18:56
Fundamentals Of Small Arms Weapons (1945) - Part 1
Fundamentals Of Small Arms Weapons (1945) - Part 1
Department of Defense PIN 29862 FUNDAMENTALS OF SMALL ARMS WEAPONS - PART I THE CYCLE OF OPERATION PROCESSES OF CHAMBERING, LOCKING, FIRING, AND COCKING EXPLAINED IN DETAIL - FUNCTIONAL MODEL BUILT UP TO ILLUSTRATE EACH STEP.
3:12
Out Of The Frying Pan Into The Fire
Out Of The Frying Pan Into The Fire
Minnie Mouse and Pluto save Grease for War effort Courtesy: Prelinger Archives Producer: Disney (Walt) Production Company: War Activities Committee Motion Picture Industry
36:03
Operation Upshot-Knothole - Nuclear Test Film (1953)
Operation Upshot-Knothole - Nuclear Test Film (1953)
Courtesy: US Department of Energy 0800015 - Operation Upshot-Knothole - 1953 - 35:45 - Color- This operation conducted at the Nevada Test Site consisted of 11 atmospheric tests. There were three airdrops, seven tower tests, and one airburst. Conducted between March 17 and June 4, 1953, this operation involved the testing of new theories, using both fission and fusion devices. A new and revolutionary method of producing deliverable thermonuclear weapons was successfully tested. Approximately 21000 Department of Defense military and civilian personnel participated in Operation Upshot-Knothole as part of the Desert Rock V exercise. Unfortunately, Operation Upshot-Knothole, particularly the HARRY test, drew a great deal of criticism as resultant fallout levels produced increased offsite radiation exposures. The tests comprising the 1953 Operation Upshot-Knothole were as follows: ANNIE, March 17, tower, weapons related, 16 kilotons (kt) NANCY, March 24, tower, weapons related, 24 kt RUTH, March 31, tower, weapons related, 200 tons DIXIE, April 6, airdrop, weapons related, 11 kt RAY, April 11, tower, weapons related, 200 tons BADGER, April 18, tower, weapons related, 23 kt SIMON, April 25, tower, weapons related, 43 kt ENCORE, May 8, airdrop, weapons effects, 27 kt HARRY, May 19, tower, weapons related, 32 kt GRABLE, May 25, fired from 280 mm gun, airburst, weapons related, 15 kt CLIMAX, June 4, airdrop, weapons related, 61 kt
27:57
The Battle Of La Drang Valley (1965)
The Battle Of La Drang Valley (1965)
This film is about the First Cavalry Division in Vietnam. ARC 653177 / LI 263.2408 National Archives - The Battle of Ia Drang Valley - National Security Council. Central Intelligence Agency. (09/18/1947 - 12/04/1981).
30:36
The Invisible Battleground (1962)
The Invisible Battleground (1962)
EFFORTS AND FACILITIES AT ELECTRONIC ENVIRONMENTAL TEST FACILITY, FT. HUACHUCA, TO SOLVE RADIO INTERFERENCE PROBLEM OF THE FIELD ARMY.
27:01
Code Of Conduct - Article III - To Resist
Code Of Conduct - Article III - To Resist
EXPLAINS THE PURPOSE AND APPLICATION OF PRINCIPLE OF "RESISTANCE" WHEN CAPTURED BY THE ENEMY - DANGERS OF ACCEPTING FAVORS IN ENEMY CAMP. Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Assistant Chief of Staff for Communications-Electronics. US Army Audiovisual Agency. (1967 - 1974) ARC Identifier 24294 / Local Identifier 111-AIF-7 CODE OF CONDUCT - ARTICLE III - TO RESIST
27:11
Research And Development In The Arctic - The Big Picture
Research And Development In The Arctic - The Big Picture
National Archives and Records Administration ARC Identifier 2569635 / Local Identifier 111-TV-366 Big Picture: Research and Development in the Arctic DVD Copied by Katie Filbert. "THE BIG PICTURE" cameramen follow Army engineers into Artic wastelands -- The mission of the First Engineer Arctic Task Force of the Army's Corps of Engineers is dramatically filmed by cameramen of THE BIG PICTURE in this film presentation. Across dangerous wastes of ice and snow the camera lens follows these engineer soldiers as they construct roads stretching deeper and deeper into the Arctic. As Army civilian scientists and soldiers of the First Engineer Arctic Task Force penetrate deeper into the Arctic vastness, new problems and new dangers present themselves. In some places, the snow and ice covering the land prevent the engineers from reaching the dirt, or fill, needed for road building. Men and vehicles must travel over the snow. But as the shape of the land far below alters, hidden changes take place in the unseen snow layers underfoot. Dangerous, man-killing crevasses -- great vaults and hundred-foot caverns -- are formed. All this and more is captured on film for THE BIG PICTURE. It is a challenge, a frontier which must be conquered. American ingenuity, determination, and scientific skill are dedicated to this task.
