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Unlocking the Renaissance: The Role of Technological Advancements

Have you ever wondered how the Renaissance, that remarkable period of art, science, and culture, managed to flourish with such brilliance and influence generations to come? What fueled this transformative epoch?We can say that the Renaissance was heavily influenced by revolutionary technological developments that reshaped the way we think, create, and explore. It was technology

Germany , Rome , Lazio , Italy , Portugal , United-states , Milan , Lombardia , India , Vasco-da-gama , Goa , America

Waterfall Arts hosts season kickoff with exhibition, workshops, artist talk on the trail

Waterfall Arts hosts season kickoff with exhibition, workshops, artist talk on the trail
villagesoup.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from villagesoup.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Japan , Belfast , United-kingdom , Japanese , Chris-battaglia , Karen-olson , Coastal-mountains-land , Marshall-wharf-brewing-company , Belfast-community-radio , Uproot-pie-company , Waterfall-arts , Forest-bathing

Waterfall Arts hosts season kickoff with exhibition, workshops, artist talk on the trail

Waterfall Arts hosts season kickoff with exhibition, workshops, artist talk on the trail
villagesoup.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from villagesoup.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Japan , Belfast , United-kingdom , Japanese , Chris-battaglia , Karen-olson , Coastal-mountains-land , Marshall-wharf-brewing-company , Belfast-community-radio , Uproot-pie-company , Waterfall-arts , Forest-bathing

"Portraits: Surf Legends": the art of Vincenzo Ganadu

"Portraits: Surf Legends": the art of Vincenzo Ganadu
surfertoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from surfertoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Sao-paulo , Sãpaulo , Brazil , Pietrasanta , Toscana , Italy , Australia , Milan , Lombardia , Tokyo , Japan , United-states

KHNC 1360 AM [The Lion]-20191213-180000

It covers 9 counties that vacancy committee will convene at noon on December 28th they should have a new congressperson in place by the time the legislature reconvenes on January 8th I'm Christian. Experience the most unforgettable Christmas exiting boardwalk East presented by Pepsi Nov 22nd for January 5th to restore it will be transformed into a howling Wonderland featuring magnificent decor and advanced including $2000000.00 pounds of ice sculptures and slides featuring the Red nosed Reindeer Games holiday and exclusive in the around theatrical experience ice bumper cars ice cube. Breakfast and more start planning just how to get away today or Brucie's Christmas dot com are you battling high interest debt if you own a home and you have some equity I have a solution for you it's a mortgage refinance from American financing you're able to use your home equity to pay off that debt at a much lower rate some customers are saving up to $12000.00 a year and there are never any upfront fees call a salary based mortgage consultant today 303-695-7000 or apply online at American financing dot net and m.l.s. 182334 regulated by the Division of real estate ladies and gentlemen it's never been more clear that the deep state is trying to scuttle the global economy and plunge us into a worldwide recession they're doing everything they possibly can to kill this global populist resurgence and win a political battle that they're in the process of losing all my friends today at all American Gold dot com All American Gold dot com by that how you and your family can build a hedge of protection against the coming economic storm now this isn't buying into all the fear mongering and everything that we're here. Know all America dot com Hi My name is literally my mom and dad used to fight about money all the time then one today I heard them talking about this guy son uncle I never knew called Uncle wow they say this Uncle Sam guy wanted them to pay him like a gazillion dollars and they didn't have a gazillion dollars so they call this company they heard on the radio called the Tax doctors in the tax doctor worked with Uncle Sam's people I think they're called the I r act and they're able to work it out so my mom and dad didn't have to pay Uncle Sam very much money at all so now mom and dad are happy and I'm happy to thanks tax doctor if you owe $10000.00 or more to the i.r.s. Or state call now and pay less $191.00. 1091. 6909. 9. Ok I am back that cold. Big. Cold his. Goal. For. The World. If you've got a serious challenge. There's always someone else watching you and all the wounds that face the thing find a good soul like a funny thing. In protest because I made this hat from a. Company where I had to come in he said he isn't trying to prove here but all your my lips it. Seems to be. The big feet it's this one this one this is the David conspiracies right here on Cajun see 1360 Steve stars I just blew in with the wind and it's got that phrase you look to go to the west where the cold is common but I feel good we got Dr Bill Cunningham from White Dove healing again with us Dave are you there buddy. Well let's see here we I think we may have day with us I wonder Dr Bill is going on he's going to be doing the show with us a little bit after the clip so just hang in there and we'll see where we roll with this and they when you get that clip ready instead to go we'll just go with it in the meantime you know it's typical Friday Friday the 13th the impeachment vote took place we'll talk about that in a little bit but meantime we're going to have a we're going to good health the information for a change which I really like Dr Bill Cunningham from White Dove healing and it sounds as if you know we're having like a little bit of a delay but in the meantime you know we have a lot of things going on here at the station I mean you should see the people around here it's typical you know we have a good time on Friday and you know Joe is here and I just saw Eric walking by and he has is his gloves are on you're the blue gloves he's cleaning I said you didn't come from the airport recently did you. I didn't see his t.s.a. Badge Ok so now we're having some you know some good times here this is Jack Daniels Friday if you're acquainted with that but hey I just got in mind I'm drinking my coffee and cocoa moco kind of a thing Mandarin to stay warm fingers so-called I can barely type on the computer here but it's really it's got to be one of those you know great days as it turns out I think ladies and gentlemen I'm never going to get down on the you know on that this is superstition of Friday the 13th but isn't it strange that October 31st Nancy Pelosi put on her pumpkin dress you know to announce that they were going to pursue this impeachment in the house and now Friday the 13th they cast a vote of they're going to turn it over to the Senate so you know we're going to have this impeachment thing going all during the Christmas season for the least the next week and it's you know it's kind of astounding and all these kinds of things happen I just it's just. Now you can't write this stuff if you were a fiction writer and sell it you know people wouldn't believe. You know but you know truth is stranger than fiction sometimes hey end up if you're going out to Christmas parties this weekend be safe please we're going to go to the company in arrive to say hello to all my friends out of the valley you're a Geisha and we're going to have good we're going to have good time tonight you know out there I want to congratulate Marcus and Heather on their their son that was born just a few weeks ago and congratulations to Marcus and then of course I want to say hello to gee I hope I can remember everybody Clint of course and Stephen and Doug they're in sales and we've got other people out at the feel like Nate my buddy Nate Rodney the d.j. Damon. Who I'm sort of forgetting now I'm not even anybody out they'll hear about it tonight you know. And I'm Raylan Let's see who else is out there anyway I don't want to forget that the wonderful lady who makes it all possible Carolyn and the company was so we do appreciate them you know I do anyway and so value your geisha and we're part of taking care of the country out here you know where you folks need to get the food that we produce that you eat so if you're up in Denver and you're hearing a lot of things you know coming from us about you know the importance of the agricultural market out here and it's shrinking because this area is growing so fast what used to be farmland when I used to travel around here for quite a while is now I mean it's full of these big big 2 or 3 acre house lots and stuff they got tarns and duck pond you know what I mean and drives like a. Duck ponds ma'am Ok but that's like working now it's working out I got Ok Fantastico we got Bill Cunningham on the line so Bill take it away. Good morning gentlemen I know you're working hard but fair to get everything in line so no problem we'll get er done anyway if you got a fascinating interview today that I did with our mentor way back in February of 2008 came the interview with Carl to the moon and the reason I want people to hear to every time when I was young I would buy a little jack knife I'd open a box I'd want to read about who invented it who in Vienna mater how did they get the ideas and just get some idea of the genius behind some of the things that I used to enjoy or obviously are quantum biofeedback to them had behind it an amazing young genius who by the way when he was 18 years of age they have the Apollo 13 project so let's roll that I think that if you'll find this fascinating I want to give confidence to the people interested in coming to see me because again behind a screen behind a bio feedback system because it's amazing genius they're going to hear him right now going to guy. Today by just a so everybody it's Ok it's amazing stories about your time but not so sure there were you know that your bad and the bad but happened that night. I grew up you know. So I. Got a high school big just mathematical whiz kid I had scholarships everywhere I had a fortune I worship at mit and Cal Tech and I think that everybody should watch it but I took a job at General Motors Institute g.i. Because they offered me a chance to start working as an electrical engineer I will be going to school at work it was called work experience and I would be an electrical engineer and there was 50000 people interviewed and they all they hired 2 of them can get shills and. I actually started working on the Apollo project navigation system that was my job and here I was right and I school and when I actually started what I would date I started I was 17 I became 18. When they landed on the side of the moon out of Apollo. And I was sitting there going through the the 2 have a trick and everybody thought it was so easy it was so easy that we had our 12 landing no problems and we could get going to them it was Kate it was just you. And I the company I work for which was General Motors to this with g.m. By the end the company the branch of them that I work for was called a.t.c. Electronics and the Waukesha Wisconsin and we both have a geisha system it was the navigation system for all of the 740 seven's and we moved the navigation system for the of our spacecraft All that ahead and. After Apollo 12 landed we'd lost the bid on the shuttle the shuttle was to do do you know baby but the going to have the shuttle and Honeywell put us it's amazing to think that we read to the mood on the lowest bidder. But everything that happens on the entire project is given to the weather was good or bad not to the guy who guaranteed the top quality but the guy who made the letter was good. Karma where exactly So anyway I remember that we were asked by lots of good on the shuttle and there was 13 people working in the math department they had all kinds of money were ups and now they don't so they thought they laid off a couple of a couple quick couple that fired and it turned down there was 3 of us left when Apollo 13 went off. I wrote 13 goes off and 2 are the guys that said because we were not supposed to be involved in anything we were just a mathematics the part we're only there to do the mathematics of this you say for once they once everything was gone it was had nothing to do with us was all now about the end years so I think that the mathematics here private and I got a phone call I came in you know it was early in the morning and I got a phone call. We want to know can we turn off the gyro in the Apollo spacecraft and then turn on the gyro. Delete the lunar landing module use that gyro to go around the moon come back to the planet Earth on the moon and then did my 2 of gyro and then turn back on the Apollo gyro so that we could separate from the litter and dig module and and land back on the planet or. Aren't that good designed any of these gyros that beat turned off but. We never put it off and on switch they took very little energy but we never took it off and honestly there was no proviso for that but yet the gyro was made so well that it would continue to rotate for hours on the planet Earth we had no idea how long a good rotate in space had no idea where running it would actually tested but I thought that somebody was kidding me I thought it was one of my paternity buddies Oh yeah sure we could do it I went to the guy commissary to get a cup of coffee I stopped my car 30 buddies and said yeah yeah yeah big that big. They said no they didn't call me and I started. And I found out it hinged it had got people move it really was used. By now they made the decision based on what I said that they would do that that would turn off the gyro with a problem that would turn on big gyroscope have the advantage module rotate around the moon come back and it would be about 40 hours or so 3540 hours before they could turn back on so obvious that when they turned back on the gyro inside the of the settings had to be precise to allow them to man so that they would know where they are the gyroscope is your 3 dimensional compass that tells you where you are in 3 dimensional not just a 2 dimensional normal type a compass is only 2 dimensional you got north south east west you got 2 dimensions whereas the this gyroscope was 3 dimensional So any way I read I sat there for 40 hours 11 guys worked either on the 3 I believe 360 computer which was as big as big as a room. 360 computer was not as powerful as your Casio watch. Today you know I but it turned out that there was an error that's the dick appear that i.b.m. Tree 60 just I'd have the proper value for them. Where root. It had a rounded off and value that meant that there was errors that met many of the calculations so I did we didn't know that but anyway I did use the i.b.m. I used my slide rule I took my slide rule I had confidence in the slide rule I had a very very expensive slide rule and I used it I made all the calculations I was the one who my job before this happened I was the one who measured the error at that gyroscopes the sink could screw. And I work hard in the in there and I actually work so hard that I got a couple of times that I I did not use the air filtration proper way I got exposed to brew you. Can be that that's what we make the gyroscopes. Really of metal and now every now and then when I do the duped or it comes up through and toxicity of my lungs I still have that you know I try to work on it you have to go shopping maybe but actually I don't think there's probably another 2 or 3 people in the world that have been really good judges of the things so we work on it and then basically we have these hours at it came down to the end and they were coming into the atmosphere and they had to turn on the gyro and in the movie Kevin Bacon turns and said Give me the numbers and the numbers had to come from us and we were the ones who we were in charge of the navigation so that was good These were called good boat settings we had to make the proper Gibbo set it 1st we had to charge the device on and lo and behold it worked there died and where was the stag and that we had to have a proper gibber setting we had to get the settings from the other gyroscope in the lunar landing by Jewel both of those to guide risk of have error I think bank made by man is perfect everything has a little bit of an error a little bit of an air so I measured that with my God I measured the error so I knew that what the. Gyroscope was telling me what is not correct because there was an error and that with the gyroscope the main gyroscope was telling me it was not correct because there was an error in it as I made the calculations. There was 2 other men there were brothers through of us the other 2 men could back up their sickness their corps and they worked and they worked and if we could not work together we have we worked it depended that's where I love metrical engineers are you know had to work with people so required together with my miscue they work independently and then define who came down we had to present you are going to the boss and the 1st guy says I think these are them and a 2nd guy says Well I think these are numbers and I told the boss I know I know these are the kind. That's that I checked it out the boss had to make a decision and the boss chose my numbers and hadn't chosen one of the other sets of numbers that would have died the good numbers were not correct my numbers were so correct that when they landed the target got up we were calculated it was the boat and normally the. Landing would be anywhere from 25 to 50 kilometers away so I would be somewhere but by 20 bios. Kirby Kirby by I was away and this case it was 50 meters away. It was about 2 football fields away. And I believe it was that way because when they opened the thing up in the system up they only had 10 minutes of oxygen in the. Battery when they were out in the action and they finally got there to put out the bolts and let them out they had 10 minutes of oxygen and had they been had they been even 5 kilometers away it probably would dive would have the oxygen. Good harp artist already so I thought I was and I was the guy I was with me and the guy put me where you know to help and that these put me in a lot of places and a lot of things and I think that was just one of. Them who are sat there most of which he says well then we went back with a power 385860. Then you know and that was easy we got there about the problem with the public 13 turned out to be 'd. A particle from space that had to get where there was a screw that was not tight but actually we could get to the moon we had the ability but then I was sad but the change in politics eccentric said I was setting the mood became you know got off the list and mankind decided that they wanted to spend their money making atomic bombs rather than going to the moon. There is better and better than them I don't why not but we're not going to get to Mars without of the intermediate base the mark Mars is my Mars is Ok but c. Minus does not have the protection that the moon does the moon has a built in protection built. Major cities on the back of the moon eventually that could be draggin underground or shielded from meteorites except. To use there we could build these things so that swab meteors could be you know worked with in a combat deep enough we could be protected from big meteorites we would have that's a gravity for people to do I rush Rademacher 'd said manufacturing this last factor . And but it was taking off from the moon into space took it took the lunar man big module and there's been about. Died of those who 'd are that big 5 yours that have landed on the moon and took off and the good are banding modules which are about the size of what's ragged and only needed a small engine to take off and separate from the moon's gravity so if we're going to go to Mars we really need a internee to base for years there's something wrong we could put somebody into not going to work but real quick you're so caught up because to get a root of the Earth's gravity takes massive amounts of money it takes massive amounts of money to a state person happening it takes very little money to get to you Gabby is higher. Than Spencer said oh yeah well I was alive for their way of. The moon is about 225000 miles. You know so figure that out of that 225000 miles away and it was basically whether the 3 to 4 day journey you know from where the Apollo people are now Myers Mars is well over 2000000 miles away Kyra not exactly sure about that but I do know that to get to Mars would take about a 3 year trip off the return to somewhere between 2 and 3 years to get the bars and then the problem but that is a little container if we had one of these if I was spacecraft where they couldn't even stand up. And you got to be there for 2 years that's ridiculous. So we went to Myers it pretty much to the moon and Bill basis and yes I mean with raw materials there's iron ore words etc and then you know we could go into the asteroid belt and get it all the battle that we need that we could build manufacturing places on the on the backside of the mood would be shielded and then that would give us a launching place to the entire sources and why don't we go there but this seems to be maybe that there's some evil eons over there that you want to focus. On That's to read your good. Sense of success. Well we lost that they lost our. I wrote you know projects we got a government project to make bombs so they wanted me to make weapons Well I didn't want to make weapons where the 1st thing they did was they put me on the main battle tank to make the laser detector I designed a laser detector so that you would know if somebody was aiming a laser at you you know the guy was with them those are detecting you know that you know the little red dot you know where somebody aimed back at your tank you would know you could turn to your friend if they could buy the book that somebody is targeting you but you would know and then after that after that they want me to work on the bombs aspired bombs and they could have growth it was Kennedy by then and. Then basically I said No I didn't want to do that so that's when I went off and I went to the University of Wisconsin I studied oceanography 'd and then I got hit man playing football and. I did go back down prospects memory 3 'd days went back to Iowa. I go into 'd 'd you know the psychology of that medicine. Went to the university the northern eastern Ohio University the O'Connor in medicine and just you know became me and that's when my son was born and then I found out that all of the synthetic drugs are sort of that I guess I am and they needed to have some changes there I probably grew up with the current the Krauts that Dr Byers pharmacology class. Got up and said was a 2 year is a sin that take anything as an insult to the body this is absolutely undeniable a synthetic anything is not the same as the natural the only way you can get the patent is to go in and prove it's not the same you want to get a patent on a synthetic You have to go into the 'd 'd opposite saying Look 1st prove my stuff is not natural I obeyed it let me give you a pat. On the way so he said a synthetic anything is an insult to the body everybody had to know that there was a 1st question on the final exam and he said now we're going to spend the rest of the semester learning how to insult the body because everything about modern medicine today is all about sin at a drug and I started to learn more about medicine that big food. And that there's a magic and that in the qualities of nature there was a magic bigger than natural medicines are safer and more effective but they don't make the money that the patented synthetic patented medicines do and that's what stumble me into this work and I got into because I was allowed to put you or I got it to work on. Electrical projects if you keep enough x. Of them to ski. He took to order all the other work that we do. But. I mean about the right thing in our testing we're testing it now and it just it's a it's a complex thing because we're going to be able to do. But there's a lot of new things but the beleaguered thing but testing now we're going to be able to make in real time scan of the patient and find out which truck route is 'd most active now. Which acupuncture Meridian and his most active No. Emotion is most active now we're going to be able to check the emotions and the physical system the astral system or the spiritual system so we're going to be able to then a buck up and we're going to see what emotion state this person is in or what cha could their act their activating or read acupuncture Meridia we're going to be able to see me in virtually real time with. The person who is emotionally and but the chalk or an active bunch could be very exciting actually testing it out is very very a lot of fun. Wow sounds like they've got. Them behind our system and I think wanting to give people an idea of how amazing this device is and who built there than some of the background of this human being that obviously got it sent here to give us a hand understand natural medicine a better way of doing things and I hope the students know the listeners know that there's a lobby archive too if somebody wants to read let's into that Dave and. You guys carry on with your rest of your half hour or if you want to ask me something well we already had but we want to hold us over if we can Dr Bill Cunningham from white heeling dot com Now this was your friend and what was his name I forgot Go ahead tell us about him again the gentleman we just heard. Dr Bell now can it wasn't the original name and change that name when he lived in Budapest the f.d.a. Was after him over here for all kinds of crap as you know and so he lives in Budapest now but again this is when he was living in America he was born in Ohio a car but living in Budapest at the time enjoying life and continuing to innovate now by the way at the 1st of the year I just put in my order Dave and Steve for the newest version of the a Dr got a new one coming out 1st of the year my son is a going to provide that to me because that's where we get them from. Amazing human being and while his dad told me one time when I was visiting with him here in Denver he came out to visit when we were here I worked with him for 3 years in the early ninety's and dad told me they took him to the Standard been a i.q. Office when he was 8 years old he was off the charts took him back at 12 he was still off the charts and as you could hear some of the stories he told there about how he was selected out of thousands of different people to do the. Lives you've