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Ingrid Bergman, Rip Torn, John Williams, Lili Darvas, John Mortimer, Lars Schmidt, Gordon Duff, Silvio Narizzano
Summary:
Based on Stefan Zweig’s book, Twenty Four Hours In a Woman's Life was a CBS movie special sponsored by Revlon, starring Ingrid Bergman and Rip Torn. In the movie a wealthy girl, Helen, wants to run away from home and marry a man she has only known for 24 hours. Her family disapproves of the marriage and tries to prevent Helen from going through with it. To help Helen decide her future, her grandmother recounts her own experience in a similar situation when she fell in love with a gambler at Monte Carlo.
As a cup of coffee is poured the coffee doesn’t spill over the edge but instead rises another half a cup to indicate the cup and a half of flavor in Maxwell coffee. Maxwell high quality flavor comes from their use of fresh coffee beans.
An advertisement for Instant Simoniz car cleaner and wax in which comedy trio, The Three Stooges, stand around in lab coats before exclaiming that they have invented a new car cleaner and wax. They test it out on the hood of a car saying they will call it "Instant Simoniz." Them Moe shows Instant Simoniz already exists.
An advertisement for Simoniz car wax in which comedian Harpo Marx chases a woman around a car with a butterfly net. The woman hands Harpo a can of Simoniz. A male narrator talks about the product as Harpo goofs around, putting the wax on the window and on his face pretending its shaving cream.
A narrator warns the viewer that the future of the United States is in jeopardy because many young people are unable to go to college due to overcrowding.
A college teacher quits his job and takes a higher paying job at a company to better provide for his family. A narrator warns the audience about the exodus of qualified higher education teachers and ask them to write to Higher Education.
An advertisement for the Institute of Life Insurance in which an insurance agent congratulates a new college graduate named Bill and his mother. A flashback shows Bill's parents deciding with the agent whether to begin the life insurance policy that ultimately ended up paying for Bill's college education. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for life insurance with the Institute of Life Insurance, in which an agent interviews football player Kyle Rote about why he decided to start a life insurance policy to help protect his family. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for homeowners insurance with the Insurance Company of North America (INA), in which a jingle plays over animated shots of the company logo. An offscreen male narrator describes the benefits of INA policies over images of a live-action family in a painted home stage set. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An animated advertisement for Insurance Company of North America (INA), in which an INA agent talks with Rapunzel in her castle about homeowner's insurance. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Kingsway men's shoes in which an animated lion king serenades a lioness by playing piano and talking about his love of Kingsway shoes. The lion discusses the affordability of the shoes over live-action shots of the product on display and being worn. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Randcraft men's shoes in which a jingle plays over close-up shots of the product being worn during a shoeshine, inside a car, and at a dance hall. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
A narrator explains how Ipana toothpaste can prevent tooth pain by removing tartar on gums. The tartar is compared with plaster which is hard to remove once it has hardened.
An advertisement for Iron City Beer in which a male narrator, accompanied by music, speaks about the product while a young couple eats a spaghetti dinner.
An advertisement for Ivory soap in which two children play act a scene where a little girl buys soap from a little boy at a store. An offscreen male narrator discusses the mildness and affordability of Ivory soaps over shots of the little girl washing her face with the product. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Ivory soap in which a woman cuddles her baby while an offscreen male narrator talks about how both mother and child have "cheek to cheek" skin softness. The narrator describes the mild qualities of the soap over shots of the woman washing her face. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
A girl name Barbie plays stores with her mother’s collection of Ivory soap. A narrator states how Ivory soap is affordable and can be used to increase the beauty of any girl no matter what their age is.
As a girl helps her mother wash her baby sister with Ivory Soap, she asks her mother why she has to use Ivory Soap if it is meant for babies. The mother replies that Ivory Soap helps women keep their skin looking young no matter what age they are.
An advertisement for J-Wax automotive wax in which a male narrator talks about the beautiful luster of a car when it's waxed. Various cars are waxed and seen protected during rainstorms.
