Civs which was sent to leading Democrats is of the highest priority known as the devices which their intended targets which included Hillary Clinton Barack Obama and the financier George Soros a similar item was sent to C.N.N. New York offices the mayor of New York is Bill de Blasio and what we saw here today was the effort to terrorize is clearly here's an act of terror attempting to undermine our free press the leaders of this country through acts of violence Devon ims is expected to reveal losses like a 500000000 pounds and plans to close 50 of its 166 stalls the department still initially intended to shut 10 outlets thousands of jobs are at risk a report by in pieces accusing the home office of a complete failure of leadership as police forces in England while struggles to cope the Home Affairs Select Committee says the police service is at risk of becoming irrelevant as neighborhood teams a cut in vast numbers of crimes go unsolved. To resume a has a dress the meeting of the Tory backbench 922 committee and an attempt to defuse tensions about the Bronx it talks there was once great criticism of the language used by some to rebrand as it is in the run up to the meeting but our political correspondent Jonathan Blake says the prime minister received the bomb oakum it was a packed room there were clearly lots of people there who were supportive of the prime minister one M.P. Outside afterwards described it as a love in and more like a petting zoo than the lion's den and talk of this being a big showdown during the week proved perhaps not surprisingly to be unrealistic The government says it has serious concerns about human rights in northwest China where it's claimed up to a 1000000 Muslim week as a being held Beijing says the camps provide education and training the Labor M.P. Catherine West is from the All Party Parliamentary Group on China she says action is needed just to ask the Chinese government to close these camps and to ease the repressive measures and finally also calling on the U.K. Government to advise any U.K. Businesses who may be investing mentioned young they may be contributing to the maintenance of what appears to be a kind of police state the European parliament has approved plans for an E.U. Wide ban on single use plastic is designed to tackle the 150000 tonnes of plastic waste from Europe that ends up in the sea every year the Irish Independent M.E.P. Links on again says he 1st dealt with plastic cutlery in the 1970 S. Act to try our main worry on this planet was a nuclear holocaust little chip we realised that the plastic far and spoon that I had in my hand was actually going to turn out to be more dangerous and I said that now even with who we have in the White House there recalls for an age a review of music education in state schools the organization you came music has written to the chancellor Philip Hammond saying they could be catastrophic consequences for the British music industry if lessons on things. Creased as the News Shop now has the support of Champions League night to forget for Tottenham who went down to 10 men and conceded a late goal to draw 22 at P.S.V. Eindhoven Captain UGLE Aris was sent off in the 79 minutes after racing from goal to bring down win that lasagna as the visitors lead to one but equalized with 3 minutes remaining Spurs in trouble with just one point in that group whereas Liverpool have gone top of that as after a 4 nil win over Red Star Belgrade 2 goals for most want to penalty taking him to 50 goals in $65.00 matches for Liverpool leads a top of the championship again after that Sunil went over Ipswich 5th place Darby stopped West Brom from going top outclassing them for one all the results are on the B.B.C. Sport website that is it has been suspended for 3 weeks after he was sent off for a high tackle and cross just Champions Cup defeat to Munster on Saturday but his number one college minister it's the 2nd round of the Vienna Open tennis after beating Argentina's Diego Schwartzman and Khan a McGregor and Norma Commodore of will both remain banned from U.F.C. Until an investigation into the trouble that followed the lightweight Well title fight is completed this is B.B.C. 5 blocks in Tejas hold on the smartphone and stop at the weather and certain central and eastern areas will be dry with clay spells overnight low cloud again for western areas breezy in the nose of the U.K. And rain in northern Scotland into Thursday and in England Wales and Northern Ireland will be mostly dry and with the best of the sunshine in the east rain in the north of Scotland highs around 13 degrees Celsius cool was the chance to come security adviser John Bolton went to Moscow the other day for talks with President Putin and others and appeared to confirm that the United States will pull out of the intermediate youth Air Force 1987 he continued the U.S. Stance that the Russians are in violation and then presented a logical problem he said so one has tossed. The Russians to come back into compliance with something they don't think the File a take it all went a pretty strongly. Far read posts the participants not the end Mr Putin talked about the US seal the fake tan Eagle holding 13 hours none all of branch and he said that your Eagle already eat polio. All over Britain it's 5 past 25 POS night on I Dream of Jeannie laid in Cocoa Beach Florida 5 posse to victory was Scott's in sight of a dreadful Indian Moscow hundreds of men women and children loyal to Blackhawk were butchered by American troops as they tried to cross the Mississippi under a white flag 5 past 7 in the Wind River Monton smog above Lander Wyoming Gannett peak rises to almost 14000 feet and 5 POSIX on sea cliffs State Beach just south of Santa Cruz California lifeguards patrol the beach and every Sunday there's a guided walk to look at fossils our news comes from C.B.S. . C.B.S. . On the hour. I'm Pam Colter F.B.I. Director Chris Ray says their highest priority is the investigation into the series of pipe bombs sent to prominent Democrats from billionaire donor George Soros to former President Barack Obama none of the devices detonated and no one has been injured C.B.S. Is Geoff again multiple law enforcement sources say one of the bombs consisted of P.V.C. Tubing and used a digital clock connected to a small battery is a possible trigger device by road technic powder was the explosive and in order to keep it lightweight glass was used as shrapnel investigators think whoever put the device together was trying to keep the weight down so that it could be put in a mailbox without having to appear at a post office for mailing also targeted with a mail bomb a leading critic of the president