roll I remember the long forest hospitals You fixed the bad parts. Can I go further? Yes, you can. Cabbage has the power to fix the weak parts one by one and bring them closer to normal. I am looking for a nice house. My City House provides your comfortable house. My City House I am doing a good job. Besen D Green and carrot combination. Nutrition and nutrition supplement. Besen D Tell me, tell me, at 6pm. Tell me, tell me, at 6pm. My City House The program is brought to you by Nissin Fudo. The program is brought to you by Nissin Fudo. The city is shaped by the living of the people who live there. Individual amenity. A unique mansion life. Nissin Palestage. Nissin Fudo. You and I are the only people. You and I are the only people. You and I are the only people. You and I are the only people. Doll is always 100 percent. We are happy to be in the shot. We are happy to be in the shot. We are in the shot from Fuji. Fuji Film This taste is clean and crisp. Big bottle of Big Bud. New release Budweiser. If you look at the machine, there was a boy who didn't feel like it unless he disassembled it. Over and over again. Passion is energy. Tokyo Electricity. The strength in the right hand and the kindness in the left hand. If you have friends, your dream will begin. Delicious relax mentos. Melanin. One drop. A drop of melanin that has been made. One drop of whitening from the cane stick. It's medicinal. Good evening, I'm Peter Barakan. I'm Mitsuko Ishii. The way to become a support for developing countries from advanced countries is a problem. In particular, it is often pointed out that the support is not properly used. Bangladesh, a particularly poor country in the third world, has an population of about 100 million people. The GNP per person is 170 dollars. It's about 25,000 yen. I've been receiving a lot of support so far, but there are many cases of failure. Some people think of a unique way of support and implement it. This is Bangladesh, the capital of Bangladesh. It is said to be the world's greatest treasure. It's also among the world's most broken down countries. And among its biggest recipients of international aid. Every year, the 10 billion dollars disappear, and it gets poorer and poorer. The reason is that Bangladesh is not the biggest country in the world. And the reason is that the projects that are being implemented here are not affected by the people's lives. The late King Henry Kissinger said that this country is like a country that has lost both hands and feet. This place is the world's basket case. Kissinger said that in 1973. I think he probably hurt the permanent image to the psyche of this country. Susan Davis is the head of the Ford Foundation in Bangladesh. She's watched the effects of aid, good and bad. The psychology of the poverty and the aid dependency of constantly being a failure of being licked and battered by every disaster you can think of. Floods, droughts, famines, tornadoes, fire, disasters, and you name it, we have it. See, that's what makes the immigration interesting. Aided, played around. You want a laboratory? Come here. And people are coming, not to witness the familiar disasters of Bangladesh, but to examine one man's solution to its hopelessness. A bank. A bank that believes that credit is a fundamental human right, and thus lends money only to the poorest of the poor. Not aid, but credit. A few dollars to buy a tool for husking rights or a cap. We're selling it. Assets that can, as hard as it may be to imagine, change people's lives. So far, the barefoot borrowers have taken more than $100 million in loans. And virtually every cent has been paid back. Mohammed Yunus is the director of the Grameen or rural bank. Average loan is... $67,000. It's very small, but this is the kind of money people need to do things for themselves. Even then, that money is not available to them. And that, I think, is the basic cause of poverty, because people do not have access to resources. Yunus first approached ordinary commercial banks, but they laughed at the idea of lending poor people money. So with a few small grants and loans from international donors, Yunus started the bank. In the upside-down world of Grameen banking, poverty is the only thing that qualifies a borrower, and the bank comes to the customer, not the other way around. This woman is one of 8,000 of the roving bankers. She's on her way to collect weekly payments. The borrower is gathered at the bank center. Each of the five bank roads represents a bank group. Each member is responsible for not only his installment, but every debt owned by the group. Act! Good. Act! Good. The meeting ends with an compulsory exercise session, and the official Grameen banking sort, and off the banker goes for it to collect. In order to establish the bank, but the Yunus says he had to unlearn all the theories of economic development, even learning the United States, passing on to