last week after a former policeman went on a rampage. 37 people including 23 children were killed in the attack which has shocked the nation and the world. now on bbc news, the travel show. there will be a time when people will go to space at much less cost and very regularly. i think the same thing s gonna happen going underwater. it s going to get less expensive and much more accessible. this is the point of no return. if there was any point to freak out, now would be the point to freak out. this is an experimental sub. people are informed that it s very dangerous down there. am i spinning? i was thinking, we re not gonna make it! we can t go anywhere but go in circles! ijust need to get there. so this is an actual menu from the titanic itself on the day it actually sank, and i very strangely came across it in a very small auction in ireland. radio: go ahead. yes, sir. secure the anchor. phone rings. so, i ve heard the comparison. like, at titanic depth, it would like ha
crowned at westminster abbey on saturday 6 may. nasa says its attempt to deflect the path of an asteroid has been a success in a major scientific achievement. and one of the last stars of hollywood s golden age, dame angela lansbury, has died at the age of 96. welcome to our viewers on pbs in america and around the globe. president biden and g7 leaders have held an emergency meeting to discuss what more they can do to support ukraine after a second day of russian missile strikes. they condemned the attacks and reassured president zelenskyy that they were steadfast in their commitment to ukraine. they said irresponsible nuclear rhetoric risked global peace and security. ukraine s president also addressed the g7 meeting, calling for more help with air defence, and presented his peace formula. from kyiv, here s paul adams. in kyiv, a day of welcome calm after yesterday s storm. air raid sirens did sound briefly, citizens heeding their government s warning to seek shelter, some h
hampshire. it s expanding nationwide. right now, iowa seems seems to be a one-off. right, but if one of the things that s true about human nature, we all have the vices of our virtues. you just said a second ago, trump can t let cruz bait him into a fight. but trump is a rolling fight. i mean, it s an ongoing that s the normal. yeah. the normal is there has to be conflict. and so this week it s the islamic world. right. you know? this morning, apparently, it s morning joe. this afternoon, it will be cruz. it just it s one it s a series of boxing rounds. could be wrong, but i think that dynamic with cruz could be really the first time where we see something different happen. yep. i want to squeeze in another major headline this morning. the popular pod cast serial launched its second season
yesterday turning the spotlight on u.s. army sergeant beauberg call and why he left his post in afghanistan more than six years ago. berg call was held captive by the taliban for five years before being freed in a prisoner swap. the pod cast fs his firsthand account of walking off his remote army post in 2009. craig melvin joins us now. what new light is being shed on the case? it is another voice down a crackly phone line telling his story this time on the pod cast serial. one of the most controversial figures in modern american history, sergeantberg call waiting to hear whether he will face court martial but already using this unusual form to his defense. i m in over my head. in the interview with america s last prisoner of war. suddenly this starts to sink in that i really did something serious. beauberg call, in 25 hours in