tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News May 6, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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former president bill clinton, says it's time too burn the beret. one asks, who caress. as hillary said, what difference does it make. here's shep. >> just getting brand new video out of ukraine of pro russian forces surrounding a ukraine government building and they're making demands. ahead, the latest on the crisis in ukraine and how washington has just made a move to help. a real life transformer. a truck that turns into a helicopter. just what in the world are they going to want to do with this thing? and save your money. turns out that $200,000 ivy league degree might not help that much when it comes to your future happiness. what makes you happy when it comes to college? answers ahead. let's get to it.
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good tuesday afternoon to you and yours. militants in a pro-russian stronghold in eastern ukraine are refews to surrender and will fight to the very end, they say. the militants have been reinforcing barricades near a building they're using for headquarters. this after deadly fighting between rebels and ukrainian troops at checkpoints outside the city. ukrainian officials say they have killed more than 30 militants during their offensive against the pro-russians. they also say they plan to bring in helicopters and heavy weapons to retaining towns controlled the russian supporters. dozens have surrounded an interior ministry base ask warned ukrainian troops inside do not join any government operation against pro-russian forces. officials at the pentagon say they sent equipment to the eastern part of ukraine to help secure the border.
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lea gabrielle has more in a country where the foreign country is telling those at home what to do. what do we know about the equipment in. >> a pentagon spokesman says this is nonlethal equipment delivered to border guards for ukraine. includes things like fuel pumps, coiled bashed wire. vehicle barriers, spare tires, binoculars and communications gear. of cause all this falls short of what ukraine has reportedly asked for, including things like body armor and night vision goggles. the state department is calling for separate -- it calls separatists' efforts in the east to organize a vote for independence a page from the crimea playbook. secretary of state john kerry just spoke on the issue. >> concerned about efforts of pro-russian separatists in to organize, frankly, a contrived, bogus, independence referendum on may 11th. >> the state department also, shep, talked about the importance of the upcoming
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presidential elections in ukraine. >> how are russians weighing in. >> they're speaking out against having the presidential elections. today, speaking at a conference with other world leaders russian's foreign minister said protesters in easternian want to be heard with an equal voice. rock has had toughens thousands of troops at the ukraine borers and accuse of instigating the violence but russia defended its position. >> we have nothing hide and our army is on our territory and is performing actions not prohibited by anyone, which are not breaching any law or moral principles. >> russia's foreign minister says he is open to more talks but the pro-russian rebels need to be included. of course ukraine disagrees. >> stewart holliday, former ambassador at the united nations. nice to see you. ambassador, we haveyed all these
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sanctions, yet the russians keep acting as russians will. is this working by any look? >> a short-term play, we have hit the russian economy. their markets are down 13%. but in the short term vladimir putin does not care. what he wants to do is foment disarray so that the ukraine will not be able to have these presidential elections on may 25th, and he'll be able to force the west into talking to him directly about some sort of deal on his terms. longer term sanctions could have a devastating effect on the russian economy if we were to ratchet that up. >> we have to have the europeans to do that, and though analyst after anally says we'll get that cooperation, the fact is we have not. >> not just the europeans, we could goo to the banking sector, we could move to have russian financial institutions lose their backing from lenders. the russia economy is very
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dependent on the dollar, something like 80%, 90% of its expert exports are in dollars. we could turn this spigot off on our own. >> there are number of long-term thoughts how to handle this. one is you have to make what russian has less valuable. you have to rely on more modern forms of energy so the product that russia has, natural gas, is not worth as much. >> absolutely, and i think we are well positioned to do this but it's going to take time. not going to be overnight. we have energy independence today. we have greater cooperation with our european allies on this. they're allies in the middle east that would step up. but that's going to take time, and until then the europeans will be very nervous about any blowback as to the energy sanctions we might pursue. >> you mentioned he is trying to create disarray. certainly succeeding. when we reported from kiev and then crimea, this unrest that
