Saturday, December 7, 2019

Reddit Bans Accounts, Suspects Possible UK Vote Interference 

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Reddit Bans Accounts, Suspects Possible UK Vote Interference 

The prospect of Russian interference in Britain's election flared anew Saturday after the social media platform Reddit concluded that people from Russia had leaked confidential British government documents on Brexit trade talks just days before the general U.K. vote. 

Reddit said in a statement that it had banned 61 accounts suspected of violating policies against vote manipulation. It said the suspect accounts shared the same pattern of activity as a Russian interference operation dubbed ``Secondary Infektion`` that was uncovered earlier this year.  

Reddit investigated the leak after the documents became public during the campaign for Thursday's election, which will determine the country's future relationship with the European Union. All 650 seats in the House of Commons are up for grabs. 

Reddit said it believed the documents were leaked as ``part of a campaign that has been reported as originating from Russia.`` 

``We were able to confirm that they did indeed show a pattern of coordination,'' Reddit said. 

The British government has not challenged the authenticity of the documents. 

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson sits on a train in London, Friday Dec. 6, 2019, on the campaign trail ahead of the…
FILE - Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson sits on a train in London, Dec. 6, 2019, on the campaign trail ahead of the general election on Dec. 12.

Britain's main opposition party has argued the documents prove that Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative Party is seeking a deal with the United States after Brexit that would drive up the cost of drugs and imperil the state-funded National Health Service. The issue has been a central election theme, largely because the country deeply cherishes the health service, which has suffered under years of austerity. 

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said the 451 pages of documents, which covered six rounds of preliminary talks between U.S. and U.K. negotiators, proved that Johnson was planning to put the NHS ``up for sale'' in trade talks. Johnson — who was not prime minister for most of the two-year period when the trade talks took place — has rejected Corbyn's analysis. 

Britain is currently scheduled to leave the 28-nation EU on January 31. 

When asked about Reddit's actions while on a campaign stop in Wales, Corbyn suggested the news was an ``advanced stage of rather belated conspiracy theories by the prime minister.'' 

''When we released the documents, at no stage did the prime minister or anybody deny that those documents were real, deny the arguments that we put forward. And if there has been no discussion with the USA about access to our health markets, if all that is wrong, how come after a week they still haven't said that?`` he said. 

'Extremely serious'

Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan told the BBC that the government was ``looking for and monitoring`` anything that might suggest interference in the British election.  

``From what was being put on that [Reddit] website, those who seem to know about these things say that it seems to have all the hallmarks of some form of interference,'' Morgan said. ``And if that is the case, that obviously is extremely serious.'' 

The specter that Russia has meddled in Britain's electoral process has been raised before. Critics are also questioning the British government's failure to release a Parliament intelligence committee report on previous Russian interference in the country's politics. They say it should have been made public before Thursday's vote. 

The Times of London reported, without saying how it got the information, that the intelligence report concluded that Russian interference might have affected the 2016 referendum on Britain's departure from the EU, though the impact was ``unquantifiable.'' 

The committee said British intelligence services failed to devote enough resources to countering the threat, and it highlighted the impact of articles posted by Russian news sites that were widely disseminated on social media, the newspaper reported. 

Leader of Britain's Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson reacts as she speaks at a campaign event in London, Britain, Nov. 9, 2019.
FILE - The leader of Britain's Liberal Democrats, Jo Swinson, reacts as she speaks at a campaign event in London, Nov. 9, 2019.

Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson expressed concern about the new Russian interference claims. 

``All of us should be concerned if a foreign country is trying to interfere in our democracy,'' she said. 

``And that is why it is so appalling that the prime minister is sitting on a report that was written weeks before the general election, that the Security Committee say should be published, into interference in U.K. democracy by foreign countries like Russia.'' 


December 08, 2019 at 11:40AM

Cabot Phillips: Opposition to Pledge of Allegiance by ‘social justice warriors’ signals alarming trend

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Cabot Phillips: Opposition to Pledge of Allegiance by 'social justice warriors' signals alarming trend We cannot stand idly by while the next generation carves away at our freedoms in the name of social justice.
December 08, 2019 at 09:19AM

Trump Congressional Ally Faces His Own Ukraine Questions

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Trump Congressional Ally Faces His Own Ukraine Questions

U.S. Representative Devin Nunes, the top Republican on the House Intelligence Committee, has been a leading voice defending President Donald Trump throughout the congressional Democrats' impeachment inquiry. 
 
But the 300-page impeachment report released Tuesday by the Democratic majority on the Intelligence Committee revealed that the California congressman has connections to the Trump-Ukraine scandal that have raised questions about his own official conduct. 
 
House Democrats obtained phone records of Nunes' calls with Trump's personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, who Democratic investigators say led a shadow effort to subvert U.S. foreign policy in Ukraine in a manner that would benefit the president's own political interests in the 2020 election campaign. 
 
Logs show five calls between Giuliani and Nunes on April 10, 2019. Two of those were missed calls and the longest was almost 3 minutes in duration. The phone calls occurred at a time when Giuliani has been accused of waging a smear campaign to oust U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch as part of an effort to clear the way for pressuring the Ukrainian government to announce investigations of one of Trump's leading political rivals, former Vice President Joe Biden, and his son Hunter.  

FILE - Rudy Giuliani is seen with Ukrainian-American businessman Lev Parnas at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, Sept. 20, 2019. Parnas has been arrested with another associate of Giuliani's, Igor Fruman, a Belarus-born U.S. citizen.
FILE - Rudy Giuliani is seen with Ukrainian American businessman Lev Parnas at the Trump International Hotel in Washington, Sept. 20, 2019.

The previously undisclosed phone records provided to the committee by AT&T and Verizon also showed Nunes spoke at least four times with Lev Parnas, a Ukrainian American associate of Giuliani who has been indicted on charges of campaign finance violations. Parnas allegedly was part of Giuliani's efforts to dig up damaging information on the Bidens. Parnas has pleaded not guilty to the campaign finance charges. 
 
The phone calls raised suspicions among House Democrats that Nunes was working behind the scenes to help the president. 
 
Nunes: Calls not suspicious 
 
Nunes told Fox News host Sean Hannity on Tuesday that the timing of his calls with Giuliani, whom he has known for some time, should not be considered suspicious and were more focused on former special counsel Robert Mueller and his report on Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.  

Asked about his contact with Parnas, Nunes said he found it unlikely he would be taking calls from random people. 
 
"l haven't gone through all my phone records," Nunes told Fox News. "I don't really recall that name, I remember that name now because he's been indicted." 

According to the phone records in the impeachment report, Nunes spoke with Parnas at least four times on April 12, 2019, including one 8-minute phone call. 
 
Parnas has alleged through his attorney that Nunes used taxpayer funds for official travel to Vienna in 2018 to meet with former Ukrainian prosecutor general Viktor Shokin, according to CNN reports. Parnas' lawyer has also said his client is willing to testify that he met with a Nunes aide and Giuliani to discuss Biden. 
 
Nunes has called those allegations "fake." He has filed a lawsuit against CNN for its reporting on his conversations with Parnas and has threatened internet publication The Daily Beast with similar litigation. 
 
"It's not unusual for members of Congress to have contact with persons in foreign countries," said Todd Belt, professor and political management program director at The George Washington University Graduate School of Political Management. 
 
Members of Congress routinely coordinate official trips through the State Department to learn more about areas receiving aid from the United States. "But this sort of freelance thing is pretty unusual," Belt said. 
 
Nunes-Trump relationship 
 
Nunes is no stranger to defending his close relationship with the Trump White House. 
 
In 2017, during his time as chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, he investigated Trump's tweeted claims that the Obama administration had him "wiretapped" in Trump Tower during the 2016 presidential campaign. 
 
Reporters discovered Nunes was coordinating with White House officials to release classified information supporting that allegation. 
 
Nunes later told reporters the incidental collection of intelligence was legal, part of routine surveillance of Trump campaign officials in discussion with foreign agents after the election. 

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif. arrives to give reporters an update about the ongoing Russia investigation, Wednesday, March 22, 2017, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
US House Intelligence Panel Weighs Future of Wiretap Probe
The House of Representatives Intelligence Committee met behind closed doors Thursday, a day after its investigation into wiretapping allegations involving President Donald Trump and his predecessor, former President Barack Obama, was thrown into disarray.Republican Congressman Devin Nunes, chairman of the panel, defended his disclosure Wednesday that legal, wiretapped conversations of foreign agents talking with Trump officials after the November election, but before he took office in late January led…

Nunes, however, was forced to recuse himself from the House Intelligence Committee investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election and temporarily relinquish his chairmanship because of his apparent conflict of interest. A House Ethics Committee investigation subsequently cleared him. 
 
Belt said Nunes has a "really cozy relationship with the president." 
 
Relevance to impeachment inquiry 
 
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff told reporters Tuesday that he would reserve comment on Nunes but said it was "deeply concerning" a member of Congress could be complicit in behind-the-scenes efforts to assist the president at the public's expense. 
 
"There's a lot more to learn about that, and I don't want to state that that's an unequivocal fact," Schiff said. "Our focus is on the president's conduct first and foremost. It may be the role of others to evaluate the conduct of members of Congress." 
 
Belt noted Democrats would have to prioritize their investigations, focusing on the impeachment investigation into Trump rather than the allegations against Nunes. 
 
"The fact that they're trying to move ahead as fast as possible really doesn't give them much, you know, wiggle room to sort of revisit this," he said. 
 
During the impeachment inquiry hearings, Nunes has consistently pushed the unfounded theory that Ukraine interfered in the 2016 presidential election, arguing that the interference gave Trump a good reason to suspect the country's motives and temporarily withhold military aid. 

That theory has been rejected by U.S. intelligence agencies, who conclusively found Russia meddled in the 2016 election. 
 
Democratic Representative Jackie Speier, another member of the House Intelligence Committee, tweeted: "If Devin Nunes was using taxpayer money to do 'political errands' in Vienna for his puppeteer, Donald Trump, an ethics investigation should be initiated and he should be required to reimburse the taxpayers." 
 
What's next for Nunes? 
 
The House Committee on Ethics considers cases of misconduct by members of Congress and could likely end up weighing in on this matter. Unlike other House committees, membership is evenly divided among Democrats and Republicans. This ensures that each party has veto power over disciplinary action of a member of Congress. 
 