C.B.S. A Steven Portnoy the device that was sent here to C.N.N. Was addressed to John Brennan the former CIA director who works not for this network as a consultant for N.B.C. a Similar package was addressed to Eric Holder the former attorney general and to that the package is meant for the Obama's the Clintons and George Soros and a clear pattern emerges whoever said these packages was intent on targeting those who've been the subjects of the president's ire President Trump condemned the attempted attacks this egregious conduct is Borat to everything we hold dear and sacred as Americans that are ill health officials have approved the 1st new flu drug in 2 decades if lose it is different than other anti-viral medications says Jenna Tex Dr Mark Eisner it's a very potent a viral so it can reduce the viral shouting and under a day and he says it's just one pill so it's one dose as opposed to Tamiflu which is 5 days twice daily to a total of 10 doses so you know it's much more convenient so if loses should be available in a matter of weeks Sabrina Cupid for C.B.S. News Atlanta Simpsonville South Carolina is a buzz after learning the winning ticket for the. 1.6000000000 dollar Mega Millions jackpot was sold there this resident says people are talking on social media people trying to guess where it might be and asking for things like asking if the a winner kid 6 I read says the government can't the Dow fell more than $600.00 points today and Nasdaq dropped $329.00 market analysts Michael Farr anticipation of higher interest rates and then an earnings season that things would be OK but probably not spectacular leave a lot of market participants feeling their full and heading for the exits he says corporate earnings are good in the banking system is sound so there's no reason to panic this is C.B.S. News aha we movie star reveals her own personal nightmare this week is from 59 year old Jamie Lee Curtis who stars in the new Halloween sequel says she had a secret addiction to painkillers she tells people it began when doctors prescribe opiates after plastic surgery on her eyes in 1989 for the next 10 years Curtis says she would get pills any way she could even stealing from family and friends she says her so Briony is her single greatest accomplishment bigger than her husband both EVER children bigger than any work success or failure Deborah Bradley guessed C.B.S. News a 2nd Texas jurisdiction is saying no to robot brothels Harris County in the southeastern part of the state is following Houston and approved rules that would stop a robot brothel from coming to the area the vote was unanimous and comes 3 weeks after Houston lawmakers revise city laws on sexually oriented businesses to block the use of electronic love dolls Pam Colter C.B.S. News. Well nod to the treaty which for the last 20 years or so has been the United States and Russia not to test certain classes of missiles which could turn Europe into a nuclear battlefield least that's the way that a lot of people have been counted tries ng it since Trump let it be known that he would like to resign from the 1987 aneath the question before us is a will he do it and B. If he does who's going to come out of it better Michael Kaufman a sorcerer scientist at C.N.A. Corporation and a fellow cannon Institute Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington D.C. Mr Kaufman. Getting having 1st of all is it evident to you that the I.M.F. Is no more or is there still room for more negotiation which I know a lot of the Europeans certainly hope for. They certainly do and of much of the arms control community but I think that the political decisions already been made in Washington to draw from treaty is just that formal notice has yet to be given you cannot virtually withdraw from a document you have to submit a written. Official withdrawal to the other party. I think that despite the public statements by National Review by their John Bolton on President Trump the stool away for some time to see what the exact answer math is and they seem to have caught Congress somewhat by surprise with the political announcement but that said To be frank the fundamentally is that treaty may think it us withdraw from of the is inevitable. The position as Mr Bolton in Moscow said is that the U.S. Believes the Russians have been in violation and they are saying that the Obama administration also believe that is that substantially true. Parents of illiterate you will suppose will have them saying it for quite some time and because going the past year and a half they've come out with much more clear statements as to how the Russians are in violation of exactly what type of missile they've created was called. This is not the matter of technical to you or misunderstanding I think over the past several years Russia have researched developed tested and finally the boys a ground based cruise missile from the sound of public statements that are fundamentally in violation of the treaty. And to that effect given that one of the cornerstones bilateral arms control agreements between originally United States and Soviet Union is now really does leave the United States of the only country implementing the treaty. And so while the United States has been a honoring this treaty. Russia has probably been developing a new drug based cruise missile where is the gap I mean it looks and looks from here as if there's not a fairly obvious Misawa gap I hate to use that word but but that would seem to be the way it is. Well to be frank just to take us briefly back to the treaty one signed was probably one of the best arms control agreements ever done by the United States because of fundamentally highly favorable to the United States and rather disadvantageous to the Soviet Union the treaty bans intermediate range ground based missiles this does not a problem for an expeditionary maritime an airspace or which the United States is there for United States base and a large amount thousands. Of sea based land attack cruise missiles Well that's quite problematic for a Eurasian land power like Russia which cannot imagine deploy the same arsenal therefore there is indeed a missile gap but the missile gap for the longest time have been dramatically United States favor and the reason why Russia fundamentally violated this treaty and sought to get out of it because over time some officials came to see the I.M.F. As a form of unilateral disarmament they cannot the ploy of conventional or nuclear base Arsenal in the same range to achieve parity with the United States as long as they are with complying with the I.M.F. Treated so where's this going I mean this is pushing us back into the kind of