Living conditions of the Okinawans in the town of Ishikawa, Okinawa, Japan during the Battle of Okinawa of World War II. Natives seated in a compound outside huts. Fully clothed men wash their legs and faces. A man distributes food to the natives. The natives walk away with the food. They sit on the ground and eat the food. An aircraft in flight.
U.S. 1st Marine Division with the Okinawans in Okinawa, Japan during the Battle of Okinawa of World War II. A U.S. Marine inspects ruins near Gushikawa. Natives including men, women and children. A U.S. marine smokes with an Okinawan civilian citizen. Young boy shows a Japanese military hat insignia that he is wearing. A Military Police personnel carries a balancing pole holding two buckets on his shoulders. The children carry balancing poles with two buckets. Views of the children.
Robert Vogeler arrives home with his family in New York. Robert Vogeler, a U.S. businessman held in a Hungarian prison for 15 months on trumped-up Soviet charges, arrives at his home land. He and his family disembark from an airplane. Cameramen clicks photographs. Vogeler is interviewed by media persons. With his wife at his side he speaks about his ordeal. His wife tells the media persons to leave him alone.
Animated diagrams about sanitation and disease show the fly insect as a disease carrier in the United States. Animated diagram gives an idea of the places from which flies pick up and later distribute filth. These places are: horse stables, manure piles, milk pails, cow barns and pig pen. From these places they move to dwelling houses, kitchens and on food which causes diseases. Manure piles shown.
Experiments on fly specks show the fly as a disease carrier in the United States. A fly moves on a menu card. A cup and a serving of sugar cubes on a dining table. The fly sits on sugar cubes. Experiments are performed which show that these fly specks frequently contain disease germs in an active and virulent state. After incubation the fly specks show living germs of typhoid and spinal meningitis. Tuberculosis bacillus seen.
A data shows that the fly is responsible for millions of progeny in the United States. The data depicts that as an adult female fly lays batches of 150 to 200 eggs several times during her short life, she is responsible for millions of progeny. To terminate the young flies: a woman pours formalin into a plate and places it in a window. The flies are poisoned and are terminated.
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