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Use the slides this C.B.C. . Hello good morning it's 3 o'clock this is up almost on 5 Live with Khalil McDonald the main nice elite is back to the U.K. On Russia. And in sport again Williamson century as New Zealand tighten their grip here in Auckland. This is B.B.C. 5 Live with the B.B.C. News at 3 o'clock here's the venue Ramos the leaders of the 28 East aides have agreed with the U.K. That it's highly likely Russia was responsible for the souls we know the agent attack the statement was made by Donald to Sgt The president of the European Council our diplomatic correspondent Jonathan Marcus says Russia's ambassador to the U.K. Is accusing Britain of blaming Moscow without any evidence he absolutely kept to the message he insisted essentially that Russia was the wrong party and that there were no facts being released by the British government just assertions he really implied that the problem here was that Britain was struggling for a role post breakfast and at the decided on the anti Russian So again you know a square pile who were poisoned by the nerve agent are in a critical but stable condition they're unconscious and under heavy sedation a judge has given chemical weapons experts permission to examine samples of their blood as our correspondent Duncan Kennedy explains they've asked this judge to collect fresh blood to be tested to see the evidence of a nerve agent and they also had permission from the judge to carry out D.N.A. Tests on this blood sample as well they've also asked the judge to retest samples already being our allies by Porton Down China says it's considering tariffs worth up to $3000000000.00 on a range of products imported from the US earlier President Trump announced plans to impose tariffs worth up to $60000000000.00 on Chinese goods the house regulator says 4 in 10 online cheapie firms in England are not providing safe care the Care Quality Commission found problems with prescribing drugs and carrying out checks on patients the Royal College of G.P.'s says the findings are very concerning. The government's launched a digital advertising campaign aimed at tackling knife crime among 10 to 21 year olds the ads on social media feature case studies have turned their lives around a key Mundell is a teacher and community worker from Manchester a lot of people use social media day in day out. To. Make a difference and could allow them to think differently about their actions the government is being asked to rethink its decision not so will the contracts for the new blue U.K. Passport to the British making the current one Gateshead based claims of French companies been chosen instead Martin Lloyd wrote the passport man's most travel documents I don't think it really matters where the passport is made long as it comes out as a very good product I think De Lauro might be being a little bit hypocritical in that when they got the 1st contract to issue the British passport in 192921 they got it by undercutting the current producer which was Harrison and Co to complain they being on the last business isn't it and the man who founded Toys R Us has died just a week after the company said its operations in the U.K. And US would end Charles Lazarus opened his 1st children store more than 60 years ago now to support the 2nd day of the 1st Test between New Zealand and England in all Clint Kevin Howes is watching at Eden Park we had 40 minutes of play then the rain and then the early tea was taken on this day night task but we're on the way again and New Zealand have brought up the 202-0343 this partnership of 80 between Kane Williamson is on a 100 on one not out and Nichols on 41 England of take of the new ball when I went to the 4th over that but still no breakthrough as yet still those 3 we could stand and this is a lead county of $145.00 runs for the rest of the sport he showed us our goal Southgate says just because Jordan Pickford will start in goal in their friendly against the Netherlands doesn't mean he's become. England's 1st choice keeper for this summer's World Cup The manager's also confirmed Jack Wilshere is out with a knee problem Dustin Johnson's defense of his World Golf Match Play title is over the world number one last match in his group meaning he can now reach the knockout stage elsewhere in Austin there were wins for RORY McILROY in Poulter Tommy Fleetwood and Paul Casey witness produced 2 late tries to be sold for 24 points to 16 in Super League at the gymnastics World Cup in Birmingham 17 year old Alex can fella took bronze for Great Britain in the women's all around and Mark Williams is through to the semifinals of snoopers Players' Championship after beating Ryan Day 6 frames to 3. Is B.B.C. 5 Live on digital smartphone. Brains in northern parts of the you. Will be dry Friday expected in Scotland and Northern Ireland which could be heavy at times but it will stay dry with highs of 13 degrees Celsius. This morning everyone is 6 o'clock and you. Wake up with right. Here are your headlines good morning. OK people feeling really strongly about this some of these texts. It's 4 o'clock on 5 Live This is Dr going to try on our lives today I suggest. Have a look at the running order see the word piercing. That. Bad. Across the U.K. On digital and online around the world this is B.B.C. 5 Live this hour MacDonald We're staying up all night. And. For those of you. Like Us enjoy coloring in your poll night world maps with the places we visit on the program stand by we're going to go from Yellowstone National Park to the city of Cork in the Republic of Ireland to New Zealand to Washington D.C. And to Sport Relief which is happening all over the U.K. Today as Yellowstone volcanoes Cork's house music scene the latest from President trumpet his team and of course the challenges and fundraising for Sport Relief 28 teams between now and 4 o'clock Also this hour we'll introduce you to Angie Thomas yesterday evening when the water storms children's book prize for 28 team her book focuses on police brutality towards young black people in the United States. The news comes from C.B.S. . This is C.B.S. News on the hour. I'm Pam Colter President Trump supporters wanted him to shake up Washington and that's just what he's doing he's replacing national security adviser H.R. McMaster with former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton C.B.S. Is even Portnoy says the administration personnel change comes at a critical time the handover atop the national security staff occurs as the president nears a major decision on the Iran nuclear deal and as he endeavors to embark on historic talks with North Korea John Bolton is one of the most prominent hawks in the national security arena he's advocated bombing Iran to prevent it from developing