U.S. Army Air Corps Third Aviation Instruction Center in Issoudun, France during World War I. Students seated in the cockpit of a dual-control airplane. The engine starts. The airplane taxis on an airfield. It takes off and is in flight.
The Second Aviation Instruction Center in Tours, France during World War I. Students and officers standing near a gun mounted on a tripod stand. An officer instructs a student. The student aims the gun at a moving target. A man with a gun arrives near a building. Photographs of targets. A man seated at a desk. Another man arrives near him and looks at negatives of the photographs.
The Second Aviation Instruction Center in Tours, France during World War I. Students lying in prone positions aim guns. An officer instructs them. Other students aim guns mounted on wooden stands. The students fire at target boards. Men note areas hit by gun shots on the target boards.
The Second Aviation Instruction Center in Tours, France during World War I. Students stand at attention on an airfield. They march in formation. The students salute. Other students take out carts loaded with bags out of a building. United States Army Air Corps Lieutenant Colonel Carl Andrew Spaatz inspects aviators and mechanics.
The Second Aviation Instruction Center in Tours, France during World War I. A wrecked airplane on an airfield. Men standing near the wrecked British Sopwith fighter biplane. Wrecked parts of the airplane and debris.
A training film on supply process of equipment from landing boats in the United States. Markers on a beach. Transport and cargo vessels arrive near the beach. Animation depicts the vessels beaching. Boats in assembly areas. Boats along the side of a landing craft. The Traffic Control Officer and Beach Masters are holding a cargo ticket. An Landing Craft Vehicle Personnel (LCVP) taking on a cargo of rations. A red flag on a boat. The boat proceeds to boat control traffic stations. Soldiers on the beach. The Traffic Control Officer directs the flow of supplies on the beach. The Beach Master's job is to see that the supplies are unloaded quickly and efficiently. He receives a copy of the cargo ticket. The cargo ticket gives information about how much and what cargo the boat is carrying. The Traffic Control Officer dispatches boats to the beach. The boats approach the beach. They are directed by the Traffic Control Officer. (World War II period).
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