tv The Sixties CNN August 1, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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forward with their mission to try to denude the entire area of tunnels. >> appreciate the update. that does it for this edition of that does it for this edition of 360, "the sixties" starts now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com something is going to happen that change is on the way. >> we can change america, we can change the world. >> what we need now subpoena a reconciliation in this land. >> there is not anything wrong with you that a good haircut wouldn't cure. >> this election year of 1968 touched the emotions and the logic as never before. >> i think we have a little too much violence in this country. >> we grew up together and we go down together. >> we have that love and understanding for our fellow citizens. we will have a new america and i
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[ cheers ] [ applause ] >> if you look at the whole year as theater, as real acts of tragedy, there is an almost poetic feeling to it. 1968 was one thing after another. >> hardly a day goes by without a report or demonstration or protest against the vietnam war. >> there is in the land a certain restlessness. >> lyndon johnson, whatever else one thinks of him. the stone of vietnam around him.
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>> lyndon johnson is a common murderer. >> johnson did things no other things a president did, civil rights, great society, he should have been somebody that every young person and every liberal would have celebrated but they didn't. he became the vietnam war president. >> we had been told repeatedly we're succeeding, defeating them. they can't hold out. johnson kept saying, there is light at the end of the tunnel. >> this is a cbs news special report. saigon under fire. >> the enemy in vietnam diminished the myth military strength controls that country. >> the american embassy is under siege and terror squads charged in during the night. >> the defensive was an enormous game changer. there were shooting up the american embassy. they had hit dozens of cities all over vietnam.
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it was a tremendous shock. >> we have known the communist have planned an offensive. we do not think the military operations will be at all materially effected. >> he was unable to be honest with the american people because he was unwilling to simply say this is an unwinnable wall. >> cronkite reel one, take four. >> these ruins are in saigon, capitol and largest city of south vietnam. >> it was the first time walter showed any bias in his public broadcast. >> it's increasingly clear to this report that the only rational way out will be to negotiate, not as victims but as
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honorable people that lived up to the pledge to defend democracy and did the best they could. >> after walter cronkite, johnson's popularity sinks. >> to most ordinary citizens, it's obvious the war has not been won. >> it wasn't just young kids. >> we are fighting a war and i'm convinced it's one of the most unjust wars that has ever been fought in the history of the world. >> martin luther king came out, i guess, the vietnam war, his own followers said you shouldn't be focussing on that, you should be focussing on our issue. he said they are inner twined. you can't separate them. >> president kennedy said on one occasion, man kind must put an end to war, a war will put an end to man kind. >> you honestly think if there was an election, a vote for and
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against the war, that the anti war people would win out? >> well it's really hard to tell now. the polls are uncertain but the polls say most of the country is discontent. i think something ought to be done. >> when they were looking for somebody to run, a number of people turned them down including kennedy. >> some said you should run against president johnson this year. >> i have no plans, i have no plans to change the statement i made. >> according to -- senator? >> the assumption among them is lbj was totally unbeatable in 1968 and bobby would run in 1972. >> the anti war movement and leader to jane mccarthy. >> how do you do? >> nice to meet you. >> senator, president johnson
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supporters say you don't have a chance and you'll be lucky if you get 10% of the vote. what do you say about that? >> i don't know. people supporting me say we'll do much better than that. >> one democrat, senator eugene mccarthy for his nomination, platform peace. >> eugene mccarthy does something taboo. >> mccarthy came in from left field. he was not thought of in the front rank of presidential contenders. but there was a great deal of frustration and even despair among the young. eugene mccarthy gave them hope. >> from nbc news in new hampshire, this is the news. >> if mccarthy gets as much as 30% of the vote or more against an income president he can claim a victory. >> he didn't win the new
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hampshire primary but took enough votes that it scared lyndon. >> he got 42% of the vote but mccarthy was nothing, an upstate, if mccarthy could draw blood, johnson was vulnerable. >> you said '68 was the year that is most involved with the day. [ cheers ] >> how does this strike you? you're not disappointed? >> oh, no, he did win. he shouldn't break down the system, work through the democratic process to get what you want. you can hope. you got to base it on a dream, and this is coming true. >> what happened to robert kennedy? >> i think -- >> perhaps the most important result out of this from mccarthy's view point is he will be a treated as a serious presidential candidate. >> all of a sudden after new
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hampshire, there is a new political reality and bobby starts recalculating. >> would you welcome his entrance? >> well, it's a little crowded now but -- [ laughter ] we never thought we'd be farming wind out here. it's not just building jobs here, it's helping our community. siemens location here has just received a major order of wind turbines. it puts a huge smile on my face. cause i'm like, 'this is what we do.' the fact that iowa is leading the way in wind energy,
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let me tell you the issue of '68, the issue of 1968 is not the johnson personality, but the johnson policies and i happen to believe that this country can't afford four more years of lyndon johnson. that is the issue of 1968. >> we're 16 years now in the shadow full of american politics. there have always been a richard nixon. he's not coming back.
