Jessie Bernard and Edna Rostow discuss about sharing of roles and image of working women in old society in the United States
Film about the problems and challenges faced by the changing roles of women in the United States in the 1970s. A American Sociologist Jessie Bernard along with Edna G Rostow a Mental Hygiene consultant at Yale University discuss about the importance of sharing of role between men and women. They state that one has to be aware, and not afraid of the responsibilities in a time when women are holding jobs outside the home and also having home roles. They discuss about the old society and traditional roles of men working outside the home and women as home makers or housewives, along with its pros and corns. The image of working women not opting to marry in olden days. Their views contradict on women not opting to marry for career. Views of women in various activities: Women walk across street. A woman laughs. Women practice dance in a group. A woman works as a dentist or dental hygienist. Two women bird trainers. A woman plays a cello in an orchestra, and another woman sings while holding a microphone. Women U.S. Navy personnel take oath. A woman teaches, while showing words on a blackboard. A woman works in a film edit room, winding and loading motion picture film onto a film reel. Location: United States USA. Date: 1975.
Dentist showing tooth color chart to patient at dentist's office
Female dentist showing tooth color chart to patient at dentist's office
EMPLOYMENT
DENTAL HYGIENIST CLEANING LITTLE GIRL'S TEETH. CLINIC FULL OF HYGIENISTS WORKING ON PATIENT'S TEETH
Dentist cleaning patient's teeth
Dentist using plaque scraper to clean patient's back teeth using a methodical process on each tooth
SUCCESS STRIKES A SWEET NOTE AMATEURS WHO STRIKE A CHORD OF BEAUTY
COVERAGE IN FORT WORTH, TEXAS FOR A MIKE VON FREMD CS VO ABOUT THE FINALS OF THE FIRST VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION FOR AMATEURS. COVERAGE IN FORT WORTH, TEXAS FOR A MIKE VON FREMD CS VO ABOUT THE FINALS OF THE FIRST VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION FOR AMATEURS. 01:00:29 SETUP. WS PEOPLE MILLING AROUND OUTSIDE CONCERT HALL. 01:00:42 MS BEHIND PEOPLE ENTERING HALL. 01:01:01 WS BEHIND AUDIENCE IN HALF EMPTY AUDITORIUM. 01:01:09 FTG SHOT IN DARKENED AUDITORIUM. PAN ACROSS LARGER AUDIENCE WATCHING CONTESTANT PERFORM. 01:01:40 GRAINY SIDE MS OLDER FOLKS IN AUDIENCE. 01:02:10 MCU WOMAN IN AUDIENCE WEARING BADGE (CONTESTANT?). 01:02:37 MS PERFORMER BOWING. 01:04:00 MS MASTER OF CEREMONIES (MC) INTRODUCING MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (MIT) PROFESSOR MICHAEL HAWLEY. 01:06:25 MWS HAWLEY STEPPING OUT ONTO STAGE, BOWING & TAKING A SEAT AT A BLACK STEINWAY BABY GRAND PIANO. 01:06:58 VS BEHIND HAWLEY PLAYING BACH'S FANTASY IN G MINOR & GRACEFUL GHOST. 01:17:50 MWS HAWLEY BOWING AFTER FINISHING HIS SET & LEAVING STAGE. 01:18:04 MWS HAWLEY RETURNING FOR SECOND BOW. 01:18:16 MS MC INTRODUCING JULIA PIERCE, A DENTAL HYGIENIST FROM ENGLAND & MOTHER OF TWO. 01:18:54 MWS PIERCE STEPPING OUT ONTO STAGE AND TAKING A BOW. 01:19:37 VS BEHIND PIERCE PLAYING CHOPIN'S POLONAISE IN C MINOR, OPUS 40, NUMBER 2. 01:23:59 MWS PIERCE TAKING HER BOW AFTER FINISHING HER PERFORMANCE. 01:24:13 DARK GRAINY CUTAWAY. WS AUDIENCE APPLAUDING ENTHUSIASTICALLY TO END.
