Memorandum
Swift TRAVELLING SHOT of the German countryside between Düsseldorf and Hanover. Interior shot of travellers in a club car, including Mr Bernard Laufer, in compartments, of travellers in a crowded Hanover station. TRAVELLING SHOT through the windshield of the camera car, of a German road, some traffic, including CUs of a Mercedes car hood ornament. Shot of some of the buildings in Travemünde seen through the side windows of a car. Shots of the "Put a Tiger in Your Tank!" advertisement in German at a filling station. Shot of a Star of David medallion around a woman's neck. CU of a boy's face. Shots of an attendant's hand taking a pump hose, of the man opening a car hood. Sequence on another car arriving at another Esso gas station, getting gas as passengers chat with the attendant, the driver paying and driving off. Interior shots inside a bus, passengers chatting, looking out the windows. TRAVELLING SHOT of the German countryside, of a town.
Norway lobster in a water tank
Norway lobster
TV COMMERCIALS
ENCO EXTRA GASOLINE COMMERCIAL (B&W) CU SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT FILLS GAS IN TANK. GAS PUMP "THERE'S A TIGER IN YOUR TANK" LATE 1950s, EARLY 1960s CONVERTIBLE CAR WITH TIGER STRIPES. HAPPY MOTORING!
ici 12 13 Edition Pays de la Loire: [emission of 09 January 2024]
German Troops in Italy, 1943
German troops cross border into Italy, Panzers on rail transports flood into Italy. Troops greeted with food and drink by ecstatic local populace. Marder and Tiger tanks cross the Alps into Italy. German troops on horseback and on foot. Rommel and his troops occupy an Italian city. SS troops occupy Pavia. Milan occupied. Troops rest on the road to Rome. Battle for Rome, skirmishes on the outskirts of the city. The city is taken. Reconnaissance plane photographs enemy ships preparing landing. Panzers, artillery take up positions on coast. Paratroops land in mountains to liberate Mussolini from his captors.
Bridgeman Images Details
Fight For Egypt
Fight For Egypt. 1940's newsreel documenting the battle between Allied and Axis forces in Tobruk, Libya near Egypt.. 1940s, newsreel, Tobruk, Libya, Egypt, World War II, Allies, Allied forces, Axis, invasion of North Africa, British artillery defends Tobruk, British soldiers firing artillery, Royal Air Force and United States Army Air Forces planes taking off from desert and in flight, flying tigers aircraft, pilot, bombs being dropped from airplane, Nazi general surrenders, white flag next to artillery, soldiers marching, warships escort convoys through Mediterranean, battleships firing guns, Axis bomber hit by Allied ship and crashing into water, General Claude Auchinleck takes command, Allies and Axis forces bombing the desert, tanks
CLONING
00:00:00:00 CLEANING A FISH TANK/ CHILDREN WATCHING/ STATUE OF GORILLA WITH PEOPLE WALKING PAST/ B-ROLL OF BLACK RHINO [OUTSIDE]/ TIGER B-ROLL [SUMATRAN]. (0:00) /
BERLIN CIRCUS
Berlin, Federal Republic of Germany (Western Germany). <br/> <br/>Various shots of the circus acts with women juggler being supported by her hair during performance in Berlin. Chimpanzees, tigers, acrobats, trapeze artists, etc. Ends with man putting arm in tiger's mouth and then the man and the tiger leap from about 30 feet into water tank. <br/> <br/>(F.G.) <br/> <br/>Date found in the old record - 02/01/1966.
Royal Tiger Tank at the Henschel tank testing grounds, Haustenbeck, Germany
German tanks at secret Henschel tank testing grounds (Henschel Panzerversuchsstation), at Haustenbeck, a village in the center of the Sennelager training area, West of Oesterholz and Schlangen, and East of Lager Staumühle. Germany. A Tiger II (AKA Royal Tiger or King Tiger) Tank wades through a water obstacle. The tanks had been fitted with a snorkel system to allow passage across river beds. Suspension and bogey system of the Royal Tiger Tank. Comparison of unfinished chassis of the German E-100 experimental super heavy tank with the light Valentine Tank. Several parked tanks seen at end of clip, including a German Jagdtiger heavy tank destroyer. Location: Haustenbeck Germany . Date: July 4, 1945.
TIGER DIVISION FAREWELL
South Korean Tiger Division troops marching in formation before leaving for Vietnam. Women and loved ones weaping.
