ary memo. margaret conley is in tokyo with the latest. reporter: whether or not you believe the decision to use atomic weapons was right or wrong, 65 years later the ceremony remains as emotionally charged as ever and the united states attended for the first time. a peace toll marked the minute the first atomic bomb hit hiroshima 65 years ago. 140,000 people died. few survived. fewer lived to share their stories. for decades after the end of world war ii, many japanese hid that they were survivors. exposure to radiation was seen as a terrible stigma. they had they speak out for recognition and medical aid and provide an oral history for future generations. translator: it was a burnt, black piece of mass dripping with bodily fluids. my mother was killed as a thing, not as a human. reporter: their voices had been heard by representatives from over 70 countries. and united nations secretary-general ban ki-moon. the united states, britain, and france were there for the firs
monitoring and enforcement of existing regulations, or both? probably both. it was a strict undercover. we did not evaluate the department of education. it certainly appeared like the wild west. there is not a lot of regulatory infrastructure overseeing or enforcing this particular case. you also mentioned earlier that it was your intuition, and reasonable at that, that these folks in the videos may have been trained in certain sales tactics and marketing approaches. as the senator from north carolina referred, there may be incentives to reach certain goals. did your investigation revealed any incentives or training, or a lack of training as to how to respond to questions from prospective students under a manner which complies with federal law? it could have been lack of training. it was more training in a script. practices like not letting someone speak to financial aid until they pay an admission our application feet they were very persistent. we tried every way. th
of course being the target of an american atomic bomb. and there is something different about this year s anniversary memorial. margaret conley is in tokyo with the latest. reporter: whether or not you believe the decision to use atomic weapons was right or wrong, 65 years later the ceremony remains as emotionally charged as ever and the united states attended for the first time. a peace toll marked the minute the first atomic bomb hit hiroshima 65 years ago. 140,000 people died. few survived. fewer lived to share their stories. for decades after the end of world war ii, many japanese hid that they were survivors. exposure to radiation was seen as a terrible stigma. they had they speak out for recognition and medical aid and provide an oral history for future generations. translator: it was a burnt, black piece of mass dripping with bodily fluids. my mother was killed as a thing, not as a human. reporter: their voices had been heard by representatives from over 70 cou
ab thank you for coming. i want to welcome my fellow trustees and want to read knowledge the hard work and dedication of the cheap actuaries in particular. 75 years ago this month, president roosevelt signed the social security act into law creating a program that tens of millions of americans rely upon to help them retire with economic security. 30 years later, president johnson signed commitments to that law creating medicare providing health insurance for older americans. this year, president obama signed into law the affordable care act. this gives americans more control over their health care decisions, will improve the quality of health care, and will address insurance company abuses. this law so it takes major steps to bring down the rate of growth over time. the positive impact of these reforms is made clear by the trustee reports. medicare s hospital insurance trust fund is expected to remain solvent through 2029. that is 12 years longer than what was projected las
number of americans choosing to go over there and fight for their cause. there have been two arrests just the last couple of weeks of young men who wanted to do just that. are we hearing any defense of those now being charged, either from the individuals themselves or maybe friends or family? people that know them? well, the 12 individuals who are alleged to be fighting for al-shabaab are in somalia, so they are not reachable. we did talk to the mother of one of them, however. our producer spoke with her. she described her son, omar hamami as being a brilliant young man who had been very good at everything he tried when he was in high school. he did go to college for a time. got more involved in islam. in fact, he was raised a baptist as she was, but he had a syrian father who was a muslim. he converted to islam, moved to toronto, married a woman, the mother said, who s of somali extraction and he went to so mali to visit with her