This website is using a security service to protect itself from online attacks The action you just performed triggered the security solution There are several actions that could trigger this block including submitting a certain word or phrase You can email the site owner to let them know you were blocked Please include what you were doing when this page came up and the Cloudflare Ray ID found at the bottom of this page Feminist campaigners have said the urinals encourage 'discrimination against women' A set of urinals, which have been designed in the shape of the pair of lips that feature as The Rolling Stones logo have drawn criticism from feminist campaign groups which are pictured on the top and right of your screen have been put in the Rolling Stones fan museum which is soon to open in the small northern German town of Luechow The lips were designed by graphic designer John Pasche in 1971 and were modeled on the Mick Jagger’s large mouth they encourage “discrimination against women” According to the Los Angeles Times described the lips as “discrimination against women it would have been acceptable because the identification with the band and Jagger would have been unmistakable The museum’s founder Ulrich Schroeder has denied that the fixtures represent a man’s mouth or a woman’s mouth or anyone’s mouth and has said that despite the criticism Meanwhile, The Rolling Stones have released a new bootleg album from this live show at Virginia’s Hampton Colliseum in 1981 The album, which can be purchased from Stonesarchivestore.com contains 26 tracks in all and was released for sale earlier this week The release of ‘Hampton Colliseum 1981’ follows on from last year’s ‘The Brussels Affair’ which was captured live in Belgium in 1973 The world’s defining voice in music and pop culture: breaking what’s new and what’s next since 1952 Although the exact route of the convoy is being kept secret protesters have organised demonstrations at cities along its 900-mile route At least 17,000 German riot police are poised for what could be one of the biggest anti-nuclear demonstrations in years By early this afternoon hundreds of activists had chained themselves to trees along the route or were preparing to lock themselves to the railway track Possible routes for the nucear waste train's 900-mile journeyThe specially constructed low-speed train, carrying 123 tonnes of German radioactive waste, which was reprocessed in eastern France It was expected to cross the French-German border early tomorrow and to arrive in Gorleben said: "Never in history has such a quantity of radioactive material ever been transported." said: "It is at least twice the radioactivity of all the radioactive pollution from the Chernobyl catastrophe and [local people] haven't even been informed of its route." The waste convoy is the 11th of its type between France and Germany since 1996 In 2004 an anti-nuclear protester died in France after his leg was cut off by a train transporting nuclear waste to Germany Protesters have tried to block previous trains but protests over the latest convoy have been boosted in Germany by growing public anger at the decision by Angela Merkel's government to extend the life of the country's existing nuclear power plants for an extra 12 years The decision is a reversal of one of the policy achievements of the government of the former Social Democratic chancellor Gerhard Schröder the industrial conglomerate and leader in nuclear power Belgium and Holland to reprocess spent fuel from nuclear power plants which remains the property of the country that produced it; the waste is sent back after treatment The latest shipment of waste will arrive in the German town of Dannenberg tomorrow and be transported the final 12 miles by lorry to Gorleben to be dumped into underground shafts There are doubts about the safety of the storage following evidence of a high danger of groundwater contamination at the site said she expected the protest to be the biggest for years "This year's transport of nuclear waste will provoke more opposition than ever before It's time that people's concerns are finally listened to." she said Greenpeace has warned that the load contains even higher than normal levels of radioactive waste due to the fact that the rods were in use for longer than usual Police and politicians have called for the nuclear industry to foot the €50m (£43m) bill the security operation is expected to cost Areva said today: "All operations related to these transports and the equipment used comply with the relevant national and international regulations that have been issued with the involvement of representatives from member states." The company insists the waste containers have been designed to withstand a 50-metre fall on to concrete and a fire of 800C (1,472F) lasting 30 minutes called Greenpeace's action a smokescreen avoiding "the real issue of the rebirth of nuclear power throughout Europe" He said: "If we want to produce electricity all the time at a reduced price and without heating up the planet we cannot do without nuclear Renewable energies remain insufficient today This convoy is less radioactive than six similar transports carried out by Areva in the last few years We have nothing to hide." Greenpeace is suing Areva for what is says is "illegal storage of waste" at Valognes Anti-nuclear protesters said they were not aiming to hold up the convoy but highlight the failure of the nuclear industry to find long-term solutions to the waste it produces Every year about 7,000 cubic metres of waste are produced by the 143 nuclear reactors in the EU "It's like thinking up the idea of an aeroplane without thinking of where it's going to land," Rousselet said The radioactive by-products of nuclear fission were processed by heating the waste until the liquid evaporated and formed a powder which was then "vitrified" – fused with glass in a melting furnace The molten glass was then poured into stainless steel canisters left to cool and fitted with a welded cover are being carried in 11 train wagons made of forged steel or cast iron that have been used to transport nuclear waste between France and Germany since 1996 Another four carriages in the train are occupied by French CRS – armed riot police – ready to intervene in the event of security breaches Helicopters are flying over the train paying particular attention to bridges and possible obstacles on the railway line On arrival the estimated 308 canisters will be removed from their casks and buried into rock.