United States Coast Guard Cutter (USCGC) Northwind and USS Sennet underway in the Ross Sea during Operation High Jump. Men on the deck of USS Sennet heaving on lines. A talker on the stern of USCGC Northwind.
U.S. Navy sailors below decks on a ship are seen opening canvas mail sacks and sorting postal mail. Men unload sacks of mail. They look at the recipient names on the mail pieces and place them in piles and into cubby holes or pigeon holes of mail recipients. A sailor gives an envelope to another sailor and he puts the envelope in his pocket. A man look at mail and delivers them to the correct boxes. A sailor pauses with one letter, brings it to his nose and smells it, smiles, and puts the letter in his breast pocket.
General views of Scott Island in the Antarctic Ocean during Operation High Jump. Views of Scott island. Boat at sea. Scott island in the background.
Activities of U.S. navy personnel aboard U.S. Ship in the Atlantic Ocean. Ships anchored at harbor as seen from a ship. Mountains in the background. Smoke rising from explosion in the far background. U.S. flag on the ship. Sailors standing beside railings. Captains and an official talk. Sailors on deck. Navy personnel standing in attention as they are given instructions.
Penguins are fed aboard ship in the Antarctic Ocean. Two penguins in a cage. A photographers standing beside cage. A man sprays water using water hose. Men clean floor of deck as water hose is sprayed. The man sprays water hose on the cage. Two men sitting with bucket. Men place tablets into mouths of fish. Men carry penguins out from the cage. Fish are fed to penguins.
War crimes trials (Flick Case) in Nuremberg, Germany. Defendants enter courtroom and take their places in prisoner's dock. Defendants include Hermann Terberger, Bernhard Weiss, Konard Kaletsch, Otto Steinbrinck and Freidrich Flick. People in courtroom rise as judges William C Christianson, Frank N. Richman, Charles B Sears, and Richard D Dixon enter. U.S. flag in the background. The judges ask that the prosecutor read the indictment. Prosecutor Thomas E Ervin reads the indictment. Ervin states that workers were subject to inhuman treatment while employed in German factories.
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