tv Americas Newsroom FOX News March 6, 2015 6:00am-8:01am PST
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>> and a whole lot more. log into "fox & friends" after the show. >> we'll see you in a few more hours. >> enjoy. bye, everyone. >> whatever you do this weekend be yourself. this had the country's attention last night. welcome to friday here in america's nquáhroom. >> good morning, bill. >> good morning everybody. i'm martha mccallum. he's known for daredevil stunts on the big screen. right after he ñook off from a santa monica airport, witnesses watched in awe as he manages to avoid homes and a very busy road down there.
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it could have been and slot worse. immediately after takeoff every radioed the tower saying he lost power in his single even jim world war iiera vintage trainer. >> the pilot reported a loss of even continue power and was attempting to return to the runway. he clipped the top of a tree and came to rest on the golf course. >> reporter: ford crash landed on the 8th hole of a local government course. a football field shy of the runway. >> we are always looking. then all after sudden the power went off and didn't quite make
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to it lincoln and turn around and came back coasting very low and heard it hit. >> was quite scary to see sitcomming down like it was. we were hoping it wouldn't hit the houses. >> reporter: the ntsb has people on the ground. it sounds mechanical. it definitely was not weather or visibility. this is a ryan p-22 trainer. it was in production from 1930-39. it was a rudimentary plane if you will. but ford is an experienced pilot and this is one of several planes he owns. bill: updates from the hospital and even los angeles when we get them. martha: he's no stranger to this kind of thing. he walked away from two other
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air crashes. he was involved in a helicopter rollover in california. in 2000, wind gusts pushed his plane off the runway in northwest. in other cases he helped rescue two hikers lost in the tetons and found a lost boy scout in yellow stone national park. brirl no black boxes. you look at the weather. it looked pretty good to me. what else remarkable is that plane on the ground is largely intact. job well done and lucky. martha: it looks like the red baron plane. cranes removing the delta airlines jet as it skidded off the airport. listen to the passengers
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describe how scary this was. >> everything from the ceiling fell down. oxygen things fell down. >> reporter: the oxygen masks all came down? >> yes ma'am. >> when we landed i felt like when your carp hits the snow and it slides. it was sliding and hit the side of the rail. it went for like 400 yards. >> it could have bean lot worse. the new photo shows you just how close it was from going into the icy water which has happened before. laura what are relearn being all of this today? >> it was a very close call as we have been seeing those images. passengers on barred that delta flight describing in detail about their harrowing ordeal.
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describing the fear they felt as they quickly realized the plane they were buckled into was losing control. all 28 passengers reported minor injuries but many did refuse medical attention. according to published reports one passenger in a window seat on the left side of the plane said the aircraft felt out off control almost as soon as it touched down. others scrished it this way. >> once it landed it was going too fast to be landing. >> it was nerve-racking. the plane came down and slid and took a spin to the left. we looked out the window and we could see the wing was hitting a fence. >> reporter: some today questioned when airports should close runways according to snow or ice. according to the national transportation safety board all
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airports are required to have a snow and sighs committee to determine braking action. the runsway had just been proud of and other pilots who landed just before this delta flight reported good landing. martha: what about everything every there today at the airport? back to normal? >> reporter: one runway is closed and the other is open. the national transportation safety board is on scene investigating. an versus giet gator is securing the flight recorders and documenting the scene. large heavy cranes arrived to remove the plane from the embankment from where it came to rest. it's been removed to a hangar. bill: the jobs number for the move february is out.
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295,000 jobs added last month. the unemployment rate dipping to 5.5%. real unemployment rate which includes people who stopped looking for work still hanging around 11%. stuart varney looking at the numbers deeper. >> reporter: it's a solid report. not a strong recovery like previous recoveries. but 295,000 jobs is a solid number. the real unemployment rate went down to 11%. you and i do this every month. dig beneath the headlines and you have a slightly different picture. the unemployment rate went down to 5.5%. why did that happen? because 178,000 people dropped out of the workforce. it equals a lower unemployment
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rate. that's the labor participation rate. no change there. so millions of people are still not in the workforce. one last one for you bill. we are not earning enough to keep pails with inflation. earnings -- average hourly earnings went up 2%. that's roughly what we suffered from with inflation. here is the conclusion, bill. it's still not at robust recovery which will rescue middle america. the 295,000 jobs is solid. bill: labor participation rate. 62.8%. why is that number not moving? >> reporter: large numbers of people think there is not enough opportunity in this economy to go back into the labor force. that's why it's down to 62%. that's an historic low bill.
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bill: speaker boehner said most americans are not seeing the positive news translate into improvement in their daily lives. would you expect the white thousands come out today? >> reporter: i think the white house will say this is more proof that this is a solid real covering are you that's on track. 295,000 jobs is a good number. but taken in and of itself it's a good number. i expect speaker boehner to say middle america is still being squeeze in this economy. bill: stocks up today? >> reporter: stocks will go down because a strong jobs report implies the fed will raise interest rates fairly soon. we'll open with a loss of 8 to 90 points on the dow.