his students, that should have known university. I came here in 1972 with all the eloquence of a new PhD from the American university. I thought I knew all the answers. And while I was doing that, I see things are not happening the way my textbook says. Economic situation in the country is going down and down and down. So I got very frustrated and I started walking in the villages to find out what is their economics? What do they say? So that village became university for me to learn economics from them. One of the first people he knew was Sophie Carter, Sophie was a cartoom, maker of stool. Ultimately she became the first Grameen borrower, but first she turned to economics. Because she had no capital, she was forced to borrow from a local trader to buy raw material. She then sold them back to him at a price he set. The profit, two cents a day. That's what I cannot accept why anybody is so good at making money. Two cents for such a beautiful scale. So I said, if somebody had given her the money, if she didn't have to borrow from the trader, could she sell elsewhere in case she get home? And she said, yes, I can. In order to become self-sufficient in the stool business, Sophie Carter needed a working capital of six dollars. Eunice lent her the money, not a gift alone. Her profit soared from two cents a day to a dollar twenty-five a day. It's a different, it's almost your mind, to see the difference you can think of in people's life. Just by this one small step, and it's unbelievable that people can do things for themselves. What was your fear when you were up there in the kitchen? Your fear was about why you can think people were poor. They are lazy, they don't want to work hard at your heart. That's what they are poor. And you come here, you see the intelligence of the world. People are welcome to do anything. I mean, working very hard to make their thinking a day. They have beautiful skills. They want to change their life. They're desperate to change their life. Sophia Carter's income is three times the national average of one hundred and forty dollars a year. She's been able to build a solid new house with a tin roof, a giant step up in the nightmarish poverty of Bangladesh. What's more, she says she's now able to feed her family. Does she consider herself now a rich woman? She says she's not rich. I was too poor at that time. Now I can feed myself. I can take care of myself. What began as a personal response to Sophia Carter in 1976 has become an instrument today. There are half a million borrowers with half a million tiny loans, made in an interest rate of sixty percent. The defaults they could certainly mark, 98 percent of all loans are paid back within a year. These people, the poorest of Bangladesh's poor, now have over 11 million dollars in savings in the Grumman Bank. The headquarters in Dhaka is a monument to their persistence. Concrete proof that little money can have big effect. Why has our whole big, big, failed, failed society? I think the basic reason is people are left out. You're looking at projects and their so-called results, not what is happening for the people. This is one horrible, yet very typical example, of a great fish hatchery disaster. At a cost of I don't know how many millions in international aid, 108 fish farms were built. Not a single one has been a success. In some like this one, the pond simply dried up. They were dug in the few dry spots in all of Bangladesh. Others were mismanaged and just fell to ruin. If it were not so farcical, it would be heartbreaking to see all this expensive plumbing covered in cobwebs, holding tanks and circulating pumps that have never held a drop of water. A hatchery that's hatched nothing but despair. Despair that is evident in the Gokul and Gokulim village of Sadeqnagar. Ask the people if anyone had ever seen a penny of the billions the nation received in 4 May. They'll laugh. Some facts of life here. This man does not own his own rickshaw. He rents it for 50 cents a day. On a good day, he might make an additional 45 cents. When you earn enough, you eat a little bit better. But the day you don't earn, you have little food and share among yourselves whatever you got. Another farmer is in the same situation. He says I can barely feed myself. Even that is not enough for the whole family. You look at my house, I cannot even put a patch on my roof. It's all rotting. He says he's got a lot of money. He says he cannot even put a patch on my roof. The poor and the impotent are the beasts of eternal burden. The women crush rice using a method as old as time. It has the grace of dancers in the valley of thought and is exhausting mindless work. Women are the first victims of poverty. As a result, the bulk of the money the Marine Bank lends goes to women borrowers. Younus says they are more determined than men to break the eternal cycle of work, hunger, and work. For example, Rani