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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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it was a preposterous argument made by alfred rosenberg, one of the chief defendants at the nuremberg trials that we went into these jews' apartments, some 77,000, and nobody was will, so we just took the works of art to safe them. of course not, they'd loaded them up on trains and sent them to concentration camps. these are really hard to imagine events when we read these documents that people keep a straight face and say these things in a courtroom, but they did. so i think that you're not going to find record title or something to document the acquisition of these works of art, and in some cases that makes it more difficult. there are nazi inventory card codes that do evidence the acquiring of these works of art, theft. they're not a legal ownership title, but they document how these works of art are acquired, photographed, inventoried, codes assigned to the families indicating what number of object it is from the families, and those documents were found by the monuments men and were used at the nuremberg trials ask very, very important in helping to return these object toss the pe
it was a preposterous argument made by alfred rosenberg, one of the chief defendants at the nuremberg trials that we went into these jews' apartments, some 77,000, and nobody was will, so we just took the works of art to safe them. of course not, they'd loaded them up on trains and sent them to concentration camps. these are really hard to imagine events when we read these documents that people keep a straight face and say these things in a courtroom, but they did. so i think that you're not...
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scientists many of which were complicit and horrific war crimes and others and even stood trial at nuremberg but instead of holding these war criminals accountable for their nazi complicity many of them were brought to the us where they and their families were provided safe harbor as part of a decades long covert u.s. intelligence program called operation paperclip well earlier i was joined by christopher simpson professor of communications at american university and author of a low back the first full account of america's recruitment of nazis i first asked christopher why the us would even implement such a horrific program in the first place. there's several different factors are involved number one is the emergence of the cold war and there was a relationship as far as the cold war is concerned in which we crewmen of nazis or tolerance of former nazis in power in germany and. the then soviet union's worries about what were the post-war and post-war intentions of the western hours and some of those in time some of those questions went back to the war time period or even earlier. all right s
scientists many of which were complicit and horrific war crimes and others and even stood trial at nuremberg but instead of holding these war criminals accountable for their nazi complicity many of them were brought to the us where they and their families were provided safe harbor as part of a decades long covert u.s. intelligence program called operation paperclip well earlier i was joined by christopher simpson professor of communications at american university and author of a low back the...
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Feb 16, 2014
02/14
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should you bother the nuremberg trials that followed world war ii, but you might not be aware there were several trials in japan after the war. because of the tokyo tribe. some people refer to them as japan's nÜrnberg. there were 28 classy defendants who are part of the tokyo tribe. these were former prime ministers, heads of state, military leaders. really consider it the 28 individuals most responsible for japan's rice to board. the imperial rise. started than it was tojo hideki who was prime minister when japan bombed pearl harbor. the only civilian among the 20 classy defendants as an ideologue and a writer named o. pala shoot me --. this is okawa here. okawa is considered to be a good civilian brain trust. he was kind divine that directed the military might. even if you didn't know that okawa was the lone civilian trial that day, you would have immediately realized from the first day of the trial that he didn't quite fit in with the rest of the crew. they described as rather eccentric entrants of the first day of the trial of the first page of the book. okawa shuemi arrived looking
should you bother the nuremberg trials that followed world war ii, but you might not be aware there were several trials in japan after the war. because of the tokyo tribe. some people refer to them as japan's nÜrnberg. there were 28 classy defendants who are part of the tokyo tribe. these were former prime ministers, heads of state, military leaders. really consider it the 28 individuals most responsible for japan's rice to board. the imperial rise. started than it was tojo hideki who was...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 100
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it was a preposterous argument made by alfred rosenberg, one of the chief defendants at the nuremberg trials that we went into these jews' apartments, some 77,000, and nobody was will, so we just took the works of art to safe them. of course not, they'd loaded them up on trains and sent them to concentration camps. these are really hard to imagine events when we read these documents that people keep a straight face and say these things in a courtroom, but they did. so i think that you're not going to find record title or something to document the acquisition of these works of art, and in some cases that makes it more difficult. there are nazi inventory card codes that do evidence the acquiring of these works of art, theft. they're not a legal ownership title, but they document how these works of art are acquired, photographed, inventoried, codes assigned to the families indicating what number of object it is from the families, and those documents were found by the monuments men and were used at the nuremberg trials ask very, very important in helping to return these object toss the pe
it was a preposterous argument made by alfred rosenberg, one of the chief defendants at the nuremberg trials that we went into these jews' apartments, some 77,000, and nobody was will, so we just took the works of art to safe them. of course not, they'd loaded them up on trains and sent them to concentration camps. these are really hard to imagine events when we read these documents that people keep a straight face and say these things in a courtroom, but they did. so i think that you're not...