got to write. Down was pretty nice to show that nah next week we're going to continue another interview with him about artificial intelligence Dr Akhter field try narry logic and how that works in our system to provide a more fun take a deeper look at The Body Electric and human beings health issues but that's going to be a fun one to amazing stuff you know and Dr Bill Nelson of course in the story is I mean if you watch the movie Apollo 13 you know exactly what happened there I mean he's describing he was the guy that was figuring with his Clyde rule there were all these competing to try to come up with the right formula for the gamble you know which was the the formula for the gyro guidance that they had used I want to get into that to much people have to play that back is quite the back end of that story that maybe a lot of us didn't know but he was a man who actually put together the you ducked door concept isn't that correct Dr Bill. Yes well what he told me to it which wasn't part of this interview but if you look at the movie Apollo 13 there's a part in it where Ed Harris and Tom Hanks were having a discussion well they were testing Tom Hanks on this big huge computer doing some kind of bio feedback system and here is comes up and says hey one of your buddies may not be going on the space flight because there's a probability we tested him on the same thing you're on right now and there's a probability you might get measles Well Bill now I know that too and if not how does this work what we heard from our innovator personally was that the Russians were actually assisting the Americans in doing the subspace work checking on the astronauts not on not only on Earth but when they were up in space as to how their health was so that definitely is a native and that's why we can still do long distance sessions which we heard about in some of the interviews I did a half hour again because of hang on and into line meant all things are connected in the universe we can actually do accurate frighteningly accurate sessions on people places animals etc through this other technique that's how we got into some of the very fascinating how it's amazing stuff because I've been through the you doctor you know I've had the had them test me out over there Dr Bill drugs too it's an interesting process it's not painful or anything like that but and it's just as you go through to look at all these different out applications of your body how it communicates with itself I mean it's like if there's Internet of your body that is telling the body what's going on and then you could adjust it and bring it like it's better than balancing your electrolytes it takes all the stressed out and I noticed it coming home to Chicago I really feel good I've almost like going home and taking a nap but anyway I liked what he said he says he said static isn't in. Salt to the body and this was what you noted. But you know it really felt that they gave at Diane in that it yeah a synthetic. And it's already a really really fun to do and we're going to carry on I've got them ideas for the new We're going to take a little break here in January get them ideas worked out but I had a couple ideas I mentioned to Joe yesterday and gave them about not having some kind of a program called a quantum help our writer the quantum help monthly coming like that where I can tell kip in a few of the practical ideas the core for people just like last week when we again urging people to call progression Diane and get that role to the comic shop like that very easy to work with if there's larger issues you know get your body in here and get on your doctor device. You know that important on their shoulder and warriors for the Lord if we're dragging the body around no good nobody's going to be relatively calm not doesn't help Boston doesn't make you feel good or you get grumpy and it doesn't give you the the joy of the Lord to try to serve with a body that needs to be fixed up and we all know that ladies and gentleman and I mean I'm excited about a white dove healing dot com White Dove healing dot com is where you'll find Dr Bill Cunningham who is our guest today and of course she's going to be back and I like the idea of doing these programs to be honest with you because I think we can actually put together some stuff a little bit more conscientiously as we plan and put together a show like that I really like that after the new year will want to look into it but how did people get ahold of you to find out about some of these things and and I've been there and I've been taking my my supplements by the way I'm almost done with everything that I have that you know I got back then and I have been feeling good all that time and most of you don't know I was you kind of a trauma for a little bit there it scared everybody it wasn't that big of a deal as it turned out but I've been doing very well since since that time and improving actually so how did people get ahold of you Dr Bill so if they want to find out about this technology and he's got all kinds of all these things or are natural supplements and ways to help maintain your health how do they find out about that. Oh good well the remaining issue for local people Dave and Steve is 303-828-4439 that's our local toll bring our number to toll free number is. 180-989-9342 probably the best way to get an overview of what we're doing here is get on the Web site w w w dot whitebelt healing dot com You'll see pictures of me address your Diana our mascot Calley there calico cat who is our conductor stress reducer and then there's pictures of the abductor there's a story about it and how it works really nice website might some Jake help me put that together it's quite nice but again personal calls to me about your personal issue is another nice way of connecting with the post and all the time you need you can come in and get a demo of it whatever you want to do to make yourself comfortable and I think today giving people an idea of you know the brains behind something I think gives them a lot of confidence in our next week we're going to get deeper into it as to how the adopter work with the Quantic nature of the human being and why a triune or a logic system or artificial intelligence used properly can really help get more information from the Body Electric called cell so are we going to go and look at that lecture from Bill Nelson next week on next Friday show. Oh yeah and again my time Jake got it all got it and you know Senator Jason in the next couple days good good and it'll be about 20 minutes I told 1008 and if he thinks out for me though they were around 20 minutes so we have you know that happy hour or if you want me to stay on you guys you're welcome to keep me sure well we'll try to keep you in of course we'd love to take questions and answers from the from listeners out there we have them of course and this is amazing technology ladies and gentlemen it is really designed right there in NASA to begin with and but we're developing it more and more I mean this is how long it's been a development has taken place is now available through White Dove heeling dot com. You can actually see some of the things that are going on in your body this stresses that you couldn't actually pick up on and it's an amazing technology we're going to be looking into this in depth and maybe I'd like to see a spit out a video or something like that if we can of it that would really be good I think but in the meantime I think we have a big you might. Film various clips of me over the years. But did going back through and giving a little are competent to people about that now in October of 1989 we were finally able to register the earth and they were going to run a time Dr Bill Cunningham white dove healing dot com lives in Johnny Knoxville right to hold on to next week Steve to write back. Get your business notice and advertise on the new k.h. And see we are one of the lowest rates in the industry and blanket Northern Colorado we also stretch out to Nebraska and Wyoming call 970-587-5003 or go to 1360 k. H. And c dot com Let's work together and make you and your business painless it pays to advertise on the new k.h. And see the ruler of the Rockies. How would you like to get a free i.r.s. To duction possibly saving hundreds of dollars on your taxes and do something good if you've got an old car you can donate it to help veterans it's a pain to try and sell a car yourself so pick up your phone and make a free call to veteran car donations they'll come and get your vehicle within a few days for free and give you a receipt to use for your tax refund of course check with your accountant for details now is the perfect opportunity to help veterans and get rid of an old car veteran car donations will come and get it for free we only ask for 2 minutes of your time right now on the phone to get the whole process started so please help the vets and make this free Call now 802-233-8318 extension 00 True true 338-318-0223 extension 3831 that's 802233831. Adopt us kids present What to Expect When You're Expecting a teenager learning the lingo jelly jelly as you do that Jodi is a shorter better way to say jealous as in Chloe I am like so jelly of your unicorn phone case you don't have to speak team to be a perfect parent thousands of teens in foster care will love you just the same adopt us kids dot org brought to you by the u.s. Department of Health and Human Services adopt us kids and the Ad Council. We are back right here on open form 3060 Cajun c. And Dr Bill was just starting to talk about something before we run out of time but we will have him back and we'll continue with that next week I believe we may have a little time off in January I'm not sure how our schedule is going to go but the only way you're really going to find out about this is just visit the Web site w w w white dove healing dot com Dave White Dove healing dot com And that's that's the way to really get in touch with what's going on there he's got all kinds of supplements and treatments these things are are there liquid based in most cases very easily absorbed is not like pills and in all that and I would look into that and you can call in there the phone numbers are there if you're listening on the part cast you can call in with a toll free number and then he has the 3 or 3 number right here in the Colorado Denver area 303-828-4329 I think is a if I wrote that down correctly I believe I did but what you need to do really just go to the website and that's we're going to start to see the most of everything that's going on so Dave you know how are you doing man I mean you're in Arkansas so you can visit wiped of healing and I hope you do yeah I will. I might have to check into that whole remote thing there because that's fascinating I kind of in Kuwait go with the 2 that that interview was very very interesting I spent some time out with the audio last cleaning it up and trying to get her to fit everything in the best we could and I'm glad I did you know because you know it was one of those things that there was a very engaging interview and a cow lost myself in that kind of a story going through with a fine tooth comb prying to clean the audio up and make sure it sound as good as we possibly could I can't like doing that kind of stuff yet again but you know I got a guy he's going to get that you ducked or training eventually can tell me he's going to be doing diagnose. Via the Internet and things like that because I don't know I'm just kidding but there are people that are trained for that as interest and well we'll get back into it but you know we really have to get on the show and the thing is we are in as most people know historical times historical times panel in Peru a panel approves impeachment articles and since charges for the House vote we know that now. Here we are Friday the 13th it was hollowing when they started this process it is described like kind of comic do you think this is rewritten scripted What do you think Dave I mean it really does feel scripted because we pretty both knew what the outcome was going to be let's all going to be down party lines like it is always and so we're having our time wasted with all of this you know there's going to be you making a big gigantic show of it there distracting us from something bigger and it really makes me wonder what the heck that actually is you know they really are distracting Laysan gentleman you know there are problems here of course that we know that have taken place for a long time with the government with the Federal Reserve You've been listening to our financial reports. There are issues there are serious issues there are health issues there are issues with the media and you know I've said this before I believe the media is a party to terrorizing the American public I mean this is not what gone right that's exactly what's going on because you have to look at who is trying to spread the fear the most Be afraid be very afraid there's a terrorist under every rock you are all criminals you all have your colon house could be at the airport before you're allowed to fly and they never have really caught any terrorist they've got made to save the day for they're not doing anything about the guns or the violence or anything like that they're just trying to fan it up so it's some point they're going to be able to come to take all the guns away as they clamp down more because they're more and more fraid of a revolt a revolution an insurrection you know we had Jack Decker on talking about all the war games that they were doing war gaming this whole thing and in the simulations every single time the Patriots end up winning and that should give everybody a little bit of hope but it's going to be a messy time we're not going to disk it at that point the snap of the finger and fortunately but righteousness will win in the end yeah absolutely. Yeah this is we have to go ahead and we are going to hold on to all of this and stay true and try to walk out because one of the things that they want to do is freak out and start running around just randomly doing stuff breaking China you know for no good reason that's what the why it's wrong but that's why the pride of the mouth and all that racial violence up with the Trayvon Martin shooting and all the stuff in Ferguson and everything else and to the question of the American people I think we all want to avoid this stuff so much that there is an air of patients amongst the people and this is a good thing because we do need to be patient because one of the things I think and a lot of folks are not agreeing on me with this one that if we hold on long enough this economic empire of fraud and Fiacha will eventually collapse and since their power is all based on that their power will also collapse right yeah it's it's going to be a dilemma here of course and you know this is one of those few events in American history we've had basically 3 impeachment that progressed to this point. I believe the 1st 2 presidents should he wrote Democrats by the way should have been impeached should have talked with Rick Rodriguez on the show yesterday and he had Ralph Epperson on he's going to have him back I don't know when and I told Rick I said we were laughing I said Rick you know if you don't get Ralph back on we're going to steal him away and get him on our show so I think Rick old yeah it was a great show realize there's a lot to that whole Jesse James story and it's had I've heard some stuff you know from some people I can't really talk it's not like it was the top secret thing but you know apparently there is an undiscovered momentous gigantic huge treasure that has yet to be uncovered from all of that show up in the you know the station Magnavox of place the Book of Secrets. You know the last dungeon and the Code Man and all that all that stuff that there's something to that you know there's something they are right and whether or not you know people eventually find that there definitely was a whole lot of. I don't know we existed I got sidetracked. When I was measured from the control room it still looks then point of fact well with the still alive it is probably going to be in the building for we get done talking probably will you know we've got a lot of shows a lot of things going on you know we're Kanjorski all here and there just whistlin around and we're you know we're putting things together lation gentleman this is the nuke agency the roar of the Rockies Dave. Oh yeah i do we have it right on cue man so we've got a new cue people should get the one from you know the what was it the Chronicles of Narnia The member the one where I was wrong really were I was some sort of a digital sound that was yeah yeah that's right let's look at look for that but anyway well you'll have to see about that I mean it's hard enough to keep in this one but I mean I think go through a lot of meat suggests Yeah. Well there's our 1st break are at least in this part of the show we'll be back for a few more minutes here starting now it's very important information maybe because Paulson got to go from there stay with us on 360 k.p.h. In see the roar of the Rockies. Did you hear that that's the sound of money blowing out your walls an attic no matter how new or well built or houses everyone pays for utilities car best way insulation at 303-469-0808 or online at best way insolation dot com and keep your cash in your wallet where it belongs. Millions of people today have no dental insurance if you're without insurance do you have a plan to care for your teeth without spending a fortune introducing dental plans dot com How would you like to save 10 percent off your next dental visit for as little as $7.00 a month we offer trusted dental savings plans from companies like Cigna and Aetna with us 30 day money back guarantee be a part of the $1000000.00 plus happy smiles service since 1999 that save money when they visit the dentist you can save on cleaning dentures braces x. Rays fillings crowns root canals and even teeth whitening 86252471 now to start saving immediately mention promo code radio to receive 15 percent off any plan and for a limited time one month free 86252471 that's 865-2471 he's dealing with a $1.00 process be. Able to market. This is James Morgan with Grisham and associates l.l.c. Buying or selling real estate call me at 720-203-0731 or visit my website that Colorado properties dot online or office says more than 3 decades of real estate experience and we will treat you like family call us today for all your real estate needs at 720-203-0731 keep listening to Cajun see 1360 they have much to do with your family your flowers have those friends I don't know but. Some answers can only be found in nature discover the on search visit discover the forest or to find a trail near you brought to you by the United States for service and the acts. If you. Didn't. Want to. Thank. You we are living on the edge too and you know these are the edgy moments Dave and . This program called Open farm right here on 1360 k. Agency dot com is a we're going to be open for some comments and maybe people do want to weigh in on some of these issues are all lost in frustration our of our wars their point of view what do you think Dave I mean are i should we expect to hear from people or should we just go on because I've got a lot to say in the next hour but we're we're going to wrap up this 1st hour pretty quick and go to the news break and then come back and this is a time where you can vent your spleen keep it clean but vent your spleen and that's what we do on this show and I think we should hear from it the listeners out there we've got our do we want to use our troll free or just call the regular number today and say we use the troll free it works pretty good for Dr Bill that number is 877-488-1360 the 13th 60 That's the station you're on a young 1360 right and you can do a complete turnaround with us we'll give you a 1360 here you know we're just showing you all around and puts you back right where you came from and you'll see it from a whole perspective right now how we do it day via. Concord like Yeah so yeah you want to get a rounded view here you want to hear everything and we were going to cover it you know it's pretty interesting it really is and how this is going to. You know all through the Christmas season they're going to be arguing this nonsense which never should have gotten this far if ya can't get one of the rooms to you it's fool's errand that's what we've grown to expect this more of the same there's really very little substance behind that they're really good about saying very many words in mean very little and I'm really getting sick of all of that and it's all very carefully crafted to you know put a spin on it and it always goes down party lines and as we were talking about that that clip meant man support saying this could be a bipartisan think nappy yeah right I've seen the in the bipartisan stuff the only bipartisan stuff that we see from this system is stuff we definitely do not want like the Patriot Act and write out start right I was all bipartisan we're all on board with that old bank bailout so we're all on board for that I you know they're always on board you know both sides of the same monster because you look at the right and you look at the left the Democrat the Republican the liberal and the conservative it's 2 sides of the same to on a monster. Don't be fooled everybody it's the same monster brought in paid for by the same money that to tell you all you need to know about this yeah you would think that there would be some more objections to what's been taking place in terms of the time in interest in the us and what just exactly what they're doing with the American public's mind and playing around with these games all this time this is not a look at the Democrats shut down the government for 35 days or record over the wall issue because they don't want to wall because except what they didn't shut down the stuff that's really dangerous and deadly They only shut down with the few things that we actually get a benefit from it was like we were being punished you know they were definitely trying to punish us and then they they extended this Mueller which on Robert Miller is somebody people ought to look at very very closely this man he can reminds me of Satan in before the throne of God bring a really bringing up accusations Isn't it amazing that what you see happening on Earth mirrors what happens in the heaven these Satan comes before the throne bringing up accusations that's what he does and every time he does. He hears in that the Lord clearing his throat yeah I mean this is what's going on ladies and gentlemen get back with you on the form state to be right back after. 36 to vote for. Such. Hi My name is literally my mom and dad used to fight about money all the time then one day I heard them talking about this guy some uncle I never knew called Uncle wow they say this Uncle Sam guy wanted them to pay him like a gazillion dollars and they didn't have a gazillion dollars so they called me to be heard on the radio called the Tax doctors in the tax doctor worked with Uncle Sam's people I think they're called the I r act and they're able to work it out so my mom and dad didn't have to pay Uncle Sam very much money at all so now mom and dad are happy and I'm happy to thank tax doctor if you owe $10000.00 or more to the i.r.s. Or state and pay less $191.00. 1091. 109. When shopping it in for Store dot com enter problem code k h N's the get a discount for you and a kickback for 1360 k. Agency Zenit Rocky Mountain News Network on Kristen the Colorado Department of Transportation is urging drivers to exercise extreme caution if they have to be driving through the mountains this weekend snow packed in icy conditions already in place and chains and traction laws are in effect if you do have to be out and traveling Be sure you have an emergency kit in your car with food water blankets and anything else you may need if you were to become stranded due to conditions or road closure Republicans in southeastern Colorado have set a date for a vacancy committee to meet about replacing a late state representative Kimmie Lewis she passed away recently following a battle with cancer and serve the state's largest district that covers 9 counties the vacancy committee will convene at noon on December 28th that should allow them to have a new congressperson in place by the time the legislature be convenes on January 8th. An Aurora police officer is going to keep his job after he was found drunk behind the wheel of his patrol car on duty and armed with a gun we told you Wednesday about officer gave the Meyer the 48 year old was demoted and had to dig a little on badly drawn but he's still not going to be criminally charged like you would be a lawyer was known by at least 2 citizens who called 911 back in March about his squad car sitting in the middle of a row or is the avenue with Meyer passed out the engine running and his foot on the brake while he's armed with his gun it was in the reports as officers who broke a window to get where I was mailed out all in the car and on his breath but because they didn't see any containers in the vehicle they treated the case as an emergency medical situation where your blood alcohol level tested at about 0.45 more than Or times the legal limit this is a regular person to jail I'm Jim Williams according to a report released by the Colorado attorney general's office deaths related to domestic violence went up last year in 201843 people across Colorado died as a result of domestic violence incidents the youngest was 3 years old and the oldest was 64 I'm Christian. Experience the most unforgettable Christmas exuberant Rocky's presented by Pepsi Nov 22nd through January 5th the newest will be transformed into a how in Wonderland featuring magnificent decor and advanced including ice 2000000 pounds of ice sculptures and slides featuring good off the red nosed reindeer searching holiday and exclusive in the around theatrical experience ice bumper cars ice to be proud of how we shall eat breakfast and more start planning just how to get away today visit Jaybird Rocky's Christmas dot com being in the Army National Guard is about more than serving your country it's about being there for your community when your neighbors need you know the Army National Guard makes college affordable and serving part time can help you graduate debt free do you want to stay close to friends and family the guard allows you to serve close to home serving part time in the Army National Guard lets you have the life you want learn more by visiting National Guard dot com sponsored by the Colorado Army National Guard by the car.