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he never left. >> most political on servers thought nixon was finished. he was countered out so many times. nixon wanted to show the leaders he was a winner. >> we'll inaugural rate a republican president next january, thank you. >> media worked with him so he wouldn't be the sweaty nixon of 1960. >> i'm really the most difficult man in the world when it comes to a public relations firm. nobody will package me. nobody is going to make me put on an act for television. if people looking at me say that's a new nixon, then all that i can say is maybe you didn't know the old nixon. >> i wrote a diary of being on the nixon campaign plane and i came out just saying what does he believe in? does he care about? how can he trust him? i realized the people i felt most related to was robert kennedy. [ applause ] >> i have traveled and i have listened to the young people of our nation, and felt their anger
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about the wall that they are sent to fight about the world that they are about to inherit. i am announcing today my canadense for the presidency of the united states. >> eugene mccarthy clears the way and tests the water, but he wasn't the guy that would get there. bobby would get there. >> this nation must adopt a foreign policy that says clearly and distinctly no more vietnam. [ applause ] >> you have the decoloration, of another rival candidate from within his own party. currents of anti war sentiment are building up and at the same time, wart is getting worse. i think if you're lyndon johnson you feel you're being surrounded by a stampede. >> good evening my fellow americans. tonight i want to speak to you of peace in vietnam and southeast asia. >> this is the moment for lbj where the pressures of vietnam are becoming almost
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overwhelming. >> it is true that a house divide against itself is a house that cannot stand. accordingly, i shall not seek and i will not accept the nomination of my party for another term as your president. >> you just heard the president of the united states, lyndon baynes johnson address his office at the white house. advance text of his address did not contain the last remarks saying, and i quote, i shall not seek and will not accept the nomination of my party for the presidency. roger, no question about it, this was a bombshell politically. >> you really don't know where to begin. >> our guest today on "meet the
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press" is the president, hubert humphrey who announced his canadense. >> he was lbj's vice president and now he's running for president. humphrey has doubts but a good soldier, he stood by the president. >> he made a sacrifice to promote this cause of peace. he was one of the casualties of this war. [ applause ] >> i don't think there was ever an overwhelming enthusiasm for hubert. the drama of mccarthy and kennedy had captured everyone's attention. >> is the key vietnam? >> yes, in a large way, in a large measure, not totally, but there is a certain degree of general protest among youth, which i think is on balance, a healthy thing. >> there was a lot of frustration on the part of students that the war was not drawing to a close despite our demonstrations, so students
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began to become more militant. >> at colombia university, students barricade themselves into university buildings. their leader is a 20-year-old ex boy scout, mark rut. >> i would say that we now have more support than any group about any political issue has ever held on any, at any time. >> colombia became the symbol of students in revolt. >> activists like tom hayden went to colombia and said let's have more colombias. there is nothing like feeling you're fighting the power or somebody is listening to you, at least, to draw more people in. >> we started shouting the phrase and the phrase we use in other words and by actions of people all around the world when
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it's the troops and that phrase is up against the world mother [ bleep ]. [ cheers ] >> we had an idea this was the beginning. we took it as the beginning of revolution. >> what is happening to america? conversation three. tonight, our young people, what's bothering them? >> is there really a generation gap? >> generation gap is a way that whites in this country and the destruction in this country, the system in this country rationalizes the lack of responsibility in teaching this generation how to solve problems which we're faced with. >> 1968 was the year that you could point to and say here is where the separation began between past generations and generations going forward. [ applause ] >> i think all of us have a role to play, and i think all of us have a great stake in the future. you more than anybody else as president kennedy once said, you have the least ties to the past
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and the greatest stake in the future. >> you find idealism and youth and my father and uncle recognized and you visit the universities. i remember my father talking about how the founders in the american revolution, you know, they were young people. >> you fellas don't even vote over here. ' you don't even vote. come up here and i'll autograph your sandals for you. that will make you feel better. >> there was a third party candidate in this election, george wallace, but wallace was not affected by the vietnam
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issue. he was going to have a certain amount of support in the south. >> there is not a dime worth of difference in either one of the two parties, and if they don't give the people a choice, we'll give them a choice by having a new party. >> there was just a plain ornery anti-government streak in him. it was his act, you in washington aren't going to tell me what to do. >> you anarchists better have you day because you're through. yes i am rich. that's why i drink the champagne of beers. having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn't there and the next second...
