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NI Drum Majors - Let Me Entertain You
NI Drum Majors: Louise Smiton (Closkelt), Emma Barr (Field Marshal Montgomery), Jason Price (Ravara), Lauren Hanna (Lomond & Clyde) and James Kennedy (Closkelt) performing to Let Me Entertain You by Red Hot Chilli Pipers for the Kids with Cancer Charity Night in Cookstown 9 Feb 2019.
Dunbar 12 May 2019 march past
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Paisley, McGuinness arrive for NI Assembly, prepare for joint govt.
SHOTLIST
1. Deputy leader of Sinn Fein, Martin McGuinness, walking towards steps of Northern Ireland Assembly building and standing in front of microphone
2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Martin McGuinness, Deputy leader of Sinn Fein:
I think what people are going to witness today is not hype but history and what we're going to see today is one of the mightiest leaps forward that this process has seen in almost fifteen years and the people responsible for that are not the British Prime Minister or the Taoiseach, Ian Paisley, Gerry Adams or myself. The people chiefly responsible for that are the people who voted for this in the recent assembly elections. It was their will that Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams, the DUP (Democratic Unionist Party) and Sinn Feinn come together to put these institutions in place.
3. McGuinness going through door, shaking hands with Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams and others
4. Mid of leader of the DUP, Ian Paisley getting out of car
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ian Paisley, Leader of the Democratic Unionist Party:
Well it's a sad day for those who were the innocent victims of all the troubles we've had. Yet it is a special day because we're making a new beginning and I believe we're starting on a road which will bring us back to peace and prosperity. And I would challenge the people of Northern Ireland to rise to the challenge today and be determined that come what may, we'll make this a country where all men and women will be equal under the law and equally subject to the law. Thank you.
6. Paisley walking into building
STORYLINE
Northern Ireland was hoping for a new era on Tuesday as long-warring Protestant and Catholic leaders prepared to forge a joint government as a nine-year-old peace accord intended.
Protestant firebrand Ian Paisley and Irish Republican Army icon and Deputy leader of Sinn Fein, Martin McGuinness, who took diametrically opposed sides in a four-decade struggle over this British territory, have pledged to lead a 12-member administration designed to consign to history a conflict that claimed 3,700 lives.
McGuinness said as he entered the Northern Ireland Assembly building that what was to occur was not hype but history.
What we're going to see today is one of the mightiest leaps forward that this process has seen in almost fifteen years, he said.
The people chiefly responsible for that are the people who voted for this in the recent assembly elections. It was their will that Ian Paisley and Gerry Adams, the DUP (Democratic Unionist Party) and Sinn Feinn come together to put these institutions in place.
Paisley, who is now leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, took a moment to remember those who were the innocent victims of all the troubles we've had. when he addressed the media prior to entering the building.
Yet it is a special day because we're making a new beginning and I believe we're starting on a road which will bring us back to peace and prosperity, the 81-year-old said.
The British and Irish prime ministers, Tony Blair and Bertie Ahern, were travelling to Belfast to celebrate the moment when the Northern Ireland Assembly jointly elects Paisley, leader of the Democratic Unionist Party, and McGuinness, deputy leader of IRA(Irish Republican Army)-linked Sinn Fein.
Paisley and 56-year-old McGuinness will take a common oath of office.
It requires all government ministers to uphold the rule of law based as it is on the fundamental principles of fairness, impartiality and democratic accountability, including support for policing and the courts.
Both Paisley, and McGuinness have spent time behind bars for their extremist paths and analysts agree that both, in very different ways, have blood on their hands today.
cripple prospects for revived power-sharing.
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NOASIS head back to Paisley 2018
The Duke Of Roxburghe's Farewell To Blackmount Forest - Athole Cummers - The Flagon - Torosay...
