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Pe 34.159: 2-6 ye VS 6281959 fic OU! 1958 Revised July, 1959 MP-2- a OS ~ ~ THIS 1S A PERMANENT CATALOG we suggest you keep It in a loose at folder a8 fnew pages will be sent {0 you from time to time EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT OFFICE OF CIVIL AND DEFENSE MOBILIZATION Revised July, 1959 TABLE OF CONTENTS General Information Where to borrow or purchase prints. . . . Gpectetentiimats, cau tera. wie ls Films approved for matching funds purchase Films Currently Available SeanOD ocean oct Rapa Bi ea stk sier's a i= Mal ts aie sce te is fbeyaGalledy"X" jo The. = '- sp -as 5 + +e Emergency Hospital. «6. + spe eeee Fue Mis ogsinet fills Seo ks Se ater House in the Middle, The (6 1/2 min.). . « House in the Middle, The (12 min.). . . « Lifeline of the Nation... 1. eee eee Mission Fallout. .....-. 52.2. Nerve Gas Casualties and Their Treatment. New Family in Town... 1.222 ees INoMiime sta, Uggs. Birks oe. sq). oe Operation Cue (EG&G Short)... 2. eee Operation Cue (EG&G Long) Operation Cue = Revised . . . . Operation Ivy. ss ee ee eee Operation Scrambles «ss +s + Rehearsal for Disaster... + + Rural Community Defenses... + 6 + Webifor Survival hg s0 soe + e+ Dime ORMDINasted shee sc yes ss To Live Tomorrows ++ see ee eee DracpecMeriee a Ge Gee ce ste +. +. Your Civil Defense- +--+ +++ +--+ nic MP-2-6 Page ae as eae me, 2 pie a") pan ne ed eae: eee arco. ane aeatt peat a a8) Sap 9 - + 10 + 10 aeLD sly Ele + 13 +14 +14 Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 Official 1émm Motion Pictures of the Office of Civil and Defense Mobili- zation are listed herein, They include films produced by OCDM and those produced by independent sponsors in cooperation with OCDM. This list supersedes all previous catalogs. FOR FREE LOAN of most of the films listed, contact your State Civil Defense Office or nearest OCDM Regional Office. See addresses listed on page 21. Films will be loaned only under the following conditions: 1, No admission or other fees of any sort may be charged in connection with the showing of OCDM films. 2. No portion of the films may be reproduced, edited, | altered, or cut in any manner. | 3, Films must be shown in their entirety, including all titles. TO PURCHASE PRINTS of official OCDM films, write directly to the appropriate source of supply shown below. Please note: Prints will not be provided by these suppliers on a preview- before-purchase-basis, All films listed may be declared obsolete and withdrawn from circulation at any time. Code A Gode © U. S, Department of Agriculture Robert J. Enders, Inc. Motion Picture Service 1001 Connecticut Ave., N. W. Washington 25, D. C. Washington, D. C. Attn: Mrs, Alice Baldwin Code B Capital Film Laboratories, Inc. 1905 Fairview Ave., N. E. Washington, D. C. MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 BOMBPROOF (Code B) Price: B&W $13.99 Time: 14 1/2 min. Released Color $59.75 Cleared for TV 1956 Sponsored by the Burroughs Corporation. This picture shows the vital. importance of preserving the records of a business establishment if operations are to be continued following the destruction of plant or office facilities. After a bombing depicted in this film, the president of a manufacturing plant is able to quiet the fears of his employees. He points out that, with the assistance of CD authorities, he has preserved through microfilming all essential business records, such as blueprints, payrolls, employee records, bills payable, accounts receivable, etc. The film ends on the note that, with basic records preserved, one of the most important problems is solved in the matter of returning to production at the earliest possible moment. CRISIS (Gode A) Price: B&W $21.65 Time: 13 1/2 min, Released Cleared for TV Dec. 1956 Sponsored by Pure-Pak Division, Ex-Gell-O Corporation. Bob Considine, columnist and newscaster, narrates his experiences in covering the disastrous Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, flood that followed in the wake of Hurricane Diane. He tells how quick- thinking, public-spirited dairymen in the area met the danger of polluted drinking water by providing the public with safe water delivered in cardboard milk