Synopsis
01 Hamburg - again Amusement Park Carousel, mountain and Valley Railway, whirligig. A laughing girl, close-up. Children looking for. Operation of the roller coaster. In the evening people in front of the sausage stand. A dice cup game, great. Enlightened, revolving carousel.
(28 m) 02 Berlin: prelude to the trial participants of the International Court of Justice arrive in Berlin. They study files and conduct negotiations.
(22 m) 03 United States - storm wind on Florida Sturmgepeitschte poplar trees and agitated sea. A Palm Crown bends in the wind. Fallen trees are on the road. Car drives through flooded streets. Fires of houses At night. Images of destruction of the landscape, and on the Richmond naval airport. Wreckage of aircraft hangars.
(32 m) 4th London - rally for world peace total view of the Albert Hall in London. Big meeting at the Albert Hall. It speaks Clemes Attlee. The participant clapping. Then talk to Eden, Lord Cecil, and the representatives of America's Stettinius.
the elevator guide strike (61 m) 5th New York - aerial view of New York. Skyscrapers, partially photographed from below. Demonstration train runs through the streets. People like to stay in Office and reception halls. Lowered a package on a rope with food. Tired stair rising girls. You are on a high balcony and look down.
(22 m) 6th England - Churchill back in London a plane lands. Churchill rises in uniform from the plane. He is greeted by Lady Churchill. Churchill covers a coat.
(15 m) 07 Austria - costume festival in the Salzkammergut region band. Serving of beer. A child drinks from a large Cup. Traditional dances are performed. Men dancing a Schuhplattler. Local people and soldiers. Saws and hammers as dancing. Cute child's face, close-up. People on a swinging pirate ship. Folk dances.
(64 m) 08. England - the fastest airplane plane Havilland vampires on the airfield. Nozzle in close-up. Start to the test flight. Flight of the airplane with aerobatic deposits. Observers on the airfield. Landing.
(51 m) 09 Holland today a windmill. Before that, a sailboat passes by. Channels. A man pulls hard on the Riverside path. Destruction in ports and shipyards. Ship wrecks. The chimneys of a power plant. Remaining are foundations of a plant. Flooded villages. A disused factory. The wreckage of the train station of Scheveningen. A slow-moving train. A road train with many supporters through the streets. Cars, pedestrians and children on bicycles. Bicycle spokes with temporary tires, great. People at the Schuster. Brands are devalued. A woman and a child from a window. Customers at the bakery. Potato diet, screen-filling. Various goods are served over the counter. Buyers leave the shop. Food in buckets and pots. An old woman cooks on an iron stove. Boys collect wood. Bushes are hacked off. Nurses pulling a wagon with wood. Malnourished patients in the hospital. A boy and a girl in Dutch costume on the street. Flying Dutch flag, great.
(146 m) 10 Tunis - religion celebration in North Africa Tunis city recordings. Empty streets. People sleeping on the street. The mosque. A gun is fired. Lively streets and parades. Representatives of the French Government and indigenous rulers. Arms to eat on the road. The Passport is presented. A veiled woman with a child on her arm. Pageant in Algiers. The mounted guard.
(45 m) 11 Bayern - newspaper founded in Munich the Munich Town Hall. The Commander of the message and control function Colonel MacMahon speaks to the editors of the Sueddeutsche Zeitung. The interpreter reads the speech, O sound. Colonel MacMahon presented the license and speaks, O sound. The damaged building of the Publisher. The Münchner Kindl presented the Colonel an Antrittstrunk.Die Foundry. Colonel MacMahon throws the lead casting mould of Hitler's "Mein Kampf" into the furnace. The first printing plate for the new paper is made from the lead. Colonel Mac Mahon is the rotary machine. Revolving rotation machine. The first number of the finished newspaper runs out of the machine. Mayor Dr. Scharnagl reads the Süddeutsche Zeitung.