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marc coming up right here. new claims that hillary clinton didn't just have one private e-mail account she had several. all while serving as secretary of state. new details from a good buy hacker and what it means as lawmakers try to get ahold of her communications while she is in office. report report dozen of skiers stranded. why they had to call a helicopter top get down from there. martha: jody area avoids the death penalty again. the woman who stabbed her boy trend in 29 times and shot him in the face will be spending the rest of her life behind bars. jurors in this case now speaking out. >> our deepest sympathy goes out to the family and they have ours heart felt apology. we hope the fact that we were overwhelmingly for the death penalty brings a little peace to
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against capital punishment. >> i'm angry there was and the finality to this and all these people sitting here in this room were not able to have that be their final decision. >> this is an emotional toll on us our families, our jobs and we feel like we failed. >> reporter: emotional and excruciating for that family. a second jury convicted her of killing her lover travis alexander. now it's up to the judge. that decision won't come until april. bill: in a prominent hacker telling james reasons here at fox that hillary clinton had not won but multiple e-mail accounts while she served as america's top diplomat. it's not clear how many of those alternative accounts she
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actually used. >> they are not only lying to us, they are messing with the courts and this is a 7-year coverup. the administration knew this from the beginning as soon as she began using this e-mail account. it's not a private e-mail account. it's a government account that was disguised and hid from the american people. bill: byron, react to what fitton was saying. he seemed to be reacting to his own experience going after this information. >> watchdog groups have tried to get information from the state department for years often through lawsuits. the white house counsel's office said they didn't know that hillary clinton had these secret e-mail addresses. i think the word secret is better than private. the whole point was most people outside of the loop the small
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clinton loop didn't know that that e-mail address existed. bill: that's your big points, right? this shows how little we know about what's going on so far. >> reporter: everything we know or think we know comes from hillary clinton. if you are hearing the state department saying something they will say they received 55,000 pages of e-mails from hillary clinton. all of that information is coming from hillary clinton. she is the original source of it. is it all accurate? that's what investigators want to know. bill: so far we only have her word. is it 55,000 e-mails? you write this today and con -- concludes that if hillary clinton is the next president patterns of a lifetime won't change. >> in the article i go through
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her patterns of secretiveness. if you go back to her first big role in washington, running the healthcare reform task force. she was slammed for creating a wall of secrecy. she went to court to refuse -- defend her right to refuse anything about the workings of that task force. then you go to the clinton scandaled. we heard a lot of her specialty was withholding information from prosecutors. then go forward to her presidential campaign in 2007. a number of candidates including obama awe accused her of being overly secretive. i don't think there is a reason to think her pattern would change if she became president. bill: how do you think this is resolved? is it a case of teflon clinton or is this a press conference
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where she comes out and lays out the information? >> i think she'll release a little more information to confirm the things she said before because she already told us she gave everything that was relevant to the state department. perhaps they are actually hoping it goes away and people forget about it and that it could be put in this pattern of right wing harassment of mrs. clinton throughout her career. but there is this bengazi committee operated by representative trey gowdy. they have subpoena power and i think she is going have to work hard to keep information away from them. bill: one last case on ought gowdy case. he has two of her e-mail addresses. do you think this information is originating with this so-called hacker james rosen talked about? or is it possible some of this is coming from the benghazi committee itself looking into her record as secretary of state? >> reporter: we heard in the
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past even before this blockbuster "new york times" report. we heard there was a secret e-mail address clinton e-mail.com that has floated out there in the past. also the house committee has technical experts working for it. they don't have to depend on news reports. they are working to work through this. the bigger issuer is to get the clinton camp, and hillary clinton herself to reveal the extent -- the full sentence of her communications that had anything to do with benghazi and the security at the consulate in libya and all of that stuff. bill: thank you byron. byron york from d.c. martha: it's been called one of the most significant archeological finds of the 20th century. but now reports of this. isis has now bulldozed all of it to the ground. we'll show you what they have been doing.
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he and martin went into ben and jerry's ice cream shop before they headed to the finish line where the bombs went off. attorneys for dzhokhar tsarnaev said he did indeed carry out the attack but they are arcing he was under the influence of his older brother. martha: isis is accused of literally bulldozing history. according to the iraqi government the terrorists terrorists launched another attack on the famed a logical site in what it called the cradle of western civilization. this after video rocked the world showing isis militants plowing through a museum with sledgehammer as they tried to erase a history erase a culture and establish a caliphate. tell us what they are doing here. >> reporter: many compared this area to king tut's tomb.
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the u.s. armory worked hard to preserve the city of nimrud. the artifacts go back to 700 and 800 b.c. when the he veryian kings ruled the middle east. the royal tombs were discovered in the 1980s. you can see there in the videos they put out destroying any site in their mind isn't islamic enough regardless to its significance to the rest of the world and history as well. martha: what about the battle for tikrit? how is that shaping up? >> reporter: last report isis
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still controls the airport in tikrit. they have started setting oil wells on fire to create a smoke screen. isis has been using sale of cruise oil blowing up these wells make that impossible. it could be they decided their strategic position is threatened and it's better to turn over the wells burning. the iraqis blew up the oil wells in kuwait and it took months to extinguish those fires. bill: so the deadline fast approaching for a nuclear deal with iran. are the tuft concessions from tehran really that tough after all? martha: it's a mess in kentucky. two days of snow. some people couldn't even open their car doors to get out of
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bill: they are calling it historic snowfall in kentucky. the snow has stopped but what's left over is a mess. 17 ins on the ground. stranding drivers for 26 miles and causing scenes like this on i-65 near louisville. >> reporter: what how was your night? >> we sat in the car and slept. we shut the motor down and went to sleep. >> i got a mile away from here
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at 3:30 this morning. it took me this long to get one mile. bill: the cold is gripping so many today. when is it going relax? >> reporter: it looks like it will and shorter-lived cold spell in eastern areas of the united states. i want to talk about the kentucky snowfall. you mentioned it was historic. up to 23 inches of snow reported across portions of kentucky. many areas across the state picking up 11 or higher amounts as well. that's really likely why we saw all of those cars stuck on highways out there. but that storm system is got. it brought messy weather up into portions of the northeast with heavy snowfall accumulations. many areas seeing 6 inches. take a look at the radar across the lower 48. it's very quiet for today.
