Carnets du Maroc II - Au sujet du roi
Various shots of Morrocan soldiers bleeding goat in military camp of Khnag Breber, they then proceed to cut off its head and start skinning animal (6:03). Various shots of Moroccan soldier cooking flat bread in wood stove (2:05). CSs from different angles of muslim soldiers doing evening prayers (2:04).
MALNOURISHED ANIMALS (08/13/1997)
INVESTIGATORS FIND MALNOURISHED FARM ANIMALS IN THE LAKE WALES AREA OF POLK COUNTY, FLORIDA.
White animal fur background. 4K stock video
sheepskin texture 4k stock footage
Secrets of Samarra - Iraq Chemical Weapons; 1990 (circa)
Nazi Germany parade; Saddam Hussein of Iraq talks with generals in military garb and beret; Hussein in crowd of soldiers; Hussein walks down stairs with military guys; Soldiers in chemical suits and masks handle a bomb shell; Title sequence; Iranian soldiers in Tehran hospital with chemical skin burns and major injuries from mustard gas poisoning, many with welts and discolored skin; Nurse feeds man with chemical injuries; Commentator; Chemical victims in hospital; Iranian troops and tanks on the move; Commentary; Civilian crowds in Iraq march in favor of Hussein - hold up pictures of Hussein; Hussein gets out of Mercedes; Satellite images of Samarra area in Iraq and alleged chemical weapons facility; Commentary; Diagram of chemical facility with arrows; Commentary on western assistance; Iraqi chemical plant - CU of pipes; Barrels with chemicals; Computer screens and numbers; Scenic shots of Holland; Belgian chemical plant; American and Belgian flags; Truck carries chemicals; Still shot of chemical bomb shell; Quick shots of presumably dead soldiers from chemical attack; Men in chemical suits and masks examine a chemical shell in the desert with Spanish markings; CU of pouring oily brown mustard liquid from a shell into a bottle; Sick Iranian soldier tells of chemical bomb; Men with mustard gas symptoms; World War I scenes; Iranian troops suffer, one with tubes in nose; Secret National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's desire to acquire nerve agents with graphics; Soldier in protective gear blasts foghorn to warn of nerve agents in a drill; Soldiers in woods put on gas masks and hoods to sound of alarm; CU of army man in gas mask with filter; Man analyzes nerve agents in field; Simulation of nerve agent attack - troops cover and carry a "victim" of nerve gas; Man points out stickiness of nerve agents; Cruel nerve agent tests done on a rabbit and goats; CU of technical journals with nerve agent instructions; Animation of nerve agent plant at Samarra; Frankfurt scenery; Pesticide equipment including piping and centrifuges; KLM cargo warehouse at JFK Airport with shots of metal drums or potassium fluoride headed for Baghdad; Scenic shots of Nashville; EXT of Westpark corporate headquarters; Businessman speaks; Businessman denies knowledge of Iraqi chemical warfare program and his company's cooperation - businessman asks reporter to leave; Iranian television shots from 1984 of United Nations investigation team in Iran to verify use of chemical weapons by Iraq - men with yellow gloves; Chemical or fuel trucks; Man inspects papers; Security entry gates; Chemical formulas on paper; Soldiers fire cannons in battle; Animation of weapons production lines; Holland scenics (with fountains); Chemical facility with pipes and storage tanks; Chemical trucks on a European highway; Gondola boats in canals and Venice scenics (Italy); Tanker sails out of harbor; Street scene in The Hague; Aerial of Montreal skyline; Exteriors of buildings and apartments in Montreal; Street sign reading "Place Frontier"; American soldiers in gas masks and protective gear and camouflage fatigues are forced to taste riot gas - the troops yell, cry, and spit in obvious pain; World map with countries either possessing or manufacturing chemical weapons; Israeli film of civilians training to survive poison gas attack - including showers; Arms control talks in Geneva; Military tanks in desert; Saddam Hussin with Iraqi troops in a bunker views explosions; Map of Iraq including Baghdad, Samarra, Al Fallujah, Salman Pak; Black and white film of military training exercises (involving hallucinogenic drugs) including man slowly climbing over hurdles; Stockpiles of American VX gas nerve agents in desert; CU of VX gas canister; Iraqi soldiers hold up two fingers to symbolize victory; Gruesome shots of dead Iranian troops lying on a shore; CU of hand grenade and dead soldier; Satellite imagery mixed with victims of chemical attacks
STUDY: ANCIENT DNA REVEALS HISTORY OF EXTINCT WOOLLY DOG