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for all of our fellow citizens and people who love peace all over the world, and that is martin luther king was shot and killed tonight in -- [crying] >> when king was killed, bobby was on his way to a campaign stop in indianapolis, going into the ghetto and the cops said don't go. they were fearful of a riot. bobby went anyways. >> for those of you who are black and are tempted to be filled with hatred and mistrust of the injustice of such an act, i would only say that i can also feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. i had a member of my family
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killed. he was killed by a white man. >> he gives a spontaneous speech to an absolutely devastated crowd. this wasn't just politics. he made it personal. >> let's say a prayer for our country and for our people. thank you very much. [ cheers ] >> this country and every person in it suffered a terrible loss tonight with the assassination of this man. the perpetrator of this deed brings down upon all of us the painful charge that we americans are prisoners of death. that's the tragedy, restraint, gentleness, charity. they had a dark day. >> king was the only rational voice left in america. when you killed him, you killed everything. you killed the only rational voice left. >> you assassinate, tried to kill the dream, okay, here is a taste of the nightmare.
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>> the outrage could not be contained. fires burned the cities of america. washington, detroit, boston, new york, a few of the cities in which the negro anguish is in violent destruction. >> i remember coming back to washington two or three days after king was killed and thinking what am i seeing here? this is the united states of america and there are machine guns on the steps of the capitol? >> 100 cities rage with riot, 20,000 are arrested. >> people were in open revolt. sirens wail and people screaming and it shook everyone black and white to the core.
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>> nothing could be more desecrating to the memory of martin luther king and to use his death as an excuse to engage in imbalance. >> there was a faith and spirit vacuum and when you find people who have lost that hope, fear tends to fill that vacuum. people were increasingly afraid and mr. law and order stepped up on the republican side. >> this is the nation of law, no one is above the law, no one is above the law and we'll win and america will remember that -- [ cheers ] no civilians that exist between black and white. i want us to work together and run on that basis of president of the united states. >> it was really the host disenfranchised classes. he felt like nobody else is
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speaking for them, and that's where his base was, rather than with liberals. liberals were with mccarthy. >> i'm not yielding to anybody along the way, the vice president or president kennedy. [ applause ] >> indiana, bobby wins, nebraska bobby wins and then on may 28th oregon. >> mccarthy's crowds have been large without the frenzy. >> they can't afford to lose if i'm going to remain an active and viable candidate who could adversely affect me in a serious way. >> the actual final figures yet to come in but apparently senator mccarthy has won a major victory in oregon, senator kennedy has suffered a severe set back. they move on now to california and the primary there a week from tonight. >> this result tonight does not
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prove of course if kennedy is politically dead this year. it establishes he has robert kennedy after all, not john f kennedy. >> i think what will happen now is mccarthy gets a new life. he's still a long shot but has a chance now. i think however you don't write off robert kennedy because he can come off the floor and win big in california. that's what he has to do. if he doesn't win big in california, he's had it.
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we want kennedy! we want kennedy! >> bobby kennedy knew he had to win california and that would be his ticket to the convention. >> it would take a big win, spectacular win in california to repair the kennedy image. >> bobby is going to do it. this is just the way everybody felt. >> 48%, senator mccarthy 41%. [ cheers ] >> all of us are involved in this great effort, a great effort not only on behalf of the democratic party but the united states, on behalf of our own people and man kind around the globe. [ applause ] >> my thanks to all of you and
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shot. is that possible? >> i couldn't find kennedy. finally found him. he's lying on the floor. [crying] >> somebody shot him behind the kitchen, right to the kitchen. >> everybody please stay back, please stay back. we need a doctor here. >> please, it's very important. we need a doctor. >> will you please clear this room? if you do not leave the room, we cannot get medical aid to the senator. now would you please clear the room? [crying] >> i can't say people said how could this happen? we've seen it happen. truth is, this had been in the back of everybody's mind and one of the reasons why some people said don't do this, don't run.
