Browse content similar to 07/09/2011. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Welcome to South East Today. I'm Rob Smith. And I'm Polly Evans. | :00:08. | :00:11. | |
Tonight's top stories: Police are to question a retired GP over plans | :00:11. | :00:14. | |
to help an elderly woman, who is not terminally ill, travel to | :00:14. | :00:24. | |
:00:24. | :00:27. | ||
Switzerland to end her life. Angry and confused; we speak to patients | :00:27. | :00:29. | |
of Denise Stewart the suspected unqualified nurse, who may have | :00:29. | :00:39. | |
:00:39. | :00:40. | ||
gone undetected in Kent for years. Police are to question a retired GP | :00:40. | :00:43. | |
over plans to help an elderly woman, who is not terminally ill, travel | :00:43. | :00:46. | |
to Switzerland to end her life Also in tonight's programme: Not in our | :00:46. | :00:49. | |
stately back yard - why the National Trust is squaring up for a | :00:49. | :00:52. | |
fight over changes in planning law. We will be talking live to | :00:52. | :00:55. | |
Government Minister Greg Clark. A bumper crop of cobnuts - and the | :00:55. | :01:05. | |
:01:05. | :01:10. | ||
engineer producing the country's Good evening. Parents of children | :01:10. | :01:13. | |
immunised by a Medway nurse arrested for fraud have been | :01:13. | :01:19. | |
speaking of their anger and upset. It is claimed that 46-year-old | :01:19. | :01:22. | |
Denise Stewart worked as a nurse for four years without proper | :01:22. | :01:26. | |
qualifications. 1,400 patients have received letters informing them | :01:26. | :01:28. | |
that they may need further treatment. Our Home Affairs | :01:28. | :01:36. | |
Correspondent Colin Campbell reports. | :01:36. | :01:42. | |
Photographed at home in Wales, this is Denise Stewart. The 46-rolled | :01:42. | :01:49. | |
suspected of fraud gently practising as a nurse. She was very | :01:49. | :01:56. | |
polite, very welcoming. This when's son was immunised by Denise Stuart | :01:56. | :02:00. | |
in 2008. Discovering that the health worker may not have been | :02:00. | :02:05. | |
sufficiently qualified his letter angry and upset. In a doctor's | :02:05. | :02:11. | |
surgery you expect everybody to be qualified. My son was a baby, so | :02:11. | :02:17. | |
anything could have happened. do you feel? Physically sick. | :02:17. | :02:25. | |
Worried for my son's health. Denise Stewart worked for four years in | :02:25. | :02:35. | |
:02:35. | :02:36. | ||
Medway in four different surgeries. That was his first injection. | :02:36. | :02:46. | |
:02:46. | :02:47. | ||
Denise Stewart give this boy can injections. We don't know if they | :02:47. | :02:52. | |
have had the right immunisations or not admitted will affect them in | :02:52. | :02:57. | |
the future. The health of our kids is in their hands. We are not | :02:57. | :03:02. | |
qualified, so we need to know that the work being done is been done by | :03:02. | :03:07. | |
somebody qualified, and if that is not the case, then why? Health | :03:07. | :03:10. | |
bosses suggested that there were no concerns about the duties carried | :03:10. | :03:16. | |
live by Denise Stuart. We have found no evidence of any harm done | :03:16. | :03:20. | |
to any patients, so we believe we can be reassuring to the public on | :03:20. | :03:25. | |
this. 1400 patients had been contacted by the trust. The news | :03:25. | :03:30. | |
for some has cost distress and confusion. | :03:30. | :03:33. | |
And Colin Campbell joins us live now from Chatham. Colin, the | :03:33. | :03:36. | |
Primary Care Trust is again trying to reassure the public today, isn't | :03:36. | :03:43. | |
it? They say only patience that have received a letter from then | :03:43. | :03:48. | |
need to seek advice. 1400 patients have now received a letter and most | :03:48. | :03:53. | |
patients are being advised the do get interest with it national | :03:53. | :03:57. | |
helpline or to contact their local doctor. Denise Stewart has been | :03:57. | :04:03. | |
released on police bail. She is now back at home, but we believe she | :04:03. | :04:09. | |
