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Aug 21, 2014
08/14
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and austria -- royal march through the outs. corruption in romania is like a black hole. it seems to suck in everyone in the country. the police, business people, politicians. even the language is proof of that. there are up to 30 synonyms for the word "bridbe." one man has been fighting the powerful pool of corruption for years. now at the end of his last term, the black hole appears to be ready to swallow the cesspool at last because of one person right in the middle of a new corruption scandal, and denial might be difficult to cause the president is obviously connected. the person in connection is his brother. >> a media frenzy in front of the anticorruption authority in bucharest. the president's brother is being questioned by police in a bribery case. >> i did not ask for any money, nor did i receive any. >> but the investigators did not believe him and took him into custody. his brother appeared before the press. >> my brother got mixed up with people he should never have gotten mixed up with. >> this woman launched the investigation. for the head of the romanian an
and austria -- royal march through the outs. corruption in romania is like a black hole. it seems to suck in everyone in the country. the police, business people, politicians. even the language is proof of that. there are up to 30 synonyms for the word "bridbe." one man has been fighting the powerful pool of corruption for years. now at the end of his last term, the black hole appears to be ready to swallow the cesspool at last because of one person right in the middle of a new...
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out of this war in the balkans a we're not going to come in on russia's side in this war against austria hungary that would have been very simple i mean germany honest france will you stay out france said that we won't say out and hands the schlieffen plan went into operation so it wasn't just an invasion out of the blue ok gentlemen the. train is a historian ok going to hear you right now did i even go ahead ivan eland jump in please i would like to talk about self-determination and sanctity of borders but go ahead i've been dealing in washington yeah yeah i agree with what george said i mean i think france actually was egging rusher on a live in before the war and i think it really wanted russia to be on their side against germany because they feared germany and the brits a lot of people in the british cabinet thought well yes belgium probably will be invaded but as long as the germans just go through the southern part. of the people in the british cabinet thought that well yes we've all pledged belgian belgian neutrality but it. fairly recent right now near the war because britain and
out of this war in the balkans a we're not going to come in on russia's side in this war against austria hungary that would have been very simple i mean germany honest france will you stay out france said that we won't say out and hands the schlieffen plan went into operation so it wasn't just an invasion out of the blue ok gentlemen the. train is a historian ok going to hear you right now did i even go ahead ivan eland jump in please i would like to talk about self-determination and sanctity...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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as you know, austria was taken over in 1938 by nazi germany. my dad fought in the war. he is captured by americans in 1945 and spent a year in a pow camp in colorado springs. i always kept telling him, having studied pows, you were very lucky, dad, to have ended up in an american camp. probably in german memory of d-day, a real turning point came with the 1978 nbc series on the holocaust. that brought the story home again to the germans and the austrians about the real downfall of the germans in nazi germany. one thing that they no longer now could deny. i would say by the 1980's, the germans were beginning to actively think about their world war ii past, which some historians really called an unmasterable past. meaning with the genocide and the killing of 6 million jews and many other civilians being killed along the way in the war, this was the kind of historical event that would be very hard to inscribe into the national historical narrative, in that sense, unmasterable. as for the germans, very often, when they think about world war ii, they use terms that asked how
as you know, austria was taken over in 1938 by nazi germany. my dad fought in the war. he is captured by americans in 1945 and spent a year in a pow camp in colorado springs. i always kept telling him, having studied pows, you were very lucky, dad, to have ended up in an american camp. probably in german memory of d-day, a real turning point came with the 1978 nbc series on the holocaust. that brought the story home again to the germans and the austrians about the real downfall of the germans...
