a manuscript thief, who tricked the likes of margaret atwood and ian mcewan into sending him unpublished works, has pleaded guity in court to wire fraud. hello and welcome to the programme. the ceasefire in ukraine declared by russia, for the orthodox christmas has come to an end. clashes between ukrainian and russian forces continued throughout the 36 hour period. president zelensky said vladimir putin s offer was deceitful he said peace in ukraine would only be restored when russian forces were expelled. and moscow said it reserved the right to return fire if its troops were attacked. our correspondent, james waterhouse along with producer siobhan leahy and cameraman paul francis sent this report from the eastern city of bakhmut, on the front line. you leave civilisation behind on the journey to bakhmut. we are heading to one of the most hostile parts of the front line. and coming into view is a city in the middle of it. the russians are just a mile away. ukraine
on the journey to bakhmut. we are heading to one of the most hostile parts of the front line. and coming into view is a city in the middle of it. the russians are just a mile away. ukraine is fiercely defending here. invading forces have thrown everything at the city, leaving it almost deserted. braving it above ground is a ukrainian soldier. translation: the situation is tense. l there are explosions and strikes coming from the enemy s side. they promised a ceasefire but we don t see it. we don t feel or see it. they said one thing but in reality it is different. few expected the ceasefire to hold anyway. it was announced by russia in the first place and ukraine was never going to engage but there is still heavy shelling coming down from the russian side. ukraine is holding onto this city and it s not going to want to let go any time soon. in bakhmut, those who flinch are in the minority. sergei tries to patch up what he can. translation: you would not wish this on your wors
all these things on display here at the micro museum about tom karen in letchworth garden city. there s even a replica of his cambridge living room. and here, i find josh tidy, who s the curator of this exhibition. josh, sadly, tom passed away on new year s eve but his designs, his legacy will live on forever. yes, absolutely. unintelligible to the breadth and quality of his design really being celebrated on show here. if you are a certain age, he designed half your childhood. but as well as the chopper and the bug and those high profile things, he really designed all sorts of everything, from lorries for leland, vans, he designed a popemobile for the visit ofjohn paul ii in 1984. he designed for four decades but really struggled to retire. he described himself as having a butterfly mind that never stopped. a huge body of work under and a real legacy there. another one of his designs you certainly will probably remember, the 1970s marble run a toy that, 50 years on,
city. there s even a replica of his cambridge living room. and here, i find josh tidy, who s the curator of this exhibition. josh, sadly, tom passed away on new year s eve but his designs, his legacy will live on forever. yes, absolutely. unintelligible to the breadth and quality of his design really being celebrated on show here. if you are a certain age, he designed half your childhood. but as well as the chopper and the bug and those high profile things, he really designed all sorts of everything, from lorries for leland, vans, he designed a popemobile for the visit ofjohn paul ii in 1984. he designed for four decades but really struggled to retire. he described himself as having a butterfly mind that never stopped. a huge body of work under and a real legacy there.
The British design, exported across the globe, was the brain child of the late Tom Karen - who died peacefully on New Year s Eve, aged 96 - and released when man first landed on the moon.