<p>https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2023/12/14/woolly-dog-dna-coast-salish/</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Ancient DNA from the pelt of a fluffy white dog named Mutton is revealing new details about the woolly dog, an extinct breed that was cared for and raised by the women of the Coast Salish tribal nations in the Pacific Northwest. The small dogs — called “sqwemá:y,” “ske'-ha,” “sqw?méy” and “sqwbaý” in some Coast Salish languages — were fed a special diet of fish or elk, and they were shorn like sheep, their wool woven into special blankets and textiles.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>For thousands of years, woolly dogs were cherished as family members and raised on islands or kept in pens to ensure they didn’t interbreed with other dogs, according to Michael Pavel, an elder of the Skokomish-Twana tribe and one of the authors of the study, published Thursday in the journal Science. The last woolly dogs disappeared around the end of the 19th century, but they have been kept alive in stories passed down by Coast Salish elders.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The new analysis of DNA from Mutton’s pelt, which is housed at the Smithsonian Institution, confirms the traditional knowledge of Coast Salish people.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Woolly dogs split from other dogs in North America somewhere between 1,900 and 4,800 years ago, the data show. Mutton had only 16 percent ancestry from European dogs — a tiny contribution that, to researchers who study ancient dog DNA, signifies the care with which they were raised even decades after European settlers arrived.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“It’s not just a dog — it’s a relative. It has enormous spiritual power, conveyed in its wool,” Pavel said. “Imagine being able to receive the gift of wool fiber, being able to learn to weave that into yarn, into an entity, or a blanket or robe that you could wrap yourself in the coldest of winter, and feel the warmth of those prayers. That’s how we look at it, and we can now enjoy a scientific view, as well.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>A genome project cracks mysteries of evolution — and Balto the superdog</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The DNA evidence, combined with the oral history from Coast Salish elders, also makes it clear that the prevailing explanation for the decline of dog-wool weaving fails to grapple with the dark role of colonialism. The commonly offered explanation is that machine-woven blankets were more convenient and replaced ones made by hand. But the study authors note that the people who cared for woolly dogs were decimated by diseases brought by colonizers, and Coast Salish elders shared stories of active efforts to extinguish cultural identity and authority among the survivors.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“They were told they couldn’t do their cultural things. There was the police, the Indian agent and the priests. The dogs were not allowed,” Rena Point Bolton, a 95-year-old elder from the Stó?lo Nation, told the researchers in an interview. The traditional tools that weavers used to turn wool into yarn, shxwqáqelets, were also not allowed.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>A very good boy called Mutton</p>\n<p>In the mid-19th century, George Gibbs, a naturalist and ethnographer working for the Northwest Boundary Survey for the U.S. government, adopted a woolly dog named Mutton.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Little is known about Mutton’s life, but in August 1859, a naturalist working with Gibbs in southwest British Columbia wrote to a curator at the Smithsonian Institution that Gibbs’s dog, who had recently been sheared, had eaten the head off a goat skin they had collected.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>When Mutton died later that year, his pelt was collected, with a tag noting: “Mr G[ibbs]’s dog ‘Mutton’ Chiloweyuck Indians.” Researchers aren’t sure exactly where Mutton was from, but they note that he could have come from a Coast Salish community near the present-day town of Chilliwack, which sits on the Fraser River, east of Vancouver, on the lands of the Stó:lo Nation.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The longhair pelt was rediscovered within the Smithsonian’s collection in the early 2000s. Audrey Lin, an evolutionary molecular biologist then at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History with a keen interest in ancient dog DNA, learned of it during the pandemic and hoped to study it.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Beethoven’s DNA decoded from locks of hair saved by his fans</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Studies show that dogs arrived in the Americas alongside people, around 15,000 years ago. But they vanished. Today, there are only the faintest genetic traces of these pre-colonial dogs in modern-day dogs, and Lin wanted to know why and how they went extinct.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Mutton’s pelt gave researchers a way to use modern tools to probe the dog’s ancestry during this pivotal time, so Lin and colleagues approached Coast Salish leaders to find out whether research into the woolly dog would be welcomed.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Steven Point, a grand chief of the Stó:lo Nation, had long heard stories about the woolly dog. His mother, Rena Point Bolton, remembers her grandmother telling stories of raising the woolly dogs to weave blankets. When he learned that there was a pelt of a woolly dog, he was astonished.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“This was like a miracle, something from our past that was all of a sudden discovered,” Point said. “You sit by your grandparents’ side, and you hear these stories. … To find someone, somehow has got one of these dogs — what a happy moment that was. It’s kind of like a confirmation that everything the elders told you was true.