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tv   Today  NBC  August 29, 2009 7:00am-9:00am EDT

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i knew the subaru legacy was the smart choice... what i didn't expect... was the fun. the all-new subaru legacy. feel the love. good morning. missed opportunity after a kidnapped girl spends 18 years held captive by her alleged rapist. the ordeal could have ended sooner. now a search for other potential crimes. outbreak. suspected swin flu cases are already on the rise as millions of kids head to college campuses. how bad could it get? and remembering senator kennedy. a grieving family mourns the loss of its pate tree ork. >> we just needed someone to
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hang on to. and teddy was always there. to hang on to. >> a celebration of his extraordinary life with songs, story and laughter as the kennedys prepare to say a final good-bye, "today saturday," august 29, 2009. captions paid for by nbc-universal television good morning, everyone, welcome to "today" on a saturday morning. i'm lester holt. >> and i'm amy robach. it has certainly been an emotional week and so many people have paid tribute to senator kennedy from the very important to the every day average american whose lives he touched. >> we saw the flag-draped coffin. 50,000 people have filed by the last couple of day. last night could amount to an irish wake. great story, laughter and an honor and tribute to senator
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kennedy. we'll talk more about that coming up and also the shocking and incredible detail answer an 18-year long kiss knapping ordeal. jaycee dugard reunited with a mother she lost so many years ago and the man accused of kidnapping and raping her, all reportedly undergoing counseling. they're looking for other victims and missed an opportunity that could have meant freedom for jaycee and her children years ago. we begin with today's events in remember brarchs of senate ted kennedy tk. right now lying in repose at the kennedy library in boston. laters this morning a funeral mass at the our lady at the basilica in boston. president obama will deliver the eulogy. and later the senator will be late to rest at arlington
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national cemetery near his brothers john and robert. we begin live with kelly o'donnell. >> reporter: good morning, lester and amy. today we will see edward kennedy the colleagues from the senate come to pay they're respects. victoria kennedy, his widow, will greet 79 current and former members who served alongside ted kennedy over the decades. this morning especially with the rain, the mood is somber, but last flight was plenty of story-telling and laughter. ♪ irish eyes >> reporter: to remember ted kennedy the people and music he loved most filled the room. comforted ted's children with thanks for sharing their father with all the cousins who had lost their own. >> the truth of the matter is that for so many of us, we just needed someone to hang on to, and teddy was always there.
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to hang on to. >> reporter: eyes filled with tears and rooms filled with laughter. >> two weeks ago as i was coming out of surgery i got a call from ted. his unique voice, loud and booming as ever, well, he roared, between going through prostate cancer surgery and doing town hall meetings, you made a great choice. >> reporter: conservative republican orrin hatch disputed the heated political battle. >> remember one time he got mad at me, demanded to come to the office, i brought him in, he started yelling at me and finally i said, wait a minute. i wrote a song for you and vicki. he said, you did? i said, yes. you want to hear it? he said, oh, yeah, and forgot all about his anger. >> reporter: after more funny story, john mccain and john kerry turned centermental. >> i think i'm going to miss him more than i can say.
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>> teddy at the helm steering his steady course, sail on, my friend, sail on. >> reporter: caroline kennedy remembered her many childhood trips with ted around the drive from hyannis port this weekend. >> i realized it was our final history trip together. now teddy has become a part of history, and we have become the ones who have to do all the things he would have done for us, for each other and for our country. >> reporter: when the procession moves from here at the john f. kennedy library to a grand church in boston, that is a very special place for edward kennedy because it was there he went day after day for his oldest child kara going through cancer treatment earlier. and see his grandchildren, the youngest taking part in the mass and teddy jr. and patrick will speak about their father. lester? >> thank you, kelly o'donnell.
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now here's aim. >> lester, thanks. nbc's savannah guthrie is outside our lady of grace where president obama will eulogize senator kennedy. savannah, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, amy. the president is here in boston. as you mentioned, he will deliver the eulogy for senator kennedy, his former colleague and also his friend. this will be a personal eulogy but it won't be a lot of anecdotes. i'm told it will reflect on kennedy the impact on country. of course, there is a personal connection between senator kennedy and the president. there was a key moment in the 2008 campaign when senator kennedy endorsed then senator obama and senior aides say that made all the difference. of course, there are a lot of former kennedy staffers now on the obama staff, including somebody on the speech writing team. this is a personal effort for many members of the president's staff, and i should mention also we'll have all but one of the former living ex-presidents here to pay their respects to senator
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kennedy. >> savannah guthrie, thanks so much. now here's lester. >> amy thanks. senator kennedy will be laid to rest near his brothers john and robert in arlington national cemetery later today. nbc's andrea mitchell has more from washington. andrea, good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning, lester. when the senator alives at andrews air force base the motorcade will proceed to the place he loved so dearly, the u.s. capitol. it will approach the senate step on the east side of the capitol and there lined with more than 100 alumni and current members of the fabled ted kennedy senate staff. the funeral procession will pause for a moment of prayer. these are the people who outside ever the immediate family knew the senator best. they loved him for his dedication to ideals, his legendary kindness and presuchous work. the procession continues down pennsylvania avenue, past the memorial museum and around the lincoln memorial and across the bridge to arlington cemetery. the same route that the funeral
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procession for his brothers passed. the senator was a frequent visitor to arlington, not only to visit his brothers and not only on november 22nd, the anniversary of the assassination of john f. kennedy. also many, many times to visit fallen soldiers from massachusetts who died in service in iraq and afghanistan. so this day will have layers and layers of meaning for the kennedy family, for all of those who served the entire nation. >> andrea mitchell, thank you. senator kennedy's niece, maria shriver sat down with david gregory with her memories of the senator. we hope to have that a bit later on. apparently we don't have that tape. msnbc contributor mishgs bank iggal is with us. you have a lot of stories to share. what will be on your mind during this service? >> well, a lot will be on my mind, lester.
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one will be a very personal notion that the idea the other day that senator kennedy left hyannis port and cape cod for the last time is something i think a lot of people are still trying to come to grips with. the reality of him in that home, on that beach, on the dock, on his boat, a huge booming laugh. the concern for others. i think that will be on the minds of both myself and everybody else in the mission church here. >> i was watching the memorial last night, and joe kennedy was speaking about the fact he and his brothers and sisters needed a father, and john and caroline needed a father, and here was ted, uncle ted, who really became that father figure. talk, if you can, about the hole that is now left in this family. >> well, it's an enormous hole, lester. i mean, the idea that senator kennedy was of washington and of the world, obviously, is a real one, but the reality is that
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senator ted kennedy was teddy to assorted nieces and nephews who will lost and fatherless when their fathers were taken by assassination in dallas and los angeles in 1968, and to see him with his nieces and nephews and his own children and the role he played, making nearly every christening, giving brides away, caroline kennedy at their wedding, baptisms, funerals, he was always there as joe kennedy alluded to last night and i would imagine the absence of ted kennedy in that family will leave an enormous hole a huge void that frankly will not be filled. >> it's almost easy to forget he was the kid brother and lived in the shadows certainly of jfk and rfk, but they're frozen in time. they died as young men and didn't really get to fulfill their legacy and promise. in contrast to edward kennedy who lived almost a full life. so when we compare him side-by-side to his brothers, how will history look at him?
