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An advertisement for DuPont's Orlon acrylic fiber baby clothing in which an offscreen male narrator describes the qualities of the product over scenes of parents dressing their baby and shopping for baby clothes. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for DuPont's Zelan water-repellant outerwear in which an offscreen male narrator describes how DuPont scientists developed the Zelan chemical as a way for clothing to repel water but let in air. The narrator describes the versatility and comfort of the product over scenes of people in Zelan clothing playing golf and building a snowman. A woman from the 1920s dances the Charleston as the narrator describes how clothing used to be different several decades ago. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
The program -- and the series -- is introduced by explanation of the cage in the title of the series. The cage symbolizes the restraints, chains, cells and prisons in which the mentally ill were kept by societies ignorant and afraid of the true nature of insanity. It also represents the progress man has made in freeing the mentally ill from these restraints as more has been learned about this problem. This program outlines the history of the treatment of insanity from earliest times through the end of the middle ages. The narrator, Mr. Stephen Palmer, describes some of the misapprehensions about insanity, some of the ways the ancient Greeks and Romans treated it, and what happened to classical thought on the subject after the fall of the Roman Empire. The influence of the rise of the Roman Catholic Church, the belief in angels, devils and magic, the methods used by the Holy Inquisition to cure madness are presented in the narration: pictures, statues, and old engravings are all used.
An advertisement for gas ranges in which a female voice sings a jingle, accompanied by music, about gas ranges and a special deal on "gold star days." A simple animation can be seen of various including a woman in a dress and gas ranges.
Indiana University, Bloomington. Audio-Visual Center
Summary:
Explains the process of editing motion picture footage in double system synchronous sound motion picture production. Follows, through use of flashbacks, the step-by-step sequences from the use of a clapstick to establish synchronization cues during shooting; the use of this visual-auditory signal to re-establish synchronization for each "take" during editing; means of permanently marking these head synchronization points; to the usefulness of the gang synchronizer and means of establishing internal synchronization points. Animation is employed to illustrate maintenance of synchronization in cutting from one take to another and means of elimination of unwanted sound in the sound track.
An advertisement for Esso (Standard Oil) Kerosene in which a narrator describes culture and labor in Holland and how Esso kerosene affects these aspects of Dutch life. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for Esso (Standard Oil) Kerosene in which a narrator describes the life of a woman in Lapland, Finland and the process by which kerosene is delivered to her home. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
Explores the significance of ethnic dance in the field of formal dance. Presents a variety of West Indian dances. Explains their derivations and movements. Includes Bele, a West Indian adaptation of the minuet; Yanvallou, a voodoo dance; and Banda, a Haitian dance about death. Features Geoffrey Holder and Carmen de Lavallade.
Explores the significance of ethnic dance in the field of formal dance. Presents a variety of West Indian dances. Explains their derivations and movements. Includes Bele, a West Indian adaptation of the minuet; Yanvallou, a voodoo dance; and Banda, a Haitian dance about death. Features Geoffrey Holder and Carmen de Lavallade.
An advertisement for Eveready Flashlight Batteries in which a male narrator compares a boxers in a boxing match to the power of flashlight batteries. The advertisement ends showing various uses of the flashlight and the logo for Union Carbide.
An advertisement for Eveready Flashlight Batteries in which a young boy runs about then goes to sleep. He wake with lots of energy and plays with his father's tools, including a flashlight. The narrator speaks about the quality product showing images of the father using his flashlight and batteries and then the logo for Union Carbide .
An advertisement for Eveready Radio Batteries in which a male narrator speaks about radio batteries while a man is shown laying back in his patio chair listening to the radio. A baseball game is super imposed then the radio stops as his batteries have died. The narrator speaks about the quality product showing images of batteries and then the logo for Union Carbide .
Dr. Clinchy discusses the problems involved in educating individuals for tolerance, including such questions as: Where do you meet strangers? What good may come out of a meeting of strangers, if such a meeting may provide conflict? Is conflict itself a good thing? Should individuality or homogeneity be encouraged in a society? What place does education have in preparing people for toleration? Can you condition people’s emotions? Dr. Clinchy makes the point that one essential for toleration is the assumption of responsibility. Toleration is not, and should not be, synonymous with indifference, and individuals must work actively to eradicate old prejudices and mistrusts, he concludes.