naval race that we saw between Britain and Germany in the eighty's ninety's right well there's a bit of a far back example I think the arms race and conventional nuclear and missiles of different types of ranges it's probably a much more recent one from the Cold War And unlike the Cold War which included a particularly dangerous period of brinksmanship the worst being the 1st 2 decades 19 fifties and sixties little is going to be much more multilateral in that it's not simply a conversation between Russian ited States China is actually a much bigger player when it comes to intermediate range missiles and they've proliferated to smaller much more people but weaker regional powers such as Iran for example. And the middle east so we're to really take this is the fact that we are now going to be looking at the return of a much more dangerous time one with very little to probably no arms control in the coming decade and the rise in advance of arsenals by both the remaining great powers and several regional powers. Just as Seoul you know discard and and lament they does not leave chairman a Poland and Francaise the meat in the sandwich. Well the meaning of losers from the withdrawal of the line out fundamentally Europeans and European security and I'm fortunate however that is likely in the short to medium term 1015 years out there is a somewhat fundamental treat the United States is making in terms of the regional military balance in Europe rolled up to the one in the Asia Pacific region while America's primary concerns and John Bolton made this quite clear in public statements is the military about what China and I are quite a few people that would like for the United States to be able to the point ground based in Germany range missile cell phones in order to offset Chinese military advantages. Much depends on the Baltics in Europe Ananth answer your question is very difficult to predict whether Europeans be the Germans French poles or others will once again allow the United States to base intermediate range baby cruise or ballistic missiles in Europe after all Russia need not ask anyone whether or not they can base missiles on their own territory with the United States can only base them with European Commission which sounds like the Germans are still defending the post-war Archer I mean the challenge foreign minister is saying that Europe will even leave no stone unturned in the effort to bring Washington and Moscow back to the table one more try and that's a pretty strong indication isn't that the game isn't quite over. I think it's quite over on high enough and I think the main battle to fight is over the new START treaty which will have to be expanded in 2021 and if it's not we will be living almost compile it without a control period in the international system over even if the new START treaty the fundamental treaty that a little strategic nuclear weapons between Russian United States even if that treaty but stunned there's nothing to say that it will ever be extended again there's no secondary extension mechanism or the new treaty will be negotiated so I were sure many a great deal of walk. Michael Kaufman thank you for your own blinkered view of the site so much. Thanks for having me on your program or ship. Well we're all well I think probably you and I us and meet me doing totally dependent on the Internet these days the internet brings this program to you in large part you may be listening on the internet certainly Internet connections involved in the broadcast and we take it for granted but you wouldn't take it for granted if you were in the middle of the Democratic Republic of Congo hoping that you might be able to afford an hour or something at an Internet cafe 20 miles away the plan to bring everybody on to the Internet everybody in the war old onto the Internet was always an ambitious one but now seems completely unreachable and the World Wide Web find ation has said that the chances of bringing everybody online and giving them reasonable access that they can afford is no They're in about 2040 down our ads Thacker as research director Hello Well I are you we must be a little depressed more than a little depressed having to make this announcement. What's gone wrong. You know it is it is quite sobering and. You know I think as you mentioned on Internet access is very important it's just hard to work cash on there is thing one of the things that observed is that the really which Internet access has been growing under that the player has really declined. In 2007 and I know average growth is around 19 percent and I don't understand about 6 percent each year and yet it's still growing but the important thing here is that how the world is not using the Internet and if we're going to get the next 50 percent almost 4000000000 people. Online it's going to take an even longer time and that's really worrying for us it tells it tells a story of digital exclusion doesn't it so give us a sense of how much relatively it costs people who have a limited thought of a little internet access to actually get online. You know the last 4 for the Internet which is an initiative that was on Isha Sesay is. Brought on price and every year. We look at our own sixty's the prices in our own $61.00 country is not average just like the phone is you know over 5 percent of our Rich monthly income to buy one gig of data each month. So you know the think about if you. Your average income. Of let's say in the United States you're earning our own $4000.00 a month on average and you're taken 5 percent of that you know just like $200.00 just spending $200.00 on one gig of data that's really a lot of money just for small relative the aunt of the and in some countries you know like in. In foreign some some South African countries that they like and they're on our Mali you know it's all it's it's our own 20 percent are high off 20 percent of our rich one think of our higher that's really extraordinary just paying for this kind of stuff and so we win or lose countries whose costing 20 percent of their monthly income in some sub-Saharan African countries for example in Mali or in Sierra Leone and therefore it means that it becomes a very expensive and it leads to a lot of people not being able to afford to to buy IMO because it's a plan to get a nice but you know can I ask you how we got here because 10 years ago there was a great deal of optimism and people were talking about developing countries skipping a whole generation and guessing why my ex and things like this you know that would that would cover a huge area with a cheap or even free internet signal what's gone wrong. I think the opposite was valid I had time