African American recruits in U.S. Army are issued uniforms and begin basic training in World War II
African American recruit sits in a chair with feet on a measuring device. A sergeant gives him a pair of shoes. But before he wears them the Sergeant tells him to stand, in the measuring device, holding two 20 pound weights. He then tells him to put on the shoes and go into the next room, where other African American recruits are lined up. They are instructed to remove all civilian clothes and begin dressing in army clothing. Next, completely dressed in their army uniforms, the recruits carrying duffel bags as they leave the snow-covered camp to board a train. Views of steam locomotives pulling trains in various places in the country. A convoy of army trucks carrying the new soldiers into a military base. The trucks park side-by-side in a line and the soldiers jump out with their gear to begin their basic training. A sergeant instructing the new soldiers on how to make a bed and other responsibilities. The new African American soldiers assembled in formation outside their barracks, on the snow, practicing close order drill, and making mistakes in the process. Next they are seen in a cross country march, carrying rifles. they take a 10-minute break. Soldiers in an infirmary, being visited by army doctors and African American nurses. Newly recruited soldiers being tended in an army dental clinic by African American dentists and hygienists. Soldiers shooting rifles on a firing range. Targets moving up and down on the range. Soldiers participating in sports, including football, baseball, boxing, and ping pong. A woman in the base library reading poetry aloud from a book entitled: "An Anthology of American African American Literature." African American members of the Women's Army Corps (WAC) are seen at another base, engaged in close order drill. Next these WACs are seen driving and riding in jeeps over rough terrain. A soldier shines his shoes, on Saturday night. African American soldiers and women dancing to music from an orchestra. The soldiers performing calisthenics in the open air. Rifles are held in some of the exercises. (World War II; WW II; World War 2; World War Two) Location: United States USA. Date: 1942.
Italy Trial 3
AP-APTN-1830: Italy Trial 3 Friday, 17 May 2013 STORY:Italy Trial 3- Karima El Maroug departs court after testifying against Berlusconi aides LENGTH: 01:02 FIRST RUN: 1730 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Natsound SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 892417 DATELINE: Milan - 17 May 2013 LENGTH: 01:02 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST 1. Mid of Karima el-Mahroug (also known as Ruby Heart Stealer) talking to her lawyer Paola Boccardi 2. Wide of the court room 3. Wide of painting in court room 4. Mid of el-Mahroug hugging her husband Luca Risso outside the court room 5. Wide of el-Mahroug leaving the court house 6. Zoom in of media surrounding el-Mahroug and asking questions, she doesn't answer 7. Mid of media surrounding el-Mahroug 8. Pull out of el-Mahroug getting into a taxi 9. Various of taxi leaving STORYLINE: Silvio Berlusconi's private disco featured not only aspiring show girls performing striptease acts as sexy nuns and nurses, but also dressed as President Barack Obama and a prominent Milan prosecutor, according to the first public sworn testimony by the Moroccan woman at the centre of the scandal. Karima el-Mahroug, also known as "Ruby Heart Stealer" took the stand on Friday at the trial of three former Berlusconi aides accused with procuring her and other women for prostitution. Her testimony confirms a sexually charged atmosphere at the "bunga bunga" parties of the then-sitting premier. The trial is separate from the one in which Berlusconi is charged with paying for sex with a minor - el-Mahroug when she was 17 - and trying to cover it up. El-Mahroug, now 20, said she attended about a half-dozen parties, using her nickname Ruby, and that after each, Berlusconi handed her an envelope with up to 3,000 euros (3,900 US dollars) in denominations of 500. She said she later received 30,000 euros (38,000 US dollars) cash from the then-premier paid through an intermediary - money that she told Berlusconi she wanted to use to open a beautician salon despite having no formal training. But she denied that Berlusconi had ever given her 5 (m) million euros (6.43 million US dollars). She