Traces the history of imperialism from the 15th Century to the present, Explains the reasons which lead to empire building by nation states. Discusses the geographical, economic, and political changes brought about by colonialism.
[motion picture] Presents briefly the theory of operation of the photoelectric exposure meter and gives illustrations of how it can be intelligently used to solve exposure problems. Practical use of the meter is shown in handling exposure problems relating to: scenes with extreme brightness ranges, achieving accurate flesh tones, copying, taking incident light readings, establishing lighting ratios, setting lights for a pre-determined f/stop, using a gray and white card, making substitute readings, and selecting from the various f/stop and shutter speed combinations either to achieve a desired depth of field or stop subject-motion. Throughout the Weston Master III meter is used for demonstration.
An advertisement for Nabisco Fig Newtons packaged cookies in which two varieties of fig dance a minuet and combine to create the product. Submitted for Clio Awards category Baked Goods.
An advertisement for Nabisco Fig Newtons packaged cookies in which a narrator discusses how eating one cookie always leads to another. Submitted for Clio Awards category Baked Goods.
Dramatizes a situation in which four persons, faced with possible death, reexamine their personal philosophies. An intellectual whose god is pure reason begins to realize his basic loneliness. An American businessman who must rely on cold organization reveals himself as warmly human. His wife turns from agreement with the intellectual's original view to agreement with her husband's new attitude. A German guide, a former Nazi who has lost the collective, totalitarian world he understands, leaves apparently to seek death in the mountains.
In this last program Professor Woodworth summarizes the points he has made in the course of the series. Then, as a climax to the study of the symphonic form, Professor Woodworth conducts the Cambridge Festival Orchestra in a performance of the final movement of Mozart's Symphony Number 38, and then in a complete performance of Prokofiev's Classical Symphony, showing the transition from the 18th Century to modern music.
Presents a simple introduction to the study of earth materials. Shows in step-by-step sequences how the land evolved from the great mass of rock and water that was the early planet. Illustrates how the pounding action of the surf, freezing temperatures, shifting winds, and simple plants combined with the force of gravity to break up rocks into sand, and to form soil.
An advertisement for First National Bank of Kansas City in which a man writes to thank his father for his advice to enroll in the bank program. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First National Bank of Portland in which a narrator instructs the viewer on how best to save money using the bank's services. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man introduces the institution's "check way" checking account. Summary for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man stands on a weight scale and a narrator compares a systematic diet to a savings plan at the bank. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man sits on top of a model of his home and considers buying a larger one. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man holds a paper over his head to repel rain, representing his emergency savings plan. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man nervously introduces the institution's services. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man rests on a cloud and holds up his savings plan to indicate how relaxed he feels. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man nervously introduces the institution's services by altering a sign to include the slogan. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated fortune teller looks into a crystal ball and finds a new car using a "timeway" loan. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man guards a pile of valuable documents but someone burns them with a match, and the narrator suggests a safety deposit box to prevent this emergency. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for First Security Bank in which an animated man nervously introduces the institution's services in front of a large check. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
An advertisement for Fleischmann's packaged active dry yeast in which a woman demonstrates the product by baking a jam coffee braid. Submitted for Clio Awards category Baked Goods.
An advertisement for Florida orange juice in which a narrator describes the nutrition information for frozen orange juice while an animated family consumes it. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
A couple in stop motion photo stills do a routine as they talk about looking for the right car for them. They have very expressive faces as they go through the process of describing their likes and dislikes in cars. They talk about how the '59 Ford is perfect for them. The Ford displayed is purple and white in the ad. They sing a duet to tell their story with instrumental music accompanying them.
An advertisement for a 1959 Ford automobile in which two people sing about how one can tell they are sitting in a Ford because the brand makes the most comfortable cars. Submitted for Clio Awards category Autos.
A plane glides in the sky and the pilot looks siren as he touches down on tarmac. Ford vehicles drive on the same tarmac. They are driving at the same time planes are taking off into the sky. We see two to three people in the cars as they drive and the occupants look up at the planes above them. The announcer tells us about the Ford Sunliner and Starliner vehicles you can test drive now at dealerships.
