Heres a live look outside as we track the rain. You can see a mix of rain and clouds on the ben franklin bridge in philadelphia. In new jersey, its not the best beach day along the shore. The sand looks pretty barren. Delaware isnt escaping the rain either. This is a soggy look over interstate 95 in wilmington. Although the sun seems to be peeking out. The first alert radar shows there is still a lot of rain left to move through. We have Live Team Coverage in the first alert weather center. Our meteorologists are tracking the rain and potential for flooding. We begin with first alert chief meteorologist glenn hurricane schwartz who is tracking the rain for us. Very active radar, glenn. There are a lot of colors back there, yellow and red indicating the heaviest rain. One thing you dont see very often, you can see the spin in the radar echoes here. This is really heavy rain headed right into the philadelphia area. Theres a lull now but its not going to last. We have more heavy rain comi
Danger. Nightly news begins now. From nbc news World Headquarters in new york, this is nbc nightly news. Reporting tonight, Thomas Roberts. Good evening. We begin tonight with a new campaign confession from Hillary Clinton concerning her private server, and emails during her time as secretary of state. Were learning tonight the clintons paid a state Department Staffer with their own money to oversee her personal email system during her cabinet level tenure. That staffer was the same aide who invoked his fifth amendment rights and refused to testify before the House Benghazi Committee. Today clinton discussed this new detail on the trail in 2345678 nasp where at the same time she picked up a much coveted endorse. Kelly odonnell is in the Granite State with more. Reporter today there were two tracks. Out in public facing voters, clinton made i fiery appeal to women and organized labor, key parts of her base. With reporters she again answered questions about the fallout of her handling ov
This is al jazeera ah hello. Hello robin, youre watching the al jazeera news. I liked my headquarters here in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. Ah, protested storm parliament, but to pro radian politicians in iraq stone firm behind that choice for Prime Minister. Also north Korean Leader kim jong warns and hes ready to use Nuclear Weapons as a conflict with the u. S. And south korea. And russia says its talking with the us, but theres still no deal yet on the exchange of high profile prisoners. And more than 300 people dead and hundreds of kilometers of roads washed away by heavy flooding in pakistan over the past month. Im jeff nash with sports paul papa is a made to doubt the wildcat encounter. And when it in 2018 the france midfielder faces possible treatment on a knee injury back a. Keep them out until next year for details later. The sam ah welcome to the news are we start in iraq where the main pro iranian parliamentary block says it will go ahead with the nomination of moh
Putting them in danger. Nightly news begins now. From nbc news World Headquarters in new york, this is nbc nightly news. Reporting tonight, Thomas Roberts. Good evening. We begin tonight with a new campaign confession from Hillary Clinton concerning her private server, and emails during her time as secretary of state. Were learning tonight the clintons paid a state Department Staffer with their own money to oversee her personal email system during her cabinet level tenure. That staffer was the same aide who invoked his fifth amendment rights and refused to testify before the House Benghazi Committee. Today clinton discussed this new detail on the trail in 2345678 nasp where at the same time she picked up a much coveted endorse. Kelly odonnell is in the Granite State with more. Reporter today there were two tracks. Out in public facing voters, clinton made i fiery appeal to women and organized labor, key parts of her base. With reporters she again answered questions about the fallout of
Lecture Organized by Jeff Nash on behalf of Bedford Hospital Charities and Friends And W H Allen's Engineering Association with the help of Bedford Museum's historian Lydia.