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Sep 9, 2009
09/09
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WTTG
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death who conducted cruel so-called experiments on living human beings at auschwitz. the newly-discovered pictures so male and female employees of the death camp socializing. why does the holocaust museum think photos like hese are important? >> they look like you're neighbors, playing with dogs, children and women are in the pictures. these men were human beings and we need to recognize them as such and recognize the human come capacity for evil. >> reporter: the elderly seemed to agree. everything about the holocaust, they think, should be conveyed to younger generations. >> because it anhappens. and it should never ever happen again. >> reporter: in maryland, john henrehan, fox 5 news. >> wow, incredible pictures. the holocaust museum doesn't have the photos up just yet but you can see all 116 snapshots by going to www.myfoxdc.com and inick on web l l to the site. we will be right back. ] an olive. [ sniffs ] green, with pimento. ooh. he's good. nothing gets past him. [ sniffs ] piece of cake. [ male announcer ] kill bugs on contact without the bad smell. r
death who conducted cruel so-called experiments on living human beings at auschwitz. the newly-discovered pictures so male and female employees of the death camp socializing. why does the holocaust museum think photos like hese are important? >> they look like you're neighbors, playing with dogs, children and women are in the pictures. these men were human beings and we need to recognize them as such and recognize the human come capacity for evil. >> reporter: the elderly seemed to...
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Sep 14, 2009
09/09
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CSPAN2
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with volume one, for instance with auschwitz and the coentration camp we had people in the memorial sites, in the museum's there who volteered to write all this of camp entries for those places. in other instances we might come across seone who knew about one camp and he or she had made that his or her parcular study. they knew about it and they could write that one ent f us. >> ht: how long what an entry be? >> guest: for a main concentration camp were looking at about 2500 words. that is about ten double spaced pages and obviously covering a place like dachau or auschwitz is ludicrous in one sense that the know this is not the main source that people will go to for camps like that. with this of camps and the entries were have del link, about 1250 words. bissette camps are the places that are less well-known. these are the places that are really important for us to document becausenformation on this is not available anywhere el in this serves for one thing to document the suffering of the people who were there and th survivorsave been very impressed that we have been able to do this for
with volume one, for instance with auschwitz and the coentration camp we had people in the memorial sites, in the museum's there who volteered to write all this of camp entries for those places. in other instances we might come across seone who knew about one camp and he or she had made that his or her parcular study. they knew about it and they could write that one ent f us. >> ht: how long what an entry be? >> guest: for a main concentration camp were looking at about 2500 words....
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Sep 29, 2009
09/09
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WMAR
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his mother was killed at auschwitz. >> she went to the gas practically immediately after she was taken. i didn't know until the end of the war, world war ii. >> after the war, polanski studied film in poland and was nominated for an academy award in 1964. hollywood beckoned. he married the actress sharon tate. life was good. then, in 1969, tate and the couple's unborn son were murdered by followers of charles manson. >> it all started so long ago. my real problems started then. marrying sharon tate. i was all right with the press before that. they wouldn't let it go. just wouldn't let it go. >> devastated, polanski threw himself into work. his masterpiece "chinatown" was released in 1974. then three years later, polanski photographed 13-year-old samantha geimer for a magazine. >> actually it went fine, but then he asked me to like change and change in front of him and stuff. it didn't feel right. i didn't want to go to the second shoot. i didn't at that time have like self-confidence to tell my mother and everyone no, i'm not going to go. we did photos of me drinking champagne, he was
his mother was killed at auschwitz. >> she went to the gas practically immediately after she was taken. i didn't know until the end of the war, world war ii. >> after the war, polanski studied film in poland and was nominated for an academy award in 1964. hollywood beckoned. he married the actress sharon tate. life was good. then, in 1969, tate and the couple's unborn son were murdered by followers of charles manson. >> it all started so long ago. my real problems started...
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Sep 26, 2009
09/09
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HLN
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and what of the boschwitz survivors -- the auschwitz survivors who still bear the tattooed numbers branded on them by the nazis? are those tattoos a lie, too? one-third of all jews perished in the great concentration of the holocaust. nearly every jewish family was affected. including my own. my wife's grandparents, her father and two sisters, and his three brothers and all the ins and uncles and cousins, all were murdered by the nazis. is this a lie? yesterday, the man who called the holocaust a lie spoke at this podium. to those who refuse to come and to those who left in protest, i commend you. you stood up for moral clarity and you brought honor to your country. but to those who gave this holocaust denier a hearing, i said on behalf of my people, the jewish people, and to people everywhere, have you no shame? have you no decency? a mere six decades after the holocaust, you give legitimacy to a man who denies the murder of 6 million jews while promising to wipe out the state of israel, the state of the jews? what a disgrace. what a mockery of the charter of the united nations. now perha
and what of the boschwitz survivors -- the auschwitz survivors who still bear the tattooed numbers branded on them by the nazis? are those tattoos a lie, too? one-third of all jews perished in the great concentration of the holocaust. nearly every jewish family was affected. including my own. my wife's grandparents, her father and two sisters, and his three brothers and all the ins and uncles and cousins, all were murdered by the nazis. is this a lie? yesterday, the man who called the holocaust...
