U.S. Office of Education]]> 1944]]> United States Army Signal Corps]]> 1944]]> U.S. Signal Corps]]> 1944]]> National Film Board of Canada]]> 1944]]> U.S. Treasury Department]]> Bing Crosby]]> Soundies Distributing Corporation of America]]> 1945]]> U.S. War Office]]> Army Pictorial Services Signal Corps ]]> 1944]]> A film "showing the fighting and casualties invovled in securing the Anzio beachhead." (William H. Nelson, "Washington Film News," Movie Makers, July 1944, 260.)]]> U.S. War Office]]> Army Pictorial Services Signal Corps]]> 1944]]> Explains why large quantities of war materials, in particular steel, are needed for the war effort. Machines such as tanks, planes, weapons, and ships might end up in a pile of rubble after a battle, but they save the lives of men who are helping to win the war. Shows the sea battle and beachhead landing of the Normandy invasion. The narrator encourages American workers and emphasizes the importance of their work stating at the end: “Give us steel, for a shining triumph.”]]> U.S. War Office]]> Army Pictorial Services Signal Corps ]]> 1944]]> U.S. Army Pictorial Service]]> 1944]]> U.S. Army Air Forces Motion Picture Unit]]> Maurice M. Grashin: writer and director]]> 1944]]>