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BBC World Service-20191204-080000

And. As welcome this move we will speak to an activist outside of China also the murder in Berlin that might have echoes of the sec a script case here in the u.k. Do the links point to Russian intelligence involvement Well I've been in South Korea after another celebrity death in the world of k. Pop that's the 3rd in 2 months and we've got the sports headlines with Matthew Kenyon and the business as well coming up here on news day after the latest. B.b.c. News Hello I'm Gerri Smit China has reacted furiously after the u.s. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at countering the detention of an estimated 1000000 Muslims in the western Chinese region ocean junk the bill still requires Senate and presidential approval the Republican Congressman Chris Smith denounce the treatment of the week is the size and scale of what is happening inching Jang is what dash easily repressed even by Chinese low standards the mass of German to millions of people on a scale that has not been seen since the Holocaust children ripped from the warm embrace of their families to be in Dr unaided income as idiology and forced to renounce their religious culture and language the NATO secretary general says the alliance is facing new challenges on its 70th anniversary among them the rise of China today's meeting has been pared down to 3 hours of arriving at the venue the NATO secretary general u.n. Stoltenberg told journalists what was on the agenda. Expect. I believe this to address a wide range of issues when they meet here later on today. The fight against terrorism on screen for all our relationship with Russia and for the 1st time in NATO says St also sit down with NATO leaders aren't address the rights of a child on the head of a Japanese aid agency in Afghanistan has been shot dead in eastern Afghanistan Dr Ted sooner Camorra was the head of peace Japan medical services succumb to come on reports Dr Ted to Mecca more had worked for years in eastern Afghanistan the NGO he headed peace departed medical services focused on improving irrigation in the country earlier this year he was granted or re citizenship of Afghanistan in recognition of his services according to officials government targeted his car this morning was he was on his way to visit a project 5 other Afghan members of his team were also killed Dr Neka Moore was initially taken to hospital for treatment but a spokesman for the governor of the whole province said he later died as a result of his injuries a new study says the growth in global c o 2 emissions has slowed this year largely because of an unexpected drop in the use of coal but the drop is offset by the strong growth in other fuels Professor Robert Jackson chairs the Global Carbon Project coal use is dropping quickly in the United States and in Europe coal use here and and there in the e.u. Dropped 10 percent this year which is quite remarkable and has dropped substantially over the last decade or so that's really the one part of fuel that has been declining natural gas use surging and all use Mark to steadily upwards world news from the b.b.c. . Australia has repeal the law which gave doctors the rights to a very courageous solemn seekers from offshore detention centers for medical treatment the medivac law was passed by opposition and independent lawmakers in February but the Prime Minister's got Morrison argued the deposed a threat to national security and has now won a vote to scrap it United Nations aid agencies are asking for a record $29000000000.00 to fund humanitarian operations next year launching the appeal in Geneva the un says the globally one person in 45 needs lifesaving help with food shelter or medical care it says more extreme weather events are adding to the misery caused by war. Rugby Union North orators in Australia and the former international Israel Folau have raised a confidential settlement in their legal dispute over his sacking for remarks denigrating gay people Saima reports from Sydney Israel Folau a conservative Christian argued that the terminations of his contract was a case of religious discrimination in a joint statement both Rugby Australia and Mr follow announced they've reached a settlement but have not revealed how much he's being paid in the statements the former rugby star said he had not intended to harm or offend people Mr fall out was sacked for saying Hell Awaits gay people after previously being warned over his social media comments both the post and his sacking sparked anger and a national debate about freedom of speech and discrimination scientists say people as young as 25 should have their cholesterol levels checked to help protect against the risk of heart attacks or strokes later in life a study tracked almost 400000 people from 19 countries over 40 years it showed a clear link between high cholesterol levels in young people and their eventual risk of having heart attacks or strokes the research was published in The Lancet medical journal b.b.c. News. Thanks for the latest welcome Lawrence really of the next half hour we're going to be talking about the murder in the heart of Berlin and the tear gas that has the potential of producing a major diplomatic rift between Russia and Germany we'll hear about that investigation another tragedy in the world of capons as well we have sport we have the business and a fantastic story from one of the neighborhoods in the Senate police Capitol dock are supposed to be turned itself into an open gallery we put pictures online as well this video of a house is painted we end up well we go speak to one of the people behind the project what's called the open sky museum All that coming up here on News Day. We're going to start in the u.s. Though there's rarely bipartisan agreement amongst politicians these days but the House of Representatives has passed a bill by $407.00 to $1.00 to counter what it calls the arbitrary detention torture and harassment of we the Muslims in China is still has to pass the Senate and get President Trump's approval but if it does eventually become law it would mark the most significant international attempt to pressurise China over its mass detention of weakness and other Muslim minorities inching Shann mandate the Us administration to identify and sanction the officials responsible is the Democratic speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi we are sending a message to Beijing America's watching and we will not stand silent this legislation helps uncover the truth require reports by the. Director of National Intelligence the State Department the depths of the crisis and about China's campaign about journalists exposing the facts it creates accountability ensuring transparency of Chinese and foreign companies involved in the camp that well China has responded furiously accusing the us of hypocrisy and interference in Chinese affair. As over what authorities there insist is a benign training program to help combat the risk of terrorism for more I spoke earlier to Jonathan Pollack from the Center for East Asia policy studies at Brookings in the u.s. Of again by asking him if he was surprised by the way to support for the bill in the house not particularly these days China seems to be the all purpose we're going boy for any number of a questions that you know that Congress members of Congress and the Senate seem to feel I don't trivialize the issues here in terms of particular in terms of what's happening in sin John but sanctions resolutions like this are kind of a feel good it's the kind of thing that people on both sides of the aisle can do they don't have any immediately or discernible effect on Chinese actions but it is an effort to try to impose some costs in China even as China and return will try to impose some costs on the United States and this is exactly what the one the one that stood against this most and Thomas Massey The Republican says and he's tweeted in the last few hours to say this was the purpose of tonight's bill to see the consumers conscience so that everyone can buy Chinese goods with no fear of the moral incumbrances broadcast on the news he's basically saying we will business as usual but it makes us feel better by voting against what they're doing there Well perhaps so on the other hand this all of these tensions related to sin Junge And of course to come at a time where the u.s. And China are still trying to see if a trade deal of some sort can be negotiated a President Trump of course just indicated that he thinks probably it's better to defer this into into the new year although president trying to change is what he says about trade understanding's all the time but it does. Highlight for me highlight for all of us how this increasing separation and politicization of relations between the United States and China undermines the basis for understanding so that in theory at least could be achieved as both countries both systems seem increasingly to be going their separate ways almost as if there is no particular cause to be to be paid for that I think that that's a big miscalculation on both sides but we see how both countries feel the need to defend their interests regardless of the consequences it's it's a very unhealthy development and it remains to be seen how this will all sort out over time and to get into the nitty gritty of this we had Nancy Pelosi say it creates accountability this bill inserting transparency of Tiny's and foreign companies involved in the 10th so is see then saying in that statement we'll be looking to see those foreign companies and you know to to make them accounts a bubble but who's exactly is she talking about she's talking about companies where it is believed that they may be selling certain kinds of technologies to China that help assist China and its efforts said incarceration of the weaker minority as well as other Muslim minorities in other and other nearby like locations but you know frankly I'm not altogether sure whether these allegations are proven if they are it may be that China will find other ways to supply these relevant to acquire these relevant surveillance technologies either through their indigenous efforts or or otherwise but you know I don't think it's going to impose a major cost on these foreign firms. It does however in some sense try to highlight that they are under scrutiny for particular kinds of sales and transactions so it's really a question then of whether or not they're trying to use have are other sources that they can rely upon to to acquire them it's also related frankly very very much where they're trying to seize this process the incarceration is something that is going to be open ended in soon John or whether it's something that they presumably will over time diminish Jonathan Pollard there from the Center for East Asia policy studies at Brookings in the u.s. . Right enemy of Russia falls dead abroad bit of a scandal in Germany a murder case in the capital burly in which goes back to August and involves an asylum seeker who was shot in the Central Park in Berlin the famous to a garden at point blank and in broad daylight by an assassin apparently riding a bicycle now the man involved was. That kind who was a Chechen who had fought the Russians in the brutal civil wars there in the case was initially dealt with by the authorities in Berlin but now federal prosecutors have taken over and this is a major change and we're going to hear why now with Frank Young some reporter for dead tag a. Newspaper in Germany Frank very warm welcome to the program that's the bare outline of what happened why have federal prosecutors suddenly stepped into what was a local crime yes hello to the federal prosecutor and our that. The man was captured from Florida in August here and said his name or Zarar when he was captured. When he was detained in August his name in the past was about him Zocalo of age 49 and that is wrong and the found out that. The so-called Sokol of had already committed a crime a murder into 2013 in Moscow the same style as in Berlin he came with a bicycle shot the victim 2 times in the head and at that time in 2013 the name was Victor sorry about him because he called. So and also the prosecutor found out that. The spot of the so called Circle of poison you and they say now. If a man who had committed murder in 2013 and the Russians at that time they searched for him and then when he has got a new hospital and then is evident that Russian authorities helped him and that they have hired him to commit a murder in Berlin and in terms of motive obviously we you know we don't know we can only speculate what the most is the idea of enemies of Russia being a danger abroad just explain how he fits with the victim in this case his background what he was known for. The victims selling come Congress really was a man from Georgia originally a Chechen and yes for the 2nd Chechen war against Russia he was one of the rebels and he was. A friend of ours and how tough that time was president of the Chechen rebels and later on really can. Telling can Congress really. Cooperated with Georgian. Drawn on story cheese and also. It was said that he cooperated with the CIA Rice Ok so possibly in a sort of an interesting and important man I mean we've got to say that the Kremlin via their spokesman Richard Pascoe also categorically reject any connection between or in the nation state Ok that's fine but in terms of how this could escalate as an incident in terms of relations between Germany and Russia or explain how this could be quite serious yet. It remembers to the case of scripture reading in England and at that time in and throughout. This morning. Frenchie different from the Russian embassy and I think. Countries did as well Germany also Germany as well I think that may have been our. Case in Berlin because already a. Cheery expression of. The Christian Democratic Union that's a part of Chancellor America is said to me we have to think about u.s. Sanctions against Russia right Many many thanks indeed the implications there of that case the murder in the garden in central Berlin in August that was Frank Young some reporter for the Tigris below a newspaper based in Berlin these day for the b.b.c. World Service coming out going to be talking about the 3rd young Korean star to die in the space of just a couple of months South Korean. Found dead at his home in Seoul taking a look at that story other headlines today China has reacted furiously after the u.s. House of Representatives passed a bill demanding sanctions over the mass incarceration a week the Muslims in sing sang and rugby Australia and the former international star Israel Folau have reached a confidential settlement over his sacking Matthews here with multiples and he's almost as well presumably Well we talked about that a couple of hours ago didn't wear Yeah he was claiming religious discrimination after he was sacked over his derogatory comments about gay people but they have now come to a deal they both say they're not saying anymore what we specifically don't know is how much money he has got elsewhere Manchester City back in 2nd place in the English Premier League for a while anyway after their 41 win over Burnley last night a welcome return to form for Pep Guardiola his team 8 points behind Liverpool in the standings but Liverpool play Everton tonight and Leicester City who Manchester City replaced and 2nd on goal difference only are also playing later toppling tonight though probably goes to the return of shows a Marine year to Old Trafford Tottenham against Manchester United will look ahead in support tonight $930.00 g.m. . And rounded up for you tomorrow morning and could the Houston Rockets get the chance to replay at least part of their game against San Antonio Spurs which they eventually lost by 2 points after a double overtime the reason James Harden's dunk which wasn't spotted by the officials or they thought he'd missed it and that led to the Spurs coming back getting overtime going on to win the game and the rockets are very unhappy. Thank you very much indeed Matthew Kenyon with dunk news I like that story he actually did out for us earlier but he can't do it every every hour because that is not in a fiction battle a thing but it was fun and it works Philip Hampshire is here with the business and a remarkable moment for a big business founded 21 years ago by Larry and Sergey the 2 entrepreneurs who are now stepping away from their baby lots of paternal and familial metaphors being used to fill take a state especially by them which is a particularly interesting this is alphabet the company you might know as Google of course for those a little bit more than Google they've created a massive $800000000000.00 business group it contains Google You Tube Deep Mind loon away mo as well current president of Google is send a pic chai and he's going to step up from running the search engine to running alphabet the overall group with all of their deep space ideas space shot I think that's what they call the division that specializes on really out there right here's now the 2 men Larry Page and Sergey Brin who are going to be stepping down they say that they're proud parents of the business there will be offering advice and love but not daily nagging and that's one of the reasons they want to step away from it you asked me a little bit earlier why they're worth different amounts of money depends on which list you look at to get where they are so Gabriel 11th richest man the wealth of 4000000000 dollars each Larry Page night the richest man in the world $56000000.00 what did he do we lost $2000000000.00 well. Earlier on they had slightly different numbers of shares in the business and he simply sold more of his shares a little bit earlier to take his money off goes gone very nice holiday so you can do a lot of good holidays for $2000000000.00 anyway so the markets are looking at this they're a little bit sad that the 2 men are stepping away but they've known for some time that it was eventually going to come it's just a little bit of a surprise that it's now many thanks indeed Philip Hensher with the business going to South Korea now actor Taryn her husband found dead at his home in Seoul the later. Celebrity loss of life to rock the country's entertainment industry the 27 year old star's agency released a statement saying it was filled with grief and urged people not to speculate on the cause of death he is the 3rd young Korean starter dime the space of 2 months let's talk to them I kim a journalist based in Seoul welcome to News Day Let's find out a little bit more about char in Harvard in. China where he was an album coming out so he had a role in a t.v. Drama secretly being shown on a major t.v. Channel here last what acting talent agency is here has appeared in several major dramas in supporting roles so you could say he was well on his way to make a name for himself in the industry and what's worse new change is that like to see we said so besides Ok pop stars also began his career in cape up as a member of a cape and in his early twenty's you know it's too early we're being told to speculate about the cause of death but clearly this is cause for concern the 3rd young celebrity to die in just a couple of months to others silly and Goo horror found dead at their homes these other k. Pop star South Korea has one of the world's highest suicide rates so clearly people must be taking a long hard look at what is going wrong what are people saying. Yes you are completely right although. Economically not salty and in the world it is also hurting. Country. I think South Korea is either number one or number 2 depending on which who does the ranking in terms of the number of suicides we have on average 36 people committing suicide per day which means a verse $13000.00 people a year commit suicide so and the figures how much higher for those under the age of 40 so many people are Internet commentators and Buz. Everyone basically here is talking about what to do about the situation this is all chaff was any end up in coming and now not everyone here new. Or used test but this is causing everyone here in Korea to talk about the seriousness of the situation is there a feeling that this is something to do with the pressures of celebrity of constant exposure on social media or an expectation or as you say if the country as a whole has a high suicide rate of people under 40 there are kind of wider issues at stake here . I think you are bright and in linking the pressures of being a celebrity to other aspects as well so it's not just k. Pop stars you know objects constant pressure but it's people in general it seems that young people in South Korea. In general are incredibly happy with their lives so this is causing many experts as well as advocates Koreans to take a long hard look at what we're doing here what what what are we doing wrong to cause this situation here and there are thank you Tony is there a committal myspace and sell on the death of South Korean actor ta and how. About Let's take you to a flourishing international art scene the painted houses of the maid ina a poor working class neighborhood in Dakar in Senegal dozens of wall paintings dot the neighborhood bringing color to the cement walls plus the neighborhood has just welcome street artists from all over the world to practice their craft and what the founder of the project calls the open sky museum the founder is artist Mamadou boy the yellow and he told Newsday is Christe of Paul's a little bit more about the area. I'm not addicted to alone yeah i like we used to see houses in the colonial style dating from 1914 and houses from around 1935 but there are hardly any of them left probably only about 10 of them in this area we don't think it's a good thing to destroy all our heritage to turn them into floods so our movement is really to try and preserve this architecture which reminds us of our history our past so that's why we decided to work hard and create this open sky museum. At 1st it was artistic but now it's really touristy there are people who come from all over the world they come to paint to contribute to the Art tell us a little bit more but the artists who are now expressing themselves on the wards of . It's not only Senegalese artists I understand it's artists from all over the world. First I want to thank all the people who live in Medina and those who are in the houses and have allowed us to paint because at the beginning of this project they asked us for money to allow us to paint their wall but now it's the residents who come to us to ask us to paint the murals at the beginning we used to hold events 2 or 3 times a year to invite artists gradually other artists got involved some who were just passing through Dhaka over here on holiday they got to know about the museum through word of mouth and they painted the murals leaving their trademarks and they used their own pain and money they did this all on their own and froze that's really powerful. Tell us more about the reactions of the people in the in the neighborhood How did they react and respond to those paintings of a great variety you know of graffitti paintings descriptive pretty color there is a whole lot of things. Like. So because of the murals people coming film are documentaries or videos here and also this area is cool because the artists who come here to paint they will live with the people of Medina they stay here for 3 to 4 days when it's meal time they share this with the host families and when it's time to leave they exchange their contact numbers with and by staying here they also help the local economy painting is part of African culture because if you walk around Dhaka or in Senegal or in Africa you won't find a shop signs like in Europe here they're all. Paint it from the clothes shops to the head so we basically in love with paint isn't something that we've stolen from the west we've just tried to internationalize we take old houses we restore them we give them another life that's what matters to us to give them a 2nd chance to make them even more attractive that makes me happy of it just. Makes us happy as well we're looking at it there's a lovely video go and have a look at it if you can put together by one of our colleagues Janet will loads of photographs from Senegal from this particular area in Senegal made enough with the pictures on the walls that we want to use a colorful vibrant Yeah you've heard that sort of stuff but doesn't do it just it really doesn't and it's a lovely little slideshow with pictures there and they would get an award if there was Award for Favorite art on the program today we were talking about the Turner Prize all for artists who are nominated for a big art award here in the u.k. Said we're all going to accept it there's no when they said Great quote from 4 new men when he finally got his Oscar for The Color of Money in 1987 didn't sell out he said it's like chasing a beautiful woman for 80 years finally she relented you say I'm terribly sorry I'm a bit tired but it's a nice day. This is the b.b.c. World Service Now take a moment to listen to this commitment I think every one of them knew this was going to be an incredible achievement for humankind and determination we have to follow the fittings to understand that this fraud is what it would what feelings of unease I was not comfortable to go to the street because some people there were looking at me as if I might say no focus on our loss this building represented my life it meant everything to me the human experience the ballot has always been in the imagination of the Mexican people they came to hear the music but they experienced a whole other there is always in Richmond when 2 cultures come together documentaries on the b.b.c. World Service She looked down at 3 form and looked back up at me and mouthed the words to Moshe are off to listen go to b.b.c. World Service dot com slash documentaries. You're listening to the b.b.c. World Service I'm Ed Butler Today we're talking football and the controversial plans to stage some of Europe's top league games in the United States or even Asia could that really happen some wonder can't even be stopped with the global appetite for Europe's beautiful game growing inexorably we're hearing examples from other sports and business daily in a couple of the. B.b.c. News where dairy Smit China has reacted furiously after the u.s. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at countering the detention of an estimated 1000000 Muslims in the western region of shown young China's Foreign Ministry said the bill was defamatory and a serious violation of international law the Foreign Ministry in Beijing has also warned the China won't be rushed into a trade deal with Washington a government spokeswoman said China would take every legitimate measure to defend its interests. NATO secretary general says the alliance which is marking its 70th anniversary is facing new challenges among them the rapid rise of China speaking on the 2nd day of talks in Britain in Stoltenberg said only the United States now spend more on defense than China discussions will also focus on terrorism arms control and relations with Russia government have killed the head of a Japanese aid agency in Afghanistan and 5 other local aid workers officials in a hard province said Dr Ted so Nakamura initially survived the attack the died as he was rushed to hospital the identity of the gunman is not known families in summer that have not been vaccinated against measles have been asked to hang a red flag outside their homes to help fight a deadly outbreak of the disease medical teams will travel daughter door over the next few days inoculating residents 60 people have died in the outbreak in recent weeks new medical research suggests that cholesterol levels in people as young as 25 should be checked to protect against the risk of heart attacks or strokes in later life rugby Australia has reached a confidential settlement with the former player Israel Folau to end his lawsuit over his sacking for making antigay comments on social media for Lao had sued the sport of Thora his for millions of dollars in compensation b.b.c. Needs. I'm Ed Butler and welcome to business daily from the b.b.c. Today the controversial plan to stage top flight Spanish league football in the us he's trying to please their American market with trying to please they see a market they think is that has never been able to better sway their players this Bunny said Faith and the media that the she's a good idea but it's not happening just yet but the plan is afoot to take your ups top games round the world Big Money talks for advertisers for broadcasters football is the biggest sports in the world and therefore if you've got great football content you want to find the best why you can have of maximizing on that that's all the government business daily from the b.b.c. . A quite remarkable scene that I got to witness earlier this year championship deciding game between 2 football clubs in Istanbul Turkey the home team gala tester I was his little rival splash actually here was. Pleasant coming out of the stadium will. See you already right. People cheering. That. The home team eventually won I. Was going off was that. Crackers inside the stadium. Was really sick it's a. Right just like a. Defense like this or a dream come true for advertisers everywhere law if unscripted drama consumed by a social audience and discussed among that great point of view a piece of content that's what sport is then Jones is head of the Sports Business. Diluent in the u.k. For advertisers for broadcasters it is the holy grail it's a thing they really want that's what sport does like pretty much nothing else football is the biggest sports in the world and therefore if you call great football console you will find the best why you can maximize. And maximizing it is exactly what a number of Europe's top football leagues are trying to do right now the latest is Spain's league dominated by titans of the game rail Madrid and Barcelona it's League has become a significant national export and globalizing its beautiful game has become the priority of the league's president heavy a 10 s who has been pushing to stage some of it should your matches abroad in the us he recently explained this idea to our own Jane Wakefield. That playing one single match abroad is part of the strategy for globalisation and isn't the whole strategy is just like the n.b.a. And the n.f.l. Have done in the past we think it's a matter of showing respect to fans who are all over the world and in this case fans that are in the us to bring warm out of the $380.00 the league match was not brought bringing this to fans that are everywhere and we see this as giving them the respect they deserve or they may. Be important it is not the sort of point of football that it should be played amongst grassroot fans and found that are based in the country just globalisation not take away some of the sort of joy of fans being able to go and support their local team but if you look at the Premier League has actually led the way in terms of globalizing football having so many fans all around the world you have to share football between the fans that are everywhere around the world and the fans for the local football today isn't just for the fans the local It's a global problem. The money your locale. That's not the only plan though that have yet about as adopted to grow the global audience for Spanish football last season he said your games on Fridays and Mondays as well with more Asia and America friendly kick off times to suit those audiences and this week he hopes to persuade at a go Madrid to stage one of its share jewel home games on the other side of the Atlantic in Miami Florida that was the plan but it isn't happening following a challenge from the nation's football association the Spanish football journalist Elvira Romeo has been telling me all about it seems how they got their bus took over so lead up as he went he tried to 3 go to many changes and one of them was to expand to the west and east while he's trying to please the American market hard enough for a 8 pm football game we're trying to please they see a market with their early kick offs on shutter release on Sundays and it's not just of course these staggered regular show jeweled times he has also tried to push an individual fixture within the league too far in location guess right through that with Catherine I didn't know. That I think with that let me call their mother and the thing is that there is plenty said Faith. Not the now line meant this money so if they say in that the reason why they are stopping these games from happening is because number one the fans have to be protected have to be defended and number 2 because the money played lead us will hold because $1.00 of the games will be played on a neutral venue and every teams will have the right to play 19 games at home and one thing games are way higher than us has never been able to better swayed their players this Bunny said Faith and the media that the idea no overseas game this season then do you think we're going to see something like that in future seasons though if we see that in the future because. Out of the us has explained they very well explained the advantages from the benefits office in the in the Lehigh game but although not until then and not until he fix us his relationship with this one is to fail I don't see it happening and also all the recent conflict with the players I mean I think that we've all played at 40 instance they've been complaining repeatedly on that media account about many Sundays at 2 pm which is true I mean people on this are 2 pm and that if they're not they will die because that is but let's stay with families and I think that we've all players have a shorter life as well so these kind of problems seem definitely and the mystical is how can you hold the players up at all so you don't think it's inevitable I don't think it's inevitable at the same time I believe the heart of us is going to keep that you know. Well heeled keep going according to Alviro Romeo and then Jones at Deloitte reckons the potential for revenue growth means that this kind of a plan for one of Europe's top leagues to stage foreign games could prove irresistible if you're in a situation where the majority of your income and the vast majority of your audience is outside of your home market it's always going to be a question that is on the table I think one of the reasons you see leakers so much pushing for this is because the Premier League of Stalin such a margin such leader in all the other European football leagues in terms of his global profile the other leagues and they're looking thing in right Ok so how can we do something different and better bigger and stronger than what the Premier League is doing in terms of showing the world that you know we are there so it's a really difficult balancing act for the administrators for the for the players but it's an idea that I don't think will go away. Well interestingly it isn't just football that is aiming to increase its global brand other sports have been getting in on the act and are in fact ahead of the game. All of them is American football the n.f.l. Has been staging games here in the u.k. Every year for the last 12 seasons and I've come to the h.q. Of the National Football League in the u.k. Just off Leicester Square in downtown London the n.f.l. Is u.k. Director is how this ticket quit. With us it's just want to. Stick with. The n.f.l. Is the most popular sport by some distance in the u.s. I think last year of the 50 most watched t.v. Programs of any genre 39 were n.f.l. Games but on the other side for us with aspirations to grow the sport beyond the u.s. Borders you have to do new and dynamic things how has it improved your profile how is improved revenue American football's revenue I don't think in the short to medium term it's about revenue is actually about found growth if we reach out to the general population and grow the number of phones using games and other touch points then somewhere along the line it will actually make financial sense so since we've been playing games it's encouraged more British players to play I think we now have 95 universities that have American football teams in the u.k. We now have 9 British players playing and fell teams we have a British coach coaching at the Atlanta Falcons we have our own Academy based in north London for 16 to 18 year olds so games and the success of them have actually led us to become more rounded we've been I think for the last 3 or 4 years the fastest growing sport in the u.k. But we're scratching the surface of our potential Well you have so far and it's not as though there's a shortage of sport available to British sports lovers is there I mean it's a crowded field in the u.k. With football cricket rugby and all the others yeah and Mylan. New insight has been that in many ways we're not competing with other sports we're competing with people's leisure time time is arguably the most valuable commodity and you're not asking a Chelsea fan or cricket found to stop loving the sport that they they were of what you're actually trying to do is actually saying right for maybe a Sunday evening watch a game rather than would watch something on t.v. Or or go out and socialize it's about making yourself relevant so we're quintessentially American and we're proud of the roots but we're also British increasingly And in terms of and they're at it yeah but it's a curious choice though push this because you've got the n.b.a. You know looking very much towards Asia we've got the British premier league football franchise and indeed the Spanish league are looking very much towards Asia as well as North America to expand their brand Why do you care why aren't you looking at Asia which is perhaps under-served some would argue in terms of global sporting brands that it can latch on to End Of course a huge expanding financial market and what we are looking at Asia and we go to China or office doing a lot of really good and interesting things there we made a decision to focus on handful of priority markets so for us that's Canada Mexico China Germany in the u.k. You didn't do it you. Are. Still. Playing games internationally is a major risk you know sports coaches and officials are creatures of habit and I think when you look at the lights of the league and the Premier League and other sports who also have owned missions to play competitive regular season games outside their market it's not easy and straightforward to do but we've certainly benefited from $32.00 teams in the n.f.l. $31.00 of them I understand you're telling me have made the journey now in the last 12 years to the u.k. To play at least one game at. They making any money doing this is anybody making any money doing again this is much more about Fang growth are you losing money the games themselves are loss leaders but the more games we play the more it's an investment for us and that's been a conscious decision because you don't grow a sport that is not indigenous to the market overnight and if you do it's a fluke and you reach saturation in North America that's a feeling oh yeah I mean there are always new fans to reach out to but 2 thirds of the country are stated fans of the fans of the sport there is a much bigger globe out there that creates greater opportunities for us so we'll continue to do well in the States but really kind of the future opportunity in exciting developments for the next generation is international. Wants us to see. It was. A European touchdown for American football then but still a bigger battle to export soccer's leading equivalent leagues the idea of exporting football games abroad follows hot on the back of a different plan to create a breakaway Super League of Europe's very biggest football clubs in other words to extend the world's top club competition the Champions League which takes place across Europe every season that hasn't quite panned out then Jones head of the Sports Business Group at Deloitte says these ideas are still being grappled with along with another very simple idea to create franchises or feeder teams of the top European clubs in America Africa or in Asia that way I suggested at least 2nd team or fringe players could get a game and fans in far off places could see their beloved teams in action to send it's already been tried so the historic example is particular thinking of was it was I axed Cape Town where I bought a club in South Africa and rebranded as I escaped and that was quite a success and. Didn't really quite work the most probably example of us in a moment is city football group match the city is the mothership home club but then teams in New York in Melbourne in Spain just recently made acquisition in Mumbai not all rebranded as Manchester City but clearly under that city football great banner so lots of other clubs are looking at that and thinking does that work and I'd say that you know the jury's still still out a little bit on the experiment but the fact that manage the city of discovery and you know this other day or in Mumbai just last wake shows that you know it's still a very very much alive alive topic and if you have a branded feed a club in somewhere like India air or Asia or North America those players could yet of course end up in the main club in the main squad back at h.q. Exactly and you asked earlier about the do European Super League and I think one of the potential hazards of the idea of having a wider network of clubs all under the same brand is that a big part of the branding of these most successful clubs is winning is being champions is winning trophies and therefore coming 12th or 13th in the European Super League is not consistent with the brand of any of those clubs and of course by definition only one club could win the European Super League each year it suits them very well I think to have domestic leagues in domestic helps where they're clearly very much at the top of the pecking order and then have European club football on top as the icing on the cake and so this glittering prize of the Champions League I think I think that works very very well similarly with having clubs around the world if your brand is winning in your eventis a new you know you win this kid at 0 more often than you don't having a eventis to Carter who are playing very well in the finishing sort of 6th in Indonesia is not a great big. A projection of your brand so I do think that there are those sort of complications to that are there it is an amazing thought though isn't it if you are let's say an hour Korean fan you get the one game and per year I mean that would be an extraordinary event in the sporting calendar for all of those Korean Premier League fans with it so you see it when you know when when big teams go imply around the world you know they're going to have a training session and you know 25000 people world will turn up to the stadium just to watch them train and then you know 607080000 people will turn out to watch you know what is into all intents and purposes sort of fairly half paced friendly so you can you can just imagine when the m.-l. Be bought games to London last year for baseball you know they bought the Yankees in the Red Sox you know that is the equivalent to taking Lupul Manchester United to another country to play you know it was that sort of scale event was then jazz all day long in the u.k. And with the sound of a championship winning goal there driving Turkish fans into raptures I think we're going to have to leave it for this edition of Business Day the onward March of the world's top footballing brands does seem inexorable doesn't it the idea of staging their matches directly for overseas fans seems to many like in dollars well of the. And welcome to witness history on the b.b.c. World Service with me. Today we're looking back at the impact of British coal miners son had on the world of art Henry Moore revolutionized sculpture changing the way the human body was seen and setting his works in natural landscapes he became internationally renowned and by the 1970 s. His monumental bronzes could be seen outside public buildings around the world I've been speaking to his only daughter Mary more I mean one can't believe because his work seemed so comfortable that there was this feeling that it was dangerous that it was outrageous that it would. Follow youth Henry Moore was born in Yorkshire England in $8098.00 during the reign of Queen Victoria when he was for art in England was taking a representation all you know would have narrative thought it was representation all could be done by photography with titles like you know the soldier comes home but Henry Moore would make abstract sculpture popular in the u.k. He was the 7th of 8 children his father was a miner but the family were keen on education and he decided to go to art school I mean I think that that generation believed in education as a way of changing the world changing your life and his choice was bold at the time England wasn't known for sculpture at his 1st art school he was the only student in the sculpture class later in a b.b.c. Documentary he said this freed him from any expectations. I began my career at a time when people were saying that. England never had produced a sculpture and never would do this. For me much better than if one had been born say an Italian and had all the renaissance as am I the background this was a complete conquest that I could make entirely alone and he began the Conquest immediately from the beginning he broke away from the tradition of copying an exact likeness but college more was taught to draw from models but this could not disguise the individuality of his own personal vision his studies of the human figure were expressive interpretations of shape and form not careful copies of reality one of those teachers was provoked into exclaiming This man has been feeding on garbage the art schools that he was and started and many of his teachers called his work you name ugly and disgusting and that he fed on a cesspit kind of rule academicians teaches and artists who believed in representation a lot Henry Moore's figure is usually women with large smooth bulky and powerful his inspiration came from what was then called primitive art freestanding sculpture from Africa and South America as this b.b.c. Report decades later explains people weren't used to seeing such sexualized sculptures what took people aback was a manner of expression which emphasized the sexual nature of the subject and rejected the realistic treatment of the human figure. It was considered to be primitive decadent and savage a willful mutilation of noble ideals in a way it was. Moore wanted to cut across the inhibitions that he felt robbed art of its vitality he wanted sculpture to have greater power and strength he wanted to arise in us the deepest forces and instincts my belief is that no matter what advances we make in technology and in the controlling of nectar the real basis of life in human relationships it is to them the good the happy or unhappy throughout his career he kept returning to the themes of the mother and child and the reclining figure women he told the b.b.c. Well much more interesting and emotional Heaven knows I don't want to play the editor so tired as to you with Early's maternal figures somewhere welling up from your unconscious I think so. I think I love I love my mother on the top but my mother really was a big stick to me Mary says Henry Moore's love for his mother helped inspire both his subject matter and the creative process itself learning to rob a need material into shape echoed back to a time when he helped ease his mother's back pain I see was the 7th child he was the youngest son and he was often at home and his mother was quite old to be when he was young and used to rub really the moment into her back because she had arthritis rheumatism so I think it you know and often when you look at the backs of his with me or even his mother's They are very large women with very broad backs he always said his work was more about form the 90 is I never know and I can't say and I don't know where the ideas come from how I get them whether what they mean Song of the time it turn lives up one part perhaps can explain a little bit afterwards I don't set out to do. Something representing. Some literary. Idea and then try to do it I work by a kind of likes and dislikes of you know think and shapes and not in words and his schooldays had a lasting influence everybody's appreciation for is built on this appreciation of say part of my. Training that as a young sculptor come from being going to a mixed secondary school. Well. I could look at all the girl's legs and I could tell you which girl was which to put on the phone with her figure from the new downwards I mean the young the falls for the top multiple all these things are connected with life and life effects by the 1950 s. His reputation was secure he'd been awarded the international sculpture prize at the Venice Biennale a in Italy and then in 1956 the United Nations Cultural Organization UNESCO requested a sculpture outside their headquarters in Paris suddenly the more family home became a hub of activity film stars came to us musicians came to us collectors came to us writers came to us but also one was aware that we were going out to the world because there were lorries there were cranes there were a sculptor being created on crazy taken off to exhibitions his home and studio were in rolling green countryside he often carved outside and displayed his work in the landscape it's because the sculpture looks different all the time every day of the year every hour of the trade for for nothing it looks different in history or in life there are certain scientists or musicians or writers or painters or sculptors who invent a new language and not many people invent a new language and he invented a new language. A new way of seeing things and in 1978 he opened up the doors to his home to the public creating the Henry Moore Foundation here his sculptures were on display in the greenery surrounding his home I mean he wanted sculpture to be part of everybody's life and experience and rich that lives and we should go on fighting that fight you can't have something that stops me it's like turning my is it necessary to go on I mean why can't be satisfied with the platter theory of all this is a growth of the moment intelligence sensitivity and saw you can't go wrong just repeating the practicing not. If they don't make a case then they're doing nothing Henry Moore died in 1986 his foundation continues Mary Moore was speaking to me for witness history now on the b.b.c. World Service a new 3 part series meeting teenagers trying to change their world 4 years ago Stubbles began a grade 6 science project they created waves of change in her hometown in Nova Scotia Canada now she's 15 and she's already convinced the Canadian government to start an environmental project which will cost more than $15000000.00 Canadian dollars vacates our old writes at b.b.c. World Service dot com. And it's b.b.c. World Service dot com b.b.c. Trending why experts are calling on the online slave market has developed in the Gulf that many women soldiers the message workers that the human rights how is this being facilitated Kentucky's Stay with us the documentary is next here in the food and Sea World Service the world's radio station. Welcome to British music's Caribbean roots on the b.b.c. World Service I'm young we're a d.j. Emerick a sound system operator. Is the best for me. With 1st hand accounts from industry professionals we explore how cliques and West Indian culture made huge inroads in the 950 s. . Join me as we explore the colorful roots of how black British music entered the u.k. Mainstream and how it is now embedded across many genres. Well when I was growing up well I remember my mom playing in a lot with the Rock Steady a good many small. Hole that is British music's Caribbean roots off the news. B.b.c. News Hello I'm Gerri Smit NATO leaders are getting ready for a 2nd day of talks near London to mark the airline's his 70th anniversary the secretary general u.n. Stoltenberg said the alliance was facing new challenges including the rise of China but he added The situation also presented NATO with opportunities Here's Jonathan Marcus after a day of argument and recrimination NATO leaders are now hoping for unity to break out it's a short meeting with a crowded agenda the focus very much on issues like the resilience of critical infrastructure cyber threats and space as a domain for military competition but inevitably contentious issues like Burden sharing cannot be avoided for the alliance's Secretary-General un Stoltenberg this is a positive story Nato's European allies he insists are spending significantly more but deep differences remain. China has reacted furiously after the u.s. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at countering the detention of an estimated 1000000 Muslims in the western region of Shin Jiang the Us legislation calls for sanctions against Chinese officials including a member of the Politburo John Sudworth is in Beijing nothing surprising in their reaction except perhaps the forcefulness of the language pushing back almost immediately after we got the news that the bill had been passed by the House of Representatives saying this action defames China basically by mischaracterizing the situation in changing that it's a malicious attack on Chinese government policy and a serious violation of international law their position all along has been this is a policy designed at combat in the rise of extremism and violence terrorism insurance Jang and it's nobody's business other than China the Chinese foreign ministry also said that Beijing would not be rushed into a trade deal with the United States it said China would take legitimate measures to defend its interests and would not set any time frame for concluding an agreement with Washington on Tuesday President Trump said he was happy to wait until after the.