because you know does technology on a cost at a time could bring. Could bring new people in line and what was what was available in many of these countries was affordable for data middle to middle income groups and I income within those countries but know that we're potentially met with potential provided services to those schools it's the majority of those the low income groups in these countries that are reality. That we are we did target and up for an affordability you know high levels of fortitude and costs remain a big problem I think what was initially addressed early on in several years ago now we have to shift that had just enough for developed a problem this is one of the major reasons why many people are not able to get on line we hear this in survey after survey a national survey of the national survey and to address the support of the problem we argue that it's primarily a policy problem we can reduce some of these industry costs by having better policies but the problem is what we have phoned in these in each on no affordability part we have published is that the governments are not pursuing the right policies to bring down the cost and so we find that the cost. Of barrier reduced and the result is that a lot of people just cannot get on and. Government's actually putting obstacles in the way of bringing more people online is that a significant thing. I think governments are just not doing enough so for example you know policies such as that they have in. Mind are I don't suppose the taxation would be would you really create returns in terms of lure in cost and improving affordability and by that I mean for example in some countries right no governments of tacked on taxes on Social Media youth. And this has increased the cost to get online it costs to buy more that it upon bread and therefore makes it more expensive on a Ford for our people to get online. From Goldman Sachs handsets to make it more expensive to buy mobile handsets and therefore it becomes on affordable for those kinds of if if governments are going to pursue these kind of positive without thinking about the long term effects of getting more people online then we will have results like this if there is. As there is and you know luckily a sensible approach of taxation if there is. Some fees are too high if there is not promotion of infrastructure and things like that this is a problem that we see you know governments are not addressing these problems with show it. Let me just ask you one for one thing is other countries that you do actually give kudos to for for giving everybody available and low cost Internet access. There there are other countries that are trying to address some of the report of the problems particularly for low income groups. I think for example. The recall there the government has tried to subsidize. Home internet access for low income households and in that country many of those low income also happen to be house those that are single parent and are headed by women so we also address not only providing access to learn come group but also provide access the woman and I'm and I mentioned a woman because well we have mentioned the broader problem of this decrease in Internet growth globally what is happening in parallel which is very worrying as well is that the digital gender gap the gap between the proportion men that are using the Internet proportion men as women are using the Internet is actually growing so more men are more likely to use the Internet than women right now and still in so in trying to address the overall problem of getting everyone on line we also need to be addressed the problem this wasn't a gap for that exam by Costa Rica I think doing is addressing both the sun and it does sound awfully. Awfully saw in a sense says more and more as if the end of that has become another branch of human and that's got mixed up in all of the daily difficulties that everything else seems to get mixed up and you know for a while it seemed to be independent of a whole lot of things didn't it it was it was as if it floated free there's no doing that quite so much. Well here I think I think the problems are always there I felt like a feeling that now there are more. The more it's more stark right in given where we are as to the issues our own house that we're not being on line and the growth for it find our own issues are on the increase and Digital Agenda got both of these issues you know pie they were out there on issues or on increasing income inequality as well as dishes their own whitish is their own. Discrimination Against Women and Petrov pushes right. That are then reflected in. Women not be. Earning less money than men in sun in some countries and they're part of being the sonnet able to afford internet access. Or in some in some cases not even having the ability to to use the Internet in the way that men might you know because of issues are on that harassment and so on. So you know you're right there are these many of the issues are intertwined and they're become very complicated. What we have pointed out though is that you know there are solutions to these issues that we know can work on the cost side we know the governments can pursue things our own smart spy taxation on our own promoting infrastructure sharing between mobile phone companies the US They can also be targeted in terms of trying to address the digital Gena get problem within their countries the problem is the governments are not pursuing these policies and in the kind. With the kind of determination that would like to see on the coast thank you for introducing us to your complex world. Thank you very much. It's just growing up to have frost to. Form digital on my smartphone and tablet this is B.B.C. 5 Live Drive the B.B.C. News with Allison Hughes explosive devices have been sent to high profile Democrats in the United States among them were packages addressed to Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton which were intercepted CNN'S building in New York was also targeted no one has been injured it's understood Devon ims is looking to close 50 stoles nearly a 3rd of its total rather than the 10 previously announced the department's also expected to announce a loss of 500000000 pounds later today. The Home Office is being accused of a complete failure of leadership over policing in in the denials a committee of M.P.'s says the police service is at risk of becoming irrelevant as neighborhood teams are stripped down in large numbers of crimes go unsolved. Just one in 7 councils in the U.K. Is covering the minimum cost of providing home Katha elderly and disabled people according to a new report the U.K. Hand