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now exists in the east of ukraine was not there. and now we know it is demonstrable that there are russians who are on the wrong side of the border who are causing this disarray. >> absolutely. and you can see it unfolding. this is setting the stage, if you will and what i they'd really like to do is even though these events in odessa were very unfortunate with the big fire, both sides are using this as sort of a rallying cry to say, look at these atrocities. they'd like to see more of those things take place that demonstrate that the region is ungovernable and therefore russia needs to step in and protect its people. >> whether there's corruption in the government isn't working very well is hardly up for debate but whether the russians can make it certainly is. >> the white house says it's sending military teams to nigeria now. to help rescue hundreds of teenage girls whom terrorists have kidnapped from a school. it happened more than three
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weeks ago, and the extremists who took the girls have threatened to sell them into slavery, and done so very publicly. the white house says it will send the teams in as soon as possible to offer any help the nigerian government might need. >> provide expertise on intelligence and hostage negotiations, facilitate information share and provide victim assistance. >> the nigerian officials say close to 300 girls are still missing. the islamic group that took the credit for the kidnapping is boko haram. crans lating to western education is sinful. according to the "associated press" two of the girl have died of snake bites and another 20 are sick. a pilot who crashed into a house and survived used his own -- he used to own the house. he went once lived there. the crash happened north of
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denver. the plane was towing a banner when the pilot tried to land in a field and instead it smashed into his home. a house that the pilot sold more than a decade ago. a witness saw it all happen. >> it was really low. didn't sound right. went immediately to the front door. frames coming out of the roof. a gentleman in the house. >> but he was not seriously hurt. officials say the pie lot tried 0 to put out the flames with a garden hose. the pilot said he didn't realize he crashed into his former house until somebody el point -- else pointed it out. >> going to an elite university, does it pay off in the end in ahead we have the results of a surprising new study that shows why an ivy league degree may not leave you better off. anybody seen rob ford? seem this crack-smoking mayor of toronto disappeared on his way
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to rehab. mr. mayor. that's coming up from the fox news deck. the united states postal service will get it there on time with priority mail flat rate shipping. our priority has always been saving the day. because our priority... amazing! ...is you! the amazing spider-man 2 delivered by the united states postal service. little things, anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. insures support. a breakthrough. and sooner than you'd like... ...sooner than you think. ...you die from alzheimer's disease. ...we cure alzheimer's disease. every little click, call, or donation adds up to something big.
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of puberty in children or changes in body hair or incased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor. tell your doctorbout all medical conditions and medications. serious side effects could include increased sk of prostate cancer, worsening prostate symptoms, decreased sperm count, ankle, feet or body swelling, enlarged or painful breasts, problems breathing while sleeping and blood clots in the legs. common side effects include skin redness or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, common side effects include skin redness headache, diarrhea, vomiting, and increase in psa. ask your doctor about axiron. the mayor is missing. where in the world is toronto's crack smoke mayor, rob ford? the answer is, we have no clue. last week mayor ford's brother said the mayor has left toronto, on his way to rehab. that was couple of days after we saw another video of him apparently, well, smoking crack. still, from that video, appeared to show the mayor holding the
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said crack pipe. mayor ford's brother would not say where thesrd> rehab facilits located, but ford's lawyer says the mayor boarded a flight in chicago where the family has a home. now there's word that mayor ford actually turned back after landing and talked with customs officials. a canadian official in chicago tells the globe that mayor ford volunteer terribly withdrew his application to enter the state and customs officials did not deny him entry. mayor ford's brother didn't comment on that report but told another newspaper the mayor is doing well in rehab, and quote, it's no one's business where he is. attending a selective school can apparently not guarantee you a great job or better life. that is according to researchers at gallup and purdue university, who studied some 30,000 college graduates across all 50 states. they found the most important factor for being happy later in life is not which school you attend bit how you spend your time while in college, including
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internships, relationships you build with professors and getting involved in extracurricular activity. especially the last part. a spokesman for the gallup group says, if you can go to o'dunk u, debt-free, versus harvard for 100,000 bunks negotiating to podunk and concentrate on what you do when you get there. jerryie willis is with us. this all makes sense. what else did we find out? >> it all makes sent. what are you spending at private school? $130,000. a state cool? $33,000 over four years. >> you find the state school, especially out of state, where can go for $33,000 -- not many of them left. >> it's much more expensive to go to a private school, and the poll found it doesn't matter whether you go private or public. at the end of the day, 39% say they're super engaged in jobs,
