A political broadcast about Richard Nixon on television in the United States. It states about delusion of people by government program. A man sleeps on a bench. A man stands near the American flag. A boy looks out through a window. Men at work. A man with a boy.
Richard Nixon political commercial on television in the United States. Voice over states that Nixon is the best candiate to speak for America. Still image scenes include a crowd of Americans gathered. The crowd marches. Leaders of several foreign countries including Leonid Brezhnev of the Soviet Union and Fidel Castro of Cuba . Two telephones on a table. Many microphones on stands. The President's official seal. The White House in Washington DC.
Visit of Leonid Brezhnev, General Secretary Communist Party of the Soviet Union to United States. He meets President Richard Nixon. Naval officers on alert at Navy Yard. Nixon and Brezhnev arrive at Navy Yard and board a yacht Sequoia. Flags of United States and Soviet Union on mast of the yacht. Both the leaders stand on its deck. Press photographers take photos as Sequoia cruises down Potomac.
A vast ship building program to be undertaken by the Maritime Commission in the United States. The newly appointed Chairman of the Maritime Commission Joseph P. Kennedy, speaks on the proposed plan to build new merchant ships. He emphasizes the necessity for a complete refurbishing of the Merchant Marine. Outmoded merchant ships built during World War I. Several ships docked at the New York harbor. People cheer and wave as the new ocean liner SS Rex sets sail. Flagship of the United States Line, the Leviathan, in dry dock. The British ocean liner Queen Mary leaves for Europe. Foreign merchant ships entering and leaving the harbor.
The Northwestern United States. Animation : A map shows the north western states. Canadian provinces on the map. The Rocky Mountains.
The President of the United States Franklin Delano Roosevelt addresses the nation in the United States. President Roosevelt advocates National Conscription (military draft) for material reasons and for reasons of morale. He defends the principles of the Atlantic Charter. He summons the United Nations to protect their own sanctity and that of small nations as well. Men wearing head phones listen to the speech.
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