HOME MANAGEMENT NEW ADVENTURE, THE. Produced by Household Finance Corporation. Two reels, 40 min- utes, sound. Obtained from Y.M.C.A. Motion Picture Bureau, 19 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois. (A $2.00 annual registration fee for the use of free films is charged.) The film con- trasts the problems of the family with a budget and the family without a plan of spending. The general idea is good and the film could be used to advantage with senior high or adult groups. MISCELLANEOUS BEYOND THE RAINBOW. (Black and white and color film showing dye industry.) 44 minutes, 16 mm. sound-loan (for transportation charges). Calco Chemical Company, Motion Picture Laboratories, Bound Brook, New Jersey. NEW ROMANCE OF GLASS. 20 minutes, 16 mm. silent-sound-loan (for transportation charges). Y.M.C.A. Motion Picture Bureau, 347 Madison Avenue, New York City. Akin and Bagshaw, Inc., Denver, Colorado, issues a catalog of 16 mm. Rental Films. They will gladly send the catalog upon request. Many films showing textile processing are listed. A pamphlet entitled "Free Industrial Films" is available through the General Extension Division, University of Florida, Gainesville. It lists films on many subjects which can be used in the classroom, for assembly programs, P.T.A. meetings, etc., and suggests the grade levels for which they are best suited. The description includes also a brief comment on the film. The only charge is transportation from Gainesville and return. Becchett, Anna M. I SEE. (A home economist reviews modern visual teaching aids. A list of films for each unit is given, together with description of film and name and address of the distributor.) Practical Home Economics, October, 1937. Films, Incorporated, 330 West 42nd Street, New York, has obtained exclusive rights to the Paramount short subject series Popular Science, and those on Unusual Occupations. Both are produced in color. The subjects have wide general appeal. The Visual Aid Department of University of Florida has films for lending schools. Write for their catalog. Among them are The Romance of Rayon, and the Story of Shoes which are inter- esting to home economics classes. The Educational Film Institute of New York University, 71 Washington Square, South, New York City, has films of interest to home economists. Write for their listings. Following is a list of publications of the American Council of Education, 744 Jackson Place, Washington, D. C., related to motion pictures. No. 1-THE MOTION PICTURE IN EDUCATION: ITS STATUS AND ITS NEEDS. The pre- liminary report of the Committee. 1937 No. 2-TEACHING WITH MOTION PICTURES: A HANDBOOK OF ADMINISTRATIVE PRACTICE. By Edgar Dale and Lloyd L. Ramseyer. 1937. No. 3-A SCHOOL USES MOTION PICTURES. By the Staff of the Tower Hill School. This evaluation-center report is helpful in suggesting ways and means by which motion pictures can be adapted to the modern school curriculum. 1940. $1.00. No. 4-FILMS ON WAR AND AMERICAN POLICY. By Blake Cochran. Detailed descriptions of a selected group of films bearing upon war issues and American national defense. 1940. No. 5-PROJECTING MOTION PICTURES IN THE CLASSROOM. By Francis W. Noel. Pro- jecting the film, planning the projection room, selecting the projector-these are some of the prac- tical problems discussed in this report based on the experience of the public schools in Santa Barbara, California. 1940. 50c.