'Your Job in the Signal Corps' discusses the importance of communication lines in the army during World War II. A sign on the door of the office of a Major General. U.S. Major General H. G. Ingles, Chief Signal Officer speaks about the U.S. Army Signal Corps and their role in all the three divisions of army. Major General Ingles speaks from his office. A soldier on top of a moving tank. Tanks in a field. Mechanized units in a field during a war. The troops communicate from the field. Aircraft fly and bomb. Bomb bay door opens. Bombs fall from bombers and hit the ground. Artillery is fired. A soldier reads a map and talks over a field phone. Gun crew fires artillery. Railway gun firing. Naval artillery firing from ship. A boat lands on a beach head. Troops walk in a jungle. A soldier blows a whistle. Allied soldiers fire a bazooka on a moving German armored vehicle. Man sends a telegram using a telegraph machine. A soldier calls with a telephone. Another soldier uses the radio for communication. Carrier Pigeons and rockets are also used to stay in touch. A hand fires a signal rocket. A messenger hand delivers a message. Officers making calls from their desks, field telephones and telephones on trees.
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Type | Size | Price (USD) Comprehensive All Media License |
Price (USD) Digital-Only License |
---|---|---|---|
HD Master, Broadcast-ready (1920x1080, unmarked) | 2845 MB | $225.00 | $79.00 |
HD Screener (1920x1080, full-res with timecode) | 2845 MB | FREE or $4 (see below) | FREE or $4 (see below) |
Proxy (320x240, low-resolution, watermarked) | 46 MB | FREE or $4 (see below) | FREE or $4 (see below) |