12/01/2012 South Today


12/01/2012

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This is South Today. The headlines... A world first. Could

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this carbon-fibre component bring cheaper air travel and hundreds of

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jobs to the South? It is really a chance to start from scratch and

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come up with ideas about how we can produce these components. Cutting

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motoring deaths by reducing speed on Hampshire's roads. Can a boost

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from the Director of Sherlock Holmes save the home of Sir Arthur

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Conan Doyle? He is the most popular fictional character ever. We do not

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want this House to be destroyed. Head in the clouds. The stargazer

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winning awards for his photography. You are looking at another world

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out there in space from your back Good evening. It could be a world

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first. Engineers on the Isle of Wight are developing a unique

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carbon fibre engine which could mean cheaper air travel. It could

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dramatically cut the amount of fuel used by airlines worldwide. GKN is

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the island's biggest private employer and the government's

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biggest menace -- business minister arrived at Cowes to unveil the

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plant and said it had the prospect of many new jobs. In a pristine new

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factory, a robot is laying strips of carbon fibre. It is constructing

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a fan blade for jet engines. It is cutting edge and we have had to

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obscure part of the machinery to stop them being copied. This is the

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finished product. A blade made a composite material, lighter than

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the traditional metal components currently used in jet engines

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worldwide. If the work is successful, it will dramatically

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reduce the amount of fuel used by jet airlines. This 26-year-old is

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working in the factory and it is a far cry from the world about

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building where he started out. is completely new and it has not

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been done before. It is a chance to start from scratch and see how we

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can produce these components. the marine heritage of the Isle of

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Wight that brought Rolls Royce to the island, helping transform the

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fortunes of GKN, who 10 years ago were making people redundant.

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speed can -- spoken to small and medium-sized businesses on the

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island and recognise the value and leadership are part of the Isle of

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Wight with the composite sector. We have got a benefit for now and the

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long term. Industry leaders think they could be doing more to stay

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ahead. To keep winning new business, we need the right skills. They

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cannot do that Alleyne. minister met business leaders from

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the island and stressed the economy is not just about tourism. We need

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a lot as skilled people but we have got actors around education,

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housing and perceived isolation. -- factors. Industry offers hope. If

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the robots can finish in 10 hours what would take five weeks by hand,

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This is good news for the Isle of Wight, creating jobs. And they

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needed because they are relying on seasonal work and many people think

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they have to leave the island to get employment. We have not said

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enough about the success of the aerospace industry. It is second

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only to the US. For every five pound spent on aeroplanes, �1 comes

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to British businesses. A can we make that much difference? As the

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price of oil increases, people are desperate to save fuel. But

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environmentalists have said it that lead to bigger aircraft and more

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people travelling, that in itself is not going to be dealing with

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climate change and will not be sustainable, irrespective of the

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jobs it creates. An elderly man accused of killing his wife after

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driving without due care and attention has been told his case

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will be heard next month. Robert Keable-Elliot appeared before

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Andover magistrates this morning. He was involved in a collision on

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the A34 it. The prosecution said he tried to return to the carriageway

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after stopping on a slip roads. Gillian Keable-Elliot was

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pronounced dead last year. The case will be heard in February. Caring

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and trustworthy is how the man accused of killing a Hampshire

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pensioner was described in court by family and friends. Georgina

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Edmonds was stabbed and beaten to death at her home near Eastleigh in

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January, four years ago. Matthew Hamlen denies murder and the case

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continues. Speed limits could be cut even further in Hampshire's

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towns and villages to say that lives. The council is reviewing

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limits on more than 100 writs after accidents. Figures for 2010

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indicate eight for six people were killed or seriously injured on

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Hampshire's roads. -- 846 people were killed. Here is our

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correspondent. This is a narrow street and it is busy, with houses,

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shops, a public house and a school. A typical road. This is all about

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slowing down on roads where accident rates suggest slower

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speeds would give more safety. That means cutting speeds from 60, or 50

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mph down to 44 from 40 mph, down to 30. Hampshire council wanted to

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change 48 sections of roads and that is a total cost of �450

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million. 20,000 vehicles per day rumble through the streets but they

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have not changed since the horse and cart. Children leaving school.

