IMPEACHMENT TRIAL LIVE: Senators ask final questions in Trump impeachment trial – 1/30/2020
President Donald Trump's impeachment trial resumes Thursday, with House managers and the president's defense team expected to field final questions from senators ahead of a crucial vote on whether to subpoena additional witnesses or documents.
» Subscribe to CNBC TV:
» Subscribe to CNBC:
» Subscribe to CNBC Classic:
Turn to CNBC TV for the latest stock market news and analysis. From market futures to live price updates CNBC is the leader in business news worldwide.
Connect with CNBC News Online
Get the latest news:
Follow CNBC on LinkedIn:
Follow CNBC News on Facebook:
Follow CNBC News on Twitter:
Follow CNBC News on Instagram:
#CNBC
#CNBC TV
IMPEACHMENT TRIAL LIVE: Senators ask final questions in President Trump's impeachment trial – 1/30/2020
Channel 11 News at Noon
The Channel 11 News Team presents the latest information on the events of the morning and timely updates on local sports, weather conditions and traffic issues. More Pittsburgh News: wpxi.com
Subscribe to WPXI:
Connect with WPXI online:
Download our FREE apps:
Impeachment of President Trump
Impeachment trial: Pres. Trump's legal team and House managers face last day of questioning ahead of pivotal vote on witnesses
U.S. House: Debate & Vote on Articles of Impeachment
The House Rules Committee debates and votes on two articles of impeachment against President Trump: abuse of power and obstruction of Congress.
Michigan Funeral Home Offers Drive-thru Viewings
A Michigan funeral home has installed a drive-thru window that allows mourners to pay their last respects on the go. (Oct. 17)
Subscribe for more Breaking News:
Get updates and more Breaking News here:
The Associated Press is the essential global news network, delivering fast, unbiased news from every corner of the world to all media platforms and formats.
AP’s commitment to independent, comprehensive journalism has deep roots. Founded in 1846, AP has covered all the major news events of the past 165 years, providing high-quality, informed reporting of everything from wars and elections to championship games and royal weddings. AP is the largest and most trusted source of independent news and information.
Today, AP employs the latest technology to collect and distribute content - we have daily uploads covering the latest and breaking news in the world of politics, sport and entertainment. Join us in a conversation about world events, the newsgathering process or whatever aspect of the news universe you find interesting or important. Subscribe:
Storm rolls in to Jefferson City
This wall cloud rolled in to the Jefferson City area around 5pm, Wednesday, October 1, 2014. It prompted tornado warnings in Boone and Cole counties. There were some reports of a funnel but as of 10 that night, no tornado touchdowns have been confirmed.
Vintage Otis Traction Elevator @ Missouri State Capital Parking Deck Jefferson City MO
(with TheElevatorChannel)
Well THIS is what that parking garage has :) also Jacob has wanted to see this for a long time. I got him in here to photograph it. Facebook:
Website:
Google+:
Flickr:
Twitter: DieselDucy Elevator Shirts and stuff!
Help support elevaTOURS!
#Elevator
#Lift CONNECT WITH ME!
Facebook:
Website:
Google+:
Flickr:
Instagram:
Twitter:
DieselDucy Elevator Shirts and stuff!
Help support elevaTOURS!
#Elevator
#Lift
Stately Images: The Public Art of Missouri's State Capitol
Stately Images: The Public Art of Missouri's State Capitol
Experience a sense of awe and art appreciation in this locally produced documentary by Ozarks Pubic Television, highlighting the impressive public art at Missouri's State Capitol. Today's center of state government is the third capitol building constructed in Jefferson City, the first two structures were destroyed by fire. In 1911 Missourians approved funding for the current capitol building and a design that would showcase cultural and state history. Available construction monies resulted in a one-of-a-kind and breathtaking collection of stained glass, murals, carvings and statuary that evocatively portrays Missouri's legendary and beloved history.
Proposed Hellen's Law could improve search efforts for the missing
The search continues for another missing woman with Alzheimer's in Jefferson County, MO. The family of Hellen Cook, who went missing in July and was found a month later near where she went missing. Her family is working on a law that would help speed up or enhance search efforts.
KRCG 13
For more information, visit
Like us on Facebook!
Follow us on Twitter:
(U.S) KILLED THE POWERFUL GENERAL????
