Live Streaming World News from vue-tube.com

Thu 8 Jul 2010
Undercover spies plead guilty
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 5:08 pm
Ten people charged with spying in the US have pleaded guilty to being unregistered foreign agents for Russia while living undercover.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Speaker urged to help prevent Iranian stoning
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 3:53 pm
John Bercow has been urged to add his voice to an international campaign to prevent the stoning of an alleged adulteress in Iran.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Best of Britain: Living with history
Filed under: time news, weather news — JaShong King @ 11:57 am

Each of this week's Best of Britain photos touches on how events from the past continue to make their effects felt.  Whether it's people remembering the victims of the 7/7 London Bombings, tennis fans hoping for a Brit to once again win Wimbledon, or actors breaking a centuries-old Shakespearean taboo, each photo is a small example of living with history.

Also included are photos of anti-war protesters, an unprecedented treasure find, an art exhibit featuring the Queen and a wall-building competition, done the old fashioned way.

A flower is seen placed at the London Bombing Memorial, on the fifth anniversary of the attacks, in Hyde Park July 7, 2010. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

Fans of tennis player Andy Murray eat strawberries and cream as they watch his Wimbledon semi-final match against Spain's Rafael Nadal on a television in a bar in Murray's hometown of Dunblane, Scotland July 2, 2010. REUTERS/David Moir

Actors Dominic Rowan (L) and Miranda Raison perform as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn in Shakepeare's Henry VIII at the Globe theatre in London July 6, 2010. William Shakespeare's Globe theater has finally put a 400-year-old taboo to rest by staging the play which burned the original house down during the Bard's lifetime. The theater on the south bank of the River Thames in London, which burned to the ground during the staging of a play about Henry VIII in 1613 and was rebuilt in the late 1990s, has staged the first version of the play that has come to be called "Henry VIII" since that fateful day. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

A British Museum worker holds recently-found Roman coins in London July 8, 2010. One of the largest hoards of Roman coins ever found in Britain has been unearthed in a field in Somerset by an amateur treasure hunter with a metal detector. The stash of some 52,000 mostly bronze coins dating from the third century AD was buried in a large, well-preserved pot close to the picturesque town of Frome. It has yet to be valued. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

Sheep pass by entrants in the annual Friends of the Lake District Dry Stone Walling Competition, who were working on their section of wall, in Little Asby Common, July 3, 2010. The event is aimed at preserving the traditional craft of constructing the walls, made without mortar, that are a distinctive part of Britain's rural landscape. REUTERS/Suzanne Plunkett

An anti-war demonstrator, who had camped out in Parliament Square, is removed from the entrance to Downing Street by police officers during a protest in central London July 2, 2010. The Mayor of London won a court order this week to evict the demonstrators who are living in a makeshift campsite opposite the Houses of Parliament. REUTERS/Paul Hackett

Fantastic Ordinary exhibition at the Saatchi Gallery in Chelsea west London July 5, 2010. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Two people gored in Spanish bull running
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 11:11 am
Two people were gored during a tense and dangerous second running of the bulls at Spain's famed San Fermin fiesta in Pamplona.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Witness to a cobblestone crash
Filed under: time news, weather news — Eric Gaillard @ 11:07 am

I am writing this on the road from rural eastern France at the end of the fourth stage of the month-long Tour de France. It’s hot and dusty outside with temperatures at about 38 degrees Celsius (100 degrees Fahrenheit). On the backs of the motorcycles in protective gear we are suffering as we spend all day in the sun. Fortunately there has been a lot happening in these early stages of the Tour and the images have been worth it.

On the third stage of the Tour between Wanze in Belgium and Arenberg in France, I was riding on the second of our two motorcycles. The second bike is not authorized to shoot the riders on the move, but instead can overtake the pack and then stop on the side of the road so the photographer can shoot the riders as they pass by. The third stage was very special as the last 50 kilometers were on the famous cobblestone backroads of northern France more commonly associated with the Paris-Roubaix cycling classic. This section is known as the “Hell of the North”. I have covered 21 Tour de France races, but never had the occasion to cover either Paris-Roubaix, nor shoot a cobblestone section.

RadioShack's Lance Armstrong cycles on a cobblestone sector during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Wanze and Arenberg-Porte Du Hainaut, July 6, 2010. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

Early in the stage, while listening in to the official two-way radio commentary, the race directors announced that all the motorcycles must travel directly to the arrival site bypassing this cobblestone sector at the end of the race because it was simply too narrow and too dangerous for everyone to work. Only a one-motorcycle pool would be authorized access. So, I took a chance and sped way ahead of the race. Our motorcyclist got the bike onto the cobblestone section and safely parked the bike off the road well before the race drew near. The day had been terribly hot and the impenetrable dust cloud thrown up from the accompanying official vehicles gave an aura of a foggy winter day rather than mid summer.

Milram rider Linus Gerdemann of Germany (C) falls on a cobblestone sector during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Wanze and Arenberg-Porte Du Hainaut, July 6, 2010.   REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

I was totally unfamiliar with this sector but I had a gut feeling that being on a tight bend would be the best place to shoot the riders because their trajectory would oblige them to pass very near me. I crouched low amongst the feet of the spectators tightly packed together on the side of the road. The first lead riders suddenly appeared and it became clear that the position was in fact a good one. The riders were passing within inches of me and I switched from my 16-35mm lens to a wider 15mm fisheye. Just as another group of riders appeared they suddenly collided and fell literally inches from me. My first thought was that they were going to land right on top of me but I kept my finger on the motordrive of my Canon 1D MkIV. Then Lance Armstrong appeared but skillfully avoided the fallen riders, then Contador, and again another group arrived and incredibly fell like skittles at exactly the same spot. I just kept shooting, this time with my 16-35mm.

Cervelo rider Andreas Klier of Germany (L) falls on the cobblestones during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Wanze and Arenberg-Porte Du Hainaut, July 6, 2010.   REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

There were seven different cobblestone sections, each many kilometers long. I simply cannot believe the likelihood of having been in the right place at the right time. The chance must be several million-to-one.

Riders fall on the cobblestones during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Wanze and Arenberg-Porte Du Hainaut, July 6, 2010.   REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

The images were transmitted straight from my camera using the Canon WFT transmitter and a Mifi unit to our Paris pictures desk and were thus available to our clients within minutes. The New York Times was just one of the many users of these spectacular images. My most amazing and unlikely experience of 21 years of Tour de France road cycling coverage.

Riders fall on the cobblestones during the third stage of the Tour de France cycling race between Wanze and Arenberg-Porte Du Hainaut, July 6, 2010.   REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Thousands evacuated as floods hit Mexico
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 9:23 am
Torrential rain that followed Hurricane Alex has left parts of Mexico underwater with tens of thousands of people evacuated.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Parliament punch-up in Taiwan
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 8:25 am
A violent brawl has broken out in the middle of Taiwan's parliament after opposition parties clashed during a debate.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Solar plane completes 24-hour flight
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 7:20 am
An experimental solar-powered plane has landed safely after completing its first 24-hour test flight, proving it can stay aloft all night.


Comments Off
Thu 8 Jul 2010
Car ploughs into restaurant in Australia
Filed under: time news, weather news — ITN World @ 6:20 am
An Australian driver is being questioned by police after his car ploughed into a restaurant in Perth, narrowly missing diners.


Comments Off
28 queries. 0.689 seconds. Powered by WordPress
Theme Flying on the Sun is a rUn3 Production by st3fo
-