a nuclear weapon and just last month he wrote an op ed calling for a preemptive strike on North Korea for months Senator Bernie Sanders is critical of the appointment saying Bolton was part of the effort to mislead the U.S. Into the disastrous Iraq war shock and awe on Wall Street today. The Dow plunged more than 700 points after President Trump announced new tariffs on some Chinese products C.B.S. Has MAJOR GARRETT one of the president's concerns China. Firms stealing U.S. Technology patents and making similar products for less China also holds the largest portion of America's $21.00 trillion dollar debt that leverage and fears of retaliation creating Zaya the among Republicans in Congress Iowa Senator Charles Grassley I would advise our people in the executive branch from the president on down to be very cautious how you approach China's planning new tariffs on some U.S. Products in response Tokyo's Nikkei index fell 3 percent at the open amid fears of a trade war it's the Senate's turn to take up the $1.00 trillion dollars spending bill but as C.B.S. Is Bill Raycroft says there could be a hitch the Senate wants badly to vote on the omnibus bill tonight so the members can get away on a 2 week recess but they need a unanimous Senate to be able to proceed to that vote Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky is being Korean whether he'll hold up the vote and that's threatening a weekend of debate in Washington on the measure the mother of the 16 year old girl shot at a Maryland high school says her daughter is on life support and is not going to make it she said jail and Willie will be taken off life support tonight a former Playboy playmate is speaking out about her affair with Donald Trump Karen McDougal spoke to CNN'S Anderson Cooper were you in love with him unless. And you think he was in love with you. Don't Trump ever say to you that he loved. All the time. MacDougall said she eventually ended their relationship because she felt too guilty about it a new report suggests most treatment for back pain is useless a global epidemic of back pain up 50 percent since 1990 is being made worse by doctors who prescribe pain killing drugs potentially dangerous surgery and arrest all of which could do more harm according to scientists reporting in The Lancet medical journal they conclude most back pain treatment is useless and the doctor should instead encourage a positive mental attitude job satisfaction and exercise Larry Miller C.B.S. News London the invitations are in the mail but Kensington Palace isn't saying who's on the list to attend Prince Harry and Meghan Marcos May 19th the wedding the couple's invited $600.00 guests to the Windsor Castle event and the lunchtime reception that follows an even more elite group of $200.00 will attend a private reception hosted by Harry's dad Prince Charles in case you're watching your mailbox the invitations are di stamped and gold with the edges bevelled and gilded Pam Colter C.B.S. News 10 past 3 this is a poll night on 5 Live is day 2 of England versus New Zealand Eden Park in Auckland and at the risk of being too tantalizing Kevin Howells we may or may not have a wicket. And we feel that it's a big week it's the weekend we can see standing ovation. James on Sundays out for 100 soon on the school 264 will want to make sure when she's putting herself in the record books now he's 18 to send 3 weeks to into new species leads to the fact we must encroach on real status both from 17 years Patty does she come to expect free from Katie are suitable to mind composed having the school seniors side to themselves in a very strong position to stay bowling England all out of the 58 bus at last England made a breakthrough today without a fairly lengthy delay due to rain and with back call now for the 2nd session of this day not much all needs day too. But with the 5th over the 2nd new pool Anderson has managed to get rid of cane Williamson So the Kiwi he had put over the a lot of damage being done 83 runs put on between he and Nichols Nichols is still there 143264 is leading 148 runs thanks very much Kevin more from Kevin throughout the morning here on 5 Live so when it's get more in the news the President Trump has replaced his national security adviser and was H.R. McMaster and these Bronson stalwarts John Bolton in a tweet of course Mr Trump said he was thankful for Mr MacMASTER service and said he had done an outstanding job for years of course the least in a series of high profile departures from the White House let's talk to our correspondent in Washington D.C. Antony's Arca Hello Antony Hi there. I think we had been expecting news of each hour McMasters departure I mean is the whole thing a surprised it didn't come as too much of a surprise as you mentioned yes a term that Bester had been on in ice for quite some time their ports and maybe a major media outlets that Donald Trump didn't particularly like a German master style that he was too long winded in is intelligence briefings that he was having conflicts with other members of Donald Trump's presidential staff and even James Mattis the secretary of defense if you remember a pick master came in to replace Michael Flynn who is Donald Trump's 1st national security advisor who was forced to resign or fired just shortly after taking the job January of last year because he had according to the White House lied to by a spread of Mike Pence about his contacts with Russian ambassador surgically X. So that all of this context means McMaster was kind of a rush choice Donald Trump likes generals brought him in but they never really clicked Donald Trump likes watching John Bolton on television defend him on Fox News he seems to like John Bolton's hard line. On Iran so you never can tell with Donald Trump's choices for staff but we'll see how long bolt at last and how well he gets along with the president now Absolutely and just by way of background of John Bolton I've been reading various things about some apparently 3 weeks ago chatting about North Korea to Breitbart of course the service provided by Steve Benen formerly of the Trump Parish as well and he had John Bolton a few weeks ago Normally you don't want to be the one who initiates the use of force but given the consequences of a nuclear detonation in the United States we have to ask ourselves whether we're prepared to take preemptive action as was quite fiery character and to the right and that was talking about North Korea which is pretty remarkable given the context of a certain amount of profit reports month with North Korea Donald Trump talking about wanting to have a face to face me but to give you the background on John Bolton is a Hawks hawk as a lot of people like to say around here yes and see a hostile nation he doesn't want to talk so very