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>> you know, i think you can make a strong face that, as spoken to last evening at the wake, that president kennedy in his 1,000 days captivated the nation. robert kennedy in the 85 days ever his campaign challenged the nation, but edward kennedy, as vice president biden mentioned, in 17,000 days in the united states senate changed the nation. actually changed the way more people live than either of his two brothers, and i think when history is written, both the short history, as people are starting to do right now, certainly enough, and the long look back as senator edward f. kennedy's career, i think people will find he was perhaps the greatest legislator since daniel webster. >> i'm almost hesitant to ask the next question because it puts a lot of question on the family, bu but it's a natural one, who among the kennedys emerges as somehow to carry on this legacy or role? is that an unfair question, and
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the second part, will someone step forward? >> no. i think it's a fair question. a question asked now for three or four day, longer than that, because of the indication that senator kennedy's illness was terminal. who takes that role? i don't think anyone knows. what that role will be going forward will be far different than it was with teddy kennedy. you mentioned earlier, i think one of the key points about understanding who ted kennedy was. he was the youngest child of his family. he was the runt of the litter. the little fat kid at the end of the table who had to fight for a roll and a piece of turkey on thanksgiving day. he didn't want any fights growing up. he was a conciliator at every table he sat at, whether the united states senate in the caucus room, whether in a joint conference committee with house members or whether it was in hyannis port with the extended family fighting over who's going to run for this or who's doing that. he liked to calm things down and come to a consensus and get things done. now, who can do that among that family? that's anybody's guess.
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>> mike barnacle, a sad day for you and all who knew and respected senator kennedy. thanks for spending time with us this morning. we do appreciate it. >> thank you, lester. it is now 12 part the hour and time for a check of the morning's headlines. for that we turn to cnbc's melissa francis at the newsdesk. >> good morning, everyone. we begin with danny now downgraded to a tropical depression but still causing dangerous surf and rip currents up and down the east coast. the weather channel's jim cantore joins us from chatham, massachusetts with more. good morning, jim. >> reporter: yeah, good morning, melissa. it was a rough day for surf yesterday. the outer banks of north carolina. surfer, a great thing, you're out in the water. a beachgoer, a lousy weekend complements of the second named storm in so many weeks here. once again in massachusetts beaches closed down. certainly on a day when we remember when the worst hurricane to ever hit the united states, danny, will never get a
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chance to reach that status. reporting from the southeastern part of massachusetts, that's rather wet and cold this morning, jim cantore. back to you. >> thanks. danny's rough surf along the north carolina coast have wes cuers searching for a 12-year-old boy body boarding just before disappearing in the water. waves only about five feet tall but the undertow was very strong. on friday the l.a. coroner's office officially declared michael jackson's death a homicide. the autopsy revealed jackson had a legal cocktail of six different drugs in his body when he died including the powerful aesthetic propofol. the report could mean criminal charges against jackson's doctor, dr. conrad murray, still being investigated. and deejay am was found dead in his new york city apartment friday. police responded to a call from a friend who hadn't heard from the celebrity disc jockey for days. foul play is not suspected. last year dj am survived a fiery
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plane crash where four others died. a spectacular liftoff, the space shuttle "discovery" launched just before midnight on its way to the international space station. take a look at that. astronauts are delivering thousands of pounds worth of supplies to the space station, including a $5 million treadmill. and finally, there are two winning lottery tickets last night, the mega millions jackpot worth one-third of a billion dollars split between winners who purchased tickets in san gabriel, california and the bronx here in new york. the lucky numbers drawn are, are you ready -- 1-17-31-37-54. megaball number, 31. we went in on a bunch of tickets, i did arrive at 5:30 this morning. didn't work out for me. >> didn't purchase that in the bronx? >> no, no. >> thank you. >> nbc meteorologist bill karins
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here with the first check of the forecast. rain here, hot and dry weather out west. >> the fire, horrible. air condition quality, let's talk about what we're dealing with with danny first off. last night we lost danny. actually absorbed but a strong storm over north carolina. call it almost a summer nor'easter that's going to move into new england. it's going to be an ugly coastal day from new jersey's coast especially over long island, rhode island, including the funeral procession. boston, soaking rain, large waves as the beach, an ugly saturday. the rest of the country feels like
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that's your weekend forecast. amy? >> bill, thank you. now we are going to talk about those wildfires raging in southern california. bringing los angeles and covering the city in a dense cloud of smoke. there are four fires burning and right now the most dangerous one just north of los angeles. miguel is outside the fire in lake view terrace, california. good morning. >> reporter: it promises to be a long, hot day for firefighters here at the station fire, more than, there have been more than three mandatory evacuations, more than 1,000 homes threatened. it promises to be a long day for crews, especially because this fire refuses to lay down.
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through the night, and into the morning, fire rages. tinneder dry brush fueling towering flames on the move. the orange glow and often at times this fight is far from over. across southern california this week, four major fires have burned more than 10,000 acres, and counties. the fight for containment is a difficult one. first, voluntary evacuations. >> they're not letting anybody up there. >> reporter: followed quickly by mandatory orders. more than 1,000 fled from their homes playing hopscotch through a series of canyons fanned by powerful winds. >> this is the first time in my lifetime that fire has been so close. >> reporter: the la pinata fire also known as the station fire remains the biggest threat. thousands of firefighters were called in to beat back the flame. as an arm of water-dropping helicopters attacked the fire from the air. fire continues to chew across the angeles national forest, at
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one point closing in on hillside homes, from million-dollar views into a different type of breathtaking business. for now, many neighborhoods appear safe. some evacuation orders have been lifted. few homes were damaged. but the weather, like the fire here, can turn on a dime. bone dry brush, gusting winds and soaring temperatures remain a dangerous combination. >> very hot, and humidity dropped off to what we considered a critical level. >> reporter: fire season in the west has just begun. and it's already off to a fast start. as of late last night, the station fire has charred more than 5,000 acres. it's only 5% contained, not to mention temperature, expected to be in the triple digits and air quality will be terrible. amy, back to you. >> miguel, thanks so much. once again here's lester. four years ago today hurricane katrina made landfall
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near the border between louisiana and mississippi wreaking devastation all along the gulf coast. katrina's powerful winds wiped out entire neighborhoods in mississippi, and although at first it seemed the city of new orleans had been spared a direct hit, with hours it became clear the levees had been breached and the devastation would be great. nbc's ron mos joins us with encouraging new signs for the city. ron, good morning. >> reporter: lester, good morning to you. you will remember that this particular neighborhood with was almost wiped off the map four years ago. in fact, just a few blocks away we saw an iconic image from the storm, a barge sitting in the middle of the street on top of a crushed school bus. there are seens of progress popping up here and there, albeit very slowly. >> you going to eat all of that? >> reporter: at a pastor, charles can always spot a blessing. the pleasures of a cinnamon roll treat with his granddaughter. and among the thick its of brush and mostly his neighborhood
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today, he still is positive. in fact, his home in almost six months, thanks to volunteers who built his house. hoping this area will get back on its feet again eventually. >> you see buildings going up, you know it's coming back. all we need is the families to come back. >> reporter: the pace of progress, especially this part of new orleans, can test the patience of eve even the optimist. >> it's discouraging because i know it could be done quicker and better. >> reporter: four years ago chaos flooded new orleans as much as water. boat rescues gave way to more troubling scenes of desperation. >> help. help us! >> reporter: a national political debate about the government's role in the tu maultuous aftermath. much has improved and a lot of people are working. this contractor is one of them. attempting to turn this schoolhouse back into a home,
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bus says that is exactly what drives him to keep at it all these years later. >> this is home. i've been born, raised in new orleans. this is where i lost my parents, grandparents and everybody lives here. i love to be in new orleans. might eventually have to. >> reporter: later bell ringing and ceremonies to honor those more than 1,600 people who lost their lives to katrina. while there are plenty of positives to point to on this long journey back, for a lot of folks it's only just beginning. lester? >> ron mott, thank you very much. still to come, an amazing young man takes his place in the record books. first, this is "today" on nbc.