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for most areas you are not look at precipitation. but behind this system we are talking extreme cold. spoch those numbers not too good. chicago feels like 7 degree below zero. single digits across parts of kentucky. as you head father south even in raleigh north carolina, 15 -- is what it feels like. -- 15 degrees is what it feels like. you are looking at highs in the the 20s. chicago cleveland new york city. we have been talking a record warm winter, the temperatures are warm across parts of the west. 80s in l.a. and also in the city of phoenix. it looks like things will be improving across the eastern united states as well. here is the forecast for monday. 50s as far north as fargo. and chicago could climb into the 50s by tuesday. so some spring fever coming up very soon. hang in there.
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martha: u.s. just cities scalia says during oral arguments he says he believes congress would fix obamacare if the supreme court invalidates a cornerstone of that law. the decision will come down likely in june. he said what about congress? do you think congress is going to sit there while all these disastrous consequences ensue? the solicitor general responded this congress, your honor? of course theoretically they could. just scalia said if the consequences are as disastrous as you say yes i think the congress would act if it gets shot down in the course of this case. juan williams is a fox news political analyst. welcome to both of you. so the discussion basically going on during oral arguments was wg, well, if the court
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decides to shoot down this premise that if you don't have an exchange in your state and it's not state run then you can't get the tax credit so many people have been collecting in the states that don't have their own exchanges then the whole thing will fall apart and millions of people will not have their health insurance. scalia said he believes republicans would come up with some sort of alternative. do you think they are prepared to do that? >> i want to caution people not to read too much into oral arguments. we are all trying to read what they are thinking and they sometimes ask devil's advocate kinds of questions. what scalia is doing is offering a nice lesson in how the republic works is when you do judicial review and when democrats built this, if it comes crashing down then yes the process is it goes back to congress and congress has to figure out what to do with it. the fact that the democrats
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built this tower it may crash down due to their issues in drafting it and they have a vum can congress to rebuild it is how the system works. he's signaling i think they are capable of doing this, many republicans paul ryan and senator barrasso says we are work onal terng tough to the prevents this from being a total disaster. martha: i'm not sure how much responsible the court has for the fix. the court is look at the language of the bill which states if your exchange is established by a state then you get the federal subsidy if you are under a certain income for the course of the year. and they are scrambling back and forth, what if the law falls apart. and i'm not sure that is their responsibility. what do you think? >> the court there is to say is it constitutional or not is it allowed or not. what you have are plaintiffs trying to make the case it's
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unconstitutional what they put in here because it's not following the language in the law. but what you have seen over the past few weeks republicans in the house and senate saying in op-ed pieces, here are our plans. they are trying to send a signal to the court to indicate despite what they call fear mongering by the obama administration about the disastrous impact that ruling that destroyed obamacare would have that the republicans are ready to put it back together. but even on the republican side in washington there are lots of questions. how long have they had to offer an alternative? a long time. they have had 60 votes to defund obamacare. they haven't come up with anything that the republicans can agree on that is a republican alternative to obamacare. the republicans say we all agree on this, let's do it.
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i understand what scalia was doing, but he's not the key player. i would argue chief justice john roberts and anthony kennedy. they are the key players on the right side of the court. march rrm but what they are chief side offing is whether this one line about the state should be taken in the larger context. that the federal government intended for everybody to get health insurance but it go to the simple point they didn't read this bill. somebody found that line and said wait a minute. that sort of makes the whole thing not work if you are in one of the many states that said we are not going to do this. shunned they have to lie in the bed they made as an argument? >> that's how making laws works. if you look back at the process you see a lot of supporters of the laugh saying as it was built. this is the incentive we are building in for states to make their own exchanges so the federal exchange doesn't have to
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step in for everybody. that was part of perhaps getting ben nelson's vote when they were putting this together and they couldn't change it because they had to pass it through reconciliation. so too bad. this is the law you made and now, you deal with having to fix it. as to juan's point of the republicans agreeing on it. there have been alternatives and discussions about it. but pea growing on something this coming down, the touru collapsing is a good impetus to making sure people don't get hurt in this process. and i think that will be an impetus to come together. man. martha: any look forward juan? >> i think if we had senator ham it sounds like she would want to fix it. but i don't see sit on the republican side. >> not in the way obama wants. >> even if it's left up to
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republicans. the republican plans that have been from the newspapers basically rely on instead of the subsidies going to tax credits these details just aren't there. >> there are questions obamacare should have answered before they passed the bill which is why wore in the situation to begin with. martha: it seems to me you are both right. i ask the question again whether it's the court's responsibility to do the cleanup afterwards. look at the law as it's written and say is it or is it not constitutionality and the other branches of government will have to step in and figure out what to do about it. >> they are calling balls and strikes. we'll see what's happening. martha: indianapolis what justice roberts said. bill: the cardinal who served as the archbishop of new york has spend half a century in the church before he was elevated to
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archbishop. during the attacks on 9/11 he anoinltsed the dead and preside over the funerals of so many victims. he died of cardiac arrest. he was 82 years old. his contribution to the archdiocese was significant. martha: cleaning up the finances and getting his house in order is something he's credited with as well. but he will always be remembered as being a spiritual leader during that difficult time for all new yorkers. bill: he gave way to a great man. martha: this horrific attack we watched on an american am balances doer. these pick -- american ambassador. why north korea says anyone
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iran one year away from enriching enough uranium to make a nuke. gillian, welcome back to you. the president puts a deal at 50-50. what do you put the chances at right now. >> it depends how you want to define success. let's be clear an end to iran's nuclear promise not on the table or real i up for discussion in these negotiations. noise potential scenario in which the united states is able to negotiate a complete termination of iran's nuclear program. i think the best case scenario with the negotiations is through a deal we are able to slow down the acceleration of their program, and limit the breakout time that -- that is, how