hard line on Iran as well as North Korea he was one of the biggest cheerleaders within the George W. Bush administration in the early 2004 war with Iraq and that kind of actually strikes me as one of the big ironies here is that Donald Trump as he campaigned for the Republican nomination in 2015 ran for president twice 16 and even as is Ben president now over the past year years been a big critic of the Iraq war said it was a colossal mistake and here he is now appointing a man who was one of the masterminds of that war to a very high perch within this Cabinet of course there are other people commenting as well I think this is Lindsey Graham Senator saying selecting John Bolton as national security adviser is good news for America's allies and bad news for America's enemies President Trump could not have made a better choice in terms of having a reliable seasoned national security come. I don't so who support are there for a move from the Senate so it's just interesting to see that this sort of shifting dynamics this stuff come and go the White House over the last few weeks isn't I mean well this is the signal a real change in approach by the president to policy Yeah I mean it just didn't rattle off names of people who left in the past month Gary Cohen who is an economic adviser Rex Tillerson the secretary of state John Dowd Duncombe's personal lawyer and I hope picks up at the end of February now it's relieving at the end of every issue is what Donald Trump's closest communications adviser and this administration has had an unprecedented amount of turnover in its 1st year I don't think part of that can be ascribed to the fact that you know Donald Trump had never assembled an administration it wasn't surrounded by people who wouldn't assembled administration he took a lot of advice brought a lot of people on based on what he considered knowledgeable sources were telling him now he's been on the job a year and I think he knows what he wants more and he wants people who will not try to control him not to try to manage him or temper some of. His primary in stings but will actually do what he says so if you want to trade war with China you want people will do that if he wants to impose tariffs on steel he wants people to do that if he wants to get out of the Iran deal that he wants someone who will help them do that and John Bolton's that kind of guy you mentioned that he is a seasoned veteran and there are people like him in Washington I interviewed him a couple of years ago in the run up to the Republican presidential primaries and he was serving as a foreign policy adviser for several busy candidates Bobby Jindal was one Ted Cruz was another Eat had kind of adopted this elder foreign policy wise man named that he was using to to connect with a variety of different politicians particularly novice ones. We've just had a statement from John Bolton just listen. As you might expect is probably quite predictable really but here we are it's an honor to be asked by President Trump to serve as national security adviser I humbly accept his offer the United States currently faces a wide array of issues and I look forward to working with President drum band his leadership team in addressing these complex challenges in an effort to make our country safer at home and stronger abroad and of course he does he does come in an interesting time for U.S. Security for U.S. Foreign relations and as you were alluding to and to the change in critical personnel that presumably he'll have to work with when he takes up his role as well . Right exactly we're going to have a new secretary of state were Donald Trump seems to be changing the dynamic of this foreign policy operation and it's not just that surprise announcement that he wanted to meet face to face with Kim Jong Il And but also the decision to start pushing tariffs not only on China but also on U.S. Allies when we're talking about steel and aluminum tariffs that goes back to the Donald Trump that we saw on the campaign trail not the Donald Trump who who was generally willing to go along with a look at established meant since coming to Washington since becoming president now I think he's getting back to what I think he promised voters what he feels is is true allegiances and he wants to us to put together a foreign policy team that will support him on that and that means people like John Bolton It seems you know and just on that point then to explain to us where we're up to with with tariffs with a potential trade war with China there's been a bit of tit for tat really hasn't there between the United States and China in the last few hours and there has been we had the steel in the tariffs announce a couple of couple of weeks ago at a little more details on that over the past few weeks and yesterday and today we're all. About China and in particular putting tariffs and we don't know what goods but on goods that Donald Trump says China makes that war. Drawn from from theft of intellectual property he thinks that U.S. Companies are forcibly trying to do business in China they are forced to share their intellectual property in China turns around takes as Protestants sells them back to the States so he is going to slap tariffs on about I think 60000000000 was the number he came up with 60000000000 and products coming into the United States of 20 to 25 percent in an effort to force China to change its ways China came right back and said OK they're going to impose tariffs on things like U.S. Pork and agricultural exports things that could conceivably it Donald Trump's constituency some conservative states fairly hard and that has raised fears that there is going to be a trade war that this is going to be a tit for tat escalation and you saw the U.S. Stock market the Dow Jones drop about 700 points today that was based on widespread concern at this point that this is going to escalate and this is going to have a detrimental effect on the U.S. Economy and just one other story for me until you realize it's always a busy day in Washington D.C. . Thank you for keeping across all of that for us and I want to mention John died who was present Donald Trump's lead lawyer on the special investigation into Russian interference or potential Russian interviewing to shoot in the 2016 election and he has resigned heard a couple weeks ago rather scathing remarks to the sort of best lawyers that money could buy were taking a pass on being Donald Trump's lawyers and so he was being left with people like John Doe's he's gone as well so what can we read into the situation well the reports on why he left was because he felt that Donald Trump wasn't taking his advice John doubt it and Donald. Top personal lawyer there's another team of lawyers within the White House handling this as well but Donald