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that one must have for the nation in the face of this tragedy, this new tragedy. >> people say well, it was inevitable. nothing is inevitable. it just happened. >> this plane will take back the body of robert francis kennedy to new york. also on board this plane today, will be mrs. john f. kennedy. also on board will be another widow, mrs. martin luther king jr. somehow and in someway, we seem t be sending a great many of our young leaders to their early graves. >> it's been a very emotional
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period for us who worked for the senator, and personally, the most horrifying thing in these last few days was this morning when i tacked this black ribbon on my campaign button because now i'm lost. i'm desperate. and i don't know where we're going from here. ♪ >> when senator kennedy went down, he was trying to speak for those americans including the young who feel a need to change many aspects of american life. well, that cause has not been still forever because even without him, the changes will be made because they have to be, but nobody knows when nor how, nor whether the changes will be made peacefully or violently. >> in the meantime, this country lost another leader. as far as i'm concerned, lost the only leader that i feel gives us any hope for the future. i mean, what happens to the
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this is walter cronkite in miami beach at this first session of the republican convention. >> richard nixon was the leader but he walked in to the republican convention, not positive that he would be the candidate. >> the new nixon runs the campaign. >> there were challengers. in new york, for starters, and george romney of michigan. there was some talk of regan, but nixon had a lock on the delegates. >> we are a nation in crisis. right now change rules america. it's time for america to rule change.
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it is my privilege to place the nomination, the man for 1968, the honorable richard m nixon. [ cheers ] >> there are 40 votes in wisconsin. >> richard m nixon. [ applause ] >> sit down, get to work. [ laughter ] >> it looks like nixon, nobody is really surprised and no committed republican feels cheated. what was the fuss all about? >> the republicans understand
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that nixon in this time, he gives people the sense of continuity. >> what is most important now is for us to think how we can get this war ended. >> mr. nixon talks of an honorable peace but says nothing how he would obtain it. >> at this point, the war is continuing as hot a pace as its ever been. more troops are being killed any week. >> this weekend, the enemy stepped up attacks throughout south vietnam. >> we knew we wouldn't be able to influence republicans on vietnam, so we wanted to put massive pressure on the democrats. ididn't think anything could happen with vietnam without that challenge. ♪ >> this is a cbs news campaign 68 convention special. what is going to happen in chicago? on this eve of the beginning of
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the 35th democratic national convention, chicago is nearly seek curety tight, perp hand the biggest for a political gathering in the free world. >> the police, several thousand are deployed. soldiers arrived in chicago and are standing by. >> for the convention, the plan was to have a mass demonstration. we gathered in the parks. >> we'll march because we have a right to because that's what we came here to chicago to do and nobody is going to stop us. thank you. >> there were many factions. they were united only by a feeling that this is our moment. this is caranegy hall. >> we think anything built up like this is liable to be used. >> a democratic convention is about to begin in a policed state. there doesn't seem to be any
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other way to say it. [ cheers ] >> the people of chicago and its mayor are proud to welcome a great political gathering of americans who come here to shape the future the nation and. >> most believe to begin. >> it wasn't politically possible for mccarthy to overcome so there clearly needed to be another forest. >> arriving now, senator george of south dakota. >> he got into the race. there was a big hole on the anti war side and bobby kennedy had a lot of delegates.
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>> mccarthy said he didn't believe he had enough strength to make any difference so mccarthy said he'll continue the fight for the nomination but it was implied his chances are very slim. >> mayor daily didn't give them permits to march but knew they were coming anyway. >> 10,000 demonstrators gathered in chicago's grant park and determined to march on convention hall tonight and police are at the park. >> you can count on it. the police and authorities will always unify what you can't unify yourself. >> the violence happening outside the home. >> that going on. >> the man out.
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>> the convention hall. >> i don't know what's going on. >> it's all the world to see oppression inside the hole with a democratic society for the free people. stry, former secretaries of state, oil tycoons, and ambassadors of countries known for their fine cheeses. yes i am rich. that's why i drink the champagne of beers.
