06/06/2014

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:00:00. > :00:08.We're in Normandy, where world leaders have joined veterans

:00:09. > :00:23.The Queen, on a state visit to France, joins thousands to pay

:00:24. > :00:28.tribute to those who changed the course of the Second World War.

:00:29. > :00:31.Many of the veterans, in their late 80s and early 90s,

:00:32. > :00:36.say they don't expect to attend another commemoration of this kind.

:00:37. > :00:41.My chaps with me, my company commander, they're all dead.

:00:42. > :01:01.The events of 70 years ago, when Allied forces invaded Nazi-occupied

:01:02. > :01:06.Europe, brought a powerful tribute from President Obama.

:01:07. > :01:10.These men waged war so we might know peace, they

:01:11. > :01:16.sacrificed so we might be free, they fought in hope of a day in which we

:01:17. > :01:26.Britain's spiralling house prices could threaten economic recovery,

:01:27. > :01:28.warns the IMF, though growth is better than expected.

:01:29. > :01:31.UKIP makes gains but not enough to take a parliamentary seat,

:01:32. > :01:37.as the Conservatives win the Newark by-election.

:01:38. > :01:41.In Sportsday, Andy Murray is out of the French Open - Rafael Nadal

:01:42. > :02:17.beat him in straight sets and now plays Novak Djokovic in the final.

:02:18. > :02:20.Good evening from the port of Arromanches in Normandy, where heads

:02:21. > :02:22.of state, including Her Majesty the Queen, and political leaders

:02:23. > :02:25.have joined thousands of veterans to mark the 70th anniversary of D-Day.

:02:26. > :02:28.President Obama praised a generation who'd "defied every

:02:29. > :02:30.danger", he said, to liberate Europe from the tyranny of the Nazis.

:02:31. > :02:33.There were hundreds of British veterans here in Arromanches

:02:34. > :02:35.for the last formal parade by the Normandy Veterans

:02:36. > :02:39.Association, in the presence of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.

:02:40. > :02:45.Our first report tonight on D-Day remembered is from our royal

:02:46. > :03:02.Dawn at the D-Day beaches, where old soldiers remembered that morning

:03:03. > :03:05.when they helped to change the course of history, and where some

:03:06. > :03:16.of those who survived and grew old remembered the many who did not.

:03:17. > :03:18.At the Commonwealth War Cemetery at Bayeux, five miles

:03:19. > :03:21.from the coast, the graves of more than 4000 young men, mostly

:03:22. > :03:26.British, who died on D-Day or in the weeks of fighting that followed.

:03:27. > :03:29.Aircraft from the Second World War flew overhead as the Queen arrived

:03:30. > :03:52.The veterans had been seated close in amongst the headstones, upon

:03:53. > :03:55.which are the inscriptions which lose none of their emotional impact

:03:56. > :04:02.They are the tributes of families, of mothers for sons,

:04:03. > :04:05.and wives for husbands, the men who gave their lives

:04:06. > :04:14.After the service, the Queen joined the veterans.

:04:15. > :04:17.She mingled and chatted, a monarch from the same wartime generation

:04:18. > :04:28.sharing memories with those who had fought in the name of her father.

:04:29. > :04:31.At Omaha Beach, to the west, lies the huge military cemetery

:04:32. > :04:36.There are nearly 10,000 graves here, a reminder of the ferocious

:04:37. > :04:38.resistance the Americans faced at Omaha Beach, and of a time

:04:39. > :04:48.when the New World sacrificed so much blood in support of the old.

:04:49. > :04:51.In his speech, President Obama said that what the Allied troops had

:04:52. > :04:54.achieved on what he called this tiny sliver of sand had determined

:04:55. > :05:03.Whenever the world makes you cynical, whenever you doubt that

:05:04. > :05:10.courage and goodness is possible, stop and think of these men.

:05:11. > :05:13.Along with all our veterans of D-Day, if you can stand, please

:05:14. > :05:17.Let us recognise your service once more.

:05:18. > :05:21.These men waged war so that we might know peace, sacrificed so we might

:05:22. > :05:25.be free, fought in hopes of a day when we no longer need to fight.

:05:26. > :05:35.At Sword Beach, the heads of state and heads of government assembled

:05:36. > :05:40.Germany's chancellor, Angela Merkel, was there,

:05:41. > :05:47.Also there, Ukraine's president-elect, a reminder

:05:48. > :05:55.For the first time, Russia's Putin and America's Obama

:05:56. > :05:59.had a brief face-to-face meeting to discuss Ukraine.

