A film of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine about the military cadets trained at the Imperial Japanese Army Academy or Rikugun Shikan Gakkō in Ichigaya, Tokyo, Japan during World War II. Japanese cadets get up and come out of a building in uniforms. Japanese cadets scrub their bare backs. The cadets practice jumping during their training. Two cadets jump from a wall. The cadets practice jumps, and Jiu-Jitsu. The cadets exercising. The exteriors of the training building. Teachers teach trigonometry, chemistry, and different languages. The cadets work in a laboratory. A student reads a Japanese history book. Western professors teach German, English, and Russian at the Japanese military school.
A film of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine about the military cadets trained at the Imperial Japanese Army Academy or Rikugun Shikan Gakkō in Ichigaya, Tokyo, Japan during World War II. Japanese cadets fight with swords. A trainer teaches the cadets hand signals. The military cadets practice commands. The cadets work on tank barrels. A cavalry cadet makes a horse jump over a hurdle. Armored forces cadets drive tanks. Engineering cadets lays wooden logs to make a floating bridge. Trucks driven on the floating bridge over a river. Artillery division cadets learn to fire from artillery. A classroom training of the cadets. A bombardier observes a moving map. The pilot gets into the cockpit of an aircraft. A Japanese aircraft in flight.
A film of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine about the military cadets trained at the Imperial Japanese Army Academy or Rikugun Shikan Gakkō in Ichigaya, Tokyo, Japan. The Emperor of Japan Hirohito reviews the graduate officers. The cadets parade. Women from a school for army brides bow to graduates. The honored student is being presented a special scroll. The Commanding Officer receives a gift from Emperor Hirohito for training the cadets. The cadets in a parade on horses lead by Emperor Hirohito. The cadets raise their cups of Sake (Japanese rice wine) during the graduating ceremony. Soldiers walk past a wooden gang plank as they return to Tokyo. View of dead Japanese soldiers lying on a beach following a battle with American forces in World War II.
A film of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine about the war dogs retrained to return to their owners in the United States during World War II. A truck loaded with crates driven to the dog training camp. Dogs barking and jumping near the small wooden cabins. A German Shepherd dog licks a trainer. A German Shepherd dog sleeps in a wooden cabin. Trainer and dog play fetch. Two men bathe a war dog. A doctor observes through a microscope. Th doctor checks the physical fitness of dogs. A car driven to a dog training area. The dogs in small dog houses. Doghouse designed as Sheriff’s office, Honeymoon Villa, and bar. Dogs on a beach. A man pours milk in a container. Dogs drink milk. Dogs run across timber trees in a forest area. A dog sits on a tree stump. A dog taken out of a house to a car. A dog taken in a car to the city for a family life. The dog runs to the family. The family members pat him. The dog sits with a child playing in garden. The dog runs after the child holding a soft toy in its mouth.
A film titled 'By Request' of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine about the requests of U.S. Army soldiers fighting in World War II. A man places a few papers in place at the 'By Request' office of the Army-Navy Screen Magazine. Door window sign reads “Army-Navy Screen Magazine New York City”. The Women’s Army Corps (WAC) host reads the letter of a person. A woman places tomato slices on a bread and the cabbage leaves. She cuts the sandwich half and serves with a glass of milk. The woman eats the sandwich.
A uniformed member of the U.S. Women's Army Corps (WAC) reads a letter from a soldier named Sergeant Lowry, asking why Army-Navy Screen Magazine doesn't show pictures of Marshal Tito, famous Yugoslav patriot. In response, the next scene shows rugged mountains of Yugoslavia, where Marshal Tito has his headquarters, in World War II. Closeup of Marshal Tito flanked on his left, by British Brigadier General Fitzroy Maclean, Winston Churchill's special envoy to the Yugoslav leader, and on his right, barely seen, U.S. Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Officer, Army Major Linn M. Farish, American Liaison to the Partisans. The three step down to a lower porch at the headquarters building, where Major Farish pumps his arm in the air several times as he speaks to General Maclean. Tito smiles, smokes his pipe, and makes some comment to them. The scene shifts to a British military photographer as he finishes taking a still picture of Tito and his principal staff officers, standing in a group, along with Tito's dog, Tigar.
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