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4 Exceptional NEW FILMS
ONE GOD — How We Worship Him 37 minutes — Rental $1G
AuthenticI BeoutlfuH Impressive! Inspiringl
Based on the book of some title
by Florence Mary Fitch
This film presents the three major religious faiths in on interesting and absorbing fashion. Beautiful music — orchestral and choir.
HUMAN BEGINNINGS
An Eddie Albert Production
20 minutes in color — Renta'. $7.50
A mental health film for young children, their parents and their teachers. Its main purpose is to foster wholesome ottitudes ond to promote the emotional security of the child.
HYPNOTIC BEHAVIOR
20 minutes — Rental $4.50
A demonstrotion that illuslrotes the psycholog i col reoches of the human mind. For classes in psychology, and professlonol groups.
UNCONSCIOUS MOTIVATION
38 minutes — Rental $7.50
Demonstrotes how hidden motives influence everydoy thoughts end feelings. Shows use of psychological tests os tools in psychotherapy. For psychology classes and professlonol groups.
Wrife for Free Cotolog Listing Over 1300 Carefutly Sefected F(/m(
ASSOCIATION FILMS^
NEW YORK 19 35 West 4Sth St.
CMCAGO 3 206 So. Mictiigan Ave.
SAN FRANCiKO 2 351 Turk St.
DAIUS 4 3012 Maple Avenue
c
OAL OUXTRY
Mining our most valuable resource. IB minutes, sound, b&w or cofor. Write for our free literature.
FLORY FILMS, INC. JZ%':^,, 303 East 71st Street, New .York 21, N. Y.
INTERNATIONAL FILM CLASSICS
Combined withHANDBOOK
FOR FILM SOCIETIES
WRITE FOR 64 PG.
1950 CATALOG:
BRANDON FILMS,INC
1700 BROADWAY NEWY0RK19,N.Y.
1471 TITLES
FOR RENTAL MANY FOR SALE
SEND TODAY for new 56 page CATALOG
Please slate school or organiialion.
International Film Bureau, Inc. 6 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago 2
WRITE SEE & HEAR FOR COMPLETE SOURCE LIST OF PRIMARY GRADE MATERIALS LISTED IN THIS ISSUE
NEW HORIZONS-II
.\ STATEMENT OF PROGRESS
THIS PRIMARY GRADE REVIEW isSUC ot See & Hear is the third in the new series of special reports promised by this magazine since the regular Fall In\ cntory of Materials published in September. It follows the trailblazing Health Sc Welfare issue of October and the equally successful Sports & Physical Education number published in November.
Like to know how we're doing? Well, a single organization purchased 1,000 copies of our Physical Education book within 24 hours of first publication; the chairman of the National Audio-Visual Committee of the American Association of Health, Physical Education and Recreation (NEA) requested 120 copies for professional friends; thousands of pieces of publicity and enthusiastic recommendations are in the mails to high school and college physical education leaders throughout the nation. All this in addition to an everincreasing subscriber family. Principals, for example, now realize that a single subscription to See &: Hear buys a complete reference library which can be distributed month by month to the school departments benefited by each special report.
All ' this is truly widening New Horizons for the audio-visual medium. It is worth noting that the single order of 1,000 copies noted above is one-third of the entire circulation of one of our contemporaries; is more than the entire religions circulation claimed by another!
The editorial response by authorities in each field has been equally tremendous. To this end we must apologize to numerous curriculum experts in the primary field whose articles are being carried over into a second installment section of this
issue to be published in the spring months.
What's ahead? The fust Mid-Century Report on the Progress of Audiovisual Education comes out in midJanuary: leaders like Alexander J. Stoddard, Los Angeles' famed Superintendent of Schools; Nikolaus Engelhardt, noted curriculum expert from New York City; and many others ha\e written especially for this issue. Budget reports, a nationwide summary of progress and problems, and a "Principal's Guide to AudioVisual Utilization" will round out the MidCentury Report.
We conclude this summary with the pertinent observation that See ic Hear has already printed more school articles and useful guides to available materials thayi all other audio-visual journals combined. The schools are a big and literally unopened market, in the classroom sense, and we intend to serve their interests exclusively in this publication. Onl) rn this way can we keep faith with,our readers and with those producers and manufacturers who realize that an undivided editorial program is the only sure path to real marketing success. — OHC
See & Hear Magazine
812 N. Dearborn St., Chicago 10
New York Bureau
Robert Seymour, Jr., in Charge
489 Fifth Avenue
Los Angeles Bureau
Edmund Kerr, in Charge
6605 Hollywood Boulevard
See & HEAR-The National Mag.izine of Sight 8: Sound in Education. Issue 4, Volume 5. publislled December 15, 1949. Issued 8 tinier annually from September to Mav inclusive during the regular school year. Published at 812 North Dearborn St., Chicigo 10. Illinois. Phone WHilehall 4-6S07. Earl M. Hale, President; O. H. Coelln, Jr., Publisher. By subscription: $3.00 per year: $5.00 for two years. Foreign and Canada: $4.00 per year, $6.00 for two years. Entered as second class matter, October 19, 1948, at the post office at Chicago. Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Entire Contents Copyright 1949. International Rights Reserved. Address all editorial and circulation inquiries to the office of publication at Chicago 10, Illinois.
SOUND RECORDING at a reasonable cost
High fidelify 16 or 35. Quality guaranteed.
Complete studio and laboratory services.
Color printing and lacquer coating.
ESCAR MOTION PICTURE SERVICE, INC.
7315 Carnegie Ave. Cleveland 3, Ohio
Phone: Endicott 2707
See and Hear