2:52
Nuclear Vault
Nuclear Vault
Welcome to the highly guarded - air-tight Nuclear Vault Like the Fort Knox, its barricaded from an assault Like the Dura Mater - double-nuclear envelope It's the home of the Library of Chromosomes Securely protected - like bullions of gold Like City Blueprints - DNA originals When it's transcribing messages in form of codes In the nucleolus - RNA to ribosomes. The nucleus of a cell contains genetic information in the form of DNA. DNA is arranged in a loose and diffuse state called Chromatins which are later condensed before cell division into chromosomes. The Nuclear Membrane is a double-walled structure (the double lipid bi-layer aka nuclear envelope) within a cell to protect even those things within the cytoplasm of the cell. It protects the genetic information from damage - damage that can cause programmed cell death (apoptosis) or even worse - cancer - if it damages the contents of the nucleus. Ribosomes and RNA are also in the nucleus - ribosomes are used in translation of messanger RNA into proteins which occurs in the cytoplasm, but ribosomes are assembled in the nucleus (nucleolus) via rRNA. Transcription occurs in the nucleus of the cell - where specific DNA genes codes are used to make mRNA. The nucleus medium is called nucleoplasm which is similar to the cytoplasmic fluid in the cytoplasm. Nuclear pores allow only certain small molecules to pass in and out of the nucleus. www.facebook.com/themdmc www.themdmc.com www.twitter.com/themdmcs For promo use only <b>...</b>
28:35
Interrogation Techniques (1969) Part 1
Interrogation Techniques (1969) Part 1
Synopsis: Shows how an interrogation team plans, conducts, and terminates interviews with guerrilla prisoners to extract information vital to military planning, focusing on following approach techniques: direct, threat and rescue, and monotony and repetition. - National Archives and Records Administration - ARC Identifier 4523800 / Local Identifier 330-DVIC-28917 - Interrogation Techniques: Part I - Department of Defense. Office of the Secretary of Defense. (09/18/1947 - ).
12:11
The House In The Middle (1954)
The House In The Middle (1954)
Atomic tests at the Nevada Proving Grounds (later the Nevada Test Site) show effects on well-kept homes, homes filled with trash and combustibles, and homes painted with reflective white paint. Asserts that cleanliness is an essential part of civil defense preparedness and that it increased survivability. Selected for the 2002 National Film Registry of "artistically, culturally, and socially significant" films.
9:15
Duck And Cover (1951) Bert The Turtle Civil Defense Film
Duck And Cover (1951) Bert The Turtle Civil Defense Film
Duck and Cover 1951 Civil Defense Film with Bert the Turtle
28:57
Special Forces Advisor - The Big Picture
Special Forces Advisor - The Big Picture
Night has closed in over the Zagreb Mountains of northern Iran. The sound of a plane is heard. Inside the plane Iranian Special Forces paratroopers prepare to jump into a maneuver area. There is a sense of urgency as last minute commands in Farsi are given by the lone American among them, a United State Army officer. How this officer, Captain Paul Wineman, is trained in the military and language skills needed for his urgent task overseas is the subject of this week's documentary, "Special Forces Advisor." THE BIG PICTURE camera crews followed Captain Wineman through training at Fort Bragg's Special Warfare School, the Army Language School at Monterey, California, and on to Iran. Here is a revealing insight into the way the Army trains men for special missions... and few are as special as those of a Special Forces Advisor.National Archives and Records Administration ARC Identifier 2569814 / Local Identifier 111-TV-585 Big Picture: Special Forces Advisor Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations. US Army Audiovisual Center. (ca. 1974 - 05/15/1984).
14:43
A Is For Atom (1952)
A Is For Atom (1952)
Although the "Atoms for Peace" campaign was formally launched in 1957, corporate America began to promote peaceful uses of atomic energy as early as the first few months after Hiroshima. A Is For Atom, an artifact of this effort, takes this highly loaded and threatening issue straight to the public in an attempt to "humanize" the figure of the atom. A Is For Atom speaks of five atomic "giants" which "man has released from within the atom's heart": the warrior and destroyer, the farmer, the healer, the engineer and the research worker. Each is pictured as a majestic, shimmering outline figure towering over the earth. "But all are within man's power Ñ subject to his command," says the narrator reassuringly, and our future depends "on man's wisdom, on his firmness in the use of that power." General Electric, a long-time manufacturer of electric appliances, power generation plants, and nuclear weapon components, is staking a claim here, asserting their interest in managing and exploiting this new and bewildering technology. Its pitch: this is powerful, frightening, near-apocalyptic technology, but managed with firmness, it can be profitable and promising. This "Trust us with the control of technology, and we'll give you progress without end" pitch resembles what we've seen in films like General Motors' To New Horizons (on the Ephemeral Films disc). But the automobile, of course, wasn't a weapon of mass destruction. In its first two years of release, A Is For Atom was seen by <b>...</b>
8:57
Our Cities Must Fight (1951)
Our Cities Must Fight (1951)
Our Cities Must Fight 1951 Vintage War Film
27:13
A Day Called X (1957)
A Day Called X (1957)
Dramatized atomic evacuation of Portland, Oregon. en.wikipedia.org
8:25
Target Invisible
Target Invisible
Illustrates the use of radar on a dramatized mission over Japan.
18:17
Rounds Of Authority (1997)
Rounds Of Authority (1997)
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center gov.ntis.ava20354vnb1 VP-005-97 Rounds of Authority This video addresses conventional, specialty, and exotic shotgun ammunition. It describes the capabilities and shows the effects of the various rounds on an assortment of substances. Producer: Randy Meeker
77:54
China: The Roots of Madness (1967)
China: The Roots of Madness (1967)
National Archives and Records Administration China: The Roots of Madness National Security Council. Central Intelligence Agency. (09/18/1947 - 12/04/1981) ARC Identifier 616322 / Local Identifier 263-69. This film covers China's political history including Mao Tse-tung, the Boxer Rebellion, and the Nationalist - Communist victory.
33:42
Chinese Nuclear Testing Film (1966) Translated
Chinese Nuclear Testing Film (1966) Translated
National Archives and Records Administration Chinese film Records of US Air Force Commands, Activities, and Organizations, 1900 - 2003 Chinese Film 1966 ARC Identifier 72247 / Local Identifier 342-USAF-50534.