(86 m)
Narration
1 amusement park in Hamburg at Hamburg Dammtor station is recently. for the first time for years, an amusement park was opened. There is a mountain and Valley Railway, carousels, air swings, sideshows and stalls of all kinds. The air is filled with organ music, town crier cries, and in the evening, everything is festively illuminated. Who sacrifices a meat counter, can afford to also benefit from a pair of hot Vienna sausage.
02. Berlin: Met prelude to the trial in Berlin of the International Court of Justice for the war crimes to a first preparatory meeting - a quiet prelude to one of the most dramatic processes of history.
These are the men who will be sitting in Nuremberg with Göring, Hess and the other leaders of the Third Reich to court. Before them the 24 main defendants against the most serious accusation will have on November 20 - responsible for himself -, which is raised by people against people.
03. Storm wind over Florida with a speed of over two hundred hours kilometers a cyclone on both coasts of Florida racing United States. He shredded the Palm trees, crippling millions of window panes, and flushed the harvest into the sea.
In many places, the storm ignited fires, against any attempt to combat was futile.
04. London rally for world peace in a large gathering in London's Albert Hall senior officials of the United Nations taken the word to the measures for safeguarding world peace, as they are set at the Conference of San Francisco.
Initially, the British Prime Minister Attlee said. He explained that the fulfilment of the constitutions of San Francisco is the Supreme and most important goal of British foreign policy.
Mr. Eden stated that today no nation alone can stand, that all countries on each other its instructed. It was the common adherence to the decisions of San Francisco the only and last chance of peoples to live in permanent peace.
Then said the Lord Cecil, an old champion of world peace. He called "an end to the war. The Nations of the world must either to each other or perish". At the end of the American representative of the United Nations, Stettinius. His speech culminated in the demand "America, England and the other United Nations may cooperate on this huge work in faith in a better world, and in the spirit of those brave men who shed their blood on many battlefields of all over the world. They died, in order To give us the possibility to the creation and protection of world peace that is worthy of their sacrifice".
5th two hundred elevator guide in the strike came New York strike the elevator guide In the skyscraper district of New York. They explained, if they would not increase their salaries would remain too - down. Some stalwarts businessmen simply recorded an improvised Office operating in the lobby of her building, others slept like lost climbers in their work spaces between heaven and Earth, and the meals were sent up them, as formerly the Tower guards in basket. Four especially eager Secretaries tried to climb up their offices via the stairs. But they found: walking into the 74th floor to rise, would down a quite.
The strike is now included.
06. England Churchill back in London from a holiday in the South of returning, Winston Churchill arrived at the London aerodrome in Hendon. He will be at the sessions of the new Parliament take part - No more as Prime Minister, but as the leader of the opposition party. His family and A lot of friends came to his welcome on the airfield.
07. Austria costume festival in Bad Ischl Salzkammergut region was Instead of the first Festival of peace. In the circles of the local audience, many American visitors admired the scenic costumes and lively dances of the Salzkammergut.
08 England the fastest aircraft the British aircraft, the "Havilland vampires" is the fastest machine in the world. Here, the principle of Düsenantriebs is trained to the highest efficiency.
The "Havilland vampires" is created in the same workshop that produced the famous "mosquito"bomber during the war.
These images show one of the first test flights of the "Vampire".
09 Holland Holland, No more is the comfort and clumsiness, the picturesque folk customs and seek the country, Holland today is poor and hungry...
The Holland maritime nation had once proud ships, most modern shipyards, perfectly landscaped ports. Today the shipyards are desolate, blocked ports, ship and materials are only dead lump of shredded iron... Holland has challenged this destruction through anything. As a country that is peace-loving and innocent, it was invaded, destroyed and looted.
In these power plants, factories, industrial plants were high-quality machines. The machines were taken... and in many cases not only the machines: whole building production facilities and assembly halls were removed. Only the foundations were the Dutch.
In centuries of hard work, Holland had defeated the elemental of water and made a helper of working people. The enemy unleashed the chore of gebändigten flooding: reclaimed fertile land, the oceans, sea is again: channels, the lifelines of Holland, were flooded, the dams broken, destroyed the locks. The enemy was forced to flee - but his deadly inheritance remained.