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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did anyone discuss these issues at the nuremberg trials? there were people there who certainly stoll was that brought out to the world? >> yes. the art investigation unit was critical. actually the volume actually interrogated caring at nuremberg. of lot of the documents entered into evidence in nuremberg as related to the art theft came from the work of this unit and it came from their research as they went through the german files to locate documents to have them verify by various interrogations' that they did. they even brought the second tier nazis it to give testimony about rosenberg. >> what was most effective is the 39 photographic albums with the had taken literally putting them in front of evidence to the affair is file footage coming from the national archives you can watch. it is reviving. it is all online. >> do we have current the monuments men for the the of wars recently like iraq and afghanistan? >> we do. we have people in the community that have advised the state department prior to the invasion in 2003 but for a variety o
did anyone discuss these issues at the nuremberg trials? there were people there who certainly stoll was that brought out to the world? >> yes. the art investigation unit was critical. actually the volume actually interrogated caring at nuremberg. of lot of the documents entered into evidence in nuremberg as related to the art theft came from the work of this unit and it came from their research as they went through the german files to locate documents to have them verify by various...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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KPIX
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,,, schell won the oscar for his role as a german defence attorney in the 1961 film "judgment at nuremberg." >>> academy award winning max millian shell has died, he won the academy award for that film. he was one of the best known european actors and no other reason for the death was given, he was 83. >> we are less than 24 hours away from super bowl 48 and this may all be the most security of any. they fly above the super bowl and if you wonder into that no- fly zone they will escort you to the ground where authorities will greet you. >>> and fans and them are making the most of the last few hours remaining before the game. >> marley hall takes a look at the preps in super bowl times square. >> the governorrers of new york and new jersey met in times square for the ceremonial handing off of the trophy for that, her fans will do that sunday. and right now they are getting in their final slides there. these young fans are ready for some football. >> i like peyton manning, that is what i like about the broncos. >> i am pretty confident that the broncos are going to win. >> why do you think
,,, schell won the oscar for his role as a german defence attorney in the 1961 film "judgment at nuremberg." >>> academy award winning max millian shell has died, he won the academy award for that film. he was one of the best known european actors and no other reason for the death was given, he was 83. >> we are less than 24 hours away from super bowl 48 and this may all be the most security of any. they fly above the super bowl and if you wonder into that no- fly zone...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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LINKTV
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enter -- nuremberg beat their rivals. house berg won 4-2. won 4-2.rrg and sundaywon, match.rt has a the game friday saw a fourth-place shocker extending their fine run of results. a fifth victory was too much, here is why. things offn started with a flash corner kick that bounced off the bar. the defense came under pressure early, but held the baseline. thehe half-hour mark, visitors had their third real scoring opportunity, courtesy of their striker. the royal blue order squander chances just before halftime. after the break, they were looking for a goal and almost got it. line keeper was caught napping, but recovered nicely to stop the score. four winseir run of since the early break. >> the upshot of all of the weekend action so far, the bundesliga looks like this, no change at the top where the big four to have the championship league so end up -- look to have the championship league sewn up. in the bottom half of the table, stuttgart are in serious trouble after seven defeats in a row. hamburg called there are way out of the bottom afte
enter -- nuremberg beat their rivals. house berg won 4-2. won 4-2.rrg and sundaywon, match.rt has a the game friday saw a fourth-place shocker extending their fine run of results. a fifth victory was too much, here is why. things offn started with a flash corner kick that bounced off the bar. the defense came under pressure early, but held the baseline. thehe half-hour mark, visitors had their third real scoring opportunity, courtesy of their striker. the royal blue order squander chances just...
