tv To Be Announced CNN June 4, 2011 4:00pm-4:30pm PDT
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>> monday night, the cnn republican presidential debate in new hampshire, mark your calenda calendars. monday night, june 13th. thanks for joining us. join us weekdays in "the situation room" from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. eastern. every saturday at 6:00 p.m. every weekend here on cnn international. the news continues here next. >> right now on cnn -- >> protests in yemen injuries the president sending him to saudi arabia for treatment. >> thank you very much. wow. >> he's back. that's donald trump joining other stars at the freedom forum in d.c. he brought down the house, but was any new ground broken?
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>> it was just excruciating pain. >> let me ask the question everybody is thinking. what were you thinking? >> that is a good question. for this magician whose stunt went a wry at a stunt race. i want you to check this out. this is the aids memorial quilt and this weekend marks the anniversary of the cases of aids. we will talk about this and also talk to an hiv positive woman who lost her mom and son to the disease. you don't want to miss that. i'm don lemon in atlanta. there is a lot of news so let's get you caught up. we will begin in syria where protesters merch marched to demand the end to the killing by security forces this is the response they got. this is what witnesses are saying that troops shot into the crowd in the city on friday. it's not clear how many died,
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but human rights groups put the toll at 80. that's not silencing the protest. there had been more violent clashes even today. a ve leiolent attack drove the president of yemen out of his country. he arrived in saudi arabia for medical treatment. he is taking over in his absence. mohammed is following from our bureau. >> it was another chaotic day as protesters gathered and violence continues and speculation grew as to where the country's president was. tens of thousands of demonstrators congregated on saturday, continuing to demand the ouster of yemen's embattled president. according to eyewitnesss, massive crowds of anti-government protesters poured out on the streets as explosions echoed and clashes
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continue between forces and the tribal factions they are battling. amid the backdrop, confusion reigned when it came to the location of yemen's president who was injured when his presidential palace was shelved. by late saturday, they told cnn that they arrived and he was being taken to a saudi hospital for treatment. yemeni officials continued to say he was being treated in yemen. meanwhile, yemen's deputy minster said yemen's vice president would take on the responsibilities that the president had starting saturday night. >> meantime a militant group said the men described as al qaeda's military brain is dead. he was reportedly killed by a drone air strike friday night in pakistan. officials in both pakistan and the usa may have not been able to confirm his death. he has been described as one of the most dangerous men in the world and a top planner of major
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al qaeda attacks. there is word that long time diplomat lawrence eagle burger has died. he is the officer to rise to the post of secretary of state and served american presidents going all the way back to richard nixon. his career included the first gulf war. he served as secretary of state in the final months of the george h.w. bush administration. he was called a tireless and dedicated patriot. dead at the age of 80. let's go to the weather and our country continues to be in the headlines. this time it's fires and flood causing so much anxiety. jacky is here with us. arizona is seeing some of the worst wildfires in history. >> one of the largest is in eastern parts of arizona and that continues to rage at this hour. check out the pictures that consumed 140,000 acres and that
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makes it the third largest wildfire in arizona history. 2500 people have been evacuate and this is continuing to grow. dry weather and extreme heat along with gusty winds making conditions worse. smoke is visible in albuquerque, new mexico. let's move on to the floods and that's where 180 mile an hour stretch from sioux city along the missouri river where a record release of water is expected in the coming days and weeks ahead. hundreds people had to evacuate and many small towns are expected to be flood. these waters should stay high through the month of july. june 1st is the start of hurricane season and we are tracking continues in the tropics look at the map and the cluster of thunderstorms. the western caribbean has a medium chance this could be the first tropical depression in the next 24 to 48 hours.
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it will be slow to move. >> thank you very much. isn't it humbling having that in the studio? >> it's very impressive. >> beautiful. this marks the 30th anniversary since the first case of hiv and aids is reported. it affected tens of millions of people and the memory of many of those who have died live on through the aids memorial quilt. right here, we will talk to the executive director and a quilt maker coming up next. many of you have been sending us questions and asking for information through social media. you can can reach out to us on facebook and cnn.com and on four square.com also. bl one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands. this resource has the ability to create hundreds of thousands of jobs. at our kearl project in canada, we'll be able to produce these oil sands
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try capzasin-hp. it penetrates deep to block pain signals for hours of relief. capzasin-hp. take the pain out of arthritis. i'm trying to understand why nobody wants to hear that we are dying. why nobody wants to help. why my own brother doesn't want to help. >> that was the scene from the acclaimed broadway play back 30 years ago when the first aids cases started to show up. the play is written by larry cramer, the original aids activist and founder of act up. it's one of the ways he is marketing and the 30th anniversary with the cases of hiv and aids. that was on june 5th, 1981.