camera sensation which represents can't companies says is a 900000000 pound shop full as the News Shop now has this been a frustrating night in the Champions League the Tottenham who had denied their 1st group win by an 87th minute goal at P.S.V. Eindhoven if it is to see Woods but as captain who goalie sent off just before the equaliser after an el judge challenge by his boss Mitty upon shittiness says he is not to blame for that capitulation no annoying no going to blame if you play it I think if someone want to believe some people isas myself I am the responsible of the of the team for. The decision didn't help us and of course you draw a very difficult situation where qualification for the existential and or the Tripoli so that result leaves Tottenham with a battle to qualify for the last 16 a much more comfortable night for getting clubs Liverpool who've gone top of that group after a 4 no win over Red Star Belgrade would not be as big surprise for you that I think we are not through yet though this group obviously is there's exciting until the end that. I thought pretty clear immediately after the draw but we're going to do more than win your own games tonight we turn our attentions to the Europa League Chelsea take on boss a bar a solvent boss might see a sorry says he's forgiven coach Marco Jani after he was charged with improper conduct that incident with Josie Marino on the weekend Jani provoked an angry reaction from the United boss of the Chelsea equalised with them at Stamford Bridge I was there when Gore spoke to Mr Moreno he said sorry media 3 it was really very important that I think that he realized that to be to be broke as I think that I want to do given. A lot of opportunity off our way to Sporting Lisbon and Celtic and Rangers also in action on in 5 lots bull tonight from 7 you can have packed music a special hour long interview with Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola Leeds it's all of the championship again after a 2 nil went over Ipswich 5th place dopy stopped West Brom from going to help out classing them for one all the results on the B.B.C. Sport website coach travel Bayliss says cricket is could miss out on the World Cup next year if they don't improve their form it's up to that poor performance in the face and final one dayer against Sri Lanka when England suffered a record $2191.00 defeat there's too many more of those and it has to be the sign go is a shot I'm not the ones that find themselves on the outer that's just the why international cricket is you know it's a it's a tough school you know it's I thought Morgan and I reached out to reassure Is it a fantastic visit with a bat leaving the wife are happy that we've won but it would be disappointing how we finished a 3 week suspensions been handed to flyhalf Dani Cypriani after his red card in Gloucestershire Champions Cup defeat to Munster on Saturday Wasps of Can fun they've released wing Christian weight from his contract to allow him to pursue a career in American football but his number one college ministry to the 2nd round of the Vienna Open tennis where he'll face Spain's The nuns of a disco and U.F.C. Fight is Kona McGregor and could be a goal Madoff will remain bounds until an investigation is completed and the trouble that followed the lightweights Well Title Fight fasciitis from B.B.C. Sport time is running out to end the fight like young compensates repeat here if you know a young person based 11 to 15. And loves talking about this then we want to hit him a lot at all for children to do is go to the B.B.C. Dog how can I smash young commentator and sex when the money comes by country experience the F.A. Cup Final Wimbledon cricket international test my oldest 6 feet competition closer . 9 am on Monday I see the website and privacy notice young commentator of the print B.B.C. Radio 5 live across the U.K. This is B.B.C. 5 Live up all night with Rob. If you look on the Internet far poor short story turned a tough film The Telltale Heart pops up a number of times it was a 941 American version directed by a sign that was on one $960.00 British version directed by honest MORRIS There's even a cartoon version from 1953 but the one we're interested in was produced by the small independent British studio Adelphi and it was believed to have been lost but it resurfaced recently in strong rar Here's a moment from it. Is impossible to say how. It ended my brain. But once conceived it haunted me day and night. There was. Action. I love you don't and you never wrong me you never give me a. Good. I think it was hit by. The feeling of it whenever it fell upon me my blood ran. But agree. I made up my mind take a life. That's really nice. Well that controlled menacing voice belongs to actor Stanley Baker who was finally night for his work and the film has been restored and is not viewable again Kate Lees is the granddaughter of the at Dauphin studios find awesome tent I ask a please what she knew about the film before at St discovery I always knew that it was going to be a good film. I knew that obviously I knew it belong to us and I knew it stars Danny Baker and I knew it was a good film because my father and uncle who had run Adelphi films before me said it was a very good film and they could be quite kind of critical really an email telling you we could film but they didn't have a copy of it absolutely that's right I mean they had seen it back in the 150 S. Cause they knew what it was side but the other thing of course I knew about it was a star the wonderful Stanley beta so I was very anxious to get hold of it and I took over Duffy 12 years ago and I've been looking for telco Hall ever since then so I use I would go to collect his fez I had a number of missing films and I found quite a lot of them and I would look him I would go to collect his fez and also I got in touch with so I'm all kinds all over the world because of course we distributed all films all over the world so I'd almost given up hope of Tell-Tale Heart nobody and I drew a blank everywhere I went and then one day just completely out of the blue this email arrives from Jeff Wells in Scotland saying oh you know I noticed you you're looking for this one you're missing some page and I've just been tearing out my loft and I found a copy of the SO man would you like it so I was absolutely I was American and I rang up Jeff and told him about it because there are a number of films made. A of the tell tale halt so I had to be sure it was the right version I and you and you would know because of you know the opening credits would tell you I presume you now while Yeah absolutely that's right that's right and also cause had Stanley Baker