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24 September 2014
Inside Out: Surprising Stories, Familiar Places

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听听Inside Out - South West: Monday October 16, 2006

Children's sun products

Sun protection advice gallery
Sun shade on beach

A major retailer is to introduce labelling on children聮s sun products following an Inside Out investigation which found a dangerous loophole in the law.

We tested a range of children聮s parasols and beach shelters and found many offered worryingly low levels of UV protection.

These facts are largely unbeknown to parents because, unlike sun cream, they don聮t have to be labelled.

After being confronted with our findings, Argos agreed to introduce a new baby parasol with a marked UPF of 40+ and put clear UPF labels on all other sun products.

Mothercare and Woolworths insisted their parasols were not designed for sun protection and are to continue selling them without labels.

Read the full report on sun products

Checking protection levels

Any parent would be forgiven for believing their child is safe from dangerous UV rays when sitting in the shade of a parasol or beach shelter.

But our tests, conducted by the Health Protection Agency, found some beach shelters had a UPF rating 聳 like SPF but for fabric 聳 as low as seven.

Sam Smith with parasol
Sam Smith tests out the protection factor of parasols

The highest protection was provided by a stripy blue and yellow shelter from a Paignton beach shop 聳 but only half of it.

The blue parts had a UPF of 30, but the yellow bits only 14.

And a test of five different parasols revealed an average UPF of just 15.

A child would still need clothing and sun block to protect them from burning, which greatly increases the risk of developing skin cancer.

Trading Standards believe this needs to be made much clearer to parents through labelling that states exactly how much protection all sun products offer.

It is planning to lobby the Government and retailers to introduce such a system.

Until then it is up to parents to be careful what they buy and keep applying the sun cream聳 even when their child聮s in the shade.

Retailers response

In response to the Inside Out investigation, Argos says:

"Argos takes the safety of all its customers extremely seriously... we are already looking to develop additional sun specific products for future catalogues and will clearly mark the relevant products with the UPF rating."

Mothercare also responded as follows:

"Our pushchair parasols are not designed to be sun safety or sun protection products.

"We clearly state in the user guide that parents should provide all the usual sun protection methods including protective clothing and sun block on exposed skin."

Woolworths say that their parasol is merely a sunshade:

"The Woolworths Ladybird Parasol is designed as a sunshade only and is not labelled as providing sun protection.

"However we are currently in talks with suppliers about stocking parasols which are designed to offer greater sun protection."

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Pioneers Corps

Pioneer Corp s
Marching for victory - the Pioneer Corps. Courtesy of Fritz Lustig.

Inside Out meets four very special war veterans as they return to Ilfracombe to relive old memories.

Willy Field, Geoffrey Perry, Fritz Lustig and Harry Rossney were part of a group of soldiers whose part in the Second World War remains largely unrecognised 聳 because they came from enemy countries.

They were some of the Jews and other 聭undesirables聮 that were allowed to flee Germany and Austria before war broke out.

Escape to England

Many parents scrambled to get their children abroad as anti-Semitism persecution intensified.

Thousands were given refuge in Britain.

When war broke out, they were recruited to the British Army to serve in the Pioneer Corps 聳 popularly know as "The King聮s own Enemy Aliens".

Three thousand passed through training in Ilfracombe at the start of their lives as British soldiers.

Some of central Europe聮s most intellectual elite could be found in its ranks, but their typical remit of building roads and camps and digging trenches made them essentially army navvies.

Many, including Willy and his friends, then went on to serve in regular fighting units of the army.

Their German background meant they were very useful soldiers.

Special missions

Many were recruited by the Special Operations Executive, which encouraged and facilitated espionage and sabotage behind enemy lines.

They took on British identities in case they were ever captured.

"It was a wonderful feeling. This is what I had always wanted to do... It was the most exciting part of my life. I did something. I could give something back to the country which saved me."
Willy Field

If they kept their German or Austrian names, they could be tried for treachery and shot, but if they were thought to be British they would be awarded POW status.

After the war, most kept their new identities and stayed in the country which had given them a safe home.

Willy and many like him had no regrets about fighting their fellow countrymen.

They felt they had given back something to the country which had saved them.

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Longitude

John Harrison
John Harrison devised a time keeper to help navigation. Courtesy of the Science Museum.

Inside Out reveals how the second worst shipping disaster in Royal Naval history happened right off the coast of the Isles of Scilly and kick-started a revolution in seafaring.

On the stormy 21st October 1707, Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell, in command of a squadron of 21 British Men o' War approached the soundings of the Isles of Scilly.

On his voyage from the Mediterranean, currents and foul weather had taken him off course and he was hopelessly lost.

He thought the British Channel 'was open and clear before him', but he was miles out in his reckoning.

The squadron became entangled on the treacherous rocks off the Isles of Scilly.

Four ships were lost and out of the 1,500 men on board, only 24 survived.

Longitude

This disaster was particularly horrific, but shipwrecks were not at all uncommon at the time, because sailors had no way of accurately charting their position at sea.

In geography, there is an imaginary grid around the world, thought up by Greek scholar Ptolemy some 2,200 years ago, that can be used to calculate the exact location of places.

Observatory
Longitude - time to find a solution to an age old problem

Latitude lines go across the map, measured in degrees and numbered from 0掳 to 90掳 north and south, with the equator as the starting point.

Longitude lines run from top to bottom, measured in 180掳 east and west with the Greenwich meridian at zero.

Throughout history, latitude was always relatively easy to calculate from the position of the stars.

But there was no accurate way of calculating longitude, which is what led Admiral Shovell and many others like him to untimely deaths.

Sailors knew that the earth turned 360掳 every day, or 15掳 every hour.

So if you travelled 15掳 eastward, the local time moves ahead one hour and similarly, travelling west, the local time moves back one hour.

So if it was noon where you were and it was nine am in Greenwich, where you started, you would have travelled west for three hours and be at longitude 45掳.

Time and place

The problem was, back in the 17th Century there was no way of accurately telling the time at sea.

There weren聮t any clocks that could withstand the motion of a ship and the changes in humidity and temperature at sea.

Clock
Measuring time - Harrison's clock was designed to help navigation

Even some of the best clocks of the early 18th Century could lose as much as 10 minutes per day, which translated into 150 miles or more.

The death of so many men off Scilly sparked a competition for the 'discovery of longitude'

In 1714, the British Government offered, by Act of Parliament, 拢20,000 for a solution 聳 equivalent to more than 拢2.5 million today - which could provide longitude to within half-a-degree (two minutes of time).

A Board of Longitude was set up to administer and judge the prize.

Many weird and wonderful suggestions were received, alongside attempts by some of the best brains in the land, including Edmund Halley and Isaac Newton.

In the end the problem was solved by a humble clockmaker from up north, after more than 40 years working on the design.

Testing time

John Harrison聮s chronometer, which resembled a pocket watch, could withstand all weather conditions to keep accurate time.

The Board of Longitude was at first not convinced and dismissed it as a fluke, but was eventually forced to award Harrison the 拢20,000 following support for his cause from King George III and an Act of Parliament.

Harrison聮s chronometer revolutionised global trade and was used by Captain Cook on his second and third voyages, which accurately charted many areas and recording several islands and coastlines on European maps for the first time.

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