We see a party with everyone doing handstands and talking to each other while they eat appetizers. It's revealed that the party was conceived by a couple who wanted to show off their newest rug. We see a manicured hand pat or run along different rug textures and fabrics.
Professor Nathaniel H. Frank discussed the nature of forces which produce curved paths, brings out the concept of centripetal vector acceleration, and shows how knowledge of the path and mass of an object gives information on the force involved.
An advertisement for Jack's packaged cookies in which the animated character representing the brand looks in the mirror and discusses the product with the reflection. Submitted for Clio Awards category Baked Goods.
"Offers revealing insights into the re-structuring of health services in London and elsewhere in Britain following the outbreak of WWII ... The film is broadly divided into three parts. The opening sequence looks at the advances made so far in the battle against sickness and disease, brought about through slum clearance, preventative and curative medicine and research. The middle section describes the re-organisation of existing services in preparation for air raid casualties, with the redeployment of city centre hospitals for emergency services and first aid, and the movement of convalescent, maternity and evacuation hospitals further out into the country. The final section uses pictures of happy, healthy children running free in the English countryside to remind cinema audiences of what Britain is fighting for."--British Film Institute website.
Fireworks go off before the commercial transition to an Asian woman walking through a forest. A narrator explains how the essence of the "exotic" Far East is captured in Jade East's cologne and aftershave.
A man takes all his morning products such as cologne, deodorant, face soap, after shave, hair gel, and pine talc and mixes them in a bowl. The resulting brew is a pungent stench. He then introduces a line of Jaguar cosmetic products which all have the same scent which avoids overlapping smells.
Jam Handy Organization, Division of Visual Aids, United States Office of Education, Federal Security Agency
Summary:
Shows how dimpling and countersinking prepare metal for flush riveting, how to operate a dimpling machine, and how to countersink work for flush rivets.
An advertisement for the Jamaica Tourist Board, accompanied by percussive music, that shows all the interesting things one can do on vacation in Jamaica. The scene ends with a couple sitting at the base of a waterfall and the woman saying, "I love Jamaica."
James A. Woodson, William C. Williams, Naomi Feil, Edward R. Feil, Edward Feil Productions, Ohio State Library Board
Summary:
Depicts the problems facing a functional illiterate as portrayed in the experiences and feelings of two men who never learned to read well. Shows how the adult reading center of the library aided these men.
James R. Hawkinson, Hal Kopel, Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
Summary:
Pictures the role of selling in modern business organization, showing how selling goes on from the inventor, through the manufacturer, to the distributor and the customer. Describes the structure of typical sales organizations, and stresses the importance of selling in our economic society.
James W. McBain, Encyclopaedia Britannica Films Inc.
Summary:
Illustrates in a school laboratory how lye and fat are combined to make soap, and explains, by animated drawings, the chemical action (saponification) which takes place when the mixing occurs. Portrays each step in the manufacture of soap in a large industrial plant.
An advertisement for Jax Beer in which comedy duo Nichols and May voice an animation of a male journalist interviewing a female Hollywood starlet. They joke about the star's dress size and her enjoyment of Jax Beer.
An advertisement for Jax Beer in which an animated quiz show host and guest, voiced by popular comedy duo Nichols and May, play a quiz game to name the ingredients of Jax beer.
An animated advertisement for Jax Beer in which an elderly woman accuses a bartender of making fun of her voice as he serves her beer. The voice work was done by future film directors Mike Nichols and Elaine May, who comprised the popular improvisational comedy duo Nichols and May in the early 1960s.
An advertisement for Jax Beer in which an animated kangaroo orders the beer at a restaurant and begins conversing with the waitress. The voice work was done by future film directors Mike Nichols and Elaine May, who comprised the popular improvisational comedy duo Nichols and May in the early 1960s. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Jay Bonafield, Larry O'Reilly, Phil Reisman, Jr., Dwight Weist, Richard Hanser, Herman Fuchs
Summary:
Shows the organization of the The New York Times and the vast interrelationship of the numerous departments. Then illustrates the methods for giving up-to-the-minute news, and stresses the need for a free press.
