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Footage documenting Bailey's travels to the Canary Islands circa 1971. The film begins with Bailey as the subject - she waves and blows kisses to the camera. We see she is traveling with her husband, Carson Ritchie. He poses outside the Tahiche Club. The camera captures scenes of the coastline with many beach-goers enjoying the sun. Bailey and Ritchie take turns filming each other walking around their hotel.
Home movie footage of a visit to Tempel Farms, home of the Tempel Lipizzan horses. Opens with a sign reading "Tempel Good Luck Farm". Show exterior footage of the stables and other buildings around the farm. Horses can be seen grazing in a pasture. A group in traditional German costume poses for the camera, possibly as part of an event that is taking place.
Footage documenting Bailey's travels to the Canary Islands circa 1971. Shows rock formations in Teide National Park, a local harbor, street scenes in an unknown town. More footage taken from inside a plane, now flying over the water and landing. Ends with views of the ocean taken from a hotel balcony.
Black and white home movie showing Ed Feil's first place trophy in the Health category for "They Learn to Live" at the 1956 Cleveland Film Festival. Also shows certificates of merit for that film and "The Winged Bequest". Features footage taken from a car driving through a city in the rain (possibly Washington state).
Footage documenting Bailey's travels to the Canary Islands circa 1971. Shows geysers and the rocky red landscape of Timanfaya National Park alongside the island's characteristic white buildings. Ends with footage of a local market outside the Church of San Gines, Arrecife.
This film opens in a classroom, showing a music teacher working through a piece with a group of string musicians. He goes on to talk about an influential teacher he had at Virginia State College named Undine Moore. Quipped the "Dean of Black Women Composers," Undine Eliza Anna Smith Moore was a notable and prolific American composer and professor of music in the twentieth century. Much of her work was inspired by black spirituals and folk music. She was a renowned teacher, and once stated that she experienced “teaching itself as an art.” Towards the end of her life, she received many notable awards for her accomplishments as a music educator.
Home movie footage of Bailey's trip to Hawaii circa 1954. She has unidentified travel companions on this trip, another woman and an older man. Begins with footage (some dark) taken from a boat arriving in Honolulu as a crowd well-wishers wave and greet them. Bailey then spends some time posing for the camera while wearing leis and exploring a garden. The camera captures the landscape and people enjoying a local beach.
Documents Bailey's trip to Mexico circa 1950. Shows footage of the Cascada El Salto de San Antón waterfall, Cuernavaca Cathedral, and the interior of Palacio de Cortes (with murals painted by Diego Rivera). Includes many shots of people swimming in a pool and close-ups of beautiful flowers and foliage. Bailey captures a local market and fishermen at Lake Pátzcuaro. Ends with beach goers swimming and surfing in Acapulco Bay.
Documents Bailey's trip to Mexico circa 1950. Shows merchants selling their wares and local architecture in the city of Puebla, including Puebla Cathedral and the Temple of San Francisco Acatepec. Ends with large groups dancing as part of a celebration, displaying various styles of folk dancing and traditional costume.
Begins with a footage taken on the 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea ride. Shows Liberty Square in the Magic Kingdom, Walt Disney World. Briefly shows people in colonial dress, including a man playing a drum, and inside the Hall of Presidents.
Edward R. Feil, George Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Harold S. Feil, Nellie Feil
Summary:
Home movie of the Feil family outdoors posing for the camera. Ed is in his army uniform. Nellie picks tomatoes from the garden and Mary tries to juggle them. George, Mary, and friends then drive away. Ends with a brief shot taken from an airplane window.
Edward R. Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, Herman Hellerstein, George Feil
Summary:
Begins in Columbus, Ohio, showing Gilbert's Shoes and LeVeque Tower. A group of people, including Herman and Mary, picnic alongside an unknown body of water before canoeing. The film then shows Ed and George on a trip to Madison, showing Bascom Hall at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the Wisconsin State Capitol building. The brothers take a bike ride down US Route 18.
Footage shows brief shots of an airplane runway and filming from inside of a moving train as it passes through a desert landscape. Exact location unknown.
Footage of the Feil family at Greenfield Village, Michigan. Shows shaky footage of trains and families outside the Smith's Creek depot. The family then rides a train through Greenfield Village.
Edward R. Feil, George Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein
Summary:
Film documents a car trip out West with visuals showing the car's location on a map. Destinations include Yosemite National Park, Mission San Juan, Hoover Dam, Zion National Park, Bryce Canyon, the Grand Canyon, and the Painted Desert.
Exterior of Cleveland airport. Shows aerial footage taken inside the plane. Two men in suits and glasses - one older, with a hat and cigar and one younger. Cut to a wedding (?) and footage taken in Mexico, including an outdoor market, parade, and a waterway with canoes where people are transporting goods. Brief shots of the landscape, cacti, and parrots. Ends with more footage taken over plane wings.
Home movie showing brief shots of the exterior of the Harold Feil home and dark footage of flowers and a wedding cake (possibly from Mary's wedding to Herman). The camera then shows off the interior of a house, including a collection of silver and items in the living room and dining room. Shows of men lounging and sunbathing by a pool. Ends with scenes of a Columbia-Yale football game and shots of the Yale campus.
Home movie footage of France during Ed Feil's military service circa 1946. Shows men in uniform walking in the street with the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel visible in the background. Also has footage of the Eiffel Tower, Arc de Triomphe, and Unknown Soldier memorial.
Travelogue showing a visit to Los Angeles. Shows a sign for La Casita Del Arroyo in Pasadena as well as a Wilshire Pl street sign. There is also footage of a boat in the water and people on board the boat.
Begins with scenes of a garden, a large evergreen tree, and flowers in a front yard. Child's handwriting on a sign reading "The End", some illegible writing, then "Joe". Shots of an unknown boy and Tiger.
