United States Army Special Forces officers in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. The headquarters of the United States Army Special Forces. A sign over the entrance to the building reads 'United States Army Special Forces Vietnam'. United States Army Captain Roger H. Donlon of Special Forces 'C' Team and Sergeant E5 James D. Coates with two Vietnamese security forces officers walk out of the building. The men stand in front of the building and look at a map and discuss defense positions.
United States Army Special Forces officers in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. United States Army Captain Roger H. Donlon of Special Forces 'C' Team and Sergeant E5 James D. Coates with two Vietnamese security forces officers visit Camp Nam Dong. The men walk towards a barbed wire fence in the camp. A sandbagged bunker beside the fence and a soldier standing on top of the bunker. The officers holding guns kneel in front of the bunker and discuss. A few men behind the fence in the background. The officers stand beside the bunker and talk. A soldier stands guard beside the wire fence. The officers come out from a trench behind him and walk up to another sandbagged bunker. The officers stand beside the bunker and discuss. The soldier stands guard in the background. The officers walk away from the bunker.
A United States Army Special Forces officer in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. Aerial view of Camp Nam Dong. Fields on the sides of the paths leading to the camp. A wooded region behind the camp. United States Army Captain Roger H. Donlon of Special Forces 'C' Team walking on a path in the camp. A few soldiers in the background. The Captain holding a gun walks on the path followed by a Vietnamese security forces officer. The Captain walks towards a wooden fence, stands beside the fence and looks outside. A barbed wire entangle just outside the fence. The Captain walks along the side of the fence. A concrete bunker lined with sandbags. The Captain walks towards the bunker. A mortar kept in front of the bunker in a shallow trench lined with sandbags. He walks up from the trench and to the fenced area. Trees and mountains in the background.
A B-29 combat crew is briefed on Saipan island, Mariana Islands during World War 2. Several aircraft parked on an airfield. Few baggages in front of an aircraft. United States Army Air Force Generals Henry H Arnold and Lauris Norstad and another officers walking up to B-29 crew standing on the airfield. General Norstad introduces General Henry Arnold to the combat crew of B-29 Superfortress and the commandants who are on their way to Tokyo, Japan after joining the 21st Bomber Command. General Henry Arnold shakes hands with the commandants. The crew standing in a row beside a USAAF heavy bomber B-29 Super Fortress. General Arnold briefs the crew. The General says the 21st Bomber Command has been operating out of China and the crew has the best of the aircraft which could carry the heaviest of loads. The General tells the crew that the message which is to be conveyed to Japan, is to be written on bombs. A few members of the crew wheel a cart loaded with bombs beside the aircraft. One of the crew members writes a message on a bomb as the General dictates. The Generals, the commandants and the crew members beside the cart of the bombs. The General wishes the crew good luck and shakes hands with the commandants. The message on the bomb for the enemy reads 'To the Warlords of Japan, We have not forgotten - The B-29s will remind you again and again and again'.
Mourning for Argentinian First Lady Eva Peron in Buenos Aires, Argentina. A large crowd gathered in front of the Ministry of Labor Building to mourn the death of Eva Peron. The civilians and the military leaders arrive for mourning. Men and women emerge out of the building after offering prayers. Flowers inside the building. Military officers leave the building. Bouquets laid in rows. A huge photograph of Eva Peron inside the building. People waiting in a line outside the building.
U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower's 175th press conference in Washington DC, United States. President Eisenhower stands in front of a microphone before the newsmen during the press conference. One of the press women asks the President if he agrees to the internationalizing of the Panama Canal and whether he was considering building another canal in that area and if they did would they be able to hold it. Pressmen seated at the conference. The President says that the second question takes a lot of study but for the previous 14 years he has been in favor of building another canal, but that was something that he shall not recommend. Regarding the internationalizing of the Panama Canal he says that it is something he would not even think of at that moment. He says that they have got a treaty with Panama, the provisions of which have been obeyed and they have had a model relationship with Panama for the last 50 years. He says that he believes that a particular incident should not become a reason for breaking a relationship that has worked so well. View of the pressmen talking. The President talking to the officials and the pressmen.
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