A woman beckons the viewer to come closer to see her use Jean Nate after bath lotion. The woman explains the various reason why she like Jean Nate while she applies the lotion.
A man receives a distress call from someone stuck on the side of a cliff. The man race across difficult terrain in his Jeep. The man rescues the person from cliff by using the winch on his Jeep.
The commercial shows which Jeeps were used in the movie "Hatari!". The commercial portrays the different Jeeps as actors that were cast for specific roles and worked with the movie stars John Wayne, Red Buttons, and Elsa Martinelli. The Jeeps are shown in several movie clips driving across Tanzanian and herding animals.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which an animated baby asks their mother what is for dessert and she brings them Jell-O. The characters exhibit stereotypes associated with Chinese peoples. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which animated children ask their mother what is for dessert and she brings them Jell-O. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
Cups of strawberries, oranges, and cherries are shown before being replaced with cups full of strawberries, oranges, and cherry flavored Jell-O. The narrator then states this is how close you can get to a perfect replacement for the real thing.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which various kids ask what is for dessert and are shown being given Jell-O dessert in glass dishes larger than their bodies. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which an animated child asks what is for dessert and his mother brings him Jell-O. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which an animated boy asks his mother what is for dessert and she brings him Jell-O. The characters exhibit stereotypes associated with indigenous peoples of the United States. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
An advertisement for Jell-O packaged food in which an animated husband asks his wife what is for dessert and she brings him Jell-O. Submitted for Clio Awards category Packaged Foods.
Made as a warning to the English people, this film re-enacts, in a Welsh mining town, the events that took place in the Czechoslovakian mining town of Lidice, which resisted the Nazis in subversive ways and was eventually wiped out. Jennings gives a romantic portrait of town life which is interrupted by the arrival of the Nazis who remain anonymous enemies.
An advertisement for Jergens lotion in which a male narrator, accompanied by music, explains how "dry, rough, pine cone hands" become "kissing soft" with the lotion. The scene depicts a man and woman being romantic in a rustic cabin and a woman applying the product to her hands. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Jergens moisture cream in which a male narrator, accompanied by music, describes the moisturizing qualities of the product and when to use it. A woman applies the cream and begins swimming in a lagoon. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
An advertisement for Jergens moisture cream in which an offscreen male narrator extols the moisturizing qualities of the cream as a woman in a white swimsuit swims underwater and displays the product. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Jim Scott, Gian-Franco Romagnoli, Robert Gaffney, Paul Rader, Roy Brubaker, W.O. Field, William H. Terry
Summary:
Portrays the unique and critical role of the sun in the drama of our own planet. Traces the history of man's study of the sun, and explains how solar towers, rockets, and balloons are used in the study of the sun. Describes the communications system established by the National Bureau of Standards to coordinate work on solar disturbances and their enhanced X radiations and particle streams.
Presents Alexander Hamilton as a boy-businessman in the West Indies, a student at King's College, the author of the Federalist Papers, the first Secretary of the Treasury, a reformer of the national economy, the champion of a strong, aristocratic government, and a friend to Northern business. Concludes his life with the fatal duel with Aaron Burr.
Introduces the age of Romanticism by dramatizing major personalities and events that contributed to the spirit of this period in the history and culture of Western civilization. | Introduces the age of Romanticism by dramatizing major personalities and events that contributed to the spirit of this period in the history and culture of Western civilization.
John Beard, Executive Director, Fountain House, Robert Kaiser, Gary C. Bergland, Larry Novak
Summary:
Shows how Fountain House, located in the "Hell's Kitchen" section of New York City, reintegrates patients returning from mental institutions as functioning citizens. Explains that the house is non-residential and most of the people who come there do not have jobs. Records how Fountain House helps its people find housing, provides vocational training, arranges jobs with nearby businesses, and offers community services in the house itself. Includes conferences between patients and staff at the house and at places of work.