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Tax returns as N.P.R.'s Nina Totenberg reports the president will likely appeal the case to the u.s. Supreme Court that congressional committees did not subpoena Trump himself but banks that have records about his financial dealings in particular the House Intelligence Committee and the House Financial Oversight Committee are seeking documents from Trump's biggest lender Bank which loaned him money after a string of bankruptcies that cost other banks millions of dollars the congressional committees which are probing foreign influence in u.s. Elections are looking for details about who Trump's partners were the extent of his borrowing whether any money laundering took place and whether he or his companies had any links to or were beholden to foreign countries Nina Totenberg n.p.r. News Washington millions of Americans may have to find other ways to buy meals under a trumpet ministration proposal to cut food stamps from member station to Bret's shouldest reports that the plan would cut several 1000000000 dollars in funding over 5 years to the program known as snap in Pennsylvania alone the change would slash monthly benefits also known as food stamps for about 775000 families stay human services secretary Theresa Miller says in colder parts of the country people have to choose between buying food and staying warm I think this is the time states have to stand up and say this is wrong stop attacking these critical safety net programs that allow people to live better lives at the u.s. Department of Agriculture which runs the program a spokesman says the administration's proposed rule will better reflect true utility costs adding the new system would cover costs for 80 percent of snap households for n.p.r. News I'm brush old service a federal judge is disqualified an attorney for Chinese tech giant Huawei from defending the company against u.s. Charges of bank fraud and sanctions violations but will prosecutors say James Cole's prior work at the Justice Department creates a conflict. Of interest Meanwhile flyway says it is moving its research facility from Santa Clara California to Canada citing u.s. Government restrictions this is n.p.r. News. The Justice Department has charged 8 people with conspiring to conceal the source of more than 3 and a half $1000000.00 in donations to Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign the defendants include a prominent political donor who supported the campaigns of both Clinton and Donald Trump the 53 count indictment also names a Lebanese American businessman who testified in the Moeller investigation and to Russian interference in the 26000 election Prosecutors allege the pair tried to buy influence with high level political figures a long delayed expansion of the Trans Mountain oil pipeline in Western Canada is finally getting underway as Dan carbon shock reports officials say a pipe for the expansion will be in the ground before Christmas representatives of the federal and Alberta governments along with the president of Trans about more on hand west of Edmonton to mark the event prove the $7000000000.00 project for a 2nd time in June 9 months after a federal court withdrew the original approval trans about and expects to employ more than $4000.00 people by the end of the year the expansion would triple the amount of oil to 900000 barrels a day from Alberta to the west coast the project is expected to be completed late in 2022 Meanwhile the Federal Court of Appeal is scheduled a 3 day hearing in mid December to consider challenges by 6 indigenous groups who claim they were not adequately consulted for n.p.r. News I'm Dan Karp in check in Toronto on Asian stock markets shares have followed Wall Street lower on concerns about trade tensions between the u.s. And China shares are down one percent in Tokyo and in Hong Kong I'm she's Stephens and p.r. News in Washington. Support for n.p.r. Comes from n.p.r. Stations and other contributors include f j c a foundation of donor advised funds working to maximize the impact of charitable giving and to create customized philanthropic solutions learn more at f j c dot org and the n.e.a. Casey Foundation. Welcome to talk on the b.b.c. World Service with me Stephen Stanko my guest today embarked on a journey fraught with danger some 6 years ago he became active in the politics and cultural life is Kurdish community he helped and it's a Kurdish magazine which drew the ire of the Terran regime after several of his colleagues were arrested in 2013 he decided to flee his destination Australia after an epic journey and one failed see crossing from Indonesia to Australia he was eventually picked up from a sinking vessel and placed in Australia's draconian offshore processing system for illegal migrants in bruises case that meant a 6 harrowing years on remote Manno silent in Papua New Guinea remarkably He's now written a book about his experiences based on text that he was able to send from his detention it's one major literary prizes in Australia but his journey isn't over so when and where will it end well better news but Chani joins me now from or Clint New Zealand where he's been granted a one month travel visa welcome to Talk thank you for having me it's a pleasure to have you on the show bears I think we have to begin with an explanation of how come your in New Zealand after this epic very long journey difficult journey that you've been on how come right now you're talking to me from all cleaned I was in white but I'd want 1st of all in cries for seniors in. Our plight who visa through my lawyer in New Zealand. Then so I'd leave the units the on. Then. International an amnesty the strain they interesting thing is that they must shorts way toward From the reason was that they fly from Port Moresby. Which is the capital city of New Guinea was the train then transit flight to New Zealand but I was a scare. That if that they deported from was straight so that's why I sent all flipping. Through the news and interesting that you didn't feel you could possibly take the risk of going into Australia even transit and you call it a long journey but of course there's nothing like the many years of journeying you have had to endure to get to where you are today let's go back in time to pick up this story when you were still a young man in Iran of course of Kurdish origin in Iran you had decided to get involved in activism both political and cultural activism what happened to you to make you feel you had to leave. I was born in war. Grew up in this nation again scored in Iran. Must stuff my live when I become or I. Was struggling this educate the young generation. Keep quarter these concerts live so all of my activities and up you know. My joy monies them once so I was working as a freelancer on my knees. In the pen on because you don't see a thing I mean the same time I was working with. The card where you go in you know some of my colleagues were. Intelligent. And you don't see. That and then. You know I had to leave Iran and then when you felt you had to flee because many of your friends had been arrested and you felt you were in grave danger I wonder why you decided to go all of the way from Iraq to Australia the other side of the world it would have been so much easier for perhaps to aim to get into Europe why did you decide on Australia actually I did that. Time so I had to leave so that's why one of my friend introduced me to. Person that I met him in the park in Teheran and he told me that the best way is that he send me to Indonesia star. On saying seen in the news then you can go to all Australians so that's why but at that time in 23rd. Dene there was a well established people smuggling route from Indonesia or across the sea to Australia but it is extremely dangerous that crossing you I believe tried it twice what happened to you when you tried it in one of those refugee boats to get to Australia in Indonesia I was the. Place. Saw in that I remember sometimes quite nice in English and. Refugees and it was a place for many of refugees there they poorest I was witness. Many people and they deported them back so with any question you know they've been asking the question so that's why I really was warning 'd my safety on the e-mail if they just report me back so that's why I went who decided the motor was thrown your I went once after 48 hours our board. Brought. In this scene and they took me from the ocean and you know put me in the. Prison and then they escaped again I went by a boat so it was a really. Knock on the power. I think. Sometimes I feel it was the work that really I had not. Because it was so down to this but on that time just I want to see safety and find a safe place yeah I know that you saw people who were on the boat. With you drowned actually killed miraculously you survived because you were picked up out of the water but other people did not survive but then of course you ended up subject to the Australian authorities decision not to allow you or indeed any of the other boat people the other refugees coming in by boat the Australian Government took a decision not to allow you on to Australian territory but to send you to Manaus island in Papua New Guinea they set up 2 camps one man a silent another in one of the islands of Micronesia now or 2 and that is where all of these would be asylum seekers ended up after 2013 what we all feelings when you arrived in manner silent you use the this sort of thing I should make it clear to both keep pouring in no it is actually one of the main. Concepts that I was saying and government is using for describing are you know is there like a negative. Meaning in Australian political context so let's say there is using this war just to make to create fear and people are scared of us they you know it wasn't I call the policy probably see. Or saying and government these and then made the past I think so but you know for me the innocent people or arriving with reading a bible if. I was excited the man was silent and they way they read that it was a week to mediation and humiliation. So I course and never forget and I describe that in the. Home. They were 3 hours saw definitively you know. Like you know I used another ward more than mislabeling you know. I think we should on that a stand did you feel as though you were being treated as a prisoner because of course you had made that journey seeking safety seeking asylum but when you were in the hands of the Australian authorities and then they sent you to Manaus Island did you feel like somebody who was going to have an opportunity to explain your story or did you feel like a prisoner there the thing that's really we were in a real prism. A place was that a prism and that's why I renamed that in my ward in my joy monies and want as a present although I thing the prison is not enough war and it's not you know war to describe that place because in prison you know they. Don't portray. Prison as a sword they sent people to pull prison on the court process for us just they took us from the water and asked for money put in that prison and the pain asked and they never asked us question. They then send us to a court and. They torture us you know they torture us the 40 years and years and they put us through a systematic torture 40 years just to you know humiliate are destroying our sandpaper our idea identities so now that I am talking with you know so far. 13 people died I can say. By the thief because of many comic legs because I'm violence so I thing. For people who want to know if they do research to see more. They can see that the whole of these Saudis and hold the system was what that was saying and government has gone silent or very Now that I am talking with you more than pond the people remaining in Yep Yeah well let's bury it you make it very very serious allegation there by using the word torture of course the Australian Government has a rationale for what they did they said it was a deterrent policy it was only by making it clear to the people smugglers and to the would be refugees that it was impossible for them to make it to Australia and that they would end up in this very difficult situation in manners silent or in our room that was according to the Australians the only way of deterring people from making this journey and many of them losing their lives because we know more than a 1000 people had lost their lives at sea that was the Australian justification you know you you cannot justify you know this part body policy you know you cannot justify you know violation of human rights and. So what that was say than government has done not sending a message to people of smugglers for people around the world that don't come to our country by boat they in fact they are sending this message to the day people I mean put there they have supporters and people of Australia and we should never forget when we arrive in Christmas Island. 2 months before the election. And the Labor Party introduced this policy just because of election of of the past 6 years that was seen and government. Used ours for the politics called benefits and that of course it was very difficult almost impossible for journalists like me to get access to now rue or to mine are silent to see the conditions inside the camps where people like you were held and let's not forget you were held there for pretty much 6 years you tell me what conditions were like because I'm very struck by the fact that of the dozen or so people who died in the in the camps at least 5 of them it seems were suicides so what was going on in the camps that left so many people so desperate that some of them were taking their own lives just we should think about these that whole day. People and innocent people in a remote prison in a remote island and keep them for more than 6 years hold they kept the children and the woman in in definit that 40 years and years and justified that So the concept in exile saw the main thing is that you know in time you know keeping people in limbo for 40 years and years so I think that is enough to you know living in that conversation and that situation is enough that we understand hold this system is screwed in other parts we should look at the people who died you know 13 people. Died and you know under this system and hundreds of people and damaged and that we should look at the. You know there are reports we spoke for must respect for international long human rights organisations such as Amnesty as such as you know the Human Rights Watch and also you want to see so it is either go or what that was fairly young government has done in the gold and saw Pinti Supreme Court. Order that keeping people in that prison camp is in of course what they were seen on government has done crime against humanity and they say these strongly strongly it is not only me many people many organisations save that and I think those 3 young government has nothing to say in front of it in 2015 I think it was you and a group of other people decided to stage a hunger strike to protest the conditions and I believe some of you showed your lips together to refuse to eat and what was the response of the local staff because let us not forget these detention centers were actually run by people from popular New Guinea How did they treat you when you tried to protest. You know before that hunger strike you know after 6 months. And there was a protest man was the result of that person but a protest was that there are toilet trained and guards with the local people. That pack are there and they injure 100 people very seriously and they are the bad. After 18 months with. Hunger strike which I think more than. 800 people you know. Participated in that protest so after a poor day they at Pac. Because our protest was a peaceful protest completive peaceful protest they came and address the you know some of the refugees and because they say that you are lead theirs or and they are the people and send them to. Local prison and they kept people in their local criminals there for days and days then they put people in solitary confinement again another stunning try to confinement you know I was there for. 40 banks I want to ask you about something that strikes me as very in a sense ironic about your situation today I'm in London holding a copy of your book no friend but the mountains it's called The True Story of an illegally imprisoned refugee it has been a big success this book and it's based on the text messages you were able to send to friends on a smuggled phone when you were still inside the detention center it is an extraordinary piece of work but the irony is. That it has been extremely well received in Australia you've just won a major literary prize in Australia worth $125000.00 Australian dollars How do you feel about the fact that your story which is so negative about Australia and the decisions taken by its government has now resulted in a book that the Australian public is so eager to read how do you feel about that before publishing these spork I was you know I published many journalism Arctic court's opinion articles in Australian media and internationally and then I made the movie talk of police the last the time with my colleague. It was funny which we strong international film festival is not as long as the book then book released so before that I was in Australia but that no war actually brought much at times. Then my war. My words but just one thing I would like to mention is that I should acknowledge big part power for staying on society and civil society and was training to stand up for Humanity support the refugees so this recalled mission to my wards Actually I understand it in this way the civil society was Trayvon beliefs which of communicating with strain you're actually resists that. Front of this system because of this one you know by this record mission by giving this award. In front of this system because this policy had a negative impact on politics. Culture in Australia you know there are many thousands hundreds of thousands of desperate people in our world who feel they have to leave their homelands just as you did many of them because of fear of persecution but it is clearly a huge risk you now are aware of the dangers and the risks involved what would your message be to desperate people around the world who are considering whether it is worse fleeing from their home countries you know are people in there for live there contraries because of discrimination because of persecution because of you know their leader. Because of or. I think that problem create the. You know this this robot sees them and people I think the superpowers soon and to take some responsibility so of course I know have a message to people or you know the pip or who just think they have safety hole can I tell them the kind I send them a message and what what can I say to them you know you should be every few. On this that's what every few of the want and why people leave the countries you know so that's. If I send a message don't do that it's risky are I knew that it is the risk you know and there were a few didn't know that when they take that and they do that because of safety so that's why you. Course you know. If I have. Not. You know. Power. Rise. And I thank you very much indeed for being on the. Distribution of the b.b.c. World Service news are with us was made possible by American Public Media producer and distributor of award winning public radio content. American Public Media with support from Cabot farmer own offering Cabot cracker pre-sliced cheese is available in resealable packages and 6 for more information at his dog Cole. Every week we get a report called 1st time claims for unemployment benefits it sounds simple but it's not really a measure. Worker confidence in the economy and particularly failure why it's not just like let me answer the survey question rather let's see what I'm doing with my time and energy I'm breaking down an indicator next. Wednesday at 3 in the afternoon also at 6 30 in the evening on k.c.a.l. You. You're listening to b.b.c. World Service I'm Ed but lot today we're talking football and the controversial plans to stage some of Europe's top league games in the United States or even Asia could that really happen some wonder can't even be stopped with the global appetite for Europe's beautiful game growing inexorably we're hearing examples from other sports in Business Daily. Babysitting news when Jerry Smit the secretary general of NATO young stars and bag says the alliance which is marking its 70th anniversary is facing new challenges including the rapid rise of China as a 2nd day of meetings are held in Britain he said only the United States now spend more on defense than China discussions will look at arms control terrorism and relations with Russia. China has reacted furiously to new u.s. House of Representatives legislation aimed at countering the detention of about a 1000000 Muslims in the western region of show and young the Foreign Ministry in Beijing said the bill was defamatory and a serious violation of international law in summer families that haven't had measles vaccinations have been asked to hang a red flag outside their homes to help fight the diseases spread medical teams will make door to door visits over the coming days inoculating residents 60 people have died in the recent outbreak government in Afghanistan have killed the head of a Japanese aid agency and 5 local staff Ted so Nakamura survived the shooting but died as he was rushed to hospital the gunman's identity is not known. Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has called for the release of any on armed or innocent people detained during the recent anti-government protests across the country he said those who'd just chanted slogans or committed a small crime should be freed. New medical research suggests that cholesterol levels in people as young as 25 should be checked to protect against the risk of heart attacks or strokes later in life. A confidential settlement has been reached between rugby Australia and the former player Israel Folau to end his lawsuit after he was sacked for making anti-gay comments on social media for Lauer the conservative Christian had to this border Thor's his for millions of dollars in compensation b.b.c. News. I'm Ed Butler and welcome to business daily from the b.b.c. Today the controversial plan to stage top flight Spanish league football in the us he's trying to please their American market with trying to please they see a market they think is that has never been able to better their players despite he said Faith and the media that the she's a good idea it's not happening just yet but the plan is afoot to take Europe's top gangs round the world Big Money talks for advertisers for broadcasters football is the biggest sports in the world and therefore if you've got great football content you want to find the best way you can have of maximizing on that that's all the government business daily from the b.b.c. . A quite remarkable scene that I got to witness earlier this year championship deciding game between 2 football clubs in a sample Turkey the home team got a chance or I was his rivals but actually. The players if the stadium. People to. The home team eventually won I. Was Like. Crackers inside the stadium I think that's probably take it's a 5 nights I was right just like a. Defense like this or a dream come true for advertisers everywhere law if unscripted drama consumed by a social audience and discussed among that great via a point of view a piece of content that's what spalted is then James is head of the Sports Business . At Deloitte in the u.k. For advertisers for broadcasters it is the Holy Grail as to is the thing they really want that's what life support does like pretty much nothing else football is the biggest schools in the world and therefore if you call great football field so you want to find the best why you can maximize it. And maximizing it is exactly what a number of Europe's top football leagues are trying to do right now the latest is Spain's league are dominated by titans of the game rail Madrid and Barcelona it's League has become a significant national export and globalizing its beautiful game has become the priority of the league's president heavy a bass who has been pushing to stage some of it shared your matches abroad in the u.s. He recently explained this idea to our own Jane Wakefield. And the rest I think of that playing one single match abroad is part of the strategy of globalization and it isn't the whole strategy it's just like the n.b.a. And the n.f.l. Has done in the past we think it's a matter of showing respect to fans who are all over the world and in this case fans that are in the us to bring warm out of the $380.00 the league matches and broad is bringing this to fans that are everywhere and we see this as giving them the respect they deserve or they may. Be important it is not the sort of point of football that it should be played amongst grassroots fans and found that are based in the country just globalization not take away some of the sort of joy of fans being able to go and support their local team but if you look at the Premier League has actually led the way in terms of globalizing football having so many fans all around the world you have to share football between the fans that are everywhere around the world and the fans for the local allergist today isn't just for the fans that are local It's a global problem. The money. That's not the only plan though that having 8 about as adopted to grow the global audience for Spanish football last season he said you will games on Fridays and Mondays as well with more Asia and America friendly kickoff times to suit those audiences and this week he hopes to persuade at let it go Madrid to stage one of its share jewel home games on the other side of the Atlantic in Miami Florida that was the plan but it isn't happening following a challenge from the nation's football association the Spanish football journalist Elvira Romeo has been telling me all about it seems how the earth of us took over the lead up as he went he began to many 10 years and one of them was to expand to the west and they stiffs Well he's trying to please their American market hard enough for a b.m. Football game but trying to please they see a market with their air league office will try to do this on Sundays and it's not just of course these staggered regular share jeweled times he has also tried to push an individual fixture within the league to a foreign location guess what I threw that with their own idea don't know. That I think with that lead to call their mother. And they think it's. Funny said Faith. Not the now line men this money so if they say and the reason why they're stopping these games from happening is because number one their fans have to be protected have to be defended and number 2 because the. Us will hold because one of the games will be played on in utero venue and every teams will have the right to play 19 games at home and 19 games are way higher than us has never been able to better swayed their players despite he said and the media and the. Idea no overseas game this season then do you think we're going to see something like that in future seasons though if we see that in the future it is because. The editor of Us has explained the very well explained the advantages from the benefits office in the in the Lehigh game but although not until then and not that he fictious his relationship with this one he said I don't see it happening and also all the recent conflict with some in it I think that we've all been a yes 14 stance they've been complaining repeatedly on that shortly I mean the I count. Many Sundays at 2 pm which is true I mean they'd be brilliant to waste on this at 2 pm and that he said not they would then because that is but I'm staying with families and I think that we've all players have a shorter life as well so these kind of problems seen definitely and the mystical in how can you hold the player subtle so you don't think it's inevitable I don't think it's inevitable at the same time I believe the heart of us is going to keep that you know. Well heeled keep going according to Alberto Romeo and then Jones at Deloitte reckons the potential for revenue growth means that this kind of a plan for one of Europe's top leagues to stage foreign games could prove irresistible if you're in a situation where the majority of your income and the vast majority of your audience is outside of your home market it's always going to be a question that is on the table and I think one of the reasons you see the league are so much pushing for this is because the Premier League is stollen such a margin such a leader in all the other European football leagues in terms of its global profile the other leagues and they're looking thing in right Ok so how can we do something different and better bigger and stronger than what the Premier League is doing in terms of showing the world that you know we are there Leigh So it's a really difficult balancing act for the administrators for the for the players but it's an idea that I don't think will go away. Well interestingly it isn't just football that is aiming to increase its global brand other sports have been getting in on the act and are in fact the head of the game. All of them is American football the n.f.l. Has been staging games here in the u.k. Every year for the last 12 seasons and I've come to the h.q. Of the National Football League in the u.k. Just off Leicester Square in downtown London the n.f.l. Is u.k. Director is how this ticket quit. Minshew with us did you just want. To. Do. The n.f.l. Is the most popular sport by some distance in the u.s. I think the last year of the 50 most watched t.v. Programs of any genre 39 were n.f.l. Games but on the other side for us with aspirations to grow the sport beyond the u.s. Borders you have to do new and dynamic things how has it improved your profile how is improved revenue American football's revenue I don't think it in the short to medium term it's about revenue is actually about phone growth if we reach out to the general population and grow the number of phones using games and other touch points then somewhere along the line it will actually make financial sense so since we've been playing games it's encouraged more British players to play I think we now have $95.00 universities that have American football teams in the u.k. We now have 9 British players playing and fell teams we have a British coach coaching at the Atlanta Falcons we have our own Academy based in north London for 16 to 18 year olds so games and the success of them have actually led us to become more rounded we've been I think for the last 3 or 4 years the fastest growing sport in the u.k. But we're scratching the surface about potential Well you have so far and it's not as though there's a shortage of sport available to British sports lovers is there I mean it's a crowded field in the u.k. With football cricket rugby and all the others yeah and Myla. The insight has been that in many ways we're not competing with other sports we're competing with people's leisure time time is I could be the most valuable commodity and you're not asking a Chelsea fan or cricket phone to stop loving the sport that they were of what you're actually trying to do is actually saying right for maybe a Sunday evening watch a game rather than and watch something on t.v. Or or go out and socialize it's about making yourself relevant so we're quintessentially American and we're proud of the roots but we're also British increasingly And in terms of our narrative Yeah but it's a curious choice push this because you've got the n.b.a. You know looking very much towards Asia we've got the British premier league football franchise and indeed the Spanish league are looking very much towards Asia as well as North America to expand their brand Why do you k.y. Aren't you looking at Asia which is perhaps under-served some would argue in terms of global sporting brands that it can latch on to and of course the huge expanding financial market and what we are looking at Asia and we go to China or office doing a lot of really good interesting things there we've made a decision to focus on handful of priority markets so for us that's Canada Mexico China Germany in the u.k. You. Are One. Of the playing games internationally is a major risk you know sports coaches and officials are creatures of habit and I think when you look at the lights of the league in the Premier League and other sports who also have own bishops to play competitive regular season games outside their market it's not easy and straightforward to do but we've certainly benefited from $32.00 teams in the n.f.l. $31.00 of them I understand you're telling me have made the journey now in the last 12 years to the u.k. To play at least one game at. They making any money doing this is anybody making any money doing it again this is much more about founding growth are you losing money the games themselves or loss leaders but the more games we play the more it's an investment for us and that's been a conscious decision because you don't grow a sport that is not indigenous to the market overnight and if you do it's a fluke and you reach saturation in North America that's a feeling you know I mean there are always new phones to reach out to but 2 thirds of the country are stated fans of the fans of this book there is a much bigger globe out there that creates greater opportunities for us so we'll continue to do well in the States but really kind of the future opportunity in exciting developments for the next generation is international. Still. To. The European touchdown for American football then but still a bigger battle to export soccer's leading equivalent leaks the idea of exporting football games abroad follows hot on the back of a different plan to create a breakaway Super League of Europe's very biggest football clubs in other words to extend the world's top club competition the Champions League which takes place across Europe every season that hasn't quite panned out then Jones head of the Sports Business Group at Deloitte says these ideas are still being grappled with along with another very simple idea to create franchises or feeder teams of the top European clubs in America Africa or in Asia that way I suggested at least 2nd team or fringe players could get a game and fans in far off places could see their beloved teams in action to send a stone was already been tried so the historic examples particular thinking I was it was I x. Cape Town where I bought a club in South Africa and rebranded as I escaped and that was quite a success and. Didn't really quite work the most probably example of us in a moment is city football great Manchester City is the mothership home club but then teams in New York in Melbourne in Spain just recently made acquisition in Mumbai not all rebranded as Manchester City but clearly under that city football great banner so lots of other clubs are looking at that and thinking does that work and I say that you know the jury's still set out a little bit on the experiment but the fact that many of the city just gone and you know this other day or in Mumbai just last week shows that you know it's still a very very much alive alive topic and if you have a branded feeder club in somewhere like India or Asia or North America those players could yet of course end up in the main club in the main squad back at h.q. Says big Exactly and you asked earlier about the the dear appears to play good I think one of the potential hazards of the idea of having a wider network of clubs all under the same brand is that a big part of the branding of these most successful clubs is winning is being champions is winning trophies and therefore coming 12th or 13th in the European Super League is not consistent with the brand of any of those clubs and of course by definition only one club could win the European Super League each year it suits them very well I think to have domestic leagues in domestic cups where they're clearly very much at the top of the pecking order and then have European club football on top as the icing on the cake and so this glittering prize of the Champions League I think I think that works very very well similarly with having clubs around the world if your brand at home is winning and your eventis a new you know you win this kid at 0 more often than you don't having a eventis to Carter who are playing very well or finishing sort of 6th in Indonesia is not a great you. A projection of your brand so I do think that there are those sort of complications to that are there it is an amazing thought though isn't it if you are let's say I know a Korean fan if you get the one game and then per year I mean that would be an extraordinary event in the sporting calendar for all of those Korean Premier League fans were there but you see it when you know when when when big teams go imply around the world you know they're going to have a open training session and you know 25000 people world will turn up the stadium just to watch them train and then you know 607080000 people will turn out to watch you know what is into all it has and perhaps is sort of fairly half paced friendly so you can you can just imagine when the m.l. Baby bought games to London last year for baseball you know they bought the Yankees and the Red Sox you know that is the equivalent to taking Liverpool Manchester United to another country to play you know is that sort of scale of event was then gems of the u.k. And with the sound of a championship winning goal there driving Turkish fans into raptures I think we're going to have to leave it for this edition of Business Day that the onward March of the world's top footballing brands does seem inexorable doesn't it the idea of staging their matches directly for overseas fans seems to many like I've dealt with the. Hello and welcome to witness history on the b.b.c. World Service with me. Today we're looking back at the impact of British coal miners son had on the world of art Henry Moore revolutionized sculpture changing the way the human body was seen and setting his works in natural landscapes he became internationally renowned and by the 1970 s. His money. Mental bronzes could be seen outside public buildings around the world I've been speaking to his only daughter Mary Moore I mean one can't believe because his work seemed so comfortable that there was this feeling that it was dangerous that it was outrageous that it would be to follow Iowa youth and we will was born in Yorkshire England in $8098.00 during the reign of Queen Victoria when he was for art in England was totally representation all you know we had narrative thought it was representation all could be done by photography with titles like The soldier comes home but Henry Moore would make abstract sculpture popular in the u.k. He was the 7th of 8 children his father was a miner but the family were keen on education and he decided to go to art school I mean I think that that generation believed in education as a way of changing the world changing your life and his choice was bold at the time England wasn't known for sculpture at his 1st art school he was the only student in the sculpture class later in a b.b.c. Documentary he said this freed him from any expectations I began my career at a time when people were saying that. England never had produced a sculptor and never would do. This for me is much better than if one of been born say an Italian and had all the renaissance as a hero but a background in this was a complete conquest that I could make entirely alone and he began the Conquest immediately from the beginning he broke away from the tradition of copying an exact likeness but college more was taught to draw from models but this could not disguise the individuality of his own personal vision. His studies of the human figure were expressive interpretations of shape and form not careful copies of reality one of Moore's teachers was provoked into exclaiming This man has been feeding on garbage the art schools that he was in started and many of his teachers called his work. Ugly and disgusting and that he said on a cesspit kind of rule academicians teaches and artists who believed in representation of the art Henry was figures usually women with large smooth bulky and powerful his inspiration came from what was then called primitive art freestanding sculpture from Africa and South America as this b.b.c. Report decades later explains people weren't used to seeing such sexualized sculptures but took people aback was a manner of expression which emphasized the sexual nature of its subject and rejected the realistic treatment of the human figure. It was considered to be primitive decadent and savage a willful mutilation of noble ideals in a way it was more wanted to cut across the inhibitions that he felt robbed art of its vitality he wanted sculpture to have greater power and strength he wanted to arise in us the deepest forces and instincts my belief is that no matter what advances we make in technology and in the controlling a picture the real basis of life in human relationships he just told them to the happy or unhappy throughout his career he kept returning to the themes of the mother and child and the reclining figure women he told the b.b.c. Well much more interesting and emotional Heaven knows I don't want to play the amateur so far as to you early maternal figures somewhere welling up from your unconscious I think so I think I love I love my mother. But my mother really was a big stick to me. Mary says Henry Moore's love for his mother helped inspire both his subject matter and the creative process itself learning to rob a need material into shape echoed back to a time when he helped ease his mother's back pain as he was the 7th child he was the youngest son and he was often at home and his mother was quite old to be when he was young and he used to rub really meant into her back because she had arthritis rheumatism so I think it you know and often when you look at the back of his winning or even his mother's They are very large women with very broad backs he always said his work was more about form the night he is I never know and I can't say and I don't know where the ideas come from how I get them whether I'm what they mean and so on that the time they turn live on to perhaps can explain a little bit afterwards I don't set out to build. Something representing. Some literary. Idea and then try to do it I work by a kind of likes and dislikes of your thinking shapes and not him and his school days had a lasting influence everybody's appreciation of fall is built on this appreciation of say part of my. Training that as a young sculptor comes from being. A mix check movie school. Where. I could look at all the girls legs and I could tell you which girl was which you could only shown with her figure from the need downwards I mean the. The fullness of for the top was for for all these things are connected with life and live for sex. By the 1950 s. His reputation was secure he'd been awarded the international sculpture prize at the Venice Biennale a in Italy and then in 1956 the United Nations Cultural Organization UNESCO requested a sculpture outside their headquarters in Paris suddenly the more family home became a hub of activity film stars came to us musicians came to us collectors came to us writers came to us but also one was aware that we were going to the world because there were lorries that were cranes there were sculpture being created uncreated taken off to exhibitions his home and studio were in rolling green countryside he often carved outside and displayed his work in the landscape it's because the sculpture looks different all all the time every day of the year every hour of the trade for for nothing it looks different in history or in life there are certain scientists who are musicians all writers or painters or sculptors who invent a new language and not many people invent a new language and he invented a new language a new way of seeing things and in 1978 he opened up the doors to his home to the public creating the Henry Moore Foundation here his sculptures were on display in the greenery surrounding his home I mean he wanted sculpture to be part of everybody's life and experience and enrich their lives and we should go on fighting that fight you can't have something that stops like training Why is it necessary for science to go on I mean why can't be satisfied with the platter theory of soft . This is a growth of film and intelligence sensitivity and saw here can't go wrong just repeating and the practicing not as if they don't make a change then they're doing nothing Henry Moore died in 1986 his foundation continues Mary Moore was speaking to me for witness history from the police chief studios at California Lutheran University this is listener supported k c l u. S. And I'm Stephen Dubner host of Freakonomics radio every week Freakonomics Radio explores the hidden side of well everything from the economics of sleep to when is the best time to rob a bank so tune in next time on Freakonomics Radio. Freakonomics Radio Sunday between 12 noon at 1 pm on k.c.a.l. You. It's 2 o'clock. Bringing you the sounds and stories of the California coast this is 88.3. And 80000.3 f.m. 1340 am Santa Barbara 89.7 k.c.a.l. . Point one in San Luis Obispo live on the case. Page 10 o'clock in London 5 in Washington 12 in Nairobi I'm James Kim our Sami with world update from the b.b.c. . The 70th anniversary summit continues on the agenda today the rise of China. Second largest in the world next to the states. As impeachment proceedings in the u.s. Congress Center a new phase Republicans accuse Democrats on the House Intelligence Committee of producing a biased report the Democrats essentially stacked in their favor and despite the fact that they did this they now have come out of this and fundamentally failed to prove their case on the top British Arts of the Turner prize goes to all 4 shortlisted nominees all of that coming up after the latest world news. B.b.c. News Hello I'm Gerri Smit NATO leaders are preparing a joint declaration that Russia's aggressive action constitutes a threat to security on both sides of the Atlantic the statement is a rebuff for the French president to my Momma Kong who's argued that the alliance should focus on terrorism as the greatest threat rather than designating Russia and China as enemies Jonathan Marcus reports in the London declaration NATO will offer strong language on Russia with Alliance leaders noting that Moscow's aggressive actions constitute a threat to Euro Atlantic security they will those stress that NATO is a defensive alliance and they will reassert that as long as there are nuclear weapons it will remain a nuclear alliance 2 they will underline the need for resilient and secure communications systems including 5 g. And in a 1st for NATO there is formal mention of China Alliance leaders will recognize Beijing's growing influence in the world which they will say presents both opportunities and challenges that need to be addressed together China has reacted furiously after the u.s. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at countering the detention of an estimated 1000000 Muslims in the western region of Sion Jiang China's foreign ministry described the bill as defamatory the spokeswoman Bourne's that those who undermine China's interests would pay the Jew price. Families in summer that have not been vaccinated against measles have been asked to hang a red flag outside their homes to help fight a deadly outbreak of the disease Here's Michael Bristow 60 people in the tiny Pacific nation of similar who have died of measles over recent weeks now.