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what's the future like? you love your new jetta. and the suit? you like it? no...i love it! still to come on "today," new questions about the 18 year
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long abduction of jaycee dugard. were there any other victims and why did authorities miss a crucial opportunity to release jaycee from captivity years ago? we'll get answers in a few minutes. college campuses bracing for outbreaks of swine flu. a look this morning who should get the vaccine and how to protect yourself in the meantime all coming up after these messages. [captioning made possible by constellation energy group] captioned by the national captioning institute --www.ncicap.org--
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>> good morning. here is a look at some of our top stories. anne arundel county police are interviewing witnesses after a man is found stabbed in his car. we were over the scene after 5:30 a.m. the 48-year-old man died of his injuries behalf. anyone with information is asked to call police. a baltimore county man barely escaped being crushed by his garage. he says he just arrived, seconds before his carport came crashing down. he says he heard a creaking sound and a loud crash. >> i feel real lucky. i have done a lot of things in my life but i came within about two seconds of not being here. >> the weight of items in his attic that the carport could not hold up. hey man convicted in the kidnapping of two teenagers will
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spend the rest of his life in prison. the 23-world man was sentenced to two life sentences. -- a 23-year-old man. abducted the teenagers from a light rail and forced the teenagers inside the trunk. the victims were then abandoned. stay with us. when we come back, we will
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now we will check your
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forecast with john collins. >> this morning are temperatures are in the 70's. only a few showers in northern baltimore county and into cecil county. heavier rain shower activity moving out of virginia across the bay. it will hit ocean city eventually. the heaviest rains have been offshore. a few sprinkles in western maryland as well. you can see most of the stormy activity is offshore but a lot of the march tour reaches back to our area. the cold front moves in and here is what the map will look like. the tropical depression near cape cod is moving out. we are in a tropical air mass until this final fronts come third. we still have some rain chances today. -- until this front comes through. we will get temperatures in the low 80's, but a scattered
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showers would not be out of the question. longer-term forecast, drier weather sunday and cooler weather next week. >> thanks for joining us. we will have another live up to date in 25 minutes. see you then. we are back on this saturday morning, the 29th of august, 2009, with a live look at the our lady of pe pech wool help basilica in boston, massachusetts, where in a short while friends and family of senator ted kennedy including three former presidents will gather for his funeral. and back here in new york city, i'm amy robach along with lester holt. coming up this half hour, for the first time the nation mourns a kennedy without ted kennedy leading us through that mourning
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process. >> his family saw so much tragedy. for the last 40 years ted kennedy helped them endure it all. coming up, a look back how ted kennedy came to symbolize strength and optimism in the face of so much loss. plus as millions of students led back to college, already getting news of suspected swine flu outbreaks. hundreds of cases reported and authorities are bracing for even more. coming up, how bad things could get and how many of us could become infected and what you can do to protect yourself in the meantime. >> i'm sending my youngest back to college in a few days with lots of hand sanitizers and lots of instructions about taking care of yourself. >> the best way. >> you bet. we'll talk about it. and later meet a remarkable man in his teens pulled off feat fuel adults could dream of. spent nine months at sea alone in a 50-foot sailboat to achieve a goal and be the youngest person to sail around the world. we'll meet him late other than the broadcast and talk about his motivation.
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>> all right. first, new detail, emerging in the shocking story of a young girl kidnapped and held prisoner for 18 years. jaycee dugard is now 29 and she is being reunited with her mother and her alleged captors are now in jail. nbc's george lewis has the story. >> reporter: garrido and his wife were arraigned pleading not guilty to 28 accounts, forceable abduction, sexual assault and false imprisonment. meanwhile, police began a new search of the garrido's home looking for a possible connection to the murders of several prostitutes in the neighboring city of pittsburg, california. satellite photos of the property show what investigate, now say was an intricate maze of tarps, tenants and sheds in the backyard that housed a secret prison. the only access was through a very narrow tarp leading to two small ten-foot by ten-foot sheds where jaycee and her daughters lived. inside a crude outhouse and
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shower, and electrical extension cords providing power for a dish washer. investigators also found an old car in the backyard, matching the description of the one used in the abduction of jaycee dugard. jaycee was 11 when taken from a school bus stop near her home in lake tahoe, california. sources close to the family tell nbc news that she and her daughters were undergoing medical checkups. >> who knows what kind of shape they're in. basically camping out for 18 years. >> reporter: neighbors said with all the high fences and tarps at the back of the garrido property, it was impossible to know what gas going on there. mr. robinson who lives next door said almost three years ago his girlfriend looked through the fence and got suspicious when she saw children, knowing that phillip garrido is a registered sex offender. >> his family over e here and the kids, what's going on? you know? and i said, call the police. you know? that's when she called. >> reporter: the local sheriff
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admitted his people failed to follow-up properly. >> we missed an opportunity to bring earlier closure. there are no excuses. >> reporter: as a parolee, garrido had regular visits from a parole officer. again it seems no one checked carefully to see what was going on behind the house. >> it appear there's was a false fence, looked like the property ended. you know, again, in the coming days as we review this we'll determine if there was other things that could have been done. >> reporter: and a disjointed rambling interview with nbc station kcra in sacramento, he spoke of being vindicated some day and said he never harmed his daughters. >> a destructive story of turning a person's life around, and having those two children, those two girls, they slept in my arms every single night from birth. never had ai harmed them. i never touched them. >> reporter: george lewis, nbc
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news, antioch, california. joining us now, former fbi profiler van sant and dr. janet taylor a psychiatrist and contributor. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> let me begin with pup the alleged kidnapper, phillip garrido, a sex offender on life parole. we heard the sheriff admit they dropped the ball, missed an opportunity and no excuse especially when you look at this elaborate tent setup in his backyard, the fact people reported hearing and seeing children, is it amazing to you that authorities didn't catch this sooner? >> well, it really is, amy. you know, we have to consider there's about 650,000 registered sex offenders in the united states that somebody has to keep track of. even though this is a population that rio fends, it's rare you get someone who rio fends in this degree. it's a former fbi agent, what bothers me about this case is that investigators, somebody could have taken the extra five minutes and just walked around
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the yard. if somebody says, here's a registered sex offender who's a little bit nuts, who has kids in ace yard, who doesn't look like him, that's the time you take the extra five minutes. you look in the backyard, you see a power cord running out in the woods, you say, i wonder where this is going to. at least these little girls, these children, could have been saved perhaps three years ago and maybe long before that. >> dr. taylor, i want to turn to you, because we're hearing more about the victim, jaycee dugard, back with her mother. her two young daughters with them, and she's reportedly feeling guilt about having stayed, even bod bonded with her abductor. this is a pretty common response, though, isn't it? >> certainly in this case, where she certainly was subject to psychological, sexual torture. he systematically with his wife was able to essentially reprogram her personality to make it seem like she had increased fear, guilt and that she could pin it on him. and that he was the link to her
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survival. >> she was wasn't educated past 11, her children have never seen a school or doctor. how are they all going assimilate or to get back into any sense of normalcy with society and being around other people and -- just seems incredible what they are up against. >> exactly. she has spent 18 years of her life, more time with him than her family. we need to eliminate normal from the vocabulary and think recovery. it will be lifelong. socially, environmentally, they've been living outside. getting used to being inside and psychologically, the extent of the damage will be felt for years to come for all of them, including her biological family. >> i want to brung you back in. the alleged kidnapper in this case, police are searching for possible evidence he may be linked to a string of murders back in the 1990s, prostitutes who had been murdered. what is the likelihood, given what we know about this man so far and what police may have
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found he may, indeed have a lot more crimes or a lot more charges he may be facing soon? >> i think it's a high probability we're going to find other offenses. realize, he's been 11 years in federal prison tore taking a woman across the state line, kidnapped her and raped her. this is some one moo has a lengthy history of doing things. so -- and some of his writings allegedly he talks about his sexual prowess. i think we'll find our victims out there. whether these are victims of kidnapping, sexual assault or perhaps could even include what they're looking at now, prostitutes, who were assaulted and murders, but this guy is going to be good for other crimes. >> all right. krint van zandt, dr. janet taylor, thank you both. in our next hour, the two women campus police officers, instrumental in cracking that case. we'll talk to them live about what made them suspicious in the farris place. right now, switching gears, a check of the weather from
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nbc's meteorologist bill karins. good morning. >> good morning again, amy. all of these beautiful people came out today. they are die-hards on this that's your weekend forecast. coming up next, swine flu fears as millions head back to college. are we prepared for an outbreak? first these messages. i should'. doing more for my high cholesterol. what was i thinking?
