SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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and it is a huge archive and i looked at it as unlimited possibilities for editing and archiving and curating and publishing and i thought it was just amazing that i have the power at my fingertips to do anything that i wanted without any sort of limits only right here was the only limit and so the site really features other people's work and i don't put my work on it and it is basically, i thought, what can i do something like interview magazine like warhol did? i have the tools and i started five years ago and it has grown into huge proportions, i think
and it is a huge archive and i looked at it as unlimited possibilities for editing and archiving and curating and publishing and i thought it was just amazing that i have the power at my fingertips to do anything that i wanted without any sort of limits only right here was the only limit and so the site really features other people's work and i don't put my work on it and it is basically, i thought, what can i do something like interview magazine like warhol did? i have the tools and i started...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 30, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV2
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the archives and how can you not when there are images being created and every has a digital slr in their hand or a camera in their phone and everyone can make a good picture now not everyone, but it is not, it gos beyond that and i can that we are going to look backwards as much as forwards. we are having all of this information in front of us. and people will sift through it, and bring ideas for it.
the archives and how can you not when there are images being created and every has a digital slr in their hand or a camera in their phone and everyone can make a good picture now not everyone, but it is not, it gos beyond that and i can that we are going to look backwards as much as forwards. we are having all of this information in front of us. and people will sift through it, and bring ideas for it.
and it is a huge archive and i looked at it as unlimited possibil
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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and the president let me into these archives very kindly because there were closed. inside i found fascinating evidence. the really interesting thing about it was apart from the story which is just amazing. they held at the stagecoach. they killed all the costs six to reject around. and then at the last minute when of course is the of the runoff with the money to of the gangsters ran off and blew up, blew themselves up. they got the money. stalin was smoking a cigarette in a doorway watching all of this is usual. what was interesting was in every bank robbery he needed inside man. so i found the memoirs, the inside man. and you know why he helped stalin set up this bank robbery? he admired not stalin's politics or communism but the public. he admired his poetry. because before he was a bolshevik revolution is to was a public pellet. his poetry was highly regarded. and this man said as a love your palm and have a tip for you. is a stagecoach arriving with 300,000 rubles and a. i'm going to tell you all the details on a. >> host: why did stalin initially joined? >> gue
and the president let me into these archives very kindly because there were closed. inside i found fascinating evidence. the really interesting thing about it was apart from the story which is just amazing. they held at the stagecoach. they killed all the costs six to reject around. and then at the last minute when of course is the of the runoff with the money to of the gangsters ran off and blew up, blew themselves up. they got the money. stalin was smoking a cigarette in a doorway watching...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 30, 2013
08/13
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and it is a huge archive and i looked at it as unlimited possibilities for editing and archiving and curating and publishing and i thought it was just amazing that i have the power at my fingertips to do anything that i wanted without any sort of limits only right here was the only limit and so the site really features other people's work and i don't put my work on it and it is basically, i thought, what can i do something like interview magazine like warhol did? i have the tools and i started five years ago and it has grown into huge proportions, i think when i checked there are 150,000 unique visitors a month reading it. so it has gotten quite an audience, but really it is something that i would love, it is just pure passion and it is also a self-education of mine on display and my own interest. and i think i will wrap it up. thanks. [ applause ] >> so for those of you who came in late, if you could hold your questions, we are not going to do a formal q, and a, but i will ask each of the panelists to stick around and if you want to chat with them one on one, they will be veil for a
and it is a huge archive and i looked at it as unlimited possibilities for editing and archiving and curating and publishing and i thought it was just amazing that i have the power at my fingertips to do anything that i wanted without any sort of limits only right here was the only limit and so the site really features other people's work and i don't put my work on it and it is basically, i thought, what can i do something like interview magazine like warhol did? i have the tools and i started...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from museums in 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> residents of a city in southwestern japan are cleaning up their streets after a nearby volcano erupted and spewed ash. mount sakurajima on the island of kyushu. the highest volcanic emission since record keeping began in 1955. the city deployed more than 60 street sweepers and sprinkler trucks to disperse mhz to affect the state of the volcano. >> mhz volcano erupted 100 years ago it formed a connection with the island of kyushu. >>> after the disaster two years ago in northeastern japan, many had difficulty identifying those who had died, but now some people are setting up a database to help identify victims through their dental records. nhk world has the details. >> reporter: recently, she used a special service that records teeth. teeth are unique to each person. they can be vital in identifying people. >> translator: it would be good if my identity could be establish
service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from museums in 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> residents of a city in southwestern japan are cleaning up their streets after a nearby volcano erupted and spewed ash. mount sakurajima on the island of kyushu. the highest volcanic emission since record keeping began in 1955. the city deployed more than 60 street...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from museums in 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> rescue workers faced a host of challenges in the aftermath of the disaster in japan. now a database is helped to identify victims through their dental records. >> reporter: recently, fumiko made a special service that records and stores teeth x-rays for 25 years. teeth are unique to each person. they do not decompose so they can be vital in identifying people. >> translator: that wouit would if my identity could be established quickly and my body returned to my family. >> reporter: staff at a dental college convert the x-rays into data files. they are stored in a vault at the private security company. in the last year, about 300 people have signed up for the service. shimomichi's sons have grown up. now she lives alone. she learned her lesson 15 years ago. since then, she hasn't had much social life. when the earthquake and tsunami stroke smimomichi heard many bodies cou
service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from museums in 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> rescue workers faced a host of challenges in the aftermath of the disaster in japan. now a database is helped to identify victims through their dental records. >> reporter: recently, fumiko made a special service that records and stores teeth x-rays for 25...