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49% say they're not and 12% are actively disengaged. >> that stat might be the most important thing to know about the state of thinking. 49% not engaged in our job. the poll did not measure the money. >> no. >> but going to ivy league school does not necessarily mean a bigger salary. >> people who go to ivy leagues have to go through a lot of hurdles to get there so they're cop send traited on working. but the determinant whether you do well is what you study. an engineering student, particularly ped trollum engineering, you can make 100,000 out of the gate. 160,000 in your contrary. it's all about whattor major is when it comes to the money, not the school you taped. >> and how involved you are and whatever the major is. >> and the internships you have and the mentors all of those play into this. tonight we have an expert on who will tell you how to get that
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in-state tuition even if you're not an in-state resident. how to do that quickly so you can get your kid into the school you want and not pay a ton of dough. >> interesting. 5:00 eastern, 4:00 central. we'll be watching. we want to know what our viewers think. do you think going to come guarantees better college and better life -- that is, going to college at an eastern elite school. >> full disclosure, i did not go ivy league. >> no. i didn't even graduate. i went for four years, but i -- this guy had to get a job. >> you needed to earn some money. >> yeah. >> that was goo preparation. >> i had to earn some money. if i wanted to continue to east, of course. >> eating is good. >> maybe could do a little less but you're right. >> hear about monica lieuwen ski, she is back and looks great, saying it's time to bury the famous blue dress. she is talking for the first time in many years about her relationship with then president
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clinton and has a lot to say. a memoir coming out and a new thing picture. we'll talk all things monica. more pleasant now than it used to be. hang on. w much money do you thik you'll need when you retire? then we gave each person a ribbon to show how many years that amount might last. i was trying to, like, pull it a little further. [ woman ] got me to 70 years old. i'm going have to rethink this thing. it's hard to imagin how much we'll need for a retirement that could last 3years or mor so maybe we need to approach things dferently, if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. ♪
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>> monica lewinski is going public about her affair with president clinton. in an essay for "vanity fair" called shame and survival, the former intern says she wants to stop tiptoeing around the pad. she writes, and i quote, it's time to burn the beret and bury the blue dress, referring to the beret she is wearing in this photo and this blue dress, the stained piece of clothing she did not clean after an encounter with the president. she write is deeply regret what happened between me and
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president clinton. let me say it again, i, myself, deeply regret what happened. she is referring to if did not have sex with that woman. she also says her relationship with the president was consensual, the clintons did not pay her off to stay quiet, and she even thought about killing herself. mollie is live in washington. this new photo of her is awesome. she looks beautiful. 40 years old? >> that's right. 40 years old. >> also writes about how hillary clinton and she may have viewed the affair. >> uh-huh. this is coming from what monica lewinski says she read about hillary clinton's reaction to her husband's affair, with the then-22-year-old intern. lewinski writes, quote, mrs. clinton, i read, has supposedly confided to a friend that in part she blamed herself for her husband's affair bay being emotionally neglectful and seemed to forgive him. although she rather bill as having engaged in gross inappropriate behavior the
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affair was nonetheless consensual, was not a power relationship. as we know the clintons stayed married and bill clinton stayed in office and went on to become a global statesman, raisings money, and will become a grandfather this year. lewinski, who says the affair was consensual but a she also says she believes her boss, former president clinton, quote, took advantage of me, is now 40 years old, single, and says it's been difficult to find a job even though she has a masters degree because potential employers would often have difficulty with what she calls, quote, my history. >> what do is she say she wants to do? >> lewinski says she may have been the very first person whose global humiliation was driven by the internet, and she says shees going public now in part because of the suicide of a rutgers university student who was secretly recorded bay web cam in a gay encounter and that encouraged her to try to help others. so lewinski says she wants to, quote, get involved with efforts on behalf of victims of online
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humiliation and harassment and to start speaking on this topic in public forums. the whole story in "vanity fair" will be online, on thursday, and in stores next tuesday. shep? >> thank you very much. she is welcome here if she wants to come talk. the guy who parachuted of new york city's one world trade tower pleaded not guilty today to burglary and trespassing. one men posted a new video of the jump this is from his helmet cam. captures the skyline. he and two of his base-upping bodies say they slipped through a hole in the fence and got up to the roof deck there. cops also arrested a fourth guy who the prosecutors say was the group's lookout. but the lawyers say the charges should be reduced because the guys have done the city favor by exposing security flaws. gee, thanks.