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this morning on "today's health" swine flu fears. op monday a panel's scientists said half of the u.s. population could be infected with swine flu this fall and winter. that's got health officials worried as students head back to college. >> reporter: on college campuses across the country if has already begun. at the university of kansas, almost 200 students have reported having flu-like symptoms in the last week or so. the university of tennessee is estimating 100 suspected cases of swine flu on campus. >> we have antibacterial lotion everywhere, and clor roshgs. everybody's wiping down their rooms. >> reporter: with the rest of the nation's universities in school set to start after labor day, it could be a sign of what's to come. >> in the next few weeks and months will be a very challenging time. >> reporter: earlier this week a committee of scientists that advises the president said that though the pandemic is impossible to predict, a plausible scenario would be 30%
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to 50% of the u.s. population infected with 30,000 to 90,000 deaths concentrated among children and young adults, but the cdc says they've seen nothing to suggest we'll see those kinds of numbers if the virus doesn't change. >> we were fortunate in the first wave, it came at the tail end of the flu season. we're starting at the beginning of the flu season now and that goes on for months. >> reporter: the vaccine is still in clinical trials and not expected to be available for those at high risk until mid-october and thanksgiving for later for everyone else. this doctor of montefiore medical center in new york says one thing we can count on seeing is a surge of patients heading to the e.r. he says, don't. >> if you're young and healthy, you're going to get through the infection fine. stay home. that's the best thing you can do. >> reporter: here with more on the swine flu is nbc's chief medical editor dr. nancy snyderman. thanks for being here. the operative term in terms of
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whether the number of deaths would be what the worst case scenario was would be whether the virus changes. it has not. >> it has not. verdict efficient, spreading very quickly. not a killer virus. just seems to knock people out. the concern is because it's brand new, what we call a naive or novel virus, means that we are, our immunity is lower. that's why the numbers are especially high. 30% to 50% infected. and projected possible deaths in the tens of thousands. >> you remember when this first came out, there was something close to a panic. goodness, pandemic. then we realized people weren't dying in masses. as a lot of people only had mild symptom of this. is there almost a concern that people may be lackadaisical, as we get into the winter months? >> my concern is exactly that for two reasons. we've been saying hand washing for so long, people are, fine, whatever. also we know that the vaccine isn't going to be available until october. there's a lag between now and when school's getting back and
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when the vaccine will really be available. i worry that with multiple messages coming out of the federal government and this lag and because it's not a killer virus, that there may be some complacency on the part of some people. >> looking at pregnant women, parents of young children, children under the age of 4. >> the federal government came out and said pregnant women jump to the top of the list. regardless of what trimester you are in or if you're a brand new parent, you are most vulnerable. >> some of the deaths, hasn't this virus unlike the normal flu targeted more young adults? >> yes. unlike the regular flu that gets people at both extreme ends of the chronological spectrum and the infirmed, the average age infection with h1n1 is 19. average age of hospitalization is 37. because the young people in this country have no natural immunity and that's the concern. >> who's going to college now? 19, 20-somethings. >> the immunization group, pregnant women, people taking
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care of other people and young american. you and i will not qualify to go to the front of the line because we're that much older. >> at the outset, reported, cases or college campuses. i'm about to send one back to school, i mentioned. what should i tell him? >> wash his hands, wash his hands, wash his hands. i have a friend who called me yesterday from california. her college freshman, sophomore, just got sick. went to school, picked her up, brought her home. if parents can do that, help isolate these case, it will be better. the most important thing, don't share toothbrushes, wash your hands. this is a virus that is usually from dirty hands up to your face, and if somebody's sick, isolate them. >> what worries me, not just the washing hands. all of us, young people in particular, i don't feel good but i'm okay, going to class anyway. not recognizing this. >> this will wallop you. not a typical cold. you have a fever, aches and pains opinion you know this is not a norm's seasonal cold. get your flu shot now.
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starting monday. get that out of the way. if you are sick do not go to your local emergency room. the concern, we'll start to clog e.r.s where people really need access. when the vaccine comes out in october, get it. >> all right. dr. nancy snyderman, thanks for being here. appreciate it. we'll be back with more in a moment. first these messages. i chose to get my daughter vaccinated when her doctor and i agreed that the right time to protect her is now. because it's about prevention. (nice) gardasil is the only cervical cancer vaccine that helps protect against four types of hpv. two types that cause seventy percent of cervical cancer and two more types that cause other hpv diseases. i chose to get my daughter vaccinated because the cdc recommends that girls her age get vaccinated. gardasil does not treat cervical cancer or other hpv diseases. side effects include: pain, swelling, itching, bruising, and redness at the injection site, headache, fever, nausea, dizziness, vomiting, and fainting. gardasil is not for women who are pregnant. gardasil may not fully protect everyone and does not prevent all kinds of cervical cancer, so it's important to continue
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routine cervical cancer screenings. i chose to get my daughter vaccinated because i want her to be one less woman affected by cervical cancer. one less. gardasil. ask your daughter's doctor about gardasil. (announcer) what are you going to miss when you have an allergy attack? achoo! (announcer) benadryl is more effective than claritin at relieving your worst mptoms. and works when you need it most. benadryl. you can't pause life.