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Sep 24, 2009
09/09
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FOXNEWS
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one of the auschwitz survivors, whose arms still bear the tattooed numbers branded on them by the nazis -- are those tattoos a lie, too? one-third of all jews perished in the holocaust. nearly every jewish family was affected, including my own. my wife's grandparents, her father's two sisters and three brothers and all the aunts and uncles and cousins all murdered by the nazis -- is this a lie? yesterday, demand who called the holocaust a live -- the man who called the holocaust a lie spoke at this podium. to those who refused to come and to those who left in protest, i commend you. you stood up for moral clarity, and you brought honor to your countries. but to those who gave this holocaust denier a hearing, i say on behalf of my people, the jewish people, and decent people everywhere -- have you no shame? have you no decency? a mere six decades after the holocaust, you give legitimacy to a man who denies the murder of 6 million jews while promising to wipe out the state of israel, the state of the jews? what a disgrace. what a mockery of the charter of the united nations. perhaps some
one of the auschwitz survivors, whose arms still bear the tattooed numbers branded on them by the nazis -- are those tattoos a lie, too? one-third of all jews perished in the holocaust. nearly every jewish family was affected, including my own. my wife's grandparents, her father's two sisters and three brothers and all the aunts and uncles and cousins all murdered by the nazis -- is this a lie? yesterday, demand who called the holocaust a live -- the man who called the holocaust a lie spoke at...
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Sep 6, 2009
09/09
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CSPAN2
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this is a representation of edith strine, convert to catholicism who was martyred in auschwitz and that is a relic, that i a piece of the wedding dress she wore on the day of her profession. so i have bought edith strine and the blessed mother and john paul ii and then had to of my heroes, archbhop carroll, first bishop of the united states and father john murray, the great theologian of religious freedomho appears to be tilting a bit. maybe we can straighten father murray. >> can i ask you about all of these metals down here? >> some of these are words i have been given. some of them a just decorative this is of intere, this is called the gloor real artist gold medal given by the republic poland for the contributions to polish and world culture. and i am very proud of the fact i am one of two non-polls. d this is one of the great photographs, john paul ii putting a prayer in the western hall of the mple of jal. my theogical library authors is we have got a dustin and kong bar, avery, etc., etcand it moves over here and wraps around. there is aenormous amount of grass in -- ratsinger. t
this is a representation of edith strine, convert to catholicism who was martyred in auschwitz and that is a relic, that i a piece of the wedding dress she wore on the day of her profession. so i have bought edith strine and the blessed mother and john paul ii and then had to of my heroes, archbhop carroll, first bishop of the united states and father john murray, the great theologian of religious freedomho appears to be tilting a bit. maybe we can straighten father murray. >> can i ask...
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Sep 24, 2009
09/09
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FOXNEWS
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benjamin netanyahu angrily waived the minutes of a 1942 paper on the eradication of jews and for the auschwitz death camp and he condemned the holocaust. >> the most urging challenge facing this body today is to prevent the tyrants of tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons are the members of the united nations up to that challenge? >> back in the security council, several members suggested that iran is the world's line in the sand. >> if we want the world without nuclear weapons in the end, let us not accept violations of international rules. >> iran must not allow its actions to prevent the international community from moving forward to a more peaceful era. >> but there was less support for tougher sanctions from russia's president, and outright resistance in beijing. >> we believe that sanctions and exerting pressure are not the way to solve problems, and are not conducive for the current diplomatic efforts on the iran nuclear issue. >> china made no promise to reduce its own nuclear aresenal and the security resolution doesn't require any nation to do so, but arms control experts from both p
benjamin netanyahu angrily waived the minutes of a 1942 paper on the eradication of jews and for the auschwitz death camp and he condemned the holocaust. >> the most urging challenge facing this body today is to prevent the tyrants of tehran from acquiring nuclear weapons are the members of the united nations up to that challenge? >> back in the security council, several members suggested that iran is the world's line in the sand. >> if we want the world without nuclear...