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some relatives of 9/11 terror victims actually agree, and the city still faces security issues. months after that stunt, cops arrested a teenager who sneaked past the guards and climb up to the tower and took a selfie. maybe i'm off but the thing that bothers me is anybody who lives in that neighborhood and hearses the word jump irthinks about the concept remembers what happens on 9/11 and it's one of the most heroing enemy -- horrifying memories of my lifetime. >> no residents sent in letter. these are family members of the firefighter. these are separate issues. lax security measure that the port authority have versus these individuals who committed a crime. they did a wrong. and they did this not to expose a lax security measure but because of their own selfish pursuit, and that's to parachute, take nice video and post it on youtube. >> if you're the owner of the
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site, wouldn't you want to send a message, you can't do this and. >> exactly. >> if you do here's what happens. >> that's when the the judge has to weigh when issuing sentencing and coming up with what charges, charged with a felony or misdemeanor. >> thank you very much. we're now learning what caused a computer crash that grounded thousands of passengers for hours. and the feds say it all had to do with an american spy plane, one that dates back to the cold war. plus, more on the announcement that america is getting involved in nigeria after the kidnapping of hundreds of girls.pgñ?ñ?ñ?ñ?? you have heard about this, right? theycuñ?ñ?ñ?ñ?ñ?ñ kidnapped mor0 girls and told the world, we're going to sell them as sex slaves. they are terrorists who have taken credit for the abduction, we'll have the latest on that right after this.
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aggravated assault after official says he shot a student in the head on campus of a college in augusta. the sheriff says the student is critical. investigators say they believe this had something to do with another shooting on the same campus a day earlier. california. crews work ago re-open lanes of traffic after a fire broke out on an overpass and closed part of 15 freeway. a construction worker's blow torch started the flames. one worker was hurt. missouri, crews rescued a man who fell into a trench west of st. louis. officials say the guy was fixing a sewer line when he got stuck. took nearly two hours to get him out. he was nose badly hurt. you'll meet a woman who was born without a hand and got a bionic one thanks to her friend.
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control commuter and left thousands of passengers stranded for hours last week and caused delays and cancellations at airports all over the southwest. the worst at los angeles international airport. flight official says this type of cold war era spy plane was to plame. the u2, which has been flying spy missions for 50 years. a pentagon says the u2 was training near los angeles at the time. but military officials tell us it wasn't any spy signal that took out the commuter. instead, they say the computer registered the wrong altitude for the jet. it was flying at around 60,000 feet. way up higher than any passenger plane. but according to aviation officials the computer okayed the u2 was below 1,000 feet. that would put it on a crash course with other jets. the situation so overwhelming it crashed the computer and caused headaches for passengers that spread close to close.
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i was flying out of lax the night before last when i read about this and was like, how does this happen? >> well, what happened is the u2 was flying at 60,000 feet but fly under visual flight rules and they're normally reserved for flights flying a lot lower altitude. so, it confused the computer and the computer placed it or recognized it flying at 7,000 feet. the l.a. flight center is in palmdale, 50 miles northeast of los angeles. it controlled high altitude flights for all of southern and central california as well as parts of arizona, utah, and nevada, sewn we u2 was thought to be flying at 7,000 feet, the computer then tried to scramle and recalculate the root routes of dozens of other airplanes. that overwhelmed the computer, causing it to crash, and the backup computers are the ones that exceeded all of -- that guided all of the other flights in the air. >> what a mess. how long passengers affected? >> -- how long passengers
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affected. >> cautioned a nationwide ground stoppage for any flight coming to or from the southwestern united states so at least toughens thousands of passengers, just at lax alone, the numbers are 428 flights delayed, 50 flights canceled, and 27 flights diverted to other airports. the faa has now given those old computers a brain boost saying, quoting here, the faa has enabled facilities to use the computer system to significantly increase the amount of night processing memory available. the faa is confident these steps will prevent a recurrence of this specific problem. there were no reports, by the way to make you feel better as you were flying out, of any close calls in or around the southern california area. >> that's good to know. red eyes are good for sleeping, not flying. more now on a story that topped our news. the white house announcing it will send a team to help free the nearly 300 girls kidnapped by terrorists in
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this group has reportedly said it will sell these children into slavery. sex slavery. it's not clear to us how involved the united states team will get. but earlier today the white house said the team will include military law enforcement personnel, people who can share expertise in intelligence, hostage negotiations and help out the families. turning to john busse of "the wall street journal." this is unthinkable. >> and been going on for several months. you had another attack last night where some additional girls were taken. >> six of them. >> that's right. and you had an attack that was very close to an event that is going to happen this week, it's a large business gathering in nigeria, meant to shock case niger would as the biggest economy in africa. it shows the military in nigeria is having a hard time getting the arms around the problem. primarily out of the northeast in nigeria, difficult terrain to get to.