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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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LINKTV
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in 1962, he won an oscar for her role ine -- for his "the judgment at nuremberg." after years of international fordom, schell became known his uncompromising confident attitude towards directors and others. >> i don't mean to say that i am better. i believe it is a question of directional taste. i often have trouble dealing with directors. constantly on the lookout for new challenges, he directed acclaimed documentary films about marlena dietrich and his sister maria/ when she fell ill with dementia, he cared for her at his home until she passed away/ the mountains, he once said, were one of his main comforts of life. >> what a lovely retreat. his documentary films are really very good. that is it this time from "the journal." more sports and news of the top of the hour. don't go away. >> she is making a flurry of last-minute preparations. >> i brought 100 young people along, cadets. >>>> the candles of a remembrance ceremony will last for three hours. we do it in memory of all of those who parish during the siege of leningrad and world war ii. >> i asked about the
in 1962, he won an oscar for her role ine -- for his "the judgment at nuremberg." after years of international fordom, schell became known his uncompromising confident attitude towards directors and others. >> i don't mean to say that i am better. i believe it is a question of directional taste. i often have trouble dealing with directors. constantly on the lookout for new challenges, he directed acclaimed documentary films about marlena dietrich and his sister maria/ when she...
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Feb 22, 2014
02/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 86
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actually grew so did the volume on deering's work actually interrogated him while he was at nuremberg and so a lot of the documents that were entered into evidence in nuremberg as a related to the art theft and so forth came from the work of this unit and it can really from their research and they went to the german file and located documents and have them verified by these various interrogations that they did. and the actual even brought some of these second tier nazis to nuremberg to give testimony about rosenberg and caring spent what was really most effective was taking the 39 er our album from these photographic album showing you what they taken and really putting them in front of the eight judges and saying here's the evidence spent there is file footage of the that come from national archives that you can watch that is absolutely riveting. it's all online. you can have access to it. we have at the foundation. >> do we have current monuments men for the wars that are going on recently like iraq and afghanistan? >> we do. we of wel have well intended pen the museums and archaeolo
actually grew so did the volume on deering's work actually interrogated him while he was at nuremberg and so a lot of the documents that were entered into evidence in nuremberg as a related to the art theft and so forth came from the work of this unit and it can really from their research and they went to the german file and located documents and have them verified by these various interrogations that they did. and the actual even brought some of these second tier nazis to nuremberg to give...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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he won an award for judgment at nuremberg. his agent said he died suddenly. he was 83 years old. "real money" with ali velshi is next. >> we like cirque lar economy because we feel the circular economy is a different economic what we're seeing is that the economy is starting to bump up against its limits. we have 3 billion middle class consumers in the next two decades. we've seen a century of price declines so actually what's the option? what we're doing is we're being more efficient with that linear economy. we're using less. being careful with the resources we have. but we're still going to run out at some stage. that's a huge issue for the global economy. a circular economy looks at from the outset, designing systems, designing products so you can recover materials so it is aligning business innovation with the design of products, materials and components which, through that business model innovation, allow those products to go back so that the materials can be recovered and thus create a restorative economy that can thrive in the long term and it is worth trillions of dollar
he won an award for judgment at nuremberg. his agent said he died suddenly. he was 83 years old. "real money" with ali velshi is next. >> we like cirque lar economy because we feel the circular economy is a different economic what we're seeing is that the economy is starting to bump up against its limits. we have 3 billion middle class consumers in the next two decades. we've seen a century of price declines so actually what's the option? what we're doing is we're being more...