The committee cleared Nunes of wrongdoing in the 2017 wiretapping controversy. 
 
Members of Congress facing ethics investigations often resign to save political face. The committee can refer the matter to a full House floor vote, censuring or expelling the member of Congress, although such action is extremely rare. 


December 08, 2019 at 08:40AM

Democrats Continue Work on Impeachment Probe

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Democrats Continue Work on Impeachment Probe

U.S. Democratic lawmakers met privately Saturday to work on the investigation into President Donald Trump, inching closer to an impeachment vote, possibly before the Christmas holiday recess. 
 
Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee were working through the weekend to review evidence against the Republican president and to draft charges that they could recommend for a full House vote as early as Thursday. 
 
The legislators disclosed a 55-page report Saturday that outlined what they viewed as the constitutional grounds on which the charges, known as articles of impeachment, could be based. 
 
On Friday, the White House said it would not cooperate with the remaining House impeachment proceedings against Trump.  

FILE - White House counsel Pat Cipollone, center, arrives for an immigration speech by President Donald Trump in the Rose Garden at the White House, May 16, 2019.
FILE - White House counsel Pat Cipollone, center, arrives for a speech by President Donald Trump in the Rose Garden at the White House, May 16, 2019.

"As you know, your impeachment inquiry is completely baseless and has violated basic principles of due process and fundamental fairness," read a letter from Pat Cipollone, counsel to the president, addressed to House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler. 
 
The response was issued less than an hour before a Friday afternoon deadline for lawyers of the president to state whether they would represent him in the next round of the committee's impeachment proceedings. 
 
"You should end this inquiry now and not waste even more time with additional hearings," Cipollone said in the letter. 
 
The counsel reiterated the president's tweeted words that "if you are going to impeach me, do it now, fast, so that we can have a fair trial in the Senate and so that our Country can get back to business." 

'He cannot claim' unfairness
 
Later Friday, Nadler expressed disappointment Trump had decided not to participate.   
 
"We gave President Trump a fair opportunity to question witnesses and present his own to address the overwhelming evidence before us. After listening to him complain about the impeachment process, we had hoped that he might accept our invitation," the committee chairman said in a statement. "If the President has no good response to the allegations, then he would not want to appear before the Committee. Having declined this opportunity, he cannot claim that the process is unfair." 
 
Democrats contend the Republican president defied the norms of conduct for the office and violated his sworn obligation to uphold the U.S. Constitution by asking Ukraine to launch an investigation of Joe Biden, the former vice president running for the Democratic Party nomination to challenge Trump next year, and his son Hunter. 

(COMBO) This combination of pictures created on September 24, 2019 showsUkraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky in June 17,…
FILE - Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Paris, June 17, 2019, and U.S. President Donald Trump in the Oval Office at the White House, Sept. 20, 2019.

Trump contends his phone conversations with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy have been perfect and he did nothing wrong. Republicans have defended the president, saying Trump was right to press Ukraine to scrutinize the work that Biden's son did for a Ukrainian natural gas company. 
 
Republicans are also pushing a debunked theory that Ukraine meddled in the 2016 election that Trump won. The U.S. intelligence community concluded it was Ukraine's neighbor, Russia, that was doing the meddling. 
 
Trump's request to Kyiv came at a time when his administration was withholding $391 million in military assistance approved for Ukraine to fight pro-Russian separatists in the eastern part of the country. The aid was released in September without Ukraine opening investigations of the Bidens. 
 
The request for such an investigation in exchange for military assistance is expected to be among the articles of impeachment against Trump. 

Congressional correspondent Katherine Gypson contributed to this report. 


December 08, 2019 at 06:08AM

Internet personality Brother Nature attacked at Miami sandwich shop

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Internet personality Brother Nature attacked at Miami sandwich shop Internet personality Brother Nature was viciously attacked at a sandwich shop in Miami on Saturday, and it was all caught on video.
December 08, 2019 at 06:01AM

Michael Fish net worth: Hurricane weatherman failed to predict worst storm in 300 years

Michael Fish net worth: Hurricane weatherman failed to predict worst storm in 300 years


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Michael Fish become famous for what is now known as the "hurricane controversy". The weather man told BBC viewers on 15 October 1987: "Earlier ...
December 08, 2019 at 12:22AM

Armenian President Attends Gyumri Memorial Service for 1988 Earthquake Victims

Armenian President Attends Gyumri Memorial Service for 1988 Earthquake Victims


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Armenian President Armen Sarkissian travelled to Gyumri today to pay his respects to the thousands of victims of the earthquake that devasted the city ...
December 07, 2019 at 10:18PM

Naval Air Station shooter wrote manifesto condemning US as 'nation of evil:' report

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Naval Air Station shooter wrote manifesto condemning US as 'nation of evil:' report The Saudi national that opened fire a naval air station in Florida Friday morning, killing three before being shot dead by officers, condemned the United States as a "nation of evil" in a manifesto posted online, reports say. 
December 07, 2019 at 10:47PM

Giovanni Poggi (historian)

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Giovanni Poggi (historian)

DilletantiAnonymous:


[[File:Giovanni_Poggi.jpg|thumb|Poggi around 1910]]
:''"Giovanni Poggi" redirects here. For other people with this name, see [[Giovanni Poggi (disambiguation)]].''
'''Giovanni Poggi''' (11 February 1880 - 27 March 1961) was an Italian historian and museum curator<ref></ref><ref></ref>
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==Life==
Born in Florence to Luigi and Assunta Papini, he graduated in literature from the [[Istituto di studi superiori di Firenze]] in 1902 and dedicated his life to archival research and study of the arts, which remained central to his work throughout his life. He began his career as a official for antiquity and fine arts following the passing of state law number 185 ("Conservation of monuments, art objects and antiquities") on 12 June 1902. From 1904 onwards he was inspector extraordinaire to the Regie Gallerie in Florence as well as director of the [[Museo nazionale del Bargello]] from 1906 onwards and of the [[Uffizi]] from 1912 onwards. He also founded and co-edited the ''Rivista d'arte''.<ref></ref>

[[File:Casa buonarroti, targa giovanni poggi 1951 ca..JPG|thumb|left|[[Casa Buonarroti]], plaque commemorating Poggi's restoration, 1951]]
In 1913 he managed to recover the [[Mona Lisa]], stolen from the [[Louvre]] two years earlier.<ref name="Men"></ref><ref></ref> It had been stolen by [[Vincenzo Peruggia]] who hoped to sell it on and got in touch with Poggi, who in turn contacted the Florentine art dealer Alfredo Geri to verify the work's authenticity<ref name="Men"/>.

Poggi also put in place a plan to protect and safeguard Florence's artworks after Italy's entry into the [[Second World War]] in 1940, identifying several safe locations to host the objects and thus ensuring they remained undamaged by bombing and out of reach of Nazi looting. He retired in 1949 after reaching the age limit for his roles but the Comune di Firenze decided it wished him to continue overseeing the institutes and monuments relating to his own subject areas. He died in Florence in 1961.

==Selected works==
*

==References==
<references/>


[[category:1880 births]]
[[category:1961 deaths]]
[[category:People from Florence]]
[[category:20th-century Italian historians]]
[[category:Italian art historians]]
[[category:Uffizi]]
[[category:Directors of museums in Italy‎]]

December 07, 2019 at 10:45PM

Truckers Block Roads as French Strikes hit Weekend Travel

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Truckers Block Roads as French Strikes hit Weekend Travel

Strikes disrupted weekend travel around France on Saturday as truckers blocked highways and most trains remained at a standstill because of worker anger at President Emmanuel Macron's policies.

Meanwhile, yellow vest protesters held their weekly demonstrations over economic injustice in Paris and other cities, under the close watch of police. The marchers appear to be emboldened by the biggest national protests in years Thursday that kicked off a mass movement against the government's plan to redesign the national retirement system.

As the strikes entered a third day Saturday, tourists and shoppers faced shuttered subway lines around Paris and near-empty train stations.

Other groups are joining the fray, too.

Nationwide Strike Paralyzes France video player.
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Nationwide Strike Paralyzes France

Truckers striking over a fuel tax hike disrupted traffic on highways from Provence in the southeast to Normandy in the northwest. A similar fuel tax is what unleashed the yellow vest movement a year ago, and this convergence of grievances could pose a major new threat to Macron's presidency.

The travel chaos is not deterring the government so far, though. Prime Minister Edouard Philippe plainly told the French in a nationwide address Friday: "You're going to have to work longer."

He will present details of the plan next week. The government says it won't raise the official retirement age of 62 but the plan is expected to including financial conditions to encourage people to work longer. Philippe did offer one olive branch, saying the changes would be progressive so that they don't become "brutal."

Macron says the reform, which will streamline a convoluted system of 42 special pension plans, will make the system more fair and financially sustainable.

Unions, however, see the plan as a t hreat to hard-fought workers' rights, and are digging in for what they hope is a protracted strike. They also plan new nationwide retirement protests Tuesday, despite the tear gas and rioting that marred the edges of the Paris march Thursday.

In a society accustomed to strikes and workers rights, many people have supported the labor action, though that sentiment is likely to fade if the transport shutdown continues through next week.

"I knew it was going to last ... but I did not expect it to be that chaotic," Ley Basaki, who lives in the Paris suburb of Villemomble and struggles to get to and from work in the capital, told The Associated Press on Saturday at the Gare de l'Est train station. "There is absolutely nothing here, nothing, nothing. There is no bus, nothing."

Many travelers are using technology and social networks to find ways around the strike — working from home, using ride-sharing apps and riding shared bikes or electric scooters.

But some are using technology to support the strike: A group of activist gamers is raising money via a marathon session on game-streaming site Twitch. Their manifesto says: "In the face of powers-that-be who are hardening their line and economic insecurity that is intensifying in all layers of the population," they are trying to "occupy other spaces for mobilization and invent other ways of joining the movement."


December 07, 2019 at 10:35PM

Pearl Harbor gunman was in counseling, facing nonjudicial punishment: military official

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Pearl Harbor gunman was in counseling, facing nonjudicial punishment: military official A U.S. Navy sailor who shot three people, killing two and himself with his service weapons at the Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard on Wednesday was undergoing nonjudicial punishment for minor misconduct and had been in counseling, a military official said Friday on condition of anonymity.
December 07, 2019 at 07:48PM

Levinson Family Court Testimony Raises Pressure on Iran for American’s Release

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Levinson Family Court Testimony Raises Pressure on Iran for American's Release

An American family suing Iran in a U.S. court for the 2007 disappearance of family patriarch Robert Levinson on an Iranian island has emerged from two days of tearful testimony more determined than ever to press Tehran for his release.