Carmaca. She'd never earned a penny. Her husband earned about 30 cents a day. They offered her some meals and lived in a shack with a cardboard roof. Nine years ago, Rani joined the Grummin Bank with four other women. The first one was for 30 dollars. With the second loan, she bought the second one. Today she owns five rooms and employs five male weavers for two dollars a day. Rani now earns more than 1,500 a year. She has a new house and a tin room, but she sends her children to school. As the leader of the center, she works closely with the bank worker, checking each payment due. A bank worker is a person who presents a Grummin Bank with the personal, the bottle of gratitude. At the same time, a bank worker is also looked up on by the borrowers as a teacher, because he or she is the person who brings messages of a new life to the people, that life can be better. At the Gormos Grimkola! Those messages perhaps from the bank worker to the borrower are in the form of slogans. They are called the Sixteen Decisions. You hear them wherever borrowers are gathered. At the Gormos Grimkola! On the road to the town of Monopoulos, when borrowers heard that the U.S. was passing through, they lined the road chanting the decision. Saying that we will not work, we will not sleep for other people, we will work for ourselves. Why did you choose the slogan? Most of the people don't read the text, so this is one way of determining what they want to do and what they should do. Would you say that 80, 90 percent of the people are going to borrow? I would say 90 percent of them. Decision number seven. We shall educate our children. This seems to have played on among the borrows. In this center house of the district of Tangail, children of Rameen borrowers are learning their ABCs. They are preparing to enter public schools. There are about 5,000 schools like this one. The teachers' salaries are paid by the borrower themselves, and they are trying to break down the barriers of illiteracy. It's not just money, taking it back, and forgetting about it. It's people. Each year, each ranch has a celebration. A gathering of borrowers and their children, a field day for families, a county fair of the spirit, a force of the poor. This bank is owned by 75 percent of the shares of this bank, the loan by the borrower who borrowed from us. Eunice has the main beneficiaries of the celebrations of the children. For most of them, it's the only chance they'll have to be part of something other than the daily ritual of hard labor. Forget the quality of performance for a moment on this dusty stage. We are someone. Eunice believes in hard work, in austerity, in self-reliance. Eunice believes that Bangladesh can develop itself. Susan Davis oversees the four foundation's participation in the Grameen Bank. Ford has been giving Grameen a small annual grant since its inception. And because he is old corrupt, and because he lives in values, Eunice probably has given more hope to this country than any other person. Eunice would be the hot big guy. He would be the, in our terms, the Kennedy, the Martin Luther King. Because what he is doing is leading the movement that goes beyond the borders of Bangladesh. There are so many things that we learn from this report. We understand why things didn't go well. It's because the people who were there were the ones who were in the way. It was meaningless to help the people who were there. When I realized that the economy that I learned at school was not very useful, I thought I should walk through the village on my own, and see what each of the villagers there needed. I think that was a good attitude to see how I could help them. Japan is also called the country of the fire. I wonder if they have given enough attention to this. The fish farm that came out in the early 2000s, I'm sure you've heard about it. I think that's a good way to help prevent such a failure. I think it's a good way to help them decide what to do. I've heard that the people from Ford Foundation have emphasized that you are a very clean person. I think that's a good way to help them decide what to do. I think that's a good way to help them decide what to do. I think it's a good way to help them decide what to do. Anyway, I heard that they are learning from the success of the poverty bank and trying to do the same things in other countries. In the United States, they are doing this kind of project in two places, Illinois and Arkansas. I hope it spreads more and more. Next, we will talk about the white firefighters and cheerleaders. The yangon officer uses the M3 to fly his luxurious car. The most advance competitor for the white firefighters is NishinWhy. Mr. Kudo. 90th year, volleyball world championship, female. Please look forward to the activities of all Japanese women. Your dream is our dream. Lager, Kirin Lager Beer. It is a mistake not to shampoo because it is scary to get out of the