Sarra, Valentino, 1903-
Valentino Sarra photographe américain
VIAF ID: 68547344 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/68547344
Preferred Forms
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (8)
Works
Title | Sources |
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"Give 'em the right stuff to fight with ..." | |
Manpower, junior size. Door-to-door salesmen for their Uncle Sam, these Roanoke, Virginia youngsters are scouring the neighborhoods for scrap metal and rubber which will be processed into vital war materials | |
Manpower, junior size. It may not look like a gold mine to you, but this backyard junk pile is just that to the junior commandos of Roanoke, Virginia. Official scrap collectors, they're out to see that every worn-out or unused piece of metal and rubber in the city gets to the nation's steel furnaces and rubber reprocessing plants | |
Manpower, junior size. It takes a good right arm to collect all the household scrap that's needed for the nation's armaments, and these Roanoke, Virginia youngsters have just what it takes. Note the badge on the boy's collar; it reads "Lieutenant: Junior Commando Salvage Drive" | |
Manpower, junior size. Junior commandos of Roanoke, Virginia, follow up on their fat collection drive with a visit to the local rendering plant to see what happens to the household fats they have collected during the week. They're learning firsthand how explosives are derived from bacon grease and meat fats | |
Manpower, junior size. She's put her playthings aside for a more important game. This Roanoke, Virginia youngster is one of America's thousands of school age boys and girls who are self-appointed scrap collectors for the duration | |
Manpower, junior size. The charge of the scrap brigade in Roanoke, Virginia includes such methods of collection as this pony cart. The patriotic and energetic youngsters of the town are making an all-out effort to corner every available piece of scrap in the city, so that their soldier and sailor brothers will have the shells, guns, and tanks with which to beat the Axis | |
Manpower, junior size. What's a home without its sidewalk scrap pile? Junior commandos of Roanoke, Virginia see to it that each home has given enough scrap to make the scrap collectors monthly visit worthwhile. When the truck appears, every youngster in the neighborhood pitches in to help load it | |
Manpower, junior size. When these hardy fighters of America's junior army do a job, they do it right--with typical American efficiency. Out to see for themselves what happens to the scrap they collect, they pay a visit to a scrapyard in Roanoke, Virginia, and watch the hydraulic press crush jalopies into rectangular bales for shipment to steel mills | |
Roanoke, Va. Oct., 1942. White and Negro children, organized as "Junior commandos," collecting scrap metal, rubber, fats, and greases, for salvage | |
Search and research, a pictorial portfolio of scenes and characters in the drama of medicine and medical progress. | |
Who's who in America, 1950-51: |