said she told acquaintances and even her father that she was going to receive such a large sum "as a boast" but that it was a lie to make her seem more important. The three Berlusconi aides - Emilio Fede, an executive in Berlusconi's media empire; Nicole Minetti, a former dental hygienist, showgirl and local politician, and talent agent Dario "Lele" Mora - are accused of recruiting women for prostitution at the parties and abetting prostitution, including of a minor. They deny the charges. El-Mahroug has made carefully orchestrated statements to the media since the scandal broke, but has never publicly given sworn testimony. Both she and Berlusconi deny having had sex. Dressed soberly with her hair pulled back, El-Mahroug said she first made contact with Berlusconi's inner circle when she participated in a beauty contest organised by Fede in Sicily when she was 16. After that she made her way to Milan, hoping to find work. She said she tried to get work through another defendant's talent agency but didn't have proper identity documents, and wound up landing a job as a hostess in nightclubs, earning around 100 euros (130 US dollars) a night. She frequently changed accommodation during that time, stayinestified that she met the premier that night - on Valentine's Day in 2010 - and that he gave her an envelope of 2,000 to 3,000 euros (2,600 - 3,900 US dollars) as she was leaving, saying it was "a little help" and asking for her telephone number, which she gave him. At that party, she said, she introduced herself as Ruby and told other guests a fake tale that she was Egyptian, that her mother was a famous Arab singer and that she was related to then-Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. She was 17 at the time but had passed herself off as being 23 or 24. El-Mahroug confirmed Friday what other witnesses have testified previously: that at some of the soirees, young female party guests had dressed up like nuns and danced for Berlusconi and then stripped down to their underwear. The parties took place in a disco in Berlusconi's villa equipped with a lap dance pole. El-Mahroug told the court that there was sometimes a singer who is close to Berlusconi at the parties, but most of the guests were young women. While she went home in a taxi alone the first night, other times, she testified, she slept in a guest room by herself. Since she only had the dress she was wearing, she was given a track suit in the morning to have breakfast, and sometimes stayed for lunch, leaving in the late afternoon. El-Mahroug said Minetti, one of the defendants, had dressed up like a nun at that February 14 party and lifted her costume to show off her legs as she danced in Berlusconi's in-house disco. El-Mahroug demonstrated from her seat how Minetti had raised her hemline. She said Minetti eventually took off her costume and was in just her lingerie. She said another young woman dressed up alternately as Obama or a Milan magistrate who is leading the prosecution against Berlusconi in the sex scandal, donning a red wig and the black robes worn by magistrates in Italy. "The girls who were dressed in costumes approached him in a sensual way as they danced. They raised their skirts," El-Mahroug testified. She added: "I never saw contact." On the stand, El-Mahroug denied ever having acted as a prostitute, and repeated her denials that she ever had sex with Berlusconi. However, when the presiding judge pressed her on wiretaps in which she appears to be referring to acts of prostitution, she said that her statements then were just "stupid things." It was the same phrase she used to explain away her statements that she was about to receive 5 million euros from the then-premier. At one point, the judge admonished her that she was testifying at a trial aimed at ascertaining the facts, not appearing on a televised interview, when she appeared to criticise prosecutors, then backed down. Prosecutors in Berlusconi's separate trial have said El-Mahroug's testimony is unreliable and are relying on her sworn statements. The defence had initially called her as a witness, but then changed its strategy and didn't call her. That trial is nearing at included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN AP-WF-05-17-13 1836GMT
EMPLOYMENT
JUNIOR ADHA MEETING. JUNIOR DENTAL HYGIENIST ASSOCIATION. CAREER PLANNING. DENTAL HEALTH EDUCATION.
DENTALCARE
A dentist and hygienist clean a youngster's teeth.