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And not even a pedestrian crossing. On the edge of the village, speed

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limits are changing suddenly from 60 mph, to 30 mph. Many people slow

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down at the last minute and when they enter the village, they are

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well in excess of 30 mph. traffic in the area has been told

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to slow down but without success. But the a Hello endorses the

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councillor bridge. -- but the automobile in association endorses

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the approach. Drivers need to understand what is coming and it

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must be transparent. Basing speed limits on accidents and road safety

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means that limits can be raised to make traffic faster. Hampshire

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examined 140 roads with accident rates and one third will be changed.

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This village is not, the list. The campaign here will continue. --,

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the rest. Will other councils follow the process? It is part of

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the authority guidance and the answer is yes. The government is

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considering pushing up motorway speed limits up to 80 mph. But we

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are talking here about A roads and B roads where the risk is much

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greater. People are slowing down any way in order to burn less fuel.

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This is one change that will upset very few people. Sussex police are

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investigating the discovery of a body by the EC at Worthing, found

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at Marine Parade. It is thought it might be a man in his fifties.

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Thames Water have apologised after flooding days after residents were

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assured a blocked drain had been cleared in Reading. People are

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trying to protect Prospect Park It is disgusting. David was his

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after-dinner looking at the aftermath of the flooding. -- today.

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I have been with buckets since 7:30am trying to get away as much

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water as we can. There was praise for fire crews but anger against

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the people blamed for what happened. It has been a living nightmare

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because the sewage has not been good. It is the fault of Thames

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Water. They have not got the drains sorted out properly. Complaints led

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to the company sending cruise. Unfortunately that was not enough

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and we appreciate that and we are very sorry for be people affected

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and we will make sure we are out tonight and tomorrow until we get

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it running properly. The clean up Ryanair has announced two reads to

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operate from Bournemouth airport. There will be flights to

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Carcassonne in France and roads in Crete in March. Winter flights had

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been stopped. -- roads in Crete. The company sailing from Portsmouth

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and Poole is thought to have lost one million euros after internet

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fraud. They were persuaded to make money transfers. The company, based

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in Brittany, said French police are investigating the incident. Coming

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up... Recharger coming back from war a hero and going into the

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The Hound Of The Baskervilles and The Return Of Sherlock Holmes was

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written there and now the House of one of the country's most famous

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authors could be turned into luxury flats. Hundreds of fans, including

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Guy Ritchie have put their names to a petition calling for the building

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Guy Ritchie's Blockbuster Sherlock Holmes, proved the detected is

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still popular. The character was dreamt up by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

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in the 19th century and is much loved. But the house where he had

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written the books is not. It had been announced Guy Ritchie is the

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latest man to join the campaign to restore the building. We are

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looking forward to working with him and other crime writers that we

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have got on board. We are putting together a business case and a

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proposal to present to the council. They must have a realistic

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alternative to what can happen to this building. It is owned by a

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development company that wants to split it into flats. Campaigners

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want to purchase it from them and turn it into a museum about the

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writer. They said it should be preserved because it has got a

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story to tell. His wife had tuberculosis and he moved here in

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the middle of the 19th century. He designed the house himself. He put

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in a big windows, facing to the South to get in the light and help

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his wife recover. It can make money at the box-office. They think the

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museum would draw film fans to the building. They have got council

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support already. The owner has not looked after the building properly

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for a long time had the council has had to step in to make sure that it

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is kept in a decent state of repair. I would encourage them to keep the

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pressure on the owner to sell. is a very sad state of affairs but

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I think we can do something with the building. I am sure people

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would want to preserve this as a landmark. As a memory to Sir Arthur

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Conan Doyle. This story could yet He survived the horrors of the

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trenches. He was badly wounded but recovered. And then he became a

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much-loved personality. His name was Warrior, and he was a

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magnificent grey charger. This week on South Today, in the countdown to

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the release of Steven Spielberg's blockbuster War Horse, we have been

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telling the stories of some of the real four-legged heroes of the

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First World War. Here is Steve Humphrey.

