Wounded United States Marines in Iwo Jima, Japan during World War II. Wounded 5th Division Marine being carried on a stretcher into an operating room. A corpsman opens rear of an ambulance and removes a wounded Marine from the ambulance. A Marine being placed onto an ambulance. A wounded Marine being carried into an operating room. Ambulance jeep backs up to entrance of the operating room. Corpsmen carry wounded Marines on stretcher from the jeep to the operating room. An ambulance loaded with wounded marines pulls away.
United States 5th Marines Division in Iwo Jima, Japan during World War II. A map on a paper. Smoke rises from an area. A weapon carrier with rockets mounted at the rear. Rockets burst as smoke rises. Aerial bursts of white phosphorus. Puff of smoke rises from the area.
United States 5th Marines Division in Iwo Jima, Japan during World War II. White Phosphorus shells and rocket burst as smoke rises. Enemy emplacement on fire. M-4 tank with a long stream of fire as it burns. Convoy in the harbor. A wrecked U.S. Navy PBY aircraft in the foreground. American convoy in the harbor. Marines along the beach in Iwo Jima.
Surgical instruments in an operating theater.Microscopic views of bacteria, including those causing lockjaw and gangrene, respectively. Views of streptococus and staphylococus. Surgeons scrub before undertaking surgery. Cartoon animation of Bacteria and skin.
Surgeon is seen scrubbing hands and arms for five minutes before performing surgery. When finished, he sneezes, but does not return to scrub and clean his hands again. Animated cartoon shows bacteria surviving the scrub brush bristles and remaining in place. Animation shows additional streptococcus bacteria descending onto surgeon's hands after doctor sneezes. The bacteria present through the scrubbing, and the new streptococcus bacteria talk to one another (voiced by Mel Blanc). The bacteria are isolated by surgeons rubber gloves before he begins patient surgery operation.
Surgical theater. Patient brought in. A patient to be operated upon. Doctor with contaminated hands accidentally spills instruments and cuts his rubber glove. Discards only one instrument although unsure which one actually caused the cut glove. A contaminated instrument remains and is used in the surgery.
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