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Aug 12, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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the school is in one archive. this goal is in the russian state archives from the state archives of the russian federation, and the jaw is in -- they were taken away. so it gives you an idea if you like a different sort of chains of command, the different parts of the transit should be separated. >> have you seen those? >> no. i've seen photographs of them. i certainly have not seen the originals. one can, but i seem the photographs are fair and. >> what were the last days in in the bunker, in hitler's bunker like? >> well, one person was present describing to me a sort of a mixed share of resignation in history. and i think that's a very good way of putting it. hitler was dishing out cyanide pills. they were eventually, many of them were -- is a cyanide or shooting yourself the best way? many of them who did decide to shoot themselves did exactly that. but the others managed to escape right to the end. those i spoke to managed to get out just before the end. and it managed to get to a small electric boat and floa
the school is in one archive. this goal is in the russian state archives from the state archives of the russian federation, and the jaw is in -- they were taken away. so it gives you an idea if you like a different sort of chains of command, the different parts of the transit should be separated. >> have you seen those? >> no. i've seen photographs of them. i certainly have not seen the originals. one can, but i seem the photographs are fair and. >> what were the last days in...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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KCSM
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officials took part in a ceremony in hiroshima to mark the launch of the archive. >> translator: i believe this online service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> residents of a city in southwestern japan are cleaning up their streets, their homes, everything after a nearby volcano erupted and spewed ash. mount sakurajima blasted a plume of smoke and ash into the air. officials say it's the highest emissions since recordkeeping began in 1955. the city government deployed more than 60 street sweepers and sprinkler trucks to remove the ash. residents used water and brooms to clean their homes and storefronts. >> translator: i've been cleaning around here since last night. it's been a real pain. >> car owners formed long lines outside gas stations waiting for a wash. >> translator: it's terrible. the ash was so thick on the windshield. i couldn't see. i didn't want to go outside, but i had to. not on the verge of a major eruption.
officials took part in a ceremony in hiroshima to mark the launch of the archive. >> translator: i believe this online service will help people around the world share our wish for peace. >> google's visual archive service was launched last year. it showcases items from 13 countries including the united states and poland. >>> residents of a city in southwestern japan are cleaning up their streets, their homes, everything after a nearby volcano erupted and spewed ash. mount...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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the opportunity is represented by the hoover archives' rich holdings on coercion and repression in the soviet union. there are millions of pages of documents from the gulag, stalin's agency for forced labor camps. mock other hold -- among other holdings that tell the story of the power and cruelty under the bolsheviks are the meetings of the central committee and the personal archives of one of stalin's georgian comrades in arms and dmitri -- [inaudible] gorbachev's biographer of stalin. and these holdings illustrate the opportunity for scholars to work here at hoover on the history of soviet rule. i said there was a need and an opportunity. the need for paul's book is illustrated by simple statistical comparison. in russia women die on average in their 70s, men die in their early 60s. while most all men who experienced and survived stalin's mass suppressions are now dead. only a few women are still alive, and they, too, are soon to have passed on. their stories need to be told now before it's too late. through paul's book, the last survivors have now been able to tell their stories. t
the opportunity is represented by the hoover archives' rich holdings on coercion and repression in the soviet union. there are millions of pages of documents from the gulag, stalin's agency for forced labor camps. mock other hold -- among other holdings that tell the story of the power and cruelty under the bolsheviks are the meetings of the central committee and the personal archives of one of stalin's georgian comrades in arms and dmitri -- [inaudible] gorbachev's biographer of stalin. and...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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i've been here for about 20 years working in archives around the world. i went to the ukraine initially in 1992 where i discovered some of the material and collecting stories. it took all these years of going to israel, spending a lot of time at the u.s. holocaust memorial. they have a fabulous collection there. going to the archives in germany, collecting material from survivors and the u.s. this massive collective effort of stories to place these women in these killing fields and concluded that there were at least a half a million, 500,000 women who are mobilized. this is new, not only that we are putting them in the eastern territory, but in significant numbers in a variety of roles. and that figure is obviously quite a contrast to when we think of camp guards in closed encamps settings behind barbed wire, behind the wall, trained to be cool. the scene of women and all different kinds of capacities in the open air setting where mass shootings, have the victims of the holocaust by it, approximately half. forced marches through famine, starvation, so for
i've been here for about 20 years working in archives around the world. i went to the ukraine initially in 1992 where i discovered some of the material and collecting stories. it took all these years of going to israel, spending a lot of time at the u.s. holocaust memorial. they have a fabulous collection there. going to the archives in germany, collecting material from survivors and the u.s. this massive collective effort of stories to place these women in these killing fields and concluded...
