And its Security Forces and overstepped the mob promising to punish those guilty of abuse. The white houses ukraine expert has testified that he felt a sense of duty to flag up a phone call thats at the center of impeachment proceedings against donald trump thats an account of alexander than men was among 4 people questioned on tuesday the trumpet ministration has dismissed their testimonies as personal opinion and conjecture alan fischer reports from washington. This could be a pivotal week in the donald trump impeachment hearings many of the shuttle to give evidence were on the controversial july call with the ukrainian president that kills a key claim the hearings are based on secondhand reports giving evidence of tenet colonel alexander vigilant a career army officer and the ukraine expert on the National Security council he was concerned by the call by President Trump pushing for an investigation into Democrat Joe Biden and his son immediately took those concerns to a white house
Way that he has some other topics well be looking at today. We look at why being a ranger exults a dangerous profession. We also see how a briefing that no wage and all related almost 1st stop them from inc. And find out how the plant waste is being put to use in the mud augusta. Being a ranger come be a dangerous job some 100. 00 wildlife guardians lose their lives each year in their line of duty many of them in east and Central Africa well accidents account for about 50 percent of those fatalities porches were responsible for the other half we went to months on forced National Park here in uganda to meet julius or one now the warden in charge of Law Enforcement there he has been confronting these day in day out for more than 20 years. In the morning roll call julius of warner tells his men that poachers have set traps during the night to capture animals. They have to move fast to save the animals lives. After covering a few kilometers and foot with his men. But as the rangers combed
It is with great sorrow that we announce the death of Lois Hains, who passed away peacefully on Wednesday, July 13th, in hospice care at Diamond Willow in Alexandria at the age of 102. Previously she lived in independent care at Grand Arbor in Alexandria for 10 years, and it was there that she suffered a severe stroke on Thursday, July 7th. We are grateful for the care and assistance of the staff at Grand Arbor for these past 10 years; for the help provided by care givers at Alternative Senior Care over the past year; and for the caring support and assistance of the staff at Diamond Willow and those of Douglas County Hospice over her final days. Lois is survived by her sons, Ronald (Suzanne) and Kendall; grandchildren, Alexander (Jennifer) and Kristen (Michael); and great-grandchildren, Joshua and Nicholas. She was preceded in death by her loving husband (of 76 years) Leonard, her parents, eight siblings, and a son, Charles, who died in infancy. In Lois’s 10 years at Grand Arbor, she