(U.S) KILLED THE POWERFUL GENERAL????u.s killed the powerful general 6
7 u.s killed the powerful generalbreaking news today
breaking news near me
breaking news fox
breaking news chicago
breaking news las vegas
breaking news trump
breaking news cnn
breaking news san diego
breaking news nyc
breaking news los angeles
breaking news atlanta
breaking news app
breaking news austin
breaking news alabama
breaking news about trump
breaking news alert
breaking news az
breaking news around the world
breaking news articles
a breaking news blog contains
a breaking news english
a breaking news meaning
the breaking news in nigeria
the breaking news in kenya
the breaking news in kenya now
the breaking news of india
the breaking news in uganda
the breaking news in hindi
the breaking news pakistan
breaking news bay area
breaking news brooklyn
breaking news background
breaking news baltimore
breaking news bbc
breaking news bronx
breaking news boston ma
breaking news boise
breaking news bakersfield
b breaking news kannada
cardi b breaking news
hepatitis b breaking news
b.ed breaking news
mel b breaking news
b&q breaking news
b.c. breaking news
hep b breaking news
b tv breaking news
ads-b breaking news
breaking news charlotte
breaking news ct
breaking news charlotte nc
breaking news california
breaking news cowboys
breaking news columbus ohio
breaking news channel 5
breaking news colorado
c g breaking news in hindi
hep c breaking news
c span breaking news
c.g. breaking news
c.ronaldo breaking news
c n breaking news
nasty c breaking news
d.c. breaking news
breaking news dc
breaking news detroit
breaking news durham
breaking news dallas cowboys
breaking news death
breaking news donald trump
breaking news definition
breaking news daytona beach
breaking news d'banj
group d breaking news
group d breaking news in hindi
t&d breaking news
winky d breaking news
d'iberville breaking news
vitamin d breaking news
d'banj breaking news instrumental
world breaking news
breaking news english
breaking news el paso
breaking news earthquake
breaking news eden nc
breaking news esl
breaking news espn
breaking news everett wa
breaking news el cajon ca today
breaking news entertainment
breaking news eugene oregon
e breaking news jang
e breaking news in marathi
e breaking news in hindi
e breaking news today
e news breaking new
e news breaking bad
e.dunya breaking news
e-40 breaking news
e express breaking news
e online breaking news
breaking news fire
breaking news fresno
breaking news fort worth
breaking news france
breaking news for today
breaking news florida
breaking news fayetteville nc
breaking news font
breaking news fox 5
fox breaking news
fox breaking news chicago
fox breaking news mcdonald's hamburgers
fox breaking news boston
fox breaking news youtube
fox breaking news app
fox breaking news shooting
fox breaking news video
fox breaking news houston
fox breaking news san diego
breaking news gif
breaking news google
breaking news greenville sc
breaking news glendale az
breaking news graphic
breaking news gastonia nc
breaking news georgia
breaking news greensboro nc
breaking news gulfport ms
breaking news gwinnett county
honey g breaking news
p&g breaking news
pubg breaking news
gk breaking news
g e o breaking news
c.g bilaspur breaking news
breaking news hawaii
breaking news headlines today usa
breaking news hollywood fl
breaking news houston texas
breaking news headlines fox
breaking news honolulu
breaking news holland mi
breaking news hartford ct
breaking news haverhill ma
h.p breaking news
h metro breaking news
breaking news in australia
breaking news in florida
breaking news israel
breaking news iran
breaking news in yuba county
breaking news images
breaking news in spanish
breaking news in los angeles
breaking news in chicago
breaking news intro
i 24 breaking news
i news guyana breaking news
i'm a celebrity breaking news
breaking news jacksonville fl
breaking news joplin mo
breaking news jax
breaking news jackson ms
breaking news jersey city
breaking news jupiter
breaking news joe biden
breaking news jeannette pa
breaking news jackson tn
breaking news jefferson city mo
j&k breaking news
j&k breaking news in hindi
j&k breaking news today update hindi
j&k breaking news today
baby j breaking news
j&k breaking news now
juicy j breaking news
juicy j breaking news lyrics
baby j breaking news lyrics
j cole breaking news
breaking news kansas city
breaking news kissimmee today
breaking news katy tx
breaking news kelso wa
breaking news ktla
breaking news kenya
breaking news kalamazoo
breaking news kent wa
breaking news kittanning pa
breaking news kingman az
k electric breaking news
u k breaking news today
kfm breaking news
k rock breaking news
breaking news live
breaking news local
breaking news lincoln ne
breaking news long beach
breaking news london
breaking news lakeland fl
breaking news logo
breaking news lyrics
l&t breaking news
l'express breaking news
l a times breaking news
n.f.l. breaking news and rumors
breaking news in epl
l f c breaking
Alabama
Visit Alabama! Learn about this state and its history - with a focus on the civil rights struggle - in the latest addition to our video series about the U.S. states; presented by Jennifer Hall Godfrey, Public Affairs Officer at the U.S. Mission to International Organizations in Austria. #50states #AL
Transcript:
Hello. I'm Jennifer Hall Godfrey, the Public Affairs Officer at the United States Mission to International Organizations in Vienna, Austria. I'm happy to introduce you to the state of Alabama.
