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

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p I BRIGHTER I SCREENINGS FEWER CLEANINGS! On the SCREEIT NON-INriAMMABU, NON-TOXIC ANTI-STATIC fILM CLEANER CONTAINS NO CARBON TET... yet cleans better, dries faster, keeps film cleaner longerl Ecco ?f 1500— proven in use by schools and audio-visual centers coast to coast— cleans film cteaner than any other cleaner, and fosfer. .. leaves an invisible anti-static coating that keeps it permanently free of dust ottracting static electriciy. #1500 elimiknaes woxing, too— keeps film ptiable, con. ditions green prints for immediote perfi screenings, adds yeors to film life. With i poisonous carbon-tet and no trichlarethylone, it's the sofest, most sensible cleaner : on the market. Best of oil, #1500 cleans 400 feet of film for less than 24! Send for details, prices today. Ccco # 150Q-N availlie 'or Neuvotor film cleaning machine. ■rfecfl able USE 1500 >W>TH ECCO SPEEDROl APPLICATOR CLEAN AND INSPECT IN WRITl NOW ton lUUSTRATlD BROCHUKtl Electro-Chemical Products Corp.] 60-A Franklin St. East Orange, N. J.l Cover: In Appreciation of UN The United Nations will be nine years old on October 24, and birthday time is a good time to appraise and appreciate. What the UN hasn't done we all know too well. What it has done few of us know well enough. In recognition and appreciation of all the UN has done to help people around the world live healthier, happier lives, we present this month's cover picture: portrait of a happy mother and healthy child from the documentary film World Without End. World Without End is a 45-minute picture produced for Unesco by Basil Wright and Paul Rotha and distribute<I by Brandon Films. It is a story about the United Nations and the people of the United NationsiTiothers and children, doctors and fishermen, rice farmers and teachers. The story unfolds in Mexico and Siam, but it is just as true for dozens of other countries where people are at work teaching and learning how to grow more food, how to combat ignorance and disease, how to share the United Nations' ideal of progress and prosperity in a ]jeaceful world without end. (See the detailed review of World Without End in the Summer, 19.')4 Educational Screen, page 236.) The International Screen This UN birthday month we have .given special attention to "A-V International": a tape exchange program between Kerang, .Australia and Muskegon, US.\ (page 326): film use in EDUCATIONAL SCREEN EDITORIAL STAFF PAUL C. REED— Editor JUNE N. SARK — Managing Editor WILLIAM S. HOCKMAN— Editor for the Church Field L. C. LARSON— Editor for Film Evaluations MAX U. B I LDERSEE— Editor for Recordings PHILIP LEWIS— Tech.nical Editor BUSINESS STAFF MARIE C. GREENE— Publisher JOSEPHINE HOFFMAN KNIGHT — Business Manager PATRICK A. PHILIPPI— Circulation Manager WM. F. KRUSE AND ASSOCIATES — Advertising and Public Relations EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD JAMES W. BROWN, School of Education San Jose State College, California LEE W. COCHRAN, Executive Assistant of the Extension Division and Director of the Bureau of Audio-Visuol Instruction, Stote University of Iowa, President, Department of Audio-Visual Instruction, Notional Education Association EDGAR DALE, Head, Curriculum Division Bureau of Educational Research, Ohio 'stote University .Australia (page 327); the Unesco treaty freeing .A-V from tariff and trade restrictions (page 314): the organization of the Latin .American .Association of .Audio-Visual Communications (page 316), the Junior Red Cross "Musical Message" to friends abroad (page 352), the descriptive list of recordings for foreign language teaching on page 340, reviews of the films United \ations In Korea and Asian Earth (pages 337, 339). But this issue is much more than just a sightseeing tour of the .A-V world. One of the primary purposes of EdScrf.en is to stimulate .A-V thinking. For most of you we hope this issue will be especially thoughtprovoking. Is it? New Titles for Two For two EdScreen staff members, that is. In tune with the times, Eflitor-in-Chief Paul Reed now heads up the "Department of Instructional Materials" in the Rochester, New York public schools. The old name, now outgrown, was "Department of Visual and Radio Education." .A new and broader title has also come to another staff member: Phi! Lewis. For the past many years while educational TV has been coming into its own, Phil has been our "Editor for Television." Now that TV has firmly taken its place in the .A-V firmament and now that Phil's own interests and talents have broadened well beyond the TV screen, he'll be known as our "Technical Editor." He'll give us the benefit of his technical knowledge of all the audio-visual media, including TV. — JNS. AMO DE BERNARDIS, Assistant Superintendent, Portland, Oregon, Public Schools MARGARET W. DIVIZIA, Supervisor in Charge, Audio-Visual Education Section, Los Angeles City Schools, Los Angeles, Californio W. H. DURR, Supervisor, Bureau of Teaching Materials, State Board of Education, Richmond, Virginia CHARLES F. HOBAN, Project Big Ben, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia F. EDGAR LANE, Supervisor, Instructional Materials Department, Board of Public Instruction, Dade County, Florida J. JAMES McPHERSON, Executive Secretary, Department of Audio-Visual Instruction' N.E.A., Washington, D. C. 5EERLEY REID, Chief, Visual Education Service, U. S. Office of Education, Washington D. C. CHARLES F. SCHULLER, Director, Audio-Visual Ce.-iter, Michigon State College, East Lansing, Michigan MAYER SINGER.MAN, Director, Audio-Visual Department, Chicago Office, Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith ERNEST TIEMANN, Director, Visual Instruction Bureau, Associate Professor, Division of Extension, The University of Texas, Austin, Texas 310 Educational Screen