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tv   [untitled]    February 5, 2012 2:30pm-3:00pm EST

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to the early days in the founding of our nation. >> every sunday on the drill field at fort myer, the 3rd infantry regiment holds a review and invites the public to attend. the band accompanies these functions are the same that welcomed the dig tears at the airport. it is the united states army band. it is another of the unique organizations in the military district of washington. since its creation, the army band has led a varied and distinguished career. open-air concerts are given each summer in the city and are enjoyed by thousands. it is the army band that leads the inaugural parades. besides these duties, it has represented the united states army at many musical functions and celebrations throughout the world. ♪
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♪ ♪ >> faced by the united states army band, the old guard passes in review. ♪
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♪ >> but not all the troops in the washington area are stationed here for show and ceremony. many fill jobs that are vital to the defense of the city. let's visit with some of them. in the suburbs surrounding washington, there are many anti-aircraft batteries such as this, ready for action 24 hours a day. >> battery commander of charlie battery of the 14th anti-aircraft artillery battalion is 22-year-old lieutenant david lacey. lieutenant, we have mentioned the overall picture of the army
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anti-aircraft command being our first line of defense. but just where does your battery fit into this picture? >> well, sergeant queen, i would say that we here around washington are the last line of defense, rather than the first. i say this because i feel that if the enemy is able to penetrate our other defenses, and get through, it would be up to us to proeblingt protect the capitol. >> living here in the backyards of some of our neighbors in the residential area of our nation's capitol, have you had an opportunity to become acquainted with them? >> yes, we have. even though as you know we have to stay only a few minutes away from the guns. we have found time to become quite acquainted with our neighbors. we have an open house here at least once each year, where we invite the folks in and show them around the area.
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and we have a couple ball teams who practice on our diamond down here during the summer. >> the teenagers come over and join some of the men here at the battery in playing ball? >> that's right, they have. >> good. >> even some of the young fellows across the road have come over and played football with the guys here. i think we are fortunate in having very fine neighbors. >> this constant alert status, more or less, must keep the men pretty much on their toes. i've been wondering, do they get an itchy trigger finger during these battle stations? >> no, they don't. we realize that's a problem, however, so we have a schedule whereby each unit can go up to the firing range in delaware and up there the men can fire the guns and, as you might say, give that trigger finger a good workout. >> well, i won't take up more of your time. thank you for coming by for a minute and filling us in on the details of your battery. >> you're welcome. >> now i think we'll just stand
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by and take a look at some of the activities that take place here in a typical gun sight of charlie battery of the 14th anti-aircraft artillery battalion. firing tactics up on the range are necessary, but football tactics are important, too. especially when you've got to spend all of your time on that same little piece of real estate. then it's the neighbors that count. and kids especially are always good for a fresh approach. here's some new tactics that are bound to succeed. and there's the payoff. though the city of washington may be only a few minutes drive away, these soldiers seldom get the chance to enjoy it. they must find recreation here at the battery and as the lieutenant said, it's the neighbors that make it enjoyable. but all good things must come to an end. somewhere on the screen of an early warning radar set, an unidentified aircraft is picked
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up. it's probably friendly but could be an enemy bomber. the aa command can take no chances. to these men, alerts such as this are routine. they happen every day. so far they have always proved to be only an alert, but men and guns are ever ready. but what are those other washington soldiers, those proud men of the old guard? what would be their mission in time of emergency? here in a third infantry room the duty sergeant receives a phone call. this regiment has been called out on a practice alert at the barracks the men hop to. off the locker tops come field packs and combat gear. this will be as close to reality
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as training will allow. over at battalion headquarters, the c.o. briefs his officers. this is explained, then the alert orders are given. >> this regiment, the 3rd infantry, has been ordered to execute plan able. this battalion will move without delay to positions as directed in the defense plan. >> back at the barracks, the men take their rifles. and then the heavier stuff too. bazookas, recoilist rifles, more tar moretars and machine guns. everything has been carefully planned for this moment. in an emergency as on parade split-second timing plus teamwork pays off in performance.