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The East Thames Valley police horses have been chosen for their

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courage, calmness and resilience. Quality is also valued by the army

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in the First World War. Sampson looks similar to this hero of the

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western front, Warrior. After the conflict, he became a police horse

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in Southampton. Was a War Horse a good choice for police work?

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your riot situations, etc, they had been exposed to the noise, shouting

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crowds, gunfire, so they would be perfect, yes. After military

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service, Warrior was donated to the police by it a Southampton animal

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lover who insisted on giving him a bag of sugar every year. The police

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still have a few mementoes of the horse, including this plaque he

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wore on his harness. In details the fact that he was involved in a

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retreat and was subsequently wounded by shrapnel in France. We

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have the equipment of a medal -- the equivalent of a medal for an

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animal. This is one of Warrior's hooves, which was turned into an

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inkstand in the 1930s. To satisfy the army's demand for horses in the

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First World War, there was an expansion of depots where horses

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were brought from all over the world including 700,000 from North

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America. Two of the biggest centres were here in this out. One of them

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was just north of Southampton, the other was here on the edge of

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Romsey. In the first world war, this farm was at the centre of a

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huge army camp with hundreds of horses arriving and departing every

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week. There were stables, a better now hospital and barracks for the

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soldiers. It was an enormous place. You had got a population in Romsey

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of about 5,000 people, you have got 2,200 book here. Most army horses

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were shipped to France from Southampton docks. On one occasion,

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horses stampeded through the city. When they were rounded up, the

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soldiers discovered they ended up with two extra horses. The next day,

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the butcher came from Southampton and said, I had two horses in a

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field near by and they have disappeared. Looking after the

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horses was the responsibility of the army veteran recalled. We had a

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proper evacuation system for the equine casualties, mobile vet

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receptions to carry out first aid on a sick horse. We brought them

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back to a veterinary hospitals. But more importantly we had more of

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Veterinary Surgeons and more equipment, which was important.

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was treatment Southampton's Warrior benefited from when he was hit by

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shrapnel. After he returned from the war, he served with the police

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for 16 years. Warrior died in 1935 and was buried here on the edge of

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the city's municipal golf course. There is still a flower bed shaped

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like a horseshoe in front of Warrior's Memorial, a poignant

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tribute to Southampton's Real War Horse.

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And as a postscript, we had a lovely e-mail from someone who says

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her mother used to live at the police station from 1920 onwards

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and used to feed a Warrior, she knew him. Apparently, her mother

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used to wear a black and white coat and used to give him a sweet, and

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there was a day that she recalls when she was in the crowd watching

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Warrior parading down the street, and Warrior spotted the black and

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white coat and came over, expecting a sweet! A very nice story, thank

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you for that. On to the sport now. Portsmouth,

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the talks go on? One of the clubs with a question mark over it going

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into 2012, what will the future be? Negotiations continue with more

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than one potential buyer in an attempt to save Portsmouth Football

:17:38.:17:41.

Club. Finances at Fratton Park were thrown into disarray when Pompey's

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parent company went into administration in November. Now,

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complex talks continue to try and secure much-needed funding and a

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new owner. There are a number of hoops to

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drunk -- jump through, the process we do need and the directors has

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got to be fulfilled at the relevant parties, so it is the number one

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priority for myself and the administrator, for the parent

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company, to get the process completed as soon as possible.

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More from that interview online and tomorrow as well.