Trump's top personal lawyer since the summer of last year and by all accounts he was counseling Donald Trump to cooperate with Robert Muller's investigation or provide any documents requested to do any interviews necessary to have his staff cooperate because the best way to get past this given the fact that he didn't do anything wrong as they like to assert is to get it over quickly as painlessly as possible in the past few weeks there before said Donald Trump does not agree with that strategy anymore that you want to more confrontational approach with Robert Muller you saw Donald Trump tweeting Robert Mueller by name for the 1st time this last weekend criticizing the independent counsel investigation a special counsel investigation as a witch hunt so I think that he also brought in a lawyer this week who is much more bellicose sees this as an F.B.I. Conspiracy against Donald Trump so I think what you see here is the same with foreign policy we see a pivot a change of strategy Donald Trump doesn't want to go along to get along anymore even wants to start pushing back and if you want to know why I think it could be because there were reports of Robert Muller is going to start looking into Donald Trump's business ties to Russia that he's expanded is prone to clued other countries besides Russian attempts to influence in the trip and ministration all busy of that is to say that this investigation isn't going to end anytime soon and I think Donald Trump may just be fed up with it and he wants fighters on his legal team or are going to brook no compromise and see Thank you very much really appreciate that really value analysis thank you and these are reporting from Washington D.C. For us and now the water storms Children's Book Prize winner for 20 team was announced on Thursday evening and the winner was and she told Miss for her heat to you give I caught up with her just after she found out she'd won I am honored I am and I am overwhelmed amazing me now that my book where the thank you. People in the other country is like the greatest honor I always feel like I'm at home when I visit the U.K. So this just this is like the icing on the cake this is holy amazing I am. What I mean to not just affected people but the compliments I've been reading about the Duke and some of the comments and reviews people have been absolutely taken aback I think by it tell us about it what's the most the idea and the story is about the 16 year old girl named star who lives in 2 different worlds mostly black for a neighborhood where she lives and the mostly white private school this year Spears and her struggle of being 2 different people and 2 different worlds becomes even harder when she's the sole witness of her childhood best friend Julio being killed by a cop who was unarmed and what started out as it does not say that only changes to the unity but it did in her life and so maybe this is my way of hope I hope to help more people understand why we say Black Flag matter and why people would be sellable set when another young black person an unarmed black person lost their life that they would be subsets and why it or to protest or to speak up speak out whatever that may be I just want to help more people understand and to get a better picture you know so often young people in these cases they become hashtags the Republican back human beings and when it happened so many of us take it personally I wanted to show why so many of us take it personally I believe as well the story started as a as a short story before you expanded it yes it did I was in what you all call university when I wrote it as a short story as part of my senior project I had to write a show as collection of short stories in order to graduate and at the time young man named after exam lost his life in Oakland California and so many of my classmates did not understand why people were upset Oscar's death was caught on tape and accommodate it and also was not armed at the crime and the video shows that he was shot while lying on his stomach. And he was not a threat he shouted back and it led to a lot of riots and protests in Oakland and conversation and my hometown of Mississippi and Mississippi and my classmates were like well he was an ex-con where people feel upset he should have to settle they told him to do and I was angry and I was frustrated so I decided to use those emotions and write a story to hopefully help my classmates understand a little better but for me it was also cathartic it helped me get those emotions out because my other option was to burn down my empire who can't fish. So I was like you took that to the piano and you talked before about the effect that this is had on people in the U.K. As well as in the United States and talk to us a little bit about that what people said to you about how they felt reading your book I said Well many young people civically young black girls and young black boys both in the U.S. And here in the U.K. Who thank me for this book The Quest for so many of them is the 1st time that they've seen themselves in a book I've had young black girls saying well this is me so many ways I didn't see my friend get sealed but far disappearing it is still my experience Well that's like the best part and it's been amazing to me to know that it's connected with readers on both sides of the car and then I had the adult that thank you for this book because it helped me understand a little bit better is help me understand why so many young people have been frustrated and why so many of them are speaking up and speaking out and why so many of them are protesting and I get it and I understand a little more and wow I did know that police in southeast Texas to speak of the issue I've gotten on both sides and you know here in the U.K. I've had a glow like a book with this weekly to say thank you for this book because there are issues here that no one is saying a thing to do and I hope that this book will help more people see what's happening right here is not just an American problem there are things happening right here in the U.K. To black people when it comes to the instance that you've described particularly United. It's of unarmed young black people being shot by police officers and a variety of circumstances what's weird is that just my work was the atmosphere among your friends your classmates people you know. How do people feel about relationships with the police I know that for so many young black people all black people black people period in the state that there is a fear there I know personally myself and I get pulled over by how I have I have a fear I'm afraid because I don't know how it's going to turn out and there was one point in time where we were piled Well if you do this you do that you'll be OK I got the same thought