:06:00. > :06:01.They confirmed that current problems must be solved

:06:02. > :06:14.President Putin's reaction on the public

:06:15. > :06:22.President Putin's reaction was harder to read.

:06:23. > :06:25.But this, most importantly, was a day for the veterans.

:06:26. > :06:34.And so this afternoon Prince William and the Duchess of Cambridge joined

:06:35. > :06:46.And then, in the centre of Arromanches,

:06:47. > :06:49.the small town just above Gold Beach where one of the British

:06:50. > :06:51.divisions came ashore on D-Day, old soldiers marched, almost certainly

:06:52. > :07:06.William laid a wreath in tribute to those who fell on D-Day.

:07:07. > :07:08.And tonight in Paris at a state banquet in her honour,

:07:09. > :07:11.the Queen spoke of her great pleasure at visiting France, and the

:07:12. > :07:20.Stirred by the day's commemorations, we are also filled with other

:07:21. > :07:28.With sorrow and regret, remembering the loss of so many fine

:07:29. > :07:38.With pride at the sheer courage of the men who stormed those beaches,

:07:39. > :07:45.And with thankfulness, knowing that today our nations are

:07:46. > :07:48.free and sovereign because Allied forces liberated this continent

:07:49. > :08:00.This evening in Arromanches, the British Normandy veterans

:08:01. > :08:03.lowered the flag of their association for the final time.

:08:04. > :08:06.But the story of D-Day, of what these men achieved

:08:07. > :08:10.and what it meant for every one of us, will live on, because the world

:08:11. > :08:16.will not forget what was done on these beaches 70 years ago today.

:08:17. > :08:26.Nicholas Witchell, BBC News, in Arromanches, Normandy.

:08:27. > :08:29.For many of the veterans, now in their late 80s and early 90s,

:08:30. > :08:33.it's likely to be the last time they will travel to Normandy.

:08:34. > :08:35.Some have returned many times over the years.

:08:36. > :08:38.Others came back for the very first time today.

:08:39. > :08:40.And they all had a different story to tell about

:08:41. > :08:45.Our special correspondent Fergal Keane spent the day with

:08:46. > :08:59.the veterans, who still have vivid memories of that day 70 years ago.

:09:00. > :09:07.D-Day has come. This morning, the Allies began the assault. On a

:09:08. > :09:20.summer's born in Normandy, distant voices summoned the great invasion.

:09:21. > :09:23.-- a summer's morning. Your enemy is well, said General Eisenhower, he

:09:24. > :09:37.will fight savagely. This warning was well founded. And for the

:09:38. > :09:42.veterans of today, painful memories. It is hard to picture them as they

:09:43. > :09:49.were on this day 70 years ago. Then, their average age was 19. Like Len

:09:50. > :09:54.Fox from Norfolk. He was a dispatch rider who came ashore under heavy

:09:55. > :10:02.fire. Men were being killed and there were bodies floating in the

:10:03. > :10:07.sea. And where the sea had come in and gone out, it left a red mark

:10:08. > :10:12.with the blood of the lads, parts of bodies and everything. It was

:10:13. > :10:18.horrible. As a 19-year-old, it was sickening. The procession of elderly

:10:19. > :10:22.people in wheelchairs, a symbol of passing time, the Long distance

:10:23. > :10:27.between the events of June the 6th, 1944, and today. The D-Day

:10:28. > :10:31.commemoration brought back memories of a special encounter for Margaret

:10:32. > :10:38.Dickinson, then a 20-year-old nurse who helped to tend the wounded.

:10:39. > :10:42.There was a German prisoner of war, and he said, he was very badly

:10:43. > :10:48.injured and I was determined he was going to get better. And he did. We

:10:49. > :10:55.got him better. And he said to me, he said, your bombs killed my

:10:56. > :10:59.mother, and you've got me better. And I would like you to have this

:11:00. > :11:13.medal that the Germans gave my mother. The patience. He said, we

:11:14. > :11:19.didn't want to fight. I said, no. We didn't want to fight, but we had to,

:11:20. > :11:24.haven't we? An estimated 9000 Germans were killed on D-Day. And

:11:25. > :11:26.these, some of the nearly 3 million captured by the Western allies