also seen him a sunny day so just had seen it and he said it was the right film but I absolutely knew it was the right for when I spoke to him on the phone because I also am happy to quiet it and he said he had bought it from a camera shop in hotels back in the 1980 S. And this camera shop was called junking Ltd I think codes for a long time now but Joan King Ltd used to do Adelphia lab work back in the sixty's and seventy's and they used to transfer all film from 35 millimeter which is a send him off format to 16 millimeter which in those days was a home format and as soon as he said he bought it from John King Ltd I knew it was going to be the right film so I went up to Scotland and. He wanted to put it in the post but I said no no far too precious you can put it in the post I need comments like that so I went up to Scotland he lives outside in a small village outside stron wrong I mean strong rod of all places you know I say this film again from strike from all of the strong RA That's pretty good as an absolutely well he apart he had a number of 16 millimeter films and when they moved he he he certainly cleared some of them out he took I think just a few up to strand all with him but then he didn't have a 16 millimeter projector anymore and they were just having a tear out the way you do and just to see he just decided that you know it was time to get rid of it and he had his eyes were you happy with the quality I mean can you can you up operate a 16 millimeter film to to sort of acceptable quality I didn't wear such perfectionists these days absolutely. So I took it to a law suit I go back to London I took it to a lab and had it digitized so it's in high definition H.D. And the quality is really good they did a lousy job cleaning up in the lab it's it is a good lab that I work with quite a lot and. It's a great fun we can all see it I mean we can see it at the National Film Archive is that right that's right it will be on the B.S.I. Player which is the 5 download top form from Friday and it will be free from the 1st 2 weeks and after that it will be for subscription customers can you tell us a little bit about the story OK So tell us how hot was a story written by Edgar Allan Poe in 1843 and it is a very spooky gothic no law dog tale. It's a kind of horror story really and there is only one actor in it who is he's called in the race and he's writing the story and he's 10 and he's telling the story as he goes along and it is fundamentally a murder story so the narrator. Lives with somebody he calls the old man we don't know who the old man is might be his father could be a servant we don't know who he is but this old man has a what what the right to kohls a vulture he has a blue cloud beyond a nice blue cloudy I preys on the murderous mind and he he goes to look at the old man asleep every every night in bed and thinks about murdering him and then on the 7th night the old man wakes up and yes indeed he doesn't to him and the story goes on and he he cuts out the body part is under the poets and the story goes on from there and it's just a really good spooky gothic you know chilling tale and Stoney Baker is perfect in the part he was a very. He was a he he was very good portraying the bleakest side of the human condition and he is a he's really excellent and it's a great film it's and it's nicely directed the action takes place in a kind of Garrett where he's writing out the story but it's you know it's all dog shadows and spooky corneas and candles and it's it's a it's it's and it's a really good because because I think I think you know people might not might remember his name but when they see his face they were down for him he's a giant the word I would use is Saturday night and you know he's got this by Doc Yes these dark good looks you know he has a compelling Yes And I think people might remember him from Zulu and Guns of Navarone Those were his his 2 most famous films. And is there a lot of the ad down for the archives such that some vailable not I mean because Because what what a sort of group of British film treasures that must be absolutely we were actively making films in the ninety's in the 1940 S. 950 S. And we a lot of the big stars really started out with us you know when early in that careers and we have 4 films with Diana doors we've got the 1st 2 films that Peter Sellers made with the goose and with Spike Milligan and Harry Seacom we have people like James Mason Ronnie Corbett Pinella Scales who was of course very big in Fawlty Taos a lot of the Carry On style start to be lost so we've got like Sid James and Jane Sam and Richard Roth is the list is sort of endless you know so we've got some terrific terrific names really good and some of the films are excellent they're being very Some of them are all quite interestingly bad actually but most of them are pretty good. That we will make what we call some good dramas romances comedy musicals horror we've got a bit of everything documentaries everything we've got a film about palmistry and a film about numerology for some very strange stuff. This this period you know when we really had a British cinema yes only to be tremendously proud of Yes absolutely absolutely and I don't feel any because there were also there were a lot of companies around that was small like Adelphi in those days in the sixty's the seventy's they will be with difficult trading conditions they all went to the will or they were broken up or so on and the L.C.C. Me because we kept the films we kept the right we've got all the documents and most days of a big don't consult guys and estate in the family so you know we were real kind of microcosm of that period is that I had 3 it's great. And and once again I think probably the best way is say if you just Google B.F. High and the Telltale Heart and it'll be up there on the be a 5 player website for 2 weeks so as you know we're terrible of giving you free stuff on this program but but thanks to the B.F. I genuinely free you'll have a horror fell 20 minutes and you see a wonderful actor. Work there is a rather moving moment Invictus Games Industry later when a British athlete was comforted by has a Danish teammate after becoming unsettled by the sound of a helicopter Paul Guess who was playing in a wheelchair tennis match along with a Dutchman I'm sorry Edwin Vermette and used to be a mine warfare specialist and the sound of the helicopter sparked has P.T.S.D. Very broad words captain of team U.K. In the 2018 a victim's Games in Canada and he knows pole guest I 1st met Paul gets back into early 2017 where he was on the trials for the games last year in Toronto and he was a very visual. Person very quiet