DN-LB-668 Beta SP
DIE FRONTSCHAU (GERMAN TIGER TANKS IN ACTION)
SHE'S GOT A TIGER - TANKING UP
ISSUE_NO = 1895 NO_OF_ITEMS = 5 COMMENTATOR = Leslie Mitchell ITEM_NO = 4 DESCRIPTION : From London Zoo pictures show Fortuna, a three week old Tiger who, having been abandoned by its mother, is being brought up by mongrel retriever Jane. CARD_FILE = 90238 CARD_TITLE : SHE'S GOT A TIGER - TANKING UP SHOT_LIST : MS Jane, a mongrel retriever, sitting in basket with puppies and baby tiger. CU Baby tiger feeding from Jane. MCU Jane. CU Puppies and baby tiger feeding from Jane. CU Baby tiger with puppies in basket. CU Jane. MS Baby tiger feeding from Jane. INDEX : Towns and Cities, Buildings, Animals - Dogs FEET_SHOT = 82 DATE_SUBD = 00/00/0000
World Wrap; 3/18/00
William Cohen meets in Vietnam with officials; Ehud Barak (PM of Israel) at ceremony, West Bank settlement town (nice establishing shot), Chechen rebels fight on, tank rolls, helicopter in sky, fires; African leaders tour flooded Mozambique by air, ground. Man shot by police who attempted to shot Tiger in Poland. Cops try to help man while Tiger just walks away
WWII FLYING TIGER VET HONORS FALLEN MILITARY FAMILY
This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment. Usage must cease on all platforms (including digital) within ten days of its initial delivery or such shorter time as designated by CNN.\n\n***This pkg contains photos from AP/Getty Images that are only cleared for use within the pkg. Affiliates may not cut these photos out of the pkg for individual use.***\n\n --SUPERS--\n:00-:12\nFrank Losonsky\nWWII Flying Tiger\n\n:13-:17\nCourtesy Frank Losonsky \n\n:23-:32 \nUniversal Newsreel\n\n:33-:38\nFrank Losonsky\nWWII Flying Tiger\n\n:39-1:02\nUniversal Newsreel\n\n1:12-1:14\nCourtesy Frank Losonsky \n\n1:15-1:21\nUniversal Newsreel\n\n1:22-1:23\nCourtesy Frank Losonsky \n\n1:24-1:29\nGetty Images\n\n1:40-1:47\nUniversal Newsreel\n\n1:48-2:03\nFrank Losonsky\nWWII Flying Tiger\n\n2:14-2:20\nCourtesy Frank Losonsky \n\n2:21-2:27\nSam Kleiner\nAuthor, The Flying Tigers\n\n2:38-2:43\nCourtesy Frank Losonsky \n\n2:44-2:52\nSam Kleiner\nAuthor, The Flying Tigers\n\n2:53-2:59\nUniversal Newsreel\n\n3:00-3:11\nFrank Losonsky\nWWII Veteran\n\n --LEAD IN--\nMEMORIAL DAY...MEANT TO HONOR MEN AND WOMEN WHO LOST THEIR LIVES SERVING OUR COUNTRY. \nTODAY..CAN BE ESPECIALLY HARD FOR THOSE WHO SERVED WITH THE FALLEN. \n97- YEAR- OLD, FRANK LUH-SAWN-SKI IS ONE OF THE LAST SURVIVING MEMBERS OF HIS MILITARY FAMILY: THE FLYING TIGERS. \nJAKE TAPPER HAS MORE. \n --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--\nNats war film "astounding the world with heroism and daring"\nFrank Losonsky:\n"Well it was the best thing that ever happened to me. I wasn't the only one there were quite a few of us most of them are all gone."\n97 YEAR OLD FRANK LOSONSKY IS A FLYING TIGER- ONE OF THE LAST. THE FAMED AMERICAN VOLUNTEER GROUP ENTERED WORLD WAR TWO MONTHS BEFORE THE REST OF THE UNITED STATES - DEFENDING AMERICA'S CHINESE ALLIES AGAINST THE JAPANESE AS PART OF A COVERT MILITARY OPERATION.\nFrank Losonsky:\n"There was a time when they needed help and we all just jumped through - we were glad to give em help."\nTHEIR ICONIC PLANES WERE PAINTED WITH A SHARK'S TOOTHY SNARL. \nBY SUMMER 1941, SOME 300 PILOTS, MECHANICS, NURSES, AND CREW WERE OVERSEAS TRAINING TO DEFEAT JAPAN IN THE PACIFIC. \nBUT ON DECEMBER 7TH - THEIR MISSION CHANGED. \n"Got the news over the radio that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor."\nLOSONSKY LOGGED THE NEWS IN HIS DIARY. \n"The president had declared war on Japan today//they won't last long now." \nNOW, HE AND HIS TEAM WERE ON THE FRONT LINES - DEFENDING NOT JUST THEIR ALLIES BUT THEIR HOMELAND. \nLOSONSKY WAS JUST 20 YEARS OLD. \nAS CREW CHIEF HE WAS IN CHARGE OF MAINTAINING THE TIGER'S P40-PLANES. 100 TOTAL.\n"That was a real good airplane it was like a tank it was sturdy, it could take a lot of shots."\nTHAT SMALL FLEET WOULD BE RESPONSIBLE FOR DOWNING NEARLY 300 ENEMY AIRCRAFT IN THE FIRST MONTHS OF THE WAR\nFrank Losonsky:\n"We never did worry about when the boys would go out to fly..and sure as the devil they come about 6 o clock they'd be coming in, flying and when they came in they'd do a barrel roll so we knew it was them."\nSam Kleiner: \n"Were you involved in painting the shark face onto the p40?"