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Aug 3, 2013
08/13
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at the national archives. and that was great because that enabled me to have that great holy cow experience as i picked papers out of boxes. so i wrote this book. it's called "junius and albert's adventures in the confederacy" because it's an adventure story. it's the kind of straightforward adventure story that keeps you awake late at night wondering what's going to happen next. are these guys going to make it home, or are they going to get shot or hung or otherwise detained on the way? but it's also a work of history, and i think it illuminates parts of the civil war that most people don't know about; the culture of reporters in the civil war, what it was like in confederate prisons, and most importantly, the guerrilla war that was fought by pro-union folks in the mountains of north carolina and tennessee and virginia. so the story has many colorful characters. but, of course, the main characters are junius browne and albert richardson. they were boast 27 years old when the -- both 27 years old when the war
at the national archives. and that was great because that enabled me to have that great holy cow experience as i picked papers out of boxes. so i wrote this book. it's called "junius and albert's adventures in the confederacy" because it's an adventure story. it's the kind of straightforward adventure story that keeps you awake late at night wondering what's going to happen next. are these guys going to make it home, or are they going to get shot or hung or otherwise detained on the...
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in maryland so it just brings up the question what else could be in those archives that we just don't know about ray mcgovern former cia analyst thank you so much for coming in was welcome. and that's going to do it for now for more on the stories we covered go to youtube dot com slash r.t. america and for the latest and greatest information on all the stories that we covered and a few that we just did not have time to get to check out our web site r.t. dot com forward slash usa and don't forget to follow me on twitter app meghan underscore lopez stay tuned to prime interest is next. wealthy british style stock. market. can. find out what's really happening to the global economy. there are no holds barred the global financial headlines kaiser report. will include the. science technology innovation all the latest developments from around russia. the future covered. the. color. line. coming out. in russia so much time means. russians love their family country houses at the end of the working week millions of people head straight for the peace and quiet of the villages a chance to rechar
in maryland so it just brings up the question what else could be in those archives that we just don't know about ray mcgovern former cia analyst thank you so much for coming in was welcome. and that's going to do it for now for more on the stories we covered go to youtube dot com slash r.t. america and for the latest and greatest information on all the stories that we covered and a few that we just did not have time to get to check out our web site r.t. dot com forward slash usa and don't...
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Aug 26, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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as you have heard, she has gathered material from this for archives on four continents and brought together an extraordinary kind of learning. but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see and to capture in her eyes a sense of how the landscapes work. is it is a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and the site. thank you. [applause] >> thank you so much for that great praise. he used the operative word see. towards the end of my talk today i want you to see the people that walked here. i want them to rise up out of the ground or rode their way in the inlet. after i finish talking and when you've brought your book, i want you to walk around and have cliche to go with you because they are here to be the that's why i call the stock visible and invisible. it's the only place i can do this talk. can you all hear me? good. as the shelter island in new york what is visible? a serving 18th-century house in its landscape whose owners played on a double roles in the revolutionary war and in the civil war. they built this house -- can y
as you have heard, she has gathered material from this for archives on four continents and brought together an extraordinary kind of learning. but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see and to capture in her eyes a sense of how the landscapes work. is it is a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and the site. thank you. [applause] >> thank you so much for that great praise. he used the operative word see. towards the end...
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Aug 9, 2013
08/13
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. >> i've a question about the archiving of their content. a lot of you are digital and only digital and as someone who thinks about capturing content for the future, what if anything of your content could you go back and get from years ago or let's say that you are continuing on in the next 10 years? is someone going to deal to come back and get content from today 10 years from now? >> i think that's a great and important question and if somebody now moving into academia and looking for links that i can give my students for readings every week i can't tell you how many broken links i found the last two or three weeks. it's so frustrating. when we created politifact we said that it was going to be as important for people to be able to look things up as it is for them to see the latest fact checks so there has been a commitment from the start to archiving and in addition the head of the newsletter of the tampa bay times was committed that we would also give all of our content to nexis so politifact's contents preserve both places but man, you
. >> i've a question about the archiving of their content. a lot of you are digital and only digital and as someone who thinks about capturing content for the future, what if anything of your content could you go back and get from years ago or let's say that you are continuing on in the next 10 years? is someone going to deal to come back and get content from today 10 years from now? >> i think that's a great and important question and if somebody now moving into academia and...
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Aug 17, 2013
08/13
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WBFF
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for our first trip to the "roadshow" archives, we don't need to go back in time.here's definitely room for a bit of retro on the "roadshow." what we often see are domestic objects that have actually changed people's lives. whether it's an early washing machine or a washstand or a hairdryer, it doesn't matter. these are things that suddenly made life easier. and i think one of the strange things the show does is track those sociological and technical changes. higgins: i'm pretty passionate about postwar home style and particularly things in the late '60s and early '70s, the use of new materials and how those really revolutionized our lifestyles. i really noticed a couple of pieces that paul did of, you know, great plastics-- the use of plastics and how that changed our lives in the late '60s and early '70s. one memorable one was the garden egg chair. - it's an amazing object, isn't it? - yeah. it's obviously-- i mean, it shrieks '60s attitude. these incredible colors. it's so sort of dynamic and vibrant. atterbury: i think also we track changes in attitudes to manu
for our first trip to the "roadshow" archives, we don't need to go back in time.here's definitely room for a bit of retro on the "roadshow." what we often see are domestic objects that have actually changed people's lives. whether it's an early washing machine or a washstand or a hairdryer, it doesn't matter. these are things that suddenly made life easier. and i think one of the strange things the show does is track those sociological and technical changes. higgins: i'm...
