African American students at a workshop learn painting and sculpture artwork techniques in the United States. Young students paint on various sculptures. Students do clay modeling. A boy works at a sculpture. William Ellisworth Artis does clay modeling.
A GB-4 radio controlled glide bomb at a United States Air Force base. Airmen assemble various components to the missile. Tail section and wings are placed on the warhead and then fixed with the missile. The radio station and smoke flares are fixed with it. The control station of the bomb. Airmen checking the movement of the tail. (World War II period).
Two GB-4 missiles mounted on a trailer at a U.S. Air Force base in United States. Trailer tows them to a USAF B-17 Bomber, while airmen sit on the missiles. Two GB-4 missiles attached to the underside of a B-17 fuselage. The aircraft takes off. Bomber launches a missile while in the sky. GB-4 flies and leaves smoke trails. Its crash near the target.
An unassembled Azon Bomb at a United States base. Airmen removing protective plugs from nose section of warhead. Attaching various components control surface, instruments to the bomb, and then the bomb to the underside of a B-17 bomber. It takes off. Dropping bomb to the target. (World War II period).
A controllable Glide Bomb GB-8 takes a flight in sky towards its target. The bomb leaves behind a smoke trail. Bomb strikes its target a boat in the sea. Two Glide Bombs kept at a U.S. Army Air Corps base. Glide Bomb fastened to wings of a B-17 bomber of the United States Army Air Corps. It takes long aerial route leaving behind smoke trails. It explodes on land. (World War II period).
A Controllable Glide Bomb GB-4 kept in a laboratory at a United States Army Air Corps base. Components of the Glide Bomb GB-4 seen when its striking head is opened. A B-17 bomber of the U.S. Air Force takes off. Experts locate target from inside the bomber. Television recorder and other instruments inside the bomber. The bomb glides along an aerial route leaving smoke trails behind and explodes at the target. (World War II period).
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