will have to return here to talk to detectives in October. | :04:09. | :04:12. | |
Sussex Police have told the BBC that they do intend to question a | :04:12. | :04:15. | |
retired GP from Hove who declared this morning that he is planning to | :04:15. | :04:18. | |
take an elderly woman to the Dignitas Centre in Switzerland to | :04:18. | :04:20. | |
die. Dr Michael Irwin's case is particularly controversial because | :04:20. | :04:23. | |
the woman from Eastbourne, whose name has not been released, is not | :04:23. | :04:31. | |
suffering from a terminal illness. Lynda Hardy reports. This is what | :04:31. | :04:37. | |
Dr Michael Irwin plans to escort the 91-year-old lady to. The | :04:37. | :04:42. | |
Dignitas facility in Switzerland. The woman is believed to have said | :04:42. | :04:45. | |
the G8 and so much pain with arthritis that she tilts her only | :04:45. | :04:49. | |
option is to go abroad. While we hope that the law will change soon | :04:49. | :04:54. | |
to promote doctor-assisted suicide for those who are terminally ill, | :04:54. | :04:58. | |
we want to start a debate on the possibility of elderly people, | :04:59. | :05:02. | |
mentally competent, who are suffering from medical problems | :05:02. | :05:07. | |
also being allowed to get that doctors have to die. His actions | :05:07. | :05:11. | |
have horrified another arthritis sufferer who has had constant pain | :05:11. | :05:17. | |
in her hip, knees and neck for 17 years. Sometimes it can be a really | :05:17. | :05:21. | |
deep burning pain, sometimes it is light somebody has got a fist in | :05:21. | :05:28. | |
your bones and is just grinding all the time. It is quite horrendous. I | :05:28. | :05:32. | |
can understand that if she is in so much pain she feels that she wants | :05:32. | :05:36. | |
to get out of it, but there are other alternatives. There is better | :05:36. | :05:41. | |
medication, better pain management. The former GP has helped three | :05:41. | :05:45. | |
others who were not terminally ill to die at the Dignitas Centre and | :05:45. | :05:55. | |
:05:55. | :05:57. | ||
never been prosecuted. But Sussex In cases such as the death of the | :05:58. | :06:01. | |
paralysed rugby player whose parents were not prosecuted for | :06:01. | :06:05. | |
accompanying him to the Dignitas Centre, the Crown Prosecution | :06:05. | :06:09. | |
Service has defended his position, insisting it has not banned the | :06:09. | :06:12. | |
prosecution of cases of assisted suicide since new guidelines were | :06:12. | :06:17. | |
issued 18 months ago. The is a real difference between people who are | :06:17. | :06:24. | |
terminally ill and he are going to die anyway, and in those situation | :06:24. | :06:28. | |
dignity and dying campaigns for them. All we don't do his campaign | :06:28. | :06:34. | |
to legalise assisted suicide, which is where you are substituting a | :06:34. | :06:38. | |
effectively death for life. Irwin says he is helping the 91- | :06:38. | :06:45. | |
year-old because she has no one else to do so. | :06:45. | :06:49. | |
In a moment we have an exclusive look at the work of the special | :06:49. | :06:57. | |
police who protect our nuclear The National Trust, which looks | :06:57. | :07:00. | |
after nearly 35,000 acres of land in Kent, Surrey and Sussex, has | :07:00. | :07:02. | |
spoken out today against the Government's controversial new | :07:02. | :07:09. | |
planning reforms. Following a meeting this morning with Planning | :07:09. | :07:13. | |
Minister and Tunbridge Wells MP Greg Clark, it said it was not | :07:13. | :07:15. | |
prepared to enter into talks until it has assurances from the | :07:15. | :07:18. | |
Government that its new system was not there simply for economic | :07:18. | :07:27. | |
development. What we want to see his things restored to their proper | :07:27. | :07:33. | |
balance. Don't want to see growth and Housing in the right place, but | :07:33. | :07:37. | |
we do not need day and overlay that just says if it helps growth then | :07:37. | :07:41. | |
it can be granted consent, because that is not the right purpose of | :07:41. | :07:44. | |
