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APTN 2330 PRIME NEWS AMERICAS
AP-APTN-2330 Americas Prime News-Final Wednesday, 14 April 2010 Americas Prime News China Rescue 00:47 No Access China REPLAY Girl rescued from rubble of the earthquake China Quake Xining 01:10 AP Clients Only REPLAY AP cover of aid operations in town closest to quake zone ++US China 00:57 AP Clients Only NEW US State Dept comment on Chinese earthquake ++Chile Protests 01:42 No Access Chile NEW Police, protesters clash as quake victims demand basic services Mexico Crash 01:08 AP Clients Only REPLAY Cargo plane crashes while trying to land, killing at least 4 Argentina Spain 01:46 AP Clients Only REPLAY Lawyers seek probe of rights abuses in Franco's Spain +Mexico Obama 3 03:27 AP Clients Only WRAP Second day of Michelle Obama's visit ADDS speech CRica Trial 02:45 AP Clients Only REPLAY Intv with frm CRican Pres Rodriguez, ahead of corruption trial Iceland Volcano 03:14 No Access Iceland REPLAY Iceland evacuates hundreds as volcano erupts again; aerials; mudflows Poland Protest 02:28 No Access Poland REPLAY Protesters object to Kaczynski burial on Wawel Hill B-u-l-l-e-t-i-n begins at 2330 GMT. APEX 04-14-10 1956EDT -----------End of rundown----------- AP-APTN-2330: China Rescue Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:China Rescue- REPLAY Girl rescued from rubble of the earthquake LENGTH: 00:47 FIRST RUN: 1930 RESTRICTIONS: No Access China TYPE: Natsound SOURCE: CCTV STORY NUMBER: 643020 DATELINE: Yushu County - 14 April 2010 LENGTH: 00:47 CCTV - NO ACCESS CHINA SHOTLIST ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 1. Various of rescuers digging through rubble to reach girl trapped in collapsed building 2. Rescuer reaching girl trapped under concrete slab 3. Rescuers pulling girl out from rubble 4. Various of rescuers carrying girl on stretcher ++DAY SHOTS++ 5. Rescuers spraying collapsed building as they extinguish fire 6. Pan of smouldering rubble left by collapsed building STORYLINE A girl was pulled out alive from debris late on Wednesday in Yushu county after being trapped for almost 16 hours following a series of strong earthquakes in China that killed at least 589 people and injured more than 10- thousand. China's state televsion showed a video of rescuers digging through rubble to get to the girl, who was trapped under a concrete slab. After three hours of hard work, rescuers managed to save the girl, who was then carried away from the collapsed building on a stretcher. Many more people remain trapped and the death toll was expected to rise, officials said. The largest quake was recorded by the US Geological Survey (USGS) as magnitude 6.9. The China Earthquake Networks Center measured the largest quake's magnitude at 7.1. Wednesday quake, which struck at 7:49 a.m. local time (2349 GMT), was centred on Yushu County, in the southern part of Qinghai, near Tibet, with a population of about 100-thousand, mostly herders and farmers. The USGS recorded six temblors in less than three hours, all but one registering 5.0 or higher. The quake also triggered landslides, the state-run Xinhua News Agency said. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1928EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: China Quake Xining Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:China Quake Xining- REPLAY AP cover of aid operations in town closest to quake zone LENGTH: 01:10 FIRST RUN: 2030 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Mandarin/Nats SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 643027 DATELINE: Xining - 15 Apr 2010 LENGTH: 01:10 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST: ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 1. Wide of cargo relief flight at airport in Xining 2. Paramilitary troops unloading boxes with relief supplies from plane 3. Wide of troops unloading relief 4. Rescuers coming off plane with sniffer dogs 5. Wide of rescue team walking through airport terminal 6. Wide of rescuers coming down escalator in airport terminal 7. Various shots of rescuers walking out of airport 8. SOUNDBITE (Mandarin): Yang Xuesong, Rescuer from Shandong Province: "The biggest concern for us is the environment because this is a high altitude situation. We don't know if the search dogs can adapt to the altitude here fast enough." 9. Rescuers leading dogs to bus 10. Buses driving away STORYLINE Chinese troops in camouflage, firefighters and dozens of rescue workers with sniffer dogs poured into the airport in Xining on Thursday to help search for survivors after strong earthquakes struck a mountainous Tibetan region of China, killing at least 589 people and injuring more than 10-thousand. The series of quakes flattened buildings across remote western Yushu county and sent survivors, many bleeding from their wounds, flooding into the streets of Jiegu township. Crews set up emergency generators to restore operations at Yushu's airport, and by late afternoon the first of six flights landed carrying rescue workers and equipment. But the road to town was blocked by a landslide, hampering the rescue as temperatures dropped below freezing. Tens of thousands of the town's 70-thousand people were without shelter, state media said. The airport at Xining, the nearest