cartons. This action proved so effective that dairymen throughout the nation, in cooperation with their local Civil Defense units, are making plans to provide similar service in the event of disaster. -2. Revised July, 1959 MP=2-6 DAY CALLED "'X", THE (Code A) Price: B&W $41.10 Time: 28 min. Released Cleared for TV Jan, 1958 Produced for OCDM Dynamically presented and superbly prepared by CBS, THE DAY CALLED "X", is narrated by film star Glenn Ford, and tells the vital and timely story of what one city -- Portland, Oregon ~~ has done to prepare its defenses against an atomic attack. In dramatically staged sequences, emergency actions which have been carefully planned and rehearsed by the government and citizens of this city are triggered by warning of imminent attack. Rapidly and methodically undertaken in the brief period between warning and anticipated attack, these actions demonstrate a high degree of metropolitan preparedness. This motion picture provides important guidelines for other communities to follow in developing their Civil Defense programs within the context of existing governmental services. EMERGENCY HOSPITAL (Code A) Price: B&W $24.97 Time: 16 1/2 min, Released Color $64.75 Cleared for TV June, 1959 Produced for OCDM ‘This animated filmograph presents many problems encountered in hospitalizing the sick and injured in case of a nuclear attack. It shows how the 200 bed Civil Defense Emergency Hospital is organized and operates as an answer to post-attack medical needs. ea MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 \ FALLOUT. (Code a) Price: B&W $22.45 Time: 141/2 min. Released Color $57.55 Cleared for TV Mar. 1959 Produced for OCDM This animated filmograph illustrates in simple terms the cause and effects of radioactive fallout. It describes clearly the preparations which should be made to safeguard lives, and to protect livestock, food and water supplies from contamination. HOUSE IN THE MIDDLE, THE (Code A) Price: B&W $11.37 Time: 61/2 min, Released Cleared for TV Oct. 1953 Produced for OCDM These declassified scenes from the Atomic Energy Commission's official fire tests at the Nevada Proving Ground show the effects of an atornic burst upon three similar houses. The house in the middle -- properly painted, made of good materials, and free of litter and trash -~ withstands the heat. Houses on either side of it catch fire and are completely destroyed as a result of their run-down, badly weathered condition, and the trash that has accumulated around one of them. A dramatic stop-motion sequence, made during the actual atomic test explosion, emphasizes the impor tance of good household fire prevention habits, =a) Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 HOUSE IN THE MIDDLE, THE (Code B) Price: B&W $16.23 Time: 12 min, Released Color $41.70 Cleared for TV 1954 Sponsored by the National Clean-Up Paint-Up Fix-Up Bureau. This film is a more inclusive version of the previous subject. It emphasizes the importance of eliminating common fire hazards in and around the home. The sponsor of this film requests that private concerns write for authority to purchase prints. LIFELINE OF THE NATION (Code A) Price: B&W $30.25 Time: 20 min, Released Color $79.00 Cleared for TV 1958 Sponsored by the Association of American Railroads. This is the story of operating improvements the railroads are making to increase their capability to meet emergencies. The Association of American Railroads feels that by showing how railroads are gearing for emergency action, they may influence other industries to take similar actions, a MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 MISSION FALLOUT (Code A) Price: Color $167.10 Time: 45 min, Released Not cleared for TV Mar. 1959 Produced for OCDM This picture was shot at the Nevada Test Site during the 1957 Operation Plumbbob series. It describes in detail the training program for ground and aerial radiological defense monitors which was conducted as a part of the test program. The film was made to show personnel of the radiological defense program the procedures used in monitoring and plotting actual fallout within the test site, The film reviews the nature of radioactivity and the characteristics of fallout. It also