Notre Dame starts their spring training under new coach Terry Brennan in South Bend, Indiana. 'Good Luck Terry' written on a board. Players on the ground.
Football game between college teams of Notre Dame and Tulane in South Bend, Indiana, United States. The game in progress. Crowd gathers at the stadium to watch the game. Fans cheer teams. Notre Dame takes on Tulane. A car parked along a side of the grounds. Crowd applauds.
Employees occupy plant in sit-down (or sit-in) labor strike in the South Bend, Indiana. Men and women workers sit idly at their machines in the Bendix Brake Products factory. Aerial views of factory. Exteriors of a building with workers milling around. Workers refuse to leave the plant at all while their organization demands the dissolution of a company union. People deliver food and supplies to workers, passing the goods through open windows. A striking worker holds his daughter who has been brought for a visit.
Brand new automobiles are demolished in spectacular head-on collisions as part of the proving process of modern motor car manufacture. A motor car is rolled sideways down a 45 degree hill, righted and then driven off. A camera man records the stunt with a film camera. A motor car driven at high speed during the test. Tires are blown at 70 miles an hour. All kinds of skidding is indulged in from 30 miles an hour up. Two motor cars are driven at full speed, drivers jump out, resulting in a head on collision.
Film starts showing a steam driven hammer forging a Studebaker automobile engine part from a flaming hot steel ingot. Two men, in protective clothing and gloves, work together to position a hot steel billet under a steam hammer to forge it into an engine part. Next, a factory worker uses a chain hoist to remove a rough engine crankshaft from a stack. The crankshaft is moved to a machine shop where it is placed in a type of lathe and machined. Closeup of the crankshaft rotating in the machining process. Next, a machinist places the crankshaft between two spindles and spins it by hand to check its balance during rotation. A slate states that the gear cutting machine to be seen next was invented by a woman. Closeup of a gear being cut with cutting tool cooled by fluid. A huge milling machine made by Ingersoll Company of Rockford, Illinois, is shown. Closeup of it milling six engine blocks at the same time. Next, a drilling machine is seen making 36 holes at the same time in an engine part. (Note: The comment about gear cutting machinery and a woman, undoubtedly refers to Catherine “Kate” Anselm Gleason (1865-1933). She worked in the family business which burgeoned as a world wide gear manufacturer when her father, William Gleason invented and patented the first bevel gear planer machine in 1874. During the restrictive culture of her time, she helped shape the global cutting tools industry as a sales engineer for her family’s gear cutting business.)
College football game between University of Notre Dam Fighting Irish with Northern University Wildcats, South Bend. Game in progress. Crowd cheer in stand. Fighting Irish beats Wildcats with a score of 26-6.
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