Inside of a giant telescope points upwards as the doors start to open to display the night sky above. Close by we see groups of people dressed for a black tie event mingling with each other. A shooting star appears in the sky and lands on the grass as a new Ford vehicle, this repeats two more times and each Ford displayed is white. The announcer talks about each and a short jingle is sung after he is finished talking. The party walks over to where the Fords are parked and they start to look and point at them as they surround each of the new models.
Two men on a camera rig are boosted up as an announcer tells us we are on the Warner Brothers lot. The ad mentions the new movie "Saratoga Truck" starring Ingrid Bergman who would be featured in another Ford sponsored ad. It also mentions current and past credits filmed on the soundstages including "Life with Father", "Spirit of St. Louis", and "Ice Palace". For each soundstage and time period they put a 1960 Ford model and show the actors in the scene interacting with the vehicle and being amazed by it. This ad highlights the Galaxie, Starliner, station wagon models, and the Fairlane 500 Ford. We see the crew in many of the shots preparing the scenes and the director and company sitting in seats watching the sets with their backs to us.
An announcer talks about the very first Ford sold as we see fields of grain, rivers, and nature. We see a small settlement where most people are walking or riding on buggies with horses. As the Ford comes out of the garage people make exclamations about it. The announcer then takes us through each Ford model and each model starts to join a long line of other Fords on a long road in the sunshine. We see all the Ford models before 1960 together before we cut to a scene of the three new Ford models of 1960, which includes a Falcon and Thunderbird. The models drive together on a long tarmac road with the mountains behind them and the sun setting.
Man in a suit and hat is alone on screen in stop-motion photos he acts out the jingle being sung. He acts out being in a too small car as the vocalist sing that "that's not a Ford" in regards to the problems detailed. We see the 1959 Ford. The roominess of the car is a main selling point and the words "Ford is proportioned for you" appear on screen at the end.
Young boy with a red hat drags a sled into his snow-covered yard then runs up to his mother at the door putting up a wreath. They both look to the driveway excited. The Ford station wagon parks in the front of the house. A man and boy wearing thick coats step out of the car and head to the back as the mother and son walk up to them. The man takes out a huge tree from the back and the other boy grabs a large gift box before everyone walks inside. The station wagon is parallel parked on a busy street with people walking around the sidewalk. A man comes out of the toy shop right next to the car and puts a sled into the back trunk. We see a bunch of other gifts in the trunk. A family smiles as they look out their window at carolers singing. Once done singing everyone waves at the family and they wave back as the carolers begin to leave. We look at the wood paneling and the announcer talks about the details of the car as all of the carolers get into it. The couple in the house are on the front porch waving as the carolers drive away.
Alice from Alice in Wonderland in her signature blue and white pinafore dress is standing in front of an ornate, gilded mirror. She walks through the ‘looking glass’ into another dimension. We see seven station wagons on a gravel area in a garden full of white flowers and sculptured greenery. There’s a castle far off in the background. Someone in a walrus costume greets her and displays the cars with his hands. In one vehicle we have the king in the passenger seat. In another a person in a two of Hearts costume comes over to the car and opens the trunk. Several more people in card costumes start to unpack everything in the back, including a boat. There are six people in another vehicle, all wearing card costumes except for the Queen of Hearts in the very front. The announcer talks about the benefits of each station wagon and then goes through with names for all of them while more characters in costumes walk through the frame. The title ‘ Ford Wagon Wonderland’ appears at the end.
A advertisement for the Ford Falcon wagon featuring characters from the Peanuts cartoons, in which a narrator teaches Linus about the car. Submitted for Clio Awards category Autos.
Four planes fly in formation, we then see a set of buildings below them. The announcer says this is the US Air Force Academy. We see at least a hundred men in military uniform marching in formation in different groups. Someone in a blue uniform and a badge has a falcon on his wrist and he lets it loose. We follow its flight as it comes back to its owner. In the background a Ford Falcon is driving in the car behind them on the road. There’s a man in a suit in the car and the announcer talks about how this car took part in Experience Run USA for the past three years so it's been heavily tested. We see cadets out on the lawn in white uniforms with rifles as they go into formation and all march together. The car drives next to an Air Force plane on the tarmac. A man in uniform exits the vehicle and some couples and one man surround him and the car and they begin to ask questions about mileage and spaciousness. All six people then load up into the car and drive off together. We see them on an empty road driving towards a mountain landscape. The falcon on the man’s wrist sits and adjusts itself in the foreground. A patriotic instrumental is playing in the whole ad.
