 Poised at a score of aerodromes in Britain, continue their devastating offensive against Nazi armament centers. Target for today, the industrial city of Marienburg, 500 miles inside Germany. Returning from a raid on the great industrial city of Schweinfurt, meets the heaviest opposition yet encountered, planes swarmed to the attack. 60% of the Nazis interceptors hurled aloft to stop the bombers from getting through. Nazi fighters are shot down. A wing damaged, one fort comes back with both motors out on one side and one on the other. Another landed with a wild skid, a tire ripped from the wheel, targets for everything the Nazis could hurl aloft, the forts took a terrific pounding and returned to report mission accomplished. Although 60 bombers failed to return, the damage inflicted upon Nazi armament industries justified the loss. For these bombers and the men who flew them, crippled the greatest ball-bearing plant in Germany. Lieutenant-General Stillwell, veteran commander of United States forces in China, arrives in India for conferences with Chinese, British and American military leaders. Coming in by another plane is General Somerville in charge of all American army supplies. His branch of the service provides a vital part of the munitions and equipment now being used for the campaign in Asia. Supreme Allied commander in Southeast Asia. Once head of Britain's fierce commandos, Mount Batten now plays an important role in directing the strategy of war against Japan. Full enough here presents a spectacle of scuttle ships and desolation along the waterfront. The Nazis in desperate retreat destroyed everything they couldn't take with them. Six days after the Germans left, Italians receive a diabolical souvenir of Nazi occupation. A delayed action bomb exploding in the Naples Post office goes off at an hour when the building is crowded with civilians. For blocks around, more than a hundred are killed and injured.Enders of Nazi warfare upon helpless civilians rechristened the USS Lafayette, moves from her pier in New York for the first time in more than four years. 18 months ago, the huge luxury liner lay on the bottom of the river, a stricken giant gutted by fire. Shipping experts said she couldn't be raised, that the 83,000 ton hulk would never sail again. But the Navy took over and accomplished the biggest salvage job in maritime history. The great liner passes France's treasured gift to America, the Goddess of Liberty. Election Day, even in wartime, permits every American citizen to vote. Today throughout the nation, they're electing senators, judges, governors of states. Ballots are cast within the privacy of curtain boots and registered on voting machines within each boot. New York State casts his vote, once nominated for the presidency of the United States, exercising the privilege of self-government. Roosevelt votes in his own hometown. This is how America is governed by the people. Once a Japanese stronghold in the South Pacific is the story of men. Australians and Americans who, against jungle and jap, advanced inch by inch up the hot, wet coastline from Milne Bay to Boona, past Ley and Salamawa to drive the enemy into the sea. These are our Australian allies, hard, rugged fighters, veterans of jungle warfare. These dramatic pictures show the Australians opening their phase of the attack that took Salamawa. In Japanese machine gun nest and outpost, half of the Australians are brought back in primitive stretchers over the wild jungle trail. Invaluable allies save many lives. Back through the dense brush over swollen screams, they carry their human burdens. It's tested by fire. These Australians have well proven their valor in the cause of the United Nations.