The course of years or decades, but in a single day. Im rebecca jones, and im here at the magnum photo print room in london in this special series celebrating the 70th anniversary of the agency Magnum Photos. Im going to introduce you to some of the worlds greatest living photographers. Coming up, the british photographer who was in berlin the night the wall came down, the american who captured the shock and terror of 9 11, and the iranian who wasnt afraid to show the violence on both sides of the revolution. But first, lets meet ian berry, who was the only photographer to witness the Sharpeville Massacre in south africa in 1960. A turning point for the anti apartheid movement. News came through that the police had shot a guy in this township, sharpeville. I got there and chatted to the protesters and what have you and they were all friendly enough. In fact it all seemed a bit dull. And id more or less given up, i walked back to the car and the cops opened fire. You can see here that t
Probably a net good thing. Host at the same time its not going to change back to what it was before. Weare where we are so the question is really , there are companies now that in recent comes months, Big Companies and at t was one of them that says were not going to give quarterly updates. We will tell you where we are going, you want to join us, join us but were not going to give you every quarter guidance and predictions. Thats no way to make good, healthy longterm decisionmaking. Host next call comes from symphony cynthia, oak ridge new jersey, you are on tv, please go ahead. Caller mister friedman, i had heard you speak and you talk about Lifelong Learning and i agree with that completely. But i am 63 years old and i have a lot of trouble dealing with the computers and i live on a fixed income of less than 1100 a month and i have tried to teach myself and i just dont have anyone to help me. So how do you direct people like me with fixed incomes and not, who grew up with the techno
Now Condoleezza Rice on democracy. [inaudible conversations] [applause] and actor price is going to be interviewed for us by one of the best interviewers i know who has his own show on bloomberg or National Book festival cochair and very generous supporter mr. David rubenstein. [applause] please welcome both of them. Plea [applause] and thanks, and enjoy. Thank you very much for coming. Thank you very much or having me here and welcome everybody. Yo thanks for being here. Its a great event, great event. [applause] its hard to believe but youve now been out of government for about nine years bo so before we get into your new book on democracy which i highly recommend that we will talk about it tell us what you been doing since he left government other than writing three a selling books, this is the third but other than that you were teaching at stanford and what ozzy doing . Ive gone back to what i consider to be my real profession are they had thatat digression in washington. I started
With their annual conference beginning in brighton today, 30 labour mps were among those who signed a letter, urging the party to pledge to stay in. But mr corbyn told the bbc, that a future labour governments ability to protectjobs could be hampered by Single Market membership. Our Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg reports. More a Victory Party than a conference. The song, and thousands upon thousands of members, dedicated to him. Hes the winner here, even though labour did not win the election. Its third conference lucky forjeremy corbyn. At last, safe and secure in his seat. The steam is rising, not falling. And the movement is stronger than ever. Labour is a party of the people, its a party of activists, its a party of the community. But many in that Community Came to brighten, too, to tell him something else. They want labour to change its mind about leaving the eu. Even to stop it happening altogether. Jeremy corbyn should come out and say, i was wrong. Lets do something about th
A veryk, you do have closely held economy, it is centralized. They have a lot of debt building effective shifted from one hand to the other. You can have a miniature kicking the can down the road but it will not become systemic and a horrible crime. This is a stability type question. You someone traveling around china doing a story. Cities relied on seal for their only out ports. People have taken pay cuts. They are being retrained. Is that going to happen quickly enough, or do you think there still is this sort of string of social unrest because the transition to the new economy is not happening fast enough . Unfortunately, the data we use to have about the social unrest is not recorded anymore. We know for sure there is a great amount of dislocation that is happening as china is beginning to move out of what it calls old industry. Moving its workers into the new economy and digital age. Plaster, there was a lot of talk coal laying off steel and workers and transferring them into a hi