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it spilled over into chad, cameroon, and niger, it's a pretty big mess. >> i saw the video of the man who is -- said he's the spokesman saying, we have taken your children, laughs and says we're going do sell them. who are these people? >> well, they're islamic militants and they have been very active in that entire region. they say that any schooling from western sources is anathema to the way people should live. they've been killing villagers who have been going to western education type schools -- >> especially girls. >> kidnapping the girls and killing everybody else. hundreds of deaths at the hands of this group. this latest event has propelled itself into the public consciousness because it's so extraordinary, taking more than 200 girls. these participants from the united states, the fbi,cry creigh, -- cia, others going to
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nigeria, the intelligence group, is probably thinking we're not only here to help nigeria find these girls. we're here to learn more about this group. because it's becoming more influential and more pervasive in this part of africa. >> one thing i didn't realize the local schooling is hard to come by. there aren't enough schools for all the people. all the kids want education. americans, relief organizations, religious organizations, all the rest, have come to try to offer the education these people need to lift themselves up from the situation the which they find themselves and that's the reason these terrorists are attacking, kill something and kidnapping others, because of western education. >> you often find that in poor areas. ngos, missionary groups that have gone in with western style education. if not from the united states, space in europe. colonial areas for decadeses. and so there's a lot of messages of western precedence. it's a full rejection of that, that the militants now ascribe to. >> do we have any sense of --
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there is reporting to suggest that any of these schools are close down, the education is stopping? if i'm a parent, i'm terrified to let this happen now. >> i think you're finding all of the groups are much more cautious in this area. but it's so remote and it's so poor, that there's not a huge presence to begin with. this is not an attack on western aid organizations so much as it is on a population within nigeria that is simply different from the islamic group. >> they're walking into villages, killing the men and boys, and kidnapping the girls to then sell them to facilitate and pay for their efforts. >> and the shock value of that is intentional, and i think this is something that the united states really wants to understand better. who is leading this. where are they getting their funding from? where are they basing their camps? and that's the sort of intelligence that the nigerian government doesn't have the facilities to fully understand. that's where they can use the
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united states if politically they find it's in their interests to engage with the u.s. they may still want to hold the u.s. at arm's length. >> recording on this now. john busse, thank you. >> some teens in ohio used the power of twitter to get their friend a new arm. coming up you'll meet an incredible young woman who was born without an arm and see this incredible moment when she had no idea what all her friends had just done for her. plus, it goes off road and gets serious air. you'll see the truck that transformed into a helicopter. [ male announcer ] this is kevin.
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to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he's agreed to give it up. that's today? [ male announcer ] we'll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. i was okay, but after lunch my knee started to hurt again. and now i've got to take more pills. ♪ yup. another pill stop. can i get my aleve back yet? ♪ for my pain, i want my aleve. ♪ [ male announcer ] look for the easy-open red arthritis cap.
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ready to take off. here it is. the thing is part of a u.s. effort to create an unmanned aircraft for rescue missions. it's a drone kind of with extra capabilities. a drone with benefits. reps say the vehicle can fly thousands of feet above the ground but they flew it lower during the test run for safety. they also say they're building a new version with a detachable cargo container. now to our favorite story of the day. a teenager in ohio can now use both of her arms to hug her father because she says she -- she always wanted to do that. but now she can too it thanks to her friends and social media. this is tori bitle. she was born with a right arm that drew only to her el go -- elbow. last fall her friends started a twitter campaign called hash tag hand for tori. it got attention of the folks at a charity. into they were holing a contest asking people what they wanted
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to do before they died and chose tori and her friends. the friends kept it all a very big secret until the group surprise editorry -- surprised tori on stage. >> your friends contacted us. they say before they die what they want more than anything in the world is to gut you a custom feet arm. we reached out to a clinic which makes the best bionic arms in the world, and they have been generous enough to actually give you a bionic arm. [applause] >> can you imagine? a couple of weeks later doctors fit editorry for the brand new bionic arm. now she says she can do so many things she never could. including, as i mentioned, hug her dad. tori is with us. thank you for being here. >> to problem. >> you have some great friends. tell me about that. >> oh, yeah, my friends are awesome.