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Aug 14, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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our don't archived? >> well, i mean, i think that you can archived but it should be measured in days and weeks, not months and years. and what you do is if somebody flags, you know, images, the authorities because they believe it has evidentiary value or an individual because they think they believe there's been some sort of abuse, then the data is retained, otherwise it is flushed out. the kinds of schemes your talk about are what we need to see. >> thank you. yes, sir. >> i'm with an organization called naps and were an association of firms in the aerial photography satellite mapmaking business. the american people have benefited from the capture of photography from a variety of platforms for decades. you dial 911 and expectant and that's to come to your home or where you are. it's because the emergency response department has an accurate map that begin with an aerial photograph so there are a lot of things that the american people use every day that is a benefit from the acquisition of aerial photogra
our don't archived? >> well, i mean, i think that you can archived but it should be measured in days and weeks, not months and years. and what you do is if somebody flags, you know, images, the authorities because they believe it has evidentiary value or an individual because they think they believe there's been some sort of abuse, then the data is retained, otherwise it is flushed out. the kinds of schemes your talk about are what we need to see. >> thank you. yes, sir. >>...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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SFGTV2
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and i started making pictures and amasked the large archive, probably 10,000 images that i made throughouts period and i widled it down to around 80 to make this work. i will describe some of the dynamics of street view and sort of the implications. so we sort of now at this point firmly that photography only is partial truth. it really is affected by so many variables that you get half truths and half varying context that some of which you bring in yourself. but what happens is the photographer takes a moment of time, in this case one second in a place and we are left to look at it and make assessments and judgment and make, you know, our own back story to the images and so there is an element of this that we don't really know the struting. we sort of see what we, what is in front of us. and we start to take that in and decide, you know, what we think that truth is. google has taken these pictures of every cinch of our country for the most part and doing it in other countries as well. some of the other countries are resisting, germany, places where there is a history of big brotheresque t
and i started making pictures and amasked the large archive, probably 10,000 images that i made throughouts period and i widled it down to around 80 to make this work. i will describe some of the dynamics of street view and sort of the implications. so we sort of now at this point firmly that photography only is partial truth. it really is affected by so many variables that you get half truths and half varying context that some of which you bring in yourself. but what happens is the...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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it features archival audio as well as interviews with living artists. he can be accessed on site by dialing the telephone numbers located near the artwork or by visiting the commission's web site. the public art speaks volumes of san francisco as a world-class city with world-class art and culture. for more information, visit >> hello. welcome to "culturewire." we are here today with bay area artist jody chanel, and we are here to see the plaza where your piece has just been installed. >> i have been doing large-scale paintings in the galleries and museums, and the idea that in the future, i could do something that would hang out a little bit longer than the duration of the installation the kind of appeal to me. i quickly found out about the san francisco arts commission school and realized there was a pre-qualified school you had to apply to, so i applied to the. >> how long did it take you to develop this work for the plaza? >> this was a fast track project. design development was about a month. >> let's look at the beautiful mural. i have never seen
it features archival audio as well as interviews with living artists. he can be accessed on site by dialing the telephone numbers located near the artwork or by visiting the commission's web site. the public art speaks volumes of san francisco as a world-class city with world-class art and culture. for more information, visit >> hello. welcome to "culturewire." we are here today with bay area artist jody chanel, and we are here to see the plaza where your piece has just been...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 107
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i thought it was really important to create this archive. i wanted to show that you can use the power of government to create multimedia age free video. and there's no hidden agenda. other than the fact i wanted to create it. and i was alone and had real supportive. that was my goal to write a book. and the beauty is -- we touch on all kinds of subjects. we are telling you were there a couple of things that i focused on. obviously watergate was a nefng affair. -- domestic affair. it was poorly understood. i raised money. see, at a certain point the nixon foundation didn't want to pay for them anymore. a group of alumni of the nixon administration domestic policy, they raised -- they helped me raise money. so i used money that i raised with a group of nixon alumni to pay for it. we used trust fund money. it was expensive. my goal was to show that the federal government could it because most of the time these are all history projects are done by the private presidential foundations. they have a vested interest, i would say, in a certain legacy
i thought it was really important to create this archive. i wanted to show that you can use the power of government to create multimedia age free video. and there's no hidden agenda. other than the fact i wanted to create it. and i was alone and had real supportive. that was my goal to write a book. and the beauty is -- we touch on all kinds of subjects. we are telling you were there a couple of things that i focused on. obviously watergate was a nefng affair. -- domestic affair. it was poorly...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 115
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this is a very interesting story which i have quoted in the here from the nixon archives. because here you get the discussion between henry kissinger in one chair, nixon in another chair and moynihan. they had read moynihan's essay in "commentary" magazine. not about, you know, the black family which is moynihan's famous essay where he suggests that, you know, in the black community men need to join the military to create masculinity. that sort of argument. he wrote another argument about the u.n. and they brought him in. this is the great liberal senator from new york. and his mission was to go to new york and to cut down the general assembly to size and to move all important business to the security council. hence, today when people say can't the u.n. do anything, they just mean the security council. this was not as it was before the 1970s. people saw the general assembly as the main body of the u.n. now we all see the security council. that was also part of the agenda, and they succeeded. you know, they succeeded in doing these things. so the part of the north/south con
this is a very interesting story which i have quoted in the here from the nixon archives. because here you get the discussion between henry kissinger in one chair, nixon in another chair and moynihan. they had read moynihan's essay in "commentary" magazine. not about, you know, the black family which is moynihan's famous essay where he suggests that, you know, in the black community men need to join the military to create masculinity. that sort of argument. he wrote another argument...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 134
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i do mostly use archives and try to use mostly contemporary archives.oks written. amazon with something like 60,000 hard cover tights. some were really good, needless to say. i try to come through that and be diligent and see what others have written. >> host: what was your dad stationed? >> guest: he got to europe at the end of the war. he enlisted in '43 went officer candidate school and a second lieutenant. he was in the con stab which was an interesting unit formed as if ended. the helmet had a yellow band. their job was to keep in order bar very -- had been utterly destroyed seven million dead german. there's no food or power. there's no running water. it's horrible. it's nation of 80 million people that have been utterly smashed. and so he was there for a year, came back went to college. penn state then went back to the army. he liked it enough he made it a career, subsequently he was a career army officer. so, you know, he had an interesting role of europe right at the end. >> host: where do you grow up? >> guest: like most army brats all over. i
i do mostly use archives and try to use mostly contemporary archives.oks written. amazon with something like 60,000 hard cover tights. some were really good, needless to say. i try to come through that and be diligent and see what others have written. >> host: what was your dad stationed? >> guest: he got to europe at the end of the war. he enlisted in '43 went officer candidate school and a second lieutenant. he was in the con stab which was an interesting unit formed as if ended....