the planning system. The Government says it wants to use the reforms to | :07:44. | :07:47. | |
simplify planning policy, from 1,000 pages to just 52. So, what | :07:47. | :07:50. | |
are the proposed changes to the system? They include encouraging | :07:50. | :07:52. | |
councils to be more ambitious in delivering new homes and meeting | :07:52. | :07:57. | |
business needs. And turning the planning system on its head, urging | :07:57. | :07:59. | |
planning decision-makers to assume the default answer to sustainable | :07:59. | :08:04. | |
applications is yes. But opponents believe the reforms are unfair, | :08:04. | :08:07. | |
promoting economic development at a cost to the quality of the | :08:07. | :08:11. | |
landscape. Well, joining us now is Planning Minister and Tunbridge | :08:11. | :08:21. | |
Wells MP Greg Clark. Mr Clark, you say you want to safeguard the | :08:21. | :08:23. | |
natural environment, but the policy prioritises economic growth and | :08:23. | :08:30. | |
business need, doesn't it? No, it doesn't. We had a very constructive | :08:30. | :08:36. | |
meeting, Fiona and I, this morning. But thought it was strange that the | :08:36. | :08:40. | |
National Trust should be thought to be disagreeing when protecting the | :08:40. | :08:45. | |
natural environment is something I have always campaigned for. I think | :08:45. | :08:50. | |
we can all agree that we need to have more homes for young people. | :08:50. | :08:53. | |
But this will make it easier to build on greenbelt land, so more | :08:53. | :08:56. | |
greenbelt land will be concreted over if the local plan isn't water- | :08:56. | :09:05. | |
tight, won't it? It will not. This is designed to make sure that | :09:05. | :09:10. | |
developments on the happens if it does not compromise day environment. | :09:10. | :09:13. | |
The green belt is protected. The threat to the green belt that we | :09:13. | :09:17. | |
have had from the regional strategies introduced by John | :09:17. | :09:23. | |
Prescott, they are being deleted. What I said was that if we go | :09:23. | :09:26. | |
through line by line with the National Trust to make sure that we | :09:26. | :09:30. | |
have a planning system that protects the environment and that | :09:30. | :09:36. | |
changes happen for the better, I am sure that's we will find that there | :09:36. | :09:42. | |
was for a little between us. Isn't the problem that brown-field sites | :09:42. | :09:44. | |
aren't currently viable for developers because of the cost of | :09:44. | :09:49. | |
development. So, there's an economic barrier to building new | :09:49. | :09:59. | |
homes, not a planning one? They cannot build on the green belt. It | :09:59. | :10:03. | |
is important to bring brownfield sites into play first, but what | :10:03. | :10:08. | |
we're saying is that brownfield site should be brought into use | :10:08. | :10:14. | |
first. Every council will want to make use of derelict land before | :10:14. | :10:18. | |
other lands, but if you think of the other land, the green belt that | :10:18. | :10:25. | |
we have, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, they all enjoy | :10:25. | :10:30. | |
enhanced protection. What about protecting the character of | :10:30. | :10:33. | |
villages and the countryside, as in the case of Hawkurst, which is | :10:33. | :10:35. | |
facing a large housing development? Aren't you putting needs of | :10:35. | :10:38. | |
developers above protecting the unique character of our rural | :10:38. | :10:46. | |
areas? Absolutely not. The essence of the policy is to take away the | :10:47. | :10:51. | |
trouble but we have in the south- east, this top-down imposition were | :10:51. | :10:55. | |
every council in the country has been told by the regional assembly | :10:55. | :11:00. | |
how many homes they have to build, which owes nothing to do local | :11:00. | :11:07. | |
assessment of needs. They are told where they are to be built. What | :11:07. | :11:11. | |
we're saying is every local council will make its own assessment of | :11:11. | :11:16. | |
