Great Depression era footage about federal provisions for the education of the North American Native American Indians in the United States. Boarding school buildings and campus at Sherman Institute in Riverside, California. Indian students play football on a school playground.
Work-study education programs for North American Indians in the United States during the 1930s Great Depression era. Indian students enter a government school which is based on part-time work. Students learning new skills in the vocational school including typing, painting and working on blueprints (drafting).
U.S. government provisions for the education of Native American Indians during the Great Depression era in the United States. Clip focuses on Native American Indian students learning vocational skills, trades, and service skills so they can get jobs and earn a living. An Indian student works on a sketch. Students cultivate plants in a greenhouse. Girls at sewing machines. Three women pose. Indian women prepare food in a kitchen. Indian women learning nanny skills and caring for American children at a play school. Children on a slide at the playground.
Film describes federal education of the Native American Indian students in the United States. An Indian student works on a sketch. Indian and American students leave a school bus at Klamath Indian Reservation in Oregon. The students enter a school building. Children on swings in a public school playground. Three Native American Indian students posing.
President Roosevelt signs the Cullen-Harrison Act, an amendment to the Volstead Act late in Prohibition, allowing the sale of beer and wine with an alcohol limit of 3.2% by weight. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt seated at a desk in his office. He signs the bill. Men in a beer bar. A man drinking beer.
Jewish war veterans parade in New York. Buildings along the sides of a street. Men march on the street. They protest against German Chancellor Adolf Hitler and Nazi persecutions. New York elected officials are seen watching the demonstration, including New York Mayor John P. O'Brien. Aerial view of the demonstration.