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Aug 5, 2013
08/13
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CSPAN2
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eye 98
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but it is because the documents are kept in the archives. [laughter] and they are incriminating. [laughter] and they're really incriminating. it is quite scandalous. the second dynamic that the second chapter tells is of the self commission and a story that is totally forgotten. one of the sad things of this self commission the final report was in caracas caracas, venezuela august august 2nd, 1980. that does not mean anything to you unless you are iraqi or kuwaiti but that was when they were invading kuwait. it has the faith of the world conference of racism and ended in bad times the crow . because of the intellectuals trying to figure out how to deal with their general agreement of trade and tariffs. but then to make a couple of revisions of global trade that will be catastrophic. i will tell you about one of them, the most important. in the background the intellectual property trade intellectual property. alexander wrote this book. sandy has a very nice timex watch. and i a take photographs of how it is laid out but i would have a completely different process. but the currier
but it is because the documents are kept in the archives. [laughter] and they are incriminating. [laughter] and they're really incriminating. it is quite scandalous. the second dynamic that the second chapter tells is of the self commission and a story that is totally forgotten. one of the sad things of this self commission the final report was in caracas caracas, venezuela august august 2nd, 1980. that does not mean anything to you unless you are iraqi or kuwaiti but that was when they were...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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our mission, great programming, archiving and preserving your memories we do that with your pledge sos ago, ten years ago, we had the legends with us as you've had members of your family with you and time moves on but time is not our friend with these shows it never has been, we are losing legends every minute and we hope that this brings back emotional moments with you with times in your own family and in memory of someone in your family. your pledge support allows us to combat the evils of time to stop time and to rewind the clock as if we could go back. last chance for you to get on the horn and say pbs please keep doing this and we're going to keep this form of music alive if we have the funding, the funding comes from your dollars and your support. something denise richardson knows every well. denise richardson: oh absolutely and i was thinking as tj mentioned johnny maestro that the last time i had saw him he had performed and he was backstage with the brooklyn bridge and we were out kivising and i said oh can i sing with your guys. and he took that moment to do that with me and
our mission, great programming, archiving and preserving your memories we do that with your pledge sos ago, ten years ago, we had the legends with us as you've had members of your family with you and time moves on but time is not our friend with these shows it never has been, we are losing legends every minute and we hope that this brings back emotional moments with you with times in your own family and in memory of someone in your family. your pledge support allows us to combat the evils of...
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you know i didn't direct this method to keep mel good archives no good mob archives but now but with this season though we actually we have people like trisha yearwood where we have a document. of her ancestor from like three hundred years ago really or more and he's on his way to his criminal accused criminal and the his companion actually wrote about what they were talking about we have his thoughts and feelings about what he was about to face you know who gets that that was unbelievable and is that show working will oh yeah it's a great it's a great show you're personalizing history you know i mean you trace is true of that so you are we have to hold you to i have one boy he's fifteen fourteen and thirteen oh fun to see tech. yeah if that's what we do know right well yeah i mean when i say he's like i'm not answering so i want to call the house like oh that's i don't want to bother anybody that's two hundred fans on the phone but what happened to the phone it feels intrusive to them it's like you're going to make a noise in the house you're going to bother everybody and what if th
you know i didn't direct this method to keep mel good archives no good mob archives but now but with this season though we actually we have people like trisha yearwood where we have a document. of her ancestor from like three hundred years ago really or more and he's on his way to his criminal accused criminal and the his companion actually wrote about what they were talking about we have his thoughts and feelings about what he was about to face you know who gets that that was unbelievable and...