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Aug 2, 2014
08/14
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w is theer bisha professor of history and director of center austria at university of new orleans. he was a graduate student of our ateum founder, and our ceo uno. before going to harvard university to earn his doctorate in history. as a presidential counselor, a group of renowned historians who advised dr. miller here at the national world war ii museum. and joining for our discussion as well is dr. john mcmanus, who americansor of military and served as our keynote speaker, the past two days for our event commemorating the 70th anniversary here at the museum. gentlemen, welcome. [applause] to begin our discussion today sky who willbol present his ideas and thought about the american expense of remembering d-day. keith.k you, first of all i will like to say thank you to everybody here today and in the veterans and this is the reason we are all here for this. first of all, i have to issue a disclaimer that everything i say represents my own ideas and not the department of defense. ok, allow me to set the stage. craft overburden with a nervous men, cluster soldiers shipped about in
w is theer bisha professor of history and director of center austria at university of new orleans. he was a graduate student of our ateum founder, and our ceo uno. before going to harvard university to earn his doctorate in history. as a presidential counselor, a group of renowned historians who advised dr. miller here at the national world war ii museum. and joining for our discussion as well is dr. john mcmanus, who americansor of military and served as our keynote speaker, the past two days...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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were austria-hungary to survive as a great power -- germany could not let austria-hungary be defeated's her only ally. and the russians had signed a treaty in 1994 which takes the weight off the french in the west if they went to war. i will stop, my colleagues. there is a danger in characterizing the war is stupid. because it mattered. at the time, the war mattered to millions of people. they were fighting for something that they believed him. worldople all over the were engaged in this conflict. it was a truly world war. to dismiss it as stupid, meaningless, i think runs the risk of dismissing it as a historical event. i think some of the other historians who spoke in the video spoke to the tremendous ramifications of the war, the transformations that took place in terms of technology, in terms of the nature of modern warfare. world war i was a big deal. it mattered in many ways. i would characterize, if i had to choose one word -- i would characterize it as tragic. it was a tragic historical moment. but one that was incredibly important to how we think about the world today. >> cer
were austria-hungary to survive as a great power -- germany could not let austria-hungary be defeated's her only ally. and the russians had signed a treaty in 1994 which takes the weight off the french in the west if they went to war. i will stop, my colleagues. there is a danger in characterizing the war is stupid. because it mattered. at the time, the war mattered to millions of people. they were fighting for something that they believed him. worldople all over the were engaged in this...
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empire and both garia while russia fielded five million men at the start almost as much as germany and austria hungary combined and war raged everywhere. and always warships delivered tons of ranks with the explosion shaking the expanse of the seas conflict filled the sky city for the first time in pilots of the first war planes were regarded as he writes the breakthrough for russia came in nine hundred sixteen russian armies managed to ram through enemy lines almost a hundred kilometers into austrian territory threatened the central powers sent thirty divisions to the eastern front easing the burden for the allies in the west from that moment germany at last the strategic advantage but it was too late for russia the people exhausted by rule coupled with the weakened government so read revolution it enjoying growing support the bolsheviks urged troops to abandon their post let germany have whatever it wants and by nine hundred eighteen the war ended for russia but despite that the role it played is hard to overstate it carried on it shoulders alone in the burden of the eastern front and helped
empire and both garia while russia fielded five million men at the start almost as much as germany and austria hungary combined and war raged everywhere. and always warships delivered tons of ranks with the explosion shaking the expanse of the seas conflict filled the sky city for the first time in pilots of the first war planes were regarded as he writes the breakthrough for russia came in nine hundred sixteen russian armies managed to ram through enemy lines almost a hundred kilometers into...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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there is a book on austria-hungary.e had to name the five to 10 people most responsible for the outbreak of the war. they all knew what was going to happen because they were caught up in the nationalism, the most dangerous -ism of the 21st century. so the war starts out as a local war, but austro hungary has to her empireia or will class because she has 15 nationalities. published in 15 different language. for austria-hungary, it was survival of a great power. germany could not let austria-hungary be defeated. it is her only ally. and the russians had signed a treaty in 1894 which would take the weight off the french and the west if they went to war. i'll stop and that my colleagues contiuenue. >> it mattered. at the time, the war matter to millions of people. they were fighting for something they believed in. and people all over the world were engaged in this conlicflic. engaged. to dismiss it as stupid runs a risk of dismissing it as a historical event. i think some other historians who spoke in the videos spoke to th
there is a book on austria-hungary.e had to name the five to 10 people most responsible for the outbreak of the war. they all knew what was going to happen because they were caught up in the nationalism, the most dangerous -ism of the 21st century. so the war starts out as a local war, but austro hungary has to her empireia or will class because she has 15 nationalities. published in 15 different language. for austria-hungary, it was survival of a great power. germany could not let...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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KQEH
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i did not want to be in austria with my father and telling me what to do, basically. so i went -- in a very reticent frame of mind into this film. and i wasn't any good in it. i was stubborn. he was insistent. we just -- we weren't hitting it off. what can i say? and then the reviews were simply terrible. and actually that was kind of good. it was my personal vindication, bad reviews. [ laughter ] >> i told you. >> exactly. i told you i'd be bad. and so i didn't work as an actress for, i guess, five or six years after that. >> so let me jump ahead and we'll come back. so juxtapose for me, anjelica, how that story turns out with being directed by your father years later in "prizzi's honor," and an academy award comes from it. >> well, "prizzi's honor" was a very different state of affairs. my father's producer from a film that he made called "man who would be king" was a great, sort of supporter of mine, for no apparent reason, because he hadn't seen me do anything. his name was john forman. and at a certain point, he offered me a part in a film called "ice pirates," w
i did not want to be in austria with my father and telling me what to do, basically. so i went -- in a very reticent frame of mind into this film. and i wasn't any good in it. i was stubborn. he was insistent. we just -- we weren't hitting it off. what can i say? and then the reviews were simply terrible. and actually that was kind of good. it was my personal vindication, bad reviews. [ laughter ] >> i told you. >> exactly. i told you i'd be bad. and so i didn't work as an actress...