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quickly they are able to assemble a bomb based on the component parts available to them at the time. bill: what you are sake is wet were it sams year or 10 years from now at some point iran will be nuclear unless you lead some sort of military took take the program out correct? under the current leadership that's why we are. >> i don't know about military engagement per se. there is a way in which we are able to somehow use diplomacy to get ourselves out of this situation. sitting down at the table with these negotiations we are already willingly acquiescing our 100% option. our best case scenario which is an iranian regime with no nuclear program whatsoever. bill: they are not talking about ends can the promise the point you made. the israeli ambassador to the u.s. said this with gretta last night. view * the deal being negotiated
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would not block iran's path to the bomb, it would pave it. bill: what does i will rail do? >> the israelis from a national security perspective have made their position very clear. that is a nuke yarm iran poses a directs and existential threat to israeli statehood and it needs to be prevented at all costs. any deal that allows iran to continue enriching uranium is categorically a bad deal because it leaves off the pathway to the development of a nuclear weapon. that's why there is interest in derailing the talks because the israelis disagree with our position in the negotiations. bill: was it 12 years ago president bush was negotiating this. >> in 2003 we had a couple of
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dozen. we now have multiple thousands. estimates range from 10,000 to 19,000. bill: deadlines have come and gone twice now. ultimately they want to get a deal done by the end of june. right now there is no clear indication which way it goes. thank you for your time in washington. >> martha: we have another hospital reporting several cases of a potentially deadly super bug. what you need to know about this. why this infection is spreading and how bad it could get. reporter: a dramatic day on the slopes. hundreds of skiers getting more than they bargained for right there.
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those people damaging 100 feet in the air. it was a high-wire rescue with crews descending on the cable car lifting everybody to safe live. 200 people made it down safe and sound. well done. martha: a second los angeles hospital is reporting an outbreak of a potentially deadly super bug. jonathon, what else the latest in all of this? >> reporter: first of all we had the outbreak at the ronald reagan ucla medical center. 7 people infected, two of whom died. now we have a second outbreak at cedars sinai. the us snct all of this. take a look at the particular type of even endoscopy.
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it's difficult to clean. and the company did not get clearance. >> i would tend to blame every one. the tom company forethought being involved. the hospital for not doing its due diligence. patient safety is number of one. >> reporter: everyone is at fault according to dr. siegel and the problems are all on the patients of course, martha. martha: someone has an endoscopy coming up, should they be concerned? >> reporter: these super bug infections are a rare occurrence. but dr. siegel says cleaning the devices is the key. some agents don't use the most
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powerful. his advice to every patients do your due diligence. check and see what the sterilization procedures they use are. are they using the best sterilization procedures possible. don't be afraid to ask. >> reporter: we are talking about two of the preeminent medical institutions not just in california but in the country. ucla and see dollars see -- and cedars sinai. martha: thank you. bill: the race for 2016. who to americans think are the most honest politicians today? martha: are you asking yourself how is harrison ford after that
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dramatic golf course larnlding. >> there are a lot of old planes here. harrison ford collects old planes and they are prone to going wrong more than a modern plane. photos are great for capturing your world. and now they can transform it. with the new angie's list app, you can get projects done in a snap. take a photo of your project or just tell us what you need done and angie's list will find a top rated provider to do the job. start your project for free today. your daughter has a brilliant idea for her science project. and you could make it happen. right?
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brand new polls to look at showing two potential republican candidates emerging as top cond contenders on the road to 2016. there they are. i am martha maccallum. >> and i am bill hemmer. according to your new poll a majority of americans believe jeb bush to be the honest one but 52% of voters on the democratic side say honest doesn't describe hilary clinton. chris sty wall is here. maybe i am cynical. it makes me smile when i see a
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poll asking people how honest politicians are. seems like an oxy moron. what do you think of the numbers? >> people will like politicians if they think they are a liar in their favor. this poll was taken before the scandal about the e-mail broke so we would expect to see estimates of her trustworthiness lower. but it tells you how valuable it is to have a famous last name. it is not republicans don't think the other contenders are not honest they just don't know enough about them. scott walker is the leading rival from the right but they say he seems okay but i don't
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know enough about him to make a decision. if you are last time is bush and you are not an extremist you will do better with these measure and that is why it is valuable to be famous. >> this poll also feeds into the notion you and i are excited a lot of us don't know who most of these people are. walker 18% bush 16% -- that is the first poll to see walker above bush. and then christie is there as well. low numbers across the board really, chris. >> there is a lot of them. to be fair there are about one trillion people seeking the republican nomination so far. but walker has succeeded in taking low name identification and capitalize on the awareness
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with the republican base and people love him because he took on government worker unions in wisconsin and won. they came to like this toughness a great deal. as jeb bush and the rest of the field goes to iowa for an ethanol subsidy event. good times. >> so much time that will be. >> subsidies bring out the gig giggles giggles. folks in iowa know the issues and they like walker. >> and iowa is important for jeb bush. if he is going to be strong in this he has to convince the people of iowa he speaks to them. the "time" magazine cover of the bush family here. does this story hurt or help
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him? >> if he would have ironed his pants it might have helped. no this was a long time ago. the big challenge for jeb bush is can he replicate what his brother did which is saying i am not a super small government guy, not a libertarian but i am down with evangelical christianity and an adult form of catholicism and pull some of them away from the conservative base and do okay in the crowded feel. >> chris, thank you so much. have a good weekend for yourself. harrison ford is on the mend
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after crashing his plane on a golf course in california. he is banged up after reporting engine programs. a witness said crashes in that area are actually nothing new. >> we heard the plane cut out. the engine made a funny noise like we have heard several time and thought there is going to be a crash. >> golfers on the course rushed over to help him out. we have a former pilot to help. the golfers were doctors as well who came in to help. the discussion says he was at 3,000 feet and the discussion is do you turn around to the airport or not. he made that decision to do
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that. is that the right call? >> every pilot has to make that decision themselves. when you have an engine failure in a plane like this it turns into a glider. you have to know how long you can fly before the airplane is going to land if you like it or not. 3,000 feet is a good amount of time. in my cockpit i can look at a point on the ground and pick it and say i will move there. if it moves up in my wind speed i will not make it. so i will pick the closest suitable place to put it down. it sounds like he put it down in a golf course which was probably the best suited place. >> we have video on the ground. and we will spot shot it in a