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that the obama administration has refused to disclose this despite a poll conducted by the national archives and records administration which showed that disclosure of these documents is the number one public demand upon release government information and you know this is all got me thinking about the history of government classification and the most interesting documents that are still being withheld from j.f.k. to the bay of pigs to the nixon tapes to obama the u.s. government has a secret history of willing then dealings that ekes out decades after the fact unfortunately the revelations these documents often provide are just a mere afterthought sturrock a revisionism that's already been carved in stone so joining me now to dive into this issue a little bit further is breaking this separate manual put up with oh i don't know if you want to be on after after governor do you know do is go no pressure and let's go over some of these because there's i mean there's so many to go over j.f.k. fifty thousand documents they have said it's only one percent it's not that much what's the big deal real
that the obama administration has refused to disclose this despite a poll conducted by the national archives and records administration which showed that disclosure of these documents is the number one public demand upon release government information and you know this is all got me thinking about the history of government classification and the most interesting documents that are still being withheld from j.f.k. to the bay of pigs to the nixon tapes to obama the u.s. government has a secret...
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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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WBFF
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this is part of a large archive put together by donald munro.producer for television before the war. he had to get that product live out every night for two hours a night from 1936 to 1939 when the television started. well, this is the opening of the television service here. this is day one of television officially. this is whenthe first pc television service in the world opened up. we beat the americans by two and a half years. it's a great british first. television service opened with two systems. it was the baird system and the marconi-emi system. and they did it first with the baird system, then there was a 10-minute interlude, and then the whole thing was repeated again, speeches, everything for the marconi-emi system. so the bbc, the first public television service in the world, started with a repeat. that's absolutely incredible news. it's incredible and it's true. it's amazing. so tell me about this. these are the actual working papers that the producer had and put together, and they show not only the memos from the bbc, but they're all
this is part of a large archive put together by donald munro.producer for television before the war. he had to get that product live out every night for two hours a night from 1936 to 1939 when the television started. well, this is the opening of the television service here. this is day one of television officially. this is whenthe first pc television service in the world opened up. we beat the americans by two and a half years. it's a great british first. television service opened with two...
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they're not releasing and the only one percent of the total the big deal is that when the national archives made this poll and asked the american people what's the number one document that you want to see released as far as what the government's been with us. from the american people it's exactly this specifically the majority of americans want to see what happened to j.f.k. and we're talking about one percent it sounds like a little you're right it sounds you know one percent that one percent of documents amounts to fifty thousand documents and that could very well be the answer to all the questions that we're looking at i mean that's the big deal about it exactly and that's like that another another scandal under kennedy's watch the bay of pigs the disaster botched operation april seventeenth one thousand nine hundred sixty one fourteen hundred paramilitary troops botched the trying to overthrow fidel castro in cuba a foil lawsuit basically demanded that the government release documents about this event and what it revealed exactly i mean bay pigs is kind of different and while we're talk
they're not releasing and the only one percent of the total the big deal is that when the national archives made this poll and asked the american people what's the number one document that you want to see released as far as what the government's been with us. from the american people it's exactly this specifically the majority of americans want to see what happened to j.f.k. and we're talking about one percent it sounds like a little you're right it sounds you know one percent that one percent...
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that the obama administration has refused to disclose this despite a poll conducted by the national archives and records administration which showed that disclosure of these documents is the number one public demand of them release government information and you know this is all got me thinking about the history of government classification and the most interesting documents that are still being withheld from j.f.k. to the bay of pigs to the nixon tapes to obama u.s. government has a secret history of willing then dealings that ekes out decades after the fact unfortunately the revelations these documents often provide are just a mere afterthought sturrock a revision is and that's already been carved in stone so joining me now to dive into this issue a little bit further is breaking the separate manual for that up oh i don't know if you want to be on after after going to this is no do is go no the pressure and let's go over some of these because there's i mean there's so many to go over j.f.k. fifty thousand documents they have said it's only one percent it's not that much what's the big deal
that the obama administration has refused to disclose this despite a poll conducted by the national archives and records administration which showed that disclosure of these documents is the number one public demand of them release government information and you know this is all got me thinking about the history of government classification and the most interesting documents that are still being withheld from j.f.k. to the bay of pigs to the nixon tapes to obama u.s. government has a secret...
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Aug 31, 2013
08/13
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as you heard she's gathered material from archives on the four continents and has brought together an extraordinary kind of learning but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see to capture through her eyes the kind of sense of all the landscapes' work so it's a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and the site. thank you. [applause] thank you. that is great praise. he used the operative word to see. towards the end of my talk today i want you to see five of the people who walked here. after i finish talking and when you've got your book i bought you to walk around and have those shades go with you because they are here. it's the only place i can do this talk. can you hear me? on shelter island in new york what is visible to the 18th century house in the landscape whose owners played all honorable roles in the revolutionary war beckoned in the civil war. can you still hear me? am i doing all right? they built this will be the second of all the site. it's ephraim bling comfortable dwelling that was extended northward in t
as you heard she's gathered material from archives on the four continents and has brought together an extraordinary kind of learning but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see to capture through her eyes the kind of sense of all the landscapes' work so it's a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and the site. thank you. [applause] thank you. that is great praise. he used the operative word to see. towards the end of my talk...
