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The Faulkner Focus

officials where our officers are stationed at along the route. if any of the students wanted to go off campus to go to wherever they want to go. we advise them to use our safe corridor pathways. thank you. >> so today at the university a professor was barred because he couldn't -- [inaudible]. did the nypd cannot insure somebody can they step in or -- [inaudible] >> the university makes decisions about who they let on their campus or don't let on their campus. they are doing their own analysis and making their own safety determinations. that is not us. they are a private university, private property. their decisions, not ours. if someone is on campus and they are in physical danger, if they are about to be attacked, for example, we'll respond

Campus , Students , Officers , Any , Route , Safe-corridor-pathways , Nypd , Somebody , He-couldn-t , Inaudible , University-a-professor , Cannot

The Context

here's the prime minister giving his thoughts on the met police and its boss. what happened was clearly wrong and it's right that they've apologised for that. and yes, i do have confidence in him, but that's on the basis that he works to rebuild the confidence and trust of notjust thejewish community, but the wider public — particularly people in london, but more broadly. and you regain that trust and that confidence by making it clear that the police are not tolerating the behaviour that we would all collectively deem unacceptable when we see it because it undermines our values. there's been plenty of reaction. the former chief inspector of constabulary sir tom winsor said he had some sympathy for the police officer in question. he said he'd acted according to the law and had offered to walk mr falter via an alternative route. the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper, said the incident clearly wasn't handled properly and it was right there had been an apology from the met. and a spokesman for the mayor of london sadiq khan who's been meeting

Police , Prime-minister , Thoughts , Boss , People , In-london , Confidence , Trust , Basis , Notjust-thejewish-community , Sympathy , Tom-winsor

Young and Addicted

like cambodia, for that matter. and we've seen clandestine laboratories of an industrial scale in those countries. there is definitely a push to get more ketamine into the market. the way ketamine is policed totally varies in different countries, which can make it more difficult for authorities to follow its route around the globe. we are talking about international organised crime here, and apart maybe from the question, "would a higher "penalty be a deterrent for an individual dealer?" i think we need to talk about how can law enforcement get the necessary tools to go after those criminal organisations and dismantle them ? in england and wales, the quantity of ketamine seized by police and border force is currently around 1.5 tonnes a year. that compares to an average of around 150kg a year a decade ago — a tenfold increase.

Ketamine , Matter , Way , Countries , Market , Push , Scale , Laboratories , Authorities , Cambodia , Dealer , Globe

Dateline

him until 11:30 in the morning then there was a gap between him leaving the starbucks at 11:30 then shows up at the same starbucks around 12:45 p.m. in between there we could not account for him anywhere. >> that gap was crucial because it was during the timeframe the police believe the murder happened. the detectives even traced a route they thought nathan might've taken that day from the starbucks to the park. a quick walk to his house, then back to the starbucks. to see if he could have done it in time. >> six minutes and 55 seconds. >> not only possible but probable. more likely, they figured than a stranger breaking in during the roughly 20 minutes denise was out. >> it's inconceivable to think someone breaks and at the same time, rummages through the house, finds a clock and loaded up and hides behind the door to execute her.

Anywhere , Starbucks , Gap , 11 , 12 , 30 , 45 , Murder , Police , Jason-lee , Timeframe , Route

The Saturday Show with Jonathan Capehart

>> let's preface this by saying this is not normal. this idea that a, critically elected president decides to have a nice the powers of government against individuals that were basically doing their job is not normal. in a functioning democracy, it is not normal. one of the things that trump likes to say is he likes to point fingers at banana republics. you know who does exactly what is threatening to do? banana republic. is not a democracy. for every single american, regardless of our political stripes, we should take everything donald trump says seriously because everything he said he was going to do on the campaign trail in 2016, he actually did accept build infrastructure. so, as we continue to go down this route, when he says he's going to deport and do roundups

Government , President , Idea , Let , Preface , Powers , Individuals , Job , Donald-trump , Things , Democracy , Everything

Space Shuttle Columbia The Final Flight

-you know, it's been a long 16 days, and so we're all just super-excited to see our loved ones again and just be back to normal, whatever that looks like. and the kids decorated the house for his homecoming, and our neighbours put out flags. -we did paper chains and making banners and so we had it all decorated just to welcome him home. -we were super-excited, and i remember, like, as it got close to them getting back, we were just ready, super-ready to have him home. and as we said, columbia coming back. it's been 16 days now since she left the kennedy space center. this is the route, which you see on your screen. -i remember getting up that day.

Loved-ones , 16 , Home , House , Kids , Neighbours , Paper-chains , Homecoming , Flags , Banners , Begin-columbia , Back

Click

brendan dawes is a generative artist himself and the developer of the film's bespoke generative software. the way to think of it is kind of like a collaborator. i give it some direction, but then it's like, "actually, i've done this," and i go, "wow, ok, let's go down that path and that route." i'm specifically looking to be surprised, surprised and delighted. i'm pleased if people are more confused than they were before, because i think the biggest problem is trying to deal with what i call the appetite for certainty. i think we normally want to have control as filmmakers of every second, so there's a little bit of surrendering that control. but the result is things that i never would have thought to connect myself. when i see it when our generative system does it, you know, it's like, "oh, my gosh, i didn't even think about that connection." that could be making unusual story choices, likejumping around out of chronological order, orjuxtaposing two seemingly unrelated scenes. those choices can lead

Film-s-bespoke-generative-software , Way , Artist , Kind , Brendan-dawes , Developer , Collaborator , Direction , Let-s-go , People , Problem , Route

Sportsday

race, marking the end of the spring classics. the slovenian blew the opposition away with a solo break 30 km from the finish. britain's tom pidcock was one of the pre—race favourites, but could only nmanage 10th place after a mechanical problem. it is always a brilliant atmosphere at the london marathon. a record number of people took part in today's london marathon with 50,000 completing the historic route. and there was a record broken in the elite races with kenya's peresjepchirchir setting a new women's only time as she stormed to victory. in the men's, britain's emile cairess and mahamed mahamed came third and fourth. joe wilson was there. away they go! 50,000 competitors, 50,000 reasons — the london marathon stretches human expectations in all sorts of ways.

Finish , The-end , Spring-classics , Britain , Opposition , Favourites , Tom-pidcock , Slovenian , Nmanage-10th , One , 30 , 10

BBC News

all of that support along the route. i mean, look at this, we are lucky with the weather, april could go either way, couldn't it in this country? but you go over tower bridge. you go past buckingham palace and down the mall, things many people may only see on the tv they don't live near the capital, so it is a brilliant marathon. and if you didn't know this, like many good ideas, the london marathon was thought up in a pub back in the late 19705 thought up in a pub back in the late 1970s in richmond by a group of runners really inspired by the new york marathon and they thought, let's have something like that here. so they put on the first one in 1981 and i can tell you they had about 6200 finishes that day. this year, they are looking at around 50,000. this raise has already raised more than £1 billion for charity, that record hit more than five years ago. more charities getting lots more money today. you're right, fantastic, one of the best in the world and these guys coming across now for the charities are really

It , Things , Mall , Couldn-t , Weather , Country , Support , Route , Buckingham-palace , Tower-bridge , People , Thatis-most-inclusive-marathon