what the community needs. Every community has young people and we | :11:16. | :11:20. | |
want to be able to get them on the housing ladder, but will be their | :11:20. | :11:27. | |
decision how many homes they will be, what they will look like. We're | :11:27. | :11:31. | |
taking a way that John Prescott targets and listened to what local | :11:31. | :11:41. | |
:11:41. | :11:43. | ||
people say. Teenagers with a history of anti-social behaviour in | :11:43. | :11:46. | |
Kent are being taken to meet serving prisoners in a bid to alter | :11:46. | :11:48. | |
their behaviour. The scheme in the Swale area sees | :11:48. | :11:51. | |
troubled teens taken to the Cookham Wood Young Offenders Institute in | :11:51. | :11:54. | |
Rochester to show them at first hand the reality of what prison | :11:54. | :11:57. | |
life can be like. An old college in Wye near Ashford | :11:57. | :12:00. | |
could re-open as a free school within the next two years, if it's | :12:00. | :12:03. | |
given the green light by the Government. Campaigners want to | :12:03. | :12:05. | |
convert the Imperial College building into a comprehensive | :12:05. | :12:07. | |
school for children of all abilities. | :12:07. | :12:10. | |
It has been revealed that the Government makes an annual profit | :12:10. | :12:13. | |
of �45 million from the Dartford Crossing. Ministers say the money | :12:13. | :12:15. | |
is invested in transport projects, but many local politicians and | :12:15. | :12:18. | |
traders have expressed anger at plans to increase the tolls paid by | :12:18. | :12:21. | |
drivers. Our reporter Ria Chatterjee is at the Dartford | :12:21. | :12:27. | |
Crossing now. Ria, this is a highly controversial issue, isn't it? | :12:27. | :12:32. | |
Issues and concerns over the dark fruit until crossing had been | :12:32. | :12:37. | |
rumbling on for a long time. Currently the charge is set at | :12:37. | :12:45. | |
�1.54 cars between 6am and 10pm. That gives a revenue of �70 million. | :12:45. | :12:51. | |
That could go up to �2.50 by April next year. That is proving very | :12:51. | :12:56. | |
contentious for motorists. What have the government have the same | :12:56. | :12:59. | |
response? The government say that the proposed increase is about | :12:59. | :13:05. | |
improvements to the crossing and that should benefit users. There is | :13:05. | :13:09. | |
a public consultation going on into this issue and that is set the end | :13:09. | :13:15. | |
at the end of this month. The special armed police force | :13:16. | :13:18. | |
which protects Dungeness nuclear power station insists it will | :13:18. | :13:23. | |
remain safe, despite pressure to make efficiency savings. This civil | :13:24. | :13:28. | |
new killer is - - civil nuclear Constabulary is there to prevent | :13:28. | :13:34. | |
decides against possible terrorist threats. | :13:34. | :13:39. | |
Their role is to defend sites, deny unauthorised access to nuclear | :13:39. | :13:45. | |
material and recover it should anything go wrong. Our role at | :13:45. | :13:49. | |
Dungeness is to protect the power station from any hostile | :13:49. | :13:55. | |
reconnaissance from terrorists or domestic or international terrorism. | :13:55. | :14:03. | |
Carrying firearms, we believe it is necessary for our job. Although the | :14:03. | :14:09. | |
transport of nuclear material is designed to withstand accidents, | :14:09. | :14:16. | |
officers are there to secure its movement, too. It has changed over | :14:16. | :14:19. | |
the years. The threat here was concern to people trying to | :14:19. | :14:24. | |
infiltrate the site or petty theft, now it has gone up to being a | :14:24. | :14:30. | |
terrorist target. The civil nuclear Constabulary was greater than 2004. | :14:30. | :14:36. | |
The patrols 15 sites in the UK and has 1000 staff, the majority | :14:36. | :14:40. | |
authorised firearms officers. It but it is up for the 7% this year, | :14:41. | :14:45. | |
but all areas are being asked to look a different ways of working to | :14:45. | :14:49. | |
achieve savings. Are you confident Dungeness will remain safe despite | :14:49. | :14:57. | |