that Star parent you know her in the book when I was you know about what to do when a police officer backed me and I was told that that was the way to divide those encounters but then you have someone like the land-O. Canfield who did everything he was supposed to do and he still ended up dead but there's this fear and there's a sensation and there's this this feeling of what can I do there's nothing I can live to do in that situation right now we have this case with this 22 year old young man in Sacramento California who was simply in his backyard holding his cell phone and even what do we do as like people what do we do to do so other than to show cops that we aren't a threat well there's a fear and there's just so straight and then there is an anger but I also know I have a lot of hope a lot of young people that I know have a lot of hope because the fact of the matter is we are speaking up speaking out and we're not going to back down and go something has changed so there is fear but there is a lot of hope just hearing you say there that that that you had to have a conversation with your parents growing up about what to do in that situation is astonishing. Absolutely Actually I didn't get that from my parents I got it from a cousin who was a cop and that sucks a lot of people but my cousin knew that some of his fellow officers would not see me in the same way that he did and he wanted me repaired so he told me where to put my hand he told me have to act and react and what to say and what not the same and he had that conversation with me because he knew that there was racial bias alive and prevalent and that many of his colleagues so he wanted me to be able to survive in a town or and that's a reality to so many of us live in I know parents right now in the safe passage have these conversations with their 10 year old and they're 12 year old because you have to look at a mirror right he was 12 and he was killed while parents are having to have these conversations with their children and I know that a lot of why parents like wow that's so foreign to me adds think that would even have to be done but it's a survival tactic. You talked as well about the the hope that you feel in this situation what gives you reason for hope I have hope because a lot of young people give me hope young people are speaking up speaking out and you're getting involved you see it with students in Parkland and what they're doing speak up and speak out but I also know that even before they were speaking never speaking out young black people all around America were speaking up and speaking out against gun violence they just weren't getting the attention from the media they give me hope they want to change things and they are challenging people in their challenge in their officials and they understand that the power is truly in the people so they give me a lot of hope and I have hope because more people are becoming aware of what's happening and if nothing else the 2016 election in America made more people aware that we have problems that we've been ignoring for so long and now people are getting involved and they're becoming aware and they're getting making themselves more knowledgeable what's happening someone who isn't like them because I honestly felt for so long Americans we were very self-absorbed and so if nothing else that election has made more people aware and I have hope that things will change this one point but it's going to take more than awareness and it's going to take more than allies we need coconspirators stand on the front lines with us 2nd to get some change. That's Angie Thomas who last night was awarded the Waterstone's children's book prize for 28 this is B.B.C. 5 Live it's 331 on digital online smartphone and tablet is B.B.C. 5 Live and with the B.B.C. News used in your Ramos thank you for the European Council says its members fully agree with Britain it's highly likely Russia was responsible for the poisoning of the film a double agent circus cripple on his door to Yulia the power still critically ill off to being poisoned insoles Bria this month but aging has criticize President Trump's announcement that he intends to impose tariffs with $60000000000.00 on Chinese imports into the U.S. Beijing says it doesn't want a trade war but will fight to the end to defend it. Interests in America and the sheets one Donald Trump sags another member of his top team his national security adviser General H.R. McMaster will be replaced by the Right Wing at John Bolton Mr Bolton says it's an honor to be asked by the president and almost 40 percent of cancers could be prevented by lifestyle changes according to cancer research EK the charity says obesity could overtake smoking as the biggest killer that's the news it's the 2nd day of the 1st Test between New Zealand and England in all Clint Kevin Howes is watching. Some success for England with his 2nd new ball and the big way his story should have came Williamson out 480802 but New Zealand continued to build their lead their 219 for 4 that now easily the 161 runs with Henry Nicholas on 45 B.J. Waffling on 11 the which it was that of James Anderson L B W So doing Anderson a 3rd which hits the match so far it ended a partnership $83.00 runs without a fairly lengthy delay due to rain to an early 2 was taken then will carry on for this session until around our $520.00 U.K. Time it being a day not a Test match but England display searching for the wickets to be bowling nice and tight lots of pressure but just that one wicket to show for it so far today with the rest of the sport has showed you soccer asshole midfielder Jack Wilshere will methyl England's friendly against the Netherlands after injuring a knee while training Jordan Pickford will start in goal in Amsterdam but manager Gareth Southgate is not giving much away about who will keep for England at the World Cup I know if we played tomorrow who I would play but I still think there is another 7 or 8 games of the season to go with can not only the goalkeeper situation now but beyond the summer as well and this is a good opportunity to to play Jordan tomorrow night commentary of Netherlands versus England on 5 Live from 745 on Friday night Northern Ireland have been hit by the withdrawal of 4 senior players including Captain Steven Davis for Saturday's friendly with career. Again and Stuart Dallas are all also out with injuries Oxford United have appointed Carl Robinson as their new head coach that's after he left League One rivals Charlton RORY McILROY produce the victory he needed to keep in the running at the World Golf Championship match play in Austin with the details he is our correspondent in Carter McElroy took his destiny back into his own hands with a heart for $2.00 and $1.00 win over Johnny Vegas and with his