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they're not releasing and the only one percent of the total the big deal is that when the national archives made this poll and asked the american people what's the number one document that you want to see released as far as what the government's been withholding from the american people it's exactly this specifically the majority of americans want to see what happened to j.f.k. and we're talking about one percent it sounds like a little you're right it sounds you know one percent that one percent of documents amounts to fifty thousand documents and that could very well be the answer to all the questions that we're looking at i mean that's the big deal. exactly and the fact that another another scandal under kennedy's watch the bay of pigs the disaster botched operation april seventeenth one thousand nine hundred eighty one fourteen hundred paramilitary troops botched the trying to overthrow fidel castro in cuba a foil lawsuit basically demanded that the government release documents about this event and what it revealed exactly i mean bay of pigs is kind of different and while we're talking
they're not releasing and the only one percent of the total the big deal is that when the national archives made this poll and asked the american people what's the number one document that you want to see released as far as what the government's been withholding from the american people it's exactly this specifically the majority of americans want to see what happened to j.f.k. and we're talking about one percent it sounds like a little you're right it sounds you know one percent that one...
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Aug 9, 2013
08/13
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years later when his family died, i dropped the subject ends are you years later he left his archives and they deliberately delivered the marine corps locker to my house and my husband said, what is in there. and i said nude photos. and he said, come on, let's open it, and i said no, i don't want to remember stanley that way. he said we have to openness, stanley was a great photographer. and we argued about it for a while. then we opened it. it was not nude photographs at all, it was the most sentimental store of kennedy photographs and artifacts and letters and handwritten notes from the president himself and the first lady. anyway, i'm going to show you some of them. i'm going to tell you about them. but because this was the 50th anniversary of the kennedy administration, and because stanley had left me these photographs from i really wanted to share them and i just didn't want to donate them, you know, to a library where they would fit in dust and people would never see them. so this photograph, which is on the cover of the book, it came with an exclusive four-day fÊte family spent
years later when his family died, i dropped the subject ends are you years later he left his archives and they deliberately delivered the marine corps locker to my house and my husband said, what is in there. and i said nude photos. and he said, come on, let's open it, and i said no, i don't want to remember stanley that way. he said we have to openness, stanley was a great photographer. and we argued about it for a while. then we opened it. it was not nude photographs at all, it was the most...
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Aug 28, 2013
08/13
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so i have cussed documents as well and then i started doing archival research.hat made me decide to pursue it as a book is once i found barely days, the living survivor of the group, being able to ask someone all the questions that are written in the memoirs or have come up in the research in some much of what harold tall man was able to validate have the information i could corroborate. so he has a very accurate memory and is careful not to embellish which is a very important thing to have been a source. >> they didn't. a good question. the nurses were all second attendance. they now range most of the enlisted men. what was interesting to me in researching a story is finding out that the nurses actually held relative rank which meant that the they were given a second lieutenant rank, the pay was half that of what a second lieutenant would make. so there was that officer enlisted man break between them when they started. even though there were all together, when they boarded the plane that morning a lot of them were strangers. the nurses were friends with each o
so i have cussed documents as well and then i started doing archival research.hat made me decide to pursue it as a book is once i found barely days, the living survivor of the group, being able to ask someone all the questions that are written in the memoirs or have come up in the research in some much of what harold tall man was able to validate have the information i could corroborate. so he has a very accurate memory and is careful not to embellish which is a very important thing to have...
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Aug 3, 2013
08/13
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i went to the archives. letters, and among them very, very sad letters from single women saying, what am i to do about these urges that i'm feeling? and i'm sorry to say she was unsympathetic. it was more to see yourself to be condoning extramarital sex. so she would reply and saying, i'm sorry. this is a problem you have to gasol for yourself at the moment. i recommend a cold bath. some of the letters were very graphic about solutions that the women had found for dealing with their sexual urges. things that would be very familiar to us today, but women here were way out of their depth should i be doing this? if i do, will it harm me? should i do it more than once a month? you know, is it going to cause terrible damage? as i say, i'm afraid they did not get much feedback. there was also, of course -- and this was of very difficult area to research -- the whole question of female homosexuality and there is no question that women who did not have relationships, marriage, they fared very close relationships wit
i went to the archives. letters, and among them very, very sad letters from single women saying, what am i to do about these urges that i'm feeling? and i'm sorry to say she was unsympathetic. it was more to see yourself to be condoning extramarital sex. so she would reply and saying, i'm sorry. this is a problem you have to gasol for yourself at the moment. i recommend a cold bath. some of the letters were very graphic about solutions that the women had found for dealing with their sexual...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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as you have heard, she has gathered material for this from around kentuckys -- archives on four continents and brought together an extraordinary kind of learning. but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see and to capture through her eyes a kind of sense of how landscapes work. so it's a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and this site. thank you. [applause] >> richard, thank you so much. that's great praise. now, he used the operative word "see," and towards the end of my talk today i want you to see five of the people who walked here. i want them to rise up out of the ground or row their way across this inlet. so after i've finished talking and when you've bought your book, i want you to walk around ask have those shades go -- and have those shades go with you, because they are here. that's why i call this talk "visible/invisible." it's the only place i can do this talk. can you all hear me? good. so at sylvester manor on shelter island in new york, what's visible? a serene, 18th century house in its landscape whose own
as you have heard, she has gathered material for this from around kentuckys -- archives on four continents and brought together an extraordinary kind of learning. but the thing that makes her unique is her ability to see and to capture through her eyes a kind of sense of how landscapes work. so it's a great pleasure for me to be here today and to share with you the convergence of this book and this site. thank you. [applause] >> richard, thank you so much. that's great praise. now, he...