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Feb 15, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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he said: >> he was acquitted at nuremberg. there's so much evidence that they were conducting horrible experiments on live human being, and they were brought to the united states. >> rough was one of seven arrested for war crimes. i was able to get the pentagon to declassify a document with the help of harvard university. after all these years it showed that those men were on a wanted war crimes lift. we knew they were conducting anyway. >> some american scientists objected to operation paper clip, chief among them albert einstein, saying: >> 2007 dwight eisenhower had meetings over the alarm going on, but he supported it. >> an interesting anecdote i came across, speaking of president eisenhower is the person in charge of scientists went to eisenhower to ask what he meant, about the scientists he should be wary of and von brown was one of them. >> there were warnings about some of these people. some were scary, and it's clear that people knew that. it's amazing as we read through this. we have a social media question. >> ther
he said: >> he was acquitted at nuremberg. there's so much evidence that they were conducting horrible experiments on live human being, and they were brought to the united states. >> rough was one of seven arrested for war crimes. i was able to get the pentagon to declassify a document with the help of harvard university. after all these years it showed that those men were on a wanted war crimes lift. we knew they were conducting anyway. >> some american scientists objected to...
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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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CNNW
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he won the oscar for best actor in 1961 starring in "judgment at nuremberg" and he had been reportedlyick for some time and died in a hospital in australia and he was 83 years old. >>> and to indonesia today, where a volcano erupted sending people literally running for their lives and the images are very difficult to watch, we have to warn you. just devastating. scorching ash spewing out of mt. sinabung, and engulfed villages where at least 14 people were killed and the authorities say that the death toll will be much higher, and adding to the heartbreak, some of the people who had evacuated the area due to the vol kay -- volcano had just returned to their homes yesterday. >>> and have you ever wondered what the tsa screeners go through? well, there is a shocking article in politico which may confirm your worst fears that they may be laughing at us. and renee march says that the former screener who penned this tell-all has to say. >> reporter: a former tsa officer calling out the agency that he once worked for stirring up fears and suspicions that flyers already had. they have ineffect
he won the oscar for best actor in 1961 starring in "judgment at nuremberg" and he had been reportedlyick for some time and died in a hospital in australia and he was 83 years old. >>> and to indonesia today, where a volcano erupted sending people literally running for their lives and the images are very difficult to watch, we have to warn you. just devastating. scorching ash spewing out of mt. sinabung, and engulfed villages where at least 14 people were killed and the...
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Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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he won an award for judgment at nuremberg. his agent said he died suddenly. he was 83 years old. "real money" with ali velshi is next.
he won an award for judgment at nuremberg. his agent said he died suddenly. he was 83 years old. "real money" with ali velshi is next.
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Feb 1, 2014
02/14
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FOXNEWSW
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he won an oscar as his role as a defense attorney in "judgment in nuremberg." he was 83. >>> in the state of the union address, president obama made clear he what is calling for a year of action, saying he is willing to use executive orders if he has to if congress won't agree on moving his agenda forward. now some house republicans are calling on the president to work with them on issues where they can agree. michigan congressman fred upton speaking about the importance of bipartisanship during this week's gop address. listen. >> the constitution also requires the president and the congress to heed the will of you the people and work together to care why you out the business of the country. >> the concept of bipartisanship. is it really possible this year? joining me now to take a look at this is our political panel fair and balanced. angela mcgowan and doug thornell former democratic congressional committee spokesman. great to have both of you. doug, is there anything different about the president's call for congress to work with him on his agenda this time i
he won an oscar as his role as a defense attorney in "judgment in nuremberg." he was 83. >>> in the state of the union address, president obama made clear he what is calling for a year of action, saying he is willing to use executive orders if he has to if congress won't agree on moving his agenda forward. now some house republicans are calling on the president to work with them on issues where they can agree. michigan congressman fred upton speaking about the importance of...