An advertisement for a 1964 Ford Falcon automobile in which a man guides the viewer through a tour of the car's design specifications and gives a road test demonstration. Submitted for Clio Awards category Autos.
An advertisement for the 1960 Ford Galaxie automobile in which a narrator describes how a photographer falls in love with one of his models, revealed to be the Ford, while he courts the woman in his photographs and by the end they view photos of the car as a couple. Submitted for Clio Awards category Autos.
Ford Galaxie "Galaxie Styling" : An advertisement for the Pontiac Galaxie in which a woman who likes modern art takes her reluctant husband to a gallery, where they discover the car and come to agree on it as a piece of art.
Pontiac "Jazz" : An advertisement for the 1960 Ford Ranch Wagon in which a narrator describes how wagons and jazz have changed since the 1920s, and a jazz band packs the car with themselves and their instruments to demonstrate the space capabilities of the car.
"Vogue says Ford means a fashion success". We several women dressed in elegant dresses in different locations around New York City with a Ford Galaxie nearby all of them. A female vocalist sings about being fashionable and then starts singing about the car and we see a wide shot of it. An announcer talks about the beauty of the car, and says the car was in a recent issue of Vogue magazine. We see more shots of the car from the side and other angles. The tagline is repeated by the vocalist at the end with the pin showing the statement on screen again.
An office building at night, streetlamps, floodlights, and a fancy chandelier are displayed as the announcer talks about the fun of night life. In a lobby two very fashionable couples meet and the announcer talks about Vogue fashion trends, specifically silk brocade suits. There's mention of other textiles and fashion trends throughout the ad. They then go outside and see a Ford Galaxie with friends in it, one couple goes in the backseat and the car is talked about more. Cut to people getting off a yacht and a dinner is set out the docks with very fashionable people. The Ford Thunderbird pulls up nearby and two couples walk towards it talking to the driver and marveling at the car. Then at a carousel in the park a couple is having a great time when their friends pull up in a Ford Falcon. Two couples walk over to the couple in the car and all fit inside as they drive away. At the end the announcer says that Vogue endorses the Fords for being fashionable.
An advertisement for the Ford Starliner in which a man drives the car down a highway while the narrator describes its responsiveness, engine, brakes, and roof. The advertisement features "Sabre Dance" from Aram Khachaturian's ballet "Gayane." Submitted for Clio Awards category Autos.
A Great Dane is sitting on the lawn and it spring into action running for the door of a large Tudor-style house. A man in a summer suit exits the house and pets the dog. At the end of his front walkway is a Thunderbird. He walks to it with his dog following him closely and observes the car touching the bodywork and upholstery as the announcer describes why owners of this car love the features so much. The man enter the car after his dog and opens the sun roof. He stops near a lake and sees a woman alone with a poodle in her Thunderbird putting down the automatic top to make it a convertible. The man watches in amazement and then drives on with him driving down a road with fences and Spanish moss trees around him as the last shot in the ad.
An animated bird named Perky Ford introduces himself and then tells us more about the Ford pickup truck and the cost-saving that you get by buying one as opposed to competitor trucks. He is a woodpecker that pecks out figures on nearby pieces of wood during the ad. We follow a Ford pickup that is a Clover Leaf Nursery truck and the workers as they drop off plants to a residential house.
An advertisement for Big Dip "ice milk" in which an animated man tells an ice cream scoop about the product and the scoop creates a sculpture of the Eifel Tower out of the ice milk.
A comparison of family life in France, Japan, India, and Canada. How each family treats and cares for a year-old baby. Mother-child relationships, feeding and bathing the child. Anthropologist Margaret Mead discusses how the upbringing of a child contributes to distinctive national characteristics.
An advertisement for Franklin Federal bank in which a postal worker opens a mail box to find it full of letters addressed to the bank. Submitted for Clio Awards category Banks.
Presents the proper methods for dissection of the frog in order to observe its anatomy. Indicates the structures which can be observed by opening the mouth. Depicts proper incisions to make in order to lay skin and muscle layers aside and how to tie off the abdominal vein before cutting it. The location and structure of the digestive system are examined. The urinary system is identified along with the reproductive systems in both the male and female frogs. The heart and circulatory systems are pictured; and muscles tendons, and nerves of the hind legs are shown. The top of the skull is removed and the brain and other parts of the nervous system are shown.