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Researchers sequenced Mutton’s genome and compared his DNA to that of a non-woolly village dog from the same region that died around the same time, along with other modern and ancient North American dogs.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>They first examined Mutton’s mitochondrial genome, DNA that is passed down from maternal ancestors. His closest relative was a 1,500-year-old dog from Prince Rupert Harbour in British Columbia. When looking at the rest of his DNA, Mutton was 84 percent precolonial Indigenous dog, with only a small portion of European ancestry.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“We interpret the fact there is that much pre-contact ancestry, that late in time, as really underscoring the care with which people were caring for these dogs, to keep them reproductively isolated,” said Logan Kistler, a Smithsonian anthropologist.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Kelsey Witt Dillon, a population geneticist at Clemson University who was not involved in the study, agreed.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“It’s easy to assume the dogs running around the Americas thousands of years ago all looked the same and were generic-looking, and people were interacting with them but weren’t managing them in they way they do today,” Witt Dillon said. “In some parts of the Americas, people were doing a lot to cultivate specific traits in their dogs.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Elinor Karlsson, a scientist who studies dog DNA at the University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School and the Broad Institute, said that the paper weaves together the fields of ancient DNA and anthropology, showing “the degree to which Europeans overwrote the history of these people and the preconceptions about their cultures not having the complexity they obviously had.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Reclaiming dog-wool weaving</p>\n<p>The first European explorers arrived in the Coast Salish region in the late 18th century, bringing not only their own machine-made blankets, but also smallpox and other diseases. Epidemics are estimated to have killed more than 90 percent of Indigenous people in villages across British Columbia. In 1858, more than 33,000 miners arrived during the Fraser River gold rush, adding to the pressure.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>It’s unclear what exactly happened to the woolly dogs. But they would have lost many of the caretakers who assiduously maintained the breed. And active efforts were made to rob people of their cultural identity and sense of power.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“So enduring was the dog, it became obvious, as I was told, how important the dog was to maintaining our traditions, our culture — to maintaining our traditional knowledge. And in the scheme of colonization and genocide, that couldn’t happen,” Pavel said.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>The Smithsonian researchers hope to bring Mutton to the Coast Salish region, where the people are now reclaiming many of those traditions.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Debra Sparrow, a self-taught weaver of the Musqueam Nation, said that it was only when she began to learn weaving that her grandfather, who was born in 1898, told her about the woolly dog and described how wool would be made by combining dog hair, mountain goat wool and fibers from stinging nettle.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“I said, ‘Why didn’t you tell me?’ and he said, ‘You didn’t ask,’” Sparrow said. “The assimilation process had done its job well. … They were told by the residential school: You’re not allowed to do anything that allows you to identify with your past.”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>In the new year, she is starting on her most ambitious project yet: She will weave a dog-wool blanket using all the old methods she learned from her grandfather. She’ll create dyes from lichens and mushrooms. She’ll have to substitute a different dog’s hair, possibly a husky, to substitute for the woolly dog.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>“For the first time in my entire life, I’m nervous,” Sparrow said. “I’m finally ready to challenge and connect to my ancestors, and say, ‘Let’s do this.’”</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--TEASE--</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>Smithsonian</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--VIDEO SHOWS</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--LEAD IN</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--VO SCRIPT</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--SOT</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--TAG</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS</b>--</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--MUSIC INFO---</b></p>\n<p></p>
Scottish soldiers move forward for attack during the Battle of Ancre in France in World War 1.
