Business Screen Magazine (1965-1966)

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right off the Annual CINE Awards Program in Washington. D. C. on Nov. I8ih :': Nincly-unc awards and honor certificates given U. S. factual motion pictures which were entered in more than 40 international tilni festivals within the first nine months of 1966 will be presented to their producers and sponsors in Washington, D. C. on Friday. November 18. when the Council on International Nontheatrical Events holds its annual CINE Awards Program and Exhibition of Films of Merit. The total number of trophies, medals and honor certificates may be even larger by that date, with 10 more festival events still being held. Last year, CINE entries won only 72 such awards within a similar period. The 1966 prizes have been won at Cannes, Buenos Aires, Venice (Art, DiKumcntary, Children's. Golden Mercury and 7th International Industrial Film Festival), Melbourne. La Plata, Cordoba, Edinburgh, Rome Electronic, ANZAAS Scientific and at Cra cow. Ill addition, 125 short subject, television documentary and industrial-sponsored motion pictures will receive CTNE's Golden Eagle certificate. These Golden Eagle Certificates will be presented at F'riday afternoon ceremonies (2:30 p.m.) in Crabtrcc Auditorium of the National Education Association headquarters building. The annual CINE dinner, with president Alden Livingston presiding, will be followed by an evening film exhibition and the formal presentation of major international awards in Crabtree Auditorium. The Exhibition of Films of Merit has been expanded to an all-day screening program, utilizing the nearby theater of the National Geographic Society and the NEA Auditorium so that film makers, government othcials and guests may see the best pictures of the year. Reid H. Ray, president of Ray Film Industries, is chairman of the 1966 CINE Awards Exhibition; Frank Rollins, Squibb & Company, is chairman of the banquet and reception events. Dr. Randall Whaley will announce the international certificate awards, aided by representatives of foreign embassies whose countries are represented. • * * * Honor Safely Films Plaque Winner at the National Safety Congress ■fr \\ inners of bronze plaques given the outstanding safety tilnis of 1965 by the National Committee on Films for Safety received these honors during the recent National Safety Congress in Chicago on Monday evening, October 24. Following screenings of top award-winning pictures before a general assembly of C^ingress guests in the grand ballroom of the Conrad Hilton Hotel, James T. Wadkins, managing director of the Richmond (\'a. ) Safety Council and chairman of the National Committee on Films for Safety presented plaques to 10 winning sponsors and producers. This year's first award winners were: Family Tree, a U. S. Forestry Service t.v. spot; The Chokerman, Northwest Forest Industry Film Committee entry; Everything to Lose, submitted by the Caterpillar Tractor Co.; The Return of Milton Wliilty, sponsored by the Construction Safety Association of Ontario, Canada; The High Cost of Negligence, a Department of the Army (U.S.) training liini; Safety in the Home, produced by net clopaedia Britannica Filn ■ ' classroom sale; The ?( Hours of Hazard, an Aetna <e^ Casualty Company prodiioi, Love That Car, produced bftri thenon Pictures for the An Oil Company; Winter Truct ing, sponsored by the U. S. S^' of Public Roads; and the Shi ft Company's televised film Bi gram: The National Driver's'm * * * Entry Forms Ready in Noven;» h for 1967 American Film FestU I ir The 1967 American Filmpnj val, sponsored by the Educalioi( Film Library Association, v held May 10-13 at the B, Hotel in New York City, petition categories include 16mm films and 35mm filntif on Art and Culture; Busines li dustry and Public Relations; de cation and Information; H U Safety and Medicine; and Re b and Ethics. Subjects in these categorii it leased for general distributi i the U.S. during 1966 are clii for entry. The entry deadli i next January 27 and entry b will be available in November « EFLA. 250 West 57th St.. York, N. Y. 10019. otjl '^ET STOCK "ROOTAGE ♦JET/PISTON/HISTORICAL AIRCRAFT 35 MM/16 MM COLOR and BLACK 86 WHITE Free film provided to producers for authentic airline sequences UNITED AIR LINES Publicity Department Atlanta 523-5516 Chicago 726-5500 Drnvrr 398-4535 Detroit 963-9770 Honolulu 510-171 Los Angeles New York Pittsburgh San Francisco Seattle 482-3300 922-5225 391-5152 397-2620 682-3731 Washington 737-6830 Write Tor cntnloR: ^ UNITED AIR LINES FILM LIBRl' Suite 230. Stntlcr Center 900 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles. California 90017 •Jet mockups for interi ilming— New York City ant\ Hollywood United A ir Lines BUSINESS SC REEN • ill