Like many of our states, the name Alabama comes from the name of a local Native American tribe. It is a beautiful state. Peach and pecan trees, and blackberry bushes, grow wild in Alabama's fields of rich soil and red clay. The state's chicken, cattle, cotton, and soybean farms provide work for many. Hunting and fishing are popular pastimes, and Alabama's coastline along the Gulf of Mexico has beautiful sandy beaches and emerald waters, making it a popular vacation spot.
Alabama has a significant history in the United States Civil War. During that war, Alabama was one of the original seven states of the Deep South to secede from the Union. Montgomery became the capital of the Confederate States of America, and Jefferson Davis, the Confederate president, resided there.
Long after the South lost the Civil War, racial tensions remained high in the United States, into the mid-20th century, including in Alabama. In 1955, an African American woman named Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus to a white passenger. This act of civil disobedience was the spark for what became known as the Montgomery Bus Boycott, during which African Americans refused to ride public buses. The boycott lasted more than a year and hurt the city transit system financially. It ended in 1956, when the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the decision of a Montgomery federal court to strike Alabama's bus segregation laws.
A pastor at a Montgomery church, Martin Luther King, Jr., was a leader in the boycott. He went on, of course, to play a prominent role in the civil rights movement. The attention he brought to segregation, including his famous I Have a Dream speech, lead to the Civil Rights Act of 1964. This act outlawed major forms of discrimination against African Americans and women.
Even so, many African American voters were still unable to register to vote. In 1965, Dr. King led a march in Alabama from Selma to Montgomery to draw attention to the issue. Alabama state police held the marchers back at Selma, using whips, night sticks, and tear gas. The TV coverage of the violence outraged many Americans, and President Lyndon Johnson sent U.S. army troops and the Alabama National Guard to protect the protestors. The 2,000 men and women participating in the march were joined in Montgomery by 50,000 supporters gathered at the capitol to hear King speak. No tide of racism can stop us, he said.
As a result of the march, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, which banned literacy tests and other requirements that had been used to prevent African Americans from voting. While Alabama's motto -- We Dare Defend Our Rights -- was chosen before the civil rights movement reached its apex, it became all the more meaningful for Alabama because of the civil rights movement.
Alabama today is home to a diverse population of almost 5 million with a wide variety of interests. The Alabama Shakespeare Festival is one of the largest in the world, with more than 400 performances a year.
Montgomery's Museum of Fine Arts houses paintings by Zelda Fitzgerald, who grew up in Montgomery. Huntsville is home to the U.S. Space and Rocket Center and the visitor center for NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.
Tuskegee hosts the Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site, the training facility for the first African American military aviators in the United States armed forces. And Monroeville is the birthplace of two great 20th-century American authors, Truman Capote and Harper Lee. Every year Monroeville hosts a performance of To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee's Southern Gothic classic story.
In Alabama you can visit Mobile, the birthplace of baseball great Hank Aaron. Or take in an American football game and enjoy the historic competition between Alabama's two biggest universities, the University of Alabama and Auburn University.
In Alabama's largest city, Birmingham, you can visit Vulcan, the largest cast iron statue in the world, which honors the city's history in the iron and steel industry. Birmingham is also home to the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame, where you can learn about legendary jazz greats with Alabama ties, including Nat King Cole, Duke Ellington, Lionel Hampton, and Erskine Hawkins.
I hope you've enjoyed learning a little bit about Alabama. From history to sports, science and technology to the arts, farming to fishing on the Gulf Shores, Alabama is a remarkable state.
Janesville, WI State of the City 2019
Janesville City Manager Mark Freitag details accomplishments of 2018 and goals & plans for 2019 at the State of the City Address at City Hall on January 31, 2019. Recorded by JATV Media Services.
B and E
Short spring ride on highways B and E in St. Clair County MO 3/29/15
Walkers Gap - Route 31 - Blount County, Alabama
Zig Zag.