big city, some 530 miles (860 kilometres) away, had been closed to civilian flights for several hours on Wednesday night to make way for the rescue effort. While China's military is well-practiced in responding to disasters, the remote location posed logistical difficulties. The area sits at around 13-thousand feet (4-thousand metres) and is poor. Yang Xuesong, a rescuer from Shandong province, who arrived in Xining on Thursday said he was concerned how the altitude would affect the sniffer dogs. "We don't know if the search dogs can adapt to the altitude here fast enough." The small airport has no refuelling supplies, so relief flights were carrying extra jet fuel, reducing their capacity for hauling supplies, state media reported. President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao urged "all-out efforts" to rescue survivors and dispatched a vice-premier to supervise the effort. The government immediately allocated 30 million US dollars (200 million yuan) for relief, and mobilised more than 5,000 soldiers, medical workers and other rescuers, joining 700 troops already on the ground. With many people forced outside, the provincial government said it was rushing 5-thousand tents and 100-thousand coats and blankets to the region, where average daily temperatures were around 43 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius). The initial quake, measured at magnitude-6.9 by the US Geological Survey and 7.1 by the China Earthquake Networks Centre, hit Yushu at 7:49 am (2349 GMT). It was followed by five more tremors within three hours, all but one registering 5.0 or higher. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1928EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: ++US China Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:++US China- NEW US State Dept comment on Chinese earthquake LENGTH: 02:30 FIRST RUN: 2330 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Eng/Natsound SOURCE: DoS TV STORY NUMBER: 643033 DATELINE: Washington DC - 14 Apr 2010 LENGTH: 02:30 DOS TV - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST 1. Wide of the US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley walking to podium for the daily news briefing 2. Cutaway of reporter at briefing 3. SOUNDBITE: (English) P.J. Crowley, US State Department spokesperson: "Yes the Secretary (of State Hillary Rodham Clinton) just put out a statement a few minutes ago on behalf of the American people offering condolences to the families who lost loved ones in this morning's earthquake in China's southern province. Our thoughts and prayers are with those who have been injured and displaced and all the people of China on this difficult day, and we stand ready to assist China with any needs it might have. We have during the course of the day been reaching out to Americans there who are registered with us, and thankfully we have no reports of US citizens killed or injured at this point." 4. Cutaway of reporter at briefing STORYLINE: The US administration offered their condolences on Wednesday to victims of the deadly earthquakes that devastated parts of western China earlier in the day. "Our thoughts and prayers are with those who have been injured and displaced and all the people of China on this difficult day, and we stand ready to assist China with any needs it might have," said US State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley, speaking at a briefing in Washington, DC. At least 589 people were killed and more than 10,000 injured. Crowley said there were no reports of American citizens among the dead and injured. The series of quakes flattened buildings across remote western Yushu county, and in the town of Jiegu, where dazed survivors flooding into the streets, many wounded. State television showed block after devastated block of toppled mud and wood homes. Local officials said 85 percent of the structures had been destroyed. The Chinese government has already allocated 30 million US dollars (200 million yuan) for relief, and mobilised more than 5,000 soldiers, medical workers and other rescuers, joining 700 troops already on the ground. With many people forced outside, the provincial government said it was rushing 5-thousand tents and 100-thousand coats and blankets to the region, where average daily temperatures were around 43 degrees Fahrenheit (6 degrees Celsius). The initial quake, measured at magnitude-6.9 by the US Geological Survey and 7.1 by the China Earthquake Networks Centre, hit Yushu at 7:49 am (2349 GMT). Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 2007EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: ++Chile Protests Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:++Chile Protests- NEW Police, protesters clash as quake victims demand reconstruction LENGTH: 01:42 FIRST RUN: 2330 RESTRICTIONS: No Access CHILE / INTERNET / CNN TYPE: Natsound SOURCE: TVN STORY NUMBER: 643031 DATELINE: Various - 14 Apr 2010 LENGTH: 01:42 ++PLEASE NOTE NEW RESTRICTIONS: TVN - No access CHILE / INTERNET / CNN+++ SHOTLIST San Pedro de la Paz 1. Various of demonstrators marching and holding banner 2. Various of riot police pushing back demonstrators 3. Official, who participated in the demonstration, walking into closed off area and being stopped by police 4. Police and demonstrators running, as plume of smoke from tear gas rises into the air 5. Various of demonstrators being arrested and dragged away and put in police vehicles Talcahuano 6. Pan of demonstration, protesters with blue flags 7. Demonstrator sitting on ground writing sign 8. Protesters walking with placard demanding additional post earthquake aid and assistance 9. Various of demonstrators marching holding flags and banners 10. Top shot of demonstration on road STORYLINE Seventeen people were arrested on Wednesday in southern Chile as they took part in a demonstration to demand the reopening of a bridge damaged by the February 27 earthquake that struck the country. Protestors clashed with police in San Pedro de la Paz as authorities attempted to keep the crowds from nearing the bridge, which connects San Pedro de la Paz and the city of Concepcion. The mayor of San Pedro de la Paz, which is 300 miles (500 kilometres) south of the capital Santiago, led the hundred-strong protest towards the impassable bridge, but were blocked by police. He accused the police of excessive force in breaking up the protest. The bridge has been shut since the quake damaged it nearly two months ago. Meanwhile demonstrators in nearby Talcahuano also staged a march, to demand an increase in the reconstruction efforts following the disaster, in particular the construction of additional housing. Wednesday's demonstrations came after protests last week in Dichato, on the coast nearby, where residents complained about the lack of housing since the earthquake. The 8.8-magnitude earthquake claimed the lives of at least 432 and left thousands homeless. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 2128EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: Mexico Crash Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:Mexico Crash- REPLAY Cargo plane crashes while trying to land, killing at least 4 LENGTH: 01:08 FIRST RUN: 1330 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Natsound SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 642970 DATELINE: Monterrey - 14 April 2010 LENGTH: 01:08 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST: ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 1. Wide shot emergency vehicles at airport 2. Wide of highway exit to airport 3. Military vehicle approaching crash site 4. Investigators walking around wreckage of plane 5. Damaged tail section of plane 6. Various of plane wreckage 7. Investigators going through wreckage 8. Various of wreckage and investigators 9. Emergency vehicle entering air field STORYLINE: A cargo plane crashed while trying to land overnight in the northern Mexican city of Monterrey, killing at least four crew members, authorities said on Wednesday. A fifth crew member was missing and presumed dead. Rescue workers pulled four bodies from the smouldering wreckage just outside the international airport serving Mexico's third largest city, said Jorge Camacho, director of civil protection in Nuevo Leon state, where Monterrey is located. Authorities believe a sports utility vehicle may have been crushed under the plane but could not immediately identify any vehicle in the wreckage, Camacho said. The Airbus A300 was trying to land in rainy and cloudy conditions when it crashed on a road leading to the airport. The plane, belonging to Mexico City-based Aerotransporte de Carga Union, had taken off from Mexico City on Tuesday night. Firefighters at the scene said the plane caught fire after the crash, but the blaze was put out. Charred and smoking wreckage was spread across a radius of at least 50 metres (164 feet). The nose of the plane and both wings had been torn away from the fuselage and lay in the middle of the two-lane road. Authorities were investigating the cause of the accident. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1928EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: Argentina Spain Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:Argentina Spain- REPLAY Lawyers seek probe of rights abuses in Franco's Spain LENGTH: 01:46 FIRST RUN: 2030 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Spa/Natsound SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 643026 DATELINE: Buenos Aires - 14 April 2010 LENGTH: 01:46 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY ++CLIENTS PLEASE NOTE: THIS PACKAGE ORIGINALLY WENT OUT AS ARGENTINA DIRTY++ SHOTLIST 1. Wide of exterior of Buenos Aires Lawyers Association headquarters 2. Wide of media conference 3. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Adolfo Perez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize winner: "It is unfathomable that the Spanish people are not reacting to this imposition of impunity. We have fought and we will keep fighting against judicial impunity. Opening this forum is historic, it is key. The trigger, which was the attempt to silence Judge (Baltasar) Garzon, has opened the doors to all this." 4. Dario Rivas, son of Severino Rivas who disappeared during the Francisco Franco regime in Spain, crying during press conference 5. Estela de Carlotto, head of Argentinian group Grandmothers of Plaza de Mayo at media conference 6. Wide of people clapping and singing 7. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Maximo Castex, lawyer involved in Spanish case: "We have promoted the investigation for crimes against humanity, for crimes committed during the (Spanish) Civil War and until after the dictatorship. We are asking for the investigation to include the period from July 17th 1936 until June 15th 1977, which was the date of the first free parliamentary elections." 8. Wide of media conference with people applauding 9. Various exteriors of Federal Court in Buenos Aires STORYLINE Argentine human rights groups are turning the tables on Spain, hoping to open a judicial investigation of murders and disappearances during the Spanish Civil War and General Francisco Franco's long dictatorship which followed. Lawyers representing Argentine relatives of three Spaniards and an Argentine killed during the 1936-39 war on Wednesday asked the federal courts in Buenos Aires to open an investigation, and hope to add many more cases in the upcoming months. Such cross-border human rights investigations have long been the speciality of Spain's crusading investigative judge, Baltasar Garzon. His crusading case against the late Chilean dictator, General Augusto Pinochet, in 1998 helped lead to the lifting of amnesties that had protected Latin America's former dictators. But Garzon himself now faces a potentially career-ending trial on charges of abusing his authority by opening an investigation into deaths and disappearances in Franco's Spain. So Garzon's supporters now hope to launch the same investigation - citing the same principles of international law - from Buenos Aires. And while Garzon limited the scope to crimes committed until 1952, the Argentine rights groups hope to address any state atrocity in Spain from 1936-1977, when its democracy was restored. A specialist in human rights law, Carlos Slepoy, said that the plaintiffs are invoking the principle of universal jurisdiction, which provides that genocide and crimes against humanity can be prosecuted by the courts of any country. Adolfo Perez Esquivel, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, was at Wednesday's meeting of the families that were attempting to get justice for their relatives that were allegedly killed in Spain. "It is unfathomable that the Spanish people are not reacting to this imposition of impunity. We have fought and we will keep fighting against judicial impunity," said Perez Esquivel. Garzon is accused of abuse of power in Spain by ignoring a 1977 amnesty law in investigating wartime atrocities in Spain. The law was passed to help Spaniards put decades of conflict behind them. Garzon, who said as many as 114-thousand people disappeared or were buried in common graves, had to abandon his investigation after a few months, ending what had been the first official investigation into civil war atrocities. He transferred the task of investigating mass graves and missing people to local courts. That might allow the Spanish government to decline to cooperate with Argentina and assert that Madrid, not Buenos Aires, has preferential jurisdiction, the Spanish Human Rights Association said. Under the principle of universal jurisdiction, one condition for a country to investigate crimes allegedly committed in another is that no investigation be under way in the latter, said the association's chief lawyer, Piluca Hernandez. The lower level courts that inherited the Franco regime case from Garzon have done very little with it, but this might still be enough for Spain to argue that Argentina cannot investigate, Hernandez added, speaking in Madrid. Hernandez believes that Argentina's move will serve as a way to put pressure on and embarrass the Spanish justice system which has failed to carry out a thorough and serious investigation. Spain's Justice Ministry and several court officials declined to comment on the suit to be filed in Argentina. The three cases being presented in Argentina on Wednesday are the civil war shooting deaths of Spanish citizens Severino Rivas, Elias Garcia Holgado and Luis Garcia Holgado, and Argentine Vicente Garcia Holgado. The plaintiffs, both Argentines, are Dario Rivas, son of the first victim, and Ines Garcia Holgado, the niece and grand-niece of the others. The plaintiffs want the Argentine courts to expand the case to include any murders and disappearances committed by Franco's forces between July 17, 1936, the day before Franco's military turned against Spain's Republican government, and June 15, 1977, when Spain held its first democratic elections following the dictator's death in 1975. The Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo, the Argentine League for Human Rights, and the Peace and Justice Service are among the rights groups joining the plaintiffs to show support for Garzon. Maximo Castex, one of the lawyers involved, told the AP that by alleging genocide and in some cases crimes against humanity, many other cases involving Argentines whose relatives were killed in Spain will likely be added. He also predicts a flow of Spanish citizens travelling to Argentina seeking to add their names as plaintiffs. The federal court in Buenos Aires will assign a judge, who will seek the opinion of an Argentine prosecutor and then decide whether to take the case. If so, it would be the first time an Argentine federal judge invoked universal jurisdiction for crimes committed outside the country. Castex says this principle of universal justice is cited in Argentina's constitution. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1928EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: +Mexico Obama 3 Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:+Mexico Obama 3- WRAP Second day of Michelle Obama's visit ADDS speech LENGTH: 02:30 FIRST RUN: 2330 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: English/Nats SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 642995 DATELINE: Mexico City - 14 April 2010 LENGTH: 02:30 CEPROPIE - AP CLIENTS ONLY AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST ++NEW (FIRST RUN 2330 AMERICAS PRIME NEWS - 14 APRIL 2010) AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY 1. US First Lady Michelle Obama walking up to lectern at Universidad Iberoamericana 2. Cutaway of students 3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Michelle Obama, US first lady: "And the fact is that the responsibility for meeting the defining challenges of our time will soon fall to all of you. Soon the world will be looking to your generation to make the discoveries and build the industries that will fuel our prosperity and ensure our well-being for decades to come." 4. Wide of speech ++NEW (FIRST RUN 2330 AMERICAS PRIME NEWS - 14 APRIL 2010) CEPROPIE - AP CLIENTS ONLY 5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Michelle Obama, US first lady: "And it's not just enough just to change laws and policies. We must also change our perceptions about who can and who can't succeed. We have to confront the wrong and outdated ideas and assumptions that only certain young people deserve to be educated, or that girls aren't as capable as boys, or that some young people are less worthy of opportunities because of their religion or disability or ethnicity or socioeconomic class. Because we have seen time and again that potential can be found in some of the most unlikely places." ++NEW (FIRST RUN 2330 AMERICAS PRIME NEWS - 14 APRIL 2010) AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY 6. Obama at lectern 7. Students applauding 8. Obama leaving lectern and walking down to greet audience members (FIRST RUN 2030 LATAM PRIME NEWS - 14 APRIL 2010) CEPROPIE - AP CLIENTS ONLY 9. Obama walking towards Mexico's first lady Margarita Zavala in Mexico's Presidential Residence of Los Pinos 10. Various shots of Obama and Zavala sitting and talking inside Los Pinos meeting room 11. Pan of bilateral meeting with representatives from the US and Mexico at Los Pinos to discuss issues related to young migrants who cross the border alone and the issue of addiction 12. Obama and Zavala seated during meeting (FIRST RUN 2030 LATAM PRIME NEWS - 14 APRIL 2010) AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY 13. Exterior shot of Mexico's National Anthropology Museum 14. Obama and Zavala walking into museum hall 15. Wide of both first ladies looking at Aztec Calendar exhibit 16. Pan of first ladies walking inside museum 17. Pull out from children's orchestra performing on museum patio 18. Various shots of Zavala talking to Obama as they watch orchestra 19. Orchestra performing 20. Wide of first ladies waving as they leave museum STORYLINE US First Lady Michelle Obama on Wednesday told high school and college students in Mexico City it would be up to them to help governments and world leaders like her husband to solve everything from poverty and hunger to climate change and extremism. The students gathered in a sunny, outdoor plaza at Universidad Iberoamericana, where Mrs Obama addressed them. Nearly half of Mexico's population is younger than 25. Around the world, people aged 15-24 make up 20 percent of the population. "The fact is that responsibility for meeting the defining challenges of our time will soon fall to all of you," she said during her first international trip as First Lady. "Soon the world will be looking to your generation to make the discoveries and build the industries that will fuel our prosperity and ensure our well-being for decades to come." Mrs. Obama's entire speech was immediately translated and broadcast live throughout Mexico. The First Lady also held up herself and President Barack Obama as proof that "potential can be found in some of the most unlikely places." Neither Obama is a product of privilege; both came from humble circumstances. Her parents weren't wealthy or college-educated. He never really knew his father and was raised by his mother. Mrs. Obama's visit to Mexico is aimed at launching an international effort to engage young people and inspire them to become leaders and problem-solvers in their communities. Earlier, she met with Mexico's First Lady Margarita Zavala and spent about 45 minutes at Los Pinos, the Mexican president's official residence and offices in Mexico City. She said she learned about hundreds of new comprehensive drug treatment centres Mexico has created using money seized in drug raids. Mrs. Obama said the two countries were working closely together to tackle the problem. Nearly 23-thousand people have been killed in drug-related violence since December 2006, when President Felipe Calderon sent tens of thousands of troops and federal police to