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Escape (Pina Colada song) @ Tea Gardens in Paisley 24/10/15
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Phil Neal on Liverpool medals, Heysel and European Cups
Workmen are dangling precariously from the roof of Anfield’s Kenny Dalglish Stand, repairing a sign bearing the great Liverpool forward’s name which has apparently lost some fluorescence.‘Something wrong with Kenny’s letters’, says a balding individual who, for the teenagers walking past on a half-term stadium tour, is not of the remotest significance.He’ll be joining one of the tour parties himself within an hour or so, talking about the time and the places when he helped make Liverpool the best in the land by a mile.Phil Neal will be 67 next week and though any pub-quiz specialist will identify him as the only player to have appeared in the five European Cup finals Liverpool reached between 1977 and 1985, he is in many ways that great team’s forgotten man.Some of them went on to have their name up in lights.Others have had lucrative media careers.But Neal has sold most of the mementos of that great career now — £11,750 for the 1977 European Cup winners’ medal; £6,462 for the 1978 equivalent — allowing him, he says, to put something in trust for the grandchildren.‘I talked to the kids about it and they didn’t want them,’ Neal says.‘We wanted to do something that could allow us to set up a trust for the grandchildren.It was a way of securing their future and that seemed the most important thing.’ A few of his swapped shirts are in the club museum, though he’s even on the margins there.‘Mr Consistency’ states a small Neal display, tucked away in a corner.Not exactly deification.It’s fair to say Neal delivered much more than consistency in the course of 417 consecutive league games as full back for Liverpool and a career in which he collected 23 trophies.That figure was unsurpassed until Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes barged in and overtook him.No one else ever has.Play back the 1981 European Cup final and you’ll observe Neal carrying out to perfection Bob Paisley’s precise instructions to wait back and shackle Real Madrid’s Laurie Cunningham, whose flank was the source of 80 per cent of the Spanish side’s attacks.‘My job was to keep him tassled to the ground,’ says Neal.‘It meant Alan Kennedy could go forward down the other flank and we all know what happened.’ Kennedy’s legendary 82nd-minute winner in the Parc des Princes clinched the side’s third elite European crown.Paisley also introduced Neal to the finer points of what is now called ‘wing-back’ play — part of a defensive set-up which was ahead of its time.There were ball-playing centre backs — Alan Hansen and Phil Thompson — and encouragement not to tackle unless absolutely necessary.Paisley and the Liverpool Boot Room always felt a team risked injury and loss of possession.But Neal tackled, when the occasion required it.He asked Tommy Smith for instructions on how to deal with Everton’s John Connolly when Paisley had made him a debutant in the Goodison Merseyside derby of November 1974.‘Kick him,’ said Smith.The full back duly did so.‘Kick him again,’ said Smith when Neal, newly arrived from N
US president meets Irish president
1. Pan from cameras to US President George W Bush and First Lady Laura Bush sitting with Irish President Mary McAleese and her husband Martin McAleese
STORYLINE
US President George W Bush on Saturday met Irish President Mary McAleese before the start of a US-European Union (EU) summit.
Topics at the summit will range from Afghanistan to counterterrorism, from trade to curbing the spread of nuclear weapons.
But Iraq will be at the forefront.
Bush will meet later on Saturday with business leaders.
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Jesse Kinch | Looking Up to Brad Paisley & Recording After His Win | Rising Star Season 1 Finale
Rising Star winner Jesse Kinch talks about whether he felt at home on stage in New Jersey with expert Brad Paisley. He shares what went behind his song selections for the finale. He comments on his mom saying he has spent a lot of time working towards this. Jesse gives the scoop on if he will be recording his record now and his next steps!
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Kenny Rogers - The Gambler
Music video by Kenny Rogers performing The Gambler. © 2018 Capitol Records LLC, Courtesy of Capitol Records Nashville under license from Universal Music Enterprises
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1966 Kings Road, Women's Fashion, Swinging 1960s London
From the Kinolibrary Archive Film collections. To order the clip clean and high res or to find out more visit Clip ref. AB241.
DAY two men talking on street. People past, looking in shop windows. Winter, cold day, people past, young women looking at handbags in window, sign - GIRL. Teenage girls chatting on the street, 60s fashion. People crossing the road, Safeway. Kings Road Chelsea.
Legends remember the Liverpool era
Greats of the Liverpool teams at the 1977, 1981 and 1984 European Cup finals, Phil Neal and Alan Kennedy talk about when the English side ruled Europe.
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US: Ireland: President Bush greeted leaders from Ireland and Northern Ireland
English/Nat
Just days after Secretary of State Colin Powell abolished 23 of 55 special envoy positions he inherited, the US administration is creating a new one, to coordinate policy for Northern Ireland.
The White House is expected to name Richard Haass, director of policy planning at the State Department, to take on Northern Ireland as part of a much broader portfolio.
The White House traditionally has taken the lead on Northern Ireland but the appointment of the former Brookings Institution scholar signals a shift in authority to the State Department.
Gerry Adams, head of the IRA-affiliated Sinn Fein party, said he is optimistic about the new administration's stance on Ireland.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
I think that the key to all of this, of course, is Irish-America. I think they're the people who hold the key, they're the people who put the issue, in the first instance, on President Clinton's agenda and then, in the second instance, on the agenda of President Bush. So I'm confident that we're going to see a continuation of the even-handed approach that has marked and which has been so successful thus far in the peace process.
SUPER CAPTION: Gerry Adams, Sinn Fein President
Because of St. Patrick's Day, mid-March often features a flurry of Ireland-related activities here, and this year is no exception.
