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607
Mar 1, 2012
03/12
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WFDC
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o nos reisionhea que inero separeuan ] univis. he[ migsta qu] nara diner.! o no[ ero noa ] parehifieivisioen mi he, ya sst! hna se hast!ers sepauniv e el diya seo n! el din se arnos se ion [hautor ]que elseñal ero noe parete la ivisioa pasaheen, ion hase armque el ivisio todoshe sta quse arm diner univ Úsihaste el do nos reisionhea ql hace muchos aÑos y seguramente a jorge, a rosario, a alejandra, y por supuesto, al licenciado marco les va a sorprender mucho que el administrador depositario de la hacienda organiza fiestas privadas en elunivisy no lhea informado que ya fue liberada. >> eso no lo debe saber nadie. >> ya nos estamos entendiendo. le propongo una cosa, ni usted ni yo estamos en condiciones de deshacernos de esta mina de oro que seguramente le ha estado redituando grandes ingresos. ¿quÉ tal si compartimos esos beneficios? >> la hacienda estÁ trabajando, y efectivamente produce ganancias. pero tampoco como repartir entre tantos. >> o sea que sÍ hay otros involucrados. >> ¿cuÁnto quiere por su silencio? >> dÉjeme pensarlo y yo me pongo en contacto
o nos reisionhea que inero separeuan ] univis. he[ migsta qu] nara diner.! o no[ ero noa ] parehifieivisioen mi he, ya sst! hna se hast!ers sepauniv e el diya seo n! el din se arnos se ion [hautor ]que elseñal ero noe parete la ivisioa pasaheen, ion hase armque el ivisio todoshe sta quse arm diner univ Úsihaste el do nos reisionhea ql hace muchos aÑos y seguramente a jorge, a rosario, a alejandra, y por supuesto, al licenciado marco les va a sorprender mucho que el administrador depositario...
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Mar 18, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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michael knight who is archive specialist in holdings protection here at nara and he is actually going to introduce mr. doback. [ applause ] >> i'd like to echo what lopez said and welcome you to the national archives records administration. we have a very special speaker today, dr. william a.doback, going to discuss his newest work freedom by the sword, the u.s. colored troops 1862 to 1867. he received his ph.d. -- his published disertation, fort riley and its neighbors, 1853 to 1985, won the edward a.tehan in. he worked at the national archives beginning mid 90s. while here he began working on his next study with his co-author thomas d. phillips called the black regular, 1866 to 1898. this book was published in 2001. in 2003, the superb work received the western history association's robert m. utley award as the finest book on the military history of the north american western frontier. in 2002, willy joined the staff at the u.s. army center of military history. and in 2003 he began research on "freedom by the sword." so i'd like to introduce dr. doback by noting that all of his mili
michael knight who is archive specialist in holdings protection here at nara and he is actually going to introduce mr. doback. [ applause ] >> i'd like to echo what lopez said and welcome you to the national archives records administration. we have a very special speaker today, dr. william a.doback, going to discuss his newest work freedom by the sword, the u.s. colored troops 1862 to 1867. he received his ph.d. -- his published disertation, fort riley and its neighbors, 1853 to 1985, won...
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Mar 17, 2012
03/12
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CSPAN3
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this schedule, the tables and rules have been approved by nara. so i'm wondering what the solution would be to the situation. we are demonstrating transparency, at least for two years or six years. but then according to what is mandated, we take the records out of the electronic reading roo room. >> well, it is true that not long after the enactment of the 1996 amendment that created the whole concept of electronic reading room and also the concept of frequently requested records, that the government had to confront for the first time something is required to be put in the reading room. it's now electronic in nature. therefore we're talking about having it posted. far better to make it available to the public if it's been requested more than once and it's disposable so people don't have to make the requests. another question is, okay, how long do we keep them up? and back in the day, they said, oh, the answer is clear, 4.726 years. no one knew which can make the stance on the head of the pen, no one knows for sure. i'm not trying to usurp the auth
this schedule, the tables and rules have been approved by nara. so i'm wondering what the solution would be to the situation. we are demonstrating transparency, at least for two years or six years. but then according to what is mandated, we take the records out of the electronic reading roo room. >> well, it is true that not long after the enactment of the 1996 amendment that created the whole concept of electronic reading room and also the concept of frequently requested records, that...