shower. Clean the coffee and prevent itching. Shiseido, new flow-in shampoo. Hi Diane. It's great to be back. The usual city welcomes you. The cruising ranger that resonates with people and the city. New day cab ranger, thank you. In order to apply the public rights law that was made in 1964, an affirmative action program was created from the mid-60s. In other words, the program is to apply a certain proportion of the minority groups such as women, black people, and Hispanics. The proportions are different in each city and town. In Birmingham, Alabama, a white firefighter said that the black people who had worse grades than him in the exam were being promoted first. He said it was the opposite discrimination. The way promotions have worked in the fire department is indeed in most simple service jobs in this country. This is a test given, and the highest scores on the list, will some credit for the minority get the promotion. But since 1981, when Birmingham signed an agreement with the Justice Department, an agreement called a consent decree, in effect there have been two lists, one white and one black, and the top scores from each race are promoted, even if the white scored higher than the blacks. That's why Charlie Jackson of Birmingham Fire Department claims he can't get promoted beyond lieutenant. I was passed over in 1988 to the position of captain. Simply because there were blacks promoted in that position who I made the highest score on, and I did not get promoted. Simply because I was not black. Herman Rodney Chamberlain of the Pestle Lieutenant in 1981. I quit all my part-time work and spent about six months studying and trying to pass the exam for the statement. And when the results were made known, there were 12 openings for the test. I was my whole life long that way, and the last day I still have not been promoted. Chambers and actions in the Indian White Fire Department feel that the promotion list should be in order of the grade scored in the test, regardless of race. I fought for everything that I got, I earned my way. What happened to the merit system where each person gains their promotions by their own merit, not by the color of their skin? One of the requirements that the role of the candidate sent down by the personnel board to qualify, which means that everybody sent down has had a passing grade on the test, but the White Fire Department say they lowered the passing grades since 1981. Charles Brass was the Pirell was going to come in on. I took the test and competed for the pass fail level to 70 percent. If you can't answer 70 percent right, you fail. Now we understand they lowered the pass fail level below 50 percent. So there will be enough minorities on the list that the personnel board can say, qualified. You're saying that the passing can be something different before 1981, that happened. Exactly. Before 1981, when a military lieutenant came in on the first day, everyone there knew that he knew what he was doing. So he passed the test. Do any of you feel that some of the black lieutenants that you've known that have not been qualified? Yes. Without question. Some people would have believed that the fire department is down because of the poor people that they're reaching that far. But the department is hiring people with poor quality. In other words, they're making these unqualified black people the bosses of the black people. Carl Cook is also a director of the fire department. I have looked at the statistics that have been turned in on the master basis as to how many houses were burned five or six years ago. The results are better now. There's nothing wrong with it. Nothing has gotten worse than before. No, it's actually getting better. Susan Liebes, who was a representative of the black people in the trial, says the test is meaningless. There are a lot of problems. One is the fire department. But you do not have to make a lot of science to be a firefighter. You should be able to climb the ladder and climb the ladder to find ladders to go into burning buildings. Those kinds of tests are related to the job. But a pencil paper test that doesn't predict performance is not a very useful test to me. How else are you going to test? How do you test other jobs that do it by written tests? Precisions. They do it by written tests. Air power, of course, they have to fly, but they also have written tests. Any job is a test. You can find out if they know the job, if they know the material. Up until 1974, there was only one black in the Birmingham Fire Department. And until 1981, there were no black officers. As of now, the city has reached its goal of roughly one third black men in the town. But the whites in the fire department feel that these black officers have been promoted at their expense. Why do we have to pay for the social problems of the country? There's a heavy message in need to deal with it without denying the