describes OCDM radiation measuring instruments and calibration procedures used to assure their accuracy. NERVE GAS CASUALTIES AND THEIR TREATMENT (Code A) Price: Color $95.80 Time: 25 min, Released Not cleared for TV June, 1957 Sponsored by E. R. Squibb & Sons. This film is designed to be exhibited only for educational purposes to professional medical, paramedical and associated professional groups, and to Civil Defense personnel. This picture explains the early signs and symptoms of nerve gas poisoning and the measures to be taken in case of a nerve gas attack. Opening scenes show the actual effects of nerve gas on an animal under controlled laboratory conditions. There is also a dramatic portrayal of how casualties stricken by nerve gas are given first aid by Civil Defense personnel. Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 NEW FAMILY IN TOWN (Code C) Price: B&W $28.50 Time: 11 min, Released Cleared for TV Aug. 1956 Produced by Robert J. Enders, Inc. When a British family moves to a typical suburban dwelling in an American city, the normal amount of neighborhood curiosity is increased when the head of the household starts to dig a large hole in the backyard, The good-natured scoffing turns to real interest when it is revealed that because of his experience in London in World War II, he has decided to build an underground shelter. NO TIME TO LOSE (Code A) Price: B&W $42.26 Time: 28 min, Released Cleared for TV Feb. 1959 Produced for OCDM This film was produced in Hawaii by the National Broadcasting Company for OCDM with Hume Cronyn as narrator, the picture dramatically brings to the screen people who witnessed the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, 1941. The film shows how this experience has prompted the citizens of Hawaii to prepare strong individual and governmental civil defense measures for future emergencies. Be MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 OPERATION CUE (EG&G Short) (Code A) Price: B&W $13.33 Time: 9 min, Released (Silent) Not cleared for TV 1956 Produced for OCDM This film consists of slow-motion movies of the effects of the 1955 Nevada Atomic Test upon buildings, towers, railroad cars, and equipment of many kinds, as recorded by the special cameras of Edgerton, Germeshausen and Grier, Incorporated, of Boston, Massachusetts. The strategically placed cameras recorded the disintegration of buildings, the bending of towers, and the partial and complete demolition of other equipment exposed to the blast, This film has no narration or other sound. OPERATION CUE (EG&G Long) (Code A) Price: BEW $27.45 Time: 19 min. Released (Silent) Not cleared for TV 1956 Produced for OCDM This version of the effects of the Atomic Test of 1955 upon building, etc., is like the treatment immediately above except that the action is slower. The same scenes were used, but by stop-frame printing, the action was further slowed. This gives more opportunity for detailed study of bomb effects. This film has no narration or other sound, Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 OPERATION GUE - REVISED (Code A) Price: Color $63.40 Time: 16 min. Released Cleared for TV 1958 Produced for OGCDM This is the story of "Operation Cue," the 1955 Nevada Atomic Test, told from the viewpoint of a newspaperwoman who was invited as an observer. It follows the test from the prepara~ tory stages through the day following the shot. The picture features slow motion photography of heat and blast effects. This film has been revised to relate the effects of the nominal bomb employed in this test to thermonuclear weapons. OPERATION IVY (Code A) Price: B&W $41.60 Time: 28 min, Released Color $115.37 Cleared for TV March, 1954 Produced by USAF This picture is a ringside seat for one of the most momentous events in the history of science -~ the first full-scale test of a thermonuclear device. It is the first public film release of the hydrogen bomb tests in the Pacific in 1952. Spectacular photography shows the giant fireball, the gigantic mushroom cloud, and the crater in the ocean bed where the test island had been, The potential destructive power of such a bomb is then translated in terms of one striking a city and its possible