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
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(archive soonnbitte hawks issone of everrll phat the grand ppix paraayzzs the cityyand costs them a holiiay weekknd of buuiness... (6::0:04) (abell)) ""any businesses simply shutdown duringgthat weekend.. many that remman oppn like perrein little ittly complain &last yeas race ccst thee as pp weekend (5:58:07) "the ccty has not done a ggoddjob of bbiigiin tte peeoll into the neigbhorhoods surroundiig tte organizers offthe race say allow in aad out access to -& discounttstoo ncourage the race crrwd tooshoppin the community. (12211:56) (dave curlle) "thhre's o question thaa these types of events buuid over a period off (5:48:18) iffddtroit &pmotor cciy offamerica...why should balttiore...?" last year, beth hhaks vowed to move her busiiess out of state...... ttis yeer....she deciddd to move to the other siid of "despite alllthe warts the believe we should aal work tt 3 (6:03:24) "the ccty has long maiitained hat the nationnl exposure it receiis from this &prace will pay off ddwn the if you've got an extra million could seeewhat is llke to liie - like ay lewis. lewis.the frrer baltimore pavvnnh
(archive soonnbitte hawks issone of everrll phat the grand ppix paraayzzs the cityyand costs them a holiiay weekknd of buuiness... (6::0:04) (abell)) ""any businesses simply shutdown duringgthat weekend.. many that remman oppn like perrein little ittly complain &last yeas race ccst thee as pp weekend (5:58:07) "the ccty has not done a ggoddjob of bbiigiin tte peeoll into the neigbhorhoods surroundiig tte organizers offthe race say allow in aad out access to -&...
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Aug 29, 2013
08/13
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public archives.he's held positions at the archives in new york university and the historical society in flushing new york. prior to his arrival at the d.c. public library, derrick worked at the library of virginia in richmond as a researcher could best for six years. he's one of the four co-authors of angels of deliverance, the underground railroad and beyond. derrick grinned a bachelor's degree in history from virginia state university in 1998 and both the masters in history and library with a concentration in archives from the state university of new york at albany jennifer krafchik is the director of the kepplinger research library at the historical society in washington, d.c.. so she didn't have to walk far to get here. before joining the society, she worked at the headquarters of the historic national women's party now the belmont house and museum where she served over a 11 years in a variety of positions most recently as a director of collections. if you haven't been there is a lovely building
public archives.he's held positions at the archives in new york university and the historical society in flushing new york. prior to his arrival at the d.c. public library, derrick worked at the library of virginia in richmond as a researcher could best for six years. he's one of the four co-authors of angels of deliverance, the underground railroad and beyond. derrick grinned a bachelor's degree in history from virginia state university in 1998 and both the masters in history and library with...
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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WBFF
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the have and released at the national archives. they were recorded over three months and cover the culmination of the watergate's candle. they amount to 3000 hours -- watergate scandal. 35 years in prison was handed down to bradley manning, accused documents to wikileaks. he said he wanted to spark debate, but he was convicted of 20 counts, including espionage. court toy arrived in hear his fate. he had already been found guilty of the the and knowledge. .- of espionage the judge sentenced him to 35 years in prison and dishonorable discharge. showing no flicker of emotion. his family in wales has been watching with trepidation. the sentence could have been a lot harsher. manning will be paroled -- up for parole in seven years time. has led anbama unprecedented crackdown on whistleblowers. >> the time to end suffering is now. protecting focus on whistleblowers is now. the time or our president to pardon manning is now. >> this is why bradley manning footage showing the killing of civilians. diplomaticrelease of cables that really em
the have and released at the national archives. they were recorded over three months and cover the culmination of the watergate's candle. they amount to 3000 hours -- watergate scandal. 35 years in prison was handed down to bradley manning, accused documents to wikileaks. he said he wanted to spark debate, but he was convicted of 20 counts, including espionage. court toy arrived in hear his fate. he had already been found guilty of the the and knowledge. .- of espionage the judge sentenced him...
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Aug 21, 2013
08/13
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the have and released at the national archives. they were recorded over three months and cover the culmination of the watergate's candle. they amount to 3000 hours -- watergate scandal. 35 years in prison was handed down to bradley manning, accused documents to wikileaks. he said he wanted to spark debate, but he was convicted of 20 counts, including espionage. court toy arrived in hear his fate. he had already been found guilty of the the and knowledge. .- of espionage the judge sentenced him to 35 years in prison and dishonorable discharge. showing no flicker of emotion. his family in wales has been watching with trepidation. the sentence could have been a lot harsher. manning will be paroled -- up for parole in seven years time. has led anbama unprecedented crackdown on whistleblowers. >> the time to end suffering is now. protecting focus on whistleblowers is now. the time or our president to pardon manning is now. >> this is why bradley manning footage showing the killing of civilians. diplomaticrelease of cables that really em
the have and released at the national archives. they were recorded over three months and cover the culmination of the watergate's candle. they amount to 3000 hours -- watergate scandal. 35 years in prison was handed down to bradley manning, accused documents to wikileaks. he said he wanted to spark debate, but he was convicted of 20 counts, including espionage. court toy arrived in hear his fate. he had already been found guilty of the the and knowledge. .- of espionage the judge sentenced him...