the speaker pro tempore: on this vote, the yeas are 224 and the nays are 194. the current resolution is adopted. without objection, the motion to reconsider is laid on the table. pursuant to clause 8 of rule 20, the unfinished business is the vote on the motion of the the gentlewoman from new york, ms. velazquez, to suspend the rules and pass h.r. 5078 as amended. on which the the yeas and nays are ordered. the clerk will report the title. the clerk: h.r. 5078, a bill toll amend the small business act to provide re-entry counseling and training services for incarcerated persons and now other purposes. the speaker pro tempore: will the house suspend the rules and pass the bill as amended. members will record their votes by electronic device. this is a five-minute vote. [captioning made possible by the national captioning institute, inc., in cooperation with the united states house of representatives. any use of the closed-captioned coverage of the house proceedings for poli
or listen with the c-span radio app. next, e-book tv exclusive. our city tour visits santa monica, california, to learn about the unique history and literary life. for eight years, we have traveled to u.s. cities bringing the book seen to our viewers. at can watch more c-span.org/citiestour. welcome to santa monica, california. with the help from our spectrum cable partners, for the next 90 minutes, we will explore this communities literary life. tourism and a growing technology sector are two of the drivers of this beachfront city. we will speak with local writers like pat morrison. santa monica was founded in 1875, even before the los angeles times. it is an important paper in telling the story of a part of los angeles that seemed to be so far away from the center of action that people did not know what was going on. santa monica and the evening outlook has been so important to telling the story of santa monica. begin our feature with local journalist saul rubin. he s
11-month spectacle that pitted o.j. s highly paid all star legal team, johnny cochran and the famous, if it don t fit, you must acquit line, against a floundering team of city prosecutors and a tarnished lapd. happening just two years after the l.a. riots and the acquittal of a group of white officers who were caught on camera beating up rodney king, he made a lasting if not so flattering impact on the city, the legal system and the news business. o.j. simpson dead today at the age of 76. joining us now, nbc news senior investigative legal correspondent cynthia mcfadden. she covered the trial. long time columnist for the los angeles time, pat morrison, she covered l.a. during the time and the civil trial, and cofounder of los angeles news service and one of the journalists who followed the bronco from the sky, marieka, who also happens to be my mom. why does this loom so large? part of it is people who were alive at the time participated. 95 million people watched televisio
in case we spoke too fast. how are you doing. i m pat morrison. i could ve said anybody could nine. you think of a good one and i ll be that for you. the environment of course as a topic that would take more than 50 mormons or any city. but i think a lot of it has to do with the kind of well that we have to deal with the problems that are at hand. if you look at it through rose colored glasses the environmental crisis can if we look at it in those terms be a moment for ourselves we have conquered nature in the past. we can heat the arctic. the question now is what we can do with what is confronting us and whether we are willing to do it. science has always come to our rescue in the past. we have vaccines that make people able to live to 80 who used it die at the age of 30. we made at the perry s in the deserts into agricultural fields and we made the urchins into our own fish ponds but if you remember the commercial from the 1970s nice it s not nice to fool mother nature. m
a novel. they have to be in the screenplay. we are at a time. thank you all for coming out. and thinks for waiting for us. [applause]. that was carl hudson and dave behr. the writers festival continues now with a panel the panel on the environment. with douglas brinkley. and theodore roosevelt the fourth. the great grandson to resident teddy roosevelt. in case we spoke too fast. how are you doing. i m pat morrison. i could ve said anybody could nine. you think of a good one and i ll be that for you. the environment of course as a topic that would take more than 50 mormons or any city. but i think a lot of it has to do with the kind of well that we have to deal with the problems that are at hand. if you look at it through rose colored glasses the environmental crisis can if we look at it in those terms be a moment for ourselves we have conquered nature in the past. we can heat the arctic. the question now is what we can do with what is confronting us and whether we are willing