The testimony of the retired FBI agent's wife and seven adult children at the Wednesday and Thursday sessions of Washington's U.S. District Court "is one way to keep reminding the Iranians that we're not going away," said eldest son Dan Levinson in a Friday appearance on VOA Persian's Late News program.

"They know exactly where my father is," he said of the Iranian government. "It's been almost 13 years (since the disappearance) and we're just suffering terribly. It's time for them to send my father home. And this (court testimony) is one way to hold them accountable and to pressure them to get this resolved."

Dan Levinson, the eldest son of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who went missing in Iran in 2007, speaks to VOA Persian outsi
Dan Levinson, the eldest son of retired FBI agent Robert Levinson, who went missing in Iran in 2007, speaks to VOA Persian outside the U.S. District Court in Washington, Dec. 4, 2019.

Father disappears in 2007

Robert Levinson disappeared March 9, 2007, while visiting southern Iran's Kish Island as a private investigator. He had retired from a 22-year career with the FBI nine years earlier. In 2013, several U.S. news outlets reported that Levinson had been part of a rogue CIA intelligence mission, a claim that U.S. authorities have not confirmed.

His family long has accused Iran's Islamist rulers of detaining Levinson as a hostage to be traded for concessions from the U.S., which those rulers have labeled an enemy for decades. However, Iranian officials have consistently denied knowledge of Levinson's whereabouts in their public statements.

Family members have not received any proof of life from Levinson since his captors sent a video and photos of him looking gaunt and disheveled in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

The family's hopes were lifted last month, when the U.N. Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances said Iran's judiciary recently had notified the world body of an "open case" for Levinson in the nation's Revolutionary Court system that handles national security cases. Iranian officials later tried to downplay the U.N. notification, saying it related to a "missing person" investigation into Levinson's disappearance.

The Levinson family filed its ongoing lawsuit against Iran in the District Court of the District of Columbia in March 2017. Family members said this week they are seeking $150 million in compensation and $1.35 billion in punitive damages from Tehran, which did not have any representation at this week's court sessions. Iran has not had diplomatic relations with Washington since Iranian Islamists hostile toward the U.S. seized power in the 1979 revolution.

David McGee, a lawyer for the family of Robert Levinson, speaks to VOA Persian in Washington, Dec. 4, 2019, about the family's l
David McGee, a lawyer for the family of Robert Levinson, speaks to VOA Persian in Washington, Dec. 4, 2019, about the family's lawsuit against Iran, where the retired FBI agent went missing in 2007.

Change Iran tactic

Levinson family lawyer David McGee told VOA Persian that the vast majority of the $1.5 billion sought from Iran is intended to dissuade it from continuing its long-running practice of arbitrarily detaining Iranian dual nationals and others with ties to the West.

"That's inappropriate behavior. We think they should stop," he said.

In the two days of testimony, Levinson's children spoke of how the long disappearance of their father has traumatized some of them with panic attacks, attention deficiency, eating disorders and nightmares of Levinson being beheaded. They also read from touching messages their father had written to them before his fateful trip to Iran and described how he had been a loving influence in their lives. The testimonies brought the seven siblings to tears.

"It's been very hard, and at times a little bit cathartic after 13 years of not talking about it, to be able to tell our story and talk about how wonderful our father is," said Sarah Moriarty, one of Levinson's four daughters, in a VOA Persian interview after Thursday's session.

"The testimony of these past few days has shown how close we are as a family," said her brother David, speaking alongside Moriarty. "It also has shown the strength of our mother, who for 12½ years has fought every day to get my father home."

 Christine Levinson (center) wife of Robert Levinson, and her children, Dan and Samantha Levinson, talk to reporters in New York, Jan. 18, 2016.
FILE - Christine Levinson, center, wife of Robert Levinson, and her children, Dan and Samantha Levinson, talk to reporters in New York, Jan. 18, 2016.

Levinson's wife, Christine, was stoic throughout the week's testimony.

Speaking to VOA Persian late Wednesday, she said she has worked to enable her children to go on with their lives. 

"I tell them all that they need to make their father proud. I think that is what keeps everybody going," she said.

Regarding the next steps in the lawsuit, McGee said he expects Judge Timothy Kelly to spend the "next month or so" writing an opinion about Iran's liability for damages.

"Assuming that he finds a liability, he will appoint a special master (court official) to make a recommendation on the damages to the family. Then the judge will make a final decision."

McGee said the judge will consider how the family has been harmed by Levinson's disappearance in Iran.

"I have never seen a better case for emotional damage to human beings than what was presented in the last two days here. This is a wonderful family that has been grievously harmed by the actions of the Iranian government," he said.

There was no immediate comment from Iran to the testimony.

Dan Levinson said he expects it to take months for the judge's final ruling to be issued.

This article originated in VOA's Persian Service.


December 07, 2019 at 06:55PM

UK's Johnson, Corbyn clash in final debate before election

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UK's Johnson, Corbyn clash in final debate before election British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn clashed Friday night in the last head-to-head debate before a general election in six days — an underpowered showdown that saw both men stick to well-worn phrases and promises about their plans for Brexit and Britain's future.
December 07, 2019 at 06:43PM

Sean Hannity says US economy booming despite Democrats' anti-Trump agenda: 'Numbers, they don't lie'

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Sean Hannity says US economy booming despite Democrats' anti-Trump agenda: 'Numbers, they don't lie' Sean Hannity celebrated the president's economic numbers Friday and criticized Democrats, saying Trump's success has come "in spite" of his opponents' actions.
December 07, 2019 at 03:20PM

Armenia remembers victims of 1988 earthquake

Armenia remembers victims of 1988 earthquake


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Armenia was shocked by the devastating earthquake that struck the country on December 7, 1988, at 11:41am local time; that is, 31 years ago on this ...
December 07, 2019 at 02:03PM

Bessie S. McColgin

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Bessie S. McColgin

HickoryOughtShirt?4: Passes WP:NPOL, #1Day1Woman



'''Amelia Elizabeth "Bessie" Simison McColgin''' (January 7, 1875 – July 9, 1972) was an American businesswoman and politician. She was the first woman elected to the [[Oklahoma House of Representatives]].

==Early life==
Simison was born in Kansas on January 7, 1875, and was educated at the Teachers Normal College and [[Wesleyan University]].<ref name = "x"></ref> As both her parents died when she was three years old, she was raised by relatives in Illinois.<ref name = "McKee"></ref> She married Grant McColgin in 1895 and they moved to Oklahoma in 1901.<ref name = "Weatherford"></ref> A few years later, the family moved to Rankin where she and her husband established the Rankin Telephone Company in their home.<ref name = "x"/> She also organized a Women's Christian Temperance Union chapter,<ref name = "Defrange"></ref> and was a school teacher in Rankin's first public school.<ref name = "Weatherford"/>

==Career==
While pregnant with her 10th child, McColgin became the first woman elected to the [[Oklahoma House of Representatives]].<ref></ref> It has been suggested that she did not decide to run on the Republican ballot, but men in her family did so behind her back.<ref name = "Defrange"/> She had been elected due to her involvement in the Western Oklahoma community and was seen as a "superior orator."<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref> While in office, McColgin was heavily involved in health and safety legislation, and thus introduced a bill to create a Bureau of Child Hygiene.<ref name = "herhatwasinthering"/> She also attempted to pass legislature from female Senator [[Lamar Looney]], but few succeeded.<ref name = "McKee"/> She was also involved in a soldiers' relief program and helped establish a Tuberculosis Sanatorium in Oklahoma.<ref name = "herhatwasinthering"></ref> Although she was not re-elected for a second term, three new female members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives were elected in 1923.<ref name = "x"/> On the last day of her term, she was presented with a wristwatch from her male colleagues to commemorate her service, which they jokingly stated was because "women legislators need to be watched."<ref name = "okhistory"></ref> Nearly 40 years after stepping down from politics, McColgin's son was elected to the same seat she had filled.<ref name = "Defrange"/>

McColgin died at the age of 97 in Sayre, Oklahoma, on July 9, 1972.<ref name = "okhistory"/> She was posthumously inducted into the [[Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame]] in 2005.<ref></ref>

== References ==



[[Category:1972 deaths]]
[[Category:1875 births]]
[[Category:Members of the Oklahoma House of Representatives]]
[[Category:20th-century women politicians]]
[[Category:20th-century American women politicians]]
[[Category:Wesleyan University alumni]]
[[Category:People from Kansas]]
[[Category:Oklahoma Republicans]]

December 07, 2019 at 03:06PM

Friday, December 6, 2019

Afghans Mourn Slain Japanese Doctor Known as Uncle Murad

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Afghans Mourn Slain Japanese Doctor Known as Uncle Murad

He came to Afghanistan as Dr. Tetsu Nakamura in the 1980s to help treat leprosy patients in Afghanistan and refugee camps in Pakistan during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. His body is leaving Afghanistan as "Kaka Murad" or Uncle Murad, revered by millions of people across the country who feel indebted to his three decades of humanitarian work in the war-torn country.

Dr. Tetsu Nakamura speaks at a meeting about Afghanistan's drought in Fukuoka, Japan, Nov. 16, 2018. (Kyodo/via Reuters)

On Wednesday, Nakamura was on his way to work with five members of his aid organization, Peace Japan Medical Services, when his car came under attack by unidentified gunmen in Jalalabad, the capital of eastern Nangarhar province.

He and his staff were shot and killed, with Nakamura dying of his wounds on the way to Bagram Airfield, a U.S. military base in northern Afghanistan, local Afghan officials said.

Life's work in Afghanistan

Nakamura, 73, had dedicated most of his adult life to working in Afghanistan, trying to save lives at times as a physician and at times as a mason, building water canals for people affected by drought.

"You'd hear a child screaming in the waiting room, but by the time you got there, they'd be dead," Nakamura told NHK TV, Japan's national broadcasting organization, in October.

"That happened almost every day. They were so malnourished that things like diarrhea could kill them. ... My thinking was that if those patients had clean water and enough to eat, they would have survived," he added.

Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani (R) and Japanese doctor Tetsu Nakamura pose for a photo, in this undated picture, in Kabul…
Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani, right, and Japanese Dr. Tetsu Nakamura pose in this undated photo in Kabul, Afghanistan.

Japanese Afghan citizen

Afghan President Ashraf Ghani bestowed upon Nakamura an honorary Afghan citizenship in October, and earlier this year residents of Nangarhar province campaigned on social media for him to become the mayor of Jalalabad city.

"This morning a terror attack against the reconstruction hero of Afghanistan, Japanese Afghan Dr. Tetsu Nakamura, resulted in his injury. His deep wounds unfortunately led to his death," Ghani tweeted in Pashto earlier this week.

Ghani offered "our deepest condolences" to Japanese Ambassador to Afghanistan Mitsuji Suzuka, as well as to the families of the Afghans who were killed in the attack.

On Friday, Ghani met with Nakamura's family in Kabul, the presidential office said.

Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani meets with family of Japanese doctor Tetsu Nakamura, in Kabul, Afghanistan December 6,…
Afghanistan's President Ashraf Ghani meets with family of Japanese Dr. Tetsu Nakamura, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Dec. 6, 2019, in the Afghan Presidential Palace.

#SorryJapan

#SorryJapan has been trending on Afghan social media networks with officials, activists and Afghan citizens expressing sorrow over Nakamura's death and apologizing to Japan for not being able to protect him.

"#Nakamura I can't stop my tears. My heart cries for you, my heart aches so much. I can't forget you, you were the true servant of this land," Basir Atiqzai wrote on twitter.

Bilal Sarwary, a former BBC reporter in Afghanistan, said Nakamura had great affection for the people of Afghanistan.

Sarwary tweeted he remembered "the joy and jubilation" on Nakamura's face "after inaugurating the water canal. His friendly hugs with Gul Agha Shiraz and his laughter of joy shows his deep love for Afghanistan."

Amrullah Saleh, the former chief of Afghan intelligence and Ghani's running mate in September's presidential elections, said the crime against Nakamura would not go unpunished.

Nakamura has become "a hero of compassion for all Afghans. He was an uncle for east Afg before. There is no way his murder will remain a mystery for ever. No way. He is too big to be cremated or buried. This high profile crime won't go unpunished. We promise," Saleh wrote on Twitter Thursday.

Afghan men light candles for Japanese doctor Tetsu Nakamura, who was killed in Jalalabad in yesterday's attack, in Kabul,…
Afghan men light candles for Japanese Dr. Tetsu Nakamura, who was killed in Jalalabad in a terrorist attack, in Kabul, Afghanistan, Dec. 5, 2019.

Vigils

Candlelight vigils have been held in several provinces in Afghanistan. Locals named a roundabout after Nakamura in Eastern Khost province with Kam Air, a local Afghan airline, putting Nakamura's portrait on an Airbus 340 to pay tribute to the slain aid worker.

WATCH: Afghan Activists Hold Vigil in Honor of Slain Japanese Doctor

Afghan Activists Hold Vigil in Honor of Slain Japanese Doctor video player.
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Afghans living in the Washington, D.C., area are planning a candlelight vigil Saturday.

No group has immediately claimed responsibility for the attack against the group. The Taliban denied responsibility for it, but Afghan officials and civil society activists have blamed the insurgent group for it.

On Friday, a group of activists held a protest in Kabul in front of Pakistan's Embassy to condemn the terror attack and criticize Pakistan's alleged support for the Afghan militants.

Pakistan has not immediately reacted to the protest.

"Afghans will never forget his services for this country," Rahimullah Samandar, a civil society activist, told Reuters. "The whole nation will love him and keep him in their memories."

Afghan National Army soldiers put flag of Afghanistan on the coffin of Japanese doctor Tetsu Nakamura, at a Hospital in Kabul,…
Afghan National Army soldiers drape the flag of Afghanistan on the coffin of Japanese Dr. Tetsu Nakamura, at a hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, Dec. 6, 2019.

'I couldn't ignore Afghans'

Nakamura was born in western Japan. He was a physician by profession and left his country in 1984 to work at a clinic in the Pakistani city of Peshawar. He treated Afghan refugees displaced by war and suffering from leprosy.

He eventually opened a clinic in Afghanistan in 1991. He found the health problems in Afghanistan overwhelming for his clinic and instead found another way to combat them: irrigation canals.

In 2003, borrowing tactics from Japan's irrigation systems, he swapped his doctor's tools for construction gear. He began building an irrigation canal to help address the drought issue in eastern Afghanistan. He and local residents spent six years completing the construction of a canal that has reportedly changed the lives of nearly a million people.

"As a doctor, nothing is better than healing patients and sending them home," and providing water to drought-stricken areas did the same for rural Afghanistan, Nakamura told NHK TV.

"A hospital treats patients one by one, but this helps an entire village. ... I love seeing a village that's been brought back to life," he added.

Since the construction of the irrigation canal, more than 16,000 hectares (about 40,000 acres) of desert has been reportedly brought back to life.

Nakamura was fluent in both Dari and Pashto, the two main languages spoken in Afghanistan.

"I couldn't ignore the Afghans," Nakamura told NHK TV.

VOA's Mehdi Jedinia and Rikar Hussein contributed to this story from Washington. Some of the materials used in this story came from Reuters.


December 07, 2019 at 12:09PM

Supreme Court Keeps Federal Executions on Hold 

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Supreme Court Keeps Federal Executions on Hold 

The Supreme Court on Friday blocked the Trump administration from restarting federal executions next week after a 16-year break. 

The justices denied the administration's plea to undo a lower-court ruling in favor of inmates who have been given execution dates. The first of those had been scheduled for December 9, with a second set for December 13. Two more inmates had been given execution dates in January. 

Attorney General William Barr announced during the summer that federal executions would resume using a single drug, pentobarbital, to put inmates to death. 

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington temporarily halted the executions after some of the chosen inmates challenged the new execution procedures in court. Chutkan ruled that the procedure approved by Barr most likely violates the Federal Death Penalty Act. 

The federal appeals court in Washington had earlier denied the administration's emergency plea to put Chutkan's ruling on hold and allow the executions to proceed. 

Longer delay

Federal executions are likely to remain on hold at least for several months, while the appeals court in Washington undertakes a full review of Chutkan's ruling. 

The Supreme Court justices directed the appeals court to act ``with appropriate dispatch.'' 

Justice Samuel Alito wrote in a short separate opinion that he believes the government ultimately will win the case and would have set a 60-day deadline for appeals court action. Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh joined Alito's opinion. 

Justice Department spokeswoman Kerri Kupec said the legal fight would continue. ``While we are disappointed with the ruling, we will argue the case on its merits in the D.C. Circuit and, if necessary, the Supreme Court,`` Kupec said in a statement. 

Four inmates won temporary reprieves from the court rulings. Danny Lee was the first inmate scheduled for execution, at 8 o'clock Monday morning. Lee was convicted of killing a family of three, including an 8-year-old. 

Inmate with dementia

The government had planned next Friday to execute Wesley Ira Purkey, who raped and murdered a 16-year-old girl and killed an 80-year-old woman. His lawyers say Purkey is suffering from dementia and he has a separate lawsuit pending in federal court in Washington. 

Then in January, executions had been scheduled for Alfred Bourgeois, who tortured, molested and then beat his 2½-year-old daughter to death, and Dustin Lee Honken, who killed five people, including two children. 

A fifth inmate, Lezmond Mitchell, has had his execution blocked by the federal appeals court in San Francisco over questions of bias against Native Americans. Mitchell beheaded a 63-year-old woman and her 9-year-old granddaughter. 


December 07, 2019 at 10:21AM

Suspect in Boston double murder claims he had affair with one of the victims

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Suspect in Boston double murder claims he had affair with one of the victims A murder suspect who allegedly killed two Boston doctors who were engaged in 2017 claimed he had an affair with one of the doctors before the killing, and even had sexual relations on the day of the murder.
December 07, 2019 at 09:53AM

Saudi Air Force Pilot in Shooting Spree at US Naval Base

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Saudi Air Force Pilot in Shooting Spree at US Naval Base

U.S. investigators are trying to determine what caused a Saudi air force pilot in the United States for flight training to go on a deadly shooting rampage at a U.S. naval base in Florida.

The shooting, which took place at the Pensacola Naval Air Station early Friday, left four people dead, including the shooter. A law enforcement official said another eight people were wounded.

Naval Air Station Pensacola

The U.S. Navy and law enforcement officials identified the shooter as a Saudi pilot, one of up to a few hundred foreign nationals who had come to the base in Pensacola for training.

NBC News, quoting law enforcement officials, further identified the shooter as Mohammed Saeed Alshamrani.

Guns are not permitted at the Pensacola Naval Air Station, but Escambia County Sheriff David Morgan said the shooter managed to get a handgun onto the base before targeting individuals at one of the buildings. Officials said the rampage ended when a sheriff's deputy cornered and shot the suspect in a classroom.

Officials with the U.S. FBI confirmed they were leading the probe, telling VOA it was still in the early stages.

"It is too early to determine motive," a FBI official said on condition of anonymity, admitting terrorism had not been ruled out.

This photo taken from video provided by WEAR-TV shows emergency responders near the Naval Air Base Station in Pensacola, Fla.,…
This photo taken from video provided by WEAR-TV shows emergency responders near the Naval Air Base Station in Pensacola, Fla., Dec. 6, 2019.

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said the nature of the investigation would be different because of the involvement of the Saudi air force pilot.

"There is obviously going to be a lot of questions about this individual being a foreign national, being a part of the Saudi air force," he told reporters.

"The government of Saudi Arabia needs to make things better for these victims," he added. "They are going to owe a debt here, given that this was one of their individuals."

U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted Friday that he had been in contact with King Salman, who offered condolences.

"The king said that the Saudi people are greatly angered by the barbaric actions of the shooter," Trump said.

Later, Trump told reporters at the White House, "It's a horrible thing that took place and we're getting to the bottom of it."

The shooting at the Pensacola Naval Air Station was the second deadly shooting at a U.S. naval facility this week.

A U.S. sailor shot three civilians at a base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on Wednesday, killing two of them before committing suicide.

Acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly testifies during a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Dec. 3, 2019, in Washington.

"These acts are crimes against all of us," acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly said in a statement Friday.