On Thursday, President Bush greeted leaders from Ireland, Northern Ireland and Britain during the annual St. Patrick's Day luncheon on Capitol Hill.
House Speaker Dennis Hastert, playing the role of host, presented Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern with a pewter bowl, saying it symbolizes the sturdy relationship we have.
Bush did not speak, while Ahern told lunch participants it was a great honour and a great privilege to meet the president.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Well I'm going to say a few words later so other than saying I've got a bigger box than you (laughter) I just want to thank the speaker for having us here again, I want to thank the president for being here, it's a great honour and a great privilege for me to meet the president and I want to thank you Mr Speaker for this initiative of yours to bring so many of my friends and leaders from Ireland here, thank you very much.
SUPER CAPTION: Bertie Ahern, Irish Prime Minister
Among the V-I-Ps from in the U-S this week are John Reid, Britain's minister responsible for Northern Ireland; John Hume, leader of the political party that represents moderate Catholic opinion, The S-D-L-P; Gerry Adams, head of the IRA-affiliated Sinn Fein party, which most hard-line Catholics support; David Trimble, the senior Protestant in Northern Ireland's power-sharing government; and Seamus Mallon, Hume's party deputy who is the senior Catholic in the government.
A senior official said earlier this week that Bush wants to put to rest doubts about his commitment to helping the parties involved implement the 1998 Good Friday peace accord.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
I had a good meeting and I'll have one tomorrow as well. I'm looking forward to it, we'll be discussing the Good Friday agreement, what I can do to help. We'll be reaffirming our trade with Ireland. I had a good visit with him, I'm looking forward to seeing him tomorrow.
SUPER CAPTION: George W. Bush, U.S. President
The agreement proposed a joint Catholic-Protestant government for Northern Ireland. The deal is at risk partly because of the Irish Republican Army's reluctance to carry out its commitment to disarmament.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
SUPER CAPTION: David Trimble, Northern Ireland First Minister
SOUNDBITE: (English)
SUPER CAPTION: David Trimble, Northern Ireland First Minister
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UK: REACTION TO TONY BLAIR'S NORTHERN IRELAND TALKS ANNOUNCEMENT
English/Nat
Politicians from Northern Ireland's main political parties on Wednesday gave a cautious welcome to Prime Minister Tony Blair's announcement that substantive peace talks could begin by September and be completed by May next year.
In a statement to MPs, Blair also outlined plans to set up an independent commission to prepare plans for the handover of paramilitary weapons.
But he warned the Irish Republican Army's political wing, Sinn Fein, that it was time to decide whether they would or would not be part of the peace process.
Tony Blair's announcement met a mixed reaction from Northern Ireland's members of parliament.
The Ulster Unionist party backed his statement but expressed some doubts it would work in practice.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Philosophically Tony Blair is right. All of us would agree that we want to see the disarmament of terrorist organisations. Whether in fact what is agreed will lead to that is gravely in doubt. There are a number of gaps, first and foremost neither he nor the Irish have defined their methodology and the modalities that will be necessary to meet their own timescale. We're convinced in my party that Sinn Fein/I-R-A have not got the capacity to move away from violence as the core element of their strategy.
SUPER CAPTION: Ken Maginnis, Ulster Unionist party's security spokesman
The Ulster Unionist leader said he did not believe Sinn Fein could commit itself to non-violence.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
I'm quite satisfied in my own mind that there is no scintilla of democratic spirit anywhere within Sinn Fein and no preparedness to trust themselves to peaceful means. They may try to fool people but as the Prime Minister said today after last week's murder the test is harder.
SUPER CAPTION: David Trimble, Ulster Unionist leader
The moderate nationalist S-D-L-P deputy leader Seamus Mallon said any decommissioning of arms would not work unless it applied to both sides in the conflict.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
It should only go ahead within the talks process if it was mutual, in other words if it was done by Republican paramilitaries and by Loyalist paramilitaries. Until the Republican paramilitaires are there then there's not going to be the factor of mutuality, which leaves it very unbalanced indeed.
SUPER CAPTION: Seamus Mallon, SDLP deputy leader
Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary said Sinn Fein knew what it must do in order to enter multi-party talks.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Tony said very specifically in the House this afternoon that we feel by putting the aide memoire three days before Lurgan to Sinn Fein that that went an extra mile, if not two miles, from the previous government, answered all the questions they had raised, and on that basis I don't see the need for another clarificatory meeting because the position is absolutely answered for them.
SUPER CAPTION: Mo Mowlam, Northern Ireland Secretary
Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams welcomed the prime minister's statement, adding his party would give the proposals its fullest consideration.
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