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these are the same men, the ceremonial troops, the color guards, the sentries and the caisson detachment and those qualities that made them the best ceremonial soldiers make them the best combat soldiers, too. down at the tank park the alert is also sounded. and 3rd infantry tankers prepare to move out. >> if this were a genuine attack, the 3rd infantry's primary duty would be defense of the capital and protection of the nation's leaders. today they follow a prepared alert plan simulating this mission. heavy caliber machine guns are mounted, engines revved up and communications tested. all guard tanks get ready to roll. ♪
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>> while the tanks rumble to their destinations, trucks pull up to receive the infantry. there is an attitude in the old guard, you begin to feel it after you've been around them for a while. they are determined to be the best at anything they tackle. that's what makes them good soldiers. that's why these men are in the third, and that's why the third is in washington with so many important duties to perform, including the defense of the city. with the pentagon for a backdrop, tank elements race down the main highways to
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establish road blocks at critical intersections, no tickets for speeding today. in the real thing, swiftness of movement would be essential. now, really only minutes after the alert was first sounded, the various elements of the third have carried out their respective assignments as given in the prepared alert plan able. tanks are eased into positions for effective fields of fire. now with the nation's capital under the guns of friendly forces, the alert is over. you have seen only a glimpse of what goes on here in washington. you have visited only a few of the many military installations around the city. and now, every evening, the people who work in all of these places go home to rest and recreation. but elsewhere there are others who will not rest tonight. at the anti-aircraft batteries
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the watch is kept. the guns point into the evening sky. they are still now, but always ready. the pentagon is quiet too. the offices are empty, the day's work is done. at the tomb of the unknown soldier a solitary bugler sounds "taps." ♪ [ taps ] ♪ [ taps ]
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>> the old guard, the army band, the anti-aircraft batteries. all these are part of the washington scene, a part of the military life that gives the nation's capital its color and vitality. a part, too, of the nation's defense. now this is sergeant stuart queen inviting you to be with us again next week for another look at the big picture. the united states army in action. >> the big picture is a weekly television report to the nation on the activities of the army at
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home and overseas. produced by the signal corps pictorial center. presented by the u.s. army in cooperation with this station. you can be an important part of the big picture. you can proudly serve with the best equipped, the best trained, the best fighting team in the world today, the united states army. this weekend, american history tv is in beaumont, texas, expanding our reach from washington, d.c. for programming on american history. beaumont is home to the first major oil field in the united states and has a population of about 120,000 people. learn more about beaumont, texas, all weekend long on american history tv. here at the texas energy museum, we talk about science primarily of oil energy. go from the geology of oil all
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the way through the refining and the final products we use every day. texas wasn't the first oil state. oil was first found in the united states in titus, pennsylvania, where rockefeller became famous. as oil was moving west and people were trying to find oil everywhere, this is about the turn of the century, now, we're looking for oil in california, kansas, oklahoma, small showings everywhere. texas had a very small oil well in 1895 in corsicana. only produced about 25, 30 barrels a day. couldn't market it, refine it. and the typical oil well in that time in pennsylvania was producing 600 barrels a day. spindletop blew in at 100,000 barrels a day. that ushered in a completely new industry in texas.
