Educational screen & audio-visual guide (c1956-1971])

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Is Your Answer Here? • Our readers ask many things. "Have you seen two films by Broadman Films (Southern Baptist— Teaching The Word and Preparing To Teach? Yes, I hked them. So did my class at Syracuse University this past summer. I recommend both. • "What is CAVE exactly and what is its address?" asks one of our middle west readers. It stands for C-.atholic A-udio V-isual E-ducators. Let me quote from a folder on CAVE: "While conventions are an integral part of an educational association, the most important part of this audiovisual group is evaluation, research, and the CAVE seal of approval." Further information from CAVE, Box 618, Church Street Station, 53 Park Place, N. Y. 7, N. Y. • "We want a hi-fi tape recorder for our church school. We find that IVz ips is the top speed on most. Is this enough, or should we hold out for 15?" You will find that 7V^ on a good tape recorder will give you hi-fi enough for general purposes. Fifteen ips is professional or studio speed and you really don't need that. Mrs. J.H.R.: The three speeds: V/g, S^A and 7^4 will take care of all your voice and music needs very nicely. department of our church school, says it would be useful there if presented with the proper context and background. I am inclined to agree with her. The pictures are fine and there is some beautiful commentary in this film. I am certain that the public schools will find this film very useful also. Ask your local film rental library for rental cost and other information, or write to AP above. Inside A Convent Few films document the life of nuns. The 30-minute film The Little Sisters does just that, and very sensitively all the way. This film focuses on a young woman who turns lier back on the world for a life of obedience, chastity and poverty in the convent of Les Servantes de Jesus-Marie at Hull, Quebec. The camera follows her into the cloisters of the order and watches and listens as she prepares for her new life, as she works, studies, prays and plays (a little) and prepares for her vows, stage by stage. Clear, interesting, restrained and useful document which will be of interest to people of all faiths. Produced by the National Film Board of Canada and available through Contemporary Films, Inc., 267 West 25th St., New York 1, N. Y.; rental $7.00. KEYSTONE now offers you . . . PROTECT-A-PRINT LEADER • Avoid Misthreoding Damage! • Avoid Film Scratch! PROTECT-A-PRINT LEADER is designed specifically to prevent print damage from dirty projectors and careless misthreading. Its special coating automatically cleans dirty projectors and its extra toughness automatically avoids misthreading damage. Intensive tests, and the exp>erience of hundreds of users, have proved that PROTECT-A-PRINT LEADER is highly effective and thoroughly safe! Your sadsfaction is unconditionally assured. Write for further information or a demonstration by our Local Representative. KEYSTONE VIEW CO., Meadville, Pa. Since 1892, Producers of Superior Visual Aids Exclusive Distributor of Protect-a-Print Leader to the Educational Field. Superior Film In the 29 minutes it takes you to see the film Face of The South you will learn more about the South than by six months travel or a university course on the subject. George Sinclair Mitchell knows the South through a lifetime of being there and by intensive study and productive reflection and analysis. The New York Times said of the film, "The commentary, dealing with historical, cultural, economic and interracial development is simply wonderful in its homespun, hard-grained sensibility. And so is the tonic effect of the speaker." In church, college, community, university, this is your film when you have 29 minutes you want to use to kick off 29 hours of discussion and motivate a lot of thinking and further study. Try your rental library before writing to Broadcasting and Film Commission, 475 Riverside Dr., N. Y. 27. Highly recommended for use all across the nation by service clubs, community forums and other groups, j In a class all by itself in both content' and format. Ugly Subject Boycott is an ugly word. It describes an action most Americans don't like. Yet it's here on our landscape and we can't blink it away. We must see it for what it is. After that, mighty few people will want to use it even to enforce the wishes of any hierarchy, religious or secular. The 30-minute b&w film Botjcott documents what happened in one New England towr when a member of a local schoo board would not vote money for buse: for a parochial school. While gettin} the story told, this film is class ij technically, and about the same qual I ity in its drama and the force ancj punch of its jMint of view. ReconnJ mended for church and communitti groups. From POAU, 1633 MassaJ chusetts Ave., N.W., Washington 6| D. C. Useful Art Filmstrip In the color filmstrip What Do Wl See of Jesus? there are 40 well-repr»l duced art masterpieces. Roughly, tUl first half deals with nativity and chiln hood, and the second with ministll and teachings. The art selections ani script are by Walter L. Nathan. Thefl are extensive notes on each pictu0| and two scripts, one for adults, other for children. Here, indeed, are pictures for stut and appreciation, and for use in ship services. A lively imaginat I nttr* Ao^xrkiu A T Q/^Dfc^v Aivn AiininvTslTAT nirinir IVfAH^H IQ'JI