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510
Feb 7, 2014
02/14
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BLOOMBERG
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the 39 alb s that the monuments monum officers found offithe proundy prosecutio hibit ec the nurembergrtionoror of the trialpertaining to theainith ai theft. theft.eft. his is part of the crime scd no one could see it as ch ch it's taken it's erspective to see it. now 're iw ortan're iw ortan' w orta w or we've d we other three albums of mon ts men i morma ts men i morma ts men ts men ts men ts men this one will l hel he extraornary effxtraby effxtrabysands of volunteers.s of s of i cover this a this a lot g italy. y.it is entombitbrick. the great fearthe greatrthe greatrrer is that r i hat r it r i i ll bomb and thll bomb an will collaps wi laps wi laps supp was protted by local museum officials. t is a miracle tt survived a ved a ved a f f f f are all are these precarious moments. > what> ggest losses> gges duringr? >> i think the frescoes at a in padua is ctan pa aa is c remarkable loss and it was was wasasasas asifying t e monument t e monumentnumentficers in ity fice arey fice looking at these phoing aphsing es damage photos but theseotos but art hist ians looking a ooking a ookin
the 39 alb s that the monuments monum officers found offithe proundy prosecutio hibit ec the nurembergrtionoror of the trialpertaining to theainith ai theft. theft.eft. his is part of the crime scd no one could see it as ch ch it's taken it's erspective to see it. now 're iw ortan're iw ortan' w orta w or we've d we other three albums of mon ts men i morma ts men i morma ts men ts men ts men ts men this one will l hel he extraornary effxtraby effxtrabysands of volunteers.s of s of i cover this...
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916
Feb 2, 2014
02/14
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KPIX
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shell was perhaps best known for his role playing a defense attorney in the 1961 movie judgment at nurembergknew what was going on. very few. >> the performance that earned him an academy award. .. >> where have all the flowers gone. >> earlier in the week. >> >> we lost an american troubadour, who said against the current. folksinger and activist pete seeger died sunday in new york .. >> born into a musical family in 1919, seger dropped out of harvard to travel the country on freight trains with folksinger woody guthrie. >> guthrie offered him useful advice as seger told anthony mason a few years back. >> put your seger on your back and buy and somebody will say kid i have a quarter for you if you pick us a tune, now you swing around and play your best song. >> he went on to write folk classics such as if i had a hammer. >> if i had a ma'am her in the evening. >> his refusal to testify about his past communist associations led, led him to conviction which was later appealed, his opponents on the right tried to protest against performances but to no avail. >> all they did is give me free pub
shell was perhaps best known for his role playing a defense attorney in the 1961 movie judgment at nurembergknew what was going on. very few. >> the performance that earned him an academy award. .. >> where have all the flowers gone. >> earlier in the week. >> >> we lost an american troubadour, who said against the current. folksinger and activist pete seeger died sunday in new york .. >> born into a musical family in 1919, seger dropped out of harvard to...
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Feb 6, 2014
02/14
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KQED
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eye 207
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the 39 albums that the monuments officers found were the primary prosecution exhibit at the nuremberg trials for the portion of the trials pertaining to the theft. so this is part of the crime scene and no one could see it as such then. it's taken years of perspective to see it. now they're important for us to find. we've donated other three albums of monuments men information. this is where this one will go here. >> rose: let's talk about histh hitler. he was a failed art student and he was going to build this huge thing in austria. he wanted to rebuild this hometown and at the center it was going to be a cultural complex. there were also drawings by hitler. we put some of those photographs in my first book where he's sitting there drawing sketches of what he wants it to look like so housed in this museum is going to be some of the great works of art, including the great german painters in the 19th century that hitler feels like, like him, were overlooked by others and that no one can understand why they're great because i'm the fuhrer and you can't understand what i know. but of cou
the 39 albums that the monuments officers found were the primary prosecution exhibit at the nuremberg trials for the portion of the trials pertaining to the theft. so this is part of the crime scene and no one could see it as such then. it's taken years of perspective to see it. now they're important for us to find. we've donated other three albums of monuments men information. this is where this one will go here. >> rose: let's talk about histh hitler. he was a failed art student and he...