effect. MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 OPERATION SCRAMBLE (Code A) Price: Color $99.52 Time: 24 min, Released Cleared for TV 1957 Produced for OCDM This film documents an actual evacuation drill conducted by the St. Louis County Hospital in conjunction with a Civil Defense exercise in 1955, It demonstrates the planning required to enable hospitals to evacuate in a short period of time in case ofan emergency. While illustrating one solution to the problem of evacuating patients, staff, supplies and equipment, the film points out many techniques that might be used by other hospitals. Users should be advised that: 1)Procedures recommended in the picture apply only in cases where evacuation is called for in local survival plans. 2) The possibility of fallout during an evacuation, or at the relocation site was not included in the attack assumptions on which this exercise was based, REHEARSAL FOR DISASTER (Code B) Price: B&W $14.40 Time: 12 1/2 min, Released Cleared for TV Jan. 1956 Sponsored by the American Trucking Association. This motion picture depicts the role of motor trucks and their drivers in Civil Defense emergencies. The story is dramatically told by a truck driver who has just returned from 48 hours of rescue work in a flood disaster. The film makes it apparent that the trucking industry, organized on a nationwide basis, can be a tremendous factor in saving lives and property in the event of any emergency, natural or war-caused, -10- Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 RURAL COMMUNITY DEFENSE (Code A) Price: B&W $21.25 Time: 13 1/2 min. Released Cleared for TV Nov. 1959 Produced for OCDM Presented jointly by OCDM and the U, S. Department of Agriculture, this film is designed to remind people living in rural areas that they would be no less vulnerable to the effects of atomic warfare than their urban neighbors. The picture outlines some of the problems farmers, and others living in rural communities, would face in the event of an attack on our nation, It describes individual and community actions which should be taken, now, to prepare for any major disaster. (A series of ten kinescope (Code a) television programs) Available by purchase only Completed Dec. 1958 Price each program: B&W $42.85 Price per set (10 programs): B&W $428, 50 Time each program: 29 1/2 min. Cleared for TV (through Sept. 1960) Produced for OCDM 1, ENTER THE NUCLEAR AGE -- This program features a reading from John Hersey's documentation, "Hiroshima," This is followed by a discussion of the problems created by nuclear weapons, “hie MP=2-6 2. 4, T 10. Revised July, 1959 KNOWLEDGE IS SURVIVAL ~- An anthropologist traces the evolution of man and how he has confronted threats to his survival through the ages. Man is shown passing from reliance on instinct to utter dependence on knowledge as a means of protecting himself. BIOGRAPHY OF A DISASTER #1 == This is based ona study of community actions and personal reactions to the 1954 Rio Grande floods. A discussion follows to highlight the psychological and sociological aspects of this disaster. BIOGRAPHY OF A DISASTER #2 -= People of Cameron, Louisiana tell of how Hurricane Audrey almost completely destroyed their town. A panel of experts explores reasons why groups and individuals react to disaster as they do. FACT AND FABLE -- The Disaster Study Group investigates group and individual behavior patterns in disaster situations. The subject of panic in emergencies is explored at length. WHAT DO YOU KNOW? -- Deals with current misconceptions concerning nuclear weapons~-fallout, radiation, etc. Results of a survey conducted in a three-state area are reviewed, disclosing myths, superstitions, and ignorance surrounding the subject. THE UNSEEN ENEMY == This program features a dis- cussion of terms and a review of the elementary aspécts of radioactivity. RADIATION AND THE BODY -= The effects of radiation on humans is the subject of this program. LEARN AND LIVE == Describes methods of protection against radioactive fallout from a nuclear attack, TODAY AND TOMORROW -- In this final chapter, Mr. Norman Cousins gives his reasons why man must make every attempt to survive the dangers of the Nuclear Age. -12- Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 