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tv   The Papers  BBC News  August 31, 2018 10:45pm-11:00pm BST

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'this honour system works, and on how this honour system works, and begina on how this honour system works, and begin a friend allied a letter, made a think about? is that what i have to do? dearsir, a think about? is that what i have to do? dear sir, my team deserves a gold. i think you could recommend somebody. will do it together. you write a letter and a shadowy committee looks over this person, their political views and decides that they are ready to get one. it is not surprising that they're doing these kinds of things, what it does show us how sensitive the tax avoidance issue, as you said, it's been being criticised for not fulfilling what you might suspect of a true abiding british citizen who lives here, pays taxes and contributes to society. and they're keen to avoid this and a lot of stuff the in this story, saying that he did not receive knighthood as his friends did, and we remember the
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report saying, why did you get one? and their something that alludes to that. footballers are far less likely to get honours other sportsmen. and there is an degree of snobbishness. in all these people instead of acting legally, rather than punish people. rather than use this, because none of these people, they are using legal methods, it is a moral question. the the telegraph, labour must labour must make seismic shifts, and the man who now sits in the house of lords, how well is he to comment on
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the future direction of the party? how's that going to help? all of the people who are criticising jeremy corbyn come from a particular tradition within the labour party was not feeling particularly at home at the moment and david was home secretary and is not in power for quite a long time. and this article is quite remarkable and saying that they are handling the anti—semitic scandal has been in shambles and i said that it needs to be a clear and different approach unless more windfall of the telegraph of course that's three more labour mps are on the verge of quitting labour on this. and on next week, it is going to be crucial that again, the political season after the summer break and the question is, will labour adopt the definition of anti—semitism that most do, or is it still bought the watered down again? and i think the critics of the
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party, are going to want clear decisive action from jeremy corbyn. i'm not sure they're going to get it. because corbyn as active as how he always acts on these issues. this isa he always acts on these issues. this is a poorjeremy corbyn, that is likely to stop in supporting him as the is likely to stop in supporting him as theisit? likely to stop in supporting him as the is it? in many ways, david making this intervention will probably play into their hands because this is part of a wider concerted effort to try and undermined his leadership is what they'll say. and from one side, is that he, his kind of role in the 19805 when he was leader of the council and was quite left—wing and became one of the main figures to ta ke became one of the main figures to take on militant. so became one of the main figures to take on militant. 50 his experience is quite interesting and i'll say, the way the supporters ofjeremy corbyn will look at this and go,
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he's from the blair area we have moved on as a party, he does not know the party is now. a party in its current state appeals to the wider electorate. let's look at the daily mail. school turns down children who live one minute away in composition of places in particular is fiendish. i can't say they were not warned, our member listening to in ministerabout not warned, our member listening to in minister about five or six years ago and the coalition, who stood up and said this is going to happen. it is not enough schools being built that we're going to have a problem with places and is one of the aspects of it. does come a problem here because of there also is showing is that people with money are being able to buy houses, this is pre—on houses closer to the schools that are popular and if we're going to get results of this,
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it'll probably be more middle class children going into one school and the others they can't get into that school, getting farmed out to less known public schools which is a problem that they should addressed. but they knew this was happening, they failed to answer it and now they failed to answer it and now they suffer the consequences.“ selection of how much your parents aren't. one of the stats in the story is that homes near popular primary schools cost duty 5000 which is 18% more and this is something that has been quite common for many decades, people from moving to certain areas to get near their favourite schools and what have you. i think, as you just said, more schools need to be built and we need to be more, places and the competition is absolutely fiendish andi competition is absolutely fiendish and i think there's also national and i think there's also national and regional disparities as well. from past research into this, places like london is actually impossible,
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yet to put someone down for the school because as soon as they're born, where as other parts of the country, very different case. don't hold your breath for them to... robot war on cancer. experts held an exciting medical breakthrough. this a very different site artificial intelligence, questioned whether this is artificial intelligence or past life, or computer science, there's a lot of that al internet ai isa very there's a lot of that al internet ai is a very different thing from how a modern human brain works. and it's this good algorithm that can actually predict what's to happen and what we're seeing in this research year is that we do not know how cancer cells, how they work, how to multiply, because if we did we would know how to predict encounter it. and now there is algorithms being created that can identify and adapt, so it is a form of ai, and