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Opening NATO 70th anniversary gathering in London this Johnson said that friends and allies must never shy away from discussing new realities he highlighted the emerging threat from hybrid warfare and disruptive technologies Jonathan Marcus has the details opening this meeting the prime minister said that NATO was coming home London was a location for its 1st headquarters at its foundation he described the alliance as a giant shield of solidarity that now protects 29 countries the nearly a 1000000000 people however upbeat his words these talks have been overshadowed by a host of differences between the allies a product of its greater size the complexity of the security challenges it faces and the disruptive impact of President Trump's rhetoric Germany is expelling 2 Russian diplomats in connection with the murder of a former Chechen rebel commander in Berlin xylem Han hunger shrilly was shot in the head in August as he was walking to a mosque the German or forages are holding a Russian national on suspicion of murder German media reports say investigators believe Russian intelligence was behind the killing the Russian foreign ministry has said it will respond to the expulsion of its diplomats in kind. China has reacted furiously are to the u.s. House of Representatives passed legislation aimed at countering the detention of an estimated 1000000 Muslims in the western region of Sion John joiners from ministry described the bill as defamatory and a serious violation of international law a spokeswoman warns that those who undermine China's interests would pay the due price Johnson worth is in Beijing Chinese state media has made some suggestions one is that there may be some kind of retaliatory set of sanctions against certain u.s. Companies and also that they may put some kind of visa restrictions in place or at least prevent certain u.s. Officials from trying to visit shin Jang and I think these measures would be designed to match of course some of the language we hear in this so-called We go act in Washington officials in southern Pakistan are examining the body of the girl amid concerns she may have been murdered by her family is Joe me giving is buried in a simple dirt grave it's outlined marked by rocks she died 2 weeks ago in a remote mountainous region of Sindh Province her parents said she fell in a landslide then disturbing reports surfaced which suggested she'd actually been stoned to death on the orders of a village council the allegation is that she was accused of damaging the family's honor but it's not clear exactly how officials say they now need to examine her body to find out how she died world news from the b.b.c. . The head of a Japanese aid agency in Afghanistan has been shot dead in eastern Afghanistan officials in one go hard province so Dr Ted soon Nakamura died on the way to hospital of the gunman opened fire on his vehicle 5 Afghans traveling with him also died the Taliban has denied being involved Japan's prime minister Shinzo Abbay paid tribute to Dr Nakamura as head of peace Japan medical services he was well known in Afghanistan for work on irrigation and I agree culture. Dozens of people are feared to have been killed in a landslide caused by heavy rains in eastern Uganda almost 50 are still missing patients are too high rate reports from Camp holler the local authorities in Mt ill going region say more than 20 buildings were buried by the landslide I didn't only flooding has cut roads and hampered the work of Emergency Service says though the area is prone to landslides this is worse than usual it's been caused by weeks of heavy rains that have claimed more than 200 lives across East Africa in northern Uganda the river Nile has best its banks cutting off a major highway with experts have warned that the heavy rains are likely to continue until the end of December the French interior minister Christophe Kasten air has condemned what he called the imbecilic desecration of a Jewish cemetery near the eastern city of Strasburg Mr Carson enjoined Jewish leaders of the graveyard heard verse 12 and where more than 100 headstones were daubed with swastikas on Tuesday the European Union's top court has thrown out an attempt by Italian vinegar make has to stop competitors elsewhere using the term but also make Italian producers argue that each word in the description about some Then I go from modern or was theirs to use exclusively on the e.u. Rules the European Court of Justice said vinegar was a common word b.b.c. News. Hello I'm Emily Webb and today I'm speaking to Ted. Ted Turner is 36 and lives in El Salvador in Central America she enjoys hanging out with her teenage son she enjoys dancing to put Chad to a style of Latin music and the reason that she tries to make the most of every day is because of what she's been through when you tell people what has happened to you they shocked. Some people get very shocked when I tell them what happened to me but most of the times they don't believe what just happened and the ones that feel empathy when I tell them to still something inside them telling them this is not possible. RINGBACK We speak to people who can do it and overcome unimaginable experience today we're bringing you the story of Ted or It's shocking it's of setting and it's sometimes hard to wrap your head around. That you have been. The same with. It begins back in 2007 in El Salvador as capital San Salvador is in the highlands of the country in the cities actually surrounded by volcanoes that's where théodore was based She was living in a school where she worked as a cleaner and in the canteen she had a son from a previous relationship he lived with her and when Ted door wasn't working she spent time with him. I was very. Young woman but very responsible as well I was just 22 years old but I was very dedicated to my family I fight a lot for my family for us to do well in life and tell me about your family because he had a son how old was he and what was his name. Has a book on me my son was 3 years old at the time his call and the relationship with my son was amazing he was a lovely boy what a name and head. But it's very primitive I call him uncle because he was my 1st son and for me an angel means company and he's been my company and they have a partner at the time as well wherever they are yeah we've been together for 2 years we were a very nice couple we were very understanding with each other he looked after my child he was really loving to him we really had a very good relationship we used to go to the park we used to go to the cinema we were very united with a family so we used to get a lot of time with him tell me about the day you found out that you were expecting another child how did you share that he's a go partner. When a stay at the lock up like that again our relationship was basing our confidence we were very loyal to each other and for us was always very important to share and to tell us everything so when I found out I was pregnant he really had his suspicions and he was very very happy I told him and he told me something like I knew it I know it is it will happen but obviously I had to keep working because he was hot to Montane a family and I had to look after my song and then also prepare for the one that was coming and what preparations did she start to make when the woman clamor had Mr Perrin close we had some still from Uncle even if I was expecting a girl we started talking to one fell for him not to feel jealous and explain here that our baby was coming home and we didn't want him to be sat so we make sure that we explained him that the baby that was coming on the way it will be his friend we just prepare as everyone's ass I guess. It was quite a normal pregnancy but then 9 months into a you went to well one day I think and you weren't feeling great Can you talk me through what happened step by step like I say they care whether you'll let me have that is it is that yeah the pregnancy was very normal so I plan my life as normal but that day is when everything happened or it is that is a normal day I was working in in these coffee shop inside the school and I was serving the children everything was fine and till me day my boss approached me and told me I need you to go to the market and buy some vegetables fans and fruit was meant to go with 2 colleagues we were in there around 3 pm and it was around 6 pm when we go back and when did you start to feel bad or on longer already everything is that day when we came back from the market we start putting the things in the 3 Chan in the freezer and I started to feel a very very strong pain in my back so I told to one of my colleagues I'm not feeling well I need you to help me and she said yes don't worry stop what you're doing I'll do it for you so I said I'm going to go to my room and lay down why was it that you decided to call the police is poor so I was in my room lay down fell in pain and my colleagues left and when I started to feel that the pain was very very strong what I thought Ok I'm going into labor that is that is what's happening so I called the police because it was the only number that came to my mind and your was 911 and I just thought I'm going to call them to ask them to send me an ambulance because I don't find the strength to go to the hospital so I called one. Woman pick up the phone I gave him my address but they didn't arrive even posit a lot of time and didn't arrive I ended up calling around 7 times and I couldn't move so I knew I had to wait for them cool the last thing I remember I was and left the room and I wait for them at this or that I fainted I just fell a very strong pain and something that came off me that I lost conscious when you woke up what was happening around. What is to eat every local area that. All of the medical marijuana that the particularly. When I walk up to police was that the same a I've been calling for the last hour and the 1st thing they told me was why did you kill your baby. Here let alone I couldn't understand what happened my mind was blank my eyes were open but I still didn't understand what was going on I was bleeding a lot I was feeling really really weak they took me straight in a pickup vehicle to take me to the police station and they told me. To be quiet and not to say anything because anything outset could be used against me so you were arrested and at this stage you didn't even realize that you had given birth you know as being as well meant that you have been back you know I thought that I still pregnant when they arrested me it was then at the police station when they put me their handcuffs and they put them for me to han my arms really high and very short 160 meters they put their book for they handcuffed like 2 meters away so I kept bleeding for hours I think everything happened around 9 pm and they kept me in that position bleeding bleeding and me gettin weaker and weaker for hours so it was then when I start realising that I didn't have my baby anymore because there was too much blat then someone is that to to say in the background she's going to die she needs to be taken to the hospital otherwise she's going to die here and that's why they took me there because they didn't want the responsibility for me to die in their place of station so you were taken to hospital I mean at this stage you basically stayed accused of suffocating your baby and obviously you were you Crystal in police custody did it just all seem like some big mistake how could you process what was happening. Mentally double back if that were the end of I thought that all was a nightmare really horrible nightmare I just didn't show any reaction I was not realizing what was going on I thought that what I was leaving was not really my reality it was very strange so only on their following day the morning of the 14th of July around 8 am. I was already in the hospital and I was with medication and I start to recover some strength but it was then when I found t.v. Cameras and reporters in my room spreading the news that a woman had been arrested for killing her child that's how I start realizing what they really were accusing me of. Now in El Salvador this has to be put in context since 998 the country has had some of the strictest abortion laws in the world if you're a woman in El Salvador you've been raped when you're pregnant you can't get an abortion if you're pregnant as the result of incest you can't get an abortion if your health is at risk because you're pregnant you still can't get an abortion and sometimes when a woman suffers a miscarriage or a stillbirth if she can't prove it was a natural death she can find herself targeted under this legislation the women who are convicted tend to be the ones who can't afford a lawyer the reason that Ted Dura was in custody why she woke up to a room full of reporters is because she was being accused of aggravated homicide or killing her baby Christians. They are not full of women who have an abortion they are full of women who have committed homicide because that's how is regarded by the state and by the government they don't see it as an accident that could happen a secret stance that can happen so what this means is that there are women in prisons in El Salvador who have had even a miscarriage or maybe have lost their baby during childbirth and can find themselves accused of murder this was what happened to you can you tell me about what happened in your trial. I was convicted. Having a stillbirth you were then sentenced to 30 years in prison I mean is it possible to describe what it was like to hear. That a day is the moment think that is a moment where all your world collapse your world is breaks it's really difficult to cope with that because it's not just that they are telling you and accusing you of something that you know you haven't done it's also that they basically end your life there were many moments where I thought it was not worth it to keep fighting and I even thought about my own life if his was worth it to carry on live in it because when you hear something like that they're put in your way from all the things that you lawful the people you love for your family so you think about the people living outside the people that care about you and that's what at the end gave me the strength. One very important person always he was your son who was only 4 years old when you were sent to prison how could you process that the thought of missing out on so much of his life in a very very empty I just kept thinking how old I would be when I finally made it out how old would it be I just thought I have lost all my life with him so he was really really difficult that I honestly thought that I would have lost all my life and we were able to see him if he is. I just got to see my son 4 times in 10 years Rico's there were a lot of restrictions so. If you want to get your song or your children to come to visit you you have to fill up a form and that form cost it $500.00 from the u.s. . I didn't have the money for that so there was only once a year that the children could come to visit their moms without any paper and that's when I got to see him and what about your partner I mean facing the prospect of 30 years in prison what conversations did you have about how you were going to me for it when or if it ever day it was really sad for both of us and there was a point where I was even afraid that he started to believe that I was guilty as well of killin our child I was convicted for too many years and it was unfair to ask him to stay with me so we have a conversation and I told him that he was free to go and to find someone else because we didn't know when our will get out of jail at the beginning he said no no no I'll be by your side I want to be with you but he was a young man and eventually he found someone else another woman who he's sharing his life with and I think that was the 1st totally fine because just because I was in prison and hours and happy that didn't mean he couldn't be happy it wouldn't be fair on him. Oh riving in prison accused of murdering you I'm baby hell he treated by the other prison this. Is that other women didn't like to know that a woman would be able to kill her own child so I was regarded as a moderate there I got beaten by other inmates they didn't allow me to get my food many many times even water. What they were saying to me is No you just die here as you kill you child you're going to die here is this right that there's always someone no that eventually turns up so there was a woman still inside who helped me and she said stay with me be on my side and they will stop beating you and stop mistreating you so that's how I survived because there was someone my my side helping me and was this woman did she have a photograph of that hand or particular memory that kept me going to help teach her in that period no none of them and you know we were not allowed to have pictures with us so they only thing I heart to remind me of him was my own memory I used to recall every moments with him especially birthdays remembering his 1st words his 1st steps and he has been danger in that kept me going food the years remembering him and reminding myself that he was my child after 5 years in prison you were contacted by the citizen group who work on the decriminalization of abortion what did they say to you not that I am better than the me in 20091 woman convicted for the same crimes as me got free and she was represented by the citizen group they thought that was an only case but she told them that there were many other women in this same situation so then these Association of Floyd is found out there were 17 women inside been convicted for the same reason. They approaches and they told me they will fight for me the legal team began their campaign and they argued that the cause of death was actually undetermined in the autopsy and that théodore sentence was excessive she was represented by a man called Dennis Munoz he managed to get her 2 appeals théodore lost both of them the 3rd appeal was launched that take it to a wasn't optimistic. It was very difficult because in every appeal one gets excited about the idea of these might work I'm going to be free but then when this didn't happen one time and then the 2nd time is devastating and then the results of that 3rd appeal when in February 28th Dennis came to you with a letter he said it was very important and he asked you to open it what's what's the state where you in welcome and. Well that moment when he came with the letter 2 of their peers were not successful so I didn't have much hope in fact I got really really angry and upset because I kind of thought. Fed up of them lying to me this is going to end up in nothing and then these were saying no no this is for real this is very important you see that this means your freedom I still didn't believe him completely so I handed the letter to some of my friends my colleagues inside and they were saying yes yes this means that you'll be free and I couldn't believe it. I mean you literally were free to go almost immediately I mean more King out of the prison doors. After 11 years behind bars what will make 7 nations will be feeling. It was difficult because somehow when you're inside you build up a family. So I was really sad for leaving my colleagues my friends and I was really sad that they couldn't leave but at the same time I was really happy because I got my freedom back I knew I could get to see my son again so tell me about that mine and I mean the moment that you were reunited with Helo Where was that and what happened I. Have no words for what happened when I got to meet I collect and he told me so many sweet things he told me that this was the moment he had been dreaming about for so many years he was crying his eyes out and honestly I have no words to describe what happened in that moment but I know I will never forget the feeling of saying him and feeling in a moment how bittersweet Was it as well I mean being reunited with him but having missed out on 11 years of his life. Well it was difficult to start over from it from basically from scratch because the how to build up again a different relationship with him and even now is going to be nearly 2 years I've been out of prison I still find his reality a little bit difficult but at the same time is in the best time of my life there are still women in prison convicted of the same thing that you were what do you make of the people who are holding these little. Yes but I mean I think the people who support these laws are sexist they don't believe in equality it can be only explain by having patrol Arcola state and not respecting in women's rights that's why as our mother is full of women being convicted for which is missing their children you are now working advocating for the women who are still in prison the women who are coming out of prison how important is that for you and how much does that help d.d. Think right now but only what it is very important to me because it is very very difficult to be a woman in. Them we need to show the states that even if they put us down we still standing and fighting not just for us but also for the future generations for them not to have to go through the same things when you were imprisoned I mean you told me that however Heller was this this amazing source of comfort fully and I used to remember in particular his birthday parties What did you do for his 1st birthday when you were out of prison a little of them a little I will be alone when I got out of prison I was about to turn 15 and you know some other as well as in all the Latin American countries these is a big deal when a teenager turns 15 so we threw a very big party for him to remember it and not only that we also trouble around Europe to celebrate his birthday you know if there was a fun trip there the family went yeah it was amazing we really had a good time it was really special because we got to share a lot there was a lot of founding it was beautiful to have him with me in the street to do your own name on my. Own not. Ted or the skis last year according to civil rights groups an estimated 20 women were still in prison n.l. Salvador accused of killing their babies terminating their pregnancies to see a photograph of Ted or and and Helen reunited we put one up on the b.b.c. Outlet Facebook page. Distribution of the b.b.c. World Service in the us is made possible by American Public Media with support from Baird celebrating 100 years of financial partner ships with individuals businesses communities and institutions more information at Baird 100 dot com and Cronos providing h.r. Solutions for the modern workforce and the people who support them learn more at Kronos dot com slash h r swagger. We know you're busy this time of year round Santa Claus this drug and I'm so sick of hearing about the meat that we put on Morning Edition for things and I think. It's Morning Edition from n.p.r. News I'm Steve Inskeep whether you're in North Carolina North Dakota or maybe up the North Pole we've got you covered this holiday season Morning Edition it's the gift that keeps on giving you the news every day all year long from n.p.r. . Next on in the u.s. Meeting another mother with a fight on her hands when the genny a wooden fall at some stop going to school and got involved in gangs people gave questionable advice people would tell me you know he's one of those kids to school probably get lost don't waste your team better just made me more determined determined to get him the education he needed Little did she realize how big that struggle would be. On out. B.b.c. News where Jerry's mate Britain's prime minister Boris Johnson has told NATO leaders they have the opportunity to strengthen the unity that has made NATO the most successful alliance in history a joint declaration will say that aggressive actions by Russia continue to be a serious security threat. In Germany to Russian diplomats are being expelled in connection with the murder of a former Chechen rebel commander in Berlin the German with or it is said Moscow had failed to cooperate with an investigation into the murder of xylem Han hung Gosh really he was shot twice in the head as he was walking to a mosque a Russian national is being held on suspicion of murder. Unknown gunman in Afghanistan have shot in killed the head of a Japanese aid agency and 5 local staff tend to knock a more or died on the way to hospital India's cabinet turns approved a controversial bill which could grant citizenship to some refugees from neighboring countries on religious grounds people from 6 faiths including Christians Hindus Sikhs and Buddhists may be able to become Indian citizens if they've been victims of religious persecution. Officials in southern Pakistan are examining the body of a 10 year old girl over concerns she may have been murdered by her family and other villagers reports suggest the girl may have been stoned to death in a so-called all my killing the French interior minister Christoph cast and there has condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery mistress Berg mystic has to never join to Jewish leaders of the graveyard verse 12 and where more than 100 graves were dogged with swastikas on Tuesday. Hong Kong's government is to spend half a $1000000000.00 on relief measures after months of street protests that have damaged the economy businesses will get subsidies for utility bills b.b.c. News. Hello you know without bringing you extraordinary stories from around the world and Emily Webb now we're going to hear about education discrimination and one woman's fight to get children equal access to schools in the u.s. Outlook's has the story. And. Will start and Little Rock a place synonymous with those powerful images from the 1957 when a group of African-American students known as the Little Rock 9 enrolled at Central High School and became the 1st nonwhite students to enter the previously segregated school. What happened next was dramatic the students were attacked a verbal e. And physically and the governor of Arkansas who was against the concept sent state soldiers to prevent them from entering the school unit of the National Guard air fare and are now being mobilized in response your President Eisenhower sent 1000 federal us soldiers to protect the black students on their way to and from school mom would. Not be allowed to override the state of our court Virginia Walton Ford was only 6 at the time but even then she knew in her bones that this was a historic moment. Was. My mom and dad were very involved in civil rights movement and I remember the night before the law right now were to go to school they are met to pray and talk in someone's home and they put all the kids in the back room and I remember even as 6 years old I knew something really important was happening eventually your parents did talk to you about what was happening do you remember what terms they explained it to you so they talked to us about desegregation and you know we had always come segregated schools and how this would impact us as time went on and how brave the law right now and were and how we would see in our own laughs what that meant to go to schools that were going to serve African-American kids you mentioned that your father was the 1st black assistant superintendent so is correct I read that your home was actually attacked by the Ku Klux Klan when your father took on that position yes it was they burned a cross in the yard in threw a rock through a window and I was terrified and I mean I remember looking out the front door and seeing the cross. Bernie and then almost as soon as we looked at the door we heard a rock come through the back window which was our baby sister's room she just was not in there so she could have been hurt if she had been in her room so those girls terrifying you know we cracked and held on to each other's 5 girls and my mom and dad he was you know trying to reassure us and keep us from being so afraid it would be an other 7 years before discrimination based on color religion sex or national origin would be outlawed but the Civil Rights Act But even when the law had changed the reality on the ground was a different matter the federal government had started putting pressure on the state of Arkansas to ramp up its public school desegregation efforts and in 19661 Virginia was 14 years old it was time for her to go to high school. Virginia was chosen to start at Central High the same school the Little Rock 9 had attended as part of the 2nd wave of black students to go to the school I remember not want to go and I remember my parents telling us we got to continue to desegregation pride says so you all need to be prepared to go to these schools and I remember telling my dad I don't want to go I want to go to the black I ask you but my dad said to me you have to go in you have to do well and you have to make sure you grasp everything the school has to offer because you have younger siblings and how would the world look at you if you don't go and your younger siblings have to follow you what will they go through and I remember thinking Wow No that's really important because I love my little sisters and I wanted to be a role model for them so I went. Right out I remember walking into the. Robberies central in Goa This is wonderful and never seen a labyrinth in a school like that where there was so many books and so I was good was a sauna lab rare but I have never. It was tough on us you know people often talk about what the law right now with through and blossomed they went through a lot and I prayed for them all the time but even when we went in 66 there was a lot of opposition to us going there and we knew we had to be tough and strong and we knew we had to go in with the attitude that we were going to get everything we could out of this opportunity but it was the lot for a 14 year 0 I mean a muscle it was in a degree sponsibility it was in I remember many times over the 3 years I was a central where I was frustrated in devastated by what I saw was happening and there was a student that commune and every day that was really hard on me you know to not respond to that but I walked away because that's what our parents told us to do and they say it don't let people being mean to you affect who you are you are good kids and you know the rules and you know what's right in Rome walk away so for 3 years I walked away now we're going to jump ahead quite a few years but keep in mind that those values her father had instilled in her about the merits of education and the role of a good school but all play out later. After graduating from high school Virginia who always loved math studied accounting and college she did well she got a job working for cultural exchange program and moved to the Us capital Washington d.c. . In the meantime quite a lot of life happened to Virginia she got married at 3 kids the marriage events. He fell apart and by the mid 1990 s. She was trying to make ends meet as a single parent I was kind of by myself with children and my oldest son was a joy he was one of those kids that you know everybody prays for Ivy he never got to travel get all A's he was jealous Khuda it was terribly challenge but he found a way to get through and so that the beginning started off really well and then as I saw the schools in d.c. Deteriorate in change and then a few years later with my youngest son I really saw it and I saw that he was in an environment that was my serving him well and he needed to be somewhere else but at that time I was working 3 jobs trying to raise the 3 of them and there were no options available for me except the neighborhood school and he just wooden door well I remember the teacher telling me you know what he was not necessarily bad he she was really mischievous and he gets in trouble all the time I mean it was a lot of gang activity in our community so he also got pulled into the streets he was running away and the year he was 14 or 15 I found 11 missing persons reports with the bullies good thing my God he would leave and he would be gone for $2.00 and $3.00 days and we'd all be out looking for him and it was scary I mean I can imagine that you probably had the feeling of like helplessness I did helplessness hopelessness you know I remember sit on the porch and cran many a night's about what we were going to do with him and so we were kind of stuck and people would tell me you know he's one of us kids just go probably get lost don't waste your time who tells a mother not to waste their time and I'd bet just made me more determined that I was going to fancy whatever he needed and then you came into the sudden windfall right a neighbor offered. To pay for William to attend a private school he offered to pay for part $2.00 issues for waiving the 10 private school and I would be responsible for the rest of what affected the new school have on him that he changed it was Oh absolutely he was it was amazing in a couple of months he was jumping up and going to school and and I remember asking him when Ted Ok what changed and he said Mama for the 1st time in my life other people care whether I learn and not other than you. And never makes me feel good William seemed to be on the right track at last it looked like Virginia's troubles were over she could have put her feet up turned her attention to something else but that's not really the kind of person Virginia is once where you get involved in thriving in school who looked around among neighbors kids were not and I just believe that there was some different for working class and poor kids in d.c. And bright at that moment I heard about legislative action proposing a scholarship program for low income kids in d.c. And I was working with a faith based organization that had been invited to get parents to participate in this I mean what they were looking for were parents to come and tell their stories and testified before the Education and Workforce Committee of the house and told them our story and it just kind of went from there all of sudden they were invited me to talk to other committees and we get other parents involved in spend a lot of time talking about our kids and what to needs were for our kids and that was kind of has starred Virginia had seen her own son thrive after switching from public to private education and she saw the difference a good school made for him and she knew she wanted that for other kids than it should have she talks about. Would have created a system of state funded scholarships for kids to go to private schools but although she had put her heart and soul into campaigning for it the legislation didn't make it into law. It was a setback but there was no stopping Virginia she had found her calling. She began to gather a group of like minded parents and they were going to fight for access to education for all kids no matter how long it took became really obsessed almost with making sure that the children of d.c. Had something there would get them out of schools that weren't serving to morrow then in 2003 legislation was once again proposed for a scholarship program for low income kids by now an old hand at campaigning Virginia rallied hundreds of parents this time she was going to make sure it didn't fall through. Over the next 10 months as the bill made its way through the legislative process Virginia worked with parents and children from across the city to relentlessly lobby Congress every single day that Congress was in session there were groups of parents on Capitol Hill often led by Virginia making themselves known and talking to lawmakers and the media. Have come out after the out. First then fight for now not exactly why so there you are you're the face of this campaign you know you're telling your story you're getting all these other parents involved but I have heard you say that you were quite a shy person I was like for you to all of a sudden be the face of the campaign Well I would tell you is terrified and I mean I remember summer early speeches and pray before I go as a lawyer to put the words in my mouth because I'm shaken and I have never been a speaker Virginia says The idea behind school choice incentives is to provide a way for all children to get a better education and give them a way out of failing schools now as with lots of elements of education there's always some controversy involved some people argue that allocating money to fund scholarships for private schools means you're going to weaken the already struggling public schools opponents also say that taking kids whose passionate parents are prepared to fight so hard for them out of the public education system means that those public schools are even more likely to fail. I put these concerns to purge and you know and she insisted that her movement was giving parents the option to make the best choices possible for their kids not take resources away from public schools we love the scholarship program but we also love traditional public schools that are do well we love homeschool what we love and what we $54.00 . Or is education to children can you to last to be successful so I fight for the best school possible what did your own kids make of what you were doing well I'll tell you one story I got a threat somebody threatened me and I remember at that point I've been involved for wow and it was 1st time a really sat down and talked to Mike his about it and I remember a column the older kids to say in our it I've been threatened if I've been threatened it is a threat to you as well so if you want me to stop I will hold the son speaking for his siblings and saying I mean the kids have talked about it we are really proud of the work you're doing and we'll be Ok so it took years of hard work and knock backs and threats but in 2004 the d.c. Voucher legislation was passed and it was signed into law right both that like for you after everything you had put into it. It was an amazing feeling and in the years since have you been able to see firsthand the impact that the program has had on young people Oh absolutely I have stayed in touch with many of the 1st group of parents that fall with us and I watched the children grow into adulthood I think the 1st group of kids to want to discuss your program in their late twenty's now and I've watched them go to college and finish college and get their 1st jobs and buy their 1st homes Virginia has seen at the impact her work has had on many young people but her proudest moment was watching her son William graduate at the top of his class as the valedictorian the student who delivers the closing statement at graduation as a mother you better Danette when they called him up to the stage to make his valedictory speech my heart was just the Rugby Union it was like This is a child who nobody expected. Do where ever I wrote him off to me and now he is the valid Torreon of his high school graduating class that's my proudest moment as a mother my proudest moment as an act of is is for we had our closing program there President Bush came to and he talked about how special our kids were and then our kids got up and talked about how special they were. And for them to have that kind of bread in joy of learning in you know that's the best moment in the world and that's all I want that's the reward for be an activist when you see something new or fall out passionately about come to fruition activists Virginia ward in full expecting to Outlook's us a fix we've made a longer version of the interview available as a podcast it's code a mother's battle for her son's education find it on the b.b.c. Outlook website or step James name I was listening in Kenya write to us saying Coo dust of a Jenny a and her fight to empower children through quality private education no mean feat as she faced the system and life setbacks if you'd like to comment on this or any other story e-mail is Outlook at b.b.c. Dot com That's outlook at b.b.c. Dot com. Now it's time for witness history today we're looking back at the impact of a British coal mine a sun on the world of art during the 20th century Henry will revolutionize scope to changing the way the human body was seen and setting his works in natural landscapes he became internationally renowned and by the 1970 s. His scope his could be seen outside government buildings universities museums banks and theaters worldwide Mary more is the only daughter of Henry Moore I mean one can't believe because his work seems so. Comfortable but there was this feeling that it was dangerous that it was outrageous that it would. Be following all use and we will was born in Yorkshire England in 8098 during the reign of Queen Victoria when he was 4 alternate and was totally representation you know we'd have narrative thought it was representation all could be done by photography with titles like you know the soldier comes home but Henry Moore would make abstract sculpture popular in the u.k. He was the 7th of 8 children his father was a miner but the family were keen on education and he decided to go to art school I mean I think that that generation believed in education as a way of changing the world changing your life and his choice was bold at the time England wasn't known for sculpture at his 1st art school he was the only student in the sculpture class later in a b.b.c. Documentary he said this freed him from any expectations I began my career at a time when people were saying that. England never had produced sculpture and never would do. This. For me is much better than if one had been born say an Italian. And had all the renaissance as a year as a background this was a complete conquest that I could make entirely alone and he began the Conquest immediately from the beginning he broke away from the tradition of copying an exact likeness but college more was taught to draw from models but this could not disguise the individuality of his own personal vision. Studies of the human figure were expressive interpretations of shape and form not careful copies of reality one of most teachers was provoked into exclaiming This man has been feeding on garbage the art schools that he was studying and many of his teachers called his work you know. Ugly and disgusting and that he said on a cesspit kind of rule academicians teachers and artists who believed in representation a lot Henry Moore's figure is usually women with large smooth bulky and powerful his inspiration came from what was then called primitive art freestanding sculpture from Africa and South America as this b.b.c. Report decades later explains people want used to seeing such sexualized sculptures what took people aback was a matter of expression which emphasized the sexual nature of its subject and rejected the realistic treatment of the human figure. It was considered to be a primitive decadent and savage a willful mutilation of noble ideals in a way it was more wanted to cut across the inhibitions that he felt robbed art of its vitality he wanted sculpture to have greater power and strength he wanted to rise in as the deepest forces and instincts my belief is that no matter what advances we make in technology. And in the controlling of nectar real bases of life in human relationships he just told them to do the happy or unhappy throughout his career he kept returning to the themes of the mother and child and the reclining figure women he told the b.b.c. Well much more interesting and emotional Heaven knows I don't want to play the editors I thought it was to you with all these maternal figures somewhere welling up from your unconscious I think. I think I'll. I love my mother earth but my mother really was a big stick to me Mary says Henry Moore's love for his mother helped inspire both his subject matter and the creative process itself learning to rob a need material into shape echoed back to a time when he helped ease his mother's back pain as he was the 7th child he was the youngest and he was often at home and his mother was quite old at the when he was young and used to rub really the moment in to have back because she had arthritis rheumatism so I think it you know and often when you look at the backs of his with me or even his mother's They are very large women with very broad backs he always said his work was more about form the no ideas I never know and I can't say and I don't know where the ideas come from how I get them whether what they mean so on the time it turn live the fun part perhaps can explain a little bit afterwards I don't set out to do. Something representing. Some literary. Idea and then try to do it I work by a kind of likes and dislikes of you know who think and shapes and not him and his school days had a lasting influence everybody's appreciation for is built on this appreciation of say part of my. Training that I was a young sculptor come from being. A mixed 2nd vehicle. I could look at all the girl's legs and I could tell you which girl was which to put her only shown me her figure from the need onwards I mean the. The falls for. The top Mr Paul all these things are connected with life and life effects by the 1950 s. His reputation was secure he'd been awarded the international sculpture prize at the Venice Biennale a in Italy and then in 1956 the United Nations Cultural Organization UNESCO requested a sculpture outside their headquarters in Paris suddenly the more family home became a hub of activity film stars came to us musicians came to us collectors came to us writers came to us but also one was aware that we were going to the world because they were lorries that were cranes there were a sculptor being created on crazy taken off to exhibitions his home and studio were in rolling green countryside he often carved outside and displayed his work in the landscape it's because the sculpture looks different all the time every day of the year every hour of the trade for for nothing it looks different in history or in life there is certain scientists or musicians or writers or painters or sculptors who invent a new language and not many people invent a new language and he invented a new language. A new way of seeing things and in 1978 he opened up the doors to his home to the public creating the Henry Moore Foundation here his sculptures were on display in the greenery surrounding his home I mean he wanted sculpture to be part of everybody's life and experience and he's rich that lives and we should go on fighting that fight you can't have something that stops me is like saying why is it necessary to go on I mean why can't the factory 5 of the platter of all this is a growth of human intelligence sensitivity and saw you can't go wrong just repeating the practicing not as if they don't make a case then they're doing nothing Henry Moore died in 1986 his foundation continues clear those reporting teaching in tomorrow if you like penguins and nature documentaries as I'll be joined in the studio by the award winning wildlife camera man Lindsay McRae He spent 11 months in Antarctica filming emperor penguins in some of the harshest conditions on Earth imagine temperatures as low as minus 60 degrees Celsius he'll be telling me about how he came to rescue some of those penguins after a storm and why he missed the birth of his 1st child to film the colony for a wildlife documentary join me for that but for me Emily Webb and the whole of the outlook team have a lovely morning afternoon or evening wherever you are in the world. Your tune to end s.p.r. Nor State Public Radio k c h o Chico n.k.f. Reading listener supported public radio for northern California a broadcast service of California State University Chico where on the web and my p.r. Work. On This is the news room from the b.b.c. World Service the British prime minister Boris Johnson has told funny.

