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Photo 1431
S-0526-0356-0004-00016 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

After-class singing at Konduk elementary school about 10 miles out of Pusan proper. UNKRA aid in this case was increased by the parents of the rural students. To lumber, glass, nails and cement was added HW 1,200,000 of their own funds. With the community's brick kiln, they turned out enough red brick to make a fine six-room school, working over two winters.

Photo 1442
S-0526-0356-0004-00030 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Thick cotton strands, produced from raw cotton in the Keumsung Spinning Company plant, are processed for reduction into fine cotton yarn which eventually will be woven into clothing and yard goods. The plant, one of three in Korea aided by UNKRA, can produce two million yards of cloth a year.

Photo 1449
S-0526-0356-0004-00038 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Fishing (Fish market, fish boats): Korean shipbuilders in a Pusan boatyard lay the deck of a new fishing boat designed and built under UNKRA's program of aid to the Korean fishing industry. UNKRA in 1954 has allocated $1,500,000 to projects aimed at increased production of the country's second-ranking food. It is aiding the ROK Government in a five-year boat-building program, has under construction in Hong Kong 10 deep-sea fishing boats, has rebuilt the vital Seoul City Wholesale Fish Market, and extended help in the form of loans and grants to fishermen and fishing organizations to help re-equip canneries and ice-making plants.

Photo 1452
S-0526-0356-0004-00041 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Choice achi by the truckload arrives each morning at the Seoul City Wholesale Fish Market, its freshness protected during the trip from fishing centers by a packing of ice. Fifty to 70 tons of fish of all types are auctioned each day at the Market, constructed by UNKRA as one of its projects in aid of the vital fishing industry. The Market was officially opened on 25 June 1954.

Photo 1456
S-0526-0356-0005-00002 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Pong Hack Elementary School, Pusan, where UNKRA materials have gone into permanent-type classrooms to replace those damaged by the fighting in Korea. Classroom construction and repair is budgeted at $1,060,000 in UNKRA's 1954 program, and will result in repair of 450 damaged classrooms and construction of 240 permanent classrooms. In financial year 1953 UNKRA provided materials for repair and construction of 3,000 classrooms under its $1,626,000 program of aid to education.

Photo 1457
S-0526-0356-0005-00003 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Eager minds drink in the printed word in schools all over the ROK. Thousands of classrooms still are needed to accommodate avid students of all ages, and books and laboratory equipment scarcely exist. But programs of classroom construction and repair is every month narrowing the gap between requirements, notably the recently-finished National Textbook Printing Plant in Seoul, are helping to feed the hungry minds of Korean children.

Photo 1466
S-0526-0356-0005-00014 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

UNKRA housing in Pusan, where teeming slums already choked with refugees were further burdened when a fire wiped out a whole section of the city in November 1954. UNKRA is building 2,000 Korean designed homes in the area, and loaning materials, earth block machines and plans to ROK Government housing agencies and the program being carried out by the Armed Forces Aid to Korea, an army group. A few traditional-type rural homes still stand in the midst of the growing project.

Photo 1468
S-0526-0356-0005-00017 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Help to the physically handicapped, an UNKRA project in Pusan. Amputees, arthritics and other patients with crippling disabilities are provided with artificial limbs, given training to make them capable of earning a living. Korean medical and physiotherapeutic staff are being trained to take over from international staff provided now by UNKRA and the American-Korean Foundation. More than $400,000 has been spent or committed by UNKRA to provide treatment and vocational training equipment.

Photo 1471
S-0526-0356-0005-00020 · Unidad documental simple · 1960-12-31
Parte de United Nations Korean Reconstruction Agency (UNKRA) (1950-1958)

Physiotherapy at the Tongnae Center for the Rehabilitation of the Physically Handicapped, operated by UNKRA with assistance from the American-Korean Foundation near Pusan. The Papa-san, a long-time arthritic, is re-learning to use his arms and legs. The girl is being treated for the results of a deep shoulder wound which rendered her right arm useless. The Korean nurse is a trainee who will eventually take over from international staff.