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and sees only their own interest after hearing this is for all the states in southeast europe like austria still being hungary. and bulgaria to lobbying much more to get a very secure supply of costs and if you create is not willing to guarantee it there will be other options. this week's or a new spot of violence in gaza after the three day truce between israel and hamas expired on friday the sides reverted to the use of force with palestinian civilians suffering the most in a crossfire that. would . be you know nuthin and. only one they did only. when you're trying to. actually much of an. a month long conflict that has claimed more than one thousand one hundred lives has left gaza and ruin and the return of all still ities brings the region even closer to a humanitarian disaster tens of thousands of homes destroyed or damaged by israeli strikes at least two universities hundreds of schools and mosques were rendered into rubble reports say half a million people displaced that's almost a third of the population for more than a million civilians there's no fresh drinkable water and bill va
and sees only their own interest after hearing this is for all the states in southeast europe like austria still being hungary. and bulgaria to lobbying much more to get a very secure supply of costs and if you create is not willing to guarantee it there will be other options. this week's or a new spot of violence in gaza after the three day truce between israel and hamas expired on friday the sides reverted to the use of force with palestinian civilians suffering the most in a crossfire that....
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the extension to austria to baumgarten and a political backing i think this would be not possible torealize you know since it has a very harsh impact on the member states and also we have now forestall riches you never know how the winter will show up it will be a very hard and strong winter and if so we will be in very very bad situation. we'll have to leave it right there dunfield a political analyst at the berlin center for caspian region studies thank you very much for your input and outlook on the story. the possibility of a gas blockade comes or with some even countries already brains for an academic hit they fear they could lose billions of euros because of russia's ban on food imports russia is blocking in parts of the need to fruit vegetables and some dairy and fish products for one yeah european agriculture will take up the brunt and some farmers and the export of those are demanding to be compensated for their loss someone there it's going to affect us all for us it will take two or three months to collect all remaining crops of oranges and we don't know what will happen i
the extension to austria to baumgarten and a political backing i think this would be not possible torealize you know since it has a very harsh impact on the member states and also we have now forestall riches you never know how the winter will show up it will be a very hard and strong winter and if so we will be in very very bad situation. we'll have to leave it right there dunfield a political analyst at the berlin center for caspian region studies thank you very much for your input and...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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can tell,our family my grandparents came from poland and austria in approximately 1915. if the guest could maybe address the situation in europe and in the united states at the time and exactly what type of hurdles my grandparents may have encountered in immigrating to the united states. thank you. host: ok, cory. guest: well, obviously, we're talking will for one time -- world war i time. lots of people want to get out of the way. from the very beginning we are talking immigration from eastern europe in 1915 -- and their hurdles are going to have to do not with numerical restriction, because it is before that. .irst they need to buy a ticket they need to buy a ticket on a train and a ship to get to the united states, and those carriers -- we think of an airline, but those carriers back companies, after only sell tickets to people they believe are admissible. if they can raise the money and get the ticket and clear any exit requirements that their country may have, they would apply for entry at a u.s. port of entry -- ellis island or one of the other ports of entry -- un
can tell,our family my grandparents came from poland and austria in approximately 1915. if the guest could maybe address the situation in europe and in the united states at the time and exactly what type of hurdles my grandparents may have encountered in immigrating to the united states. thank you. host: ok, cory. guest: well, obviously, we're talking will for one time -- world war i time. lots of people want to get out of the way. from the very beginning we are talking immigration from eastern...
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nineteen fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite the growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. after one try to document the battle as best i can. stretch a better is run back and forth carrying the wounded to field medical stations. it's a harrowing sight but the wounded bear their injuries stoic and the doctors and nurses do their best. to be a solitary fun the russians pushed over the top and surprised the enemy. close courses they were no match for the russians and many german soldiers were captured . it was a great victory and a much needed boost in their own. a couple of hundred years ago sir thomas more wrote you an abandoned ship in a storm just because he couldn't control the winds well america ain't no you don't b.s. or tommy and ill stinky wind is blowing and the corporate rats are abandonin
nineteen fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite the growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. after one try to document the battle as best i can. stretch a better is run back and forth carrying the wounded to...