changes? Of course. They are trained to a very high level and I | :14:57. | :15:02. | |
have no doubts whatsoever that we can provide good, secure response | :15:02. | :15:06. | |
to this site and to the nuclear material. Although for some it | :15:06. | :15:11. | |
might seem strange to see armed officers so near the nuclear power | :15:11. | :15:16. | |
station, for the people who live in the shadow of Dungeness, they have | :15:16. | :15:21. | |
benefited from a fall in minor crime. We have a new Kuala power | :15:21. | :15:27. | |
station on our doorstep, we do want any trouble here at all, do we? It | :15:27. | :15:31. | |
frightens the anglers sitting on the beach! You feel safe none but | :15:31. | :15:37. | |
nobody can blow it up and! police are stressing that there is | :15:37. | :15:41. | |
no specific threat to Dungeness, but officers are there to make sure | :15:41. | :15:46. | |
it remains that way. This is our top story tonight: | :15:46. | :15:49. | |
Parents of children immunised by a Medway nurse who has been arrested | :15:49. | :15:52. | |
for fraud have been speaking of their anger and upset. It is | :15:52. | :15:55. | |
claimed that 46-year-old Denise Stewart worked as a nurse for four | :15:55. | :16:05. | |
:16:05. | :16:08. | ||
years without proper qualifications. Also, the story other young Kent | :16:09. | :16:13. | |
sailor, the first person ever to receive the Victoria Cross. | :16:13. | :16:20. | |
Also, why and mobile cinema from the 1960s is packing them in in | :16:20. | :16:23. | |
Essex. As the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 | :16:23. | :16:26. | |
terror attacks on the Twin Towers approaches, what has it been like | :16:26. | :16:29. | |
for the relatives of those that died? Robert Eaton came from | :16:29. | :16:32. | |
Brighton. He was in one of the buildings when it collapsed. His | :16:32. | :16:35. | |
sister, Barbara Stephenson, told our reporter Alex Beard that the | :16:35. | :16:45. | |
:16:45. | :16:52. | ||
passing of time hadn't helped ease the pain. Every year at this time I | :16:52. | :16:59. | |
feel terribly upset. Robert was more than 100 floors up in the | :16:59. | :17:03. | |
first tower. At that time his family back in Sussex or watching | :17:03. | :17:07. | |
the events unfold on their televisions unaware of the personal | :17:07. | :17:11. | |
loss that the day would bring. had a phone call from a mother to | :17:11. | :17:18. | |
say had I heard from him. I said, no. She said, switch the television | :17:18. | :17:26. | |
on because something is going on in New York. I did. But that. I wasn't | :17:26. | :17:31. | |
aware that Robert was in the north tower. It was early evening before | :17:31. | :17:36. | |
we realised, after having watched the north tower collapsed, but he | :17:36. | :17:41. | |
more than Nike had been killed. years on and Barker still finds it | :17:41. | :17:48. | |
hard to watch images from that day. I think anyone who has lost a loved | :17:48. | :17:54. | |
one is able to slow the heel and put aside would happen to them, but | :17:54. | :18:00. | |
with relatives of 9/11 we're constantly being reminded of what | :18:00. | :18:05. | |
happens and it doesn't get any easier. Like so many others, | :18:05. | :18:11. | |
Robert's body was never found. have never been told that he is | :18:11. | :18:16. | |
dead, she is just missing. He went to work and did not come home. | :18:16. | :18:20. | |
his memorial service his family buried at boxer bashers from Ground | :18:20. | :18:27. | |
Zero. Their permanent memorial to Robert is a charity set up and his | :18:27. | :18:31. | |
name. The fund helps children access board who may otherwise | :18:32. | :18:41. | |
:18:42. | :18:51. | ||
struggled to do so, a positive During the Crimean War, when a live | :18:51. | :18:54. | |
shell landed on the deck of the ship Charles Lucas was serving on, | :18:54. | :18:57. | |
with no thought to his personal safety, he grabbed it as the fuse | :18:57. | :19:01. | |
burned and threw it overboard. But at the time there was no medal to | :19:01. | :19:04. | |