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Claude Davis has agreed a new contract at League Two leaders

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Crawley. Meanwhile Reading have signed Republic of Ireland under-21

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striker Karl Sheppard. The player has agreed a two-and-a-half year

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deal, and arrives from Irish side Shamrock Rovers. Sheppard helped

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Rovers win the League of Ireland last season. He will boost a Royals

:18:28.:18:30.

side which has moved into the Championship's play-off places

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following a good run of form. He has got 10, 11 goals for

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Shamrock Rovers this year. He has played in the Irish lead for the

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last couple of years or so, and done well, so we are pleased to get

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him. $$ YELLOW Sussex spinner Monty

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Panesar pushed his claim for a recall to the Test side with five

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wickets for England in their latest warm-up game before the Test series

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with Pakistan. Panesar took 5 for 57 against a Pakistan Cricket Board

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11 in Dubai, where the tour will be staged. England go into the final

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$$ YELLOW The players are household names watched by millions, but they

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have not even turned professional yet. College sport is enormously

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popular in the United States, and success at that level can lead to a

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career among the pros, where they maintain their fame, but, in many

:19:17.:19:21.

cases, make a fortune, too. Now, a young man from Crawley in Sussex is

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setting his sights on American football's NFL. Nathalie Graham has

:19:25.:19:35.
:19:35.:19:36.

He has got two wigs off from intensive training, so Tom Wort has

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come back to Crawley to see his grandma and has brought his

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American girlfriend. Tom's father played for Crawley, so when the

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family moved to the States six years ago it was the first sport he

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took up. As soon as I moved out there and started High School,

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freshman year, I had a natural knack for the sport, because I see

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the game as a privilege to be able to play. I don't take anything for

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granted. It allowed me to keep going in each level. Despite

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starting late, Tom has become one of the top players in college

:20:17.:20:22.

football in the States, where he is tipped for stardom in the NFL, this

:20:22.:20:27.

board's highest lead. If he excels and the first four or five years

:20:28.:20:32.

under league, he could earn up to five or $6 million in year for

:20:32.:20:37.

doing a sport he loves. Tom usually plays in front of 85,000 people.

:20:37.:20:43.

But, whenever she can, his greatest fan flies out to join the crowd.

:20:43.:20:49.

You know that he knows where you are, because I scream out, Granny

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loves you! Very embarrassing for him! Braced him a whole life,

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everyone I love is here. -- raised here. I am out in the stage doing

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what I love to do. Once he has conquered the National Football

:21:06.:21:09.

League, Tom wants to come back to Crawley and encourage other young

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people to take on his sport. So we have not had many English players

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make it in American football. $$ YELLOW Highlights of the road to

:21:24.:21:27.

the Super Bowl every week on BBC Two, and then on Sunday 5th

:21:27.:21:36.

February Super Bowl 46 is live here Most of us have done a bit of

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stargazing in our time, but not many of us have gone outside to

:21:40.:21:42.

take award-winning photographs of the planets. But that is exactly

:21:42.:21:45.

what Damian Peach, from Selsey, is doing. And his snaps have even won

:21:45.:21:48.

him the title of Astronomy Photographer Of The Year. In our

:21:48.:21:51.

series Living The Dream, Tom Hepworth went along to meet him to

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find out more. I am in Selsey, which is off the

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beaten track. The sort of place people come to to get away from

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middle. But I am here to meet a man who moved here for a particular

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reason. This guy is here are very dark and being near the sea, it is

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particularly clear -- the sky is here. It allows you to get a really

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sharp photographs. Damien is an astronomer. He takes photographs of

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the solar system using a telescope in his back garden. It is a deep-

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seated interest I have had ever since I was a child. I got a small

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telescope and it was amazing being able to look at the bell to Jupiter

:22:36.:22:40.

and the rings of Saturn. It is such an incredible thing, there are all

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of these objects out there. Have telescope, will travel. His

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astronomy has taken him all over the world. Here he is meeting the

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second man on the move. And in the line of duty he even had to go to

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Barbados -- the second man on the moon. It is quite convenient in

:22:58.:23:03.

some ways that a warmer, tropical island is the ideal place for this

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type of photography. Here at home it is rare to get a good, clear,

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sharp night. Dan there it is set frequent but parents are. And the

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dedication paid off when he was crowned Astronomy Photographer of

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the Year. His photograph of Jupiter is so detailed that you can see the

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features of Jupiter's moons. It is now hanging at the Royal

:23:27.:23:31.