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other cases followed and by 1982, it had a name. we are talking about aids. aids and hiv infect more than 30 million people in the world and of the million who is died, many are remembered and many of these are called the aids memorial quilt. this is one of them. this is the executive director of the aids foundation. thank you very much for joining us. it's an important anniversary and we want more progress. how has this helped? the fight against hiv and aids and awareness. >> i think the quilt in the original founding was a place where people could come to mourn and to heal and it gathered the community together outside the gay community and mobilized the kind of action through artistic expression. it's transformed into one of the most compelling pieces of
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prevention, education that we have. >> me about this piece of the quilt. >> i think why we selected this one was for several reasons. mainly hiv and aids affected middle america, southern america, the globe with this particular piece. this woman was a nurse. >> helen margaret. >> her children are here which we can't see, but these are the children. we see not only the care giver, but we see where she gave care. >> the panel is made for my sister helen, an intensive care nurse. daniel and amanda. aids took everything from helen. she lost everything. it's not just amen. people used to think it's everyone. >> it is everyone. i think the reality is that we are each other's keepers. what the quilt it is is demonstrates that this is a
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disease that is not just my personal disease, but everyone's and my response affects everyone else's response. >> me about these. you made six panels and you brought a couple. you are hiv positive and you are a grandmother and your mom and son both died from complications of the disease. >> yes. what i do when i make the panels, i make them so in the statistics where we hear about it's 30 million people every day or whatever, each panel represents a person. i make the quilt so that we will know it's not just a number. this was a person in my life that i loved. >> someone that you loved. >> yes. >> let's take a look at this one. >> this is a brother and a sister. this is my mom and my uncle.
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this shows pictures of when they were kids. they have grown up. >> you seem like you get emotional when you talk about it. >> do i because not only is it putting a face to the number, but it's also a healing process. what we have to do is we have to get away from the fear and the stigma that keeps us from talking about hiv. that's what continues to keep it rampant in the communities. it's such a shush thing and we have to talk about it. >> i'm glad you said that. there thousands of panels. did you ever get all of these panels together again? >> we would love to. i think it's the most asked question. when will you bring the entire quilt back to d.c.? the truth is, at 25 years old, next year the quilt will be 25 years old, we have to look at
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care of the quilt and how the quilt goes out and travels and really what it does to break down this barrier of stigma. >> what's the website where people help with the resources? >> aids quilt.org. >> thank you. these are beautiful. thank you so much. god bless you. >> god bless you too. >> appreciate it. much more coming up here on cnn. a gathering of christian conservatives with a big draw for almost every presidential candidate. up next, see how the faith and freedom coalition is a chance to attract new supporters. first i want to tell you about this. bill gates calls the start of the revolution. it provides more than 2,000 video tutorials from calculus to chemistry for free. steve perry introduces us to the pioneer and enjoys behind the videos in today's perry's pri e
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principl principles. >> in a small office in silicon valley, they are using illustrations and lingo to explain math, science, history, and even business concepts. >> if this does not blow your mind, then you have no emotion. >> the 10 to 20-minute tutorial are free to anyone, anywhere. >> you opened up the world of learning. >> the best way to get to the core of most issues whether it's poverty, health care and whatever, it's democracy and making sure you have an educated population. >> you have 31. >> he used it as a tool to home school his children. >> what i like about it is you can work at your own pace. they can rewind it and watch them open it. >> you have to matchup all the material before moving on. with only hints to help you. >> if you are struggling and you don't get it, you take the test
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and you get a c on the test. >> you can't move on with a c here. >> that's right. >> he uses videos in math class. the software tracks each student's progress. >> it allows the teacher to know their students very well and know their strengths and weaknesses. >> it's a nonprofit, but it's backed by bill gates and google. >> you are doing this for free. what is it? >> if they had a new for profit, it would limit the number of kids. >> hopefully when i'm 80, i can say there is a billion kids and maybe we will continue to use it. >> steve perry. [ male announcer ] to the 5:00 a.m. scholar.