"Our prayers are with the families of the fallen and with the wounded," he added. "It is our solemn duty to find the causes of such tragic loss and ceaselessly work together to prevent them."

Steve Herman contributed to this report.


December 07, 2019 at 06:55AM

Patrick Schwarzenegger was 'scared' of his dad Arnold as Mr. Freeze in 'Batman & Robin'

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Patrick Schwarzenegger was 'scared' of his dad Arnold as Mr. Freeze in 'Batman & Robin' Patrick Schwarzenegger doesn't have the fondest of memories of his dad as Mr. Freeze in the 1997 film "Batman & Robin." 
December 07, 2019 at 06:29AM

Rep. Swalwell grilled on impeachment inquiry, defends release of Nunes' phone records

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Rep. Swalwell grilled on impeachment inquiry, defends release of Nunes' phone records Former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate Rep. Eric Swalwell, said Friday he would not "assume how people will vote" on articles of impeachment, but that he did believe House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff's, D-Calif., release of Ranking Member Devin Nunes', R-Calif., phone records was warranted.
December 07, 2019 at 02:15AM

Will Smith says colonoscopy 'turned very real' after doctor discovered precancerous polyp

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Will Smith says colonoscopy 'turned very real' after doctor discovered precancerous polyp The 51-year-old vlogged the appointment for his fans, including when his doctor told him they had found a precancerous polyp.
December 07, 2019 at 02:02AM

Michigan boy's entire kindergarten class shows up to adoption hearing: 'Too cute!'

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Michigan boy's entire kindergarten class shows up to adoption hearing: 'Too cute!' A Michigan kindergarten class took a one-of-a-kind field trip on Thursday — they went to see one of the classmates get his forever home, and just in time for Christmas.
December 06, 2019 at 11:30PM

Inside Edge

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Inside Edge
December 06, 2019 at 04:00PM

Inside Edge

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December 06, 2019 at 04:00PM

Inside Edge 2

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Inside Edge 2
December 06, 2019 at 01:00PM

Swiss Red Cross Commission Escape

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Swiss Red Cross Commission Escape

Angloyearn: Split from the article Dominic Bruce


The Swiss Red Cross Commission escape occurred in 1941 in Spangenberg castle. The escape involved the prisoners, [[Dominic Bruce]], Eustace Newborn and [[Pete Tunstall]].
It has been described as the most audacious escape of World War II. Bruce's MC citation described it as a ''very clever escape.''

In late July and early August 1941, Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall, took an interest in the architecture of the building. Intrigued by the building and suspecting there may be escaping materials, the three broke into a flat in the Schloss thought to belong to a forestry principal. Inside the flat the trio obtained escape material such as disguises, maps and a compass. After sourcing the escape resources, they carefully crafted an escape plan that involved the incompetent gate security of the castle. After escaping the castle grounds they planned to march to Kassel and break into Kassel airfield and then fly to Basle on a stolen aircraft.

Patiently waiting many weeks for the conditions to be just right for the escape, on 3 September 1941 the trio, brazenly, walked across the moat bridge. The three POWs simply walked out of the camp posing as a German officer (Tunstall) and two doctors (Bruce and Newborn) of a Swiss Red Cross inspection team. Upon reaching the bottom of the hill outside of the castle's grounds, they quickly removed their Swiss Commission disguises and then made their way to Kassel, a strong Nazi military centre, dressed as Luftwaffe airmen, aiming to steal a plane.

Subsequently, after a turn of unfortunate events, they were forced to change their plans. As such, the three decided to march onwards towards the Belgium border. On their tenth day on the road, they were recaptured by an off duty guard. Following their capture, Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall were interrogated by the Gestapo and sentenced to 53 days in solitude. The escape by the trio, which revealed the short comings of the castle to handle prisoners in solitude, is thought to be a reason why Schloss Spangenberg was evacuated in late 1941.

==Prologue to the Swiss Red Cross Commision==
[[File:First US Army Rehabilitation Centre- Recuperation and Training at 8th Convalescent Hospital, Stoneleigh Park, Kenilworth, Warwickshire, UK, 1943 D16599.jpg|thumb|upright|left|A "wooden horse", as seen in an US Army rehabilitation centre; UK, 1943.]]It has been argued that Bruce and Tunstall are the original innovators of the wooden horse escape technique.
Along with Eustace Newborn and [[Pete Tunstall|Peter Tunstall]], Bruce came up with the escape plan now known as "the Swiss Red Cross Commission." Tunstall, also highlights that in 1941, prior to he and Bruce planning an escape with the famed 'Swiss Red Cross Commission,' he and Bruce had been digging an escape route with a wooden horse tunnel from inside the gymnasium, the wooden horse was placed roughly four feet from the wall that separated the gym from the moat. The digging was a very slow process, it required the removal of spoil, bricks and stone work, and was aided by other prisoners distracting the guards. They were later joined by Douglas 'Sammy' Hoare<!-- disambiguation there are two, or more, notable RAF pilots named Sammy Hoare in WW2--> and a syndicate who were promised a second go if they escaped undiscovered. Other members of this syndicate were also named as: Harry Bewlay, John Milner and Eustace Newborn.

When Bruce and Tunstall noted the slow process they began examining the rest of the castle and left the digging to the other team involving Sammy Hoare. The tunnel almost reached completion but unfortunately the digging team got caught when a guard become suspicious at the large stones that were accumulating outside of the gym. The guard then called a search, and then found the escape tunnel. When the guards found the shaft they called an Appell and Hauptmann Schmidt confidently stated to the prisoners, "It is impossible to escape by tunnel or any other way."

This wooden horse gym escape tunnel was two years prior to the famed [[Stalag Luft III#The first escape|Sagan wooden horse escape]]. Tunstall stated that he would like to think some of the watchers and workers who helped on their original wooden horse escape may have mentioned it from time to time; and would like to think that their idea contributed to the success of the effort at Sagan.



==Exploration of the castle==
[[File:Db spangenberg jpeg cropped.jpg|thumb|upright|right|Bruce (on right) during his imprisonment in Spangenberg]]
Whilst the wooden horse tunnel was being dug, Bruce and Tunstall, were planning, after they had escaped from the castle grounds, to steal an aircraft from [[Kassel-Rothwesten Airfield|Kassel airfield]] to fly to [[Basle]] [[Switzerland]]. To do this they also created Luftwaffe uniforms. As the tunnel was being dug by other prisoners, Bruce and Tunstall were also in the process of exploring the castle and keeping their options open for other escape possibilities in case the tunnel route was found. At this time, Bruce and Tunstall got to know a new prisoner called Eustace Newborn who was in the wooden horse tunnel syndicate. Newborn was a South African airman with plenty of experience flying [[Junkers Ju 52]] and [[Junkers Ju 86]] airplanes. Needing his experience with [[Junkers Ju 52]] airplanes, Newborn joined their escape team. In the escape it was decided Tunstall, who could speak better German, would be a Feldwebel and Bruce and Newborn would be privates.

Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall also wanted to explore a walled off flat. Inside the daily hustle of the castle and at the same time as Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall were planning on exploring a flat, Eric Foster and Joe Barker, who were planning a laundry cart escape, were taking a similar interest in the impressive architecture of the building. Though their interest was for the first floor of the building, not the same flat that interested Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall. At this moment in time, both groups did not know that they each had a keen interest in this area of the castle. Foster claims in his book it was 'bad form' for want-to-be escapees to ask upfront questions about planned escapes involving other groups.

The flat that interested Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall had once been explored by a [[France|French]] lieutenant named Merlin, who had broke into the flat in 1939. It was rumoured the previous occupant of this apartment was a forestry school principal who was now at the front for Germany. They eventually found a way into this flat via a chamber found at the top of the staircase which had a plaster ceiling. This chamber led to the attic. They broke through this plaster ceiling in the chamber with a four foot long metal-pole that they claimed could break through anything and that they affectionately pun-named [[Napoleon]]. At first sight inside the attic Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall noticed a shadowy silhouette staring back at them, and this frightened them. The silhouette turned out to be a bust of Emperor Franz Josef on a plinth. From the attic they found a staircase down to the principals flat. Bruce and Tunstall picked the locked door at the bottom of the stairs. Inside the room they found escape material such as civilian clothes, officer uniforms, guns including a [[Luger pistol]], maps, a compass, cases and stale cigars. Upon sourcing these materials Bruce and Tunstall then gave up their wooden horse tunnel escape completely and left it all to Hoare. Instead they began solely focussing on the bridge and gate security. Unfortunately the gate security had been increased because of a 1940 escape from the castle by three Canadians, Keith Milne, Don Middleton and Hank Wardle.

==Gate security==
[[File:Burg Spangenberg Turm.jpg|thumb|upright|right|The inner court yard looking towards the gate as seen in 2009]]There were three companies working the castle gate. Tunstall called them, ''A company,'' ''B company'' and ''C company.'' Each company worked shifts. All staff rotated their roles and sometimes a staff member would be the sentry on the castle side of the bridge who opened the gate. There could be ten other posts a guard could be on.

The guard commander was on the other side of the bridge away from the castle. The sentry on the castle side of the bridge was to open and close the gate on command. To let people into the castle the sentry could only open the gate after an order that could only come from the guard commander, and this order would come after the guard commander had signed the people in. To let people out of the castle, the sentry, would blow a whistle, and the guard commander would come through the gate to sign the people out, then following a command, the sentry would then open the gate. Over time, they observed the C company Feldwebel was the least meticulous of the three companies and that there was no chance of escape if A company and B company had a shift, being they followed the protocol to the letter.

They worked out that C company had two big flaws that could be exploited. They noticed the guard commander did not bother with the protocol when the orderlies went to the moat to feed the pigs potato peelings and rubbish from the kitchen, this left the gate open. They also pinpointed the weak link in the C company team. Tunstall called the guard ''Blockhead.'' They believed he would be the least alert enough of the guards to notice their faces when they were in disguise.