next opponent Brian Harmon P.T.P. To your line there was further U.K. Success with victories for Paul Casey Tommy Fleetwood and Ian Poulter who's now just 2 wins away from booking a place at the Masters but defending champion Dustin Johnson in last year's runner up John ROM and now out of contention while American rivals Jordan speed and Patrick Reid face a shootout against each other for a place in the knockout stages late tries from Greg Burke an hour in harem I helped witness beat sulphur to move into the top half of Super League Vikings coach Denis Betts reckons they deserve their $2416.00 victory. On the back of our resilience and determination to defend the 1st half and then how well we managed in the 2nd half like we got beaten up in the 1st half we were wanted to surrender Lima scored a try offer of a kick that we should defused and then to go back to pretty quickly but to break our line and open it up in snow because Players Championship Mark Williams be Ryan Day 63 in their quarter final and at the gymnastics World Cup in Birmingham British teenager Alice can fellow took bronze in the women's all around event compadre at a meeting or had to withdraw after suffering an injury during her warm up that's the very latest from B.B.C. Sport. Seasons when CAC isa season starts this week and the Australian 3 I. Ask for news and the best live sport this is B.B.C. 5. 8. And. Let me take you back 30 years. The ball and. Make this love right written and produced by New Jersey acid house D.J. Romance and better known as the ball and chain released in 1993 it became the anthem for club goers in the late ninety's in the Irish city of Cork the birthplace of hives in Ireland but the house scene has been through some hard times with legendary venue Sir Henry is being knocked down but now is staging something of a revival 5 large Jerod Mannion has been to Cork. Once the birthplace of house music an island called may now be a forgotten sea. Story consists of the old heads and a new generation. Of one half a fish go the founder of Ireland's 1st ever club with the playing of course to think since $1000.00 if you. Were going to put. The Jason so call right from the beginning. Back to Back when he started out there was still prime minister of the U.K. . For another year. That was and yesterday that's from Gerard online reporter and he's with us no. Yeah good man tell us a little bit about court 1st of all for those who might not be familiar with this yeah so for those who don't know Cora cork is a small city it's an Irish city so you know why you Brits would classify as a as a proper city but it's a small city in there in the West are violent absolutely lovely pétrus I was only there for the 1st time when we actually shot the documentary but probably one of my favorite cities in in Ireland you know 10. To date and what we discovered we kind of went over just to kind of chatter some people about the music scene over there and what we discovered was that this kind of quaint picturesque place was actually the birthplace of quite a head and mystic crazy and mad scene which was the rave scene back in the 1980 S. Cork is a place with quite a strong identity that people notice kind of the People's Republic of Cork. The rebel county or as it's known and that kind of shot Sean through with every movement needs a bass the Beatles had the Cavern Club in the sixty's in Liverpool that gave them their 1st kind of break they used to lunch time gigs different time I know. I want to bring them back. But yes they had the covering club in Manchester they have the hacienda when I went that would just happen before this in Cork where all just took off house music peered rave culture appeared and in Cork it was a venue called Henry's and absolutely led legendary venue as we hear and in the documentary me and we talk about it and it just got some some crazy stories there was an unknown on the floor a sort and every everyone who went in there on your runners or trainers you'd come out with just black shoes the place was just it was a dyke but that was all part of the experience that was part of rave culture back then and that was kind of it was all part of it you didn't you know dress up in your Sunday best you actually dress down and that's one thing we're get to the mirror when we talk to Jamie is that people like that they like to down to earth nature and this venue was quite iconic It was a rock venue held some pretty iconic gigs had diviner it was one of those gigs I think their capacity was about a couple of 1000 but. Pretty much more than the capacity of people that could have been there claim to be at that Nirvana gig it's one a. One of those ones but so hard some Ledger names in for this club in the West are violent it's held some of the biggest names and rock but also what came to be in house and techno and some of the stories there that we found out as we delved into There were just were just absolutely crazy when I 1st started going to actually people used to bring the bags with them with a change of clothes for a change of trainers or to go in there because it was so filthy some people didn't go in there even get dressed up to going to dress down to go in there they dressed almost like they were going for the jam you know and the Spanish peasant days and the rave days and we can never be can never kind of equal those days that was that a day that only happens once. So for me as a kind of young person in the house and techno when I delved into the history of it and I met people that had experienced those days one of the things that struck me was that the stars are everyone who was around back then they all wish it was like that now they all kind of long for those days and very much missed those days and for me you never experienced them I mean I was I wasn't even born and you know in the eighty's anyways. I can look back with envy you know I look back and wish I could have experienced it. At the moment you know we obviously have our own house and techno scene and you know there we go to nights we go to venues that we think are unbelievable but it just really strikes me that it just seems like nothing compared to those days you know and I think that I've never seen something like when people look back to those days as fondly as they do I've never seen anything like it and I'm just I'm filled with envy Yeah we could do that what we're on the floor yeah no more during the summer but that's a key ring that. We mention the idea though that there is a bit of a revival we heard there though that you know will never be the same again you know once in a lifetime it cetera but people are doing their best aren't they to try and revive the scene yet definitely I mean one of the people you heard from there is a guy called Jamie be in there