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ted denty was bornto power -- ted kennedy was born to -- when his older brother was killed the last son became the patriarch of the kennedy family and his voice spoke the nation's grief. here's nbc's anne thompson. >> reporter: ted kennedy was always there to say good-bye. in the painful days of november 1963 he walked with sister until jackie and brother bobby behind president kennedy the casket. he was just 31. a short five years later, a nation's heart would break with ted's voice at bobby's funeral. >> those of us who loved him and who take him to his rest today pray that what he was to us, what he wished for others will some day come to pass for all
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the world. as he said many times in many parts of this nation, those he touched and who sought to touch h him, some men see things as they are and say why. i dream things that never were and say why not. >> reporter: all too soon at age 36, he was the patriarch. his beloved mother rose would live to 104. >> as she did all our lives, whether it was when i walked back from the rain from school as a child, or when a president who was her son came back to hyannis port, she will be there ready to welcome the rest of us home some day. >> reporter: and of jackie he said no one ever had a better sense of self. >> she graced our history and for those of us who knew and loved her she graced our lives. >> reporter: hes would preside over the funerals of bobby sons
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david and michael, then ten years ago, john f. kennedy jr., like his father, gone too young. the senator turned to irish poet troy explain the loss saying, we dare to think in that other irish phrase that this john kennedy would live to comb gray hair, but like his father, he had every gift but length of years. ted kennedy had length of years. and the burdens that come with surviving. for toad, anne thompson, nbc news, boston. and we'll be right back, but first, this is "today" on nbc.
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...the future. 11 days in the future. look, you love your new routan. you love the german tuned suspension. you love not having to pay for scheduled maintenance,you- i love what you've done with your hair. we'll take it. still to come on "today" what were you doing when were you 16? >> this guy was sailing around the world solo. you'll meet him. first these messages. but nasonex relief may i say... bee-utiful! prescription nasonex is proven to help relieve indoor and outdoor nasal allergy symptoms
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like congestion, runny and itchy nose and sneezing. (announcer) side effects were generally mild and included headache. viral infection, sore throat, nosebleeds and coughing. ask your doctor about symptom relief with nasonex. and save up to $15 off your refills. go to nasonex.com for details, terms and conditions. start your three-course meals with a shared appetizer. choose two entrees from over 15 chili's favorites, then share a decadent dessert. chili's --
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>> good morning everyone. here is a look at some of the stories we are covering for you. in anne arundel county police are interviewing witnesses after a man was found stabbed inside a car. we were over the scene just after 5:30 a.m. the 48-year-old man died of his injuries at the hospital. anybody with information is asked to call police. a baltimore county man barely escaped being crushed by his crotch. he says he just -- escaped being crushed by his crotcgarage. >> i feel real lucky. i have done a lot of things in my life but i came within about two seconds of not being here. >> the weight of the items in the attic was too much and the
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carport could not hold it up. complaints about bats have offered health officials to issue a warning. bacon also transmit rabies, a special ones that cannot fly. -- they can transmit rabies. ask or any other unfamiliar and wrong and should never be touched. a baltimore man convicted of kidnapping two teenagers and raping one will spend the rest of his life in prison. he was sentenced to two life sentences. authorities say he and another man abducted the teenagers from a light rail last fall, forced the boy inside the trunk and the girl was raped in the back seat. the other defendant will be sentenced in october. we will take a break and when we come back
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low temperatures have been in the low 70's. the lower eastern shore has a batch of schroer activity coming off the bay. -- a batch of shower activity. this situation at this point is that. most of the heavy tropical moisture is associated what is left of danny. the call from from the west, all of this tropical air is still in the area, so even though things are better we still have a chance of rain until this cold front moves through.
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our forecast today is mostly cloudy but we do expect to see some sun breaks. the temperatures will be in the low 80's but still some chance for scattered thunderstorms activity. >> thank you for joining us. we will see you again in 25 minutes. good morning. saying good-bye. >> we just needed someone to hang on to, and teddy was always there to hang on to. >> after senator ted kennedy the family and friend gather to celebrate an extraordinary life, today, the final farewell. missed opportunity. a kidnapped girl set free after an 18-year ordeal.
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now local authorities admit they missed their chance to find jaycee dugard years ago. was it wrong. and fantastic voyage. a teenager sails around the world enduring danger, loneliness on all on his own. why did he did it? we're going to ask him as he arrives back in port. good morning, everyone. welcome back to "today." i'm lester holt. >> and i'm amy robach. coming up in his half hour, remembering senator kennedy. right now the senator lying in repose at the john f. kennedy memorial library in boston. >> later his body will be moved to our lady of perpetual help basilica in boston. president obama who flew into boston late last night from
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martha's vineyard will deliver the eulogy. >> this afternoon the senator will be laid to rest at arlington national cemetery near his brothers john and robert. >> we have correspondents covering all events. we begin with kelly o'donnell in boston. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, lester. and good morning, amy. right now the kennedy family is gathering at their hotel preparing to make the journey back here to the john f. kennedy library for another day of rebranses for ted kennedy. also today here we will see some of the colleagues that have shared his days in the senate over these many decades. 79 current and former u.s. senators will be here. many of them traveling together, leaving this morning from washington. victoria kennedy, the widow of edward kennedy, will greet them all personally, and it will be a time for them to come together and say their farewells. one of the things you saw, a bit of an image of, and it continued through the night, is the flag-draped casket was always in
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the company of a military honor guard and a civilian one as well, with former staffers, friends, constituents who have been at the side of that casket through the night. more of his friends will pass by today, and then there will be the journey to the church, and the church is so significant, because during the time when edward kennedy's first child, kara, was going through cancer treatment, she's a survivor of lung cancer, several years ago he spent his days praying for her there, near her treatments. so that church has particular sentiment for him. we will see members of the kennedy family, and some different roles today. he has four grandchildren. they will participate. there will be others from that youngest generation who will take part in the funeral mass. we will also hear from his sons, teddy jr. and patrick, who will share their rep braremembrances well. >> kelly o'donnell for us this morning. thank you. here's aim. savannah guthrie is outside
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the basilica. good morning, savannah. >> reporter: good morning, amy. president obama arrived here in boston last night, and this morning has already had a private meeting with the widow of senator kennedy, vicki reggie kennedy. after that meeting, of course, they'll come here to the church where the president will deliver a eulogy. i'm told it will be a personal statement, but one that really focuses on the impact senator kennedy has had on the country. of course, there is a special bond between president obama and senator kennedy. at key moment in the campaign of january 2008, senator kennedy came out and put his weight behind president obama, endorsing him. he has told me that was a moment that had a tremendous momentum for the campaign. it meant a lot personally to the president, in many ways senator kennedy at that moment passed the torch to president obama and i'm told the president was humbled by that. there are a lot of former kennedy staffers who now work for the white house. a couple will be honorary paul
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be pallbearers and one who worked on the eulogy used to work for senator kennedy. >> thanks so much. here's lester. amy, this afternoon senator kennedy will be laid to rest in a place he visited as a mourner often. arlington national cemetery where two of his brothers buried. nbc's andrea mitchell has more from washington, d.c. andrea, good morning. >> reporter: good morning, lefter. the senator's return to washington today does resonate with echoes of so much sad history. the funeral procession goes from andrews air force base to the u.s. capitol, pause there from the senate steps for a prayer on the east side and an honor of more than 1 hundred alumni from the senate staff watching from the steps. the crusade will go past the museums and monuments to the lincoln memorial and across the bridge to arlington cemetery. the same route his two brothers