combat drug cartels, according to government figures. Like Mrs. Obama, Zavala also is interested in childhood obesity and the plight of Mexican children in US custody, especially those who were detained after they crossed the border to try to find their parents. Mrs. Obama flew into Mexico late on Tuesday after stopping in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, to see the devastation three months after a massive earthquake killed an estimated 230-thousand people and left more than 1 (m) million homeless in the Caribbean nation. Her visit to the Mexican capital on Wednesday and Thursday is also in part a goodwill tour to highlight relations between the United States and its southern border ally. After the closed-door sit-down meeting with Zavala and a joint tour of the National Museum of Anthropology, Mrs. Obama spent the rest of her public time with children. Beside her address at the Universidad Iberoamericana, she also stopped by a public elementary school, and lead a round-table discussion with youth leaders at La Hacienda de Los Morales. The meeting between Mrs. Obama and Zavala was not their first. The first ladies met on the sidelines of international summits their husbands attended last year. In another sign of the important friendship between the two countries, the White House recently announced that the second state dinner of US President Barack Obama's administration will be in honour of Mexico, on May 19. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 2129EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: CRica Trial Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:CRica Trial- REPLAY Intv with frm CRican Pres Rodriguez, ahead of corruption trial LENGTH: 02:45 FIRST RUN: 2030 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Spanish/Natsound SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 642998 DATELINE: San Jose -14 April 2010/FILE LENGTH: 02:45 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST April, 14, 2010 1. Various of former Costa Rican President Miguel Angel Rodriguez during interview 2. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Miguel Angel Rodriguez, former Costa Rican President: "Without being accused of any action, when all the executives of the companies involved say I never spoke to anyone to ask for anything regarding this issue. How can this be? (referring to the fact that he was detained and is on trial) That can't be. That is a total violation of rights to due process. It is a total violation to the justice system. It is a total violation of equality before the law. It is an abuse of power by the public ministry and one of their most serious faults in this process, not only because the facts do not exist, but also because this was not investigated in the way it should have been, with objectivity. This was solely an act against a former president with the goal of making political capital." 3. Cutaway of hands 4. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Miguel Angel Rodriguez, former Costa Rican President: "Since the very beginning, even when the existence of funds had not been made public, I said publicly I had received a certain amount of money, which Mr. Lobo (Jose Antonio Lobo, a former executive at Costa Rica's electric company) lent me for the OAS (Organisation of American States) campaign. I used the interest from those funds as part of the resources I needed for that campaign, and that money was returned to him in cheques that were deposited in the public ministry back in 2004." 5. Cutaway of Rodriguez seated at his desk 6. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Miguel Angel Rodriguez, former Costa Rican President: "I am very confident that this case has been so pathetically put together by the public ministry, with the sole goal of attacking a politician, rather than investigating the facts, that all that will become clear and the country's judges will be able to reject all pressure put on them and will act in accordance with the law. That is what I have always asked for, a fair trial, and I am confident that will be the case. I am calm, expecting that, though there is always some nervousness that something could go wrong, but that is life." FILE: 2004 (Exact date unknown) 7. Rodriguez, wearing handcuffs, being led off plane and handed over to police who remove handcuffs 8. Wide of Rodriguez with police STORYLINE Former Costa Rican President Miguel Angel Rodriguez was on Wednesday proclaiming his innocence, speaking in the capital San Jose ahead of his forthcoming corruption trial The trial, which starts next week, comes six years after the scandal prompted his resignation as head of the Organisation of American States (OAS). Rodriguez is charged with taking bribes in exchange for giving the French telecom Alcatel's Latin American branch a 149 (m) million US dollar mobile-phone contract while he was president in 2001. Jose Antonio Lobo, a former executive at Costa Rica's electric company, in 2004 accused Rodriguez of demanding 60 percent of the bribes paid by Alcatel. The 70-year-old former president denies the accusations, saying they were part of a campaign to destroy him politically. He says he borrowed money from Lobo for his OAS campaign but that those funds were returned in the