Observatory in Greenwich. There were so many good entries, that is

:23:31.:23:35.

one of the things that did strike me. A lot of people are doing great

:23:35.:23:40.

work out there. It is fantastic for an -- fantastic for amateur

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astronomy as a whole. We waited for the dark and luckily the sky is

:23:46.:23:50.

clear it. Damien was able to give us a close-up view of the evening's

:23:50.:23:57.

full moon. You can see the hills, can't you? You might find the lunar

:23:57.:24:02.

module! Sadly, we would need an extremely large telescope to see

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something that small. After a quick look around the Moon, Damien was

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keen to show us somewhere further away. That is Jupiter, isn't it? It

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looks as though it shimmers, is that the atmosphere? It is the

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atmospheric turbulence. What is the weather light on Jupiter at the

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moment? Stormy, what it is always like. It is an absolutely amazing

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planet, full of storms and coloured belts. It is constantly changing as

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well, it is dynamic. You are looking at another world out there

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in space, from your own back garden, and that is quite a special feeling.

:24:48.:24:50.

Great photographs. And you can get involved in all

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things astronomical next week at events across our region, including

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Stargazing Live at the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth and Fontwell

:24:56.:24:58.

Park Racecourse on Tuesday. South Today will be live from the

:24:58.:25:01.

Spinnaker with Sarah Farmer, who will have top tips on how to

:25:01.:25:05.

stargaze successfully. So for more information, go to our Facebook

:25:05.:25:15.
:25:15.:25:18.

site, BBC South Today, where you The weather and Jupiter, I suppose

:25:18.:25:25.

you know that? It is stormy, I hear. How about closer to home? A lot

:25:25.:25:31.

colder. That is the weather for our forecast. Very, very cold over the

:25:31.:25:39.

next few days. A widespread frost tonight. Look at the temperatures

:25:39.:25:45.

tomorrow, half of what they were today, so wrap up warm. A frosty

:25:46.:25:51.

night to come, mist and fog a possibility in the early hours. And

:25:51.:25:55.

the odd spot of drizzle this morning, sinking southwards, slowly

:25:55.:26:00.

clearing the region, most of it over the near Continent. Patchy

:26:00.:26:04.

cloud here and there but that will disappear and skies will clear, so

:26:04.:26:11.

temperatures will plunge into minus figures in the countryside. Mist

:26:11.:26:15.

and fog a possibility, particularly the further north and west you are.

:26:15.:26:21.

A chilly start tomorrow, the isolated chance of some ice on

:26:21.:26:25.

untreated services. He ribbon of cloud in parts of Wiltshire,

:26:25.:26:28.

Oxfordshire, Berkshire and Hampshire, which will turn the

:26:28.:26:32.

sunshine pays it. For the rest of us, so any spells and blue skies

:26:32.:26:42.
:26:42.:26:42.

overhead. Cannot cooler than today -- sunny spells. -- a lot cooler.

:26:42.:26:46.

Freezing fog is a possibility in parts of Oxfordshire. Temperatures

:26:46.:26:52.

take a plunge in the towns and cities into minus figures. -3 in

:26:52.:26:58.

Oxfordshire, perhaps down 2-5, so a very, very cold start to the day on

:26:58.:27:04.

Saturday. A crisp winter's day. The cloud is terrible, hit and miss

:27:04.:27:08.

where you will see the cloud, and temperatures will struggle to rise,

:27:08.:27:13.

like tomorrow. Sunday, a repeat performance of Saturday, more cloud

:27:13.:27:18.

the further west you are. High pressure stays in charge, it stays

:27:18.:27:23.

cold and frosty to start the day on Monday. A frosty start each day

:27:23.:27:27.

until Monday, mist and fog a possibility, but there will be some

:27:27.:27:31.

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