Native American Indian children demonstrate skills in the United States. An American Boy Scout in uniform kneels to prepare a fire lay and then light the fire using flint and steel. A Native American Indian boy shows rope and lasso skills, twirling a rope around himself and in the air. A boy stretches threads across a frame and shows beading skills as he makes a Native American Indian beaded band or sash. A Native American Indian Boy Scout in uniform braids and splices a lanyard. A Boy Scout in uniform shows the making of a cord belt from 28 strands of twine.
U.S. Army MASH (Mobile Army Surgical Hospital) at K-51 Inje Airfield in South Korea during the Korean War. Interiors of a surgical tent shows U.S. Marine Corps 1st Medical Battalion surgeons putting a mask over a wounded soldier's face to administer anesthesia, and work during a surgical operation. The doctors pass clamps and scissors during the surgery operation.
A film describes functions of Professional Sections of a U.S. Army evacuation hospital in the European Theater during World War II. Enlisted Men take X-ray pictures of a wounded soldier in the X-ray tent of the evacuation tent. Doctors examine the X-rays in a tent. Patients are taken to pre-operative tents where they are examined. Instruments are readied and arrangements are made before the surgery is performed. The patients are placed on operating tables in a tent. Surgeons operate on the patients.
Amphibious landings of Allied soldiers in Agropoli, Italy during the Italian Campaign of World War II. U.S. soldiers of 34th Infantry Division and British soldiers move down the gangplank of a ship. Soldiers embark on LCTs (Landing Craft Tanks) which move them close to a beach, at which point the soldiers disembark into DUKWs (six-wheel drive amphibious trucks). DUKWs loaded with soldiers move towards the shore. They move up a beach. Infantrymen disembark from the DUKWs and move along the beach.
This training film highlights activities inside U.S. FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) crime and ballistics analysis laboratory. Serial number on butt of pistol. An FBI agent in crime laboratory shows a number on strip of paper and scratch numbers on a slab. The agent cleans the slab to recover the covered numbers of the handgun. Numbers as seen from the microscope.
This training film highlights activities inside the U.S. FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation) crime laboratory. An ashtray with a used carbon paper. Questioned Documents Unit (QDU) personnel at the FBI laboratory place it under a glass cover to preserve it. View of the carbon paper. QDU personnel work between rows of filing cabinets.
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