Jamie B. Has pretty much been around the block not as far as the 1980 S. But he started his label in core called Bastardo Let's go 15 years ago and Jamie is just an incredible guy I mean when it comes to music he can kind of you see the kind of musical geniuses you know the people that have made it big like you know obviously the princes in the Michael Jackson's they've all made a lot of money they've made a lot of success but what really fascinates me when I look into things as a documentarian as a journalist is the people that have devoted their lives to music with pretty much no financial gain and often go against the grain with culture and Jamie is one of those guys I mean. The techno revolution but back in the day as I've. Ed took off he was running his night there but then there was a bit of a dip you know Henry's that iconic venue it closed in 2003 due to mismanagement and after the last it kind of brought with it an economy went out of fashion I mean things had been flowing in house and techno quite often and the whole thing just kind of lost its popularity should say but someone like Jamie 1000000000 he stuck with it even when it wasn't popular even when it wasn't profitable here he really kept you know he stuck with it because he loved it and that's one thing that struck me is that absolute love and knowledge for music that nobody knows Jamie what people in court might to your average Joe He could have moved on he could have moved to Berlin he could have kind of he's got a lot of contacts he makes his own music but he decided to stay and pioneer something in court. Getting over to live here with. The new. Stable. Of the regime. Feels like it's OK she is really into what you say about going to new financial gain people just doing it for the love is that quite common to young people get involved what's the revival look like was the scene like that yes so what we see now a mention in the stouter than a style that comes with a resurgence and we're seeing that resurgence now and over the past 55 years I would say there's been a resurgence with the younger generation which has brought with it people like myself who started to kind of dip into that kind of culture it started where electronic music had a boom E.D.M. Became quite commercial and accessible to people and then people started to look at it deeper and look at the roots of it and that's when they found techno and what we've seen now is this incredible boom of house and techno Island is a small country it's really taking taking over there's pretty much a festival every few months in the country. So it's a really strong kind of playing for now and I just feel quite good because people like me who have stuck it out you know they're kind of come back in to kind of lead the resurgence if you like and as an example of that we've got it was we heard a little while ago that make this love right which from 1903 let's have a little bit of hidden beauties by Ana. This is absolutely. True and this is. Listening to this the truck I chose. Because it's actually number one in the deep or charts on the charts is kind of like what you guys see the music charts for us in underground house and techno I think it's quite representative of the old days you can kind of hear in their old. And that's what's really getting popular now and it's just I think quite representative of how things have kind of spun back around and those rave days and a kind of very. A kind of goods representation of how things of this get more popular now. You. Know. Carol. Carol. And General Berkeley see the full documentary of your time in court yet so the documentary is available on the for for magazine Facebook page if you go on Facebook and the search for 4 for the one the top videos. 5 lives Jared man in their report saying having spent a joyful time in court finding out the music revival that is going on there just now and this is up all night and it's coming up to 348 so it's time that we had back to Oakland and get an update on the cricket with Kevin Hauser going to heaven . Well at least throughout some cricket and we have a bit of a delay for rain earlier on the local time here by the way coming up to 10 to 5 we had 40 minutes of play England were unable to make any for the break through them but they have since that resumption and the wickets of Ken Williamson 102 though the New Zealand captain New Zealand now a 229 for punishment 23 so far between B.J. Walking on 17 and Henry Nichols on 49 the 2nd new ball as being taken now into the Kevin thank you Will there we'll check in with you as the morning progresses and hope that the rain doesn't drop things too much it sounds like it's going to be back in for their business Kevin holes they're reporting from Auckland at the cricket coming up to 10 minutes to 4 and Yellowstone National Park in the United States is one of the world's most beautiful areas of wilderness it's rugged remote sweltered under hot summer sums but also freezes in subzero temperatures in winter before all there is above ground still is what is underneath that is even more frightening Yellowstone sits on top of a super volcano that last erupted roughly 640000 years ago creating the massive 40 mile wide Yellowstone caldera and producing an umbrella shaped ash cloud that blanketed areas as far as modern day New York with several millimeters of ash and the prospects of another cataclysmic super eruption ascent scientists on a decades long search for the source of Yellowstone's devastating power and Peter Nelson a Ph D. Student from the Jackson School of geosciences at the University of Texas in Austin has pioneered research that confirms a long held belief of why Yellowstone is different to many other volcanoes that it was caused by rising super heated magma that originated deep in the Earth's core you still with me good Peter Nelson to be tell me more about his research most folk heroes on earth occur plate boundaries between 2 large tectonic plates you know Stone is unique in the air that it's a large is the volcano in North America that's over a 1000 kilometers away from the plate boundary so people for a long time since this. Seventies. There is the curious why you have such a large volcanic system so far away from the plate boundary another example of this is like Hawaii and what would people have previously thought that was done today and that these excess exemptions could occur one of the 1st ideas actually a man to print hypothesis which is my research supports now is done in the early 1970 S. But since then there's been other theories that have predicted a more shallower origin such as in the upper $100.00 or 200 kilometers people believe that melt cooled at that depth and Yellowstone this kind of a special place for that it now has collected and formed