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traveled all those years ago. the senator will be buried near his brothers down a gentle slope that commands the finest view of the capitol anywhere, and attendants of the cemetery say over the years senator kennedy has been a haunting visitor to that place. not only on the anniversary of his brother'ses's death but throughout the year to mourn them. and attending burials for fallen soldiers from massachusetts, killed in iraq and afghanistan. and there he will rest forever among them. lester. >> andrea, thank you. senator kennedy the niece, maria shriver, also a member of our nbc family sat down with "meet the press" moderator david gregory to share her memories of the senator. >> what was that final year like? for him? >> for me it was watching this final year, was beautiful, because i think, you know, there have been a lot of things written about teddy over the year, and it hasn't all been
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complementary, and i think for someone to have that kind of love come at you is a very powerful thing. that very few people, i think, ever experience in their lifetime. >> maria shriver speaking with nbc's david gregory. we turn now to nbc's tom brokaw who spent many years covering the kennedys. tom, good morning. good to see you from your home in boston. >> reporter: last night a bathering of time in a matter of speaking. the memorial service the john f. kennedy library. what was particularly touching, tributes from two of his conservative colleagues, orrin hatch who said he came with a conservative law on washington to set out to slay in a political sense ted kennedy and wound up being one of his very closest friends. and senator john mccain, of course, who is a republican presidential candidate in this last cycle. they both gave warm and glowing tributes to ted kennedy, the politician, that too few people
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probably saw behind the scenes. he was always there in a most generous way, flying all wait to utah with his wife vicki when senator hatch's mother died so he could be at the service. there were many parts to senator kennedy. a lot of them were dark parts, but in the last couple of days, we have been saying, he redeemed himself in so many ways, and i think at the end of his life, and the tributes you heard last night, they knew that this was a man who was on the public stage for a long time and left an enormous imprint on this nation. >> he will be missed, of course, tom, on capitol hill as a friend to so many. in terms of his legislative influence, in what ways will he be missed in the day-to-day business of the u.s. senate? >> reporter: well, more than anybody else in the senate. he was able to pull two sides together. he had very strong, very liberal views which continue to drive the conservatives around the
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bend when they think about his legislative record. but the people who worked with him would always say he was a guy who if you get in the room, he could find common ground. my own experience with him, you could be at a cocktail party or convention and there would be a ruckus good time. if you asked a political question, his whole demeanor changed and he would cut right to the chase. better than anybody else i dealt with as a reporter on capitol hill he knew where all the pressure points were, where the possibilities were for compromise, and what roads not to take, because it would end up as a dead end. he was master of the political process on capitol hill. >> tom, his flaws were well known. you and others over the last few days talked about the fact that the latter years of his life in many ways were devoted to years of redemption, but sometimes it's hard to forgive yourself. did you ever have the sense that he felt that he had earned and found true redemption? >> reporter: i think that he did. i think that his life with vicki
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was an exceptionally important part of the last part of his life. that he found true happiness and real love there. but he was on a tear, personally, as everyone know, but always got up in the morning and went off to do the work that he needed to do. a friend of mine, who described people who could go out all night long and party and drink hard, he'd always say, they're the kind of guys that can take a punch. ted kennedy in his time could really take a punch. he 0 could be out all night long, get up the next day and get to business of what he saw were under represent evs of the country. in the background of his life became a statesman. a larger than life figure who served almost a half century in the u.s. senate and in so many ways left a greater legacy politically than either his iconic brothers john f. kennedy, the president, or robert kennedy. >> tom brokaw, thanks for sharing your memories. good to see you, tom. >> reporter: okay, lester.
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tom will be anchoring nbc's coverage of senator kennedy the burial at arlington national cemetery later today. that happens at 5:30 eastern time. you can catch more of david gregory's interview with maria shriver tomorrow morning on "meet the press." let's get a check of the other headlines from krpt nx's melissa francis at the newsdesk. >> good morning to both of you and everyone again. we begin in california, wildfires ramping out of control, the movie dangerous burning just north of los angeles. joining us live from lake view terrace, california, good morning, miguel. >> reporter: good morning, melissa. this is the largest, the most dangerous fire burning in southern california. the station fire has been responsible for three rounds of mandatory evacuations, and at this hour, more than 1,000 homes are threatened. at last check, more than 5,000 acres have been scorched. containment at only 5%. this fire began on wednesday, and like so many in this region has died down, and then kicked right back up.
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hot conditions and bone dry brush have really fueled this blaze. nearly 3,000 firefighters and an army of planes and water-dropping helicopters are trying to beat those flames back. the big story this afternoon will be triple digit temperatures and potential winds. air quality will be a major problem the entire day. melissa? >> nbc's miguel, thanks so much. the iraqi journalist who threw a shoe at former president george bush will be released from prison next month. the 30-year-old report ert is being released three months early, because, if can you believe it, good behavior. prince's william and harry's country home a scene of burglary. according to the "sun "a newspaper, the burglar didn't know the house belonged to the royals and was arrested after sneaking on to the ground. the princes were not home at the time. it was the garage sale to end all garage sales. thousands showed up at the great california garage sale on friday. more than 6,000 items are on sale including 600 cars. the department of general
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services is reporting sales topped more than $1 million. just at drop in the bucket compared to the $26 billion state budget deficit. i saw a really night green gnome on sale
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that's a look at your weekend forecast. hope it's nice where you are. lester? still to come on "today," the youngest person to sail
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around the world alone. how he did it when we meet the amazing young man who just sailed into port this morning, right after these messages. special interest groups are trying to block progress on health care reform, derailing the debate with myths and scare tactics. desperately trying to stop you from discovering that reform won't hurt medicare. it will actually strengthen it by eliminating billions of dollars in waste and lowering drug prices. tell congress not to let myths get in the way of fixing what's broken with health care. learn the facts at healthactionnow.org. of fixing what's broken with health care. it's critical that i stick to my medication. i cannot be one of the 61 million americans who do not refill their prescriptions on time. readyfill at cvs pharmacy automatically refills my prescriptions and reminds me to pick them up. you mean, reminds me to pick them up. [ chuckles ] stop by your local cvs pharmacy to ask if readyfill is right for you, and get a $25 coupon book.
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there's only one way to eat an eggo -- your way. l'eggo my eggo. what do you say to a spin around the color wheel? - to paint with primer already mixed in? - ♪ yeah yeah yeah... - test samples instead of can commitments? - ♪ whoo! - what do you say we dip into our wallets less... - ♪ are you feeling it? - ...and grab ahold of the latest tools out there... - ♪ oh! ...so we can quit all that messing around with extra steps - and get busy turning our doing dials up a notch? - ♪ whoo! ♪ oh! more saving. more doing. - that's the power of the home depot. - ♪ yeah yeah yeah. mike was only 16 years old when he set off on a quest to become the youngest sailor to sail the globe. he samed around the southern tip of africa, across the south seas of the pacific, came through the panama canal and even met up
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with hurricane bill last week in the atlantic. nine months and 30,000 miles later, mike is now 17 and has made it back to england and the record-breaking sailor has now docked in portsmouth. congratulations. >> thank you. thank you very much. >> you've spent the past nine months at sea. i've got to ask how it feels to finally be docked this morning and how do you plan to celebrate? >> it is absolutely incredible. i mean, i couldn't believe the crowd lining the dock complete completely. i was overwhelmed. it does feel really great to be back on solid ground. i'm looking forward to a bed that doesn't move at night. >> probably it will feel strange. sailing arranged the world is a feat in and of itself, but you were 17 -- 16, turned 17, you were all alone. what were some of the biggest challenges you faced as you were navigating the seas? >> the biggest challenge is that you are completely alone.