\nFrank Losonsky: "yah"\nSam Kleiner: \n"You wanted it to look real scary."\nFrank Losonsky: "yah"\nNOW MORE THAN 7 DECADES LATER, LOSONSKY'S STORY IS INSPIRING A NEW GENERATION. AUTHOR SAM KELINER HAS SPENT YEARS COLLECTING STORIES AND RESEARCH FOR HIS NEW BOOK THE FLYING TIGERS.\nSam Kleiner:\n"I think there was a real rush to capture this story while there was still some link to the living members of the flying tigers //there was a sense that they had a mission greater than themselves and I think that's something that I hope my generation and future generations will continue to remember about the tigers."\nSam Kleiner: \n"You must have been real proud."\nFRANK: "I was." \nLOOKING THROUGH PHOTOGRAPHS AT LOSONSKY'S HOME IN GEORGIA, THEY ARE SURROUNDED BY MEMENTOS OF HIS SERVICE.\nSam Kleiner: \n"They were the first pilots there ready to fight and they score the first victories against the Japanese after Pearl Harbor and help to inspire Americans that we can win what felt like an unwinnable war and so their heroism became a real inspiration to Americans."\nFrank Losonsky:\n"They were a good bunch of boys and they'll never be forgotten even though they're gone...I think people are going to remember the flying tigers."\n -----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----\n\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nMEMORIAL DAY WORLD WAR II MILITARY\n\n
WORLD WAR II
TIGER TANKS MONTAGE, GERMAN RAILROAD FLAT CARS CARRY TANKS, TANKS IN MASS PRODUCTION. TANKS IN WWII
RUNDSTEDTS COUNTER OFFENSIVE
Item title reads - Rundstedt's counter offensive. <br/> <br/>Captured German newsreel showing counter offensive in Belgium. <br/> <br/>L/S of smoke screens. German smoke generators with captured jeep in foreground. M/S German officer and soldier. M/S heavy German mobile gun firing. C/U German signallers. M/S German infantry advancing along road, getting through wire fence, passing burning allied vehicles. M/S German Tiger tank and Germans under armoured car. Various shots of German troops smoking captured American cigars and cigarettes, and riding on vehicles and tanks. C/U two Germans looking into air with field glasses. M/S as tanks drive through.
Propaganda Minister, Joseph Paul Goebbels speaks at Rhineland tank factory in Germany; review of Tiger II tanks
Joseph Paul Goebbels addresses German workers, officials and some soldiers at Rhineland tank factory in Germany during World War 2. Posters on wall with German slogans. The Nazi symbol with 'Koln' written under it. (Speech possibly in Cologne?). Minister of propaganda Joseph Paul Goebbels speaks while large crowd of audience listens carefully to Propaganda Minister's speech. Scenes changes to exposition and review of a large number of German Tiger II tanks (King Tiger), being displayed for dignitaries to review. Closeup of tank commander standing up through open hatch in turret as his tank rolls by scores of other Tiger II tanks in formation on a large field. Location: Germany Rhineland Factory. Date: 1944.
PERSIAN GULF WAR / ARMY 2ND ARMORED TIGER BRIGADE ***
POOL COVER FTG OF THE US ARMY SECOND ARMORED DIVISION "TIGER BRIGADE" ON MANEUVERS IN SAUDI ARABIA AFTER THE INITIATION OF THE US LED AIR OFFENSIVE AGAINST IRAQ. 12:53:04 INTV/W TIGER BRIGADE COMPANY COMMANDER CAPTAIN MATTHEW MARGOTTA ABOUT THE BRIGADE'S SUBORDINATION TO THE SECOND MARINE DIVISION. VS OF A DESERT COMMAND POST BRISTLING WITH RADIO ANTENNAE, TIME CODE LEAP. 13:41:11 NICE PANNING SHOTS OF A LONG COLUMN OF M1 ABRAMS TANKS RAISING CLOUDS OF DUST AS IT CROSSES FEATURELESS DESERT. CLIPS OF ARMORED PERSONNEL CARRIERS FOLLOWING THE TANKS. TIME CODE LEAP. 14:30:40 INTVS/W LIEUTENANT COLONEL MICHAEL JOHNSON, STAFF SERGEANT RUSSELL ALBERT, SPECIALISTS JIM PUSKAS AND JOHN MATHIS, SERGEANTS PAUL DURAND AND MILTON HARRIS AND PRIVATE FIRST CLASS (PFC) KEVIN WOODIN ABOUT THE FUTURE ROLE OF GROUND TROOPS IN OPERATION DESERT STORM. TIME CODE LEAP. 15:12:45 CLIPS OF SOLDIERS SCRUBBING THE BARREL OF AN M1 CANNON WITH A LONG POLE. LINDA PATTILLO SUS. TIME CODE LEAP. 09:04:43 SLATE TO THE END. CI: PERSONALITIES: ALBERT, RUSSELL. PERSONALITIES: DURAND, PAUL. PERSONALITIES: HARRIS, MILTON. PERSONALITIES: JOHNSON, MICHAEL. PERSONALITIES: MARGOTTA, MATTHEW. PERSONALITIES: MATHIS, JOHN. PERSONALITIES: PUSKAS, JIM. PERSONALITIES: WOODIN, KEVIN. MILITARY: OPERATIONS, SAUDI ARABIA. WAR: US / IRAQ.