The battle of the Ancre in World War 1. Scottish troops in trench standing ready for signal to attack. At the signal, Scottish troops including the Argyle and Sutherlands, Royal Scots Regiment, Scottish Rifles Cameronians, and the Kings Own Scottish Borderers go over the top in an attack. Waves of troops are poured into the German positions. A Scottish soldier enters a signals dugout to request artillery support. British gunners in goat skins fire 18 pounder field guns in support. German prisoners are escorted over no-man's land. Scottish troops in reserve watch the battle from a trench, using periscopes. Stretcher bearers brave shrapnel to bring back wounded from no man's land. Smoke from bursting shells seen in distance.The Scottish reserves move forward to augment those engaged ahead.Batteries of the Royal Horse Artillery are seen moving to forward positions with their 18 pounder field guns. Location: France. Date: November 1916.
Life in Morocco
1957 Life in Morocco - The living conditions, customs and occupations in Morocco in the 1950s - Casablanca, camels, waterboy with goat skin container, shoemaker, cobbler, stone mason chipping large rock, building a stone house, stone fort, roman ruins, mosque, Atlas mountains, farmer with cattle, plowing fields, irrigation well with donkey, wheat crops, man with sickle harvesting wheat, threshing ground with horses, sheep grazing, boy with lamb, washing sheepskins, wool gathering, spinning thread and yarn, dyed yarn, spinning wheel, bobbin, hand loom, clay pots, potter, decorating pot, blacksmith, public market, bread, souk, homemade candy, selling sheep, spice merchant, druggist, herbs, rugs, carpets, camel market, tractor with tiller, mechanical harvester, modern city, faces of happy Moroccans, Berber tribesmen on parade
MAKING PARCHMENT (issue title is THE VERY IDEA)
Making Parchment. Part of THE VERY IDEA issue. <br/> <br/>Brentford, Middlesex / Greater London. <br/> <br/>Traditional industrial process of refining goat, sheep and calf skin to make paper and drums. Various shots of old factory. Various shots of men dunking animal hides into lime pits to cleans them. The hair is then scraped from the skins. Various shots of hides being tightened and stretched on a frame. C/U of old worker. C/U of semicircular shaving knife. Various shots of skins being shaved to level them out. The removal of grease from the skins then takes place, they are put steam baths. Various shots of skins drying on frames. Various shots of worker smoothing skin by rubbing it with pumice powder. Various shots of skins being used to make drums and paper scrolls.
Gabriel Attal is in position thanks to me
SEVEN CITIES
ORIG. COLOR 850 SIL VS MAN CUTS LAMB'S THROAT, SKINS HIM AND HANGS CARCASS ON TREE. MS SMOKE COMING FROM CHIMNEY. VS GOATS GRAZING ON HILLSIDE. CU'S GOATS. VS IRRIGATION SYSTEM. VS WATER FLOWING INTO DITCHES. VS FIELD WITH YELLOW FLOWERS. VS OF BOY DRAWING WATER FROM WELL. CI: ABC SHOWS - 7 CITIES. GEOGR. - GREECE, PATMOS. ANIMALS - GOATS. AGRICULTURE - IRRIGATION. GEOLOGY - FLOWERS. ANIMALS - LAMB(SLAUGHTER). OCCUPATIONS - FARMER.
AFRICA
MAN NEARS TOWN. SMALL GOATS IN MUD. TIRES IN MUD. PEASANTS TRY TO SELL WARES. RUGS, SKINS
HISTORICAL FILM: LEATHER / TANNERY PROCESS (1920’S)
B&W film, 1920. The process of making leather.