:11:27. > :11:31.between D-Day and the end of the war. Many of the German dead are

:11:32. > :11:34.buried here outside Bayeux. Because of the memory of what Germany

:11:35. > :11:41.inflicted on Europe, commemorations here are low-key and sombre. These

:11:42. > :11:44.men are from a German peace group, that where the modern uniforms of

:11:45. > :11:51.democratic nations as a statement against Nazi militarism. It's the

:11:52. > :11:57.first generation since over 300 years in Germany who had no war, and

:11:58. > :12:00.that's fantastic. Today belonged to the men and women whose individual

:12:01. > :12:05.efforts formed part of the spearhead to defeat fascism. A French

:12:06. > :12:11.generation raised in security greeted them warmly. For the

:12:12. > :12:14.veterans and their families this is the last great public

:12:15. > :12:20.acknowledgement of this # the sacrifice on D-Day. But for those

:12:21. > :12:35.who survived, the images, the sounds of that day have been embedded in

:12:36. > :12:39.their memories for 70 years. Ward defined the D-Day generation. Those

:12:40. > :12:45.hours on the beaches, the most vivid and terrifying in so many lives. As

:12:46. > :12:52.many as 4000 Allied soldiers died on D-Day. They were the heroes. I

:12:53. > :12:56.always think they were the heroes. We weren't, they were the heroes,

:12:57. > :12:59.the lads we had to leave behind. They sacrificed their lives. I was

:13:00. > :13:08.lucky, I survived. There was a final parade by the

:13:09. > :13:11.Normandy Veterans Association here And among the soldiers, sailors and

:13:12. > :13:16.airmen taking part was Tony Colgan Our defence correspondent

:13:17. > :13:37.Caroline Wyatt joined him and his grandson on a veteran's journey.

:13:38. > :13:43.Just over there we landed. At the age of 90 Tony Colgan has brought

:13:44. > :13:48.his grandson Antony here, to a place that defined his life There was all

:13:49. > :13:53.hell breaking loose when we were about a mile off shore. I thought -

:13:54. > :13:59.this is your last day. You are just not going to get out of this. All of

:14:00. > :14:02.a sudden as we came to the shore t went dead quiet and there was no

:14:03. > :14:07.firing or anything like that, just for a matter of a minute or two.

:14:08. > :14:12.Antony wants to know more about his grandfather's war, before it is too

:14:13. > :14:16.late to ask. : It is weird to think of him as a 20-year-old kid driving

:14:17. > :14:20.on to this beach and experiencing what he is describing. It is

:14:21. > :14:24.important to remember as much as we can, so I can pass that information

:14:25. > :14:30.on to his great-grandchildren and great-great-grandchildren.

:14:31. > :14:33.NEWSREEL: Not a soul to be seen this this village where a tank battle was

:14:34. > :14:38.fought. Surviving D-Day was just the start.

:14:39. > :14:44.Only a week later, Tony helped liberate this Normandy village in a

:14:45. > :14:50.crucial Allied victory. We were down this road here and there was a tank

:14:51. > :14:53.there knocked out. Were you scared a lot of the time? Scared all the

:14:54. > :14:57.time. You were naturally scared. It was a life and death situation. The

:14:58. > :15:01.whole of your life was life and death. Will you be able to get

:15:02. > :15:09.around the corner? Will there be antitank guns around there? An

:15:10. > :15:14.antitank gun, if it fired at me would wipe me off the face of the

:15:15. > :15:19.earth. You are so lucky, you and Jim to manage to stay alive. As the

:15:20. > :15:26.Durham Light Infantry pushed inland into the weeks after D-Day, the toll

:15:27. > :15:36.of the dead and injured went up quickly. We lost over 200 in one

:15:37. > :15:40.day. 200! He is 27. He is 19. 19. It is extraordinary. That they have not

:15:41. > :15:50.had a life. No, that they didn't have a life. It can be emotional. It

:15:51. > :15:57.is, isn't it? Yes, it's all right. Oh, man, you have made me cry now.

:15:58. > :16:01.As D-Day fades from living memory, Tony's grandson will also do his

:16:02. > :16:12.duty to remember and pass on what his grandfather and his comrades

:16:13. > :16:20.With time in France is actually 11.15pm. It is late. The square in

:16:21. > :16:24.Arromanches is still packed. They are enjoying the music.

