Otto Hagel The Potter's Hands; Marguerite Wildenhain master potter, trained at the Bauhaus in Germany. Pond Farm Studio, Guerneville, California
Hansel Mieth Gloria T. Pomo with her Great Aunt Maggie Wahoo; Gloria and Maggie Wahoo in Maggie's cabin. Picture on the wall is of her wedding. Both are Pomo Indian. Maggie was one of the best basket weavers. She is 106 years old and blind.
Hansel Mieth Otto's mother at her son Helmut's grave; he died of T.B. brought on by starvation and exposure in an American prisoner of war camp.
Otto Hagel Joe Moe, on leave from Guadalcanal, tells oldtimers in his hometown about how he was wounded
Hansel Mieth Heart Mountain Internees; a salute to the American flag led by a Boy Scout Drum and Bugle Corp during 35 degree below zero weather, Heart Mountain, Wyoming
Hansel Mieth Fence pulling; those fences which were built by pioneer labor are now ours to repair and maintain
Hansel Mieth Burning Hens; chickens get sick and die. We try injecting this and that, but still they die. They die in such numbers, that we make a bonfire and watch our dreams go up in smoke
Hansel Mieth Funeral of Rodney Maruffo. Rodney was the son of the chief of the Pomo Indians of Kashia. His body was shipped home from Vietnam for burial in the tribal cemetery of Kashia, California. He is carried to the grave by his childhood friends.
Otto Hagel Ford Plant Being Organized. Union organizers would go to worker's homes. If they met at the plant, workers would be blacklisted
Otto Hagel On Placid Concord River. The sages of New England tired the sun with talking; Emerson and Hawthorne lived across the river for years.
Hansel Mieth Honor Guard; A soldier shipped back from the battle-front for burial at the camp. His comrades hold the Honor Watch, Heart Mountain Internment Camp, Wyoming