U.S. 35th Infantry soldiers in Pusan, Korea during Korean War. Columns of U.S. soldiers march at a railroad station in Pusan. Soldiers board a train. Wounded soldiers are helped out of train by U.S. medics. Wounded soldiers on litter cases are taken through the train windows and placed aboard ambulances. Wounded South Korean soldiers seated in boxcars. Wounded soldier being helped from ambulance by other men. A brick schoolhouse.
U.S. Generals and soldiers in Taegu during Korean War. U.S. General J Lawton Collins leaves EUSAK (Eighth United States Army in Korea) headquarters and gets into jeep and drives off. Colonel Guy Melroy of U.S. 19th Infantry Division and Lieutenant Colonel Henry Mauz of 24th Division Artillery look at map and confer. Three soldiers at 75 recoil rifle on Kum River line.
U.S. Generals with pioneer of American commercial radio and television David Sarnoff in an office in the United States. Interior of the office shows U.S. Army Major General Spencer Akin, Chief Signal Officer, with United States Air Force General Harrison Thyng, David Sarnoff and others.
U.S. Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson makes a speech from his desk at the Pentagon in Virginia. He mentions Korea and states that, as always, Labor has offered patriotic services which has helped to keep America free through the years. As in the past, Labor and the armed forces are one, willing to work and fight together, and die, if need be, in that cause.
Exhibit about African American military service personnel at Pentagon in Virginia, United States. American lawyer John P. Davis, publisher of the magazine 'Our World'. Poster of jet fighter aircraft pilots. White and African American servicemen, servicewomen, and officers gather in the building. They look at an exhibition of photographs which pictures the activities and contributions of African Americans in the armed forces of the United States military. Mr John P. Davis shakes hands with Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson. Mr Davis, Mr Johnson and an African American official at the ceremony as they cut the ribbon which opens the exhibition.
An exhibit at the Pentagon in Virginia, focusing on the contributions of African Americans in the United States military. American lawyer John P. Davis, publisher of the magazine 'Our World' stands with the United States Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson. Davis is introduced to Johnson. Mr Davis speaks at the microphone and explains the idea behind the exhibition of the photographs. Mr Johnson addresses people and talks about the exhibition, referencing President Truman's Executive Order 9981 regarding racial integration in the military, ending the practice of racial segregation among troops. Johnson and Davis cut the tape to inaugurate the exhibition.