:16:25. > :16:29.We should mention one other veteran who was here today in Normandy,

:16:30. > :16:32.an 89-year-old, who'd been reported missing from his care home in Hove.

:16:33. > :16:34.Bernard Jordan, who served with the Royal Navy 70 years ago, disappeared

:16:35. > :16:38.yesterday, wearing his medals. Police were alerted but happily

:16:39. > :16:46.Mr Jordan is safely on his way back home.

:16:47. > :16:55.Good to be able to say that. We will have more from norm andy later in

:16:56. > :17:00.the programme. Back to Jane for now. -- from Normandy.

:17:01. > :17:06.Now the rest of the day's news. The International Monetary Fund ha

:17:07. > :17:08.given an upbeat assessment of the British economy, saying

:17:09. > :17:10.growth is better than forecast. But it's warned that ever-increasing

:17:11. > :17:12.house prices could threaten the recovery.

:17:13. > :17:15.The Government said the Bank of England has the powers it needs

:17:16. > :17:17.to deal with any problems. Here's our Economics Editor,

:17:18. > :17:18.Robert Peston. His report contains some

:17:19. > :17:18.flash photography. Lovely,

:17:19. > :17:22.lovely, lovely. The sun's out and Lovely,

:17:23. > :17:25.the economy, well, if it's not exactly soaring away, well, it's

:17:26. > :17:29.recovering nicely. Now that's not exactly what the powerful IMF,

:17:30. > :17:33.monitor and watchdog of the global economy, thought was likely just

:17:34. > :17:38.over a year ago when it warned that the Chancellor was playing with fire

:17:39. > :17:44.by pushing ahead with austerity. Contrition from the IMF's boss? I

:17:45. > :17:48.completely acknowledge that we underestimated growth. Now, do I

:17:49. > :17:52.have to go on my knees? We underestimated. Look, we got it

:17:53. > :17:59.wrong. We acknowledged it. We were not the only one to get it wrong.

:18:00. > :18:03.This man isn't exactly weeping at the IMF's embarrassment. Today's IMF

:18:04. > :18:08.report shows our long-term economic plan is the right one. The British

:18:09. > :18:11.economy is firing on all cylinders. And the IMF say we are right to

:18:12. > :18:17.carry on tackling Britain's budget deficit, fixing the banking system

:18:18. > :18:27.and backing businesses to create jobs. So, we're if you werely on the

:18:28. > :18:47.sunny side of the street, are we? Mm. Elegant, swanky, rich London,

:18:48. > :18:50.prices going through the roof. Now, the IMF says it is not a serious

:18:51. > :18:54.bubble yet, but if the overheating in the housing market were to

:18:55. > :18:57.intensify, if it were to spread to the rest of the country, that could

:18:58. > :19:06.be dangerous. So the IMF is urging the Bank of England to move early

:19:07. > :19:08.and gradually to cool down the housing market. By curbing

:19:09. > :19:11.mortgages that a high multiples of what people earn. By streetening

:19:12. > :19:14.banks so they can absorb losses if mortgages go bad and, if all else

:19:15. > :19:16.fails, perhaps changing or ending the Government's cherished

:19:17. > :19:25.help-to-bye subsidised mortgage scheme. The ball is in the Bank of

:19:26. > :19:28.England's court right now. The Bank of England has a lot of new

:19:29. > :19:31.powers to deal with house prices rising very

:19:32. > :19:34.quickly. Some of them, I think it will deploy this month by trying to

:19:35. > :19:36.Mick affordability tests more difficult. But, Britain will remake

:19:37. > :19:40.vulnerable to boom and bust in housing, warns the IMF, unless there

:19:41. > :19:42.is much more of this, the building of new homes.

:19:43. > :19:46.The father kooi Kew of a nine-day-old baby boy, who died from

:19:47. > :19:48.blood poisoning hopes lessons

:19:49. > :19:50.can be learnt from his son's death. 20 other babies are still being

:19:51. > :19:52.treated in a number of neonatal wards

:19:53. > :19:55.across the southeast of England. Yousef Al-Kharboush who died

:19:56. > :19:58.on Sunday, was a twin and was born eight weeks premature.

:19:59. > :20:03.Today, his father spoke of the family's loss.

:20:04. > :20:06.Anybody who has a child and thinks about them being dead,

:20:07. > :20:09.you would understand what a father would feel in that case

:20:10. > :20:14.and seeing him suffering in front of you, before he dies.