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they just know how to hide things from me and they've always done amazing things, definitely. for me. >> how is this process been? i know you were born with an arm to the elbow, right? did you even realize this sort of pros the thick or bionic arm was possible? >> i knew it was the main thing. people saw it was the price -- $150,000. and that's just so expensive for an arm, and i just kind of put it to the back of my head. i was never going to get it and that stuff. so, that was just my biggest thing. for not getting it. >> we talked to wounded warriors who had a hand, who were injured, and have gotten this sort of thing, anyway, and it's a very difficult thing to learn to use, but it's my understanding that for you it wasn't so difficult. do we know why? >> um, for me, since i was born without my hand, i never had that phantom feeling, whereas
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like warrors and tough do when they lose a hand. i never had that feeling so when i used it for the first time it was like the -- just a whole new thing and i just adapted to it easeie. >> i wonder what that was like. for those who have all our apen damages forks you to look down and be -- appan damages for you to look down and pick something up or huggure father, how did that feel and what was it like? >> i can't even explain the feeling. just something i've never felt before. it was just to know that i can use my right side now for so many things, which is, like, a blessing to know. and when, like, i was able to tie my shoes for the first time, simple things like that. >> tying you shoes for first time when you were 19. have you talked to your friends about what all this means to you and how thankful you are?
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>> oh, yay, they definitely know i'm just to grateful to have them in my life, definitely. >> i know this was a donated hand, and all that went along with it, and it's my understanding that the folks at the buried life are now willing to make a donation to someone else if your youtube video gets views. tell me about that. >> yeah. i just talk to them and they told me if the video that they just released yesterday gets a million views, that hangar clinic will donate another hand like they did to me. so, that would be really sweet to help somebody else out and to -- for more people to see my story and -- because i know for me, when i was growing up, never had that person to look on to but having the clinic in my life now, i have had the role model and it's such a great company for sure. >> anytime a kid is different in any way from all the rest of the kids, that kid usually has problems. did you?
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>> um, not really, no. i mean, i was raised in such a great community that they never spoiled me or anything like that. they were just so kind and everything like that. understanding, for sure. >> that's great to hear. i know even if it didn't change that side of your life, it changed what you can and can't do. was there something that before you had hand you didn't realize you were missing, now that you do have one? >> um, i mean, just the things i can do. like, now that when i don't wear my hand, i'm like, how did i do this before? this is so much easier with this bionic hand. there's a lot of things, like, every day i learn something new and i do something different. just continually growing and everything like that. >> well, it's great to mete meet you. i hope everybody can have friends like yours. i want to tell people how to get to the video. the easiest way is put in torri
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and biddle, two r's and two ds, right? >> yep. >> and they can find the video. it's easy on youtube. >> yep. >> all right, torre, enjoy the hand. hug your father. >> thank you. i will. >> nice to meet you. fox report now and more headlines the family of a woman who spent five days trapped in her car after its crashed says doctors will amputate both feet but relatives expect her to survive. somebody spotted the car off the highway near dinner on sunday. >> forecasters warning of another bat dade for crews battling a fire in oklahoma. temperatures could top 100 degrees with very low humidity and high winds. firefighters say the flames have killed one person do steroid at least ten homes, and scorched more than four square miles. it started on sunday as what
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they call a controlled burn. >> office depot will close at least 400 stores. about 20% of its locations in the united states. executives say they're eliminating overlap now that they merged with office max. no words how many job cuts they would mean. representatives say they hope to find new positions for at lease their top staffers. those are the headlines from across at the america. >> if your one of the millions of americans taking as spring on a regular basis. turns 0 it heal a been fits may not be as great as you think and the dangers -- well, we'll report you decide. that is next. if there was a pill to help protect your eye health as you age... would you take it? well, there is. [ male announcer ] it's called ocuvite.
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a vitamin totally dedicated to your eyes, from the eye care experts at bausch + lomb. as you age, eyes can lose vital nutrients. ocuvite helps replenish key eye nutrients. ocuvite has a unique formula not found in your multivitamin to help protect your eye health. now that's a pill worth taking. [ male announcer ] ocuvite. help protect your eye health.
