---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Newsnight <newsnight@ebs.bbc.co.uk>
Date: Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 10:39 PM
Subject: In tonight's programme
To: su.k.mishra@gmail.com
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NEWSNIGHT - Thursday 16 September 2010 at 10.30pm on BBC Two
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Presented by Emily Maitlis
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"It's marvellous to know" remarked Scottish Conservative leader Annabel
Goldie at the papal reception in Holyrood, "that humour is alive and
well in the Royal Family".
It was in response to the Duke of Edinburgh who, she later revealed, had
asked her if she wore tartan knickers. One of the less choreographed
exchanges of the day's events.
The day, as it happened, was bathed in sunlight and mellifluous harmony
as crowds turned out to line parks in Glasgow and Edinburgh for the
pontiff's visit. It was also the day that a minister asserted the new
government would "defend people of faith" or, "dare I say" she added,
"do God".
Is Baroness Warsi right to assert people of faith are more likely to do
more for their communities? The humanists don't think so. We'll be
talking to her tonight.
And we'll be hearing Steve Smith's latest thoughts on Big Society.
After the EU justice commissioner accused France of thinking the
unthinkable in its expulsion of the Roma people we compare the fortunes
of Roma here in Britain.
And Bernhard Schlink - author of best selling novel, The Reader (which
became an Oscar-winning movie) - talks to us about guilt, forgiveness
and what the Pope should do about wrongdoing within his own Church.
Join me, Emily, at 10.30pm on BBC Two.
From: Newsnight <newsnight@ebs.bbc.co.uk>
Date: Thu, Sep 16, 2010 at 10:39 PM
Subject: In tonight's programme
To: su.k.mishra@gmail.com
============================================================
NEWSNIGHT - Thursday 16 September 2010 at 10.30pm on BBC Two
============================================================
------------------------------------------------------------
Presented by Emily Maitlis
------------------------------------------------------------
"It's marvellous to know" remarked Scottish Conservative leader Annabel
Goldie at the papal reception in Holyrood, "that humour is alive and
well in the Royal Family".
It was in response to the Duke of Edinburgh who, she later revealed, had
asked her if she wore tartan knickers. One of the less choreographed
exchanges of the day's events.
The day, as it happened, was bathed in sunlight and mellifluous harmony
as crowds turned out to line parks in Glasgow and Edinburgh for the
pontiff's visit. It was also the day that a minister asserted the new
government would "defend people of faith" or, "dare I say" she added,
"do God".
Is Baroness Warsi right to assert people of faith are more likely to do
more for their communities? The humanists don't think so. We'll be
talking to her tonight.
And we'll be hearing Steve Smith's latest thoughts on Big Society.
After the EU justice commissioner accused France of thinking the
unthinkable in its expulsion of the Roma people we compare the fortunes
of Roma here in Britain.
And Bernhard Schlink - author of best selling novel, The Reader (which
became an Oscar-winning movie) - talks to us about guilt, forgiveness
and what the Pope should do about wrongdoing within his own Church.
Join me, Emily, at 10.30pm on BBC Two.
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