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there's no one to help you. there had been the trip, saying every job you have to do and sleep as well. >> how do you sleep jp i understand you had problems with your autopilot. how did you sleep during these nine months? >> i would sleep in spurts of 40 minutes and only get about four hour as night. i'm kept very busy. quite startling how busy you're kept, because it's quite a handful. >> you ran into your fair share of rough seas on the blog you kept during your journ journeys. you described surfing down 50-foot waves at break neck speeds. what was it like facing those conditions alone. did you ever think at a certain point i'm not going to make it. this isn't going to work? >> no. i was always head-set on the finish. sometimes i thought, what am i doing here? some of the best moments were
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exhilarating. it's absolutely brilliant. >> you accomplished this at 17. what's next for you? besides probably sleeping for the next nine months? do you just go back to being a regular teenager? do you have your sights set on something else? >> i am looking forward to going back into college, i have a year left. at the same time, looking for bigger challenges and there's definitely going to be something next, that's for sure. >> does it involve sailing? i know you've been sailing six you were 7? >> probably involve sailing, i'm sure. >> mike, congratulations once again. glad you're back safe and sound. thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you. and we'll be right back. but first, this is "today" on nbc. need a lift? hey buddy, i appreciate the ride, you know. no problem. ♪ mind if i take a shortcut? yeah, sure.
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they're being called heroes for helping to crack an 18-year-old kidnapping case. >> what made them suspicious? we'll ask when we meet them live after these messages. febreze introduces new flameless luminaries more than a flameless candle, the shades are infused with a fresh scent just place the shade on the wooden base to turn on the light and fill your room with a light, fresh scent and with shades you can change to suit your mood and complement your style each shade safely brightens any room with a soft flickering light and a stylish design
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>> what is left of danny is very disorganized. it is a signal of the storm out over the ocean. ocean city can expect to get some waves and some rip currents. you can see some clemens in the south. things ultimately will not -- you can see some clearing in the south. those funds are beginning to move in. we have some chance for some
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rain shower activity around the area, maybe even a thunderstorm today. we may see some sun breaks this afternoon which would take the temperature up to 83. >> thank you. thank you for joining us. 11 news saturday morning continues in 25 minutes. we are back on this saturday morning, august 29, 2009. a big thanks to all the folks gathered out on our plaza spending this very rainy saturday morning with us outside. i'm amy robach along with lester holt. >> a nice crowd. >> it is a great crowd. and a big one, too, with all of those umbrellas. still to come this half hour, two university of california at
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berkeley police officers and this morning are hailed as big heroes. >> yes. something about fip isle garrido that didn't sit right with the two officers. what they did next led to an arrest and freedom for jaycee dugard. coming up we'll meet the two campus officers and find out what tipped them off when we talk to them live. >> then on a much, much lighter note, we're going to talk about guilty pleasures. we were asked to come up with ours. mine involved food in a lot of ways. >> yeah, mine, food and actually i think one of the ones we shared was candy. >> swedish fish specifically, i believe. one of my big, big guilty pleasures. i have a lot of fun eat eating those. we're going to talk about when they're fun, when the guilty pleasure is fun and when they can perhaps be something more serious and how to know the difference between the two. we'll talk about that. >> a great half hour ahead. first one more check of the weather with
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>> 73 degrees at the airport with cloudy skies.
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most of the rain is offshore right now. a few showers in western maryland. here is the forecast for today. a few showers this morning and maybe some already. what's your name, buddy? >> samuel glover. >> samuel glover. you see yourself on tv? >> uh-huh. >> how do you look? >> good. >> i think you look good, too. let's send it inside to lester. >> bill, thank you very much. now to the story everyone is talking about. the 18-year-old kidnapping case of jaycee dugard. on tuesday, two police officers at the university of california at berkeley became suspicious at phillip garrido's behavior. this morning lisa campbell and
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officer allison jacobs join us live from california. good morning to both of you. thanks for being with us. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> we begin lisa with you. take me back to earlier this week when this man presented himself on campus. i understand he wanted to stage some sort of event. tell me about your first interaction. >> my first interaction was when he came into my office on monday, he wanted to schedule an event, and so initially i allowed him to explain to me what type of event it was. he wasn't clear in his thoughts, appeared to be really unstable. but more alarming was the two little girls that were behind him. >> and so you asked him to come back tuesday. when there was an interview and officer jacobs, you become involved here. you look at the two daughters. what, as police officer, started not adding up in your mind? >> what first struck me, and us together, was the coloring of his two little girls, who were
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very pale. their appearance was very drab. they didn't interact like normal young girls would act, and the intense stare from the youngest one just kind of made me hair stand on end. >> and lisa, have you shared your concerns with officer jacobs? >> yes. actually, i went to ali and asked if she would run him based on the observations i made monday. then after she came back with the information, i asked her sow sit in on the interview. >> so you run a background check, and he cups up as a registered sex offender. officer jacobs, what happens then, now? >> so i tell lisa he's on parole for rape and kidnapping, and we were immediately concerned because she said he had two little girls with him. there was nothing in the paperwork that said she couldn't be around children, but i was definitely concerned at that point. so i wanted to sit in with the
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meeting just to make sure that everything was okay. >> so you've got a registered sex offender. two little girl whose do not appear to be his. your first instinct? slap the cuffs on him right there? >> no. they did appear to be his. his blue eyes, calling him dad. >> the parole officer said he didn't have any daughters. >> that was much later, after he had already left. >> i got you. so once you called the parole officer, what steps did he then say he would take? >> the parole officer said he was going to call mr. garrido into his office and tell him not to come back to uc-berkeley campus. and then he said he was going to check up on the family. >> and lisa, what was your reaction when you found out what had happened, and who dugard was -- or who this man was? >> when alley came back with the information it made it much more urgent that we were both able to sit together and make an
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observation and come together and try to figure out what to do in interests of the children. >> had you heard of the dugard case? was it part of your memory? >> no. actually, i'm a chicago native. so '91 -- i'm 19, 20. >> yeah. i was in high school. so i didn't remember either. >> when this was all explained to you, what was your reaction when you realized who you had and the re cues of jaycee, that was a result of your work, what was your reaction. >> wow. thank god. >> shocked. very shocked, this is something so huge we were a part of and honored we could be a part of it and help jaycee find her way home. >> i know you don't willingly accept the label of heroes but i think a lot of folks regard you as that. to that you swha? >> we did what any officer in our position would do. we're grateful we were able to persist and provide the services that would hopefully help jaycee and her children. >> and i think all police
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officers are heroes in our eyes. on a day-to-day basis. >> a good answer. a lot of people would agree with both of you. we appreciate both of you being here and a lot of us appreciate what you did as well. >> thank you. we'll be right back after these messages. with an epa estimated 32 miles per gallon. and up to 600 miles between fill ups. it's the most fuel efficient crossover on the highway. better than honda cr-v, toyota rav4 and even the ford escape hybrid. the all new chevy equinox. on tuesday i go in even earlier than usual. thank goodness for eggo, a nutri-grain waffle... with a quick smudge of cream cheese. at least that part's easy. there's only one way to eat an eggo... your way. l'eggo my eggo. try the first great-tasting, zero-calorie...