TIME OF DISASTER (Code ¢) Price: BkW $20.06 Time: 10 min. Released Cleared for TV Dec. 1954 Produced by Robert J. Enders, Incorporated This timely subject is primarily concerned with the role of Givil Defense in natural disasters -- tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, fires or explosions. It explains the responsibilities of the Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization and other groups in "wresting from natural disaster part of the toll it would normally take." TO LIVE TOMORROW (Code A) Price: B&W $22.28 Time: 13 1/2 min. Released Cleared for TV July 1955 Sponsored by the Institute of Life Insurance ‘A study of human behavior under emotional impacts, ranging from a flash fire in a kitchen stove to possible enemy attack, is the subject of this film, The picture opens with a state- ment by President Eisenhower, who underscores the need for calm action in the time of emergency. -13- MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 TRAPPED (Code A) Price: B&W $31.69 Time: 20 min, Released Cleared for TV Feb. 1954 Produced for OCDM This rescue film with English narration is an adaptation of a motion picture made available through the courtesy of the Government of Sweden, It graphically emphasizes the need for trained rescue workers and shows many of the risks as well as the rewards of rescue. It also illustrates many of the special techniques required to rescue trapped casualties, searching in collapsed structures, digging through rubble, tunnelling through shifting masses of debris, and wall- breeching. YOUR CIVIL DEFENSE (Code A) Price: B&W $21.33 Time: 13 1/2 min, Released Cleared for TV Dec. 1958 Produced for OCDM Leo A. Hoegh, OCDM Director, appears in this film which highlights the activities of government in non-military defense preparedness, and shows the progress made until now and what is planned for the future. The film also portrays some of the things each citizen should do in making his own pre~ parations for survival. Se Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 OBSOLETE FILMS Continuous modifications in non-military defense planning is necessary to keep abreast of advances in weapons technology. Because of these changing plans, much of the information provided in the following films is no longer accurate. ATOMIC ATTACK BIG MEN AND SMALL BOATS CITIES MUST FIGHT CONELRAD DISASTER ON MAIN STREET DUGK AND COVER EMERGENCY ACTION TO SAVE LIVES. ESCAPE ROUTE FACTS ABOUT FALLOUT FIREFIGHTING FOR HOUSEHOLDERS FRONTLINES OF FREEDOM IMPROVISED HOSPITAL LET'S FACE IT NEW LOOK AT THE H-BOMB OPERATION ALERT -- 1956 OPERATION CUE (sound, color, unrevised) OPERATION DOORSTEP OPERATION KIDS OPERATION SCAT OPERATION WELCOME RESCUE STREET ROLE OF THE WARDEN IN THE H-BOMB ERA. SCHOOL FOR SURVIVAL SOUND FOR SURVIVAL SURVIVAL UNDER ATOMIC ATTACK TARGET YOU THIS IS CIVIL DEFENSE U, S, CIVIL DEFENSE IN ACTION WARNING RED WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT BIOLOGICAL WARFARE WORK OF THE RESCUE UNIT eee MP-2-6 Revised July, 1959 All prints of these obsolete pictures on loan from OGDM, or purchased under the Federal Contributions Program, must be returned without delay to: Motion Picture Division Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization Bottle Creek, Michigan Prints of these films purchased outright, in which full owner- ship passed to the purchaser, are not subject to recall. However, owners are urged to refrain from using such prints for public showing. -16- Revised July, 1959 MP-2-6 MOTION PICTURES APPROVED FOR MATCHING FUNDS PURCHASE Supersedes MP-2-6, Supp., March 20, 1958 Motion pictures in the following categories are approved for purchase by states and political subdivisions under Provisions of the Federal Contri- butions Program: 1, All Official Civil Defense Films released by OCDM, as listed in the preceding section of this catalog, or in subsequent revisions thereof. 2, Films used in civil defense courses developed by state and local governments and approved by OCDM To obtain eligibility, a print of the film must be forwarded to the OCDM Contributions Audio-Visual Committee, through OCDM Regions. 