United States President Richard Nixon and officials at the White House in Washington DC, United States. The interior of the White House. U.S. President Richard Nixon and cabinet members seated around a conference table. The officials discuss amongst themselves.
Rooms containing memorabilia related to President Eisenhower. Photographs of the Eisenhowers' son, John, in Army uniform, and his wife Barbara Jean. Photograph of Mamie Eisenhower with son John and his wife Barbara Jean and their children (Mamie' s grandchildren) Dwight David, Barbara Anne, and Susan. World globe on table. Books on shelf. Three paintings on wall. Portrait of Abraham Lincoln. Flags and medals on shelf. Inscription under painting reads: Summer, By Charles H Davis. Numerous official gifts and awards presented to President Eisenhower over the years.
The work of African American civil rights leaders in the United States. Ernest Green, one of the "Little Rock Nine" students, encourages black apprenticeships in building trades. Through his work at the Recruitment and Training Program, or RTP, Inc., in Brooklyn, New York City, Ernie Green reaches out and speaks to young black men in need of jobs. Young black workers without jobs stands outside a fenced area and look in at white men working at a construction site. Young black men unemployed on street corners and in front of shops. African American children on a city street, bundled in coats and walking to school. Ernest Green reflecting on the difficulty for black young men in getting jobs and in feeling welcome in the work force. Two young black men talking on a city sidewalk, looking in store windows, and then talking and doing a multiple step hand shake. Blacks in a classroom coaching young minority men in preparation for a sheet metal or other building trade union qualification test. African American men with construction jobs are seen laying bricks for a new building, working with steel beams, pouring cement, and constructing a building. Black workers install building windows and work with a torch on steel girders.
The work of African American civil rights leaders in the United States. Ernie Green, leader of the Recruitment and Training Program. or RTP, Inc. in Brooklyn, New York, is seen in a meeting with officials. Green and others working to create construction trade training opportunities for young unemployed African American men, and any young man who needs assistance. Black and white students exit an integrated high school. African American men and women stand in a queue to cast their votes in an election as narrator notes increase in black voting. Scenes of African American citizens in voting booths. An African American politician running for office greets voters on the street.
Tactical communications equipment being operated by the 124th Signal Battalion, 4th Infantry Division, during the Vietnam War. An Army technician turns on a piece of radio equipment in a rack and picks up a phone to monitor as he makes adjustments. He moves to several other boxes in a large array of equipment in racks, and makes adjustments in them. Closeup of one piece of equipment shows gauges for measure and frequency drift and technician's hand on the control for output adjustment. The technician holds phone to his ear as he makes adjustments to the radio equipment.
Tactical communication equipment of United States 4th Infantry Division, 124th Signal Battalion in Vietnam during the Vietnam War. View of the 4th Infantry Division headquarters at Camp Enari and Dragon Mountain signal site. Communication equipment atop a mountain. Radio antennas in the background as soldiers walk about in the camp area. Radio bunkers at the camp. Radio antennas and towers at the camp.
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