That produced the capstone pavilion to an incredible accomplishment that really took an Incredible Team to bring it about and to kind of lead us through that. You know, weve assembled an amazing panel. You know, of course, we have dr. Nick mueller nick mueller, the president and ceo emeritus of the National World war two museum. Cofounder the museum, along with Stephen Ambrose. And as those who were here for the Previous Panels know, you know, clearly, you know, the tour de force, the great ideas that have driven this place forward, but also will drive it into the future. And then joining us to nicks left, as youre right, erin clancey aaron is our director of Curatorial Services here at the National World war two museum. Shes been a museum team member since 2017, and as such, is responsible for the care and management of the museums incredible artifact. Archival oral histories and digital collections. And i think were, you know, quarter of a million artifacts. Imagine. How do you even
The session is creating liberation pavilion, the culmination of over three decades of planning great ideas that produced the capstone pavilion to an incredible accomplishment that really took an Incredible Team to bring it about and to kind of lead us through that. You know, weve assembled an amazing panel. You know, of course, we have dr. Nick mueller nick mueller, the president and ceo emeritus of the National World war two museum. Cofounder the museum, along with Stephen Ambrose. And as those who were here for the Previous Panels know, you know, clearly, you know, the tour de force, the great ideas that have driven this place forward, but also will drive it into the future. And then joining us to nicks left, as youre right, erin clancey aaron is our director of Curatorial Services here at the National World war two museum. Shes been a museum team member since 2017, and as such, is responsible for the care and management of the museums incredible artifact. Archival oral histories and
just about at the top of the hour, the end of another historic day and another historic first for donald trump. mere weeks after becoming the first former president charged on state felony offenses, he s now also the first to be charged with the federal kind, specifically 37 counts connected to retaining, mishandling, moving, concealing government documents, some of them highly classified. the indictment also details allegations of two occasions he shared highly sensitive material with people not cleared to see it. he s also accused of hiding documents from his own attorneys and conspiring to obstruct government efforts to get them back. just a short time ago we got our first read on how long the government expects it will take to make its case in court against donald trump according to a court document filed along with the document, the estimate that jack smith, the special counsel s team is making, is 21 business days. that s about a month. that does not include how long
grabs, dysfunction and this is not a partisan criticism. understand this, it s embarrassing, it s dysfunctional. it s dangerous, it s stupid. those are the word that is republicans have used. 11 rounds of voting and we still don t have a house speaker. as the deadlock enters a fourth day we have new reporting about another potential deal in the works that just might give kevin mccarthy the gavel. plus, we get the latest from the war in ukraine as russia calls for a brief cease-fire to observe the orthodox christmas holiday. ukrainians leaders are dismissing the idea. some good news, damar hamlin is showing improvement after collapsing on the field during monday night football. the buffalo bills safety is alert and responding to commands. we ll show you what his doctors are saying. good morning, and welcome to way too early. i m jonathan lemire on this friday, january 6th. it is, of course, the second anniversary of one of the darkest days in our nation s history and we wi
but he s not going to do the deal, not on this roll call. maybe not today. chris jansing, my colleague is going to take over this roll call. watch with steve kornacki. this has been an extraordinary day already. we have another flip here. we knew it was going to be historic. steve kornacki, what did we just seethe? i want to go back to steve. what are we looking at? mary miller from illinois, another one of the holdouts, she also flipping over and voting for mccarthy. that means there have been 13 folk who is have voted against mccarthy previously and now 7 of those 13 have flipped over. so he s actually of the votes cast by previous mccarthy opponents in this roll majority over. he s gotten more than half of them. 7 of the 13 have flipped over. paul gosar will vote at the end. he has seemed pretty dug in, but we ll see what happens there. the next name to come on the list is ralph norman. we re about 15 names away from him. very rapid fire after that. scott perry, chair