case, gas, and the people that they work for. There has been no discrimination in the Birmingham Fire Department until the blacks were promoted over white. We've talked to some white firefighters. They admit some things have been done. They just think this is the wrong way to do it. Captain Jackie Burton. We are all saying that people want both of Jesus from the job. What they're saying is, we want moral high ground. We are supposed to show the wrong, just told the wrong. But yet they want to eat the fruit of the wrong. I mean, you can't have both. You're going to admit it's wrong. All right, you can't build the benefits of this wrong and move your moral high ground in. We are so sorry that this happened to the white people. But when it comes to correcting it or implementing some plans to correct it, well, it's not up to you yet. That's not up to me yet. I will help you move some gifts to go like that. You wouldn't let me. I came when I came out of high school. I wanted to be a firefighter, but I was denied the opportunity. Although there was an opening after 1981, as black people were promoted over whites who had scored higher on the test, the whites filed lawsuits. One of the suits got to the Supreme Court last June. The court said the white firemen could sue the city of Birmingham if they thought they were being passed over unfairly for promotion. The attorney who was sent to the Supreme Court all the way to the Supreme Court, and one is Ray Fitzpatrick. The important thing is that white firefighters were denied promotion not on the basis of their qualifications, rather on the basis of their beliefs. The firemen ignored qualifications and selected persons for promotion and simply went white, black, and white, black, right down two separate lists. That's wrong. We asked Susan Reed what we knew about this decision. What's new is that now the Supreme Court has said, if you promote black, you understand that you can't prove a black degree of lawful, that also may endanger the rights of whites. And we said that that is called a cause of action, and they're entitled to a trial on that. And that is what it means. It means that a following of the lawful degree of lawful degree now is barring of the lawsuit. The white firemen won their 1989 argument in the Supreme Court with the help of a powerful ally, the Justice Department. The irony, of course, is that the Justice Department was on the side of the blacks in 1981. The irony is not lost on James Alexander in his journey for the city of Birmingham. I cannot think of anything in our practice that has made me this angry. Who does it make angry at, the Republican administration? Surely, and most particularly the political parties in the Department of Justice. I mean, bear in mind that I came to the negotiations with the city at the invitation of the Justice Department. We worked with the Justice Department for a while on their judgment, and we were able to get a good result. We were able to get a good result. We were able to get a good result. We worked with the Justice Department for a while on their judgment, negotiating a decree that bears their imprint, that is someone to... I think literally hundreds of other decrees around the country, and then two years later, they're walking into federal court saying that they are challenging the very decree that they negotiated in its... in its very own way. That leaves the city of Birmingham still bound by the decree to promote blacks, or at the same time subject to lawsuits every time a black is promoted over a white, or higher on the test. Birmingham's mayor, Richard Arrington, has to figure out what Birmingham does now. We have to live by the law of the land. If we get to the highest court, we lose it. We'll have to live by it, but it's going to be... I don't want to say devastating, it's going to be difficult. I think for the next 15 or 20 years, we'll probably be in court, suing us. The Supreme Court decision opens the door for these white people to challenge their affirmative action in Birmingham. It also opens the door for lawsuits all over the country, where affirmative action plans have been in place for years. Every white policeman or sanitation worker or civil servant feels he wasn't hired or not promoted because some lower-scoring black got the job, or they have caused the suicide of a reverse discrimination. Every consent decree in the country that takes rights into account is a sitting guise for the kinds of litigation we're experiencing here in Birmingham. If you go anywhere and look into consent decrees where private employees, public employees, doesn't matter, where they have tried to settle race or sex or some other kind of litigation, they take rights into account. They've got a problem. There have been several cases of reverse discrimination, right? Yes. Until now, the Supreme Court decision was all about the affirmative action, but during the