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and people started looking everywhere for oil. at the turn of the century, texas was primarily cotton and cattle. and that was its main production. it was an agricultural state. so almost overnight, texas was transformed into an industrialized economy based on oil. in the early part of the united states history of oil well drilling, it was pretty much used with a cable tool rig. in this particular equipment, you're taking a very heavy steel bit and it's picking it up and dropping it over and over, just like if you were on the back end of a -- had a post on the end of a seesaw and you're rocking it up and down. as the driller is controlling the drop or the rate of which that cable and that bit is dropped into the ground, they're only picking up the bit maybe 3 or 4 inches at a time and then dropping it again. this is fairly lightweight equipment. it wasn't heavy enough to drill spindletop in 1901. they brought in heavier
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equipment, which we call the rotary rig. the rotary rig became fairly more common in texas after 1901 because it was heavier and able to take the spindletop production. the culture and folklore of the oil industry is rampant with stories of different types of people who worked on the rig. the early cable tool guys considered themselves experts at drilling. there was a high degree of technology. it took a lot of experience in drilling with the cable tool rig. these guys were coming into texas from other parts of the country. they had gotten their start in pennsylvania and ohio and illinois. and they came in and they were very proud of the techniques and the experience that they had. the rotary drilling actually took less education to really work on those types of rigs. and these two groups of people, if one oil field was using a cable tool rig and another -- the same oil field, they had the
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folks there working rotary drilling, they didn't want to talk to each other. it was an antagonism between the two and hostilities would occur. rotary drilling is what's used exclusively today throughout the world, even offshore drilling, anything like that. oil has several characteristics when it comes out of the ground. it can have different colors, different thicknesses, which is viscosity. in this particular exhibit, we can see the viscosity of oil kind of reflected. you can see the different colors, there's a thinness to a thickness. what i'm going to do right now is they're going to rotate this wheel. and we should be able to capture the flow which indicates the viscosity. now, what makes the difference, when oil is priced, when you would say the spot price of oil is $90 or $100 is based upon what they call an intermediate oil or west texas intermediate, which is a nice grade of oil.
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oil, as it's sold, is sold at different prices based upon the number of characteristics, one of which is its viscosity. other, how much sulfur it has in it or other impurities. very thick oil is going to be harder to refine. that's one of the issues today when talking about getting the oil out of canada and these oil sands. it's a very thick oil that's embedded in loose sand instead of rock. it's a much thicker oil. it's tougher to produce. it's tougher to refine. you can have very light oils, which would have less impurities in them and it's an early indication -- all oil is made up of carbon and hydrogen. all different kind of compounds are in this oil. as you refine oil, we're basically separating the hydrocarbons and the different compounds out of the oil. some of the early crude oils that you found up in pennsylvania were somewhat like this, they were lighter crude oils. they were easier to refine and had a lot of kerosene compounds and kerosene cuts in them. made very well for that.
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when spindletop was famous in 1901, its crude oil was a fairly thick crude oil and had a lot of sulfur in it. and the main product was kerosene. spind spindletop crude oil did not make kerosene very well. and it was one of the -- sort of inciden instigated a whole new market for crude oil, one of which was firing sugar refineries in louisiana and also they started using it on steamships. they replaced coal with fuel oils. they're still steam-powered but you use the fuel oil to fire the burners. we have a small exhibit here that talks about distillation of refining. it's heated up, and what we're doing -- basic first step of refining is to take crude oil and heat might
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think of in terms of products, from heavy asphalts at the bottom to diesels and fuel oils, up to kerosenes and gasoline, then up to lighter gases. as these gases condense or cool down then they can be pulled off. that's where you get your various products. one of the things that's always inherent in dealing with oil is the environment. we've had some disasters obviously, the bp oil disaster and spill in the gulf was a disaster that should not have happened and the industry as a whole going back hundreds of years, this industry has evolved quite a bit. in the early days there were no regulations at all. when you drilled a well, oil just went everywhere. it comes at a combination of public concern, governmental action and the industry
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themselves. i think all those things come together. today i think you see a lot more companies and the companies that we deal with every day are very concerned about the environment. i think there are issues today we think of the fracing and operations and i think the industry is concerned. you might say the easy oil to find and get out of the ground has been found and we have drilled for it and have produced it. the oil that's still there. again we think we have huge reserves still available to us. but it is deeper, it's in harder formations to get out and so the big issues coming up, the biggest things you'll see are increases in technology and finding ways to safely and personnel safety as well as environment safety to get this oil out of the ground and in a
