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EYEVINE 10.02 - 17.02.2021 (543)

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today as police keep up patrols in the parks. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today as police keep up patrols in the parks. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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EN_01464853_0529

17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today as police keep up patrols in the parks. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today as police keep up patrols in the parks. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Police keep up patrols of the parks as members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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17/01/2021. London, UK. Security stand next to a car park full sign while members of the public enjoy a stroll in a very busy Richmond Park in South West London today as police keep up patrols in the parks. Earlier, the government pleaded with the public to stay at home as much as possible. And today, Foreign Minister Dominic Rabb said that lockdown could be lifted in March but with tier systems still in place as health chefs reveal that a 24/7 vaccination pilot will begin next week as total Covid-19 deaths reach over 88,000 this weekend. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers queue up at a Covid-19 Testing Centre at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers queue up at a Covid-19 Testing Centre at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Air stewards walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. A passenger sits next to a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers queue up at a Covid-19 Testing Centre at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers queue up at a Covid-19 Testing Centre at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers queue up at a Covid-19 Testing Centre at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Air stewards walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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08/01/2021. London, UK. Passengers walk past a Covid-19 Testing Centre sign at London Heathrow as Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan declares a Major Incident as cases continue to spread throughout the capital. This week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson plunged England into a 3rd lockdown as he ordered schools to close and workers to work from home as the government brings in the army to ramp up vaccinations across the country. ? Alex Lentati / eyevine

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Keeping it fluid. NASA astronaut Victor Glover installs the Fluid Dynamics in Space experiment, or Fluidics for short. Fluidics is the black cylinder pictured in the foreground of the European Columbus module of the International Space Station. Developed by French space agency CNES and co-funded by Airbus, the Fluidics experiment is probing how fluids behave in weightlessness. The experiment is made up of six small, transparent spheres housed in the black centrifuge seen here and is studying two phenomena. The first is ?sloshing' or how liquids move inside closed spaces, which is hard to predict both with and without gravity. Think how frustrating it can be to get the last drop out of a packet of orange juice, then imagine the challenge for engineers designing satellites to use every drop of fuel in weightlessness, or designing rockets with fuel tanks that must deliver fuel to the engines under extreme loads. Insights can help industry design better satellite fuel-systems to increase their life and make them less expensive. A second part of the experiment looks at wave turbulence in liquids. On Earth, gravity and surface tension influence how energy dissipates in waves or ripples. In space, scientists can observe how surface forces behave without gravity and single out interactions. This could help us improve climate models forecasting the sea states and better understand wave formation on Earth, like rogue waves for example. The centrifuge contains two spheres with water for wave-turbulence research and four spheres dedicated to ?sloshing', of which two hold a special liquid with low viscosity and little surface tension for optimum sloshing. The experiment was first run on the Station by ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet during his Proxima mission in May 2017, with the most recent session completed by NASA astronaut Victor Glover in the European laboratory Credit: ESA / eyevine Contact eyevine for more information about using this image: T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 E

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Robert Maxwell. Serious Fraud Squad officers arrive at Maxwell House the Maxwell HQ in Fetter Lane London 1991. Ian Robert Maxwell, MC (10 June 1923 ? 5 November 1991) was a Czechoslovakian-born British media proprietor and Member of Parliament (MP). He rose from poverty to build an extensive publishing empire. His death revealed huge discrepancies in his companies' finances, including the Mirror Group pension fund, which Maxwell had fraudulently misappropriated. He escaped from Nazi occupation, joining the Czechoslovak Army in exile in World War II and then fighting in the British Army where he was decorated. After the war he worked in publishing, building up Pergamon Press to a major publishing house. After six years as an MP during the 1960s, he again put all his energy into business, successively buying the British Printing Corporation, Mirror Group Newspapers and Macmillan, Inc, among other publishing companies. He had a flamboyant lifestyle, living in Headington Hill Hall in Oxford from which he often flew in his helicopter, and sailing in his luxury yacht, the Lady Ghislaine. He was notably litigious and often embroiled in controversy, including about his support for Israel at the time of its War of Independence in 1948. In 1989, he had to sell successful businesses including Pergamon Press to cover some of his enormous debts, and in 1991 he was found dead, floating in the Atlantic Ocean having apparently fallen overboard from his yacht. He was given what amounted to a state funeral in Israel. His death triggered the collapse of his publishing empire as banks called in loans. His sons briefly struggled to keep the business together, but failed as the news emerged that Maxwell had stolen hundreds of millions of pounds from his own companies' pension funds. The Maxwell companies applied for bankruptcy protection in 1992. ? Brian Harris / eyevine http