==Escape plan and the luger pistol debate==

[[File:Marcel Junod-5.jpg|thumb|upright|left|[[Marcel Junod]], delegate of the ICRC, visiting [[Prisoner of War|POWs]] in Germany. Bruce's attire would have been similar.]]They hid all the gear needed for the escape in the sick bay. They decided the escape would revolve around the three being disguised as a visiting Swiss Red Cross Commission inspection team. It was planned that on the day of escape, Tunstall would be dressed as an army Hauptmann. They would carry an ID card which was no more than a touched up fishing license with an official seal, and Bruce and Newborn would be dressed as visiting doctors. Bruce and Newborn would be very well dressed, carrying dispatch cases. Bruce would also be wearing a [[Homburg hat]] and smoking a cigar. Newborn would be wearing a [[Tyrolean hat]]. Underneath the attire they would be each wearing their Luftwaffe uniforms. They also had a debate about carrying the [[Luger pistol]]. Bruce and Tunstall were in favour of carrying the gun for the sake of authenticity. Newborn, along with a prisoner called Joe Kayll were strongly against it, arguing you cannot expect the protection of the Geneva convention for carrying it. The argument was in turn settled by the SBO, Brigadier Somerset who strictly forbade them taking the Lugar with them. Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall then settled on building a replica using wood and lead stripped from the roof. They polished and blued the replica until it looked perfect. The escape was planned to be ''shit or bust'', as such the cases only carried three rations. More important to the three was boot polish, shaving equipment which would keep them presentable as Luftwaffe airmen, and the local map and compass.



Bruce and Tunstall estimated their escape from the castle grounds depended on these three things, pig feeding time leaving the gate to the bridge open, 'Blockhead' being on the gate and C company being on the afternoon shift. They waited a long time for these conditions to occur, waiting all through August. These conditions in turn rested on Blockhead failing a gullibility test. The plan was for this test to be performed by a prisoner called John Milner who spoke good German. The planned test was to see if Blockhead would bluff. In German, Milner would ask Blockhead if the German officer and the two Swiss doctors had left the castle? If Blockhead bluffed this question, he failed the test and this would probably mean he assumed a Swiss Commission team was inside the castle. If he bluffed Milner would give a thumbs up from behind his back and this thumbs up would mean the escape plan would kick into action. If 'Blockhead,' passed the test Milner would give a thumbs down signal from behind his back and the escape would not go ahead.

Upon the thumbs up sign the kitchen orderlies would immediately go to the door with their kitchen rubbish. It was always predicted Blockhead and C company would always open the gate to the orderlies to allow the orderlies to feed the pigs with rubbish from the kitchen. At this point, when the gate was predicted to be left open by Blockhead, they devised to immerse Blockhead in to a social orchestration. They arranged for: Blockhead to be blustered and overwhelmed by his perceptions; they scheduled deftly timed goon baiting from the orderlies at the gate to overwhelm him; and timed for a perception of urgency from Swiss Commission inspection team and the Army Hauptmann, to rush him.

Prior to walking through the gate, the faux Swiss commission team would be seen having chats with the British medical officers to help with the frame. Upon reaching the gate they had lined up for Tunstall to state in German to Bruce, right in front of Blockhead, "''Du lieber Gott, Herr Doktor, schon viertel zwei. Kommen, wir müssen weitergehen!''" ("Good God, Doctor, it's already a quarter to two. We must hurry!").



Upon exiting the castle security they planned on heading down the hill. At the bottom of the hill they planned on removing and hiding their Swiss commission clothes. They arranged to walk to the forest on their way to Kassel, dressed as Luftwaffe airmen, knowing the guards would eventually be searching for two civilians and an army Hauptmann. They also organised for a white smoke signal. The white signal would come from the kitchen. This white smoke would warn Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn that the guards are now searching for them.



==Spangenberg gate escape==
[[File:Castle_Spangenberg_(2).JPG|thumb|upright|right|Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall walked across the bridge dressed as a Swiss Red Cross inspection team]]

The escape plan to escape the castle grounds worked. Milner tested the guard Blockhead and Milner gave the thumbs up. Bruce, disguised as a doctor, conversed with the British medical officers to help frame Blockheads confusion, with Bruce being perceptually harassed on some critical points, by the medical officers. The orderlies goon baited Blockhead at the gate, the Hauptmann (Tunstall) then marched to the gate in a hurry and stated to Bruce, "''Du lieber Gott, Herr Doktor, schon viertel zwei. Kommen, wir müssen weitergehen!''" Blockhead even saluted the Hauptmann (Tunstall). Tunstall walked by and walked through the gate, and Bruce and Newborn, carrying dispatch cases, with Bruce, a non-smoker, insouciantly smoking a cigar (a rarity by this period of the war; and convincing evidence for the guards that the visitor was Swiss), followed him over the bridge.

==A witness of the gate escape==
On 25 August 1941 Foster and Barker were successful with their, almost air tight, laundry basket escape, though they eventually got recaptured. From his solitary cell window in Spangenberg Foster witnessed Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall walking over the draw bridge. Foster seen and heard the craft from Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall. He observed Tunstall stating to Bruce and Newborn, in front of the guards, the time and how they must hurry. He heard either Bruce or Newborn state in German 'Come on Doctor get a move on!' He then observed Bruce showing the fishing ID license to the guards, to which he deliberately dropped and then picked up again in order to obfuscate the imperfections of the documentation. He explained the hurried perception effect was good. He was impressed with their chicanery. Foster then observed the trio walking down the stone stairway, instead of walking down the narrow spiral road. He then lost sight of the trio as they made their nervy journey to Kassel - a strong military centre.

Tunstall explained, the guards at the other end of the bridge saluted at the Hauptmann as they made it over the bridge on their way out of the castle grounds. Though Kassel is a right turn from the exit of the castle, exiting the grounds they turned left before they set on their way to Kassel and made their way to the bottom of the hill, where they removed and hid their commission disguises. They then chose one of two roads that led from the castle, and marched to Kassel, along Melsunger Straße, dressed as Luftwaffe airmen.

==On to Kassel==
In their escape plan there was only one thing that did not come off, at the bottom of the hill they did not see the white smoke warning that came from the kitchen, warning them the security team was searching for them. There were also some close calls on the way to the forest. When on an open road heading towards the forest, search parties drove past them, even asking Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn if they had seen three escapees dressed as the Swiss Commission inspection team, causing some mild anxiety. Along the route, after walking openly through the streets saluting with German officers, they gained confidence their disguises were working. After the close call with the search squad, they reached the forest. Very relieved that they reached the shade of the forest, Tunstall explained that Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall then come across the threat of a group of wild boars. The three, noting the wild boars with tusks in the moat at Spangenberg, had been previously institutionalized and given information from the guards about the violence of the wild boar. The bigger male boar, with sharp tusks, was flipping soil with his snout, and eye balling them, as such, they discussed making a safe detour route around the group. According to Tunstall, Bruce became impatient, and then picked up a walking stick, broke the conditioning, then walked over to the pigs, the pigs then harmlessly moved away before Bruce arrived. He then leaned with the stick and waited for Newborn and Tunstall to catch up. In disbelief, Newborn and Tunstall made an excuse for their hesitancy. Newborn a South African, alongside Tunstall, then began justifying their positions by jokingly talking about the [[African warthog]], talking about the merits of the warthog, how you can't be too careful as these African pigs were noted for their fury, and how these wild hogs regularly busted car tyres with their tusks.

[[File:Haus Posen.JPG|thumb|upright|''Haus Posen'' in 2015. A building in Kassel airfield.]]They reached the airfield the next day. At [[Kassel-Rothwesten Airfield|Kassel airfield]] they intended to steal a [[Junkers Ju 52]], which Newborn had flown before the war, and then fly to Basle Switzerland.They penetrated the aerodrome. Whilst inside the aerodrome, they were impeded by a suspicious officer, of superior rank to the Feldwebel, who asked them to stop. They evaded the suspicious officer after Tunstall shouted a few phrases at him. The phrases explained to the officer they were in a hurry. The three then marched purposely into a building. Inside the building they saluted the administration staff and walked though an exit on the other side of the building. This manoeuvre stopped the officer of superior rank trailing them. They then approached the airfield. On the airfield, they were discovered trying to start a Luftwaffe aircraft, so they decided to find another aerodrome that was less heavily guarded near the Belgian frontier. They know had to adjust their plans. In the adjustment of the plans, they decided it was better to travel in plain sight and in daylight with their Luftwaffe uniforms, whilst saluting and using colloquial phrases, instead of going cross country, and getting their uniforms dirty. Whilst on the road from Kassel, unknown to Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall, every police and military unit in German occupied Europe had been informed of the escape of an army Hauptmann and two civilians from Spangenberg castle. As the escape was originally planned as ''shit or bust'' and they had packed limited rations, they decided they had to live off the land where possible, aiming to eat apples, plums and pears stolen from trees and by eating crops out of the soil. They also stole three loafs of bread from a horse and cart. To the laughter of Bruce and Newborn, Tunstall, stole three loafs of bread from a horse and cart whilst matching the horses gallop, and painfully crouching to stay out of the sight-line of the driver. [[File:Edersee, Staumauer, 2011-08 CN-01.jpg|thumb|upright|Eder Dam as seen in August 2011]] On the second day from Kassel, Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn marched alongside the River Eder and came across the scenic sight of the [[Eder Dam]]. This visit would be one and a half years before the dam-busters raid involving [[Guy Gibson]]. Gibson's raid would rupture the dam.

On the march Tunstall explained the three were approached by some women. As they could not hold a conversation in German this raised anxiety they could immediately be caught. Tunstall explained to the women that they must not speak to them. The women asked "warum" (why). Tunstall mentioned, "they are under arrest." Bruce caught on quickly, and Tunstall claims Bruce then leered at them and did the "finest brutal-and-licentious-soldiery act you can imagine." In the IWM tapes Bruce expands on this. He relates how one morning (after a night sheltering under cover on farmland) they woke up to an audience of German land girls. They questioned Tunstall as to why the trio were travelling in such an unorthodox fashion. Tunstall, in an effort to allay their suspicions, claimed that he and Newborn were taking their prisoner Bruce to a military prison. The women asked what crimes Bruce had committed. As a prank, Bruce leered at the girls and replied "unmentionable sexual practices" – upon which they ran away in alarm.

After ten days on the road, near a small prison camp used for farm labour, they were arrested by a soldier who followed them on a bike with another guard and a civilian. This soldier, who just three weeks previously worked as a guard at Spangenberg, recognised Tunstall.