very timid and was only doing one spall see saw saw him and then dissipated and when you say very visual i you're referring to his tattoos which are fairly very. Exact. And full on. In a wheelchair covered in some amazing tattoos so very visual. So so be it a quiet guy and you had no inkling that you at the time you know that he was suffering so badly from P.T.S.D. Ah I think P.T.S.D. Is one of them things that isn't visual it's not really out and in your face so no none whatsoever but he never spoke with himself in these all know things so early dose of lacking confidence let's say and just very quiet get yourself. But he said I mean there obviously is good tennis player because otherwise you wouldn't be the Invictus Games while the tennis is a trial because the tennis is not supposedly Invictus So actually he showing exactly how good image has been to him he's volunteered out to do a trial with a tennis hence playing with the Dutch guy against 2 Americans so it wasn't partly because games it was a trial game just just and he went yeah I'll do that which I think just amazing and stands out what good is don't blame. And then in your experience does something like that the sound of a helicopter triggering P.T.S.D. Actually occur more than you know more than a couple of times this is something that happens to people Well I mean enough it was a fantastic psychological wellbeing team in and you know they're learning so much and I've got a lot of good friends who do suffer with P.T.S.D. And they're very strict is that do it and you see people die to the floor and start to search them on you see people just find a hole and jump in it all you see just the emotional aggressive responses from a helicopter which it is totally diverse What reactions from different noises visual displays are can come and I suppose we're still learning and I suppose I mean the so many side triggers when you think about it you know the the sort of the classic one is the loud noises and it sounds like a gunshot and some people freeze completely. Now it is the other bank that whether the gun show or just explosion no no I've seen some pretty pretty drastic reactions from it which is sad when you see you go wow it's pretty serious some of the reactions. And how and in the in the sort of the team U.K. And you know the whole set up you're talking about how do people actually comfort each other I mean we saw that wonderful example there with you know the the pair of them on the tennis court but this is that is there are a lot of interactions like that. I mean like everything's up in the girls and interactions good because you're making friends and when you make friends with social media that's all you make contacts and therefore you start to talk and you sign posts Walkmans ations that can help if you feel you know getting it so I suppose in and the big circle of things anything when you get together for a short period or long period of time is good because it gets chosen for you to meet and therefore friendships develop and therefore things get better for you and obviously your families as well because if you're all smiling so your families but in terms of I mean from what you've told me if I was on my own and you know I'd been in service and I suddenly had a moment of P.T.S.D. That maybe surprised me to a satellite Help for Heroes supply pretty good place to go. And I think they're pretty stunned pulverization yes that they are a place to go but sometimes it's just making the making the communication just making a phone call to try to ask for help because well we are quite proud nation we do some soul and do some big and sometimes door ask for help until it's too late so we can somebody that we have. Bonnie broad who is captain of team U.K. In the 2018 Invictus Games Canada and more on a story we told you about the mail room for all of southern Los Angeles being evacuated and the F.B.I. Now saying that 2 more suspicious packages similar to the 5 previously intercepted addressed to California Congresswoman Maxine Waters have been intercepted I think includes one that was intercepted earlier but we're also obviously talking about this one in Los Angeles will bring you more on that later but no let's go to Fenway Park where it hasn't warmed up but pitcher David Price his hands still seem to be doing the job for him as we rejoin Seth Bennett Seth. Yeah he catch me in a corner of quiet at Fenway Park and I'm telling you there are very many of these just looking out over the city people are closing down beneath me in the bars I can see one of the big T.V. Stations have got their stand up outside where they'll have a few the superstars David Ortiz one of the legends of the Boston Boston Red Sox he'll be there doing his analysis at the end of this game but you mentioned David Price's hands well how these things are pretty cold he will feel a little bit fortunate to have got to this point with L.A. Leading only by 2 runs toward L.A. Really have fought back well in this game and price has been hit hard 2 of the last outs in the inning just went right on to the warning track very very close to being home runs and certainly extra base it was some good fielding in the end from the Red Sox means that the score line is still pretty tight L.A. Have come back into this game very very strongly and you think India feel that maybe prices time in this game is going to be pretty limited I would be very very surprised if he starts the 6th inning but it has really good game so far and the Boston fans that was so confident not so long. I would just be starting to feel a little bit nervous with their side down by a rope. Says many thanks indeed keep stopping those feet now let's join the sun they are good to tell us about a brand new European and Japanese mission to America Hello Sandy I wrote so when this thing I very very good were under the sink take off Sunday. Yes it took off last Friday from friends Guyana and it's the best because both spacecraft are talking about it's heading to its vacuity which is the planet closest to the sun and it's expected to reach in 7 years time in December 2025 so this is the 3rd time that we're going to back me the 1st 2 were actually NASA missions launched in 1073 in 2004 respectively but this time like you said it's a joint mission team the European and Japanese space agencies Now the interesting thing about is that there is actually 2 spacecraft that a sharing a right to mercury one is the Japanese orbits is called Neo which will focus on measuring Matthiessen kinetic field and the other is a European welcome the planet will better but it will study a whole bunch of being such as chemical makeup and topography