reward such bravery. When Queen Victoria introduced a new medal to | :19:04. | :19:06. | |
recognise extreme heroism, Charles Lucas, who lived in Kent, became | :19:06. | :19:16. | |
:19:16. | :19:17. | ||
the first person to receive it. Sara Smith has more. | :19:17. | :19:22. | |
Buried here in this churchyard, Charles Lucas was the first person | :19:22. | :19:26. | |
ever to receive the Victoria Cross. When he carried out his | :19:26. | :19:30. | |
extraordinary act of bravery the nettle did not even exist. It was | :19:30. | :19:34. | |
the horror of the Crimean War which convinced the Paris of the day that | :19:34. | :19:44. | |
:19:44. | :19:44. | ||
there should be a reward for ordinary soldiers and sailors. | :19:45. | :19:50. | |
was the first war really fault in the public eye. Correspondents what | :19:50. | :19:54. | |
they're feeding back to the newspapers. There was an increased | :19:54. | :20:00. | |
appetite to find an award to reward gallantry they could be awarded | :20:00. | :20:04. | |
irrespective of rank or social services. Charles Duke this had | :20:04. | :20:09. | |
been built on HMS heckler when a Russian explosive landed on the | :20:09. | :20:16. | |
deck. Everyone is told to lie down and he picked it up and threw it | :20:16. | :20:22. | |
over boards and it exploded as it landed on this see. So, he saved, | :20:22. | :20:29. | |
probably, the lives of a lot of the crew and maybe the entire ship. | :20:29. | :20:33. | |
Here his bravery is marked, not just by at plaque but by a yearly | :20:33. | :20:40. | |
service at his graveside. Stilled the highest awards of gallantry, | :20:40. | :20:43. | |
the Victoria Cross is traditionally made from the Bronze other cannon | :20:43. | :20:49. | |
taken during the Crimean War. Charles Lucas would died just as | :20:49. | :20:59. | |
:20:59. | :21:02. | ||
another terrible conflict was The first English nut oil for | :21:02. | :21:09. | |
hundreds of years has been created in Kent. Farmers say it can be used | :21:09. | :21:13. | |
in same way as olive oil. It is made from the Kentish cobnut, | :21:13. | :21:15. | |
cultivated variety of hazelnut. It is believed the variety of Kentish | :21:15. | :21:20. | |
cobnut was introduced in 1830. The nuts were popular with Victorians | :21:20. | :21:28. | |
and were even played with by children as a form of conkers. Now, | :21:28. | :21:31. | |
a retired engineer from Kent is producing the world's only English | :21:31. | :21:33. | |
nut oil. Ian Palmer reports. Grown in Kent, harvested in Kent | :21:34. | :21:43. | |
:21:44. | :21:44. | ||
and eaten in Kent. Farmers say the Kentish cobnut is making a comeback. | :21:44. | :21:50. | |
And very good nuts was actually found in the woodland around my | :21:50. | :21:55. | |
farm. That is one reason why I started growing them. The crop is | :21:55. | :21:58. | |
doing well this year - 4,000 tonnes of cobnuts will be harvested from | :21:58. | :22:07. | |
this orchard over the next few weeks. It will take a picker 20 | :22:07. | :22:11. | |
minutes to take all the nuts from the tree. The clever bit is what | :22:11. | :22:15. | |
comes next. This is where English nut oil is produced. Here at | :22:15. | :22:18. | |
Hurstwood Farm near Sevenoaks they shell cobnuts, they dry them and | :22:18. | :22:22. | |
then they squeeze them. This cold press machine was developed by | :22:22. | :22:26. | |
Richard Dain. Without it there would be no oil. One cobnut tree | :22:27. | :22:31. | |
produces two bottles. The product is sold to restaurants and shops | :22:31. | :22:34. | |
across the South East. Fortnum and Mason and Selfridges in London | :22:34. | :22:38. | |
stock it. At around �8 for a quarter of a litre it's not cheap, | :22:38. | :22:44. | |
but say the oil can be used for almost anything. But what do people | :22:44. | :22:53. | |
think? I tried to find out. doesn't taste like all boil. It | :22:53. | :23:03. | |
:23:03. | :23:04. | ||
tastes nice. It is horrible. dissimilar to olive-oil. Very nice. | :23:04. | :23:06. | |
Before this 83-year-old retired engineer developed his oil press | :23:06. | :23:10. | |