John Ciardi, Iolani Luahine, Kaupena Wong, Joseph Kahaulelio, Joan Shigekawa, Marly Russell, Larry Spiegel, Dennis Maitland, Bob Cosner, Lane Slate, James MacAllen, Don Kellerman
Summary:
A documentary about Hawaii. The show covers the unification of the Hawaiian islands under King Kamehameha I as well as traditional Hawaiian dances and music.
John H. Storer, George E. Brewer, Jr., John C. Gibbs
Summary:
The second in the "Living Earth" series. Shows with many examples the interdependence of plant and animal life and the dependence of the land upon past living forms for its productive power. Explains the far-reaching effects of an upset in the balance of the living community.
An advertisement for John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company featuring a blind man who describes his experience working as an administrative director at the company. An offscreen male narrator discusses how the John Hancock company employs over 500 employees with some form of disability. Submitted for the Clio Awards.
Practical flower arranging for the home, featuring Miss Eve Porter of Montclair, New Jersey. Items discussed are the different types of flower containers and the combinations of flowers and forms for effective exhibition.
Shows Eliot O'Hara illustrating how to paint crowds of people as he starts from the beginning of a painting and demonstrates how to paint figures in perspective. Explains his method for making figures with dabs from a brush and his techniques for painting special effects such as a horizon, wet street, and suntanned bodies. Presents famous masterpieces by several world famous artists to illustrate the various points made.
While painting his impression of crowds on a street and at a seashore, Eliot O'Hara demonstrates brush strokes and techniques which he uses in producing a feeling of movement in crowd pictures. Shows how colors can intensify the sense of motion in a painting. Includes views of painting of crowd scenes by Marin, Daumier and Dufy.
John R. Coleman, David Schoenbrun, Perry Wolff, Bruce Minnix
Summary:
In the fourth episode of Money Talks, Dr. John R. Coleman discusses the potential conflicts of interests that might arise between government and businesses. Both the government and businesses want to have competition in the economy. Coleman explains how the government and businesses might have differing opinions on how to best implement healthy competition in the economy He illustrates this point by examining monopolies, labor, profits, and subsidies from the point of view of both the government and businesses. Coleman states the government and businesses need to have thoughtful economic discussions to maintain a strong healthy economy. David Schoenbrun concludes the episode by analyzing whether President Kennedy is anti-business.
John R. Coleman, David Schoenbrun, Perry Wolff, Bruce Minnix
Summary:
Dr. John R. Coleman explains economic concepts that enable people to measure and analyze the economy such as gross national product, consumer price index, and stock market index. He also explains how labor resources can be measured through the employment/unemployment rate and that there is a correlation between the employment rate and the consumer price index. Coleman concludes the episode by explaining different ways to increase the gross national product and the consequences behind each action.
John Strohm, Francis L. K. Hsu, John T. Bobbitt, Milan Herzog
Summary:
Describes China's most critical social and economic problems and examines the forces that are shaping the Communist revolution in China. Illustrates the Communist methods of forcing radical changes in traditional living patterns. Considers the possible effects of Communist success in China on world security.
John T.R. Nickerson, Robert Longini, Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
Summary:
Presents a survey of the meat industry, tracing the steps in the production, processing, and distibution of meat. Shows herds grazing on western grasslands, cattle being shipped to the Corn Belt for fattening prior to slaughter, the dressing, inspection, and grading of beef, pork, and lamb, and the cutting, processing, and packaging of graded meat. Describes modern cold-storage and shipping facilities. Traces the discrimmination of processed meat from the packing plant to the consumer. Shows commonly-used by-products of the meat industry.
Discusses the beliefs, concepts, and attitudes which have influenced the novels of John Updike. Presents several selections from short stories read by the author and accompanied by scenes which depict the narration.