3. ‘The following Non-OCDM films for use in OCDM Training and Education courses: (See Federal Contribution Manual, AM25-1, Chapter 7) NOTE: Prints of these films are NOT available from OCDM. NAME SOURCE AIS FOR ATOM Advertising & Sales Promotion ({OGDM Gourse No, 1.21) Department General Electric Company Building 6, 1 River Road Schenactady 5, New York AIR POWER - NEW DOCTRINE United World Films ({OGDM Gourse No. 3.7) 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. Y. ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION As above. (OCDM Course No. 11.15 & 14.1) alge MP-2-6 NAME ARTIFICIAL RESPIRATION, THE BACK PRESSURE-ARM-LIFT METHOD (OCDM Course No. 11,15 & 14.1) ATOMIC ENERGY (OCDM Course No. 1.22) ATOMIC TESTS IN NEVADA (OCDM Course No. 11.22) BASIC PHYSICS OF AN ATOMIG BOMB (OGDM Course No. ll. 21) CARE AND MAINTENANCE OF FIRE HOSE, (OCDM Course No. 9.2) COLLECTION AND PRESERVATION OF EVIDENCE, (OCDM Course No. 10.2) CUMMINGS CITY (OGDM Course No. 3.7) DEBRIS CLEARANCE ({OCDM Course No. 14.3) DEBRIS TUNNELLING (OCDM Course No. 14.3) ESSENTIALS OF FIRST AID (OCDM Gourse No. 11.15) FIRST AID (OCDM Gourse No. 1.15) -18- Revised July, 1959 SOURCE United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. ¥. Encyclopedia Britannica Films, Inc., 1150 Wilmette Ave. Wilmette, Ilinois Byron, Inc., 1226 Wisconsin Ave. Washington 7, D. G. United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. ¥. Fire-Fighting Films 74 President St. New Rochelle, New York United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. Y. As above. Contemporary Films, Inc. 13 East 37th Street New York 16, N. Y. As above. United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. ¥. American National Red Cross National Headquarters Washington 6, D. C. ATTN: General Supply Officer Revised July, 1959 NAME. FIRST AID FOR BURNS IN CIVIL DEFENSE (OCDM Course No. 11.15 & 14.1) HOLD THAT LINE WITH DIRT (OCDM Gourse Nos. 9.1 & 9.2) INTRODUCTION TO RADIATION DETECTION INSTRUMENTS (OCDM Course No. 11.22) LITTLE DROPS OF WATER (OGDM Course No. 9.2) MASTER SPRAY STREAM PROBLEMS ({OCGDM Gourse No. 9.2) MEDICAL ASPECTS OF NUCLEAR RADIATION (OGDM Course No. 11.22) PISTOL BULL'S EYES (OCDM Course No. 10,2) RESCUE BREATHING (OCDM Course Nos. U.15 & 14.1) SALVAGE (OCDM Course No. 9.2) SIGNALS AND GESTURES (OCDM Course No. 10.1) -19- MP-2-6 SOURCE American National Red Gross National Headquarters Washington 6, D. C. ATTN: General Supply Officer Fire Fighting Films 74 President Street New Rochelle, N. Y. United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. Y. Austin Productions, Inc. P.O. Box 713 Lima, Ohio Steve Smith Pictures 623 Kansas Ave. Topeka, Kansas United World Films 1445 Park Ave. New York 29, N. Y. Transfilm, Inc. 35 W. 45th Street New York 36, N. Y. American Film Producers 1600 Broadway New York 19, N. Y. Steve Smith Pictures 623 Kansas Avenue Topeka, Kansas Dallas Jones Productions 1725 North Wells Street Chicago 14, [linois MP=2-6 Revised July, 1959 NAME, SOURCE TORNADO ‘The Calvin Company (OCDM Gourse No. 3.7) 1105 E, Truman Rd. Kansas City 6, Missouri TRAFFIC PATROL, ITS NATURE AND Dallas Jones Productions PURPOSE, 1725 North Wells Street (OCDM Course No. 10.2) Chicago 14, Illinois NOTE: Motion picture prints purchased under the Federal Contributions Program are subject to recall by OCDM in the event they ar declared obsolete. a -20- Revised July, 1959 REGION 1 Connecticut Maine Massachusetts Director, Civil Defense Agency New Hampshire Director, Civil Defense Agency New Jersey New York Rhode Island Vermont REGION 2 Delaware District of Columbia Kentucky Maryland SOURCES FOR FREE LOAN OF CIVIL DEFENSE FILMS Director, OCDM Region 1 ak Hill’ Road Harvard, Ma Director sachusetts Office of Civil Defen 672-4 Farmington Avenue West Hartford 15, Connecticut Director, Civil Defense & Public Safety Agency State House Augusta, Maine 143 Speen Street Natick, Mai achusetts 64 South Street Concord, New Hampshire Acting Director of Civil Defense Department of Defense The Armory, Armory Drive Trenton 10, New Jersey Director, New York State Civil Defense Commission 124 East 28th Street New York 16, New York Director of Givil Defense State Council of Defense Control Center, Darby Road Scituate, Rhode Island Director of Public Safety Montpelier, Vermont Director, OCDM Region 2 