A scientific documentary depicts ancient Egypt. View of a rocky terrain along the River Nile. View of Valley of the Kings. An ancient palace built near the river. The exteriors of the palace with a statue of a woman ruler named Queen Ankhkheperure Neferneferuaten at the entrance. Engraved carvings of Nefferneferuaten dressed like a man with a fake beard. A sculpture of her son Thutmose III who became the next king of Egypt. Gold utensils and pots for perfume storage. A statue of King Thutmose III in gold. Two large damaged statues at the entrance.
U.S. Army General Matthew B Ridgway gives a speech on blood donations in Japan. General Ridgway seated at a desk with the American and two other flags in the background. He thanks American people for blood donations that have helped thousands of soldiers.
U.S. Army General Matthew B. Ridgway gives a speech on blood donations in Japan. General Ridgway seated at desk with the American and two other flags in the background. He talks about the shipment of blood being as valuable as ammunition. He talks about how the blood is transported. General Ridgway thanks American people for blood donations that have saved the lives of thousands of soldiers. The General ends the speech with a plea to the home front to continue the support of the blood donor program.
Narrated feature on U.S. Army activities during the war in Korea. Focus on the United States Eigth Army. Newspaper cutting in background stating the involvement of UN Forces and U.S. Combat Team in war. 8th Army soldiers hold rifles and move forward. Narrator describes operation of the Army Combat Team starting with the Infantry, and supported by tanks, artillery, and aircraft. Rapid sequence of images of various weaponry in action including flame throwers, M1 Garand rifle, Browning Automatic rifle, mortars, machine guns, bazookas, recoilless rifles. Various heavy artillery and tanks are also shown. Close up view of Soviet Russian soldiers marching in Red Square, Moscow, during a parade. U.S. Army soldiers are shown in battle in Korea, including in cold conditions on snow covered ground.
Operation of a U.S. Army Combat Team from the Eighth United States Army (EUSA) during the Korean War. Infantry soldiers walk through rocky mountains carrying guns. Soldiers look through binoculars at observation posts and relay targeting information to artillery. U.S. Army artillery firing on enemy positions. Infantry dug in on a trench line. Army observation plane in the sky scouting out target sites. Views of artillery being loaded, aimed, and fired. Tanks and infantry on the move together as an Armored Infantry Unit. Narrator discusses relationship between infantry troops and tanks and how they work together as a team. Mortar units aiming and firing. At an airfield, weapons are loaded onto planes including P-51 Mustangs and jets. Planes being fueled. 5 inch rockets and 50 caliber machine guns are loaded, along with Napalm and demolition bombs. View of pilots in combat briefing and then exiting briefing to fly mission. P-51 Mustangs taking off from airfield. Mustang fighters in the air and views of Mustangs firing on enemy positions with guns and bombs. Air-Ground Liaison Team shown in a jeep on the ground providing targeting information to planes via radio.
Regimental Unit of Eighth United States Army during the Korean War. Trucks of a Regimental Unit passing along roads. Two officers looking field maps and conversing. Soldiers walk in line followed by army tanks on the road side. Tanks cross streams. Artillery and mortars seen firing on targets. Officers standing in front of maps and discussing tactics. View of General Matthew Ridgway consulting maps with other officers and then boarding a small airplane. Armored Task Force Team activities: One soldier technician stands near the radar at an army truck while others work inside the truck. Soldiers seen in a bunker, looking through a device that detects location of hostile fire. Soldiers place microphones in the ground, to detect enemy activity. They run cables away from the microphones. Two soldiers look at a paper and talk over radio, reporting information learned from the microphones. Soldiers release a hydrogen balloon carrying a radiosonde device for measuring atmospheric conditions, such as wind, humidity and pressure. Technician seated beside a radio receiving device recording weather readings.