and once they reach the planet the 2 spacecraft will enter different orbits and cover the different hemispheres but so a lot we don't know about Mercury I mean it's so far away isn't it. Yeah it is well it's a very mysterious and at the end a strong message really interested in studying it because it's kind of an oddball and also a system it's barely bigger than our moon but it has this I know that's disproportionately large but size so understanding how much we formed will help us better understand how the solar system evolved and astronomers are also interested in studying Mercury because it can tell us about exoplanets so planet busting of the star as whether these are habitable and not. And and hopefully so your but the planet I mean how do you control a spacecraft that sort of distance. Well radio waves and it is interesting because. We can actually get to Mercury a lot quicker than 7 years you can get that in 5 months but it's really about slowing down the spacecraft enough so that it doesn't hurt all into it so they're doing the slide past method so what they're going to fly by different candidates and it's called that because number one fun fact because it's named after the Italian scientists who created this fly by. By method as they work so it springs fire a couple of different planets like this. And it gets pulled into the gravity of these tenets so it slows it down eventually enough so that when it approaches Makeni it's low enough so it can't and its orbit quite nicely fried and the projectionist are her warm it'll stay there. They're expecting 2 years if all goes well and hopefully a bit longer and once it reaches the end of its mission which is crashing to the surface. Well you know as a story about a favorite dog I remember Chapman pincher from the Daily Express. But he wrote about it very fondly. But there's new There's new work on a chocolate labs life expectancy isn't per year that is so the findings from a study that came out on Monday might have some setting news for people who intricate collapse research just looked at you know your records of over 2000 labs in the U.K. And they found that chocolate labs tend to have shorter lives than their yellow a black cousins so on average chocolate labs lived 10.7 years as compared to 12 point one years for one chocolate labs they also tend to suffer more health problems so for example they tend to get twice as many infections and 4 times as many skin infections why is this the case why the researchers believe that it's because of the way talk at labs of bread so chocolate is a recess of trait which means that breeders must have to chop at labs to produce puppies atop in color but this also means that the gene pools to appease come from is much smaller and when that happens the chances of harmful D.N.A. Mediations accumulating actually increases so you have a higher chance of getting certain diseases. Instead of breeding a stronger species are actually breeding a weaker species as the generations progress Exactly yes a pity for such a lovely dog too. But they but these same I mean the same. Weaknesses in the gene pool are not evident in yellow or black. That's right apparently not so they do suffer from infections folks Omble but not as their weight as high as the chocolate ones. Well let's take a dip in the Southern Ocean that's very kind and it's very dark what sort of poorly understood things actually live there tell us why or what Yeah so this really unusual sea cucumber that is nicknamed the headless chicken monster and it was caught on video for the 1st time also last is a feast and earlier this month now if you haven't seen the video I highly recommend you google it as it's pretty cool you see this pink semi transparent blob floating about and it's propelled by these tiny fins and you also see it walking along the ocean floor and the numerous tentacles it has just grabbing food it's really wacky and it got the nickname headless chicken monster because some people say it looks like a decapitated chicken that's ready for roasting. On a more serious note we don't actually know very much about the sea cucumber we don't know how many exist so whether it was last spotted all the way across the wild in the Gulf of Mexico last year so it really highlights how. Much we don't know about the deep ocean. That we were still new creature Satriani something yeah thank you very much thanks for that if you. Want to. Be received by. The B.B.C. News far worse. News this hour explosives the same to senior Democrats and in full blown away but little pulled that group in the Champions League. Is B.B.C. . President has called for unity for explosives were sent to some leading Democrats in the U.S. Move the devices reach their intended targets which included Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. The F.B.I. Says it's investigations of the highest priority Jared Bernstein is a former Federal a New York City Homeland Security Office official clearly somebody who is going with us very specific agenda looking at people with specific ideology in the United States and that's the 1st step towards this investigative process where the F.B.I. Are used to look at who are the people who are targeted or the different groups who have made threats on those people and go through their database to be very meticulous about looking for groups or individuals who are known to them or are known to them who might be involved with this kind of activity U.S. Investigators say they are now trying to track down another suspicious package the believed been sent to the former Vice President Joe Biden. Is expected to reveal losses later 500000000 pounds it's believed it now wants to close 50 of its 166 stores and pays a warning policing in England and Wales rest becoming a relevance with many crimes going unsolved a fair Select Committee says cuts in neighborhood teams are partly to blame and it sank using the home office of a failure of leadership the U.K. Head of counterterrorism policing Neil bassis says the police and am I 5 a carrying out a record $700.00 terror investigations it's all the Commons home affairs committee that 80 percent relates are Islamist extremism and many of the rest involve far right fanatics He says his biggest worry is the danger posed by British nationals who've been fighting for terror groups in Syria and Iraq My real concern is the people who are about. This big fight it who are fighting and who are committed to the fight should they come back or should they start to come back they are huge and so that is the big national security threat the Government's say as little time it's in the rules around non-disclosure agreements.