This factory produced fertilizers, which 1 1/2 million tons of potatoes annually secured the Dutch nutrition. the whole factory was transferred to Germany. Holland is starving.
This was once the station of Scheveningen. A Dutch passenger train looks today.
In the cities, the image is friendly. The road starts to revive: a few trams... for the purpose of power saving with many followers... A few vehicles and many pedestrians... lots of bicycles. Bikes of every imaginable kind and variety... including A lot that do all honor the inventiveness of their owners. This is a bike - and it even works! This is the bleaker side of the city, whose residents lacking most. Who has a few shoes capable of mending, have to wait for months on the repair. 6 years no new clothes, no shoes - and now precious brands must be returned for repair of hardly portable scraps.
During the German occupation, the population had the struggle with hunger. Even now, the food situation is serious, although foods from England and America arrive. Every Dutch receives a week's supply of 4 pounds bread... and 4 pounds potatoes. In addition, there are 3/4 pounds of fat and some sugar, chocolate and biscuits. Meat in cans and everything - even the salt - only is strictly rationed.
But also for rationed food, you need money and fuel. Many people do not have both. Community kitchens were established for this daily to give them a warm meal. It consists primarily of potatoes - and that means new brand delivery.
Who belongs to the lucky few who have even a stove and some firewood — he is one of his pieces of wood such as gems. It is still good because this old woman: she has grandchildren who go for it on the get Zauche. Wood - almost the only fuel of the country - is currently the most valuable goods of Holland. And so as the children must collect it for the grandmother, the nurses must do it for your hospital.
Because the hospitals sindüberfüllt... fully with the victims of years of malnutrition. Tuberculosis rages... and many other diseases that are descended from 1940 of this earlier health-packed people.
The children of Holland grew up hungry and joyless. You have the right to a better and happier future.
10 Tunis religious festival in North Africa a month-long reigned in the cities of North Africa deep silence. It was the time of "Ramadan", the time of repentance and fasting.
Now, the mosques announce the beginning of great religious celebrations in Tunis.
The French Government representatives participate... and the native Princes.
Everywhere To find Instead of food distributions, because according to the law of the Koran, the poor must enjoy the joys of the Festival.
Here, too, the food are scarce. Everyone must present the passport so that the distribution is even going on.
In Algiers, a great pageant decides the religious celebrations.
11 Süddeutsche Zeitung In Munich City Hall was Instead of the handing-over of the licenses to the first Bavarian daily independently conducted by Germans. The head of the press Department of the American press Control Office, welcomed the representatives of the military Government, the civil administration, the American and German press, and the three editors of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung", all of which were persecuted because of their political stance by the Nazis.
Then directed Colonel MacMahon, Commander of the news control system, the word to the editor. His speech is transmitted in German. Colonel MacMahon presented the licenses... The publishing house on the dyers Graben is severely damaged. The printing presses had to be in the basement. According to an old custom, the guests are welcomed by the Münchner Kindl belongs to which Of course also a mug.
In the Foundry finds Instead of an act of symbolic importance: the leaden moulds of Adolf of Hitler's "Mein Kampf" wanders into the furnace.
The pressure plate of the first free newspaper in Bavaria is created from the lead of the Hitler book.
Now, Colonel MacMahon lets run the presses... The first number of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung" is finished... Mayor Dr. Scharnagl belongs to the first readers of the newspaper, in the Munich again freely and independently, his voice rising.
Narration (English)
01. Hamburg fun fair
For the first time in years a large fun fair has been opened at the Dammtorbahnhof in Hamburg. The attractions comprise a scenic railway, roundabouts, swings and numerous side-shows and stands of all kinds. The air is filled with the blaring music of barrel-organs and the roucous spiel of the barkers ... and in the evening the whole place is blazing with lights.
Whoever gives up a meat ticket can also enjoy a pair of Wiener Würstchen.
02. War crimes
In Berlin the Allied Tribunal for the war crimes assembled for a preliminary meeting - quiet prelude to one of the most dramatic trials of history.