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moment. you can control the plane you just have to control it like a glider. there are no black boxes on here. who knows if we will figure out what happens. but once it is on the ground it is largely in tact. the plane is there. there is a divot in the ground but that is it. >> when i see the way the plane looked coming in to laned it was in control flight and not stalling. so he went through the emergency procedures and did the first thing which is point toward a place where you can put it down and get to your best glide speed and that is 80 miles per hour and 20 miles per hour above where it would start stalling. no matter what you do you have to make sure you don't get below the stall speed because then it is out of control flight and the air flow isn't coming across the wings and the plane no longer
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flies and it will crash and you will not recover it down to the ground. >> he could have put the wheels on that golf course and landed a-okay based on what you are saying with one exception. the witnesses say he hit a tree. >> there is nothing you can do about that. if you see you have not going to make it -- you are -- where you are trying to go it is better to pick a shorter place and you can do a flip with you put one ring up and use your top rutdder slip yourself down. >> you practice that? >> every time you do a check guard as a pilot you practice this landing. you will pick a spot to land go through emergency procedures and do everything you can to land safely instead of down. >> mia gabriel with us.
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thank you so much. the ntsb is set to investigate another derailment of a train carrying crude oil that happened here the mississippi river. garret teny is live. to investigators know what happened? >> reporter: officials have not had a chance to start the investigation. the fire hear burning all through the night. this is what it looked like throughout the afternoon and evening yesterday. the giant, billowing smoke clouds can be scene for smiles. the train derailed 30 miles outside of the town of galina. firefighters had to use a bike trail the access the sight. they recommended people within a one mile radius evacuate. local state and federal agencies
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are now on the scene and waiting for this fire to die down so they can start the investigation. >> garret thank you very much homeland security officials saying isis recruits at home are getting more difficult to track and we will tell you why coming up. >> and president obama raising eyebrows saying the alleged racial discrimination in the ferguson police department is a nationwide problem. we will have a fair and balanced debate on that. plus this: [screaming] >> we are now hearing emotional testimony from the victims of the boston marathon bombing including a father who watched his 8-year-old son lose his wife as court watchers express sympathy. >> a lot of people are hurting today. people loved their children and they are gone.
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they say after seeing a magician make his assistant disappear mr.clean came up with a product that makes dirt virtually disappear. he called it the magic eraser. it cleans like magic. even baked on dirt disappears right before your eyes. mr.clean's magic eraser. a man's home blew up in brooklyn brooklyn new york and three firefighters injured. one was hit by the cover. all three are going to be okay. they say the explosion was likely caused by salty run off seeping into the electrical wiring below ground.
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stunning new warnings from the intelligence community on the number of americans trying to join isis overseas. according to leaders at the homeland and the department of national intelligence and the fbi authorities are not able they say to find a clear pattern for why americans are being inspired to join this terrorist group and that might make it harder to find them before they sign up. ohio republican, mike turner is on the house special committee and he is joining us here. thank you for being here. we were chatting during the break. we are in the middle of the boston bombing trial which should be a case study to figure out how to find these people. what have we learn from that and what have we not learned? >> this is very difficult. the terrorist groups are using 21st century techniques for medieval tactics.
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we need a global strategy. we cannot pursue boston paris internet solicitations without going to the coordinated efforts of these organizations. that is how we get to the root of this. >> that sounds to me like you want to find out who is on going on certain websites and searching for certain things that might tip us off. can we do that? >> there needs to be an intelligence sharing in the coordination but the focus should be on who they are trying to communicate with not just the isolated people reaching out. it should be the leadership. this administration needs a global target that looks for those looking and solicit people to join their organization. >> when you look at the tsarnaev case, they had tripped wires. especially the older brother. the fbi had spoken to them and
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they had local law enforcement issues. but we don't have a way to attach the global fight to local law enforcement. and the 30 people that have been taken in in the last few months in some cases a parent flags their own child. but he is saying we have investigations in all 50 states so it seems like they should be included together. >> that is where the administration needs to be more diligent in fighting. they are communicating with someone -- the global terrorist groups. and that is where we need to attack. we will never catch everybody going online and seeking out the bad people. >> should we be able to take passports like they are doing in great britain and europe. my fear is something like that
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going to happen and it is like turned out he caused disturbances at the mosque and his uncle was worried about him. >> they were on the no-fly list the paris attackers but were able to fly throughout europe. tracking them down tying them down the organizations and deminish their capability will have an impact. people need to be diligent. if they have information they need to call the fbi like active parents >> if you see something, say something. let's hope we get better coordination in the pin intell. >> why the islamic legal code usually found overseas is in the lone star state. and dwarf planet is about to
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a truck driver allegedly falling asleep at the wheel crossing the center line of a rural highway slamming into a car and school bus killing the 22-year-old driver and 43 children from the bus went to the hospital but they are going to be okay. a state trooper says the same truck driver was involved in a similar incident in a same area about a year ago. and cases being heard in texas. the panel at a dallas suburb
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using using using islamic law. how is this working? >> we need to point out this is not a true court. that would obviously be illegal. we have our own judicial system in place that has been established. but this is an islamic tribunal and leaders consist of three emoms and a doctor of study. they are not attorneys and sever mediation and arbitration laws. divorces make up the primary case load because like the catholic church religious factors are at play and clergy has to be involved in such. >> if a muslim women went to the
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court and got the final decree from the court. that is the last word of the court you are divorced. according to islamic law she is still a husband and wife. she is still a wife of the husband. >> reporter: that tribunal says they have handled 25 cases since they have been up and running. >> i cannot imagine this is not without controversy. what is the controversy? >> there are a lot of critics here. people who are concerned and questioning the whole legality of this. opponented worried about the slippery slope. >> religious freedom is prodetected under our first uh amendment. we are not trying to prevent that.