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it will be a deficit of the heart and of the soul. >> that is former utah governor john huntsman, sounding a common theme at this weekend's gathering of conservative activists. it's called the faith and freedom coalition and a chance to quote right-leaning activists from around the country. the producer shannon travis is there. every republican you have been thinking about, what's the goal here? >> you almost have to come to events like this. a committed grass root committed activist they want to test out the candidates and see what the messages are. see what the appeal is. i was out in the hall way a few moments ago. he was about to speak within moments.
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and they wanted to seek support. this conference is a way for economic conservatives to come together with cultural conservatives and a way to say hey, we need to forge ties and you want to be the democrats of president obama. >> i have to ask you about donald trump. i thought he quit the white house race. he said i'm not going to run. i have been seeing him on television everywhere and appearances. he showed up and got a great reception. >> you can never be too sure about donald trump. you are absolutely right. a few weeks ago, he said hey, i'm not going to get into the presidential race after flirting yet again. i was here for the speech. he got a rousing ovation from a lot of people and rambled through a lot of thoughts and ideas. a lot of it with a lot of red meat to the activists that are here. i don't know if he is flirting with it, but he hasn't closed
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the door on jumping in at some point in the future. some words he made are raising people's eyebrows. i don't know if we can say we heard the last of it yet. >> mike huckabee is not going to run? appreciate it. testimony in the casey anthony murder trial sound like something out of the show csi. she is charged with killing her 2-year-old daughter in 2008. how a hair is at the center of the prosecution's case. first, i want to tell you about a special show coming up sunday night. it's a gps special on how innovation is needed to get our economy moving. one aspect is governmental innovation. we will highlight a team of scientists that has a history of success. they are providing technology for soldiers in combat to create the best technology in the world. >> they're simply must work and
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all of the situations and death. that kind of urgency focuses on the mind and inspires greater genes. >> most recently they funded the first version of the internet. in 1969, computer hubs called nodes were able to send messages over a phone line. >> the original investment is $150 million. that gave birth to the internet and about $300 billion later. >> these days he is working on exciting innovations including a groundbreaking project in robotics to create a robot with animal-like capacities with strength that can go on combat missions in rough terrain. >> when you watch the big dog video, it looks like a dog. moving. it has all sorts of attributes that make it resilient and difficult in environments.
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>> much, much more on this and the gps special, restoring the american dream and how to innovate. sunday night at 8:00 p.m. eastern. ttd# 1-800-345-2550 ttd# 1-800-345-2550 ttd# 1-800-345-2550 ttd# 1-800-345-2550 and talk to chuck about ttd# 1-800-345-2550 rolling over that old 401k. i've been looking at the numbers, and i think our campus is spending too much money on printing. i'd like to put you in charge of cutting costs. calm down. i know that it is not your job. what i'm saying... excuse me?
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you are the one in control. >> please. i completely -- >> i'm not trying to get you ups upset. >> i am upset now. i am completely upset. the media is going to have a frickin field day with this. >> the casey anthony trial wrapped up the tenth day. she is charged with killing her 2-year-old daughter, caylee, in 2008. testimony focused on hair recovered from the anthony car.
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where did it come from? likely from a decomposing body. the defense attorney called the testimony unreliable opinions. make sure you join us for a one-hour special report on the trial coming up tonight at 10:00 p.m. eastern on cnn. let's get you caught up on the top stories. the man often described as al qaeda's military brain is dead. that's the word from a militant group in pakistan. he reportedly was kill by a drone air strike friday night in pakistan. the governments said they have not been able to confirm that report. he has been described as one of the most dangerous men in the world. as violent and protests in parts of yemen, the country's president is now in neighboring saudi arabia. the president is being treated for injury he suffered when his
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presidential palace was shelled on saturday. in the capital, they have tentatively agreed to a ceasefire. multiple wildfires pushed 250,000 acres across the state of arizona. the largest is in the east central part of the state. more than 1,000 people are battling the blaze and so far no containment. 2500 people have been evacuated. smoke and ash are reaching albuquerque 200 miles away. the man called dr. death was asked about how he viewed his own death. now the world is reflecting on the life of jack kevorkian. he was known for helping more than 130 people kill themselves to end their pain. his views on death was controversial. >> what crime has this child committed that
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