Detective describes chilling confession from man on death row
Original Air Date: 11/20/13
JOHNSTOWN, Pa. -- There are new details about a series of murders that happened decades ago as the man at the center of the case awaits his execution. Joseph Paul Franklin was set to be put to death in a Missouri prison at 12:01 Wednesday morning, but late Tuesday afternoon a federal judge granted him a stay of execution.Franklin is accused of killing at least 20 people across the country in the late '70s, including an interracial couple in Johnstown in 1980. It's a case local authorities couldn't prove for nearly 18 years, until Franklin, himself, confessed. Franklin recently sat down with CNN and explained the reason behind his three-year murder spree. He said his mission was to try and get a race war started. A self-proclaimed white supremacist, Franklin is accused of targeting dozens of Jews, blacks and any whites associated with them. He was a sniper, who carried his rifle in a guitar case, gunning down his victims in cities across the country. His most notorious case was the shooting that paralyzed Larry Flynt, the publisher and founder of Hustler magazine. Franklin said he shot Flynt twice because his magazine featured an interracial couple.Franklin's arrest didn't come until 1980, after authorities believe he had already killed at least 20 people, including a young, interracial couple in Johnstown. On June 15, 1980, Arthur Smothers, 22, and Kathleen Mikula, 16, were walking along the Washington Street bridge in Johnstown, when someone shot them from the hillside. At the time, police believed Franklin was behind the murder. They said it fit his profile and they were even able to place him in the city. Our investigation has established the fact that this individual was in our area and this has been learned from a witness, Johnstown Public Safety Director William Tomallo said in an interview with 6 News in 1980. He was always a person of interest in this case, former Johnstown Detective Jeannine Grech said Tuesday. They just did not have the technology or the capability then as to what we have now.The shooting happened long before Grech came on board, but she was there in the Tennessee prison with Franklin in 1998 when he confessed to the murder. He noticed the hillside and he thought it would be a good location to do what he describes as his hunting, said Grech. He stayed here long enough and he completed what he wanted to do and when he did, he left. Grech said the Cambria County District Attorney's Office received a call from the prison saying Franklin wanted to talk. Because he would only speak with women, then-Assistant District Attorney Kelly Callihan and Grech were chosen to go.They flew us down and they were only giving us a time limit of three days to get a confession or statement from him, said Grech. Grech said it took all three days before Franklin laid it all out. She said he recalled the day in detail and even illustrated how he got away after the shooting. When he drew that map, I knew without a shadow of a doubt that he definitely was the killer, said Grech. Upon the completion of the interview, he wanted to shake our hands, which we did, and the eerie, cold, clammy feeling that you had when you shook his hand is something that you just never forget.Franklin was never charged with the double murder, mainly because he was already on three death rows and serving several life sentences. I think he wanted to confess for notoriety, not because he was remorseful in any way, shape or form, said Grech.. Grech also recalled talking with the victims' families after that interview, now 15 years ago. She said they understood and were relieved to have some closure. If Franklin's execution ever goes through, Grech said, justice will be served, but said she still feels for all his victims' families, who have to live with what happened every day.
Jahmal Cole: Exposure Is Key: Solving Violence In Chicago By Exposing [...] | Talks at Google
Jahmal Cole stops by Google Chicago to discuss his new book, Exposure Is Key: Solving Violence In Chicago By Exposing Teens To Opportunities.
Named as one of Huffington Post’s 15 Inspiring Chicagoans, Cole is passionate about creating opportunities for disadvantaged teenagers. My Block, My Hood, My City provides underprivileged youth with an awareness of the world and opportunities beyond their immediate neighborhoods, taking students on explorations focused on STEM, Arts & Culture, Citizenry & Volunteerism, Health, Community Development, Culinary Arts, and Entrepreneurism.
Learn more at
Get the book here:
Moderated by Jen Wesley.
ISIL In Iraq Lecture: Fundamentalist Takeover or Urban Ethnic Revolt?”
Middle East expert Juan Ricardo Cole speaks on “ISIL in Iraq: Fundamentalist Takeover or Urban Ethnic Revolt?”
Juan Ricardo Cole
Cole, the Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan, is a public intellectual and prominent blogger for Informed Comment at juancole.com.
“We are excited and honored to have Professor Cole speak about ISIL at CSULB,” said Houri Berberian, a professor in CSULB’s department of history and director of Middle Eastern studies. “He is one of the leading experts on the contemporary and historical Middle East and will provide perspective and context to help us understand the current situation unfolding in the region.”
Cole, who became interested in Islam and Arabic while a teenager living in Eritrea when his father was stationed there in the military, has been a regular guest on “PBS NewsHour.” He has also appeared on “ABC Nightly News,” “Nightline,” “The Today Show,” “Charlie Rose,” “Anderson Cooper 360,” “Countdown with Keith Olbermann,” “Rachel Maddow,” “The Colbert Report” and “Democracy Now!,” along with many others. In addition, he has given many radio and press interviews.