form of official cheques which were deposited at the public ministry. During Wednesday's interview, Rodriguez claimed the investigation against him lacked "objectivity." The 70-year-old also claims that he was never accused of any wrongdoing and calls the charges against him and the case " a total violation of rights." After leaving office, Rodriguez became head of the OAS. He resigned in 2004 after less than a month on the job. He willingly flew back to Costa Rica in 2004 to face the accusations against him, but was arrested upon arrival. He spent five months in prison, followed by some time under house arrest. Rodriguez says he hopes to demonstrate his innocence but acknowledged fears that the trial would not go his way and that he would face jail. "I am very confident that this case has been so pathetically put together by the public ministry, with the sole goal of attacking a politician, rather than investigating the facts, that all that will become clear," he added, ahead of his trial which starts next week. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1929EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: Iceland Volcano Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:Iceland Volcano- REPLAY Iceland evacuates hundreds as volcano erupts again; aerials; mudflows LENGTH: 03:14 FIRST RUN: 1430 RESTRICTIONS: No Access Iceland TYPE: Natsound SOURCE: CH 2/RUV STORY NUMBER: 642979 DATELINE: Eyjafjallajokull, 13/14 April 2010 LENGTH: 03:14 CH2 - No Access Iceland RUV - No Access Iceland SHOTLIST RUV - No Access Iceland Eyjafjallajokull - 14 April 2010 1. Various aerials of mudflows on side of mountain near Eyjafjallajoekull glacier 2. Wide aerial of mountain CH2 - No Access Iceland Eyjafjallajokull - 14 April 2010 3. Various aerials of plume of smoke and snowy mountain RUV - No Access Iceland Near Eyjafjallajokull - 13 and 14 April 2010 ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 4. Various of cars leaving area, cars being stopped by workers overseeing evacuation 5. Emergency vehicle leaving station 6. Mid of evacuation officials meeting 7. Close up of computer screen showing affected area 8. Tilt down of computer screen, pan to officials in room 9. People in evacuation centre 10. Tilt up from documents to evacuation worker speaking with resident 11. Evacuees sleeping on the floor at the centre 12. Various of evacuees 13. Various of lists of people that need to be evacuated 14. Pan of people unloading mattress 15. People walking in the evacuation centre STORYLINE A volcano under a glacier in Iceland erupted on Wednesday for the second time in less than a month, melting ice, spewing smoke and steam, closing a major road and forcing hundreds of people to flee rising floodwaters. Authorities evacuated 800 residents from around the Eyjafjallajokull glacier as rivers rose by up to 10 feet (3 metres). Emergency officials and scientists said the eruption under the ice cap was 10 to 20 times more powerful than one last month, and carried a much greater risk of widespread flooding. A chief inspector for the Icelandic Civil Protection Agency said no lives or properties were in immediate danger. Iceland's Meteorological Office said a plume of steam rose at least five miles (eight kilometres) into the air. Scientists aboard a Coast Guard plane that flew over the volcano said the new fissure appeared to be up to 1.2 miles (2 kilometres) long. There were no immediate signs of large clouds of volcanic ash, which could disrupt air travel between Europe and North America. Some domestic flights were cancelled, but Iceland's international airport remained open. The volcano, about 75 miles (120 kilometres) east of Reykjavik, erupted March 20 after almost 200 years of silence. The original eruption petered out earlier this week. But the Icelandic Meteorological Office said there were a series of tremors overnight, and rivers in the area began rising Wednesday morning - strong evidence of a new eruption under the glacier. Residents were evacuated to a Red Cross centre, the Civil Protection Agency said. Iceland's main coastal ring road was closed near the volcano, and workers smashed a hole in the highway in a bid to give the rushing water a clear route to the coast and prevent a major bridge from being swept away. Iceland, a nation of 320-thousand people, sits on a large volcanic hot spot in the Atlantic's mid-oceanic ridge. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1947EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM ------------------- AP-APTN-2330: Poland Protest Wednesday, 14 April 2010 STORY:Poland Protest- REPLAY Protesters object to Kaczynski burial on Wawel Hill LENGTH: 02:28 FIRST RUN: 2130 RESTRICTIONS: No Access Poland TYPE: Polish/Nats SOURCE: TVN STORY NUMBER: 643028 DATELINE: Warsaw, Krakow - 14 Apr 2010 LENGTH: 02:28 TVN - NO ACCESS POLAND SHOTLIST: Warsaw ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 1. Tilt down from Palace of Culture and Science to people gathered 2. Group of protesters 3. Close of banner reading (Polish): "Powazki yes, Wawel no" 4. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Name not known, protesting against proposal to bury President Kaczynski at Wawel: "I think that his merits are unsuitable compared to the merits of people who are already buried there. It is simply an exaggeration, an exaggeration." 