 returned to her Danish crew. The Denmark Noodle Hansen takes over the vessel and Denmark is hoisted. In April 1940, when the Germans invaded Denmark, this graceful 216-foot square rigor lay at anchor off Florida. She remained in the United States, and after Pearl Harbor was lent to the Coast Guard as a training ship. American cadets learned the ways of the sea aboard her. Now she puts out to cross the Atlantic once more to her native land. President Truman decorates a group of 14 marine and navy men for heroism above and beyond the call of duty. Don Iwo Jima, a sailor who, in land fighting, offered his life to save marine comrades. And 17-year-old Private Lucas, who enlisted at 14, threw himself on an exploding grenade to save his fellow men. Congratulations from Navy and Army Chiefs of Staff for their valor. Ferts in underwater demolition. They crash dive in a training maneuver using self-contained oxygen tanks and rubber frog feet to swim through otherwise impassable obstacles and prepare for demolition work. These fantastically uniformed but performing a perilous and necessary military job preceded landing troops into the beach heads of France, blowing up mines and harbor defenses. American underwater demolition teams on a swift Navy patrol boat prepare explosive charges for an attack on the underwater defenses of Balikpapan Borneo, a hazardous assignment that must be perfectly timed. With split second precision, the men spill out of their larger craft into a rubber boat alongside and then into the sea. Explosive packs are thrown overboard, timed with each man's takeoff. Many kinds of equipment, mine detonators, measuring lines, firearms, even special radios were used on missions. In these actual combat pictures, Balikpapan shore defenses are attacked six days before invasion. Only as they were dropped. The foreign ministers closed in a stalemate. But that need not and should not deprive us of a second and better chance to get on with the peace. The foreign minister of the Soviet Union has not rejected our proposal for a peace conference. During the discussions, he admitted that it was correct in principle. In my hope is that after he is conferred with his government, his government will agree that the nations that fought the war, the world war, shall have a chance to make the world peace. We urged that those states, both large and small, which had fought and suffered in the war, must make the peace. This has been a people's war. And it must be a people's peace. To a British military tribunal at Lunarburg has brought assorted assortment of Nazi war criminals. Headed by the notorious Joseph Kramer, charged with responsibility for torture and mass murder of 50,000 prisoners at the German death camp at Belsen. Belsen's women, as savage as any of the men. Kramer's chief assistant, 21 years old and a veteran of five years of atrocities, is Freiline Irma Gratsen. In early court sessions, there are 26 men, 19 women. Number two is Fritz Klein, German doctor at Belsen, author of countless deaths. The average of men and women alike is 1,000 deaths apiece. The first batch of Nazi butchers and one of the worst awaits the verdict of allied justice. Chester W. Nimitz, admiral of the fleet, who steered American naval might to victory in the Pacific, receives the thanks of his countrymen. The state's Naval Academy midshipmen lead a column of 5,000 marching Navy personnel in Nimitz honor. First high naval commander to return home for official welcome. Under Nimitz, the Marines staged a mounting series of amphibious operations to clear the Japanese from the 68 million square miles of the Pacific Ocean. Attachments of Navy waves and Coast Guard spars represent the women of Nimitz forces. The Coast Guard's trained patrol dogs search in line with their handlers. Its mighty air arm, scene of Japan's final surrender, is the reviewing stand, as Nimitz arrives at the foot of the Washington Monument. Attachments thanked to admiral Nimitz.