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to ask if readyfill is right for you, and get a $25 coupon book. readyfill, only at cvs pharmacy. good music. >> yeah. >> he said she said. >> right. guilty pleasures. everyone has favorites. foods, tv shows, a little embarrassing and lester and i are no exception. >> i think my number one guilty
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pleasure is i like to watch old sitcoms, and i say old, i mean "60s old. "i dream of genie," "hogan's heroes," "gilligan's island." silly, isn't it? >> my biggest guilty pleasure not only involves music and some of the artists i have on my ipod, britney spears, miley cyrus. i'll add mutt i like the bubble gum pop feel-good -- when i'm in a bad mood if i put on britney or miley, i have to admit, i'm in a good mood afterwards rnlgtsz i did a story a couple years ago to overcome my fetish for candy and i went to a hypnotist. >> you have made a decision to permanently eliminate your sugar addiction. >> but every once in a while i'll get a bag or two of candy and i'll just -- >> swedish fish probably tops my list in candy. >> swedish fish. >> when i'm in college i used to
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go to the commissary and just have bags and bags of them. >> gummy savers. >> peanut m&ms. two for mommy one for the girls. >> i don't feel guilty. it's just once in a while. it's a candy vacation. >> so our guilty pleasures actually are bad for you? and is there a healthy way to indulge them? >> somehow it bake a cooking -- candy. i don't know. and good morning to both of you. logan, your presence does not imply that there are any sex issues here. >> guilty pleasures don't have to be sex related. >> but we love having both of you here. i just wanted to clear that up, in case anyone says, i heard -- anyway, rick, the guilty pleshers that make us feel guilty. why do i feel guilty about watching "'60s tv shows? >> guilty pleasures are already in small doses. when you go crazy, that's when
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it's a problem. my guilty pressure, kfc original recipe. >> finger licking good. >> but every day. >> can't do it every day. i actually just lost 30 pounds on weight watchers. that was one of the things. i've got to be able to have my kentucky fried chicken every once in a while. >> and, logan, to that point, everyone's guilty plesh sir different. how do we define what it is? >> any kind of behavior, a ticktivety, food, something we like to enjoy secretly but are too embarrassed to admit to. we have so many different ones, we all come from different backgrounds. taboo in one family is not necessarily in the next. >> do you think it's different between men and women? >> oh, yeah. see i like to say to guys we tend to be victims of pleasure. if we like something we don't care what it is. we're going to keep doing it. it's like, hey, it's like -- >> we do it, we just don't tell you.
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>> guys tell everybody. guys -- >> for example, if were you to hit yourself up side the head with a hammer and liked it, you would hit yourself in the head again and again. you know? you're a guy. that's how we perceive. >> some of these things really are perfectly innocent. when did you realize, i have a real issue? >> it's perfectly acceptable to indulge in moderation. whatever it is, the on way you can derive pleasure and sanction is from something, then it's probably a bigger issue. if you're sneaking around hiding in in a way a little more malicious wlnchs amy took the swedish fish a minutes ago. >> i don't think i'm sneaking it. they're all around. >> it does become a nightmare, however when it starts to impact other people's lives? >> it can impact relationships. embellishes in swedish fish isn't necessarily a problem. keeping secrets, affects someone
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else's wealth and well-being, it becomes annish u. every so often, everything in moderation doesn't hurt. >> you mentioned the kentucky fried chicken. does this call into the cat gopher pleasure revenge. i'm being good. doggone it, i'm doing something bad. >> perfectly healthy. you don't want to deprive yours. >> i find sometimes you go to the guilty pleasure, like on a rainy day, feeling down, you need something to make me feel better. you reach for the swedish fish. >> here you go. >> we heard from rick. what about you? >> television. i love reality tv and i actually like, and i hope he's not watching, watching cartoons with my son. >> nothing wrong with that. >> nothing to feel guilty about. >> i tell him he can't be watching them all the time. >> only bad time to watch them when the "today" show is on. another issue. >> thanks so much. appreciate it. and we'll be back. first, this is "today" on nbc.
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in his nearly 50 years of public service, senator ted kennedy was a passionate advocate for the poor, the sick and the suffering. >> as the liberal lion of the senate, he lifted hi booming voice in the senate. here now, ted kennedy "in his own words." >> i came to this body believing that that the privilege of the powerful can look out for themselves, but that our challenge is to make sure we're going to have eve as even a playing field as we possibly can for all americans. >> i'm announcing today my candidacy for the senate of the united states. >> the young man i wanted to see in america where everyone could make a contribution, where a man will be measured not by the color of his skin, but by the content of his character.
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>> each of us must do his individual cause to end the suffering. to feed the hungry. to heal the sick. to strengthen and renew the national spirit. >> for all those whose cares have been our concerns, the work goes on, the cause endures, the hope still lives, and the dream shall never die. >> as long as i have a voice in the united states senate, it's going to be for that democratic platform plank that provides equal quality health care, east and west, north and south for all american as a matter of right and our privilege. >> the fundamental test of our society is how it leads the least powerful among us.
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>> we must raise the glass ceiling that stretches across our government and our economy so that at long last all americans will be equal in life as well as in law. >> there is a new wave of change all around us, and if we set our compass true, we will reach our destination. not merely victory for our party but renewal for our nation. >> i love this country. i believe in the bright light of hope and possibilities. i always have, even in the darkest hours. i know what america can achieve. i've seen it. i've lived it. >> we'll be right back.
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never in a million years one pair of khaki shorts: ain't gonna happen the perfect pair of jeans: priceless use your mastercard and you could win the perfect pair of jeans and a trip in mastercard's break in your jeans promotion. thanks for watching this saturday morning. coming up tomorrow on "today," whitney houston the first new album in years. is it good enough to call it a comeback? >> we'll see. now, stay tuned to nbc. the funeral of ted kennedy
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beginning at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. later tonight i'll see you right back here for "nbc nightly news." have a great day. bye-bye. ba ba good morning.
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>> we will check the forecast in just a moment. here are some of the stories we are working on today. police are interviewing witnesses after a man was found a place -- stepped in his place in glen burnie. it occurred at 5:30. the man of pasadena died of his injuries in the hospital. anyone with information on the case is asked to call the police in anne arundel. a man convicted of kidnapping two teenagers and raping one will be sentenced. to life sentences plus 100 years to run consecutively. he conducted the teens from a light rail. he put the boys in the trunk of his car while the girl was raped.
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>> a man escaped getting crushed under his crotch. -- garage. he heard a noise and then heard a loud crash. >> the driveway. up. >> most of the shoppers have gone away. the work a lot of showers last night in carroll county and montgomery county. things began to thin out around baltimore. some heavy rains on the eastern shore.
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a few sprinkles and showers south of baltimore this morning. a lot less rain. we see a lot of rain is developing off of the coast. that is the situation right now. most of the rain is off the coast. things are easing up as far as the rain is concerned. it is not gone yet. we will talk about the forecast in just a few minutes. >> up next, is your name david or anything like that, he could get a free meal at a famous barbecue restaurant. we will let the details straight ahead. >> we have a live report from boston where senator kennedy is being remembered. >> it ready for a look at the other side of the dinner table. a documentary filmmaker is joining us live. >> and the maryland state fair >> and the maryland state fair i what is it to lead? at pnc, it's doing what most benefits our customers.
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whether that's building more certified green buildings than anyone on earth. creating online banking tools for the next generation. or making a 10 year, $100 million investment in kids. it's how we've always done business. and will for a very long time to come. pnc. leading the way.

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