COMPARISON OF FIRST AMERICAN OUTBREAK OF INHALATION ANTHRAX WITH CURRENT SITUATION
FTG FOR LYNN SHERR CS VO ON COMPARISONS OF AMERICA'S FIRST EPIDEMIC OF INHALATION ANTHRAX WHICH TOOK PLACE IN MANCHESTER NEW HAMPSHIRE AT THE ARMS TEXTILE COMPANY. AN IMPROMPTU NARRATOR IDENTIFIES THE PHOTOGRAPHS. MIXED. NATS. 03:00:21 B&W STILL PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE ARMS TEXTILE COMPANY AND PROPERTY. LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS FOLLOW: 03:01:11 WEAVING SECTION OF THE PLANT. PUSH INTO CU. 03:01:59 A PILE OF GOAT HAIR. PUSH INTO CU. 03:03:24 CAR TENDER (HEAVY MACHINERY) AND GOAT HAIR. 03:05:14 BAIL OPENING. A MACHINE THAT OPENED THE BAILS OF GOAT HAIR. 03:06:48 EXTERIOR OF ARMS RIVER BUILDING. AUTOMOBILES PARKED OUTSIDE. 03:07:15 EXTERIOR OF ARMS BUILDING. 03:07:47 VARIOUS COLOR SHOTS OF TYPES OF ANTHRAX INFECTIONS ON THE SKIN AS DISPLAYED ON A POSTER. 03:09:56 SAME FOOTAGE. RELATED FOOTAGE. B&W PHOTOGRAPHS CONTINUE. 03:10:21 WEAVING TYPE MACHINE. PLANT FACILITY UNKNOWN. 03:11:12 ROW OF REELING MACHINE. PLANT FACILITY UNKNOWN. PUSH INTO CU. 03:11:38 PHOTOGRAPHS OF LESIONS ON BODY OF ANTHRAX VICTIMS. FOLLOWS THE PROGRESSION OF A LEGION. 03:14:16 END OF FOOTAGE.
Flock of White Sheep Grazing in a Dry Field with Shepherd
A flock of white sheep graze in a field with dry grass and shrubs. A shepherd watches over them.
55434 1950s MOVIE PROSPECTING FOR OIL IN THE SAHARA DESERT SAUDI ARABIA
This color film about mapping the Sahara for oil was photographed and narrated by R. Guillaume, a geologist sponsored by Total Oil Products Ltd. Their logo is from the 1950s, which changed in 1963. It opens with the landing of an Air France Breguet 761S on a runway covered in sand. (:28-1:15). The supplies and equipment are loaded into vehicles. They drive in the ruts to know where the road is and avoid getting bogged down (1:16-1:52). A tank truck filled with water passes (1:53-1:59). Base camp is established at an old military facility to return to once a week to resupply (2:00-2:22). Mildly salty water is stored up in goat skins, attracting camels who drink up (2:23-2:47). The tents at the archaeological exploration stand against the desert sand. Multiple vehicles are overhauled from their travel (2:48-3:18). Radio contact is made twice a day (3:19-3:35). The desert seems to consist of camels, sand, and stone (3:36-4:10). Locusts scurry across the sand (4:11-4:25). The locals call the wind Jin, which covers and uncovers what’s left behind. A tomb is uncovered, along with pestles and mortars (4:26-5:20). The geologist also picks up flint darts used for hunting (5:21-5:30). An unusual pile of rocks is decorated with prehistoric carvings. These pictographs show rhinoceros and buffalo once drank from a lake there (5:31-6:09). People of the region still carve rounded rocks to make dishes. (6:10-6:20). The desert has areas with some moisture for random plants and flowers to grow (6:21-6:36). The cliff face helps identify rock outcrops that may indicate oil, which are followed and topographical surveys performed. A certain points, prefabricated cement is used to make a marker. Back at camp, the topographer makes his detailed map of the stratum (6:37-9:30). Borings 160” deep are made each mile (9:31-10:35). A sandstorm hits the camp. The tents are quickly taken down and the trucks drive through the storm in order to not lose the tracks. New dunes are formed each time (10:36-11:42). <p><p>We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."<p><p>This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com
RFK JR CONTROVERSIES
&lt;p>&lt;pi>&lt;b>**This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment.**&lt;/b>&lt;/pi>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;pi />&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;pi>&lt;b>***This pkg contains photos from AP/Getty Images that are only cleared for use within the pkg. Affiliates may not cut these photos out of the pkg for individual use.