a volcanic province because they have weaknesses within a plate of other people have hypothesize that are pieces of ocean plating that is attracting and or not America has pushed hard material in the interior of the plate causing ELST on the floor OK and what's changed no What's your research been looking at and looking into so they've all been arguing a long time and even mostly looking at selfish observations or in the you know the top Maybe 1000 kilometers of the Earth's mantle we went much deeper it went all the way down to the core which is about 3000 kilometers I understand you did that using seismic waves from earthquakes will I be oversimplifying if I suggest that you are using them like a doctor may use ultrasound to see an unborn baby is that is an organ principle that's exactly how it is so the travel time of waves generated by earthquake depends on the temperature rock so if you have a hard rock in the waves are going to travel much slower you have a colder arc than the waves are traveling much faster so like an ultrasound if you measure a bunch of these travel times a click of waves generated by earthquakes coming in bunch of different directions. You can constrain the way speed of the rock and then figure out the temperature from that so to do your research we depending on earthquakes happening and I frequent does that happen oh yes we're looking at very deep quakes that happen to out the the world so we are looking at an end to 6 and above events and we had about 8 or 9 years of them over 6 or 7 years that we looked at OK Talk to us a little bit about your whistle How old is your wisdom. OK So Yellowstone if you believe I research said it originated from a deep mantle plume the start of it was about 16400000 years ago and that was the 1st eruption and it formed a large hole Cannick province called the Columbia River flood basalts and since then we have a trail of smaller volcanoes that have led from the contour verified the salts to the current location of Yellowstone I mean I was reading a term as well that wonder if I can just get you to explain is the idea of this interplay hotspot and I think you going to mention a couple of times what does that mean and interplay hearts but is this an area of warmer mantle that's within a plate so not along a plate boundary I see so that was that was what the original kind of hypothesis around the like the formation of Yellowstone and Hawaii that you mentioned that was what was going to be storm oh yeah exactly they're trying to explain you know it was very cryptic while you have these intra plate. I understand the idea is you have a deep mantle plume that's coming from the core which is independent from plate movement and plate boundaries and plate tectonic activity what you find out then about these structures as a result of your research Oh the biggest and most exciting is that Yellowstone originates at the core of the earth the core mantle boundary and it travels up that originates near the next a cold California border and then it travels up through the mantle to the current the current you know current location of Yellowstone and Wyoming and to the untrained ear why why is that exciting. It's exciting because when you see Old Faithful and grand prison addict all the nice geothermal features that you see when you go visit there actually coming from energy coming from the core of the earth is a train at 6 am from. The 1000. Direct evidence of it as this is one way to kind of harness that energy in a more useful every day sort of application if you have a geothermal plant now there all the time in Iceland I guess the other thing about this is. Just sort of startling from what you said the fact that Yellowstone is powered from the core of the earth from the center of the earth. Initial 1st glance that's quite worrying isn't as well the potential energy that there's this harnessed in there yes but in a similar thing is likewise your ice Len there are believed to be powered by you know similar structures but that is not volatile as stone OK OK And so there's a hot spot under the Hawaiian Islands as well yes you know we start off chatting about the kind of the tectonic plates and the hot spots and I believe that the hot spot under the Hawaiian Islands or stayed roughly in place and of course over millions of years the tectonic plate has actually kind of moved northwest words if I've got my geography correct. Can you explain that does your findings do your findings help explain why that may be happening Oh yes so you think about if you have the plates maybe the top 100 or 200 kilometers of their surface and they're very rigid and they move in that's what your plate but mantle underneath the top 200 kilometers of the earth's surface moves independently from the plate. So if you have like a deep mantle plume. Coming up you have a plate sliding across it then you can get a chain of volcanoes like what you see at home I asked if the end of rock rising column of hot rock is stationary relative to the moving plate and in theory I guess it would take a long long time but in theory does that mean that. Like in the Hawaiian islands that more volcanoes could appear or of my misunderstanding Oh yes so why yeah time to expect you know if we got a hot day in another 10000000 years it would have. To be here that's probably going to be able to afford so. So so that so that into the process doesn't really stop the energy from the hot spot underneath remains and could could in theory one day lead to new volcanoes Yes exactly where is the youngest volcano then in that case what is the youngest volcano that is. On the earth at the moment I think you can go to Hawaii I'm not an expert on Hawaii but I think that a hot. And if you go off shore there's a new island that's being formed already below the ocean and that's as a result of this hot spot Yes exactly. As a return to the Yellowstone disappears soon new volcano appears as part of the Yellowstone system and and ruins what we've all grown to love there well I wouldn't say have. I mean I think. Yeah Yellowstone will live along you know millions of years and hearts will be featured now whether there'll be a large call there are forming eruption like what you mentioned you know 640000 years ago I'm not sure but at least the energy driving the system if it does come from man to can which I research shows should be around for millions of years. As Peter Nelson Ph D. Student of the University of Texas in Austin in the next hour experts say we're treating back pain completely wrong that's reassuring don't use drugs they say we should be using physical exercise I'm talking therapies We'll have the details for you plus news from Australia as well you know will still exist.

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