Reagan administration, the government itself has changed a lot. In the 1989 case of these firefighters, the Supreme Court decision was a bit different. The report doesn't say that there is a problem with discrimination in the fire department's stamp of rights but the want countries to support it as much as they can, in a very desperation way. Yes, especially if you consider associating marry with Lake viel. This fake business say they will sell it to the police, under the law arson, and the gravy state. The policy of the current government is to make the black and white line equal. It's going to take a long time. I think so, but I think it's a good step. Next is the topic of the 16th anniversary of the death of Rostropovich. Lime and lemon shine. Lemon. The taste of lemon. New Sprite. Blue soft contact lens. Meniko soft ma. Congar bread is a delicious cereal food that is perfect for a frantic morning. I ask for a child. Instant breakfast. Nishin's congar bread. The power of the map. New wind. To the rich future. The title of the new stone. The whiskey that came out of Canada. Canadian club. The deliciousness that does not change. I drink the delicious water of the Rokko. The water is also delicious. The delicious water of Rokko. The policy of the Perestroika seems to be very difficult in the economic aspect, but it has brought a great change in culture, art, and especially human rights. Among them, the world-renowned cellist and the former opera singer, Ms. Galina, was back in February this year for the first time in 16 years. The Slavs have returned to the Moscow Conservatory. The Slavs have returned to the Moscow Conservatory. The Slavs have returned to the Moscow Conservatory. The Slavs have returned to the Moscow Conservatory. The first time they came was to the great Novojevice cemetery in the Soviet Union. And finally, they came to the old Moscow apartment. In this way, the Slavs invited their old friends to their house. It was the day when they went to Moscow through Tokyo. The two of them are different. And then, for a few days, the two of them are busy with their schoolwork. They have a rehearsal for the concert. And then, the big night arrives. His first piece, Tchaikovsky's Symphony in Piano, this musical holds profound meaning for the Slavs. This was the last piece he performed in Moscow before being printed in exile. But this performance tonight is not emotional and political, as it is a musical triumph. And in the most prominent box, just off the stage, an old friend of mine, we have spent the night with. And sitting next to her, is a girl by his agorabature. Slava is called back six times by the audience. The people here are celebrating one of their own, not just for his music, but for his political courage. His final encore in the Stars and Stripes Forever, a bridge he told us between his old home and the Soviet Union, and his new friends in America, some of whom have come all the way from the US for the concert. Slava told us that for him and his family, this is his daughter Olga. This is simply an unforgettable night. The next night, Slava plays the virtuoso piece that seems to belong to him, Georges's cello concerto. Yet if today he was considered the world's finest celloist, 16 years ago he had been hounded from Soviet concert hall, told in fact by one minor official that, as a musician, he had simply degenerated too much. The root of Slava and Kanao's political difficulties lay in a place that also gave them so much delight, their Dasha, their country home outside Moscow. Slava himself had helped design and build it. In 1969, the invited dissident writer Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who had come under increasing persecution from the government, invited him to live in his cottage just by their main house. Galina had thought it might be too small for them. I asked him, how possible it would be for you, it's small place. He said, Kana, I'd rather my life live in my cottage, like a palace. Solzhenitsyn wrote some of his most acclaimed works of his duchy. Though he had no money himself, he would accept nothing from the Russian poviches, except shelter. He lived here on just one ruble a day. And in his refrigerator he had cabbage and spaghetti. Solzhenitsyn worked here dawn to dusk, leaving his writing, they said, only to face back and forth in the woods outside. As the official campaign against Solzhenitsyn intensified, most Soviet intellectuals remained silent. But Slava spoke out, he wrote an open letter defending Solzhenitsyn, but no Moscow paper was published. So he gave it to the Western press. That did it. He was immediately deemed persona non grata by Moscow. You wrote to Prada in 1970, why is it that a person who doesn't know much about literature or art, would absolutely be competent in those things? Why? Why? Why did you write that? Why did you write? And why? Because that's incompetent. And