Olney, Maryland Director, State Department of Civil Defense Delaware City, Delaware Director, Office of Civil Defense 4820 Howard Street, N. W. Washington 16, D.C. Deputy Adjutant General State Civil Defense Administrator P. 0. Box 656, Cherokee Station Louisville 5, Director, Maryland Civil Defense Agency State Armory Pikesville 8, Kentucky Maryland Ohio Pennsylvania Virginia West Virginia REGION 3. Alabama, Florida Georgia Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina <2 MP-2-6 ‘The Adjutant General and Director of Civil Defense Building 101 Fort Hayes Columbus 16, Ohio Director of Givil Defense State Couneil of Civil Defense Main Capitol Building Harrisburg, Pennsylvania Goordinator of Civil Defense Room 208, Lyric Building Gor, 9th and Broad Streets Richmond, Virginia Director of Civil Defense 151 = 11th Avenue South Charleston, W. Virginia Director, OCDM Region 3 P. O. Box 108 Thomasville, Georgia Director of Civil Defense State Administrative Building Room 652 Montgomery, Alabama Director of Givil Defense Florida State Defense Council 2585 Riverside Avenue Jacksonville, Florida Adjutant General and Director Of Civil Defense 959 E. Confederate Ave., S.E Atlanta 2, Georgia Director, Mississippi state Civil Defense Council 109 New Capitol Bldg., Box 1228 Jackéon, Mississippi Director of Civil Defense Council of Civil Defense Jefferson & Dale Streets Raleigh, North Carolina Director of Civil Defense 1416 Senate Street Columbia, South Carolina State Director of Civil Defense 315 Gordell Hull Building 6th Avenue, North Nashville, Tennessee MP-2-6 REGION 4 linois Indiana Michigan Missouri Wisconsin REGION $ ‘Arkansas Louisiana New Mexico Oklahoma Texas REGION ¢ Colorado Director, OGDM Region 4 Battle Creek, Michigan Director, Civil Defense Agency 57th & South Shore Drive Chicago 37, Mlinois Director of Civil Defense TIT N. Moridian Street Indianapolis, Indiana State Civil Defense Director 119 W. Washtenaw Lansing 23, Michigan Director, Office of Civil Defense 100 East Capito! Avenue Jefferson City, Missouri State Office of Civil Defense State Capitol Madison 2, Wisconsin Director, OCDM Region 5 P.O, Box 2935 University Hill Station Denton, Texas Director, Office of Civil Defense 2215 College Street Conway, Arkan: Director, Office of Civil Defense Building 309A, Area B Jackson Barracks New Orleans, Louisiana State Director of Civil Defense P.O. Box 4277 Santa Fe, New Mexico State Director, Oklahoma Office of Civil Defens P. 0. Box 3365 Oklahoma City 5, Oklahoma State Coordinator for Civil Defense & Disaster Relief Capitol Station ‘Austin, Texas Director, OCDM Region 6 P.O. Box 8878 University Park Station Denver 10, Colorado Civil Defense Director 1511 University Avenue Boulder, Colorado ae Towa Minnesota Nebraska North Dakota South Dakota Wyoming REGION 7 Arizona California Nevada REGION 8 Alaska Waho Revised July, 1959 Director, State Office of Civil Defense State Office & Laboratory Bldg. East 7th & Gourt Streets Des Moines 19, Iowa State Director Kansas Civil Defense Division State Office Building Topeka, Kansas Director, State Department of Civil Defense 555 Wabasha Street, Room 5-F St. Paul 2, Minnesota Director, State Civil Defense First Floor, Capitol Building Lincoln, Nebrasia Director of Civil Defense Fraine Barracks... Bismarck, North Dakota ‘The Adjutant General State Director of Civil Defense Camp Rapid Rapid City, South Dakota Director, “Civil Defense Agency P. 0. Box 909 Cheyenne, Wyoming Director, OCDM Region 7 Naval Auxiliary Air Station Santa Rosa, California Director of Civil Defense 1623 W. Washington Strect Phoenix, Arizona Director, California Disaster Office P. 0. Box 110 Sacramento 1, California Director, Civil De Capitol Building Garson City, Nevada sage Agency Director, OCDM Region 8 Everett, Washington Acting Director Department of Civil Defense P.O, Bex 1628 Anchorage, Alaska Director of Civil Defense Box 1098) Boise, Idaho Revised July, 1959 ‘Montana, ‘Oregon ‘Washington Director of Civil Defense State Arsenal, Box 1157 Helena, Montana Director Oregon Civil Defense Agency Room 126, State Finance Bldg, Salem, Oregon Director of Civil Defense P. 0. Box 519 Olympia, Washington -23- MP-2-6

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