Universal, c1941. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Walter Lantz Cartune) A Walter Lantz Production.

Credits: Director, Walter Lantz; story, Ben Hardaway, J. Cosgrove; music, Darrell Calker; artists, Alex Lovy, R. Somerville. Technicolor.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc. & Walter Lantz Productions; 28Aug41; MP11523.

WOOL, FROM SHEEP TO CLOTHING. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Robert Homer Burns and Alexander Johnston, c1947. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 17Nov47; MP2515.

A WORD TO THE WISE. The Chicago Film Laboratory. Presented by The National Retailers Mutual Insurance Co., sd.

© Theodore L. Osborn, Jr.; title, descr., & 6 prints; 4Dec46; MU1359.

WORDS AND MUSIC. Loew's Inc., c1948. 119 mins., sd., color, 35mm. An MGM picture.

Summary: A musical extravaganza in which a story of the lives of Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart is used as a framework to display twenty-two of their best known songs.

Credits: Producer, Arthur Freed; director, Norman Taurog; film editors, Albert Akst, Ferris Webster; story, Guy Bolton, Jean Holloway; screenplay, Fred Finklehoffe; adaptation, Ben Feiner, Jr.; music director, Lennie Hayton; orchestration, Conrad Salinger; film editors, Albert Akst, Ferris Webster.

Cast: June Allyson, Perry Como, Judy Garland, Lena Horne, Gene Kelly.

© Loew's Inc.; 7Dec48; LP2007.

WORK MEASUREMENT FILM. c1948. 16 min., si., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Performance rating; introduction. A film designed for use in connection with a work measurement manual by Ralph Mosser Barnes.

© Ralph M. Barnes; 19May48; MP3150.

WORK MEASUREMENT FILM. Ralph M. Barnes, c1949. 16 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Explains the need for performance rating, and illustrates the range of working speeds among factory employees. Includes studies showing performance of miscellaneous factory operations at various rates of speed.

© Ralph M. Barnes; 29Mar49; MP4185.

THE WORK OF THE ATMOSPHERE. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc., c1946. 1 reel, sd., 16mm. In Greek.

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 11Jun46; MP804.

THE WORK OF THE KIDNEYS. Britannica Films, Inc., in collaboration with Anton J. Carlson, H. G. Swann, and F. J. Mullin, c1946. 1 reel, sd., b&w, 16mm. Afrikaans version. Title on script: "Die Werk van die Niere."

© Encyclopaedia Britannica Films, Inc.; 3Jul46; MP1873.

THE WORK OF THE KIDNEYS. Erpi Classroom Films, Inc., c1940, 1 reel, sd.

© Erpi Classroom Films, Inc.; 20Sep40; MP10696.

THE WORKING OF MAGNESIUM. Presented by The Dow Chemical Co. sd., b&w.

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© The Dow Chemical Co.; title & descr. 25Feb44; 5 prints, 21Feb44; MU14515.

THE WORKING OF MAGNESIUM. SEE This Is Magnesium.

WORKING ON AIR. Presented by General Motors, Aeroproducts Division. (Little Journeys in General Motors)

Appl. author: Jam Handy Organization, Inc.

© General Motors Corp.; title & descr., 30Oct44; 11 prints, 31Oct44; MU15350.

WORKING ON THE RAILROAD. Video Varieties Corp. 3 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: "Working on the Railroad" is sung by the Striders, a Negro male quartet.

© Video Varieties Corp.; title & descr., 13Sep49; 3 prints, 18May49; MU4532.

WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS. Hoffberg Productions, Inc., c1949. 20 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A memoir of Charles Dickens, presenting sequences from his novels filmed in their actual settings.

Credits: Producer, Edwin J. Fancey; director, John G. Taylor; commentary, Frederick Allen; photographer, Billie Williams; editor, Jack Wilman.

© Hoffberg Productions, Inc.; 25Apr49 (in notice: 1948); MP4038.

WORLD FRIENDSHIP. International Film Foundation, Inc., c1949. Presented by the Girl Guides and Girl Scouts. 20 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: Shows how world friendship and understanding grows out of the camp experiences of the girls from Brazil, Canada, and the United States who are attending the camp for Girl Guides and Girl Scouts which is held in conjunction with the Conference of the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts in Cooperstown, New York, in 1948.

Credits: Director, Francis Thompson; narration, Basil Beyea; narrator, Tony Kraber; music, Gene Forrell.

© Girl Scouts of the United States of America; 15Mar49; LP2254.

WORLD IN FLAMES. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1940. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Albert J. Richard; written by William C. Park.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 8Nov40; MP10605.

WORLD JAMBOREE—1947. Boy Scouts of America, c1948. 32 min., sd., color, 16mm.