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we want humphrey! >> downtown, downtown chicago, across from grant park, beside the hilton hotel, there has been in progress for some time a peace demonstration. the police have come to put it down. the national guard has been called to help. >> you create disorder if you try to impose too much order with force. so that's what happened. >> they were suppressing our democratic rights in order to continue an undemocratic war.
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>> people screaming, being dragged to the paddy wagons. a scene of wild disorder, on this, the night of a presidential nomination of the democratic convention. >> it was a police riot. i have never seen that before in my life. i had never seen groups of uniformed policemen going after civilians. there were pools of blood on michigan avenue. >> the whole world is watching! the world world is watching! >> the whole world is watching chants the crowd on the side. >> when george mcgovern is president of the united states, we wouldn't have to have gestapo tactics in the streets of chicago. >> did you see what was happening downtown? >> yes, i saw it with this television set. >> do you think this is going to cost the democrats the election,
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what is happening here in chicago? >> i don't think there is any question. i think not only the party but the country is split in half. and i think they'll veer away from this dissension. >> thank you very much. shirley maclaine watching the television set in the back of the hall about what is going on downtown. >> it is my high honor to present the new leader of our party, the next president of the united states, the honorable hubert humphrey. ♪ >> i proudly accept the nomination of our party. >> we got hubert humphrey as the candidate. humphrey was an example of what we were fighting. he was a liberal who was going to betray our hopes. >> see an hhh on your lapel. does that mean you're for humphrey all the way? >> well, i wouldn't say all the way. i'm a democrat.
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and he is the nominee. >> now it's true what george wallace said. if the first job at hand is to end this war, there isn't a dime of difference there between humphrey and nixon. >> vice president humphrey remains by any basis of measurement available a complete underdog. >> my feeling is if he could cut himself off from the president, be his own man, that he has a chance of winning this election and would make it very easy for all of us to support him. >> humphrey desperately needed to separate himself from the administration, and he did. >> i think the greatest task of statesmanship is to find a way to conclude and bring that war in southeast asia to an end. >> the public was so happy that there was some movement towards peace in vietnam. humphrey was back in the game, and it was neck and neck. >> from nbc news election central, nixon is the one. that's the natural banner for any spritely front page tonight.
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94% of the popular vote is counted. there are the numbers. >> it was one of the closest elections in american history. closer even than when nixon lost to kennedy eight years ago. >> i have done my best. i have lost. mr. nixon has won. the democratic process has worked its will. >> george wallace carried five states -- alabama, arkansas, georgia, louisiana, and mississippi. >> in our judgment, the people who supported us had an impact on the two parties in a different direction. and i do wish for mr. nixon the most success of any president in the history of our country. >> having lost a close one eight years ago, having won a close one this year, i can say this. winning is a lot more fun.
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>> with nixon's election, even though many people felt a sense of disappointment, there was a sense that there may be some normality on the horizon. people were exhausted. so it was in part a sense of relief. maybe, thank god it's over. >> i plan to spend christmas in the states, but i can't stand violence. >> 1968 certainly has been one of the unhappiest years in american history. >> in the end, it always comes down to what the people do. and this year, the people, like the events of 1968, are largely unpredictable. >> our country was put to some enormous tests in 1968. it was a bend, but there wasn't
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a break. >> the issues that were thrown open in 1968 who has authority, who deserves authority, what the limits of power are, those are profound questions that continue to matter. >> this will be an open administration. open to new ideas. open to men and women of both parties. open to the critics as well as those who support us. and i am confident that this task is one that we can undertake and one in which we'll be successful. next thursday on "the sixties" -- >> jack, what is your definition of a husband? >> a husband is a guy who is in charge and should be all of the time. >> what we are talking about is a revolution and not a reform. >> rules that had existed for a thousand years, just overnight, they were gone. >> it's amazing we waited to the '60s to break the walls down. but it was time.
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♪ stop children, what's that sound ♪ >> "the sixties," next thursday night at 9:00 on cnn. this is cnn breaking news. >> this is "cnn tonight." i'm don lemon. breaking news just moments ago. take a look at this. reuters reporting the islamic university has been hit resulting in that tremendous fireball right there. the question is, are we on the brink of war in gaza? the world is waiting and watching to see what israel will do. this much we do know. 90 minutes after another collapsed ceasefire, an israeli soldier is missing, and a hamas military wing says they assume he is dead. we'll hear from israeli ambassador ron dermer who promises a strong response. plus president obama who
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