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we are making sure our laws are respected. >> reporter: a representative from the texas bar says it sill legal to represent yourself as a license or judge if you are not licensed to practice law in the state of texas and these people are not. >> casey stegeal in dallas. thank you. >> president obama talking about alleged racial discrimination in ferguson missouri saying it is not isolated with pockets of bias all across america. we mean talk about that. >> paul and oats said they are not amused after the name of a granola bar has a familiar ring. they are telling their lawyer say it isn't so. how do i get hotel deals nobody else gets?... i know a guy. price-line ne-go-ti-a-tor! i know a guy in new york vegas, dallas. my competitors may know a guy, but i know over 60,000 guys. priceline.com
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reporting slamming his car into a crowd of israelis in jerusalem. they say attacker plowed over the curb and got out of the curb and stabbed a pedestrian. they're treating this as terror attack. john huddy live in jerusalem. what are the latest details here? >> reporter: , well martha, police say the attacker is a palestinian man from east jerusalem where this happened. earlier today, at this point, martha, it appears he was acting alone. take a look this is some video we recently got from the scene earlier as police say, as you were talking about martha, the man drove his vehicle up on to the curb outside of a border police station in east jerusalem, hitting seven people. six female border police officers and pedestrian. the man jumped out of the vehicles we've been talking about with a knife and stabbed a person before a security guard shot him. this man was seriously wounded and in police custody right now. those seven people were taken to the hospital, with minor
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injuries. now it appears, at this point, as i said, that the man was acting alone. it doesn't look he was affiliated with any particular organization. though hamas did praise the attack. this happened in the same part of east jerusalem that several other attacks happened as well, including one on november 5th, when another palestinian man drove his vehicle again into a crowd of people killing one border police officer and wounding more than 13 others including several children. now this area, martha is being targeted because it is high traffic area on one side. the light rail goes through, stretching into the old city and one side an orthodox neighborhood, several orthodox neighborhoods and on other side, predominantly palestinian neighborhood. high traffic high terror tax. martha: john, thank you very much. bill: president obama responding to the justice department report that conclude police bias in
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ferguson missouri. this after the justice department decided against charging the police officer who fatally shot michael brown. the president saying that the type of alleged racial discrimination now, found in ferguson, is not unique across america. >> i don't think that is typical of what happens across the country but it is not an isolated incident. i think that there are circumstances in which trust between communities and law enforcement have broken down and individuals or entire departments may not have the training or the accountability to make sure that they're protecting and serving all people and not just some. bill: so the first part of that answer is what this debate's about. katrina pierson, a spokeswoman for the tea party leadership fund, former congressional candidate.
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attorney jessica ehrlich, democrat who ran for congress as well. lady, good morning to both of you. first comment, katrina, i don't think this is typical what happens across the country but it is not an isolated incident. critics say you are painting with a broad brush. how did you take that comment? >> bill, it is interesting you talk about these things, but the president never wants to talk about the root cause of some of these instances, for example, in ferguson, since he is talking about now, we're looking at communities where poverty is prevalent where the public education system failed miserably and you have unemployment rate continuously increase poverty rate increasing. these are communities where you see most of these type of occurrences but he doesn't want to talk about that because those are federal policies put in place and kept in place by liberals. bill: got it. was it right to say across america it is the same? >> no, i don't think it is right
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because every community is different. everything stems from something or another. this particular case in ferguson is simply in ferguson. he is talking to another community though. he is talking to minorities all over the country who have experienced some sort of altercation with police or in communities like this where they do see this happening. racism does exist. he addressing it with a broader brush but he should be talking about the causes behind the problem. bill: jessica, do you see it with a broad brush or not? >> no, i don't. i think his words were very appropriate and apt and he is specifically said that you know these aren't isolated incidents but they're not, you know, prevalent. this isn't happening in every single community. but i do agree with katrina on the fact these are things that need to be addressed on a community by community basis. i don't believe that these are just federal issues but that, yes, poverty is one of them. there needs to be more communication between police departments and their communities. you know there are a lot of
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factors that could come into play. issues need to happen. i think it is particularly poignant the president mentioning this weekend particularly when he was asked about it because it is the 50th anniversary of selma and we're seeing heightened attention. bill: he will be there tomorrow. >> no there will not be one republican member of congress who will be there. bill: next debate on that. want to make sure police are protecting serving all people not just some. wonder how the fraternal order of police would respond to that? fox polling suggests this. how would you describe barack obama, honest or not? back in 2011 57% said he is honest. now that number is down to 43. you wonder 3 1/2 years, later, katrina, what's changed? what accounts for that? >> i think last couple of years you see the president and decision he is making, taking everyone into account except for the american citizen. he is placing the needs of illegals and their children over the children of america. he is placing safety and
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security over potential terrorists over needs of his own country. people are looking at that i'm frankly surprised that the numbers are not lower. if you look and connect all the dots, you have to come to logical conclusion that president may not be on team america. americans get uncomfortable with that. bill: there is question about patriot system in there. put that on the screen. does that describe barack obama? 54% say yes. that is down off of 60% from 2011 as well. since that time, jessica the obamacare rollout, like your doctor, keep your doctor. you know, the website foulout, on and on. what explains why honesty remarks come in the way they do? >> well i think this is something we've seen over and over again from poll, when you've got a president in the last two years, say of an eight-year term you will see the numbers drop. kind of been remarkable had any bounce back at all, particularly numbers are totally partisan. under democrats look specifically at the poll he
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still has a very high rating in terms of believability, honesty and dropped more with republican voters. that is to be expected. it is very interesting that not only did he still have high marks when it came to caring, both republicans and democrats think he is very caring but real interesting thing i think about this poll especially as we go into 2016 is that the people who were really most disenchanted with what is happening in the united states and feeling this country is the best country in the world, were not really republicans and democrats and hardcore voters. they were tea party supporters they were independents and voters under the age of 35. those are going to be the demographic really people who we're going to hear a lot from as we go into 2016 and see what course we'll be taking next. bill: you mentioned caring 60% talked about caring higher than strong leader according to our polling. all on our website, foxnews.com.