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the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and are in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. after much trying to document the battle as best i can. stretch or better is run back and forth carrying the wounded to field medical stations. it's a harrowing sight but the wounded bear their injuries stoic and the doctors and nurses do their best. to tell refinance the russians pushed over the top and surprised the enemy. close courses they were no match for the russians and many german soldiers were captured. it was a great victory and a much needed boost in the. live. live. live a little. cross-talk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want to. live. and. the first series. says right to. life for the story. and. not me. oh well. my. life. was setting. these cases. sometimes for nothing and. it's not just still. just if you see a stage eight looked to be. but
the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and are in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. after much trying to document the battle as best i can. stretch or better is run back and forth carrying the wounded to field medical stations. it's a harrowing sight but the wounded bear...
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nine hundred fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe then destined for victory. that's just one try to document the battle as best i can. barrows run back and forth carrying the wounded to field medical stations. it's a harrowing sight but the wounded bear their injuries stoic and the doctors and nurses do that best. after this i'll tell refinance the russians pushed over the top and surprised the enemy. close courses they were no match for the russians and many german soldiers were captured. it was a great victory and a much needed boost in their own. i've. played luckless. lead live. a little endless lists lists. lists. crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want to. live. play it was terrible they come up very hard to take you live get along here is a plug tha
nine hundred fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe then destined for victory. that's just one try to document the battle as best i can. barrows run back and forth carrying the wounded to field...
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Aug 7, 2014
08/14
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in europe today, entire communities in germany and austria are becoming energy independent through an anaerobic compbustion product. the units are small and the army is investing in them and that could be in the corner of the factory connect today a grid or maybe a community electric cooperative getting rid of grids and making better and saver distributed grids. you can youtube austria and see this or look up the story of the german town that became fossil-fuel free and are in control of their own energy. i would love to see american communities do that and i would support and advertise it f. fiber, seed oil and energy. we need the energy to happen. how many people have ready "collapse"? it is a scary story that in great civilizations he documents what went wrong and they sound eerily familiar. this is the modern day cambodia culture. for our purposes as neighbors i am your neighbor to the south and we new mexicans shared that area of the four corners. talk about globalization. they were trading from seattle to costa rica. it looked good. cities and trade routes and then it collapse.
in europe today, entire communities in germany and austria are becoming energy independent through an anaerobic compbustion product. the units are small and the army is investing in them and that could be in the corner of the factory connect today a grid or maybe a community electric cooperative getting rid of grids and making better and saver distributed grids. you can youtube austria and see this or look up the story of the german town that became fossil-fuel free and are in control of their...
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ottoman empire garia while russia fielded five million men at the start almost as much as germany and austria hungary combined and war raged everywhere and always warships delivered tons of rands with the explosion shaking the expanse of the sea conflict filled the sky city for the first time and pilots of the first war planes were regarded as he writes the breakthrough for russia came in nine hundred sixteen russian armies managed to ram through enemy lines almost a hundred kilometers into austrian territory threaten the central powers sent thirty divisions to the eastern front easing the burden for the allies in the west from that moment germany had lost the strategic advantage but it was too late for russia people exhausted by war coupled with the we can government to read revolution enjoying growing support the bolsheviks to abandon their post let germany have whatever it wants and by nine hundred eighteen the war ended for russia but despite that the role it played is hard to overstate it carried on each shoulders alone in the burden of the eastern front and helped end the war which woul
ottoman empire garia while russia fielded five million men at the start almost as much as germany and austria hungary combined and war raged everywhere and always warships delivered tons of rands with the explosion shaking the expanse of the sea conflict filled the sky city for the first time and pilots of the first war planes were regarded as he writes the breakthrough for russia came in nine hundred sixteen russian armies managed to ram through enemy lines almost a hundred kilometers into...