:20:15. > :20:19.But, this is what life is all about and we accept it the way it is.

:20:20. > :20:27.Yousef's father, Raaid Hassan Sakkijha, speaking earlier today.

:20:28. > :20:28.The front-runner in the Afghan presidential election,

:20:29. > :20:38.Abdullah Abdullah, has survived an assassination attempt.

:20:39. > :20:41.six people are reported to have been killed, and more than 20

:20:42. > :20:43.injured, when two explosions struck his convoy in Kabul.

:20:44. > :20:45.No-one has admitted carrying out the attack,

:20:46. > :20:49.but the Taliban has threatened to disrupt the election campaign.

:20:50. > :20:51.The Conservatives have been celebrating a comfortable victory

:20:52. > :20:53.in the Newark by-election. UKIP made gains,

:20:54. > :20:56.pushing Labour into third place. The Liberal Democrats recorded one

:20:57. > :20:58.of their worst results - coming sixth behind the Green Party.

:20:59. > :21:00.From Newark, here's our Deputy Political Editor, James Landale.

:21:01. > :21:05.His report contains some flash photography.

:21:06. > :21:07.My first duty as a new Member of Parliament.

:21:08. > :21:10.Good luck. From the excitement of the campaign

:21:11. > :21:13.to the reality of the job. Today the new MP

:21:14. > :21:16.for Newark opened a pub. But even here, even now,

:21:17. > :21:21.he wouldn't drink to celebrate his party's first by-election

:21:22. > :21:24.victory in Government for 25 years. At least the boss was happy.

:21:25. > :21:26.It's a good result because we worked hard.

:21:27. > :21:30.We had an excellent candidate and we had a very clear message

:21:31. > :21:33.about our long-term economic plan. How it is working

:21:34. > :21:35.but how we need to stick at it. As

:21:36. > :21:38.the ballot papers were counted early this morning, the piles of votes

:21:39. > :21:42.very quickly showed that the massive Tory effort here had paid off.

:21:43. > :21:47.Robert Edward Jenrick is duly elected for the Newark constituency.

:21:48. > :21:52.Cheers of joy - yes. But also some tears of relief.

:21:53. > :21:54.For the Tories' success in holding a safe seat,

:21:55. > :21:59.meant Nigel Farage was looking, for once, not quite his usual self.

:22:00. > :22:03.This by-election mattered because for the first time it pitted

:22:04. > :22:06.the Tories against UKIP. The Tories had to show they could

:22:07. > :22:10.take on UKIP and beat them. Well, they've certainly done that.

:22:11. > :22:12.For him, the wait for a seat in Westminster goes on.

:22:13. > :22:15.You promised an earthquake. It hasn't really happened.

:22:16. > :22:18.Has it? Well we won the European elections

:22:19. > :22:21.two weeks ago with 28% of the vote across the country and in

:22:22. > :22:24.this fiercely contested by-election tonight, we have 26% of the vote.

:22:25. > :22:27.So the earthquake is still rumbling on.

:22:28. > :22:31.Labour put on a brave face. Their core vote didn't collapse

:22:32. > :22:36.but third place in a seat they once held will worry some.

:22:37. > :22:41.The Liberal Democrats did beat the Loonies, but not many others.

:22:42. > :22:45.They came sixth and once again lost their deposit.

:22:46. > :22:49.Clearly, this is a very disappointing result for the Liberal

:22:50. > :22:52.Democrats but it's also clear that an awful lot of our supporters in

:22:53. > :22:56.this by-election voted tactically. People absolutely didn't want

:22:57. > :22:59.to be represented by UKIP. So, the people of Newark have

:23:00. > :23:02.stalled UKIP's momentum. The Tories are shouting it

:23:03. > :23:10.from the rooftops and life here, at last, can get back to normal.

:23:11. > :23:14.Sir Bradley Wiggins has told the BBC he's disappointed not to be

:23:15. > :23:17.competing in this year's Tour de France.

:23:18. > :23:19.The 2012 champion says Team Sky is focusing its efforts on the

:23:20. > :23:24.defending champion, Chris Froome. Wiggins hasn't been chosen to

:23:25. > :23:27.compete in this weekend's Criterium du Dauphine,

:23:28. > :23:30.a key warm-up event for the Tour. Here's Joe Wilson.

:23:31. > :23:35.Bradley Wiggins' is British cycling's outstanding individual.