==Interrogated by the Gestapo==
Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn were taken many miles to [[Frankenberg, Hesse|Frankenberg]] on the [[Eder|river Eder]] and interrogated by the [[Gestapo]]. During WWII, the Gestapo were notorious for not verifying information and sending people to concentration camps. Not much was known about the Gestapo in 1941. Tunstall described how even the [[Wehrmacht]], who had transported them, become anxious in the malevolent presence of the Gestapo. Tunstall wanted to get out of the presence of the softly spoken Gestapo interrogator as soon as possible. When Tunstall was answering his questions, Bruce and Newborn looked at Tunstall with disdain, consequentially, when Bruce and Newborn were interrogated, they instead, approached the questioning from the interrogator with disrespect. Tunstall believes had the same situation happened just three years later, Bruce's and Newborn's approach could have been fatal.



==Solitary confinement==
They were then sent back to Spangenberg. Hauptmann Schmidt was incensed at the audacity of the escape. The three were each held to a long period in [[solitary confinement]]. Bruce received 53 days in solitude for the Spangenberg Castle escape, which was longer than the Geneva convention suggested. In Spangenberg they were not sentenced for their escape but held in ''preventative arrest.'' The Senior British Officer also complained that according to the Geneva convention guidelines, the exercise yard in Spangenberg was too small, and they needed to be moved to another camp.




===Defying solitude with a card school===
In solitary confinement, Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall were placed in three separate cells in front of, and high above, the moat they had previously escaped from. The approach by C company to Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall was different to A and B company. When compared to C company, A and B company treat Bruce, Newborn and Tunstall with good humour. To the amusement of Bruce, Newborn, and Tunstall, in the remaining cell, Blockhead was also doing his time in confinement for letting the fake inspection team through the gate.

Whilst they were held in confinement, they even managed to defy solitude after Bruce picked the lock on his, Newborn's and Tunstall's cell doors in order that they might join him in his cell to play poker with a set of home made cards a previous occupant had left behind. When caught out by the guard who had noted that there was three to a cell, Tunstall claimed, Bruce, Newborn and himself smiled and nodded at the puzzled and curious guard as if they were innocent, this was harmless, and as if the guard was a juvenile who had just completed a simple comprehension test. The guard upon realising they had the nerve to break the solitary punishment, then blew his top. For the breaking of the solitude, Bruce was eventually court-martialled on the serious military charge of breaking free from arrest, the other two eventually got 5 extra days solitude. Tunstall explained he thought Bruce eventually got away with it by Bruce explaining escaping was not a court-martial offence for a POW, according to the Geneva Convention.

Inside of solitary, Tunstall claims, early on, there were rumours of Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn being shot. After nearly eight weeks, the whole camp was made to move; Bruce, Tunstall and Newborn were rumoured to be, and expected to be, sent straight to the Colditz ''Straflager'' (punishment camp), instead, they were sent to Warburg. This immediate move was a hindrance to Bruce and Tunstall as they had been formulating two more escape plans. Tunstall mentions that on the journey to Warburg there was a flurry of train jumpers.

==See Also==

*[[June 1962 Alcatraz escape attempt]]
*[[Maze Prison escape]]
*[[Stalag_Luft_III#Great_escape|Stalag Luft Great escape]]
*[[Eric Williams (writer)#The "Wooden Horse" and escape|The "Wooden Horse" and escape]]

==Footnotes==

==Sources==
;Books
* Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
* Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)
*

;Newspapers & journals
* Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)

;Websites
*
* Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)

[[Category:Royal Air Force officers]]
[[Category:Royal Air Force personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:British escapees]]
[[Category:British World War II prisoners of war]]
[[Category:Escapees from German detention]]
[[Category:History of the Royal Air Force during World War II]]
[[Category:POW escapes and rescues during World War II]]
[[Category:World War II prisoner of war camps in Germany]]

December 06, 2019 at 06:38PM

Venezuelan cinema in the 1900s

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Venezuelan cinema in the 1900s

Kingsif: ←Created page with ' Venezuela had been introduced to cinema in the 1890s. After an initial boom in screenings and pro...'



[[Venezuela]] had been introduced to cinema in the [[Venezuelan cinema in the 1890s|1890s]]. After an initial boom in screenings and production, the presence of cinema in the nation was lower during between 1900 and 1910.

== Industry development ==
A film circuit was established in Caracas in 1899, which included the Teatro Caracas, the Circo Metropolitano, a small bar opposite the Circo, the Café La Francia, and the Socorro bodega. After this, cinema appears only sparsely until about 1907.<ref name="azuaga">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><sup>:31</sup> Farrell writes that in the 1890s Venezuela was a frontrunner in the industry of film within Latin America, a status it lost after the state became involved with production in the 20th century.<ref name="Farrell">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><sup>:20-21</sup>

It is in 1907 that contemporary evidence exists, through newspaper reviews, of more national films being created. These films were still ''[[Actuality film|vistas]]'', depicting everyday activities of the common people, with an aim to "[win] the favor of the public and that of the tyrannical authorities of the time".<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:31</sup> The filmmakers were also active in making propaganda for the government.<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:31</sup> Some of the subjects of the reemergence of 1907 include "national holidays, bullfights, events, sports, views of places of the national territory and official events".<ref name="UCAB">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><sup>:10</sup>

For a few days, beginning on 30 November 1900, a [[Bioscope]] was presented by W. H. Whiteman in the Hotel Bolívar of [[Ciudad Bolívar]].<ref name="sueiro"></ref><sup>:38</sup> These screenings were so popular that the public in the city wrote to the newspaper to ask the show to be transferred to the Teatro Bolívar, where the [[Zarzuela|''zarzuela'']] performances were cancelled to allow this to happen.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:38</sup> The first sound films of the country were shown by the Frenchman G. Romegout on 31 August 1901, operating a [[Phonograph|gramophone]] at the same time as the projector.<ref name=":4"></ref><sup>:67-68</sup>

Cinema did not reappear in [[Caracas]] until the end of 1901; in the 1890s, [[Carlos Ruiz Chapellín]] had shown films in various venues, filling them with theatre during 1900.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:87</sup> However, the resurgence of the cinema here, being shown at the [[Teatro Municipal of Caracas]], was not as popular. In November 1901, ''El Tiempo'' wrote:
[[File:Teatro_municipal3.gif|thumb|The Teatro Municipal of Caracas at the time]]


From 1902 through 1904, the screenings of films again became minimal.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:132</sup> Additionally, most halls used for showing films did not have permanent facilities for the function, being limited to the [[Baralt Theatre]] in [[Maracaibo]] and Teatro Municipal in [[Valencia, Carabobo|Valencia]]; in 1904, the Teatro Municipal in [[Barquisimeto]] was the main location for cinema in this region, with other areas using commercial public buildings like cafés and hotels for screenings.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:37</sup>

The pioneer [[Manuel Trujillo Durán]] had returned to photography until 1902; in August 1903 he was working with fellow [[Zulia|Zulian]] [[Alfredo Duplat]] in [[San Cristóbal, Táchira]] on films, traveling through the state after showing films in [[Cúcuta]].<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup> A report in the newspaper ''Horizontes'' announced that they were showing films that they had directed.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup> Trujillo Durán continued to work in film through the decade, but sparsely: he operated projectors at several locations, including as the duo 'Trujillo & March' at the Baralt Theatre, where he is documented in 1906 and 1908; at the [[University of the Andes (Venezuela)|University of the Andes]] in 1907; and around the country for [[Pathé]] in 1908 and 1909.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup>

In 1905, film screenings emerged again in Caracas. Ruiz Chapellín, who had been the main film entrepreneur in the city, was replaced in this position by [[Carlos Badaracco]]; seen as a more gentile person, Badaracco's presence and the ability from 1904 to rent films from U.S. companies rather than buy them outright led to more investors in cinema. Badaracco created the Empresa Nacional and guidelines to film projection in 1905, making it an official job.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:122</sup> Badaracco would work as a professional projectionist until the end of the decade.<ref name=":5">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref>

This year, a company owned by the Ireland brothers began showing a hundred films that they had imported at the Municipal in Caracas; though a renowned company, the shows left the Municipal from 25 April 1905, with the reason that the Circo Metropolitano could hold the much larger audiences they were attracting. The Irelands also introduced different film seasons through the year, and held a special screening on 27 April 1905 with then-Vice President [[Juan Vicente Gómez]] in attendance, their last show at the Municipal, though running concurrently with their regular programming at the Circo.<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:100</sup> Other companies were formed in the decade. In 1908, after the Baralt brothers of Maracaibo relocate to Caracas, the Baralts worked with the Delhom brothers and the two sets of siblings formed a company together. Though it dissolved a year later, the Delhoms continued to make films for another five years,<ref name=":5" /> with Manuel Delhom making at least a dozen in 1908.<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>

In 1908, the government of [[Carabobo]] had several films made commemorating the 5 July act of Independence. These were screened at the [[Gaumont Cinema]] in Valencia, shortly before President [[Cipriano Castro]] left the country.<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>

== National films ==
{| class="wikitable" width="100%"
! width="21%" |Title
! width="20%" |Director
! width="13%" |Genre
! width="27%" |Subject
! width="21%" |Notes
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:left; background:#e9e9e9" |'''[[1901 in film|1901]]'''
|-
|''Diálogos de Tirabeque y Pelegrín''<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:40</sup>
|G. Romegout, a Lumière worker<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:40</sup>
|
|The popular cartoon characters Tirabeque and Pelegrín<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:40</sup>
|First certain fiction and first sound film made in Venezuela<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:40</sup>
|-
|''Bailes populares''<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:37</sup>
|Romegout<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:37</sup><ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>
|Folktale<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:37</sup>
|
|Featuring sound<ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>
|-
|''Coplas de Gedeón''<ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>
|Romegout<ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>
|
|
|Featuring sound<ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:left; background:#e9e9e9" |'''[[1903 in film|1903]]'''
|-
|Unknown (likely multiple)<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup>
|[[Manuel Trujillo Durán]] and Alfredo Duplat<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup>
|
|
|Possibly made in [[Colombia]]; shown in Venezuela by Venezuelans (13-27 August)<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:55</sup>
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:left; background:#e9e9e9" |'''[[1908 in film|1908]]'''
|-
|''5 de Julio'' or ''5 de Julio: Película Criolla''<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:33-34</sup>
|Manuel Ignacio Baralt, Servio Tulio Baralt and Manuel Delhom<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:33-34</sup>
|Documentary
|The acts surrounding the signing of the [[Venezuelan Declaration of Independence]], including "Tram travel, the arrival of a train in [[Valencia, Carabobo|Valencia]], Esquina de San Francisco, traveling by car in [[El Paraíso, Caracas|El Paraíso]], official acts, [[Yellow House (Venezuela)|Yellow House]], the [[National Pantheon of Venezuela|National Pantheon]] and [[Palacio Federal Legislativo|Palacio Federal]]"<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:34</sup>
|Made in honor of the president of [[Carabobo]] state, Dr. Samuel E. Niño<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:34</sup>
|-
|''Las Trincheras-Valencia''<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:34</sup>
|S. T. Baralt and M. Delhom<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:34</sup>
|Documentary
|Showing the visit of President [[Cipriano Castro]] to [[Las Trincheras]]<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:34</sup>
|
|-
| colspan="5" style="text-align:left; background:#e9e9e9" |'''[[1909 in film|1909]]'''
|-
|''Carnival in Caracas''<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>
|MA Gonhom and Augusto González Vidal<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>
|Documentary
|Showing the carnival in Caracas<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>
|Said to be filmed on primitive cameras, but enjoyed by the audience who wanted to see the subject<ref name="UCAB" /><sup>:11</sup>
|}