He has written widely about Egypt, Iran, Iraq and South Asia, and has commented extensively on al-Qaeda and the Taliban, the Iraq War, the politics of Pakistan and Afghanistan, and Iranian domestic struggles and foreign affairs.
Cole has a regular column at Truthdig.com and continues to study and write about contemporary Islamic movements, whether mainstream or radical, whether Sunni and Salafi or Shia. Cole’s command of Arabic, Persian, and Urdu and familiarity with Turkish as well as having lived in the region for almost 10 years and continuing to travel there allow him extraordinary access and insight to both the Middle East and South Asia.
Cole was awarded Fulbright-Hays fellowships to India in 1982 and to Egypt in 1985. In 1991, he held a National Endowment for the Humanities grant for the study of Shia Islam in Iran and from 1999-2004 was the editor of The International Journal of Middle East Studies. He has served in professional offices for the American Institute of Iranian Studies and on the editorial board of the journal Iranian Studies. He was elected president of the Middle East Studies Association of North America in November 2004, and in 2006 he received the James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism administered by Hunter College.
For three decades, Cole has sought to put the relationship of the West and the Muslim world in historical context. His most recent work is “The New Arabs: How the Millennial Generation is Changing the Middle East.” He is also author of “Engaging the Muslim World” and “Napoleon’s Egypt: Invading the Middle East.”
The event is organized by the Middle Eastern Studies Program with assistance from the Department of History and History Students’ Association, and is sponsored by the Office of the Provost and College of Liberal Arts.
Jesse James in Kentucky | Kentucky Life | KET
Russellville was recovering from the Civil War when an old Confederate guerrilla gang from Missouri that was up to no good made its way to town one day in 1868. Among the men, many believe, was the infamous Jesse James (1847-1882).
The gang robbed the Nimrod Long Banking Co. of Russellville on March 20, 1868. The bank president, Mr. Long himself, was shot and wounded. Jesse James later denied being there. However, it is certain that Jesse knew Kentucky well. His father, a minister, was born in Logan County, and his aunt lived in Adairville, providing him a convenient Kentucky hideout.
Jesse's gang hit a Kentucky bank again on April 29, 1872, when they robbed the Deposit Bank of Columbia, and killed an unarmed cashier. On Sept. 3, 1880, they held up a stagecoach on the road from Mammoth Cave to Cave City.
The years went by in a blur of bank and train robberies as the outlaw's legend grew. It all ended for Jesse James in 1882, when he was shot in the back of the head in his own home in St. Joseph, Missouri, by a trusted ally who wanted to collect bounty money.
The Russellville bank robbery is re-enacted every year at the Logan County Tobacco and Heritage Festival. The Adairville home where Jesse hid out with his aunt's family still stands today.
Haunted Places in Alabama
Birmingham, Montgomery, Huntsville, and more! Check out the top 10 most haunted places in Alabama! From creepy cemeteries to scary castles, ghosts, poltergeists, and more!
Music:
Ghost Story by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
Photos:
Redmont Hotel Nov 2011 02 by Chris Pruitt ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
Redmont Hotel Nov 2011 01 by Chris Pruitt ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
Sturdivant Hall 001 by Carol M. Highsmith ( is in the Public Domain
Sturdivant Hall Selma by Altairisfar ( is in the public domain
Moundville Archaeological Site Alabama by Altairisfar ( is in the public domain
Moundville Archaeological Park 04 by Jeffrey Reed ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (
Le porte-avion USS Alabama, Battleship Memorial Park, Mobile, Alabama by Nicolas Chadeville ( is licensed under CC BY 4.0 (
USS Alabama by Rennett Stowe ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
Harrison-plaza by Burkeanwhig ( is in the Public Domain
FortMorgan02 by Bob Webster ( is licensed under CC BY 3.0 (
Fort Morgan by Altairisfar ( is in the Public Domain
Forks of Cypress by Alex Bush is in the Public Domain
Forks of Cypress Ruins by Highsmith 02 by Carol M. Highsmith ( is in the Public Domain
Gaineswood by Highsmith 001 by Carol M. Highsmith ( is in the Public Domain
Gaineswood by Highsmith 005 by Carol M. Highsmith ( is in the Public Domain
Sloss Furnace, night fog by Robert S. Donovan ( is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (
Sloss Furnaces by Lahti13 ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
Ladder and window at Sloss Furnaces, image by Marjorie Kaufman by MiltonPoint ( is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 (
News Now Stream 7/4/19 (FNN)
Sharing a mix of breaking news, Arizona stories, engaging discussions, and popular culture.