Extracts of CBC television programs assembled in preparation for programs on the 25th anniversary of CBC television. This item includes the following:~The visit of Russian Premier Alexei Kosygin to Canada in October 1971. Prime Minster Trudeau and Kosygin are walking together when a man jumps on Kosygin from behind and bears him to the ground. Trudeau is the first person to react, the man is seized and taken away shouting "Go Home" and "Freedom for Hungary".~French President Charles de Gaulle in Montreal, 24 July 1967. De Gaulle speaks to a large crowd from a balcony, he says, "Vive Montréal! Vive Québec! (Pause) Vive le Québec libre! (Crowd cheers for a long time) Vive le Canada français! Et vive la France!"~Bill Cunningham, while reporting on an American-South Korean military exercise involving a parachute drop, is chased by a billowing parachute.~A news special, Christmas 1975. Michael Maclear reports from Hanoi with the first film allowed a western crew of American prisoners of war in North Vietnam. Maclear talks to two American pilots in a room containing a Christmas tree. They say that since becoming prisoners they have thought a lot and talked to other prisoners and have reached the decision that before all else, "The war must be ended". On the same news special is silent footage of Maclear interviewing North Vietnamese Premier Van Dong with voiceover by Maclear.~News film from September 1969. Maclear reports from Hanoi on the first meeting of the National Assemby since the death of Ho Chi Minh. Includes silent footage of the streets of Hanoi; the National Assembly and Presidium, including Pham Van Dong, Defence Minister Nguyen Giap, and others; and a reception afterwards where Maclear talks to Pham.~President Eisenhower in France, circa 1956; U2 spy plane taking off; Soviet Premier Khrushchev entering a limousine in France; and captured U2 pilot, Gary Powers, on trial in the USSR.~CBC FOLIO, mid-1950s, MACBETH, Act V, Scene VII, with Patrick MacNee as MacDuff and Barry Morse as MacBeth. This hilarious production was adapted and produced by David Greene.~THIS HOUR HAS SEVEN DAYS, 25 September 1965. Larry Zolf and Montreal law professor Pierre Elliot Trudeau interview Quebec Hydro Minister René Levesque on the subject of separatism in Quebec. Levesque says he is not now a separatist, but that he could be convinced to become one. He goes on to defned separatists in general against charges of extremism. Zolf does most of the interviewing, trying to press Levesque to talk about English Canadian reactions. Levesque says that that is not his concern, and then refuses to accept Zolf's attempts to try to make him say he doesn't care about their reaction. Trudeau says he is concerned about an English backlash sparked by Quebec extremism. Levesque says he is too. They agree that violence can be necessary against some regimes, citing Batista in Cuba, after which Levesque claims that Castro has become a new Batista. Trudeau is concerned about any sort of separatist extremism, living as we do "in a climate where the authorities have traditionally behaved in an authoritarian way". Includes program credits.~The opening of MUSIC HOP from April 1964. Perhaps from the same show, The Girlfriends lip sync a recording of the title song the the movie MUSCLE BEACH PARTY. Tommy Ambrose sings "Nadine"; Nester Burla from Fort William sings "Kissin' Cousins"; and Dianne Brooks sings "The Shoop Shoop Song".~VICTORY CELEBRATION HONOURING MARILYN BELL, September 1954. A special program telecast live from the grounds of the Canadian National Exhibition in honour of Marilyn Bell, who had just completed her swim across Lake Ontario. On the bandstand, in front of thousands of people, CNE president Robert Saunders praises her and presents her with various gifts.~MUSIC HOP, 10 February 1966. Show opening with host David Mickie; opening song "Going to a Go-Go"; and jazz sequence with singing by Shawne Jackson. <78mn>