<!--== Influence and themes ==
The films available for Venezuelans to view when the technology arrived were "predominantly foreign", with this described as "a factor of tremendous significance" in terms of the development of national film.<ref name=":2"></ref><sup>:103</sup><ref name=":3"></ref><sup>:20-21</sup> Hart looks at the French influence on the development of cinema in Venezuela; though the [[Auguste and Louis Lumière|Lumières]]' representatives did not arrive in Venezuela until after the country had been exposed to many U.S. films through Méndez' Vitascope business,<ref name=":1">Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><sup>:42-44</sup> Hart sees the Maracaibo-produced first films as being of the [[Actuality film|''actualité'']] genre.<ref name=":0"></ref><sup>:13</sup> Azuaga García describes ''Un célebre especialista...'' as "everyday", and ''Muchachos bañándose...'' as "like a view or postcard", both styles he believes are influenced by Lumière films.<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:29</sup> Paul A. Schroeder Rodríguez agrees, denominating the Latin American body of films in this time as ''vistas'',<ref name=":3" /><sup>:22</sup> a term literally meaning "views" and indeed used by some of the filmmakers themselves, which he defines as ''actualités''. Schroeder does, though, describe another key element to the ''vistas'': their creators were prone to "experimentation", he claims because of their inexperience in the art.<ref name=":3" /><sup>:22</sup>

Farrell instead asserts that the Venezuelan film industry has been "struggl[ing] against cultural imperialism [...] since the arrival of film", and has always tried to create its own identity.<ref name="Farrell" /><sup>:19-20</sup> Along the lines of this innovative spirit, Elisa Martínez de Badra posits the argument that Ruiz and W. O. Wolcopt's partnership producing [[Slapstick film|slapstick films]] and the "staging" of ''Un célebre especialista...'' and ''Muchachos bañándose...'' were early examples of narrative and narrative-approaching films and influenced the development of films in the region to have fictional narratives early on.<ref name=":4"/><sup>:67</sup> Though Tom Gunning identifies early Latin American cinema as [[spectacle]], a marker of the U.S. school of filmmaking,<ref name=":2" /><sup>:103</sup> Mártinez de Badra specifically separates the first Venezuelan films from those produced by [[Thomas Edison|Edison]].<ref name=":4" /><sup>:67</sup>

A distinctly Latin American identity is further argued for by Ana M. López; she also refers to the films as ''vistas'', but notes the different context of the production. She argues that the everyday images of French ''actualité'' films would have been more thrilling and shocking for a Venezuelan audience, as they were foreign both geographically and culturally, so the Latin American productions modeled on them were culturally imbued with their own locations, traditions, and developments.<ref name=":2" /><sup>:103-104</sup> Venezuela does have some differences from its neighbors, though. One is that while López lists many of them replicating ''[[L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat]]'' with films featuring their own new public transportation, Venezuela cannot be counted among them.<ref name=":2" /><sup>:104</sup> Another is its inclusion in a different catalogue of thematically-linked early Latin American films in López' article; though there were a few "scientific" films, showing medical practices and including ''Un célebre especialista...'', created to establish a more positive reputation for the medium of cinema, López writes that this practice was not as common as scholarship may see it to have been.<ref name=":2" /><sup>:108-109</sup>

Regarding the question of influence and identity, Paranaguá chooses a different ground. He refers to a "tripolar circulation" of cinema inspiration, with Latin America at one point of a triangle that connects to both the United States and Europe.<ref name=":3" /><sup>:20</sup>

== Timeline of film screenings ==
[[File:Baralt_Theatre_1896.png|thumb|The Teatro Baralt in 1896, where the first films were shown]]
Some of the dates and film titles are dubious or questioned, or were in 1997. Information for the pre-1897 screenings are adapted from ''Memorias de Venezuela'' vol. 10, from information published in the book ''Panorama histórico del cine en Venezuela'' (Fundación Cinemateca Nacional, 1997); the records are from newspaper archives.<ref name=":1" /><sup>:44</sup>

The films screened between 11 July and 29 December 1896 were done so by Trujillo Durán, who travelled around Venezuela and then onto [[Colombia]] with the Vitascope projector; as he was traveling he may have acquired new films from the company to show at different locations.<ref name=":1" /><sup>:44-45</sup>

The premiere of the first Venezuelan films, and the two other films shown, on 28 January 1897 are sourced from the introduction to Peter Rist's ''Historical dictionary of South American Cinema''.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 2, expected 1)</ref> Rodolfo Izaguirre has also suggested that more films were shown at the same time, but does not propose titles.<ref>Liquid error: wrong number of arguments (given 1, expected 2)</ref><sup>:752</sup> The films shown on 26 November 1897 are sourced to Azuaga García's analysis of national film. He also notes that there are records of Rouffet films mentioned in Caracas newspapers around this time, but there is "no assurance that these were presented to the public".<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:30</sup>

The first screenings were relatively affordable, with the typical cost being between 1 and 20 [[Venezuelan bolívar|bolívares]] depending on the seat. The equivalent in [[United States dollar]] at the time was 5.18 Bs. to US$1, giving the expenses in USD at the time as between 19c and $3.86.

{| class="wikitable"
|+Key
|<sup>'''''?'''''</sup>
|Denotes information that is dubious
|}
{| class="wikitable"
!Date
!Film(s)
!Location
!Notes
|-
|24 September 1894
|''[[Buffalo Dance (film)|Buffalo Dance]]''<sup>'''''?'''''</sup>
|unknown
|
|-
|After April 1895
|''The Indian short stick dance<sup>'''?'''</sup>''
|unknown
|
|-
|April–May 1896<sup>'''''?'''''</sup>
|''Serpentine<sup>'''?'''</sup>''
|unknown
|Second version
|-
| rowspan="6" |11 July 1896
|''[[The Monroe Doctrine (1896 film)|Alegoría sobre la doctrina de Monroe]]''
| rowspan="12" |Maracaibo
|Set in Venezuela, but produced by the Edison Company ([[United States]])<ref name=":1" /><sup>:44</sup>
|-
|''La Serpentina''
|In color
|-
|''Baile de Indios/Fiesta de Indios''
|
|-
|''[[Les Forgerons|Un taller de herrería]]''
|
|-
|''Gran Parque central (Nueva York)''
|
|-
|''Torneo Carnavalesco''
|
|-
| rowspan="6" |12 July 1896
|''Plaza del Herald (Nueva York)''
|
|-
|''Danza de las bailarinas''
|
|-
|''La incansable Serpentina<sup>'''?'''</sup>''
|Not in source; in film listing to right
|-
|''Alegoría sobre la libertad de Cuba''
|
|-
|''Sorprendente juego de paraguas''
|In color
|-
|''Fuentes y montañas de Nueva York''
|
|-
| rowspan="5" |5 September 1896
|''Baile de escoceses''
| rowspan="6" |Caracas
|
|-
|''Escena en una cervecería''
|
|-
|''[[Annabelle Butterfly Dance|Mariposa blanca]]''
|
|-
|''La mariposa cubana/Mariposas de leche''
|
|-
|''Incendio en Nueva York y salvación de la victimas''
|
|-
|8 September 1896
|''[[Corbett and Courtney Before the Kinetograph|Lucha entre los grandes boxeadores Corbett y Courtney]]''
|
|-
|8 October 1896
|''El baile de las palomitas''
| rowspan="2" |[[Valencia, Carabobo|Valencia]]
|
|-
|9 October 1896
|''Sorpresa de unos jugadores por la policía''
|
|-
|7 December 1896
|''La cuerda de monos/Danza de monos''
| rowspan="12" |Maracaibo
|
|-
| rowspan="7" |29 December 1896
|''Ejercicio de carrera por la caballería americana''
|
|-
|''La cremación de Juana de Arco''
|In color
|-
|''Ecos del carnaval''
|In color
|-
|''Baño natural/Baño matinal''
|
|-
|''El camaleón''
|Serpentine second take
|-
|''Sun dance''
|Second version
|-
|''El incendio de una casa cochera''
|
|-
| rowspan="4" |28 January 1897
|''Los Campos Elíseos''
|
|-
|''[[Un célebre especialista sacando muelas en el gran Hotel Europa]]''
|First Venezuelan-made film shown in the country
|-
|''[[Muchachos bañándose en la laguna de Maracaibo]]''
|
|-
|''[[L'Arrivée d'un train en gare de La Ciotat|La llegada de un tren]]''
|
|-
|26 June to 14 July 1897
|Unknown
| rowspan="5" |Caracas
|Screenings at Circo Metropolitano<ref name="sueiro" /><sup>:61-64</sup>
|-
|August 1897
|Unknown
|Screening by Veyre at Salón de la Fortuna<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:29</sup>
|-
| rowspan="2" |26 November 1897
|''[[Una paliza en el estado Sarría]]''
|
|-
|''[[Carlos Ruiz peleando con un cochero]]''
|
|-
|14 March 1899
|''Pasión y muerte de Nuestro Señor Jesucristo''
|Screening at the Archbishop's Palace<ref name="azuaga" /><sup>:31</sup>
|}
-->
== References ==




[[Category:1900s in film]]
[[Category:1900s in Venezuela]]
[[Category:Cinema of Venezuela]]

December 06, 2019 at 01:29PM

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