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Aug 4, 2014
08/14
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BBCAMERICA
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the fact that presence of germany and austria are here today and other nations than enemies are here too, there's testimony to the power of reconciliation. not only is war between us unthinkable rgs but former adversaries have worked together three generations to spread democracy, prosperity and rule of law across europe and promote shared values around the world. we were enemies more than once in the last century. today we are friends and allies. we salute those that died to give us freedom. we will remember them. >> our correspondent matthew price is there. how can you sum up what we've seen in the last few minutes? >> reporter: well, it's been a small ceremony, but with high profile dignitaries here. one in which through the words -- some of which you heard there -- various speakers summarized the aspects that are thought on a day like this. king of belgium spoke of sacrifice of an entire generation of people. you heard from the duke of cambridge that focused a lot of his speech on what he considers the sacrifice of an entire country, belgium and what the action of its soldiers he
the fact that presence of germany and austria are here today and other nations than enemies are here too, there's testimony to the power of reconciliation. not only is war between us unthinkable rgs but former adversaries have worked together three generations to spread democracy, prosperity and rule of law across europe and promote shared values around the world. we were enemies more than once in the last century. today we are friends and allies. we salute those that died to give us freedom....
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one hundred fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties. but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. just as much try to document the battle as best i can. stretch of barrows run back and forth carrying the wounded to field medical stations. it's a harrowing sight but the wounded bear their injuries stoic and the doctors and nurses do their best. after this artillery fire the russians pushed over the top and surprised the enemy. close courses they were no match for the russians and many german soldiers were captured. it was a great victory and a much needed boost in their own. do we speak your language from chris cox programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on. reporting from the will talks books the v.o.i.p. interviews intriguing stories for you. then try. to find out more visit our big dog called.
one hundred fifteen has been a desperate year for the russian forces the germans in austria hungary and have steadily pushed them back from east prussia with considerable casualties. but they will not be driven out easily. the russians have made a stand and they're in remarkably good spirits despite a growing shortage of equipment. they firmly believe they're destined for victory. just as much try to document the battle as best i can. stretch of barrows run back and forth carrying the wounded...
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and a case that could expound exponentially, in europe, in austria, all across the world, other thanmerica and canada, anyone who used facebook who feels privacy rights are violated can join this class. they could really cause major financial issues for facebook. neil: if you're facebook, what do you do? >> facebook needs to move for this to be dismissed. they already had other things, other reduce done that said that they weren't violating european union policy and european union law, so they need to have the case dismissed. it could grow into the millions and billions of people. neil: how did they say they didn't know about it? we learned since that they acquiesced to this request for information, so they didn't know about it, right? >> facebook definitely knows about it, they know about the issues. this gentleman has been pursuing this for many years, he seems like he has a vendetta against facebook and whole motivation is to get them to change policy. but the real issue is that the users are agreeing to facebook's privacy policy. they're actually agrees when they accept that priv
and a case that could expound exponentially, in europe, in austria, all across the world, other thanmerica and canada, anyone who used facebook who feels privacy rights are violated can join this class. they could really cause major financial issues for facebook. neil: if you're facebook, what do you do? >> facebook needs to move for this to be dismissed. they already had other things, other reduce done that said that they weren't violating european union policy and european union law, so...
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this is not international within twenty four hours a day live from austria center here in moscow where just a midnight and ten pm in kiev where the capital a seeing the deadliest wave of violence since the protests began with clashes coming just a day after the government's amnesty for protest as came into force. who is now in kiev alexy have you managed to make it to the city center we spoke about forty minutes ago when you're trying to make your way to much of the protests. happening there what do you see and where are you. more than. three. hundred meters to get inside the independence square it's very tense and here we can see black smoke we can hear bang grenades exploding from trying to find it is very unpredictable caucus a way to. become an even get out on the other side of the square where many of the t.v. crews and cameras have set of their life trucks and said i'd broadcast for us to be able to go live from here we cannot get there because the whole area is cordoned off either by the police or by the protests that we trying to penetrate the independence square but right now.
this is not international within twenty four hours a day live from austria center here in moscow where just a midnight and ten pm in kiev where the capital a seeing the deadliest wave of violence since the protests began with clashes coming just a day after the government's amnesty for protest as came into force. who is now in kiev alexy have you managed to make it to the city center we spoke about forty minutes ago when you're trying to make your way to much of the protests. happening there...