Portrait of dentist in dentist's office
Portrait of dentist in her dentist's office
86604 "THE REAL MISS AMERICA" 1952 KOREAN WAR U.S. ARMED FORCES WOMEN RECRUITING FILM
Narrated by Henry Fonda, THE REAL MISS AMERICA is a short documentary film produced in 1952 by the United States Department of Defense as a recruiting tool for women, urging them to join the armed services. Women's training, social life, and living situations are depicted, as well as a wide variety of jobs in which women could serve in the various branches of the military. Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett speaks to the importance of women as part of the national defense, and General Matthew Ridgway praises women for their service in combat-support functions.<p><p>The film shows activities in Korea at the 2:00 mark, including the decoration of two female nurses operating in a Mobile Army Surgeon's Hospital, as well as Navy WAVES at the 3:40 mark working in communications, as trainers, and as dental hygienists and nurses. Air traffic controllers and LINK trainer, and weather observers, are seen at the 4:30 mark. A unit band is seen at 4:45, and an intelligence department and code office, and telephone operators, are also seen. Recreation for our "daughters in uniform" is also seen including bowling and lawn tennis, as well as dancing, are also seen.<p><p>The film's narration is fairly condescending and definitely a "period piece" in an era when women's roles were limited by sexism.<p><p>Motion picture films don't last forever; many have already been lost or destroyed. For almost two decades, we've worked to collect, scan and preserve the world as it was captured on 35mm, 16mm and 8mm movies -- including home movies, industrial films, and other non-fiction. If you have endangered films you'd like to have scanned, or wish to donate celluloid to Periscope Film so that we can share them with the world, we'd love to hear from you. Contact us via the weblink below.<p><p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
Dental scaling tool with coolant
Dentist preparing to use a plaque scraper to clean patient's teeth. Liquid coolant is being sprayed from the tip of the device.
80984 " THAT MEN MAY FIGHT " WORLD WAR II WOMEN'S RESERVE WAVES U.S. NAVY MOVIE
This WWII movie shows the U.S. Navy's WAVES, the acronym for the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service, the World War II women's branch of the United States Naval Reserve. The film shows WAVE training in San Diego, California. The film shows WAVES employed as stenographers, postal clerks, telephone operators, air traffic control, pharmacists mates, dental hygienists, aerographers, store keepers, and more. At the 5:30 mark, women are shown operating LINK trainers and repairing aircraft as aviation machinists mates at the Air Station at Norman, Oklahoma. The women's softball team, such as you might have seen in "A League of Their Own" is also shown. <p><p>The WAVES was established on 21 July 1942 by the U.S. Congress and signed into law by the president on 30 July 1942, as the Title V amendment to the Naval Reserve Act of 1938. This authorized the U.S, Navy to accept women into the naval reserve as commissioned officers and at the enlisted level, effective for the duration of the war plus six months. The purpose of the law was to release officers and men for sea duty and replace them with women in shore stations.<p><p>The notion of women serving in the Navy was not widely supported in the congress or by the Navy, although some members did support the need for uniformed women during wartime. Nonetheless, the persistence of several women laid the groundwork for success. The congressional act allowing women to serve in the Navy became a reality, in large measure, through the efforts of the Navy’s Women’s Advisory Council, Dr. Margaret Chung, and Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of the president.<p><p>Mildred H. McAfee became the first director of the WAVES. She was commissioned a Lieutenant Commander in the Navy on 3 August 1942, and was the first woman commissioned in the US Naval Reserve. McAfee, on leave as president of Wellesley College, was an experienced educator and highly respected in her field.<p><p>The age for officer candidates was between 20 and 49, with a college degree, or two years of college and two years of equivalent professional or business experience. The enlisted age requirements were between 20 and 35, with a high school or business diploma, or equivalent experience. United States citizenship was required in each case. WAVES were primarily white and middle class. Little attempt had been made to recruit African-American or other women minorities until October 1944. However, 72 African-American women did eventually serve in it he WAVES and on a fully integrated basis. The WAVES peak strength was 86,291, which included 8,475 officers, 73,816 enlisted, and about 4,000 in training.<p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example like: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
4k video footage of a confident young woman working in a dentist’s office
Nobody cares for your smile quite like I do
Dental tools wrapped in plastic
Dental tools wrapped in plastic ready for use in the dental surgery.
Children at the Dentists Office
Dr. John Boland and his dental assistants make going to the dentist a more pleasant experience for their young patients. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.