The office of the Time magazine in Washington DC. A reenactment : Robert Sherrod, war correspondent for the Time magazine, dictates to a secretary. He dictates about write ups, articles, lay outs, memorandums and pictures to be used in the next Time magazine issue.
The office of the Time magazine in Washington DC. A reenactment : Mary Malloy, a correspondent for the Time magazine, at a teletype. She answers a telephone. A woman sorts letters and postal mail in a shelf. Correspondents for the Time magazine Harold Horan, Robert Sherrod and Mary Virginia Johnson sort telegrams and mail. A woman takes out books from shelves.
The office of the Time magazine in Washington DC. A reenactment : A man observes a map. A woman sorts mail. She reads a document. Another woman sorts mails. She reads a Time magazine issue. Women read and sort mail.
The office of the Time magazine in Washington DC. A reenactment : A woman sorts letters and mail in a box. A man and a woman discuss. The woman walks away. Another woman discusses a document with a man. A man writes on a paper as he smokes a cigarette.
Founder of the Ford Motor Company Henry Ford's funeral in Dearborn, Michigan. Aerial view of residential areas, countryside and a large estate. Aerial view of Greenfield village and Ford Airport. Aerial view of highways and automobile traffic. Spectators lining a roadway.
American robot bombs, America's answer to the German V-1 buzzbomb, being prepared in Dearborn, Michigan during World War 2. Workers weld bomb casing at Ford robot bomb factory. The workers move long tube like bombs with jet engines. They are known by nickname "Flying Chimney". The bombs on wheels. Men with ear protection in a testing area as the engines are fired during testing. Buildings in the background. Flame shooting from the jet engines. Workers including some women assemble the bombs at a plant in Toledo, Ohio, where wings and warheads are also built. A woman war production worker lying inside the body of a robot bomb and working on its assembly. The bombs take off from a launch pad in a gully at an Army Air Force test site. A booster cuts loose from the American Robot Bomb and hits water at a distance as the buzz bomb flies through the air, with an estimate 200 mile range. The bombs in flight. The booster hits water.
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