why are they incompetent? Why did that kind of thing exist in my head? And yet it could only be said. In 1973 the government finally stripped Solzhenitsyn of his citizenship, ordered him into exile. After he left the cottage, two men from the KGB appeared to remove a black box, electronic listening equipment that had been buried for years beneath the cottage walls. So they were eavesdropping on Solzhenitsyn. Yes, that's right. As the Kremlin saw it, Slava and Galina had the wrong kind of friends. Dr. Solzhenitsyn, a dissident Andrei Sakharov, died a few months ago. Slava brought a leaf to his grave too. When I went to Sakharov's grave, I saw so many flowers. And I think people now express gratitude and appreciation to these genes. My tears started to fall for him. I saw admired him. In 1974, a member of the Bolshoi Theatre came to Slava and Galina and told them that all they had to do was sign a mild public declaration against Sakharov. And that would be enough to restore the two of them to official favor. But the two refused. Why didn't you sign it? The denunciation of Sakharov. Why not? That's... I have a conscience. I have a conscience. In 1974, Slava and Galina finally understood they could survive as artists only by leaving Russia. As have so many others. Slava's talent was still shown in the US and Europe, but not Galina's. So at one time, she was the top Soviet soprano in the West, her career slowly crumbled. And now in the winter of 1990, she and Olga walked outside the Bolshoi near the stage door she used at her triumphant concerts. Two old friends after they'd come inside refused. Too many bitter memories she told us. On earth, hello musicians, to carry political paper for themselves, had publicly denounced her and Slava. You were the main diva of the Soviet Union. And then suddenly, come the 200th anniversary of the Bolshoi, and you are a non-fascist. Not a lot of word about me. No picture or name. Yes, so it is. Because you and your husband defended Slava. Yes. And in a strange way, it was tougher for you than it was for Slava. Yes, of course. Galina, was it all worth it? Was it worth it? What? Was it worth it? Yes. No, it was meant to be. And it could not be any other way. Was it worth it? Sixteen years. Now, after 16 years of criminal life, was it worth it? What do you think of the fact that you killed the soldier of the Soviet Union and the soldier of the Sakharovs? Dear, I completely repeat all what I made. Even if I have a promise to live in my life, I have to go back. For Slava, nothing speaks more eloquently of the artist's struggle against the brutality of dictatorship than the Fifth Symphony of Dmitri Shostakovich, one of the greatest Russian composers of the century. His career, too, almost destroyed by the Kremlin. Slava told his orchestra that night, you should play this music, so it feels like a fork in the brain. Sixteen years is really long. I felt that way especially after 16 years in Japan. I see. I can't imagine that I couldn't go back even if I wanted to. In his case, he chose the path of his belief, rather than having the highest artistic position in Soviet countries. He is a difficult person. The opera singer Galina Fujin was also a famous opera singer at the time. She was completely abandoned and was killed. I read a book called Galina, which is published by Miss Zshovo. I can see the situation at the time very well. I recommend it. It was a book that moved me for the first time in a long time. Next week, we will send a special book called Children are Dangerous. In America, there are 300,000 cases of adults playing a sexual prank on children. The wife thinks her husband is a pervert and continues to run away with her children. This is a report that reflects the distortion of American society, such as fathers who are accused of the testimony of a 10-year-old daughter. The head moves to the right and left. I want to do a job that can be qualified. The page of a company that can be qualified is ready. Travaille I'll make it tonight. Really? 15th year boy and girl Next, they will take a video of the video's.] You can most of you, get out of the video now. use From now until tomorrow, power is not cut off! So, singlomont! Yes! Singlomont, the hero of the physical body! Singlomont! 540 megabytes of capacity, powerful digital sound! Now, there is no one who can call it a super machine. The software is also exciting! PC Engine CD-ROM System, Nogrom! Top mode, launch! Sporty elegance, servo mode, birth! I can sleep for a day or two, but... What kind of tough man is it that comes after three days? Ah, tomorrow you will be more busy! When you can't get rid of the fatigue that you're accumulating now, you can listen to the Cupid Core Gold. Now, if you collect 10 tropical cards at McDonald's, you can get a watch and a radio. Tropical Time Presents are being held! McDonald's! This program was brought to you by Nissin Fudo.