A woman in a jungle applies baby powder on herself. Tarzan then swings in on a vine and scoop up the woman before they both swing away into the jungle.
A father wakes up and trips over a toy horse. He walks into the room and find his wife applying baby cream to their daughter. The wife explains to him why she is applying the cream and the father reflect on how fast his daughter is growing.
As his mother is applying baby powder to his sister, a boy complains that a boy wouldn’t need baby powder because they are tough. After his mother corrects him, he wonders if he could trade his sister for his neighbor’s baby brother.
As a mother applies baby powder to her infant, her other son asks her if she use to use baby power on him when was a baby. The mother then explains that she also used baby powder on him because it protected his skin soft.
An advertisement for Johnson & Johnson "Cotonetes" cotton swabs in which the product tickles and soothes an animated baby. Narration and text in Portuguese. Submitted for the Clio Awards International category.
A mother applies Johnson Baby Oil on her baby, Fred while they are at the beach. As the mother is applying the oil her other son voice his worries that his brother will get arrested for not wearing any clothes.
Two female roommates are looking in a mirror and getting ready for their days as they talk to each other. One roommate is going to an interview and is incredibly nervous about how she looks, her other roommate suggests she put on some Johnson & Johnson Baby Powder. She barely listens to her until the end when she grabs the product as she leaves.
An advertisement for Johnson & Johnson's No More Tangles hairspray in which a small girl describes how her mother was inadvertently damaging her hair by pulling out clumps of it while combing. By applying the product, the mother is shown able to move a comb through the girl's hair without getting it tangled. One of the winners of the 1975 Clio Awards.
J&J Shower to Shower "Girl on Herself" - A woman washes herself with Shower to Shower soap. As she applies the soap footage of her walking along a beach and through nature is projected on her skin.
Ban Deodorant "Psychiatrist" - A woman asks her psychiatrist if Ban deodorant will solve all her problems. The psychiatrist replies that it will solve just one.
Johnson & Johnson, Surgical Specialty Division, Edward Feil Productions
Summary:
Addresses the storage, properties, types, selection, handling, and application of sterile surgical drapes for covering surgical tables and a patient for surgery. Properties of woven and non-woven materials are addressed. Proper techniques for opening and setting out sterile drapes are shown, along with application of an adhesive drape to the patient, and a laparotomy sheet.
Traces in detail the production of cane sugar. Shows the ground-breaking operations in the spring, the planting and cultivation during the summer, and the cutting and the preparation of the stalks for delivery to the refinery in the fall. Illustrates the mechanized nature of these operations and depicts the numerous refining processes that ultimately produce white sugar crystals.
Slow-motion and underwater photography are used in demonstrating how swimming students emulate the motins of the dolphin as they learn the dolphin kick, the accompanying body undulations and the butterfly arm action which combine to increase the power of the breast stroke. Educational author, Francis Dixon.
Joseph Moray, National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, John M. Davidson, Richard Gilbert, Arthur M. Kaye, Shirley Tebbe, Francesca Greene, Peter Smith, Carole Eickhoff, Davidson Films
Summary:
Delineates interesting facets of the development of our decimal system. Compares the additive, subtractive, multiplicative, and positional notation aspects of the Chinese, Babylonian, Egyptian, and Hindu-Arabic systems. Uses models to explain concepts which lead to greater understanding of base 10 systems.
This film traces the historical development of our present decimal system--the Hindu-Arabic system of numeration. The meaning and importance of base ten, place value, grouping, numerals, and expanded notation are carefully described.
In this holiday commercial, an actor dressed as a stereotypical caricature of a Chinese man advertises the "great wall of pants." Other wall related characters such as a flower, walnut, and Humpty Dumpty also praise the wide selection of pants at Just Pants.
The ugly duckling is shunned by the chicks for wearing ugly clothes. The ugly duckling is transformed into a beautiful swan when he puts on clothes from Just Pants.