Summary: A young American Scout describes the World Jamboree held in France in the summer of 1947.

© Boy Scouts of America; 15Oct48; MP4050.

THE WORLD OF 1960. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1939. 833 ft., sd. (Columbia Cinescope)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; narrator, Edgar Barrier; photographers, Don Malkames, James Lillis.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 18Dec39; MP9833.

THE WORLD OF SILENCE; OUR PROBLEM FOR TODAY. Evangelical Lutheran Institute for the Deaf. 4 reels, sd., color, 35mm.

© Evangelical Lutheran Institute for the Deaf; title, descr., & 14 prints, 23Jun47; MU2151.

THE WORLD OF SOUND. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1941. 929 ft., sd. (Cinescope, no. 18)

Credits: Producer, B. K. Blake; story, William M. Nelson; narration, Milton Cross; music director, Jack Schaindlin; photographer, Charles Harten; editor, Leonard Weiss.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Oct41; MP11854.

WORLD PREMIERE. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1941. 8 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Sol C. Siegel; director, Ted Tetzlaff; story, Earl Felton, Gordon Kahn; screenplay, Earl Felton; photographer, Dan Flapp; film editor, Archie Marshek.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 23Aug41; LP10678.

WORLD WITHOUT BORDERS. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 2 reels, sd. (A Universal Special Featurette)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrators, Ed Herlihy, Ben Grauer.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 28Nov44; LP13039.

WORLD'S HEAVY WEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP, JUNE 1948. RKO Pathe, Inc., c1948. 19 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: In the Yankee Stadium, 42,000 people see Joe Louis knock out Joe Walcott to retain the heavyweight championship.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 28Jun48; MP3119.

WORLD'S HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP, MADISON SQUARE GARDEN, DECEMBER, 1947. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., c1947. 18 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Joe Louis successfully defends his heavyweight championship title for the 25th time, with Jersey Joe Walcott as the contender.

© RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.; 6Dec47; MP2652.

THE WORLD'S LARGEST TELESCOPE REFLECTOR. Glenn Edgerton, c1941. 1 reel, sd.

Credits: Written by Cecily Edgerton; narrator, Robert McNamara.

© Glenn Edgerton; 1Jan41; MP10808.

WORLD'S MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: ROCKY GRAZIANO VS. TONY ZALE. Coram Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Challenger Tony Zale, winning over champion Rocky Graziano, recovers the middleweight crown after scoring a third-round knockout.

Credits: Supervisor of production, J. A. Wray Kerr; film editor, Elmer J. McGovern.

© Coram Pictures Corp.; 11Jun48; MP3089.

WORLD'S MIDDLEWEIGHT CHAMPIONSHIP: TONY ZALE VS. MARCEL CERDAN. Ringside Pictures Corp., c1948. 2 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: Challenger Marcel Cerdan wins the title when Champion Tony Zale is unable to come out for the twelfth round.

© Ringside Pictures Corp.; 22Sep48; MP3314.

WORLD'S SIMPLEST DRIVING. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by the Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A woman, accompanied by her small daughter, drives easily through traffic in a new Oldsmobile which is equipped with Hydra-matic Drive.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 7May48; 4 prints, 10May48; MU3029.

WORLD'S SIMPLEST WAY TO DRIVE. Jam Handy Organization, Inc. Presented by Oldsmobile Division, General Motors Corp. 1 min., b&w, 35mm.

© Jam Handy Organization, Inc.; title & descr., 28Nov47; 3 prints, 1Dec47; MU2492.

WORLD'S YOUNGEST AVIATOR. Universal Pictures Co., Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd. (Person-Oddity, no. 127)

Credits: Producers, Joseph O'Brien, Thomas Mead; narrator, Albert A. Grobe.

© Universal Pictures Co., Inc.; 4Feb44; MP14555.

THE WORM TURNS. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 18Dec44; MP15494.

WORTELS VAN PLANTE. SEE Roots of Plants.

WOT'S ALL TH' SHOOTIN' FER. Distributed by Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp., c1940. Presented by Paul Terry. 1 reel, sd., b&w. (Terrytoon)

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

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 3May40; MP10282.

WOTTA KNIGHT. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1947. 7 min., sd., color, 35mm. (Popeye the Sailor Cartoon)

Credits: Director, I. Sparber; story, Carl Meyer, I. Klein.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 24Oct47; LP1260.

WOULD YOU FOR A BIG RED APPLE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 31Jul44; MP15078.

WOULD'ST COULD I BUT KISS THY HAND, OH BABE. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1942. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 26Jan42; MP12148.

WRANGLER'S ROOST. Range Busters, Inc., c1941. 6 reels, sd. (The Range Busters, no. 7).