***&lt;/b>&lt;/pi>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>President-elect Donald Trump has picked Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be his next secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:00 - :07&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>October 27&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>[Trump]&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:22 - :35&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>(D) Presidential Candidate&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:41 - :47&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Laura Barron-Lopez&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>CNN Political Analyst&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>:58 - 1:10&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Howard Lutnick&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Co-Chair, Trump-Vance Transition Team&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>November 1&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:18 - 1:22&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Getty Images&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:33 - 1:57&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert Kennedy Jr.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>[this is an upper courtesy]&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:03 - 2:08&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert Kennedy Jr.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>[this is an upper courtesy]&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:08 - 2:19&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Prof. Larry Sabato&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Center for Politics, University of Virginia&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:22 - 2:28&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Vanity Fair&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:29 - 2:33&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>(I) Presidential Candidate&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"Breaking Points"&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:39 - 2:43&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>"Breaking Points"&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>PEDIATRICIANS AROUND THE NATION ARE REACTING TO PRESIDENT-ELECT TRUMP --- TAPPING FORMER INDEPENDENT PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ROBERT F. KENNEDY JUNIOR --- TO LEAD THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>KENNEDY'S CHOOSING IS CONTROVERSIAL BECAUSE HE IS ONE OF THE NATION'S MOST PROMINENT ANTI-VACCINE CONSPIRACY THEORISTS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>AND HE HAS BEEN KNOWN TO SAY SOME VERY CONTENTIOUS THINGS -- C-N-N'S BRIAN TODD REPORTS ON HIS HISTORY OF OUTRAGEOUS STATEMENTS AND PROVOCATIVE VIEWS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Donald Trump, (R) President-elect "I'm gonna let him go wild on health. I'm gonna let him go wild on the food. I'm gonna let him go wild on medicine." &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THE PERSON DONALD TRUMP'S GOING TO LET 'GO WILD': &lt;u>ROBERT&lt;/u>&lt;u>F.&lt;/u>&lt;u>KENNEDY&lt;/u>&lt;u>JR&lt;/u> IS THE 70-YEAR-OLD SON OF DEMOCRATIC ICON ROBERT KENNEDY-- AND HAS BECOME KNOWN MOSTLY FOR ESPOUSING OUTLANDISH, &lt;u>FALSE&lt;/u> CONSPIRACY THEORIES ABOUT THE &lt;u>COVID&lt;/u>&lt;u>VIRUS&lt;/u>.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "COVID-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and Black people. The people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>AND HE'S REPEATEDLY, &lt;u>BASELESSLY&lt;/u> CALLED THE COVID-19 &lt;u>VACCINES&lt;/u> 'UNSAFE'&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Laura Barron-Lopez, CNN Political Analyst "There could be widespread disinformation to the public about what they should or shouldn't be doing in terms of their public health."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THE CO-CHAIR OF TRUMP'S TRANSITION TEAM TOLD CNN'S KAITLAN COLLINS THIS, ABOUT WHAT KENNEDY MIGHT &lt;u>TRY&lt;/u> TO DO WITH THE COVID VACCINES THAT ARE IN PLACE &lt;u>NOW&lt;/u>- WHICH HAVE BEEN PROVEN TO BE MOSTLY &lt;u>SAFE&lt;/u>.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Howard Lutnick, Co-Chair, Trump-Vance Transition Team "He says if you give me the data- all I want is the data. And I'll take on the data and show that it's not safe. And then if you pull the product liability, the companies will yank these vaccines right off, off of the market."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IN MAY OF THIS YEAR, IT WAS REVEALED THAT KENNEDY ONCE CLAIMED IN A DEPOSITION THAT A PARASITIC WORM HAD ONCE ENTERED HIS BRAIN, AND DIED WHICH HE SAID, LED TO QUOTE "SEVERE BRAIN FOG" AND TROUBLE WITH HIS SHORT-TERM MEMORY.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>HE ACTUALLY JOKED ABOUT IT.