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Suggestions One is that there may be some kind of retaliatory set of sanctions against certain u.s. Companies and also that they may put some kind of visa restrictions in place or at least prevent certain u.s. Officials from trying to visit shin Jang and I think these measures would be designed to match of course some of the language we hear in this so-called We get our act in Washington officials in southern Pakistan are examining the body of the girl amid concerns she may have been murdered by her family is DOMA giving is buried in a simple grave its outline marked by rocks she died 2 weeks ago in a remote mountainous region of Sindh Province her parents said she fell in a landslide then disturbing reports surfaced which suggested she'd actually been stoned to death on the orders of a village council the allegation is that she was accused of damaging the family's honor but it's not clear exactly how officials say they now need to examine her body to find out how she died world news from the b.b.c. The head of a Japanese aid agency in Afghanistan has been shot dead in eastern Afghanistan officials in one go hard province said Dr Ted Su Nakamura died on the way to hospital after gunman opened fire on his vehicle 5 Afghans traveling with him also died the Taliban has denied being involved Japan's prime minister Shinzo Abbay paid tribute to Dr Nakamura as head of peace Japan medical services he was well known in Afghanistan for work on irrigation and I agree culture. Dozens of people are feared to have been killed in a landslide caused by heavy rains in eastern New gander almost 50 are still missing patients are to hire a report from camp our the local authorities in Mt ill going region say more than 20 buildings were buried by the landslide Additionally flooding has cut roads and hampered the work of emergency services though the area is prone to landslides this is worse than usual it's been caused by weeks of heavy rains that have claimed more than 200 lives across East Africa in northern Uganda the river Nile has bust its banks cutting off a major highway with experts have warned that the heavy rains are likely to continue until the end of December the French interior minister Christophe Kasten air has condemned what he called the imbecilic desecration of a Jewish cemetery near the eastern city of Strasburg Mystica joint Jewish leaders at the graveyard heard verse 12 and where more than 100 headstones were doored with swastikas on Tuesday the European Union's top court has thrown out an attempt by Italian vinegar makers to stop competitors elsewhere using the term but also make Italian producers argue that each word in the description about some and then ago from modern or was theirs to use exclusively on the e.u. Rules the European Court of Justice said vinegar was a common word b.b.c. News. Hello I'm Emily Webb and today I'm speaking to Ted the eskies Tedder is 36 and lives in El Salvador in Central America she enjoys hanging out with her teenage son she enjoys dancing to pitch a style of Latin music and the reason that she tries to make the most of every day is because of what she's been through when you tell people what has happened to you they shocked. Some people get very shocked when I tell them what happened to me but most of the times they don't believe what just happened and the ones that feel empathy when I tell them it is still something inside them telling them this is not possible 'd. We speak to people who can do it and overcome unimaginable experience and today we're bringing you the story of Ted or It's shocking it's up setting and it's sometimes hard to wrap your head around. Still one of us has. Been. The same with the 2nd. It begins back in 2007 in El Salvador as capital San Salvador is in the highlands of the country and the cities actually surrounded by volcanoes that's where théodore was based She was living in a school where she worked as a cleaner and in the canteen she had a son from a previous relationship he lived with her mum and when Ted door wasn't working she spent time with him. I was very. Young woman but very responsible as well I was just 22 years old but I was very dedicated to my family I fight a lot for my family for us to do well in life and tell me about your family because either I had a son how old was he and what was his name really what then has a book on me my son was 3 years old at the time he's called and frail and the relationship with my son was amazing he was a lovely boy what a name and head for the grave but it's very primitive I call him uncle because he was my 1st son and for me an angel means company and he's been my company and they have a partner at the time as well whenever they can yeah we've been together how to yes we were a very nice couple we were very understanding with each other he looked after my child he was really loving to him we really had a very good relationship we used to go to the park we used to go to the cinema we were very united with a family so we used to get a lot of time with him tell me about the day you found out that you were expecting another child how did you share that nice with your partner when as they had to look up at that I guess our relationship was based in confidence we were very loyal to each other and for us was always very important to share and to tell us everything so when I found out I was pregnant he really had his suspicions and he was very very happy I told him and he told me something like I knew it I know it is it will happen but obviously I had to keep working because he was hard to maintain a family and I had to look after my song and then also prepare for the one that was coming and what preparations did she start to make when a woman prime ahead Mr Perrin at the close we had some still from Uncle even if I was expecting a girl we started talking to one fell for him. To feel jealous and explain here that a baby was coming home and we didn't want him to be sat so we make sure that we explain him that the baby that was coming on the way it will be his friend we just prepare as everyone's as I guess it was quite a normal pregnancy but then 9 months into event to well one day and a new bunch feeling great Can you talk me through what happened step by step and look up as a ticket rather your. Yeah the pregnancy was very normal so I plan my life as normal but that day is when everything happens for it is that is a normal day I was working in and these coffee shop inside the school and I was serving the children everything was fine and till me day my boss approached me and told me I need you to go to the market and buy some vegetables Hansen fruits was meant to go with 2 collies we when they're around 3 pm and it was around 6 pm when we go back and when did you start to feel bad wrong or. Everything is that when we came back from the market we start putting the things in the 3 Chan in the freezer and I started to feel a very very strong pain in my back so I told to one of my colleagues I'm not feeling well I need you to help me and she said yes don't worry stop what you're doing and I'll do it for you so I said I'm going to go to my room and lay down why was it that you decided to call the police or so I was in my room lay down fell in pain and my colleagues left and when I started to feel that the pain was very very strong when I thought Ok I'm going into labor that is that is what's happening so I called the police because it was the only number that came to my mind. And you it was 911 and I just thought I'm going to call them to ask them to send me an ambulance because I don't find the strength to go to the hospital so I called one woman pick up the phone I gave him my address but they didn't arrive puzzle lot of time I didn't arrive I ended up calling around 7 times and I couldn't move so I knew I had to wait for them. The last thing I remember I was and left the room and I wait for them up to the war but I fainted I just fell a very strong pain and something that came off me that I lost conscious when you woke up what was happening around he. Honestly I eat every local area that. All of America had a lot of the particularly. When I woke up to police was that the same hour I've been calling in for the last hour and the fasting they told me was why did you kill your baby well. I couldn't understand what happened my mind was blank my eyes were open but I still didn't understand what was going on I was bleeding a lot I was feeling really really weak they took me straight in a pickup vehicle to take me to the police station and they told me. To be quiet and not to say anything because anything outset could be used against me say you were arrested and at this stage you didn't even realize that you had given birth you know as being as well meant that you have been back in oh I thought that I still pregnant when they arrested me it was then of the police station when they put me there handcuffs and they put them for me to han my arms really high in very short arm 160 meters they put their book for the handcuffs like 2 meters away so I kept bleeding for hours I think everything happened Iran 9 pm and they kept me in that position bleeding bleeding and me gettin weaker and weaker for hours so it was then when I start realizing that I didn't have my baby anymore because there was too much blood then someone is started to say in the background she's going to die she needs to be taken to the hospital otherwise she's going to die here and that's why they took me there because they didn't want the responsibility for me to die in the police station so you were taken to hospital I mean at this stage you basically stickies to have suffocating you will baby any of us you were you Ryssdal in police custody did it just all seem like some big mistake how did you process what was happening in your own mental baggage that . I felt all was a nightmare a really horrible nightmare I just didn't show any reaction or I was not realizing what was going on I thought that what I was leaving was not really my reality it was very strange so only on their following day the morning of the 14th of July night around 8 am. I was already in the hospital and I was with medication and I was thought to recover some strength but it was then when I found t.v. Cameras and reporters in my room spreading the news that a woman had been arrested for killing her child that's how I start realizing what they really were accusing me of. Now in El Salvador this has to be put in context since 1998 the country has had some of the strictest abortion laws in the world if you're a woman in El Salvador you've been raped in you're pregnant you can't get an abortion if you're pregnant as the result of incest you can't get an abortion if your health is at risk because you're pregnant you still can't get an abortion and sometimes when a woman suffers a miscarriage or a stillbirth if she can't prove it was a natural death she can find herself targeted under this legislation the women who are convicted tend to be the ones who can't afford a lawyer the reason that Ted Dura was in custody why she woke up to a room full of reporters is because she was being accused of aggravated homicide or killing her baby prisons in a Salvador they're not full of women who have an abortion they are full of women who have committed homicide because that is how is regarded by the state and by the government they don't see it as an accident that could happen or a secret stance that can happen so what this means is that there are women in prisons in El Salvador who have had even a miscarriage or maybe have lost their baby during childbirth and can find themselves accused of murder this was what happened to you can you tell me about what happened in your trial. I was convicted for having a still if you were then sentenced to 30 years in prison I mean is it possible to describe what it was like to hear. There they say it's a moment think that is a moment where all your world collapse your world is breaks it's really difficult to cope with that because it's not just that they are telling you and accusing you of something that you know you haven't done it's also that they basically end your life there were many moments where I thought it was not worth it to keep fighting I even thought about my own life if is it was worth it to carry on live in it because when you hear something like that they're put in your way from all the things that you lawful the people you love for your family so you think about the people living outside the people that care about you and that's what at the end gave me the strength. One very important personal busy was your son who was only 4 years old when you were sent to prison how did you process that the thought of missing out on so much of his life well really ended I just kept thinking how old I would be when I finally made it out how old would it be I just thought I have lost all my life with him so he was really really difficult I honestly thought that I would have lost all my life and we were able to see him if he is certain I just got to see my son 4 times in 10 years because there were a lot of restrictions so if you wanted your song or your children to come to visit you you have to fill up a form and that form cost it $500.00 from the u.s. . I didn't have the money for that so there was only once a year that the children could come to visit their moms without any paper and that's when I got to see him and what about your partner I mean facing the prospect of 30 years in prison what conversations did you have about how you were going to me for it when it everday it was really sad for both of us and there was a point where I was even afraid that he started to believe that I was guilty as well of killin our child I was convicted for too many years and it was unfair to ask him to stay with me so we have a conversation when I tore him that he was free to go and to find someone else because we didn't know when our will get out of jail at the beginning he said no no no I'll be by your side I want to be with you but he was a young man and eventually he found someone else another woman who. Sharing his life with and I think that that's totally fine because just because I was in prison and I was unhappy that didn't mean he couldn't be happy it wouldn't be fair on him. Oh riving in prison accused of murdering you I'm baby hell he treated by the other prison this. Report is that all the women didn't like to know that a woman would be able to kill her own child so I was regarded as a moderate there I got beaten by other inmates they didn't allow me to get my food many many times even water what they were saying to me is Law No you just die here as you kill you child you're going to die here. Despite that there's always someone no that eventually turns up so there was a woman still inside who helped me and she said stay with me be by my side and they will stop beating you and stop mistreating you so that's how I survive because there was someone my my side helping me and was this woman did she have a photograph of that hand or a particular memory that kept going to help teach her in that period well none of them of you know we were not allowed to have pictures with us so they only thing I have to remind me of him was my own memory I used to recall every moments with him especially birthdays remembering his 1st words his 1st steps and he has been then Jane that kept me going fill the years remembering him and reminding myself that he was my child. After 5 years in prison you were contacted by the citizen group who were on the decriminalization of portion what did they say t. Not that I am better than the me in 200911 convicted for the same crimes as me got free and she was represented by this citizen group they thought that was an only case but she told them that there were many other women in the same situation so then these Association a flaw is found that there were 17 women inside been convicted for the same reason . And they approaches and they told me they will fight for me the legal team began their campaign and they argued that the cause of death was actually undetermined in the autopsy and that Ted or a sentence was excessive she was represented by a man who denys menials he managed to get her 2 appeals théodore lost both of them the 3rd appeal was low inched that tape sure wasn't optimistic. It was very difficult because in every appeal one gets excited about the idea of these might work I'm going to be free but then when these didn't happen one time and then a 2nd time is devastating and then the results of that 3rd appeal when in February 28th Denis came to you with a letter he said it was very important and he asked you to open it what's what sort of state we you in. The lobby and. Well at that moment when he came with the letter 2 of their peers were not successful so I didn't have much hope in fact I got really really angry and upset because I kind of thought I'm fed up of them lying to me this is going to end up in nothing and then he's were saying no no this is for real this is very important you've see that these means your freedom I still didn't believe him completely so I handed the letter to some of my friends my colleagues inside and they were same yes yes this means that you'll be free and I couldn't believe it. And he literally was free to go almost immediately I mean more King out of the prison doors. After 11 years behind bars what will mix of emotions we feeling 11 days. It was difficult because somehow when you're inside you build out a family. He said I was really sad for leaving my colleagues my friends and I was really sad that they couldn't leave but at the same time I was really happy because I got my freedom but I knew I could get to see my son again so tell me about that mine and I mean the moment that you were reunited with the Hallowell was that and what happened I. Have no words for what happened when I got to meet I collect and he told me so many sweet things he told me that this was the moment he had been dreaming about for so many years he was crying his eyes out and honestly I have no words to describe what happened in that moment but I know I will never forget the feeling of saying him and feeling him I'm on my arms how bittersweet Was it as well I mean being reunited with him but having missed out on 11 years of his life. Well it was difficult to start over from it from basically from scratch because the how to build up again at a different relationship with him and even now is going to be nearly 2 years I've been out of prison I still find these reality a little bit difficult but at the same time is been the best time of my life there are still women in prison convicted of the same thing that you were what do you make of the people who are holding these laws. Yes that I mean I think the people who support these laws sexist they don't believe in equality can be only explain by having patrol Arcola state and not respecting in women's rights that's why as our other is full of women being convicted food is missing the children he was now working advocating for the women who are still in prison the women who are coming out of prison how important is that for you and how much does that help d.d. Think right now but only in what it is very important to me because it is very very difficult to be a woman in. Them we need to show the state that even if they put us down we still standing and fighting not just for us but also for the future generations for them not to have to go through the same things when you were in prison and you told me about Hell and hell it was this this amazing source of comfort fully and how you used to remember in particular his birthday parties What did you do for his 1st birthday when you out of prison 11 am on a list that I will remember when I got out of prison and I think I was about to turn 15 and he has had other as well as in all the Latin American countries this is a big deal when a teenager turns 15 so we fear who a very big party for him to remember it and not only that we also travel around Europe to celebrate his birthday very nice it was a fun trip with the family that yeah it was amazing we really had a good time it was really special because we got to share a lot there was a lot of bounding it was beautiful to have him with me in the street to do your own name on my. Own not. Ted or the skis last year according to civil rights groups an estimated 20 women were still in prison n.l. Salvador accused of killing their babies terminating their pregnancies to see a photograph of Ted or and and Helen reunited we put one up on the b.b.c. Outlet Facebook page. Distribution of the b.b.c. World Service in the u.s. Is made possible by American Public Media with support from Baird celebrating 100 years of financial partnerships with individuals businesses communities and institutions more information at Baird 100 dot com and Cronos providing solutions for the modern workforce and the people who support them learn more at Kronos dot com slash h r swagger. Next on outlook in the u.s. Meeting another mother with a fight on her when the Jenny a wooden forward some stopped going to school and got involved in gangs people gave her questionable advice people would tell me you know he's one of those kids to school probably get lost don't waste your team bad just made me more determined determined to get him the education he needed Little did she realize how big that struggle would be. On out the b.b.c. News with Jerry Smit Britain's prime minister bars Johnson has told NATO leaders they have the opportunity to strengthen the unity that has made NATO the most successful alliance in history a joint declaration will say that aggressive actions by Russia continue to be a serious security threat. In Germany 2 Russian diplomats are being expelled in connection with the murder of a former Chechen rebel commander in Berlin the German authorities said Moscow had failed to cooperate with an investigation into the murder of xylem Han hung Gosh really he was shot twice in the head as he was walking to a mosque a Russian national is being held on suspicion of murder on known gunman in Afghanistan have shot and killed the head of a Japanese aid agency and 5 local staff Teds who NACA more or died on the way to hospital. India's cabinet turns approved a controversial bill which could grant citizenship to some refugees from neighboring countries on religious grounds people from 6 faiths including Christians Hindus Sikhs and Buddhists may be able to become Indian citizens if they've been victims of religious persecution officials in southern Pakistan are examining the body of a 10 year old girl over concerns she may have been murdered by her family and other villagers reports suggest the girl may have been stoned to death in a so-called on a killing the French interior minister Christoph cast and there has condemned the desecration of a Jewish cemetery mistress burg Mr Kasten air joined a Jewish leaders of the graveyard verse 12 and where more than $100.00 graves were daubed with swastikas on Tuesday Hong Kong's government is dispensed half a $1000000000.00 on relief measures after months of street protests that have damaged the economy businesses will get subsidies for utility bills b.b.c. News. Hello you know without bringing you extraordinary stories from around the world I'm Emily Webb now again to hear about education discrimination and one woman's fight to get children equal access to schools in the u.s. Outlooks has the story. The case. Will start and Little Rock a place synonymous with those powerful images from 1957 when a group of African-American students known as the Little Rock 9 enrolled at Central High School and became the 1st nonwhite students to enter the previously segregated school. What happened next was dramatic the students were attacked verbal e. And physically and the governor of Arkansas who was against the concept sent state soldiers to prevent them from entering the school unit of the National Guard airfare and are now being mobilized In response President Eisenhower sent 1000 federal us soldiers to protect the black students on their way to and from school. Not be allowed to override the decisions of our court Virginia Walton Ford was only 6 at the time but even then she knew in her bones but this was a historic moment. And . My mom and dad were very involved in civil rights movement and I remember the night before the law right now were to go to school they are meant to pray and talk at someone's home and they put all the kids in the back room and I remember even as 6 years old I knew something really important was happening eventually your parents did talk to you about what was happening do you remember what terms they explained it to you so they talked to us about desegregation and you know we had always come segregated schools and how this would impact us as time went on and how brave the law right now and were and how we would see in our own laughs what that meant to go to schools that were going to serve African-American kids you mentioned that your father was the 1st black assistant superintendent so is correct I read that your home was actually attacked by the Ku Klux Klan when your father took on that position and yes it was they burned a cross in the yard into a rock through our window and I was terrified and I mean I remember looking out the front door and seeing the cross. Bernie and then almost as soon as we looked at the door we heard a rock come through the back window which was our baby sister's room she just was not in there so she could have been hurt if she had been in her room so it's terrifying you know we cracked and held on to each others 5 girls and my mom and dad he was you know trying to reassure us and keep us from being so afraid it would be an other 7 years before discrimination based on color religion sex or national origin would be outlawed but the Civil Rights Act But even when the law had changed the reality on the ground was a different matter the federal government had started putting pressure on the state of Arkansas to ramp up its public school desegregation efforts and in 19661 Virginia was 14 years old it was time for her to go to high school. Virginia was chosen to start at Central High the same school the Little Rock 9 had attended as part of the 2nd wave of black students to go to the school I remember not want to go and I remember parents telling us we got to continue to desegregation pride says so you all need to be prepared to go to these schools and I remember telling my dad I don't want to go I want to go to the black ask you but my dad said to me you have to go in you have to do well and you have to make sure you grasp everything the school has to offer because you have younger siblings and how the world look at you if you know go and your younger siblings have to follow you what will they go through and I remember thinking wow that's really important that I love my little sisters and I wanted to be a role model for them so I went. To a vet I would I remember walking into the. Robberies central England this is wonderful and never seen a labyrinth in a school like that where it was so many books and so I was good was a sauna lab rare but I have my problems it was tough on us you know people often talk about what the law right now went through and blossomed they went through a lot and I prayed for them all the time but even when we went in 66 there was a lot of opposition to us going there and we knew we had to be tough and strong and we knew we had to go in with the attitude that we were going to get everything we could out of this opportunity but it would be over the lot for 14 year 0 I mean it was in a degree sponsibility it was in I remember many times over the 3 years I was a central where I was frustrated in devastated by what I saw was happening in and there was a student that communism's every day that was really hard on me you know to not respond to that but I walked away because that's what our parents told us to do and they say it don't let people being mean to you affect who you are you are good kids and you know the rules in you know what's right in Rome walk away so for 3 years I walked away now we're going to jump ahead quite a few years but keep in mind that those values her father had instilled in her about the merits of education and the role of a good school it all play out later. After graduating from high school Virginia always loved math studied accounting and college she did well she got a job working for cultural exchange program and moved to the Us capital Washington d.c. . In the meantime quite a lot of life happened to Virginia she got married had 3 kids the marriage eventually fell apart and by the mid 1990 s. She was trying to make ends meet as a single parent I was kind of by myself with children and my oldest son was a joy he was one of those kids that you know everybody prays for Ivy he never got in trouble get all A's he was in a school who that was terribly challenge but he found a way to get through and so that the beginning started off really well and then as I saw the schools in d.c. Deteriorate in change and then a few years later with my youngest son I really saw it and I saw that he was in an environment that was my serving him well and he needed to be somewhere else but at that time I was working 3 jobs trying to raise the 3 of them and there were no options available for me except the neighborhood school and he just wooden door well I remember the teacher telling me you know Wayne is not necessarily bad he's just really mischievous and he gets in trouble all the time I mean it was a lot of gang activity in our community so he also got pulled into the streets he was running away and the year he was 14 or 15 I found 11 missing persons reports with the bullies good thing my God he would leave and he would be gone for $2.00 and $3.00 days and we'd all be out looking for him and it was scary I mean I can imagine that you probably had this feeling of like helplessness I did helplessness hopelessness and you know our members sit on the porch and cran many a nights about what we were going to do with him and so we kind of stuck and people would tell me you know he's one of those kids to school probably get lost don't waste your time who tells a mother not to waste their time and I'd bet just made me more deter. And that I was going to fan foot ever he needed and then you came into the sudden windfall right a neighbor offered to pay for William to attend a private school he offered to pay for part to issue for we in the 10 private school and I would be responsible for the rest of what affected the new school have on him that he changed it was Oh absolutely he was it was amazing in a couple of months he was jumping up and going to school and and I remember asking him 110 Ok what changed and he said Mama for the 1st time in my life other people care whether I learn and not other than you. And never makes me feel good William seemed to be on the right track at last it looked like Virginia's troubles were over she could have put her feet up turned her attention to something else but that's not really the kind of person Virginia is once where you get involved in the ravin in school who looked around among neighbors' kids who were not and I just believe that there was some different for working class and poor kids in d.c. And right at that moment I heard about a legislative action proposing a scholarship program for low income kids in d.c. And I was working with a faith based organization that had been invited to get parents to participate in this I mean what they were looking for were parents to come and tell their stories and testified before the Education and Workforce Committee of the house and told them our story and it just kind of went from there all of sudden they were invited me to talk to other committees and we get other parents involved in spend a lot of time talking about our kids and what to needs were far kids and that was kind of has starred Virginia had seen her own son thrive after switching from public to private educate. And she saw the difference a good school made for him and she knew she wanted that for other kids than it should have she talks about would have created a system of state funded scholarships for kids to go to private schools but although she had put her heart and soul into campaigning for it the legislation didn't make it into law. It was a setback but there was no stopping Virginia she had found her calling and. She began to gather a group of like minded parents and they were going to fight for access to education for all kids no matter how long it took became really obsessed almost with making sure that the children of d.c. Had something that would get them out of schools that weren't serving to morrow then in 2003 legislation was once again proposed for a scholarship program for low income kids by now an old hand at campaigning Virginia rallied hundreds of parents this time she was going to make sure it didn't fall through. Over the next 10 months as the bill made its way through the legislative process Virginia worked with parents and children from across the city to relentlessly lobby Congress every single day that Congress was in session there were groups of parents on Capitol Hill often led by Virginia making themselves known and talking to lawmakers and the media. After the hour. Right here in fact for last. Night so there you are you're the face of this campaign you know you're telling your story you're getting all these other parents involved but I have heard you say that you were quite a shy person so what was it like for you to all of a sudden be the face of the campaign well to you is terrified and I mean I remember summer early speeches I pray before I go as a lawyer to put the words him out because I'm shaken. And I had never been a speaker Virginia says The idea behind school choice incentives is to provide a way for all children to get a better education and give them a way out of failing schools now as it had lots of elements of education there's always some controversy involved some people argue that allocating money to fund scholarships for private schools means you're going to weaken the already struggling public schools opponents also say that taking kids whose passionate parents are prepared to fight so hard for them out of the public education system means that those public schools are even more likely to fail. I put these concerns to purge and you know and she insisted that her movement was giving parents the option to make the best choices possible for their kids not take resources away from public schools we love the scholarship program but we also love traditional public schools that adore where we love homeschool and what we love and what we 5 for is education to children can you to last to be successful so I fight for the best screw possible what did your own kids make of what you were doing. A story I got a threat somebody threatened me and I remember at that point I've been involved for wow and it was 1st time really set down and talk to Mike his about it an armored column the older kids in San aren't I've been threatened if I've been threatened it is a threat to you as well so if you want me to stop I will hold the son speaking for his siblings and saying many kids have talked about it we are really proud of the work you're doing and we'll be Ok so it took years of hard work and knock backs and threats but in 2004 the d.c. Voucher legislation was passed and it was signed into law. Right what was that like for you after everything you had put into it. It was an amazing feeling and in the years since have you been able to see firsthand the impact that the program has had on young people Oh absolutely I have stayed in touch with many of the 1st group of parents that fall with us and I watched the children grow into adulthood I think the 1st group of kids who went to discard your program in their late twenty's now and I've watched them go to college and finish college and get their 1st jobs and buy their 1st homes Virginia has seen the impact her work has had on many young people but her proudest moment was watching her son William graduate at the top of his class as the valedictorian the student who delivers the closing statement at graduation as a mother you better didn't it when they called him up to the stage to make his valedictory speech my heart was just the robin and it was like This is a child who nobody expected to do well ever I wrote him off to me and now he is the valid Torreon of his high school graduating class that's my proudest moment as a mother my proudest moment as an active is is for when we had our closing program there President Bush came to and he talked about how special our kids were and then our kids got up and talked about how special they were. And for them to have that kind of Pratt in joy of learning in you know that's the best moment in the world and that's all I want that's the reward for be an activist when you see something you have fought passionately about come to fruition activists Jenny award and fill it speaking to outlets Assia fakes we made a longer version of the interview available as a pup cast its code a mother's battle that has son's education. And find it on the b.b.c. Outlook website or. That James Nehemiah was listening in Kenya write to us saying Jenea and her fight to empower children through quality private education no mean feat as she faced the system and life setbacks if you'd like to comment on this or any other story e-mail is Outlook at b.b.c. Dot com That's outlook at b.b.c. Dot com. Now it's time for witness history today we're looking back at the impact of a British coal mine a sun on the world of art during the 20th century Henry Moore revolutionized scope to changing the way the human body was seen and setting his works in natural landscapes he became internationally renowned and by the 1970 s. His scope his could be seen outside government buildings universities museums banks and theaters worldwide. Mary nor is the only daughter of Henry Moore I mean one can't believe because his work seems so comfortable that there was this feeling that it was dangerous that it was outrageous that it would. Be fire or use Henry Moore was born in Yorkshire England in 8098 during the reign of Queen Victoria when he was 4 alternate and was taking representation you know would have narrative thought it was representation all could be done by photography with titles like you know the soldier comes home but Henry Moore would make abstract sculpture popular in the u.k. He was the 7th of 8 children his father was a miner but the family were keen on education and he decided to go to art school I mean I think that that generation believed in education as a way of changing the world changing your life and his choice was bold at the time England wasn't known for sculpture at his 1st art school he was the only student in the sculpture class later in a b.b.c. Documentary he said this freed him from any expectations I began my career at a time when people were saying that. England never had produced sculpture and never would do. This. For me is much better than if one of been born say an Italian and had all the renaissance as a as a background this was a complete conquest that I could make entirely alone and he began the Conquest immediately from the beginning he broke away from the tradition of copying an exact likeness but college more was taught to draw from models but this could not disguise the individuality of his own personal vision. Studies of the human figure were expressive interpretations of shape and form not careful copies of reality one of most teachers was provoked into exclaiming This man has been feeding on garbage the art schools that he was in started and many of his teachers called his work you know. Ugly and disgusting and he said don't assess that kind of rule academicians teaches and artists who believed in representation a lot Henry Moore's figure is usually women with large smooth bulky and powerful his inspiration came from what was then called primitive art freestanding sculpture from Africa and South America as this b.b.c. Report decades later explains people weren't used to seeing such sexualized sculptures what took people aback was a manner of expression which emphasized the sexual nature of the subject and rejected the realistic treatment of the human figure. It was considered to be a primitive decadent and savage a will for mutilation of noble ideals in a way it was more wanted to cut across the inhibitions that he felt robbed art of its vitality he wanted sculpture to have greater power and strength he wanted to arise in us the deepest forces and instincts my belief is that no matter what advances we make in technology. And in the controlling of nectar the real basis of life in human relationships it is to them to who are happy or unhappy throughout his career he kept returning to the themes of the mother and child and the reclining figure women he told the b.b.c. Will much more interesting and emotional Heaven knows I don't want to play the amateur psychologist to you with all these maternal figures somewhere welling up from your unconscious I think so I think I love I love my mother earth but my mother really was a big stick to me. Mary says Henry Moore's love for his mother helped inspire both his subject matter and the creative process itself learning to rub the need material into shape echoed back to a time when he helped ease his mother's back pain I see was the 7th child he was the youngest son and he was often at home and his mother was quite o.t. When he was young and used to rub really the moment in to have back because she had arthritis rheumatism so I think it you know and often when you look at the backs of his women or even his mothers they are very large women with very broad backs he always said his work was more about form the night he is I never know and I can't say and I don't know where the ideas come from how I get them whether what they mean Song of the time it turn live on perhaps can explain a little bit afterwards I don't set out to do. Something representing. Some literary. Idea and then try to do it I work by a kind of likes and dislikes of you would think in shapes and not him and his school days had a lasting influence everybody's appreciation for is built on this appreciation of say part of my. Training that a young sculptor come from being going to a mixed secondary school. Where. I could look at all the girls' legs and I could tell you which girl was which you could only shown with her figure from the need downwards I mean the. The fullness of for the top with support all these things are connected with life and life or sex by the 1900. Fifty's his reputation was secure he'd been awarded the international sculpture prize at the Venice Biennale a in Italy and then in 1956 the United Nations Cultural Organization UNESCO requested a sculpture outside their headquarters in Paris suddenly the more family home became a hub of activity film stars came to us musicians came to us collectors came to us writers came to us but also one was the way that we were going to the world because there were lorries there were cranes there were a sculptor being created on crazy taken off to exhibitions his home and studio were in rolling green countryside he often carved outside and displayed his work in the landscape it's because the sculpture looks different all the time every day of the year every hour of the trade for for nothing it looks different in history or in life there is a certain scientists or musicians or writers or painters or sculptors who invent a new language and not many people invent a new language and he invented a new language. A new way of seeing things and in 1978 he opened up the doors to his home to the public creating the Henry Moore Foundation here his sculptures were on display in the greenery surrounding his home I mean he wanted sculpture to be part of everybody's life and experience and rich that lives and we should go on fighting that fight you can't have something that stops me it's like turning. To go on me why can't be satisfied with the platter of all this is a growth of the moment intelligence sensitivity and saw you can't go wrong just repeating the practising not. If they don't make a case then they're doing nothing Henry Moore died in 1986 his foundation continues Claire those reporting Dejan and tomorrow if you like penguins and nature documentaries as I'll be joined in the studio by the award winning wildlife cameramen Lindsay McRae He spent 11 months in Antarctica filming emperor penguins in some of the harshest conditions on Earth imagine temperatures as low as minus 60 degrees Celsius he'll be telling me about how he came to rescue some of those penguins after a storm and why he missed the birth of his 1st child to film the colony for a wildlife documentary join me for that but for me Emily Webb and the whole of the outlook team have a lovely morning afternoon or evening wherever you are in the world. Recognizes the nonprofit community support of Libya artisans market and the Briscoe art with. The artisans announced the 200-1000 holiday market at a new location this year the Medford armory December 13th 14th and 15th the holiday market features artisans of the list the artisans market offering their locally made works of art jewelry pottery clothing hats woodworking and more there will be live music throughout the weekend the Lithia artisans holiday market at the Medford armory is open to the public the 13th 14th and 15th of December. This is the news and information service of southern Oregon University's Jefferson Public Radio 12 30 am k s j k talent at 9 30 am. Also heard in the right valley at one o $2.00 f.m. News of the region the nation and the world it's 13 hours g.m.t. I'm Jackie Leonard and this is the news room from the b.b.c. World Service the British prime minister Boris Johnson has told fellow NATO leaders that the alliance must be ready to confront new threats if it's to prosper one thing every leader here is absolutely resolved on and that is the Viking importance of NATO for a collective security will be in Washington where formal impeachment charges are expected to be considered today Germany is expelling 2 Russian diplomats over Moskos refusal to cooperate with an investigation into the murder of a former Chechen rebel commander Fiore in China after the Us House of Representatives passed a bill demanding sanctions of the treatment of we go Muslims engine John media why do you think that even takes action that harms Dyna seem to its remaining different did you price must be paid and unvaccinated households in measles stricken Samoa told to hang a red flag outside their homes to aid an inoculation campaign only on the news. B.b.c. News Hello this is Gerry Smit the British prime minister Boris Johnson has told NATO leaders they have an opportunity to strengthen the unity of purpose that has made NATO the most successful alliance in history Mr Johnson was speaking as he formally opened NATO 70th anniversary gathering near London as friends and allies we must never shy away from discussing new realities particularly NATO response to emerging threats like hybrid water and disruptive technologies including space and cyber. They've been fractious exchanges on Tuesday between President Trump and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macor He said NATO is in the throes of brain death a joint declaration will say that Russia's aggressive action constitutes a threat to security on both sides of the Atlantic the statement is seen as a rebuff for president McCraw he'd argued the alarm should focus on terrorism as the greatest threat rather than designating Russia and China as enemies Germany is expelling 2 Russian diplomats in connection with the murder of a former Chechen rebel commander in Berlin German prosecutors said the Russian authorities have failed to cooperate in the murder investigation the Russian foreign ministry said it would responding kind from Berlin domain McGuinness can have usually was shot in the head in a park in Berlin on his way to a mosque he had fought in Chechnya with anti Russian separatists in the 1990 s. Making him an enemy of the Russian state shortly after the killing a suspect thought to be Russian was Courts as he allegedly tried to dispose of the murder weapon in a nearby river in August Moscow said there was no link between the killing and the Kremlin. A court in Senegal has handed down a 2 year suspended prison sentence to the head of a Qur'anic school for chaining up children Sarah ne Hardy I'm gay or was convicted along with 4 parents and the metal worker who made the trains they were arrested.

