United States Army Signal Corps]]> 1944]]> Presents a vivid record, uncensored by military authorities, of the 1939 siege and fall of Warsaw. Shot by Julien Bryan, who later founded the International Film foundation. Nominated for an Academy Award for best one-reel short in 1941 and added to the National Film Registry in 2006. “As the only neutral-country cameraman left in Warsaw when the Germans arrived, Bryan’s footage is a unique, horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war.” (“News From the Library of Congress,” Library of Congress, December, 2006.) ]]> Walter O. Gutlohn, Inc.]]> Julien Bryan]]> RKO Radio Pictures]]> 1941]]> U.S. Navy]]> U.S. Marine Corps]]> U.S. Coast Guard]]> U.S. Treasury Department, War Finance, Motion Pictures and Special Events Division]]> 1945]]> Presents the training of civilians for rescue work during World War II. Shows the procedures for assigning volunteers to the type of work for which they are prepared and training them to perform as a unit. Follows a squad from the sounding of the alarm, going to the scene, surveying the wreckage and taking notes, and tunneling for buried victims, to the orderly departure of the squad from the scene.]]> U.S. Office of Civilian Defense]]> Audio Productions, Inc.]]> 1942]]> Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company]]> 1943]]> U.S. Office of Civilian Defense]]> 1942]]> London Fire Service]]> British Paramount News]]> Pathe Gazette]]> 1941]]> U.S. Office of Civilian Defense]]> 1942]]>