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>> nine minutes before the hero. federal health officials made an important announcement about aspirin. now they say companies should not advertise the drug as way to prevent heart attacks or strokes for millions of americans. they say there's just not enough evidence to support the claim and what's more they warp that aspirin could cause serious bleeding in the brain and stomach. nearly 44 million adults take aspirin regularly, at least three times a week. that number is up from 24 million a decade ago. heart attack prevention has been a staple of bayer aspirin's ad campaign for many years. they asked the fda permission to include on the labels its can prevent heart attacks and strokes for people with no history of heart trouble. last week the feds said, no. we have a professor of medicine at columbia university medical center who is very smart. this is not about people who
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have had heart attacks before and the doctor says you need to good on an aspirin regular mine. this is people who say i don't want a heard attack. >> this information does not apply to people who already have heart disease. we still recommend aspirin therapy in that situation. >> this was a risk and reward situation for the fda. >> that's right. i think the fda got this right. it's very important that they're putting out an advisory. really helping people understand that it's not a one-size-fits-all and shouldn't be a routine recommendation if you don't have a history of heart disease. something you really need to discuss with you doctor. >> this is about advertising by the company. this is nothing about what a doctor may prescribe for an vivid person. of your doctor says take aspirin, take aspirinishing that's right. it's very important we weigh the benefits of aspirin with the potential risks and decide on an individual basis. the problem is a lot of people thing that aspirin is save because you don't need a prescription and may be taking without the advice of a doctor.
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so it's important to have the conversation. >> you don't want to take anything if you need it. as prison does thin your blood. >> people think about the medications as a magic bullet and it's a way to maybe prevent heart disease without having to do the hard stuff, like eat well and exercise, but there are rings associated with aspirin therapy. bleeding in the stomach, bleeding in the brain. and research has shown, in studies, especially in women, that the number of adverse affects of aspirin in the setting of women at low riecks equal the number of benefits for preventing certain types of strokes. >> good for a walk and eat some vegetables. >> do what your mom said. >> she was always right. we'll be right back.
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♪ why do results matter so much? it's probably because they are the measurement of everything we do. for a wireless company, results come down to coverage speed and legendary reliability. so go ahead, stream, game or video chat. that's why verizon built americas largest 4g lte network. because the only thing that really matters are the results you get. so for the best devices the best network and for best results, use verizon. honestly, the off-season isn't i've got a lot to do. that's why i got my surface. it's great for watching game film and drawing up plays. it's got onenote, so i can stay on top of my to-do list, which has been absolutely absurd since the big game. with skype, it's just really easy to stay in touch with the kids i work with.
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doctors gave him rabies shots. he has given all kinds conflicting stories but once he said he thought the bat was dead and other times he said it was alive. the british newspaper "the sun" reports that ozzie asked to convert an old barn on his estate into a two-bedroom home but officials said no. why? the barn is home to bats, a protected species. we did a segment earlier and asked does attending a selective college help you out later in life? i know what your answer is, what you got? >> so, shep, the viewer says i believe going to an ivy league college would improve anyone's chances of getting a high-paying job. vicki says college can't garp tee -- guarantee a better life. frank says, success depends on the course of study in college.
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useless degrees yield useless opportunities and debt. and becky says, you did not get your degree. it's too late. you have credits. get the degree. >> why die need a degree? i'll retire or something. and retire quite comfortably, thankfully. everybody should get a degree but not me. >> on this day in 1994, a train tunnel beneath the english channel, known that's chunnel, opened. engineers had talk about making such a tunnel sense the early 1800s. britain stopped the first attempt claiming the tunnel would hurt security. a century later work thon real chunnel began and now it can get you from france toeningland or backwards roughly have half an hour. but it was 20 years ago today. when news brecks out we'll break in. news from wall street. the dow is off 127.
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about .07 of a percent, but the nasdaq is off, like, 1.3%. it's been a rough day in the market. neil cavuto will help us understand why as his program begins ruth now. >> thank you, shepard. welcome everybody, i'm neil cavuto. is time running out for lois learner to come clean? moments from now the house could be controlledder to holding the former irs official in cop tempt. she is accused of misleadings investigators and. to greta an how she sees this playing out. >> i think she has a lot of trouble, because certainly the republicans have the numbers to put the rule together to send this to the floor to have the vote. so it's difficult for her to survive anything but a contempt determination. her lawyer, who who ahave nope 30 years, made a huge -- blunder
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