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thank you, ladies. >> thank you. >> this weekend marks the 50th anniversary of a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement. the first of three marchs from selma, alabama, to the capital of montgomery. it gained the nickname, bloody sunday because 600 marchers were attacked and beaten by the police who refused to let them cross the edmund pettis bridge. jonathan serrie live for us from selma, alabama. good morning, jonathan. >> reporter: good morning martha. some of the original marchers are returning to this very bridge where 50 years ago they withstood beatings. one woman among them, at the time was evenly is years old. emotions are still law for linda black man lowry as she gazes at edmund pettus bridge. she and other demonstrators were beaten and tear gassed by local police half a century ago.
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>> i was 14 years old. i wasn't a threat to anyone yet somebody beat me and in that beating i received seven stitches over my right eye and 28 stitches in the back of my head. >> reporter: out of fear, lowry nearly dropped out of a subsequent march but was encouraged to press on by white military veteran who lost a leg in combat. >> he said before he let anybody else harm another air on my head he would lay down and die for me. i said, i can't let him do more for me than i was willing to do for myself. >> reporter: lowry who turned 15 on historic march from selma to montgomery would become the youngest person to complete the entire route. she writes about her experiences in a book geared toward young readers. >> i think children are our future historymakers and everybody has the potential to change things. i just want them to recognize that they can, even start at an
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early age. >> reporter: the marchs that began on this bridge here in selma alabama led to sweeping reforms to protect americans right to vote regardless of race. linda lowry says she wishes more americans these days would exercise this right for which some people risked their lives 50 years ago. martha? martha: impressive woman great story. jonathan, thank you very much. >> history this weekend too. the father of the youngest boston bombing victim bringing many to tears after his emotional testimony. how he describes the final moments of his young son's life. >> an eight-year journey has ended but the mission is just beginning. nasa going where no probe has bonn before. -- gone before ♪
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♪ bill: they're back in the news. hall & oates, where did they go? hauling a serial company into -- cereal into court with about. calling trademark infringement. they're suing under name haul oates entertainment. all over there. they want the company to pull the product away from the shelves and pay damages. martha: boston bombing trial will resume on monday, giving jurors a break after emotional and sometimes gruesome testimony they heard from survivors. they detailed minutes before and after the explosions. prosecutors revealed a new photo showing dzhokhar tsarnaev dropping the second bomb right
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near a group of young children. including 8-year-old martin richard, one of the three who lost their lives in this attack, that bill boy. some of the most emotional testimony of the day gave from the boy's father, william richard, bringing many tears in the courtroom, when he described having to leave the dying boy to help his other two children. try to imagine what this man has been through. quote, when i saw martin, i knew he wasn't going to make it. i needed to go to the ambulance with jean and henry. i saw my son alive barely, for the last time. i saw a little boy severely damaged by an explosion, i just knew from what i saw there was no chance. doug burns is defense attorney and former prosecutor. duane eats criminal defense attorney. -- kcatet. this little boy and smiling face is the face of this trial at the moment because his story is front and center. you look at it and look at choke
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choke sitting in the courtroom -- dzhokhar tsarnaev. sifting there in the courtroom according to all the reports willfully put the backpack behind a group of small children. the big question, doug, in this case whether dzhokhar tsarnaev all along had intention and motive and wanted to carry this out because that could equate to the death penalty for him, yes? >> absolutely. the defense did a surprising but at the same time sophisticated gambit in the opening because they painted with two brushes. first they used what lawyers call duress. the brother was influence on me but they're not really going to formally argue that as a legal defense. the other part, martha, he was less involved so on and so forth. make no mistake about it i think my colleague will agree. this trial is whether or not he will get the death penalty and they're trying it as such. the lawyer is trying to establish credibility by getting up in the opening saying he is
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guilty. they're just doing the death penalty phase twice. martha: they're using this part of the trial phase to soften the ground for that argument. >> absolutely. martha: because the penalty phase will be when it will be decided whether or not he will get the death penalty. i want to put up one more quote from testimony of jeff bauman who lost both of his legs on that fateful morning. he says, i saw a flash, three or four pops, i was on the ground. i looked down, and i could see my legs. it was just complete carnage. you know, obviously this is tough for the jury but it is reality of what happened on that day, duane. and how does it serve this case in your mind? >> well you know, the prosecutors are trying to paint a picture and they're doing a very good job of it of what the carnage was that day and the suffering that the people went through. you know i agree with doug the defense has done a very good job
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about taking some of the sting out of it. i mean they got up in opening statement said my client's guilty. he did these things. however, you know they're paving way to try to get out of the death penalty. you know, and the death penalty isn't a one size fits all kind of punishment and it may not be the best outcome in this case. martha: in massachusetts very different perspective really on the death penalty than you see in texas when you look at the arias trial we witnessed yesterday, the outcome of that, doug. what do you expect from this jury? always hard to say, but what is your thinking? >> that is very important observation you made. it is interesting, in new england and massachusetts, in state courts they don't have a death penalty. this is federal crime in federal court so you do have the death penalty. remember jurors are from the same community. one poll amazingly way back earlier more around the time of the crime was 57% against the death penalty for this