tonnes of cobnuts were going to waste each year. Now the nuts are | :23:10. | :23:20. | |
:23:20. | :23:28. | ||
literally being turned into liquid gold. | :23:28. | :23:32. | |
A mobile cinema built on to the back of a coach in the 1960s drew | :23:32. | :23:35. | |
crowds in the centre of Brighton today. The theatre was used half a | :23:35. | :23:37. | |
century ago to promote Government policies extolling the virtues of | :23:37. | :23:40. | |
modern technology. It has been restored to pristine condition and | :23:40. | :23:43. | |
is once again being used as a people's picture house. Robin | :23:43. | :23:48. | |
Gibson reports. It was, in every sense, a publicity | :23:48. | :23:54. | |
drive selling a message, and 1960s message that technology could | :23:54. | :23:59. | |
change industry, technology and bring prosperity. This is the last | :23:59. | :24:04. | |
survivor of that fleet of mobile cinemas sent out to visit | :24:04. | :24:09. | |
workplaces all over the country for the Government. It was completely | :24:09. | :24:14. | |
derelict. It had been at a service for 35 years. It had actually been | :24:14. | :24:20. | |
in a field, so anything wooden was rotten. The engine had ceased and | :24:20. | :24:25. | |
the gearbox stolen. It needed to be rebuilt. Looking like you come it | :24:25. | :24:35. | |
:24:35. | :24:36. | ||
has gone back to its beginning as a travelling cinema. Today in | :24:36. | :24:42. | |
Brighton there were free showings of local archive belongs. Archive | :24:42. | :24:46. | |
Pelhams have a tough time at cinemas because there was always | :24:46. | :24:49. | |
the new feature to play, but what is biddable about this is that we | :24:49. | :24:54. | |
can go with the interest is. The same way to we can be used in our | :24:54. | :24:59. | |
laptops and her phones to watch movies, this mobile cinema is just | :24:59. | :25:09. | |
perfect because we can literally take her films anywhere. Dish - - | :25:09. | :25:15. | |
are films anywhere. It is great to see old films in that environment. | :25:15. | :25:20. | |
Brilliant. You didn't get death and, because nowadays you go to the | :25:20. | :25:27. | |
cinema new, deaf. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Dust the cinema ad to | :25:27. | :25:34. | |
it? Yes, especially as I like vehicles anyway. I am a bit of an | :25:34. | :25:40. | |
anorak. There is irony here, of course. It was perceived as the | :25:40. | :25:45. | |
cutting edge, but in its dotage the old cinema is helping to revive | :25:45. | :25:55. | |
:25:55. | :26:00. | ||
I am going to the cinema at the cemetery on Friday. And want to see | :26:00. | :26:08. | |
what the weather is going to be There is plenty of rain around | :26:08. | :26:15. | |
tomorrow. Today was mostly dry with some showers. There will be a band | :26:15. | :26:19. | |
of Korean moving through tonight. It will cure tomorrow, but there | :26:19. | :26:26. | |
will be more wind behind it. You can see these tight isobars | :26:26. | :26:29. | |
indicating a blustery south- westerly winds, which are picking | :26:29. | :26:34. | |
up to 25 miles an hour. Temperatures have been 16 or 17 | :26:34. | :26:39. | |
degrees. So, dry for a time as soon be through this evening, but the | :26:39. | :26:44. | |
cloud will thicken. That is ahead of the band of rain spreading | :26:44. | :26:49. | |
eastwards. We will have a wet end to the night. Temperatures reflect | :26:49. | :26:54. | |
those lows. So, a wet start to the day tomorrow. That rain will clear | :26:54. | :27:01. | |
East. It will be dry for a time, but cloudy per, but we will see | :27:01. | :27:09. | |
further outbreaks of rain. This suggests - - south-westerly winds | :27:09. | :27:17. | |
will pick up to about 20 miles an hour. It will be a humid and mucky | :27:17. | :27:24. | |
nights on Thursday night. It will stay dry for Friday, but it will be | :27:25. | :27:30. | |
cloudy. Moving towards the weekend we have a deep area of low pressure | :27:30. | :27:38. | |
spreading eastwards. You can see these type isobars. So, dry today, | :27:38. | :27:42. |