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May 27, 2018
05/18
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moizan: i am guillaume moizan. i specialize in world war i. mr. yockelson: what started your interest in that? why do you do that? bornn -- mr. moizan: i was near the elbow on forest. my brother and his friends, we would walk through the forest and find remains everywhere. as i grew up, i wanted to know more about history. why do we have changes here echo were with the germans, allies? afford my whole life interest into the first world war, and when you are born in this region, it is something normal to be interested in the war because remains are still everywhere in the forest. .r. yockelson: mitch yockelson i'm a world war i historian. an author a kid of books on the first world where. the most recent, "47 days: how persians warriors defeated the i."an army in world war >> how did your interest in this start and why? mr. yockelson: it started as a young kid, basically reading and learning about general pershing. for a number of years, i served as the national archives' world war i specialist, and it developed from there. >> we are going to watch
moizan: i am guillaume moizan. i specialize in world war i. mr. yockelson: what started your interest in that? why do you do that? bornn -- mr. moizan: i was near the elbow on forest. my brother and his friends, we would walk through the forest and find remains everywhere. as i grew up, i wanted to know more about history. why do we have changes here echo were with the germans, allies? afford my whole life interest into the first world war, and when you are born in this region, it is something...
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guillaume a lot of my beauty. could be school o'connor and. she might be out of. staters to hear a lot about me. in the i know a lot of behind beauty. but they still be a lot of mecca and a mystery. in the heart of. limitless. and if you think about. it. thank you. thank. goodness for that had been for you i. hope you get it. from home and so you're going to go with the one that it was going to look for the idea that a little. bit of. struggles. against the book might tell that mom i'm going to end you. michael but hundred ninety. five is that going to leave you with a little article how did you know where he was so sometimes it was like. she was you know before. now isn't one of the i'm sure i don't. really understand either. one of my a couple times. just didn't know but that could look at it now but maybe it was time. for them i'm. sure he didn't want to and then cherry that i meant i don't feel it does feel that i could love the idea left. but i do because it limits the. fact that how learning something to be there though i don't know the most about been is th
guillaume a lot of my beauty. could be school o'connor and. she might be out of. staters to hear a lot about me. in the i know a lot of behind beauty. but they still be a lot of mecca and a mystery. in the heart of. limitless. and if you think about. it. thank you. thank. goodness for that had been for you i. hope you get it. from home and so you're going to go with the one that it was going to look for the idea that a little. bit of. struggles. against the book might tell that mom i'm going to...
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May 28, 2018
05/18
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army films, with historian mitchell yockelson and french battlefield guide guillaume moizan. officially titled "activities of the graves registration service" the film was shot in northeastern france after the war, in 1919 and 1920. this ten-minute army signal corps film documents the sometimes grisly work of removing the remains of u.s. service members from temporary graves and preparing them for transport to the united states or burial in american cemeteries in france and we will show a four-minute film from 1955 which documents the dedication of the u.s. marine monument in belleau wood, france. >> after the fighting that ended, graves registration service team, drs teams, usually led by a chaplin, would go to the temporary burial sites which were near where the soldiers fell and bodies were exhumid and look -- if the dog tag was there, two dog tags were issued to american troops and then the bodies were either placed in a permanent cemetery or they were removed, placed in coffins and brought to the ports for shipment back home. about 70% of american families elected to hav
army films, with historian mitchell yockelson and french battlefield guide guillaume moizan. officially titled "activities of the graves registration service" the film was shot in northeastern france after the war, in 1919 and 1920. this ten-minute army signal corps film documents the sometimes grisly work of removing the remains of u.s. service members from temporary graves and preparing them for transport to the united states or burial in american cemeteries in france and we will...
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May 28, 2018
05/18
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. >> i'm guillaume moizan, tour guide in france. specialized in world war i and for american people on the battlefield for the last couple years. >> what started your interest in that? why do you do that? >> i was born by the argon forest. with my brother's friends when walking in the forest we find trenches, remains everywhere, so that's how i got interested when i was a child already. then growing up i start to want to know more about history. why do we have the trench here. where were the germans, the allied, everything, and i got involved. i had -- it's like a whole life interest into the first world war war. when you are born into this region it's something normal to be interested in the war because remains are still everywhere in the forest. >> mitch yockelson, i'm a world war i historian. i serve as the chief historical adviser to the united states world war i centennial commission and also an author of two books on the first world war the most recent, 47 days how pershing's warriors defeated the german army in world war i. >
. >> i'm guillaume moizan, tour guide in france. specialized in world war i and for american people on the battlefield for the last couple years. >> what started your interest in that? why do you do that? >> i was born by the argon forest. with my brother's friends when walking in the forest we find trenches, remains everywhere, so that's how i got interested when i was a child already. then growing up i start to want to know more about history. why do we have the trench here....
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May 9, 2018
05/18
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and we'll have the latest from one of the most prestigious and guillaume. bets on the moving calendar can fill fest. thank you for joining us iran says supreme leader says the trance decision to pull the united states out of the two thousand and fifty nuclear deal is quote silly and superficial he accused the u.s. president of lying in this threaten to quit the landmark agreement if the remaining world powers can't offer a trade guarantee. he has more now from tehran. the day after the united states tore up the nuclear deal iran set it on fire members of parliament into one burned a printout of the international pact and the american flag a show of anger and disappointment over what they say is a mistake by washington i thought all right all your more him if europe an important countries like russia and china fill this international vacuum perhaps that will be a way to continue otherwise the islamic republic of iran will bring the us to its senses with its nuclear actions they have to know that under such circumstances iran has no commitment to remain in th
and we'll have the latest from one of the most prestigious and guillaume. bets on the moving calendar can fill fest. thank you for joining us iran says supreme leader says the trance decision to pull the united states out of the two thousand and fifty nuclear deal is quote silly and superficial he accused the u.s. president of lying in this threaten to quit the landmark agreement if the remaining world powers can't offer a trade guarantee. he has more now from tehran. the day after the united...