Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Khat" ¶ 90
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

BBC and News
* Angola profile from the BBC News
* Secrets of Sun-like star probed, BBC News, June 1, 2007.
* BBC News report on the ( delayed ) successful launch of the Ariane 5 ECA flight on November 16, 2005.
* Belgium profile from the BBC News
The story of the men's claims was covered by many major news networks, including BBC, CNN, ABC News, and Fox News.
BBC News ( also referred to as the BBC News Channel ) is the BBC's 24-hour rolling news television network in the United Kingdom.
The channel launched as BBC News 24 on 9 November 1997 at 17: 30 as part of the BBC's foray into digital domestic television channels, becoming the first competitor to Sky News, which had been running since 1989.
Since then, with several relaunches, an increase in funding and resources from the BBC and improvements in digital television technology, the channel has been able to diversify content, with two minute looped bulletins available to view via BBC Red Button, BBC News Online and the BBC's mobile website, alongside individual weather and sport bulletins.
In May 2007, the channel became available for UK viewers to view through the BBC News website through a live stream.
In April 2008, the channel was renamed " BBC News " as part of a £ 550, 000 rebranding of the BBC's news output, complete with a new studio and presentation.
Its sister services, BBC World was also renamed as " BBC World News " while the national news bulletins became BBC News at One, BBC News at Six and BBC News at Ten.

BBC and Harmless
* BBC News-" Harmless skin virus ' fights acne "
The first of these new series, adapted from the novel Life, the Universe and Everything, was The Tertiary Phase, broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 2004, and the latter was a double series adaptation of the final two novels, So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish and Mostly Harmless, The Quandary Phase and The Quintessential Phase, broadcast back-to-back in 2005.
The Tertiary Phase, Quandary Phase and Quintessential Phase are radio adaptations of the books Life, the Universe and Everything, So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish and Mostly Harmless produced in 2003 and 2004 by Above the Title Productions for BBC Radio 4.

BBC and dangerous
The BBC subsequently removed him from a list of speakers declared to be dangerous to public morality and in the 1930s he and his colleagues made a series of radio broadcasts on psychoanalysis.
No concert promoter would co-operate with the BBC, regarding it as a dangerous competitor, but the British National Opera Company allowed broadcasts of its performances from the Royal Opera House.
* BBC website ' M1 could be dangerous in rain
* BBC documentary features ‘ dangerous ’ fishing method in the Philippines
Part of the road was named " the most dangerous road in South East England " in 2008, and the BBC named the road as the ' most crash prone A road ' in the UK with 7, 721 crashes and 120 deaths over 12 years from 1999 – 2010, an average of 383 crashes per mile.
According to the BBC the department is considered ' one of Colombia's most dangerous ' as of 2011.
* BBC Article " How do you fend off a dangerous dog?
The BBC reported that army officials had accepted the commander's claim that " he fired into the ground near the girl after coming under fire in a dangerous area ," but that they did not explain why the officer shot into the ground rather than at the source of the fire.
BBC commentator and former F1 driver Martin Brundle argued in The Sunday Times that the inclusion of Badoer and Romain Grosjean in the race was dangerous, since new rules that ban further testing until 1 January 2010 mean that they have been unable to gain the experience necessary to race.
The BBC subsequently used the form of words " accused of being one of the UK's most dangerous extremist preachers ".

BBC and drug
In 1992, The Shamen's video for the song " Ebeneezer Goode " was banned by the BBC due to its perceived subliminal endorsement of the recreational drug Ecstasy.
The supposed drug reference in the line " I'd love to turn you on " resulted in the song initially being banned from broadcast by the BBC.
In a 2009 interview with the BBC, Cale claimed that " the strongest drug " he now takes is coffee.
The duo once again generated some controversy when their second single from the album, " Numbers ", was banned by the BBC due to references in the song to the drug speed, something that they had missed in the earlier single " Bedsitter "..... " watch the mirror count the lines, the battle scars of all the good times ".
Brian Epstein died of an accidental drug overdose in August 1967, not long after negotiating a contract with the BBC for his only female artist to appear in a television series of her own.
The track was performed on the children's show Blue Peter but complaints arose due to drug references and the record was subsequently banned by the BBC.
Wings followed it with November 1972's " Hi, Hi, Hi ", which was again banned by the BBC, this time for its alleged drug and sexual references.
The ease of addiction to lorazepam, ( Ativan brand was particularly cited ), and its withdrawal were brought to the attention of the British public during the early 1980s in Esther Rantzen's BBC TV series That's Life !, in a feature on the drug over a number of episodes.
He also starred in the BBC drama, Holby City, in which he played the drug dealing boyfriend of Sandy.
In a BBC interview in 2000, Becker and Fagen revealed that " Kid Charlemagne " is loosely based on Augustus Owsley Stanley, the notorious drug " chef " who was famous for manufacturing hallucinogenic compounds, and that " Caves of Altamira " is about the loss of innocence, the narrative about a visitor to the Cave of Altamira who registers his astonishment at the prehistoric drawings.
Having made programmes about stillbirth ( The Lost Babies ), and mental health ( Trouble in Mind ), in 1985 Rantzen presented a BBC One programme on drug abuse, Drugwatch.
In fact, by the time of the article, the BBC had already cut seven minutes from the 7 January 1967 programme because of drug references in one of that week's chosen songs, " The Addicted Man " by The Game, which had resulted in universal disapproval by the Jurors during an extended discussion.
On 15 June 2007, BBC News reported a committee advising the U. S. FDA had voted not to recommend the drug's approval because of concerns over suicidality, depression, and other related side effects associated with use of the drug.
Other productions included an early example of a formatted documentary, Thighs, Lies & Beauty, an investigation of the myths and reality surrounding the beauty business for BBC1 ; The Art of Tripping, a 2 hour dramatised documentary for Channel Four on drug taking and the arts starring Bernard Hill ; a Frontline ( Channel Four ) current affairs film featuring the story of South African Jann Turner whose father was assassinated in front of her when she was 13, and as an adult returns to South Africa to look at the arguments for revenge versus reconciliation in the new South Africa ; Steven Spielberg on " Schindler's List " and Tom Hanks & The World According to Gump, both for the BBC ; and Wagner vs Wagner, for Channel Four, featuring Richard Wagner's great grandson on the composer's political and cultural legacy of anti-semitism and race hatred.
He was suspended by the BBC when the drug allegations were published in the News of the World in April 1999.
She made her TV debut at 19 in the BBC Television drama The Scold's Bridle, playing a drug addict's daughter opposite Miranda Richardson.
A BBC Scotland news report on 13 February 2006 pointed out that, partially due to poor diet, crime, alcohol and drug abuse, life expectancy in Calton is lower than in some areas of Iraq or the Gaza Strip.

1.662 seconds.