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the story goes he fainted when he went to auschwitz. that's not the case with manson.of shorty shay. shot a philadelphia guy, left him for dead. why didn't he do it? it's speculation on my part but i'm almost positive he'd have to confirm this, that he thought he'd be able to immunize himself from criminal responsibility by getting others to do his bidding for them. it was tougher to convict them because he was not at the murder scene. when your blood is at the murder scene and the victim's blood inside your car and home, that's the end of the ball game. >> larry: linda, you might not have convicted him. >> it would have been extremely difficult. >> larry: was it hard, linda, to testify? >> yeah, it was. it was -- >> larry: had to look at all your friends, right? supposed friends? >> yeah, i definitely -- >> larry: had to look at charlie manson. >> yes, i did. >> larry: did he look back at you? >> yes he did. >> larry: was he angry? >> yes. >> larry: plenty angry. >> yes. >> larry: what happened to you after that? >> after that i was -- >> larry: what have you been doi
the story goes he fainted when he went to auschwitz. that's not the case with manson.of shorty shay. shot a philadelphia guy, left him for dead. why didn't he do it? it's speculation on my part but i'm almost positive he'd have to confirm this, that he thought he'd be able to immunize himself from criminal responsibility by getting others to do his bidding for them. it was tougher to convict them because he was not at the murder scene. when your blood is at the murder scene and the victim's...
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447
Sep 24, 2009
09/09
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FOXNEWS
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personal way, benjamin netanyahu actually had some of the original blueprints from the death camp at auschwitzthat's where 1 million just were killed. he challenged the united nations to try and prevent iran from getting the bomb. he said so before it's too late. >> will it take action against the dictators who stole an election in broad daylight and then gunned down iranian protesters who died in the sidewalks on the street choking in heir own blood. above all, will the international community stop the terrorist regime of iran from developing atomic weapons? >> well, he also said the jury is still out on the united nations, that if churchill and roosevelt were still around, the u.n. would try them as war criminals. trace? trace: eric shawn outside the y u.n. president obama making history at the u.n. today. the first american president to head up a meeting of the security council since it was created six decades ago. that's just a coincidence. the chairmanship is done on a rotating basis. today's topic, reducing the spread of nuclear weapons and the risk of nuclear terrorism. wendell goler is
personal way, benjamin netanyahu actually had some of the original blueprints from the death camp at auschwitzthat's where 1 million just were killed. he challenged the united nations to try and prevent iran from getting the bomb. he said so before it's too late. >> will it take action against the dictators who stole an election in broad daylight and then gunned down iranian protesters who died in the sidewalks on the street choking in heir own blood. above all, will the international...
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Sep 25, 2009
09/09
by
HLN
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not at auschwitz to liberate auschwitz but at auschwitz fighting for the russians. those things don't pop easily in our history books, but this broad global concept of who's on what side of this line of scrimmage, who's on the side of freedom and who's on the side of suppressing freedom, we need to understand it. these forces know instinctively what the play out here on the globe, and so we wonder, what is the chess board that putin is playing on, the monopoly board that putin is playing on? he's about freedom in the soviet union -- i have to say russia, the former soviet union, their satellites have diminished since putin came into control. we met with personalities in russia. i am going to avoid saying their names. mr. speaker, you'd recognize many of them if not all of them. and they told us that there really no longer exists a free press in russia. not a newspaper that they can count on that has any influence that's free to print what it wants to print. there's not a free legislature in russia any longer either that they are -- the people who are controlled by p
not at auschwitz to liberate auschwitz but at auschwitz fighting for the russians. those things don't pop easily in our history books, but this broad global concept of who's on what side of this line of scrimmage, who's on the side of freedom and who's on the side of suppressing freedom, we need to understand it. these forces know instinctively what the play out here on the globe, and so we wonder, what is the chess board that putin is playing on, the monopoly board that putin is playing on?...
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Sep 28, 2009
09/09
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MSNBC
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he lost his mother in auschwitz, the nazi death camp, and his wife sharon tate was brutally murdereds killer susan atkins died in prison of brain cancer last week. but some time polanski has to face the music. >> time doesn't make crime go away. >> reporter: his victim now says she doesn't want to see him put in jail, that she's forgiven him. polanski now faces possible extradition to the united states. this morning polanski's french lawyer said he found the arrest indefensible and he plans to fight not just the arrest, but any extradition proceedings the u.s. might attempt. for now roman polanski remains in custody here in zurich. we're told it's possible under swiss law he could apply for bail if he agrees to stay within switzerland. that is extremely rare for anyone to be granted that under these circumstances. mika? >> nbc's donna friesen in europe. thank you. so many dimensions to this story, the fact that there was a civil settlement and that the victim doesn't want this to move forward. so many years later. at the same time, the crime, a rape, a terrible crime. >> a 13-year-ol
he lost his mother in auschwitz, the nazi death camp, and his wife sharon tate was brutally murdereds killer susan atkins died in prison of brain cancer last week. but some time polanski has to face the music. >> time doesn't make crime go away. >> reporter: his victim now says she doesn't want to see him put in jail, that she's forgiven him. polanski now faces possible extradition to the united states. this morning polanski's french lawyer said he found the arrest indefensible and...