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "Maybe a brain-worm ate that part of my memory." (APPLAUSE)&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>EARLIER THIS YEAR, IN A RAMBLING VIDEO POSTED ON 'X'- KENNEDY ADMITTED THAT ABOUT 10-YEARS AGO.. HE WAS DRIVING IN UPSTATE NEW YORK, WHEN HE FOUND THE CARCASS OF A DEAD BEAR THAT HAD BEEN HIT BY A VEHICLE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "So I pulled over and I picked up the bear and I put him in the back of my van because I was going to skin the bear."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>BUT KENNEDY SAID HE GOT SIDETRACKED BY SEVERAL EVENTS THAT DAY COULDN'T GO HOME DIDN'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH THE BEAR... SO HE DECIDED TO LEAVE THE CARCASS IN NEW YORK'S CENTRAL PARK, AND MAKE IT LOOK LIKE A &lt;u>BIKE&lt;/u>&lt;u>ACCIDENT&lt;/u>.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "So we went and did that and we thought it would be amusing for whoever found it or something."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Prof. Larry Sabato, Center for Politics, University of Virginia "The whole story- the wild, weird story that RFK Jr. told about the bear cub and how it got into Central Park- has really made an impact, and not a positive one for him." &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THIS SUMMER, AN ARTICLE IN 'VANITY FAIR' HAD A PHOTO OF KENNEDY- APPEARING TO PANTOMIME EATING A DOG CARCASS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>KENNEDY &lt;u>DENIED&lt;/u> IT WAS A DOG.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "It's actually me eating a goat in Patagonia."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THAT SAME 'VANITY FAIR' ARTICLE PUBLISHED ALLEGATIONS THAT KENNEDY HAD SEXUALLY ASSAULTED A FORMER NANNY FOR HIS FAMILY. KENNEDY SIDE-STEPPED THE ACCUSATIONS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D) Presidential Candidate "I am not a church boy."&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--TAG--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>ROBERT KENNEDY JR. HAS ALREADY FLOATED IDEAS FOR MAJOR TURNOVER AT PUBLIC HEALTH AGENCIES...&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IN ONE RECENT INTERVIEW, HE SAID HE WOULD CUT EMPLOYEES AT &lt;u>NUTRITION&lt;/u> DEPARTMENTS AT THE U-S &lt;u>FOOD&lt;/u>&lt;u>AND&lt;/u>&lt;u>DRUG&lt;/u>&lt;u>ADMINISTRATION&lt;/u>.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>AND AT A RECENT CONFERENCE, HE PROPOSED REPLACING ABOUT 600 OFFICIALS AT THE &lt;u>NATIONAL&lt;/u>&lt;u>INSTITUTES&lt;/u> OF &lt;u>HEALTH&lt;/u>.. WITH HAND-PICKED STAFF.&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;tab />&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--KEYWORD TAGS--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>KENNEDY TRUMP HEALTH VACCINES PEDIATRICIAN &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>
East of Bombay
East of Bombay. Armand and Leila Denis travel through India in the 1930s, exploring the native culture and religious celebrations.. 1930s, India, Bombay, Mumbai, sunrise over harbor, workers walking across gangplank loading and unloading cargo, ancient boats and ships, ship crew on deck, harbor activity, workers carrying cargo, workers unloading cargo from ships, men rowing ancient boat, cows and goats on busy streets, street scenes, artisan creating ivory elephant carving, craftsman polishing gems on hand operated wheel, silversmith hammering silver figures, craftsmen hand weaving rug, foreman reading out loud thread colors from design to workers, large group of Muslims bowing in prayer, Maharaja palace, elephant and camels carrying people entering palace gate as crowds of bystanders watching, palace garden, embellished terraces and domes, Maharaja and dignitary playing parcheesi, magician doing magic tricks for Armand and Leila Denis, magician doing bird trick by resurrecting dead bird, goat performing balancing trick for trainer, man opening elaborately embellished doors to reveal Taj Mahal, Taj Mahal facade and garden, bullock powered irrigation system, man powered irrigation system, cars driving up mountain road in lower regions of Himalayas, Armand and Leila Denis standing outside car looking at mountain view, people using axes to cut away foliage, tree trunks and branches from road, guided trip on horseback up Himalayan mountain, pack horses, caravan traveling on perilous ledges, caravan arriving at Tibetan monastery, people crossing precarious rope bridge over ravine to reach monastery, monastery perched atop cliffs, pilgrims, adults and children in traditional clothing, mountain women weaving and spinning, mountain women wearing turquoise studded headdress, people entering