An advertisement for Frying Spry cooking fat in which an animated chef details how the product is superior to butter, oil, or shortening over live-action shots of food being cooked in frying pans. An offscreen narrator extols the product over a shot of a dinner table full of food. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Illustrates abnormalities in gait caused by pain, structural defects and deformities, neuromuscular disorders, and a combination of these causes. Details technical symptoms of the gait and posture resulting from poliomyelitis, spastic paralysis, hypotrolic muscular dystrophy, distonia musculora, and dislocation of the hip, indicating the results of the Trendenburg, flexion, and other tests. Presents Dr. William T. Green of Harvard Medical School providing the narration for the examples and conducting the physical examination for each case stressing that careful observation of the gait is one of the key factors in diagnosis.
An advertisement for General Electric light bulbs in which an animation of Mister Magoo is pictured trying to buy new light bulbs accompanied by his cat. Mister Magoo is nearsighted and get many things wrong. As he is in a store his cat is scared by a dog and drags home the entire light bulb display. The advertisement ends with Mister Magoo singing a GE jingle.
An advertisement for General Electric portable mixer in which a male narrator describes the product while a group of young people gather to mix milk shakes and other drinks. A young woman shows the various functions of the mixer and how to store it on a wall
An advertisement for various General Electric appliances in which a Christmas animation depicts a sleigh riding past a GE store. A jingle plays, accompanied by music, personifying different appliances, including a mixer, an alarm click, and a rotisserie oven.
An advertisement for GE Snooz-Alarm Clocks in which a male narrator speaks, accompanied my music, informing audience they can exchange their old clocks for money in exchange for purchasing a new GE Snooze-Alarm clock. Product is pictured and demonstrated.
An advertisement for General Electric featuring Don Herbert in which the television host stands in a model kitchen and describes how new appliances have affected labor hours and cost since 1930. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for the General Electric company featuring Don Herbert in which the television host teaches a child named Flip about how the company allocates revenue. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for General Electric garbage disposals in which an offscreen male narrator describes the disease risk from common houseflies and how the town of Jasper, Indiana eradicated most of their flies through reforming garbage collection and installing GE kitchen disposals. Close-ups of flies and footage of Jasper accompany the narration. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for General Electric in which actor and Native American chief Dan George talks about the significance of Lake Tahoe to his people. An offscreen male narrator discusses how General Electric's sewage treatment systems allow Lake Tahoe to remain one of the cleanest lakes in the world. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for General Electric featuring Don Herbert in which the television hosts teaches five-year-old children about owning stock and the company's contribution to the growth of American industry. Submitted for Clio Awards category Corporate.
An advertisement for General Motors in which a male narrator describes the company's initiative in designing a windshield that can withstand the impact of stones. Two test drives, first with a regular windshield and the second with GM's more damage-resistant windshield, are demonstrated, and the narrator argues that the new windshields are further proof that GM cares about keeping consumer repair costs down. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Edward R. Feil, George Feil, Nellie Feil, Maren Mansberger Feil, Herman Hellerstein, Leslie Feil, Betsy Feil, David Hellerstein, Jonathan Hellerstein, Kathryn Hellerstein, Amy Feil, Ellen Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Susan Hellerstein, Harold S. Feil
Summary:
Home movie of a joint birthday party for George Feil (brother of Ed Feil) and his daughter, Amy. Nellie presents George with a cake and he blows out the candles with the assistance of his daughters, nieces, and nephews. Amy is given a cupcake with one candle. The party then moves to the living room, where all the children help Amy and George open presents.
**WARNING: CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES OF LAB TEST ANIMALS** Illustrates the basic techniques of obtaining germfree environment, germfree animals, and methods of germfree miantenance. Demonstrates the methods by which germfree animals may be obtained as with the chick from the egg and a guinea pig from a Cesarian operation. Concludes that thee techniques contribute in the field of immunilogical studies and in the study of tissue response to parasites.