These are the men who, in Nuremberg, will pass sentence over Göring, Hess and the other chieftains of the Third Reich. Before them the 24 major criminals will have to defend themselves against the most damning accusation which has ever be levelled by man against man.
03. Hurricane hits Florida
Driven by a 140 mile-an-hour wind, one of the worst hurricanes ever rages over both coasts of Florida ... tears the palm trees to shreds, shatters millions of windows and washes the crops into the sea.
Pires rage and are fanned by the gale.
The U.S. Naval base at Richmond suffers the most serious damage. Many buildings are destroyed and hundreds of planes wrecked.
04. Albert Hall
In the Albert Hall in London the United Nations Association held a large rally in support of the San Franzisco Charter and to discuss measures to guard and maintain world peace.
The meeting was opened by the British Prime Minister Atlee.
He pronounced the realisation of the San Franzisci Charter as the first and foremost aim of British politics.
Mr. Eden maintained that to-day no single nation can stand by itself, that all countries are interdependent. Therefore, the mutual observance of the S.F. resolutions is the last and only chance for all nations to live together in permanent peace.
Lord Cecil, veteran worker for world peace, is the next speaker. "No more wars!", he dries. "The people of the world must combine or perish!"
Finally, the American representative to the United Nations, Stettinius. His pseach culmintes in the appeal: America, England and the other United Nations must collaborate in this tremendones task ... in the faith in a better futurex and in the spirit of those brave who gave their lives on the battlefileds all over the world. They died to make it possible for us to establish and maintain a world piece which is worthy of their sacrifice."
05. Elevator strike
2000 elevator operators of N.Y.s highest skyscrapers struck and announced if their pay was'nt raised, they too, would stay grounded.
A few enterpriding business men worked as best they could in the lobby of the Empire State Building. Others slept like marooned mountainers in their up-stairs rooms between heaven and earth and had their food sent up to them in baskets like the tower wardens of a medieval castle. Four zealous secretaries tried to climb the stairs to their offices, but declared finally: to walk up to the 74th floor really got the down.
The strike has been called off meanwhile.
06. Churchill back in London
Back from a holiday in the South, Winston Churchill arrives at Hendon airport near London. He will attend the meetings of the new Parliament - no longer as Premier but as leader of the opposition. His family and friends greet him at the airport.
07. Country fair in Ischl
Bad Ischl in Austria celebrated the first public festival of peace time. Together with the local spectators many American visitors saw and admired the colourful costumes and florishing dances of the Salzkammergut.
08. British build fastest plans
This British aircraft, the de Havilland Vampire, is the fastest plane in the world. In this machine the principle of jet propulsion has been developed to the highest degree of efficiency and performance ever ahieved.
The Havilland Vampire is manufactured in the same aircraft works which produced the famous Mosquito during the war. These pictures show one of the first test flights of the Vampire.
09. Holland to-day
Holland is no longer the country of easy-going comfort and geniality, of colourful customs and costumers. Holland to-day is poor and hungry.
The maritime nation Holland once had proud ships, modern buildings yards, model ports. To-day the yards are derelict, the ports blocked, ships and equipment a tangled mass of useless wreckage. Holland has done nothing to provoke this destruction. A peaceful and peaceloving country, it was attacked, destroyed and plundered. These power plants, factories, industrial works contained valuable machinery. The machines were looted ... and often not only the machines: whole buildings and complete workshops were removed ... leaving only the foundations to the Dutch.
In centuries of toil Holland had tamed the menace of water into a servant of man. The enemy unleashed the violent floods again: rich pastures, won from the sea, are sea again; canals, Holland's lifelines, are blocked, her dykes blown, her locks destroyed. The enemy was put to flight; but he left his deal legacy behind him.
This plant produced fertilizer, worth one and half million tons of potatoes for Holland winter. The entire factory was carried off to Germany. Holland starves.
This is what is left of Scheveningens railway station. And this is what a passenger train looks like in Holland today.
In the towns the picture is slightly more cheerful. Street traffic begins to revive: a few tramcars - with several trailers to save fuel ... a few vehicles, plenty of pedestrians ... and bicycles. Bicycles of every form and shape ... many of them doing an honour to the ingenuity of their riders.
