That the first cosmonaut was gagarin, he never let the country down, not in any foreign country, anywhere, the whole planet loved him, and he lived up to this, so we later met with gagarin , i personally rarely met, but when they came to classes, and often the teachers had to go to the star, so as not to distract them, the teachers went to the star, on the contrary , the academy went to the academy, then the academy went, then they came, that is , there was a complex curriculum, the curriculum remained. With the same, and the curriculum changed, what is the curriculum, this is on wednesday, these classes are on thursday and so on, here is the curriculum, and it, of course, was adjusted according to how busy they were, and in order not to wasting their time often happened the teachers went out, and they studied not in absentia, it turns out, you know, fulltime by correspondence, fulltime by correspondence, because they were lagging behind as astronauts, they had their own work , they ha
hello. i m tadhg enright. welcome to the programme. the head of the company behind the artificial intelligence tool chatgpt has told lawmakers in the us that government regulation is crucial to keep the industry safe. we ve seen tech ceos get a congressional grilling before, but that s not what happened here. appearing before a senate panel, sam altman said that al could be as significant as the invention of the printing press, claiming it had the potential to improve nearly every aspect of our lives. but he admitted the technology also poses serious risks. my worst fears are that we cause significant. we, the field, the technology, the industry cause significant harm to the world. i think that could happen in a lot of different ways. it s why we started the company. it s a big part of why i m here today, and why we ve been here in the past, and able to spend some time with you. i think if this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong. and we want to be vocal about that.
live from london, this is bbc news. avoiding another banking crisis: us regulators race against the clock to find a buyerfor troubled first republic bank, whose shares plunged last week. more protests in france as unions call for further strike action against the government s pension reforms. and solving london s housing crisis: we ll tell you how one community is building its own solution by selling affordable housing to the locals. hello. i m mark lobel, here with your top business stories. let s start in the united states, where us regulators are racing to find a buyer for the troubled first republic bank. the federal deposit insurance corporation has reportedly asked six banks to bid for the lender, and wants a deal in place within the next 2a hours. shares in first republic plunged last week after it admitted customers had withdrawn $100 billion in deposits in march. at that time, its competitor silicon valley bank had collapsed, prompting fears of a wider banking crisis
although you can see that ball of fire coming up on the other side of the atlantic. ainsley: you will see sunshine but not see what on fire island, brian? brian: no cars. only bicycles. it s impossible to get a dui. steve: i think you can. you can be drunk driving a bike. brian: can you? ainsley: bicycling under the influence it s a bui. steve: grant was driving a horse too fast. he wasn t drunk. actually that would have been the one day he wasn t drunk. brian: he did sometimes surge drinks. steve: surge drinks? brian: yeah he would blitz it. go dry for a long time and go after it. much like chris in his prime in college. i would say this. did we really need the sign surf line? we know where the surf and the sand. where the water ends. it said surf line. steve: that s the organization that provides the image. we need to thank them. ainsley: surf line right here with an arrow. it s a big day today. brian: that was ainsley s way for me to tell me to star
ah, the ku klux klan is the oldest terrorist group in united states. the white man has them the supreme rage with his secret society of white supremacists breeches, hatred of black people. and it s long history goes back decades. it is re emerged again and again. it s crimes have caused bloodshed in america for more than 150 years. ah, 150 years of hatred, racism, and 4. 1 blame and slave 150 years of exclusion, violence and rage this tale of cruelty still haunts the united states. mm mm. ah. in june 18, 65, the american civil war finally came to an end. after 4 years of deadly combat, claiming more than 700000 lives, the abolitionist north finally defeated the pro slavery southern states. ah, general robert e lee surrendered to general ulysses s grant at appa maddox. and a few months later, the 13th constitutional amendment ended slavery. nearly 4000000 of the south s 9000000 inhabitants had been enslaved. and at last, they were free of their chains. for plantation owners, t