**WARNING: CONTAINS GRAPHIC IMAGES OF LAB TEST ANIMALS** Illustrates the basic techniques of obtaining germfree environment, germfree animals, and methods of germfree miantenance. Demonstrates the methods by which germfree animals may be obtained as with the chick from the egg and a guinea pig from a Cesarian operation. Concludes that thee techniques contribute in the field of immunilogical studies and in the study of tissue response to parasites.
Presents an analysis of the structure of viruses and how they are studied. Shows and explains how an electron microscope works. Uses film clips of experiments to demonstrate the cultivation, isolation, and purification of viruses. Concludes with a discussion of the differences between viruses.
A public service announcement from the Glass Container Manufacturers Institute in which a young man and woman leave various forms of litter around a city as they have fun on a date. An offscreen male narrator implores the viewer on behalf of glass manufacturers to "make love, not litter" and "keep America beautiful." Submitted for the Clio Awards.
A public service announcement from the Glass Container Manufacturers Institute in which an offscreen narrator describes the steps for how recycled glass is processed and formed into new products over shots from a recycling plant and an automated bottling assembly line. The narrator tells the viewer that the bottle they used last week may form part of the future bottle they will use next week. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Explains the basic principles of gravitational attraction that relate to the earth, and other planets, and the sun. Relates these principles to flights of rockets and artificial satellites and includes the experiments on weightlessness that is encountered by astronauts. Gives a number of practical examples from everyday life and explains the role of gravity in these situations. Concludes with three questions for children to solve.
This program presents rare film clips of outstanding dancers: Anna Pavlova, Irene and Vernon Castle, and Argentinita, as well as performances by Alexandra Danilova and Frederick Franklin, to illustrate the importance of the dancer as the creator of a dance. Two sets of distinguished dancers perform the same roles from the balled “Le Beau Danube” to show how individual interpretation can vary the effect of the same choreography. Dance critic Walter Terry joins Miss Myers to discuss the importance of an interplay between choreographer and performer.
The Herman B Wells papers includes materials pertaining to Wells' family and personal finances, his activities in the banking profession, his work in Germany for the United States government after World War II, and to his research and teaching and professional activities as a member of the faculty of Indiana University.
An advertisement for General Telephone and Electronics by which a narrator describes the work of Sylvania Lighting while a rapid succession of shots play displaying various ways the products are used.
An advertisement for Hanes men's clothing in which a puppet taking a shower sprays his wife with the shower head after she brings him the wrong brand of t-shirt to change into. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
A commercial shows pictures of a baby gradually growing into a man. This is followed by a narrator explaining that the food a baby is fed will determine how strong it grows. The commercial concludes with several different types of Heinz baby food being fed to a baby.
A boy and a girl play in a river as their parents barbecue on the shore. As the family comes together to eat, Heinz has a relish/pickle product for each member of the family.
Edward R. Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Herman Hellerstein, Kathryn Hellerstein, David Hellerstein, Jonathan Hellerstein, Daniel Hellerstein, Susan Hellerstein, Nellie Feil, Harold S. Feil, Leslie Feil, Maren Mansberger Feil, Betsy Feil, Ellen Feil, Amy Feil, George Feil, Ann Leslie Jones
Summary:
Begins with a Christmas/Chanukkah celebration at the Hellerstein home. Kathy receives a cameo ring and excitedly shows it off to the group. The film then shows Christmas at the George Feil home, where Leslie plays the piano. All of the girls then play with dolls while the adults sit around talking. Maren serves drinks to the group.
Shows the simple forms of plant life that appear upon retreat of the glaciers and the role of these plants in preparing the earth's surface for other plant and animal life. "Forests" of the high Arctic are shown to be only inches high though many years old. The struggle for life existing among plant forms and animal forms in this harsh environment is depicted as the variety of species in the region are surveyed.
Shows the simple forms of plant life that appear upon retreat of the glaciers and the role of these plants in preparing the earth's surface for other plant and animal life. "Forests" of the high Arctic are shown to be only inches high though many years old. The struggle for life existing among plant forms and animal forms in this harsh environment is depicted as the variety of species in the region are surveyed.
Emphasizes the hazards the inexperienced city driver must learn to recognize. Shows the unusual situations that may arise from driver fatigue. Explains how to avoid fatigue. Presents a complete picture of the advantages and special dangers confronted on expressways. Describes necessary action to protect occupants in your car.