That, too, is a bicycle and ... it works.
This is, the darker side of the large town whose inhabitants lack most essentials. Who still possesses a pair of shoes worth repairing has to wait months for their retunr. No new clothing of footwear for 6 years - and now precious coupons must be parted with even for the repair of rage hardly worth patching.
Througout the German occupation the Dutch had to fight starvation. Eben now their plight is grave when supplied are reaching them form England and America. Every Duchtman receives a weekly ration of four pounds of bread ... and four pounds of potatoes. Besides 3/4 lb. of fats, and a little sugar, chocolate and biscuits. Meat only tinned and everything ... even salt ... is severely rationed.
But even rationed foods must be paid for and cooked. And many have neither money nor fuel. For these people communal kitchens have been installed providing one hot meal a day. It's mainly potatoes.. and that means mor coupons.
The few lucky ones who have a stove and some fuel count their sticks like diamonds. Incidentally, this old lady is lucky since she has grandchildren who can help her solve the fuel problem.
Wood to-day is one of Holland's most precious commodities. And just as the youngsters must find it for Grandma, so must nurses find it for their hospitals. For the hospitals are full ... overcrowded with the victims of years of malnutrition. Tuberculosis rages.. and other diseases which since 1940 have reaged this once so sound and healthy nation.
Hollands children grew up starving and joyless. They have a claim to a better and happier future.
10. Ramadam
Deep silence reigned for a month in the North African townships. It was the period of Ramadam, the time of penitence and fasting.
Now, the mosques of Tunis announce the beginning of great religious festivities.
The representatives of the French Government take part ...
... and the native rulers.
Food is distributed everywhere for the law of the Coran demands that also the poor must share in the joys of the festival. But here, too, food is scarce and everybody must show his or her passport to ensure a fair distribution.
In Algier a colourful pageant marks the end of the festivities.
11. Süddeutsche Zeitung
Munich town-hall was the scene of the presentation of the licence certificates for thefirst Bavarian newspaper which is run independently by German publishers and editors. The American Chief of Press Control section welcomes the representatives of the Military Government and the civilian authorities, the American and German press and the three publishers of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung" all of whom were persecuted by the Nazis for their political convictions.
The Colonel Mac Mahon, Commanding Officer of the Press Control section, addresses the publishers.
His speech is translated into German.
Colonel Mac Mahon presents the licences.
The printing plant of the Färbergraben is badly damaged. The presses had to be transferred to the basement.
Following ancient Bavarian tradition a "Münchner Kindl" greets the guests and offers the traditional stein of beer.
In the composing room an act of symboloc significance takes place:
the original type metal of Hitlers "Mein Kampf" is dumped into the foundry. The lead of the Hitlers book is melted and transformed into the page plates for the first three newspaper of Bavaria.
Colonel Mac Mahon sets the press rolling ... and the first copy of the "Süddeutsche Zeitung" comes off the convefor belt.
Bürgermeister Dr. Scharnagl is one of the first readers of the newspaper in which Munich once again raises it's voice freely and independantly.
Persons in the Film
Attlee, Clement ; Lord Cecil ; Churchill, Winston ; Eden, Anthony ; MacMahon ; Scharnagl ; Stettinius
Places
London ; Munich ; Austria ; Bad Ischl ; Holland ; Scheveningen ; England ; Berlin ; Florida ; Hamburg ; New York ; Tunis
Topics
Sachindex Wochenschauen ; Customs ; Railways ; Misery ; Trade, finance ; Craft ; Industry ; Justice ; Disasters ; Children ; Flags ; Forestry ; News, communications ; Political events ; Travel ; Religious events ; Cities ; Strike, strike ; Dance ; Costumes ; Debris ; UN ; Buildings ; war crimes, war crimes ; Landscapes ; Holiday ; Transport: General ; festivals ; Flugzeugwesen, Flugwesen ; aerial photographs ; Crew ; Industrial ; aftermath of war
Type
Newsreel (G)
Genre
Periodicals
Translated by Microsoft Translator