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cost effective manner, but the technology's going to do that for us. in may of 2011, historian richard norton smith led a ten-day bus tour from asheville, north carolina to austin, texas. the group stopped at several presidential and historic sites along the route. one of the stops was the sixth floor museum at daiy deeley pl dallas, texas. from the six floor southeast corner of this building lee harvey oswald shot president john f. kennedy in 1963. the curator talked about the museum and how the information on the assassination and ensuing investigations is presented. >> what we set out to do was to
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basically tell what happened and not draw any of our own conclusions but to present what history has told us. and there have been several investigations and various developments over the years. most people accord the to public opinion surveys have never. satisfied that it was just lee harvey oswald but none of these other theories have been proven and as far as many people are concerned, they've all been dismissed. the official explanation is three shots were fired, all from lee harvey oswald and all from that southeast corner sixth story window. the rifle that oswald supposedly used was his. it was traced to him and to his post office box. it was left behind in the building on the sixth floor. the warren commission had a reconstruction done and one of the exhibits upstairs is a scale mod of dealey plaza that they helped study how the shooting
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happened. ultimately the fbi and warren commission decided that the first shot came when the car came out from underneath a tree. still is there, much taller now than it was. from that moment to when that fatal shot was fired is about six seconds. well, then they have the problem of, well, could that rifle be fired that fast. not easily. of course, the faster you try to fire a rifle the more inaccurate you tend to be. but the later thinking is the first shot was fired before the car went under the tree. which adds a total of two or three more seconds. so if you have eight or nine seconds to fire, then you can do it. the rifle had a scope, but that doesn't mean he had to use the scope. you would normally -- and i've talked to a couple dallas police officers who fired test shots from that window in 1978 for the second investigation. they told me, and all the reporters present, these are easy shots, no one would miss. it is the timing that makes it
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difficult. but if you have enough -- if you have seven, eight, nine second, you can do it if you have used that weapon before. there is no hard evidence in the medical evidence that kennedy was hit from any other direction other than behind and above. now whether there was another shooter who didn't shoot, or did fire a shot and missed, that's the question that some people are still not comfortable with answering because they just don't know. they're not satisfied with not knowing. let me give you an example. in a criminal investigation, there's always -- there are always loose ends. every investigator will tell you that. when the shots were fired, within 30 seconds, one of the dallas police officers doing traffic control at the intersection started running down the side street here and he ran back to the area that's now known as the grassy knoll in the parking lot.
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he encountered a man dressed in coat and tie. the cop had his gun drawn and he went up to the man, the man identified himself as secret service. told him he was secret service, and flashed secret service credentials. the cop let him go and proceeded to search around the parking lot and found nothing. the warren commission was told about this and they asked the secret service, well, who did you have -- who of your agents were located on the ground? none. those of us who study the assassination would then look to see what happened as a result of getting this information. you would think there would be some sort of investigation. well who is this guy? why has he not come forward? how come his supervisor hasn't come forward to say, you know, it's ralph or something. nothing happened. there was no follow-up whatsoever, and there are -- i don't know what the total number is, but there are enough of those questions that make a lot of people scratch their heads and go, you know, what's really
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going on here, is there more to it, or was that just some guy who for some reason did not or could not come forward at the time? we don't know. most people are just not satisfied with the kennedy assassination and how it ended. leaving some questions up in the air and no motive for lee harvey oswald, no known motive. so perhaps that's one of the reasons -- or two of the reasons that people come here. we have had members of the kennedy family here. we don't identify them by name but the kennedy family is quite happy with what we do and how we go about it. >> for more information about the sixth floor museum at dealy pl plaza at jfk.org.
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you're watching american history tv all weekend every weekend on c-span3. this past mopped the national archives released an audio recording on air force one soon after president kennedy was assassinated. the recording made as the airplane travels from dallas to washington includes conversations among pilots, aides, lyndon johnson, and others, and includes over 0 minutes of audio not previously part of the public record. here's an excerpt. >> c-140. 497. last three numbers. he's inbound. his code name is grandson and i want to talk to him. >> grandson. okay, sir. we'll see what we can do. we're real busy with air force one right now.
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>> okay. you don't have the capability to work more than one, huh? >> we're running air force one on two different frequencies, we're getting two different patches at one time right now an that's all we can do. what is your drop, sir? are you drop off the washington switch? >> i have to drop 303 or 79225. it will be too late. >> what is your name again, sir? >> colonel dorman. >> okay, i'll try to get back to you if we can get him right away, sir. >> that was just a portion of a recording released this week to the national archive museum to a deal -- belonging to the late general clifton jr. it was 1 of 2 original recordings of his acquired by collection. they donated one to the

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