:23:36. > :23:38.Tour de France winner in 2012. Four time Olympic champion.

:23:39. > :23:41.But there is a problem, there are two stars in Team Sky.

:23:42. > :23:44.Wiggins and alongside him, Chris Froome.

:23:45. > :23:47.The team ain't big enough for the both of them.

:23:48. > :23:50.It seems it's Wiggins who is going to leave.

:23:51. > :23:53.I'm gutted. I've worked extremely hard

:23:54. > :23:56.for this hard for this all winter and right through the summer.

:23:57. > :23:58.The team is focussed around Chris Froome, the defending champion who

:23:59. > :24:02.has a great chance of winning his second Tour, and it's been decided

:24:03. > :24:06.that, as things stand, they are going to base the team around him.

:24:07. > :24:09.So, unfortunately, I won't be there. The whole point

:24:10. > :24:12.about the Tour de France this year is that it starts here in Britain.

:24:13. > :24:16.In a month's time The Mall here in central London will be filled

:24:17. > :24:21.with cyclists and fans. The star attraction, had, of course,

:24:22. > :24:24.been Bradley Wiggins. The first stage is in Yorkshire

:24:25. > :24:26.where there has been a huge marketing and publicity drive

:24:27. > :24:28.around the race. Great scenery, but without Wiggins,

:24:29. > :24:33.some of the prestige must have disappeared.

:24:34. > :24:37.I'm very disappointed that Bradley won't be in the start in Yorkshire,

:24:38. > :24:41.in the start in Leeds on 5th July. Of course, him winning the race

:24:42. > :24:45.in 2012 was one of the reasons that the Tour de France was coming back

:24:46. > :24:48.to the UK as quickly as it had, having only been here in 2007.

:24:49. > :24:52.Meanwhile, Chris Froome, the reigning champ,

:24:53. > :24:55.has already seen off his main rival, sorry, team-mate, Wiggins.

:24:56. > :24:59.He may already feel he has won the Tour, once more.

:25:00. > :25:06.Well, that is it from me for tonight. Now let's return to Huw,

:25:07. > :25:11.and the D-Day commemorations in Normandy.

:25:12. > :25:14.Thanks. Welcome back to Arromanches where world leaders and veterans,

:25:15. > :25:20.thousands of family members and friends have been marking the 70th

:25:21. > :25:30.anners have riff D-Day. As you say. Our royal correspondent Nicholas --

:25:31. > :25:36.anniversary of D-day. Our royal correspondent Nicholas Witchell has

:25:37. > :25:41.been following events. What was the poignant moment? I would defy people

:25:42. > :25:49.and not be affected by the poignancy. These ageing veterans,

:25:50. > :25:55.many in wheelchairs here. The inscription on the headstones, still

:25:56. > :26:00.there despite the passing of years. I remember being here for the 40th,

:26:01. > :26:04.people said it would be the last big commemoration. Since then we have

:26:05. > :26:10.had the 50th, 60th and 70th. This will be the last, big, formal

:26:11. > :26:14.anniversary. It is for that reason that Prince William said this

:26:15. > :26:18.afternoon that it is so important that younger people understood. It

:26:19. > :26:23.is no exaggeration to say that if these landings had not gone as

:26:24. > :26:28.smoothly as they did, that nothing of significance that we know today,

:26:29. > :26:33.would be quite as it is. That is why, what happened here, matters.

:26:34. > :26:37.Thank you. That is all from the BBC team here in Normandy after a day

:26:38. > :26:42.that few will forget, paying tribute to the Allied force who is liberated

:26:43. > :26:46.France back in 1944 and changed the course of the Second World War. In a

:26:47. > :26:49.moment the news where you are, but we'll leave you with some of the

:26:50. > :26:58.enduring images of this 70th anniversary of D-Day. From Normandy,

:26:59. > :27:17.from all of us here, good night. BELL TOLLS

:27:18. > :27:25.delr There was all hell breaking -- there was all hell breaking loose

:27:26. > :27:27.when we were about a mile off shore. Then I thought - this is your last

:27:28. > :27:53.LAST POST PLAYS day. You are just not going to

:27:54. > :28:02.! Whenever you doubt that courage and goodness is possible, stop and

:28:03. > :28:06.think of these men. Snool age shall not weary them, nor the years

:28:07. > :28:12.condemn. At the going down of the sun and in

:28:13. > :28:18.the morning, we will remember them. We will remember them.