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this could be totally revolutionary to cancer research and the idea is that in five, ten years' time, cancer more like hiv or diabetes, something that you can live with it is treatable, not something that is a terminal death sentence. this the result of a collaboration between four or five universities, including one in america and one in edinburgh. and it's extraordinary and it requires that kind of massive intelligence and research to make this sort of breakthrough. there's this sort of breakthrough. there's this incredible sale of the hobby chain which coca—cola bought four 4 billion. it's an interesting thing,
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we seen so many billion. it's an interesting thing, we seen so many stories about the decline of british chains going bankrupt costa, is one of the most popular coffee chains. clearly, coca—cola getting involved is going to up its game with all the investment and the coffee wars between starbucks and boutique are clearly going to increase significantly banks to this purchase, i'm just glad to see that it is not a chain going bankrupt, it's actually a good thing. copy is such a massive global industry now. coca—cola is obviously fearing that, they feel that it may fall out of favour, but the more health conscious nature. but maybe they've actually kind of missed the boat on this and that the coffee boom has peaked them are going to start
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drinking more, kale or something or whatever the next thing is. and this point, with lattes and cappuccinos. were always into something new, is a concoction that cost an arm and the leg my daughter picked up. something very sugary, but not subject to a sugar tax. but these big corporations, they think will be much to catch up and then they spend an awful lot of moneyjust as the bubble starting to break. when i can even get any british high street, and the coffee chains there and how they all separate it was a very british coffee chain that it was ingrained in ourculture british coffee chain that it was ingrained in our culture in different places and others, it was to... a quick comment from aretha
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franklin's funeral. and everybody wa nted franklin's funeral. and everybody wanted tell wax lyrical as long as they were allowed. donna ellison sure five hours is long enough. an amazing woman with an amazing story. i think five hours was the minimum she deserved. we'd still have yet to hear from stevie wonder. she's been popular for so many decades after so many generations. that's it for the papers for the moment. don't forget you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it's all there for you — 7 days a week at bbc dot co uk forward slash papers — and if you miss the programme any evening you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. thank you for now to my guests jason beattie from the daily mirror, and sebastian payne, from the ft. we'll all be back with a longer look at the papers at 11:30, but for now, it's goodbye. a lot of dry weather around this
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weekend, some sunshine at times and looked like it will get warmer as well. some cloud coming in from the atla ntic well. some cloud coming in from the atlantic on those weather fronts thereabout toppled to the uk, before fading away. and that he got another weather front from the atlantic into the north west on sunday. an ahead of that, we are drawing our airfrom the south, just lining the temperatures to rise. and last night it was really cold in scotland, temperatures at minus two celsius, tonight won't be as cold, you can see her in cumbria, some of the high cloud beginning to spill and at northern ireland, and is also going to be pushing further eastwards across scotland over the accuracy and western parts of england and wales. bit of drizzle here and
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there, clear skies east of england and temperatures down to six or 7 degrees. that fed into the weekend then, bit of detail and started it, 01’ then, bit of detail and started it, or if but a sunny start through much of the midlands, and southeastern england. watch more cloud for the southwest of england and wales pushing into northern england, most of it to the i received considering patchy beat irish rain is, some places still got a be dry but we'll see some sunshine breaking through. at northern ireland gypsies skies brightened a little bit at the rain continues to peter out through the day. there'll be some bubbling up here and there and the southeast, could get little higher than today, we have more cloud further north as 18 or 19. we still some residual cloud across the muslim areas that might have the afternoon should be dry with
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sunny spells, but eastern england but also around aberdeen, temperatures should be into the low 205, possibly the mid—205 in the southeast esta pitches will be higher on sunday. into the start of september and the band of rain, the ring featuring out prior to brighter sunnier weather but cooler weather. this is bbc news — i'm martine croxall. the headlines at 11:00: the number of deaths being investigated in a hospital maternity unit increases as more than 20 families come forward with concerns at shrewsbury and telford nhs trust. police investigating the murder of a mother and daughter in the west midlands have arrested a 21—year—old man. we'll hear from the family of raneem oudeh and khaola saleem — who have spoken exclusively to the bbc. the world bids goodbye
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to the queen of soul — a host of stars pay tribute to aretha franklin at her funeral in detroit. and the future of one of the world's most admired birds, the golden eagle, could be more secure after british scientists make a significant breakthrough. and at 11:30, we'll be taking an in—depth look
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