1. Dean Walker, “Canada’s Movie Industry is Thriving but Not in the 9-Reeler Trade,” Globe and Mail, 29 June 1957, A22–A23.
2. See articles of mine such as "Patterns of Cultural Authority: The National Film Society of Canada and the Institutionalization of Film Education, 1938-41," Canadian Journal of Film Studies, 10.1 (2001): 2-27
3. and "Mapping the Serious and the Dangerous: Film and the National Council of Education, 1920-1939," Cinéma, 6.1 (Fall, 1995): 101-118. Also, Zoë Druick, Projecting Canada: Government Policy and Documentary Film at the National Film Board, (Montreal/Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 2007) and "The Best Teachers and the Best Preachers: Film, University Extension, and the Project of Assimilation in Alberta, 1917-36," in The Institutionalization of Educational Cinema: North America and Europe in the 1910s and 1920s, eds. Marina Dahlquist and Joel Frykholm, (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2019), 123-146.
4. Graham McInnes, One Man’s Documentary: A Memoir of the Early Days of the National Film Board, (Winnipeg, MB: University of Manitoba Press, 2004), 47.
5. McInnes, One Man’s, 48.