 This was Lydice before the Nazis wiped it from the map, murdering its men and slaving its women in revenge for the death of Gestapo leader Reinhardt Hydrik. Today a new Lydice is born, Lydice, Illinois. Here in this new model township in Midwestern America, people who love liberty, many of them Americans of Czechoslovakian ancestry, gather to perpetuate the name of the martyred village. Patriotic and religious ceremonies banned in the old world, did he say? They dedicate a memorial bearing liberty's eternal flame, voicing their remembrance in the words of Czechoslovakia's national anthem. Marines invade Sydney Harbor. Their only victim, an old ferry boat converted to navy use. Two torpedoes found their mark before the invaders were blasted to the bottom. Ivers locate the invader craft near the harbor entrance. One by one, all four are raised to be salvaged for scrap. Some never had a chance to fire a shot, so quickly were they destroyed. Men say these underwater raiders are bigger than the types sunk by the Americans at Pearl Harbor. At any rate, these are four deadly fish that didn't get away. Deep in the heart of the Canadian woods, an army of lumberjacks shoot the dangerous rapids of the Samorites on their way to start the greatest log drive in history. For 300 miles, the old rivers choked with timber, timber for the pulp and paper mills, timber to be converted into chlorine, emulsions and TNT for war. Dynamiters plant the charges that will free the jam, started on its way downstream. For a jam allowed to pile up will often change the course of the river, leaving the logs high and dry. The few sputters, better hurry up Mr. Lumberjack and don't waste any time finding a safe spot. That blast is ready to go. A sea of timber, 48 million logs of spruce and chuck pine. The specially built steel bottom alligator boat plows through the floating forest. The man in the bow polling to clear the way. At the sorting gap, Lumberjack separate logs bearing the trademark or stamp of each individual owner. Then up the giant conveyor belt they travel to the mill. Stripped of bark and washed clean as a whistle, they're now cut to size. Up through the air like torpedoes to make the world's greatest stockpile of logs for war. Last cattle country of California, hard riding horsemen stage what Americans call a rodeo. Pitting his skill against untamed stallions and steers, each cowboy must hang on for 60 seconds to win the match. It's quite a trick, even for men born to the saddle. And when there's no saddle, well, that's what makes rodeo riding the most thrilling sport of the western plains. Since China unconquered, five years of murder and pillage by a ruthless nation bent on enslaving or exterminating a helpless people. Five million innocent civilian victims have perished, and yet China fights on. Its spirit undaunted, unbattered Chongqing, blasted and rebuilt a dozen times, the Chinese Republic carries on the fight. Here, Madame Chongkai-Shek, American educated wife of China's leader, ministers to her people, inspiring them to even greater effort with her own unfailing courage. Mobilizing the young womanhood of the nation in unprecedented numbers, Madame Chong symbolizes the spirit of the new China. Today, bombed out war industries take to the fields and rallying behind Chongkai-Shek, an army of 26 million men. Here is China's answer to the invader, behind the scenes in a U.S. war plant, rushing the manufacture of army scout cars. Here is a vivid example of how the famous American auto assembly line has been converted to speed equipment for war. American engineering genius for mass production, getting things done in a hurry. In a matter of hours, the finished cars roll off the line and are driven to ports of embarkation. Banky soldiers call them jeeps, and the world will be seeing a lot of them. New to this war, they're the legs of America's motorized infantry. These are some of the U.S. Army flyers who bombed Tokyo. General Doolittle, who led the raid, sees General Arnold, Army Air Chief, decorate 23 of his men with the distinguished flying cross. The citation states, they volunteered for this mission, knowing full well that the chances of survival were extremely remote. But they did survive, and they're ready to go again. Biggest reward is the family reunion, where the U.S. Army trains some of those flyers. Ground school for bombardiers. On rolling platforms, equipped with practice bomb sites, they learn the secrets of expert marksmanship. Study the outlines of potential targets. Now, they're ready to take real bombs aloft for an actual test. Student pilots at the controls, student bombardiers on the alert. Their objective, outline of a city, drawn to scale. Down go the bombs, sped to their target by the finest bomb site in the world. Needed now. This is the bombardier's big moment, sample of United Nations' air power in action on the battle fronts of the world.