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Aug 15, 2014
08/14
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LINKTV
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austria's group has bought engineer nan manny ae /* /* it has 83 stores and 17,000 employees across germany has seen the sales fall and made a net loss of 34 million euros. >> coca-cola has bought a 17% stake in monster beverages. the over $2 billion deal will transfer its business to monster and take over its non energy drinks like hanson's natural soda and peace tea. coke has been under pressure to find new growth. >> and chaquita has rejected a high takeover bid. it offered $611 million for the u.s. based banana giant. it still planned to join forces with the distributor and would create the largest banana supplier. >> now, the games in germany is billioned as the largest trade show in the gaming industry. gamers developers and publisher are gathering until sunday to check out what's new in a market that's worth tens of billions of euros. nicolas explains. what's new in video games and a battle ground for two giants, microsoft. >> sony is demonstrating its project here. it's a virtual headset giving gamers a 90 degree field here. >> it's a completely new experience inside a completely ne
austria's group has bought engineer nan manny ae /* /* it has 83 stores and 17,000 employees across germany has seen the sales fall and made a net loss of 34 million euros. >> coca-cola has bought a 17% stake in monster beverages. the over $2 billion deal will transfer its business to monster and take over its non energy drinks like hanson's natural soda and peace tea. coke has been under pressure to find new growth. >> and chaquita has rejected a high takeover bid. it offered $611...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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MSNBCW
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. >> green lake, austria.ce world record, 525-foot 12-minute walk over the icy cold green lake. >> it's really cold. it's about 45, 48 degrees. >> it's the longest slack line ever attempted in europe. getting past the midway the lowest point of the line is the hardest. >> you have to like control your breathing, your body. hear into yourself, your mind is collecting so deep with your body, with your muscles, with everything. you feel the energy. >> also in austria a walk 12,000 feet high through the clouds across two of the highest peaks in europe. for most people, it's plain and simple terror. but for meche, it's just a warm-up. back in the u.s., he craves a tougher challenge and finds it. like in oregon's aptly named monkey face, another successful ramble without the aid of any kind of safety harness. >> i think it is less dangerous than driving a car. >> this daredevil doesn't just walk from one end to the other, when he gets close to the other side he does his signature move. kneeling on the line he puts h
. >> green lake, austria.ce world record, 525-foot 12-minute walk over the icy cold green lake. >> it's really cold. it's about 45, 48 degrees. >> it's the longest slack line ever attempted in europe. getting past the midway the lowest point of the line is the hardest. >> you have to like control your breathing, your body. hear into yourself, your mind is collecting so deep with your body, with your muscles, with everything. you feel the energy. >> also in austria...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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sparked by the shooting of duke ferdinand of austria in 2013, it cost more than $200 billion at the time. more than nine million solers and airmen died in the four years of the war. that's more than the entire population of new york city. another 6 million innocents died as a result of the war. targeting civilians, first of their kind. >> . >> the technology, the killing technology. so we were seeing -- i think it was everybody's conflict. >> reporter: modern warfare was completely revolutionized in those four years, on horseback, and ended with soldiers on machine guns and poisonous gas, driving tanks, and submarines and bombers. >> nobody was prepared for what they faced. the weapons of destruction. >> before the conflict, empires ruled the world. the british empire was at its peak, and the auto man empair, and owning a passport didn't exist. by the end of the war, europe's power structures had completely changed. the automan empire broke up. the consequences we deal with today. the russian czar was overthrown by the pol bolsheviks. >> world war i was the key turning point. the end of
sparked by the shooting of duke ferdinand of austria in 2013, it cost more than $200 billion at the time. more than nine million solers and airmen died in the four years of the war. that's more than the entire population of new york city. another 6 million innocents died as a result of the war. targeting civilians, first of their kind. >> . >> the technology, the killing technology. so we were seeing -- i think it was everybody's conflict. >> reporter: modern warfare was...
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Aug 7, 2014
08/14
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it's happening in austria. gasification farmer and there's a farmer talking about it or look in cell time germany which is independent fossil fuel free and reduced 30% unemployment to none by becoming in control of their own energy. i would love to see americans do that. try copying seedings fiber and energy in mapping the south in seed. how many people here have read jared diamond book collapse? kind of a scary tom where in great civilizations it documents what went wrong and sounds eerily familiar. this was in a state culture of modern-day cambodia but for our purposes as neighbors and we new mexicans share the culture of the four corner. these people talk about globalization, they were trading from seattle to costa rica and it looked really good. cities and trade routes and see this sounds familiar to you guys for it is kind of like the four states -- deforestation and sprawled followed by interestingly no joke right-wing leaders. seriously there's a theory because the monuments get bigger and more dramatic
it's happening in austria. gasification farmer and there's a farmer talking about it or look in cell time germany which is independent fossil fuel free and reduced 30% unemployment to none by becoming in control of their own energy. i would love to see americans do that. try copying seedings fiber and energy in mapping the south in seed. how many people here have read jared diamond book collapse? kind of a scary tom where in great civilizations it documents what went wrong and sounds eerily...