WORLD WAR II: GERMANS IN ITALY SURRENDER (1945)
B&W film. German troops fighting in Italy surrender to Allied forces.
80814 U.S. ARMY BATTLE OF THE BULGE DOCUMENTARY "TIGERS ON THE LOOSE" PART 2
Part two of the Big Picture about the Battle of the Bulge, TIGERS ON THE LOOSE was produced by the Army Pictorial Center and is narrated by Lorne Green. It features live WWII footage and interviews with commanders of the infamous 10th Armored “Tiger” Division. It begins December 16, 1944 as Hitler drives forward (:45-1:08). American defenders at Bastogne are outnumbered and outgunned. General Anthony McAuliffe (1:29) has replied to a letter of surrender with the single word “NUTS.” The 10th Combat Command B and the 101st Airborne have heavy fog, limiting the resupplying of ammunition and medical supplies (1:43-2:24). December 22 was clear, allowing the Air Force to drop supplies (2:35). Brigadier General William Lynn Roberts (2:49) describes a lucky break. A captain in Bastogne was an expert at ground-to-air communications via a VHF set to the Allied planes overhead, dropping napalm bombs, bombs, rockets, and bullets (3:23-4:18). This advantage included seeing enemy tank tracks in the snow (4:21-4:40), shifting the battle. General McAuliffe (4:45) talks about Christmas Eve, when a house with wounded Tigers was completely destroyed (5:30). On December 26, the 4th Armored Division breaks the German line (5:42-5:54). On January 16, 1945, they are officially relieved during a blizzard (6:04), as soldiers fail to get a tank up the hill (6:11-6:32). The 10th leaves town on February 20 to capture Trier (7:58-8:33). Colonel James O’Hara commanded the 54th Armored Infantry Battalion of the 10th (8:39) in the Saar-Moselle triangle (8:48-9:17) and was instructed to cross the Saar River. Company Commander John Devereaux (9:52-11:16) discusses the night crossing, which involved traversing a booby-trapped minefield while under fire. He then explains how pillboxes were cleared (11:47-11:59). The Tigers set off for Trier on February 21, taking shelling (13:15-14:22). The Germans were on the ridges on each side so they crossed at night (16:45-17:39). The next assignment to take a bridge intact caused the tanks to come under heavy fire (18:12-18:44). On March 16, the entire Division pushed towards the Rhine River (18:45-19:00). Colonel Curtis Hankins (19:05) describes destroying an entire German supply train, helped by the Air Force (19:24-19:54). They crossed the Rhine on March 20, capturing 8,000 prisoners (20:02- 20:20). Three days later after heavy fighting, they rolled into Heidelberg (20:23-20:30). The exhausted men take a break (20:36-20:52). The Germans still had armored strength (20:52-21:06). On April 3, the 10th and the 100th Airborne received orders to seize Heilbronn (21:10-21:22). Lieutenant Colonel George Hamel (21:24-22:21) describes an alternative path taken, where more blown bridges halted progress (22:21-22:40). The Germans fought back hard and by April 8, American supplies were low (22:41-22:59). A soldier is loaded into an ambulance (23:00-23:08). The Air Force arrives, dropping temporary supplies (23:11-23:25) but it’s not enough and the Division sadly withdraws between April 11 and April 22 (23:31-23:49). Reaching the Danube River, they joined the 44th Infantry Division in combat (24:24-24:41) and continued capturing towns (25:15). An agreement to not destroy Garmisch-Partenkirchen from the 1936 Winter Olympics was upheld (26:28-27:19). The war ended, the Tigers relax (27:40-28:05) and receive honor (28:07-28:46). <p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com