A film on technological advancements in the United States. Messages from London, England to New York, United States are received on siphon recorders and are transmitted by a Morse sounder and are forwarded to all points in America. A man operates a telegraph key. A recorder in operation. Students are trained at a training school at a cable station. Manual sending and receiving of a duplex to and from England. A man with earphones receives messages. A man places a record on a machine. An automatic perforator and transmitter sends 100 words per minute. Operators at keyboards. A tape is fed through a machine.
Involvement of National Council of African American Women (NCNW) in the Forest Heights housing project in Mississippi, United States. The National President of NCNW, Dr. Dorothy Height speaks (in voiceover) about the project. Film shows another woman surveying poor and low income families. A Council member speaks to an African American woman. Some NCNW workers sitting in office. NCNW workers have meeting in the office. The author of a new program from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Turn Key III, Associate General Council, Joseph Burstein explains the program. An African American woman with a child stands near him. Four men sitting in the office. A man explains the program with a briefing chart..
The pilot Forest Heights project of Housing and Urban Development Turn Key III Program in the United States. Group of mostly African American children playing outside a house. African American woman putting clothes on a line to dry. Children playing football. African American boys and girls playing on playground equipment in parks.
United States Senator Nye in Washington DC. U.S. Senator Nye denounces war. As the Chairman of the Munitions Investigating Committee he declares commercial interests want another large European war to serve their greedy interests . He states his belief that adequate neutrality legislation will keep the country at peace. The Neutrality Act of 1935 was signed on August 31, 1935.
United States President Franklin Delano Roosevelt signs the Constitution of the Philippines, as permitted by the Tydings-McDuffie Act of 1934. View of the signed Philippine Constitution that had been produced by the Constitution Convention in the Philippines and approved there on February 8, 1935 before being presented to Roosevelt in Washington for his signature. (It was later ratified on May 14, 1935). President Roosevelt talks about the importance of document signed. Philippine President Manuel L Quezon stands up, shakes hands with President Roosevelt and thanks him on behalf of the Filipino people.
A training film dramatizes the methods of disseminating biological warfare agents in the United States. Small scale method of disseminating biological warfare agent to sabotage key personnel and key installations shows a skilled plumber contaminating the water supply of a military reservation with a pathogen. Various other methods can be used to contaminate food and ice cream. U.S. military personnel eating at tables. Unprocessed or uncooked food can also be contaminated. Infective material being put into a ventilation system by a man. A missile heads for a target depicting large scale airborne method of disseminating biological warfare agent. Men carrying a submarine designed for biological warfare at a beach. Rockets equipped with biological warheads being fired from a ship. Usage of aircraft shows an aircraft dropping a bomblet to achieve greater affect. The aircraft equipped with tanks flies low over a field. Animation depicts the selection of microorganism.
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