monastery, worshippers spinning prayer wheels, water driven prayer wheel, elderly beggars spinning small hand propelled prayer wheels, Armand and Leila Denis examining and spinning hand propelled prayer wheel, blind elderly beggar, Tibetan monastery festival celebration in monastery courtyard, procession of monks dressed in costumes and grotesque masks emerging from monastery into courtyard, group of young monks emerging from monastery, monk dressed in costume and mask playing drum to signal entrance of high priest, high priest entering courtyard, monks dressed in costumes and masks performing religious dance to musical accompaniment, ceremonial dance, man inflating goat skins for raft, rafts made of inflated goat skins traveling on treacherous mountain river, boatmen paddling raft through rapids and past boulders, people disembarking raft, horse caravan traveling from river shore, boat pov traveling on Ganges River in Varanasi / Benares, Hindu pilgrims praying in bathing ghats, sacred cattle on river banks, boy bathing cow in Ganges River, native man shaving man's eyebrows and shampooing his hair, native man performing massage on man's leg, pilgrim covered in white ashes taking nap, corpse being carried down steps of ghat, men using axes to chop wood for funeral pyre, men dipping corpse into Ganges, relatives sitting on ghat watching funeral ritual, men building funeral pyre and passing lighted torch over corpse to release spirits, men sweeping corpse ashes into river, Juggernaut ceremony, god figure being placed on altar, crowds of onlookers, procession of chariots through streets, pyramid shaped temples covered with sculptured figures, Thaipusam ceremony, worshippers with metal skewers driven through their faces and bodies, procession fair, hand operated amusement park rides, snake charmer performing show, Ceylon / Sri Lanka, Colombo, bullock carts carrying spices to ships, market, vendors selling pottery and tropical fruit, Negombo, catamarans coming into beach, children playing on beach, fishing boats, women carrying baskets on their heads, fisherman cleaning fish, men carrying fish, men bathing with well water, Negombo women and girl making lace in Dutch style, Perahera procession, devil dancers practicing dance to drum accompaniment, Kandy, Perahera procession at night with elaborately decorated elephants and people on foot, high priest of Temple of the Tooth, elephant carrying golden casket holding tooth of buddha, dancers in procession
THE MOOD AND THE MODE
Full title reads: "The mood and the mode". <br/> <br/>Models wear the latest fur coats. They model them in a zoo - posing next to animals, some of which their furs are from! <br/> <br/>Location of events unknown (probably London Zoo). <br/> <br/>Various shots of model wearing seal skin hat and coat posing in seal enclosure. Various shots model wearing ship skin coat posing next to a ram. M/S of model standing in front of flamingo pool, she wears white fur hat and coat (coat has wide lapels and cuffs). M/S of woman wearing coat made from lambs' skin posing next to a llama. Various shots of two models in fur jackets cuddling baby goats. Various shots of two models in Indian lamb coats, they are looking at Polar bears in enclosure. Various shots of models in leopard skin coats petting a tame leopard.
Navajo people moving to their summer home in United States.
Navajo Native American Indian family move from their winter house to summer house. The winter house is made from wooden logs. The head of the family, wears a silver belt around his waist,handkerchief tied around his head and necklaces in neck. He loads bedding, hand made blankets and sheep skin onto the cart. Pets like kittens and pups are also kept into the cart. The lady of the house moves out her sheep and goats . The eldest Navajo boy is a good horse rider and carries a bow and arrow on his horse as he guides the flock of sheep behind the cart . The family including the father,mother,daughter and youngers son boards the cart. The young child is strapped to a baby board. The whole family moves towards the valley. On their way they meet other Navajo families. Its night now and the family plans a halt.The other families gather around camp fire and sings and dance. Young and old ones enjoy the camp fire and smile. Location: United States USA. Date: 1938.
MIDDLE EAST
MS OF PEDDLERS AND MOORS IN MOROCCAN MARKET PLACE IN TURBANS GOAT SKIN WATER POUCH CANTEEN VENDOR SELLS CUP OF WATER -
Chronique INA by Julien Guéry: The Christmas tree
Chantier notre-dame de paris. notre dame retrouve sa flèche