Edward R. Feil, Mary Feil Hellerstein, George Feil, Nellie Feil, Harold S. Feil
Summary:
Travelogue compilation that begins in Belen, New Mexico. Shows footage of a desert landscape with mountains in the distance taken from a moving train. Back in Cleveland, Mary walks with friends in the garden at the Harold Feil home. Ends with the family visiting Hunting Valley, Ohio. Harold and Nellie visit with another couple, Ed and a friend ride bikes.
Footage is very dark (nearly opaque) and shaky. Shows Eddie and a friend (possibly Robbie Cohen) playing Twister in the living room of the Feil home. Also shows a film being projected on the wall.
Home movie of Ed and George in New York. Extensive footage taken while riding the New York Central Railroad. Scenes of a park and the Chrysler building.
Depicted here is a family enjoying their lake front property on Lake Wawasee in Syracuse, Indiana. Also captured on this reel are the bridge and pagoda at the Chinese Gardens, the Church of the Little Flower, and the Spink Wawasee Hotel that were all once found around Syracuse, Indiana.
Home movie with footage of Air Force planes in an airfield and various activities in the Wilkinson family's yard. Shows Bernadine Bailey's nephew, Paul Freeman Wilkinson, and another boy playing with a Scottish terrier, a chicken coop, and close-ups of the yard's flowers.
Teaching Film Custodians abridged classroom version of 'The Cavalcade of America' television series episode, "A Message From Garcia", which originally aired January 18th, 1955 on ABC-TV. This film dramatizes the exploits and heroism of US Military 1st Lt. Andrew Rowan in Cuba, on the eve of the Spanish-American War. Braving a journey with rebels through the Cuban jungles, risking capture and execution by Spanish troops, Lt. Rowan joined General Calixto García, commander of the rebel forces in eastern Cuba, to assess the strength, efficiency, movements and general military situation. This information, reported by Lt. Rowan, enabled an American troops landing almost entirely without casualties, to join in the liberation of their Cuban allies. Lt. Rowan returns home with a strange message from Garcia.
Soprano Virginia MacWatters was known not only for her impressive operatic career during which she performed in opera houses throughout the United States, Europe, and South America, but also for her dedication to teaching. In 1957 she joined the voice faculty of the Indiana University School of Music where she remained until her retirement in 1982.
Portrays man's callousness towards war and violence by viewing unemotional and noncommunicative men who press triggers on pinball machines in a Parisian bistro and cause real battleships to sink, airplanes to explode, and cannons to blow out the wall.
Soprano Virginia MacWatters was known not only for her impressive operatic career during which she performed in opera houses throughout the United States, Europe, and South America, but also for her dedication to teaching. In 1957 she joined the voice faculty of the Indiana University School of Music where she remained until her retirement in 1982. “Adele’s Laughing Song” is a piece from the operetta Die Fleidermaus composed by German - born Johann Strauss which first premiered in 1851.
Robert B. Cummings, Tom Armstrong, Edward Feil Productions
Summary:
This film follows a group of boys as they embark on a camping trip through the Cleveland YMCA. This specialized learning experience is structured by combining goals with fun activities. There is time for everything at Y camp: time to think, time to play, time to rest, and time to write a letter home.
The Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics & American Institutions was an endowed ethics research center established in 1972 at Indiana University Bloomington. Through its programming, the Poynter Center addressed bioethics, religion, political ethics, research ethics, professional and educational ethics, technology, and many other areas. Initiatives over the years included courses such as "The Citizen and the News," supported by the Ford Foundation, which began in the fall of 1975 and studied the institutions that produce news and information about public affairs in America.
Interview with congressmen John Anderson and Lee Hamilton about criticisms that congress has as a body. Also includes discussion of some of the solutions for this problem.
"He slammed the paper on the principal's table and he says 'Don't tell me that this child is retarded - look at what she's done.'" As a child in Hammond, Indiana, Andrea Pepler-Murray had been placed in segregated special education classes. It took an art teacher to advocate for her educational potential. Andrea describes her struggle to be recognized and how she eventually became an activist for campus accessibility at Purdue Calumet University in Hammond. There she founded Hoosier ADAPT, an student group focusing on disability rights. In 2007, Pepler-Murray graduated from the university (renamed Purdue University Northwest) with a degree in Communication and Creative Arts.
The Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics & American Institutions was an endowed ethics research center established in 1972 at Indiana University Bloomington. Through its programming, the Poynter Center addressed bioethics, religion, political ethics, research ethics, professional and educational ethics, technology, and many other areas. Initiatives over the years included courses such as "The Citizen and the News," supported by the Ford Foundation, which began in the fall of 1975 and studied the institutions that produce news and information about public affairs in America.
Conversation between several people on politics, from presidential and congressional political maneuverings to the prospects of Indiana delegates and their impact on the political process. Conversation also focuses on military spending and the reduction of military budget.
Traces the history of the classification of animal life. Explains the necessity of scientific classification of plants and animals and the use of Latin in science. Discusses the work of Carolus Linnaeus leading to modern classification. Traces the evolution of the horse as a basis for explaining subdivisions, class, order, family, genus, species, living relations, and varieties, and defining nomenclature.
A woman and her doctor discuss the facts and fallacies of menopause. She learns that with proper care it need not be the tragic experience some women have been led to expect.
Features a large display of antique planes lined up in a field for spectators to enjoy. Also includes footage of pilots taking off and flying in a variety of aircrafts. There are several impressive aerial shots, taken by a passenger in the plane.
Home movie of a medical conference where the Feil film "Closed cuff method of gowning and gloving" is being played inside a booth labeled "Teaching technology for operating room nursing". Attendees sit and watch the film and talk with representative from Case Western Reserve University. Also shows other booths at the convention.