5. Protest at the foot of the Palace of Culture and Science 6. Banner reading: "Warsaw for Presidents, Wawel for Kings." 7. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Marta, last name not known, protesting against proposal to bury President Kaczynski at Wawel: "Let's leave Wawel as a historical place, for really outstanding people, who created and changed something in Poland. With all due respect, President Kaczynski, unfortunately, does not belong to those people." 8. Banner reading (Polish): "Mr President, stay in Warsaw" 9. Wide of protesters 10. People signing petition to change the place of burial 11. Man holding sign amongst crowd reading (Polish): "Wawel for the greatest" 12. Wide of protest Krakow ++NIGHT SHOTS++ 13. Protesters gathered 14. Various shots of people chanting (Polish) "Krakow says no" and "Not Wawel" 15. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Name not known, protesting against proposal to bury President Kaczynski at Wawel: "Someone has yet again divided Polish society into two groups. Supporters and opponents. And we want everyone to be together." 16. Protesters chanting whilst holding sign reading (Polish): "Powazki yes, Wawel no" 17. Large banner reading (Polish): "Let's leave Wawel for kings" 18. SOUNDBITE (Polish) Name not known, protesting against proposal to bury President Kaczynski at Wawel: "I think that Wawel is for kings and for great people, who really deserve it. And President Kaczynski only fulfilled his clerical role as president. He is not deserving (of burial on Wawel) through anything he did." 19. Various shots of crowd gathered STORYLINE Controversy continued to flare in Poland on Wednesday over the burial site for Polish President Lech Kaczynski, who was killed in a plane crash along with dozens of other senior figures, and suspicion was spreading about the cause of the accident. Discord flared for a second day as to whether Kaczynski and his wife should be interred on Wawel Hill in Krakow, near the 1,000-year-old Wawel Cathedral, the main burial site of Polish monarchs since the 14th century, and of more recent heroes, including the 20th-century Polish statesman and military leader Jozef Pilsudski. About 300 people staged a protest in the capital Warsaw on Wednesday evening decrying the decision, which was made by the Kaczynski family and the Catholic church, without public debate or a vote in parliament. A large banner read "Warsaw for Presidents, Wawel for Kings." "Let's leave Wawel as a historical place, for really outstanding people who created and changed something in Poland. With all due respect, President Kaczynski, unfortunately, does not belong to those people," said Marta, one of the protesters in Warsaw. A similar rally took place in Krakow, home to Wawel. Some Poles have criticised the decision to bury Kaczynski, whose combative style earned him many opponents, in a place reserved for the most esteemed of national figures. In a front-page editorial, leading Polish daily 'Gazeta Wyborcza' said the "decision to bury him in Wawel is hasty and emotional." Sunday's state funeral will begin at begin at 2pm (1200 GMT) with a Mass at St. Mary's Basilica, Krakow. The bodies of the first couple will then be carried in a funeral procession across the Old Town and up the Wawel Hill, site of a castle and a fortification wall surrounding the cathedral. The decision has raised the unsettling prospect of protests during the state funeral, which will be attended by numerous world leaders, including US President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle, as well as Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Aviation experts say the investigation into the crash was moving relatively quickly but some Poles were complaining about a lack of public information, including the transcription of conversation in the cockpit before the accident. Pilots ignored pleas by traffic controllers at the Smolensk Airport to land elsewhere. Some here are speculating that they ignored the risks in order to keep Kaczynski on schedule for a memorial for Polish officers executed by Soviet secret police in the Katyn forest in 1940. The Tu-154 went down while trying to land in dense fog at Smolensk in western Russia on April 10. All aboard were killed, including the president, first lady, and dozens of Polish political, military and religious leaders. Polish officials said June 20 now appears all but certain to be the date of an early election to replace Kaczynski. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 04-14-10 1947EDT ------------------- END -- OF -- ITEM -------------------
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Coast to Coast in 48 Hours, Reel 2
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MISC. NEWSREEL 1920'S #2
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THE SKY GIANT - ADMIRAL CHARLES E. ROSENDAHL
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Ford Collection and United Newsreel
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MISC. NEWSREEL #15
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MISC. NEWSREEL 1920's #4
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HENRY FORD'S MIRROR OF AMERICA, 1914-1945