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Mar 17, 2012
03/12
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and if they don't, you can appeal that to a body at nara, called the interagency security classic appeals panel, iscap or ifcap, i've heard it both ways and iscap will do a de novo review of the document and declassify it or classify it and they have an amazing release rate of something along the lines of 60% or well, mdr there's nothing in the executive order that says anything about fees. the cia decided well there should be and they passed a new regulation. they did not put it through notice and comment. they just said it's a rule, stuck it out there and says, if you do not agree to pay the total search, review and duplication cost, we will not process your request, because i guess they got tired of being of being overturned by iscap and filing mdr requests. they not only violated by not going through notice and comment, but there's actually a supreme court case out there that says you can't do this. there's a law called the inpent appropriations act when agencies cite their fees. the ioaa says governments can charge fees for things that businesses would charge fees r for. and the supr
and if they don't, you can appeal that to a body at nara, called the interagency security classic appeals panel, iscap or ifcap, i've heard it both ways and iscap will do a de novo review of the document and declassify it or classify it and they have an amazing release rate of something along the lines of 60% or well, mdr there's nothing in the executive order that says anything about fees. the cia decided well there should be and they passed a new regulation. they did not put it through notice...
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this is what we have to try to understand but, you know, i thought mcthat nara was rather astute whenhey asked him after he wrote his memoirs about the mess he caused in vietnam because he had all these second thoughts and they said, well, don't you think you should apologize or you want to apologize, you know, to the american people and to the world. he said, what good is an apology. if you make mistakes and you see this and stir up enough trouble, why don't we change our policy? that's what he said. we should change our policy so if we have a policy going on in the middle east that is begging that we apologize now and then and others condemning it because they don't think we should apologize, i think we should reassess our foreign policy and that is what i think we are not doing and that is why i am quite different than the other candidates and the president that american people i think are sick and tired of this war and the wars going on over there. we're going broke. we ran off a debt of $4 trillion in this last ten years fighting these wars that were not legitimate and that we we
this is what we have to try to understand but, you know, i thought mcthat nara was rather astute whenhey asked him after he wrote his memoirs about the mess he caused in vietnam because he had all these second thoughts and they said, well, don't you think you should apologize or you want to apologize, you know, to the american people and to the world. he said, what good is an apology. if you make mistakes and you see this and stir up enough trouble, why don't we change our policy? that's what...
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Mar 21, 2012
03/12
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MSNBCW
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we know his name is muhammad nara. he's 24 years old. he's from toulouse.with al qaeda in pakistan's tribal territories. he returned to france to commit -- carrying out all the recent killings here in this toulouse area. he said he killed the french soldiers to protest against western intervention in afghanistan and that he killed the jewish children on monday at the jewish school to avenge what he called the children killed in palestine. so we're talking about an extremely hard-core -- not a lone wolf, perhaps, but certainly a home-grown terrorist, somebody that's traveled back and forth to the tribal areas. and now saying that he will surrender. but we just don't know when. chris? >> jim maceda, thank you so much. we'll keep you posted on what's going on in toulouse. >>> meantime, residents of southern mexico are cleaning up this morning after a strong 7.4 magnitude earthquake caused damage to buildings. about a dozen people were hurt. amazingly, no deaths were reported. first daughter, malia obama is in that region on a class service trip. but the first
we know his name is muhammad nara. he's 24 years old. he's from toulouse.with al qaeda in pakistan's tribal territories. he returned to france to commit -- carrying out all the recent killings here in this toulouse area. he said he killed the french soldiers to protest against western intervention in afghanistan and that he killed the jewish children on monday at the jewish school to avenge what he called the children killed in palestine. so we're talking about an extremely hard-core -- not a...