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defendant, which i found very surprising. so i think the the lawyer who is really a big death penalty expert is playing directly into that regional dynamic as you say as well martha. martha: she has gotten a lot of famous people including ted kaczynski and jared loughner off the death penalty. if someone can pull this off she may be the person to do it. thank you very much, gentlemen. >> my pleasure. bill: 12 minutes before the hour. jon scott is coming up on happing how when we finish here. how are you doing. >> you wouldn't believe it looking at blue sky what yesterday was like trying to recover from a huge blast of winter weather for much of the nation including the new york city area. flights resuming. people trying to get back to normal after huge series of storms made a mess from texas to maine. flooding concerns are growing in some parts. new questions about a crash landing of a delta plane during heavy snow at laguardia. we'll talk to a guy who survived
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that incident. new jobs numbers, harrison ford's close call the offensive against isis. bill: you had a busy day. >> it was interesting one. bill: see you at the top of the hour. >> sounds good bill. bill: buckle up and hold on. one of the fastest and tallest roller coasters in the world is about open. ♪ your daughter has a brilliant idea for her science project. and you could make it happen. right? wrong. because you're not you you're a cancer hospital and your daughter... she's a team of leading researchers... and that brilliant idea is a breakthrough in patient treatment that could save thousands of lives. which means you need a diverse team of advisors helping you. from research data analytics all the way to transformation of clinical care. so you call pwc. the right people to get the extraordinary done.
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martha: so here's a challenge for you folks. do you think you can pull the plug on your phones and your tablets all of it for 24 hours? the national day of unplugging getting underway tonight at sundown. well that's a challenge that we might be able to do over the weekend, right? thousands of people signing on
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the, hit the off switch pledge, going into digital lockdown, until sundown tomorrow. if you do it, tell your friends and loved ones that they might get worried if you don't respond to them. that is the world we live in. if they don't respond back in 15 minutes they get worried. bill: historic arrival this morning, 310 million miles from earth. the dawn spacecraft, orbiting the dwarf plan net sires. we have the manager of space.com. it is sending back, dawn the signal takes about an hour. we know that dawn has communicated with earth. so dawn has made it to ceres? what has down said? >> it is in orbit. it is 3.1 billion-mile trip for the spacecraft. it has ion drive that lets it flick around the asteroid belt.
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it will be there for next year, year or so. it is orbiting the dark side of ceres. it is not getting a good view of the dwarf planet. bill: this is amazing stuff. they have been looking at this particular dwarf planet for 200 years. >> in fact ceres was first asteroid ever discovered in the asker to road belt. at the time they thought it was full planet. they found other asker to 'roids so it bill an asteroid. now it is a dwarf planet. bill: you say ceres is a strange place? >> it's a giant, round object in the asteroid belt, a world unto its own, 560 or so miles across. it has water or ice volcanoes on surface. could be left over remnants, a proto planet what our whole solar system is made off. bill: that is why they targeted it.
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how do they know it has wear? >> they see evidence from you hubble spacecraft, other space telescopes. they spotted dark patches on ceres and as it gets closer. could be ice or active volcanoes. bill: you're excited about this? >> this is the first time we've ever seen a dwarf planet up close. bill: that dwarf planet is? >> is a smaller planet in a region where it hasn't cleaned up the whole orbit. there is in the asteroid belt. a lot of other asteroids around there. bill: not full -- >> fell fledged. bill: pluto is like that? >> pluto is a dwarf planet. we'll see pluto up close first time in the july. this is the year of the dwarf plan net. bill: this is remarkable launch eight years ago? >> 2007. bill: we're starting to figure this stuff out. >> it is. second object that dawn has arrived at in 2011 it arrived at another asteroid the second
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biggest object in the asteroid belt. it has been able to go between those two points. another first for the mission. bill: ceres we go. thank you tarik malik. >> good, good stuff. kentucky, in the snow. they're still dig out after that winter storm dumped up to two feet there, stranding travelers, some good-natured with the ones we spoke to for more than 24 hours but is there more white stuff on the way? stick around. why do i cook? because i make the best chicken noodle soup. because i make the best chicken noodle soup. because i make the best chicken noodle soup. for every way you make chicken noodle soup, make it delicious with swanson®.
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it will open just in time for spring and your road trip there. we will do the show live as the roller coaster drops. >> that will be must-see tv. >> have a great weekend. bye, guys. and from the fox extreme weather center mother nature is not finished after a brutal week and especially brutal winter across much of the country. hi everybody, i am jenna lee. >> it is march and it feel like january. i am jon scott. another wave of super cold air sweeping across the nation and breaking records for march. many cities and states digging themselves out after yesterday's snowstorm pounded states. and in boston more than a hundred inches and winter is not over yet. in kentucky the storm
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