Credits: Producer, George W. Weeks; director, S. Roy Luby; original story, Earle Snell; screen adaptation, John Vlahos, Robert Finkel; music direction, Frank Sanucci; photography, Robert Cline; film editor, Roy Claire.

© Range Busters, Inc.; 4Jun41; LP10701.

THE WRECK OF THE HESPERUS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1948. 7 reels, sd., b&w, 35mm. Suggested by a story by Edward Huebsch. Title from the poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

Summary: A young sea captain brings to an end the nefarious undertakings of a man who causes shipwrecks in order to profit from the salvage; Gloucester in 1830 provides the setting.

Credits: Producer, Wallace MacDonald; director, John Hoffman; script, Aubrey Wisberg; music director, Mischa Bakaleinikoff; film editor, James Sweeney.

Cast: Willard Parker, Edgar Buchanan, Patricia White.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 22Mar38; LP1513.

THE WRECK OF THE HESPERUS. Terrytoons Inc., c1944. 1 reel, sd., color. (A Terrytoon)

Credits: Director, Mannie Davis; story, John Foster. Technicolor.

© Terrytoons, Inc.; 11Feb44; MP14844.

WRECK OF THE OLD '97. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 5Feb45; MP15607.

WRECKING CREW. Paramount Pictures Inc., c1942. 7 reels, sd.

Credits: Producers, William H. Pine, William C. Thomas; director, Frank McDonald; original story, Robert T. Shannon, Mauri Grashin; screenplay, Maxwell Shane, Richard Murphy; photographer, Fred Jackman, Jr.; film editor, William Ziegler.

© Paramount Pictures Inc.; 2Nov42; LP11808.

WRESTLING. 700 ft.

© Stanley Willard Henson, Jr., title, descr., & 12 prints, 5Dec40; MU10644.

THE WRESTLING OCTOPUS. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1942. 872 ft., sd. (World of Sports, no. 78)

Credits: Commentator, Bill Stern; photography, Charles Harten, J. Burgi Contner, Jay Rescher; editor, Harry Foster.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 3Apr42; MP12648.

WRITE THAT LETTER TONIGHT. Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc., c1945. 1 reel, sd.

© Soundies Distributing Corp. of America, Inc.; 4Jun45; MP15994.

WRITING BETTER BUSINESS LETTERS. Coronet, c1949. 11 min., sd., b&w, 16mm.

Summary: Shows the importance of business letters, emphasizing the importance of clarity, brevity, and courtesy. For junior and senior high grades.

Credits: Educational collaborator: J. Paul Leonard.

© David A. Smart; 20Apr49; MP4277.

WYATT EARP, FRONTIER MARSHAL. SEE My Darling Clementine.

WYLIE, PHILIP. Cinderella Jones. 1946.

WYOMING. Loew's Inc., c1940. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. 9 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Milten Bren; director, Richard Thorpe; original story, Jack Jevne; screenplay, Jack Jevne, Hugo Butler; music score, David Snell; film editor, Robert J. Kern.

© Loew's Inc.; 11Sep40; LP9920.

THE WYOMING BANDIT. Republic Productions, Inc., c1949. 60 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Summary: A Western in which "Rocky" Lane routs murdering bandits and restores law and order.

Credits: Associate producer, Gordon Kay; director, Philip Ford; written by M. Coates Webster; music, Stanley Wilson; film editor, Harold Minter.

Cast: Allan "Rocky" Land, Nugget Clark, Trevor Bardette, Victor Kilian, Rand Brooks.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 19Jul49; LP2446.

WYOMING HURRICANE. Columbia Pictures Corp., c1944. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Producer, Leon Barsha; director, William Berke; story and screenplay, Fred Myton; film editor, Charles Nelson.

© Columbia Pictures Corp.; 20Apr44; LP12782.

WYOMING WILDCAT. c1941. Presented by Republic Pictures. 6 reels, sd.

Credits: Associate producer-director, George Sherman; original story, Bennett Cohen; screenplay, Bennett Cohen, Anthony Coldeway; music director, Cy Feuer; photography, William Nobles; film editor, Lester Orlebeck.

Appl. author: Republic Productions, Inc.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 6Jan41; LP10250.

WYOMING. Republic Productions, Inc., c1947. 84 min., sd., b&w, 35mm.

Credits: Associate producer and director, Joseph Kane; screenplay, Lawrence Hazard, Gerald Geraghty; music, Nathan G. Scott, Ernest Gold; music director, Cy Feuer; film editor, Arthur Roberts.

Cast: William Elliott, Vera Ralston, John Carroll, George "Gabby" Hayes, Albert Dekker.

© Republic Pictures Corp.; 15Jul47; LP1165.