Radio-program , Political-science , School-types , Liberal-democracies , Republics , Member-states-of-the-united-nations , Parenting , Arts , Public-high-schools-in-ohio , Aid , Anti-communism , Types-of-university-or-college

BBC Radio Northampton-20191203-140000

Boris is very capable he said and will do a good job but he also reiterated his backing for brakes it crucially he also went out of his way to counter Labor claims that the n.h.s. Would be on the table in trade talks no no no he replied when asked never even thought about it we wouldn't want it if you handed it to us on a silver platter Mr Jermyn pays in the u.k. For a meeting of NATO which is seen sharp disagreements breakout between some of its leaders the fulminating secretary general hopes are said to lead is needed to get around the table and tackle the divisions between them there is not sufficient serious political debate around the NATO table when Turkey invades northern Syria without any form of consultation and Turkey buys Russian 400 missiles without consultation and then I have not mentioned yet the very unpredictable American president you never know what he is going to do what he's going to treat what he is going to say 3 teenage boys have been arrested and charged in Scotland in connection with hoax threats to schools around the world one institution in Fife was forced to evacuate funnel reports of a bomb threat as Andrew Anderson reports more than 80 hoax bomb and shooting threats were allegedly made to schools in Scotland England the USA Canada and the Netherlands between last December and February when Office high school was evacuated after reports of a bomb threat and international investigations been led by police in the Canadian city of Edmonton where 9 schools received hoax calls affecting more than 4000 students to Scotland of no arrested and charged 3 boys aged between $15.17 from the Don de Cologne roughness and muscle bar areas in connection with the calls. Scientists say average global temperatures since 2010 show that this decade will be the warmest ever a report by the world which are logical guys ations and he waves and floods which used to be a once in a century event where now becoming more regular researchers have warned that some festive coffees and hot chocolate sold by high street chains contain shockingly high levels of sugar the group action on sugar wants them to be subject to the same sugar taxes soft drinks several of the coffee chains in the study said they also offered healthier options Michelle Roberts reports the researches who campaign about the health risks of sugar analyzed $124.00 hot chocolates and 79 season or lattes sold by 9 companies including Costa Pret and McDonald's the most sugary drink was from Starbucks a large or venti signature caramel hot chocolate made with milk and talked with whipped cream that contains 23 teaspoons all 94 grams of sugar and 758 calories a salty caramel hot chocolate from Cafe Nero came 2nd at 15 teaspoons of sugar. Added the Fiji hooka son out of a seat at the school. With immediate effect from Championship side Cornish Pirates he played in all 4 of Fiji's pool games in the World Cup He's also serving with role Navy based at R.N.A.'s cold rice is whether a dry day with. Some gentle winds a high of 7 Celsius 45. Minutes past him. See radio. Is looking pretty busy if you run to the softer Nasheed was looking at speed sensors on the $85.00 just at the junction with the right that's looking slow and also the top roundabout slow on the approaches a 43 especially quite heavy there are things that have patchy congestion into and out of Northampton on the Bedford road around Queens Park is building up both ways to be slowing it down a little bit round round spinny area that sat southbound in fact in both directions on the a 43 and are already looking at some queues around Kettering at chalet others on the rocky road north bad that ye 43 as well as you had southbound towards Kettering is a bit slower than usual from what I can say nobody is reported on the railways but if you spot a problem call our 803 out of all fordable 5 in the exabytes in 30 minute show. Let's get on the slight because it's December so we've given to share a bang a bit of a right. To take a trip on the ages that have no time to get a word to say. Christmas. Colby about no. Cats we've done a cold squeeze done kept the. Kids. On this. Today was finding out about a place that's treasured by many for the work that it does it's Cram's the house makes Louise pretty as a fundraiser the Holloways hire anybody who doesn't know where I raised the whole space. By Hey Mary how to catch them I was sort of services do you offer that we provide care for patients. Who need the special help. Taken in the physical and mental health spiritual and social care and can be in the hospital and patients I know. When people hear the word hospice they very often think that he gets cancer patients and he's only comes patients to go there but that's not the case is it no way. Available for anyone over the age of 18 has a life limiting illness not specifically cancer of see we do get a lot of cancer patients but we can support of this is well lots and lots of people when benefiting from hospice services in that case yes hundreds every year come into the impatient in cash train as well as another few 100 in their own homes. Which costs money so therefore people that you are important to the fund raising what kind of thing yet not to at the moment and say This weekend the part we've called for 35 k. Family from run time we've held this event and is actually that it's family from Ron Paul signs involved which include Fire Ice folk and sniping. All ages can take part in Pierce chairs wheelchairs and all ages if I may say from 0 puts can come and take part is lots of fun if you source or bubble rush in my similar sort of idea but there's also the forces of that look fantastic yeah yeah so really really excited to get still available on the day and all this week online as well you have to run it you don't have to run it you can look at all a joke it will run or skip or hell if you can't get a mile of. Fire Ice snow and fog blindness so I won't tell you too much more about those 4 zones keep a bit of a mystery for the day for everyone taking part but just put my mind at rest there you know there's a fire to anybody no we're not going to get a fine i heard you had that question yesterday in a school is. Not a so when you walk on in wintery day Hi Ok what else is going on between now and then and now and Christmas and so people live in their workplaces or schools or local organizations they can get involved Well 1st defeat campaigns. We're encouraging anyone between attentive to November and 20 December 2 don't some Christmassy fest of the wintery Sox and also Dana. To take part and would like to see some amazing photos of people face to face. Because of our Christmas jumper day which I think is a we come Friday night for Save the Children yes incredibly popular I have tested what really I know I have let's not forget about i love you to. Tell me about the magic of Christmas. Then the use of Christmas Tree of service yeah yeah and yeah so we had our annual trailer service on Sunday and we finally had sort of a $500.00 people come along we had the Salvation Army our community choir and it's a lovely reflective service of remembrance anyone connected to currently or from the local area I just want to comment on the remember someone about you've got all kinds of plans in the pipeline for next year is when I already have yes yeah we've got lots of events planned for out the year we've got all but we're going back in my school or so I call road races are sort of usual events that when I'm full as well as little surprises along the way I guess it is quite fun doing your job isn't it yeah I mean it's something different every single day. You can't predict who is going to end up like you say I was a school with a crocodile all the school class a and then today on the radio and. Smart might be something completely different you never know how much money do you have to raise every year or so to support the hospice services from racing team we have to raise 1400000 pounds and yet there are so many good causes out there must be hard does it sometimes definitely And you know we understand that if you want to he has so much money and but we hope that we offer something for everyone and the hospice does touch a lot of local people and just really lucky that we have such good community support. On to the community to really be running around and yes a day in for I to waste that could be coming. You know then I compete and taking part in one of our campaigns also think kind is about businesses and things that are quite stuff Louis said people want to find out more about hospice and what you're doing to raise funds how do they go about doing so and they can find out that we have to take a page and we have a website which is. Ok u k s fantastically well thanks for telling us about it thank you for having our take about why you Louise Brady he's a fundraiser for canceling hospice. Wants a picture of adult behind them. The app that's on the way in the next. I will play it who's Helen off to the like to travel news. You're right that Robbie Williams One is very likely for. I don't see them of any same but. That's about Cold 180 for you come on stage but they all make the most amazing noise just before they went on as well the n.a.c. Was hit by lightning so we had to wait while keeping all the fuses anyway when. I'm fine to say on Sunday overtop have a Christmas market at the village hall between one and 3 stills crops live music on a pup as well and on Sunday it is Christmas fat Rushton library runs between 10 and 3 local craft as gifts cakes mince pies games I'm refreshment the common cold is very Southern ways I guess no county in the f.a. Cup. Because it's cold. Looks. Cold. And they keep the true form going like so you can hold a school in the league trophy up front and become very. Desperate to get to the starting line and this is up to them to go in the fall much again give them. A couple is closer to some 45 to 70 b.b.c. Radio Northampton Yep that's all I found if you won't tell me a helping hand from 7 on da base. Say. Oh look. Like. A. Designer. And see. Amy Winehouse in rehab and b.b.c. Radio Times and so just in case you're comfortable about what's going on for the rest of the day it goes like this Sarah Palmer so inflamed by even she's going to have 2 years on the we want to have all the day's news for you and then from 6 o'clock a roundtable debate with all the candidates standing in next week's general election for the constituency of Wellingborough So if you live in Wellingborough and surrounding areas then you want to be with Sarah tonight from 6 for that and then the statue itself let's think I have my word from 7 o'clock on a family you've got a football with Jake and to Michael thought here on the way to Fratton Park for the a.f.l. Trophy game Portsmouth bus is the coupler said that's on f.m. Kickoff at $745.00 build it from 7 if you want the weirdness that is Mr Tim Whalen in a day before that from 7. Am to. See radio Northampton Ok here's Helen is on the way after the latest from Barry. Thanks so much Helen just hearing of the accident taking the 45 that is close to where that's all these parents out whose turn smell like their partially blocked with slight delays on the approach I can see on the speed sensors and make sure update on that in the 5 much praise shouted queue looks to be buildings like the they're now. At their approaches to chance mail getting slower on the I 45 in both directions still just a bit slow going towards the road works around speeding on the I 43 in both directions the comments are at Northampton quite busy now and also a slower. Still around the area on the I 5 about directions close to the brightly road looking to name but if you want to call our 845 loose in the next update in 30. Helen b.b.c. Radio Northampton I was just like that was nearly home time it is time for us to play. 3 places somebody and you just have to get. That image into. Place. Well say. Number one then you get to. The next 24. Places looking after things that 1030 double for double 5 you can text if you text north or you think get plays to put your name on the text as well saying that 813 double straight here we go clear one actor producer director singer songwriter also the American power boat association is 988 world champion who you. Are Not me until this morning when I play actor producer director singer songwriter also the American power boat associations 988 world champion internet research on I'm sure. 8830. Text 81 triple 3 and still it's your message with. Hello b.b.c. Radio north. Lol. Lol. Look. Famous of course for the top of the Pops thing where they started singing and there was a picture of Jackie Wilson. Behind them on screen decks is Midnight Run us and Jackie Wilson says on b.b.c. Radio 5 that she is going to write then Keith and tell me s.n.c. Boys are so was done today the 2nd of s.n.c. Boys are in types of the gym and Tom Barry and Julian rushed in kite from Stan Ian Stacy and Chris at the beehive passing kings the open Stan and Gina in long puppy well done clever cloaks on their way to Clayton played Nash Bridges in the 1990 s. Cup Series 08030 double fordable 5 Nash Bridges in the 1990 s. Cup serious. Lol you look so bad. is in longhand on shouty voice grabs this but by the front of her jeans the bit where the button is and yanks are towards them all I can think he's that's going to split you different that's all I mean it's very manly and much of what you should I might go. To him over the phone you know I think I think he found it quite Oh no they can write so she's probably being paid a lot to let him do that yeah he's a hit in the video and then I want to remember that have to watch out for that next time I shall go you'd say well go. Talk about yes I'm something I've just found out I'm here because I'm covering for a way to behave and yet people have been saying there's no blue down here you know I've got 4 hours ahead and I know little of my gladness but I think about did I how much I'm going to have to run during the news. That's all I'm going to say so I'm going to make an alert about 5 minutes 10 if there's anybody in that order top star as well as what. Told you what happened to me the other day so I decided I needed to go for a way to get somebody down to do the bits and pieces just in case the desk Yeah not you know Ok I want to just as there was somebody in there that's got to the next No No Yes I got myself look. Oh no other cause I don't now 2 floors away from where I live you are giving me palpitations Now Helen final review is what I would say so I could do the show for my phone I could do. So many welcome the b.b.c. North to take over. Yeah anyway anyway I'm sure it'll all be fine yes Sarah Palmer is here because when David isn't yes I don't well yes I mean I hope he gets better I'm assuming he's not well I think it's complicated to get it everything's got gated with Wayne but I found his bolt Oh good under the desk with a young Lawson Polish errantly it was under the desk with the pies and the fake tan Ok so I found that so we'll be doing Bay Vince bolts a little bit later on a mob to get Martin Bawly to help me because it's quite a big one. Something that's something that was on the news. A festive drinks too much sugar and Sarah Foster during the news saying that one of them I got $758.00 calories yes it is the Starbucks signature caramel hot chocolate $23.00 teaspoons of sugar you're wrong would fall off if you put that much sugar in it to you could stand the spoon in it can you can imagine 20 means of should go and I get why the highlighting I really do but it is Christmas Yeah but you don't want to Couric Well anyway so with his Christmas and the 1st of December that's my excuse for everything I get these Christmas too when. Jean the 3rd Ok it was Christmas it was Christmas salute you. Next Christmas yes I will be hearing about giving cheese steak breakfast this morning a family in Russian are making passes to give to charities which is brilliant of them we have the final debate with the parliamentary candidates that cover a week covering the district and also hearing from the Hamptons I'd like Martin but he set this up for me Northampton's male role model of the year I think is more of an influence or have you heard that word I've been hearing that was some going to ask me what made me think it's a new thing it is a new thing that's why I don't know much about it yes and also a nurse manager from San Andres hospital here in Northampton has been given the production team of Holby City some 1st hand advice on the new storyline very very good so yes so that's the sort of like to stuff and then we get into the politics at some point and you having to say in my house 8 I am a nonparty I have to I have to walk wipe stuff down when I finished here is that right yeah absolutely I have to sanitize with that because. Helen b.b.c. Radio Northampton Sarah promise it's in Fort Wayne but even for my 3 o'clock happy nobody's going to write David in Abington Rob and John in Welling Garden City he's clay number one actor producer director singer songwriter also the American power boat associations 988 world champion that might be my favorite thing that I found out today playing on the tape played Nash Bridges in the 1990 s. Cop serious and you find a place there best known for playing Sonny Crockett in Miami Vice is that if you know. The way to 100 only 3. Radio Times and. It is very exciting when a change somebody is like from Friday morning if only because the sight of. A bush outside the house could be enough to scare them for not. Good show but it's really. Time. Some of these double. Bands polling makes it go bold. You know when you. Spend the song I don't see. Coming. To the gym don't. Talk to each other please. Go but dong. Sung. With so. We're. Supposed. To. Check out guitar tone. Oh come on. Let's take. The America's crime scene. Feed. Is all you can. Really adds up under the lights the. Military doesn't. Really see. He's got a. Sleeve . Friday. With the sounds of. The song with sleep. Including somebody he was on with last week b.b.c. News it 3 his. President. Has denied claims made by labor that the us wants access to the n.h.s. As part of any future trade deal he said he would stay out of the general election . Saying he thought Boris Johnson was very capable and he was a fan of Frank said he said he could work with anybody when asked about Jamie Colby in the mom's drum dashed any hopes of unity at the NATO event bike using his French counterpart of being nasty and disrespectful for describing the alliance as brain dead the defense secretary Ben Wallace stress the need for nations to stand together a former u.k. Permanent representative to NATO Lord Ricketts said the lines could still be productive but some reform is necessary yes through tensions yes there is fractures up was here President macro went too far in talking about brain dead I think we'll see tomorrow that NATO is alive and well but we are in urgent need of a serious political debate about what NATO is going to be for in the next decade the broadcast regulator has rejected a complaint from the Conservative Party about a decision by channel 40 use an ice sculpture to prepare present Boris Johnson during a leaders' debate on climate change of calm said the format of debates was a matter of editorial freedom as Tom Barton reports after Boris Johnson turned down Channel 4 as invitation to appear alongside other party leaders on the channel's climate change debate the broadcaster represented both him and Nigel frog should also declined the invitation with ice sculptures the Conservatives complained the format failed to comply with rules surrounding Jew impartiality the party also took issue with Channel falls refusal to allow the Cabinet minister Michael Gove to take the prime minister's place of Commons election committee has ruled that the decision to exclude Mr Gove from a debate designed for party leaders was reasonable. Here in the county the 4 general election candidates in Wellingborough have been telling b.b.c. Radio them to more they believe voters would want them to focus on 1st if they're elected next week Merrington Hoess standing for the Green party she says investing in local communities should be the top priority helping people to take the lead to tackle the climate crisis and working to create a more sustainable society with better public transport and affordable energy tackling homelessness and housing affordability and improving public services and making sure we all have more police to work for an urgent care center in Wellingborough and improve g.p. And dental services and you can hear a full debate with all 4 candidates for one Ingrid coming up live after 6 here on b.b.c. Radio Northampton the grandson of a foreman with empty cricketers says he's incredibly proud that his is the 1st family to be inducted into the Hall of Fame Wantage road 8 of the 9 Kingston brothers played for Northamptonshire between the late 19th and early 20th centuries a number of them also played rugby for the Saints Bill Kingston grandson of opening batsman Billy says the family didn't really celebrates the unique heritage of its own ours growing up most of the the original sons had died and just my grandfather and great uncle left and they were they were pretty old so the records were just basically put in a box which are just dug not recently. Do families really shunning the tradition having calendar in favor what they call $24.00 days of giving is the 50th they've done it with a wide range of good causes in Northampton ship benefiting today's giving cheese day which organizes hope will make people think about the needs of others after Black Friday and Cyber Monday mum Sara Howard whose 2 children volved says they've already been busy we went to Johnny's happy place we threw up on Saturday cause they were having a crush on the Sunday so we took them some cakes that we'd made and I made them some homemade crafts for them to sell and we went to call we ambulance station and get them some heroes for heroes and also a way ambulance station was 1st time we've been there literally day with a mixture of bright spells and patchy cloud gentle winds a high of 7 Celsius that's 45 Fahrenheit and tonight it's danger. With some low clouds and fog could form in places later on turning rather cold as well overnight the winds will stay gentle temperature down to freezing again as 32 Thera night they will see Radio News It's 4 minutes past 3. And with a travel let's go to I'm up Percy into a thank you travelling between North Hampton and Bedford on the a 48 road works are slowing you down both ways through Brayfield And also we're on coal at coal Brayfield all clear on the a 45 at little church is still following an accident earlier but the a 45 is slowing up northbound to reach the a 14 at junction at Thrapston and Colby has a few Q.'s southbound on Phoenix Parkway with delays now of that nearly 5 minutes if you spot a problem call us on our 800.

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