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Robert Maxwell on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper. May 1990 Ian Robert Maxwell, MC (10 June 1923 - 5 November 1991) was a Czechoslovakian-born British media proprietor and Member of Parliament (MP). He rose from poverty to build an extensive publishing empire. His death revealed huge discrepancies in his companies' finances, including the Mirror Group pension fund, which Maxwell had fraudulently misappropriated. seen here on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper 1990 He escaped from Nazi occupation, joining the Czechoslovak Army in exile in World War II and then fighting in the British Army where he was decorated. After the war he worked in publishing, building up Pergamon Press to a major publishing house. After six years as an MP during the 1960s, he again put all his energy into business, successively buying the British Printing Corporation, Mirror Group Newspapers and Macmillan, Inc, among other publishing companies. He had a flamboyant lifestyle, living in Headington Hill Hall in Oxford from which he often flew in his helicopter, and sailing in his luxury yacht, the Lady Ghislaine. He was notably litigious and often embroiled in controversy, including about his support for Israel at the time of its War of Independence in 1948. In 1989, he had to sell successful businesses including Pergamon Press to cover some of his enormous debts, and in 1991 he was found dead, floating in the Atlantic Ocean having apparently fallen overboard from his yacht. He was given what amounted to a state funeral in Israel. His death triggered the collapse of his publishing empire as banks called in loans. His sons briefly struggled to keep the business together, but failed as the news emerged that Maxwell had stolen hundreds of millions of pounds from his own companies' pension funds. The Maxwell companies applied for bankruptcy protection in 1992. ? Brian Harris / eyevine Contact eyevine for more information about using this image: T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 E:

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Robert Maxwell on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper. May 1990 Ian Robert Maxwell, MC (10 June 1923 - 5 November 1991) was a Czechoslovakian-born British media proprietor and Member of Parliament (MP). He rose from poverty to build an extensive publishing empire. His death revealed huge discrepancies in his companies' finances, including the Mirror Group pension fund, which Maxwell had fraudulently misappropriated. seen here on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper 1990 He escaped from Nazi occupation, joining the Czechoslovak Army in exile in World War II and then fighting in the British Army where he was decorated. After the war he worked in publishing, building up Pergamon Press to a major publishing house. After six years as an MP during the 1960s, he again put all his energy into business, successively buying the British Printing Corporation, Mirror Group Newspapers and Macmillan, Inc, among other publishing companies. He had a flamboyant lifestyle, living in Headington Hill Hall in Oxford from which he often flew in his helicopter, and sailing in his luxury yacht, the Lady Ghislaine. He was notably litigious and often embroiled in controversy, including about his support for Israel at the time of its War of Independence in 1948. In 1989, he had to sell successful businesses including Pergamon Press to cover some of his enormous debts, and in 1991 he was found dead, floating in the Atlantic Ocean having apparently fallen overboard from his yacht. He was given what amounted to a state funeral in Israel. His death triggered the collapse of his publishing empire as banks called in loans. His sons briefly struggled to keep the business together, but failed as the news emerged that Maxwell had stolen hundreds of millions of pounds from his own companies' pension funds. The Maxwell companies applied for bankruptcy protection in 1992. ? Brian Harris / eyevine Contact eyevine for more information about using this image: T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 E:

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EN_01464853_1185

Robert Maxwell on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper. May 1990 Ian Robert Maxwell, MC (10 June 1923 - 5 November 1991) was a Czechoslovakian-born British media proprietor and Member of Parliament (MP). He rose from poverty to build an extensive publishing empire. His death revealed huge discrepancies in his companies' finances, including the Mirror Group pension fund, which Maxwell had fraudulently misappropriated. seen here on the editorial floor of the European Newspaper 1990 He escaped from Nazi occupation, joining the Czechoslovak Army in exile in World War II and then fighting in the British Army where he was decorated. After the war he worked in publishing, building up Pergamon Press to a major publishing house. After six years as an MP during the 1960s, he again put all his energy into business, successively buying the British Printing Corporation, Mirror Group Newspapers and Macmillan, Inc, among other publishing companies. He had a flamboyant lifestyle, living in Headington Hill Hall in Oxford from which he often flew in his helicopter, and sailing in his luxury yacht, the Lady Ghislaine. He was notably litigious and often embroiled in controversy, including about his support for Israel at the time of its War of Independence in 1948. In 1989, he had to sell successful businesses including Pergamon Press to cover some of his enormous debts, and in 1991 he was found dead, floating in the Atlantic Ocean having apparently fallen overboard from his yacht. He was given what amounted to a state funeral in Israel. His death triggered the collapse of his publishing empire as banks called in loans. His sons briefly struggled to keep the business together, but failed as the news emerged that Maxwell had stolen hundreds of millions of pounds from his own companies' pension funds. The Maxwell companies applied for bankruptcy protection in 1992. ? Brian Harris / eyevine Contact eyevine for more information about using this image: T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 E:

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