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tv   News4 Midday  NBC  June 10, 2019 11:00am-11:50am EDT

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right now on news 4 midday. david ortiz remains in theho spital shot in what is being described as ambush. the latest on the shooting and the former player's condition. >> new at midday. virginia tech announceslans for a new $1 billion innovation campus near amazon's new northern virginia headrs quarte what the campus will include for people who live d work in that rea. and in our area a few scattered showers out there. more moderate in spots but just wait. we've got a lot morein to get through before it's said and a r done. i'll let y know when it's said and done. that's coming up. >>ews 4 midday starts now.
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good monday morning. welcome to news 4 midday. >> new this morning, brand ne details about aw major project aimed at fostering innovation in our area.irginia tech the new i campus in alexandria. it was part of plans to bring azon to the washington ea. >> justin finch is live and he's been watching the news conference from school officials a lawmakers. justin, what are they saying? >> hey there, pat, good morning. the press conference wrapped up. we can tell you this announcement has bn one that's months in the making here. beginning the work on this soon after amazon's hq announcement in november. that's when they saw an opportunity here. this morning we can tell you from blacksburg toere in northern virginia there's a lot of excitement because this will not be your average mixed use development here. it will be the live, work and
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play components but also education as well. this is apartnership that also features a promise. it was struck by virginia tech, lin stone investments as well as the city of alexandria. this has been a hot property for a long time. the national landing across from the four mile run stream which is where crystal city is and the arlington area where hq 2 is set to take shape. this will be a 15 acre development. 1 million square feet. a price tag of 1 billion that will feature funding from virginia tech and the state. also here today senator mark warner who called this a technogical gamehanger not only for northern virginia but the state as well. >> this is also personal to me a technology entrepreneur, the one thi i think we've always looked in northern virginia. we have great educational
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institutions but we have not had the world research innovation center this will produce. >> they're saying this is an economic game changeringing lot jobs that correspondent with this site. the investor saying they make really particular cho about where they choose to spend their time and money, and they focus on data like growth potential and also the commitment to the area. those were two things they saw strongly in this opportunity here. itreill also featu affordable housing for the students and staff but also for residents in area.lexandria they're also promising on top of that a very strong kug thro 12 partnership with local schools. i asked about that. they're saying rig now they want to gethrough the work of setting up development to have their first class in 2020 a then begin an extense i
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patnership with local schools. back to you. >> justin, there's a lot to look forward to in alexandr>>. ew this morning some students in southeast d.c. don't have school today because someone broke into their school and vandalized it. they say they were called to the middle school shortly before 6:00 this morning. it's unclear if anything was stolen. police are looking through security video now. news 4 pat collins is headed that day. we'll update you as we learn more about that. > now toweather. a dreary start to the day. it hasn't poured rain but cuds and drizzle are sticking around. >> can weexpect more of this stuff for the rest of the day? >> all day. this is what it's goingto loo like all day. this is the live tower camera but there's so much fog and low clouds. you can't see anythrg. camera is working.s but this i what it looks like if you're a little higher out tthere. andhis is another camera view that we have outth a.way becau
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it's shaking a little bit. we got a breeze out there as well. but we're coinuing to see waves of rain pushing to the area. again, we could hit dry patches. look at this down to the south. but maybe, maybe a streak of sunshine but mainly cloud cover, drizzle, we're waiting for a slow moving cold front that's right here at the back edge ofthat is going t push into the area from the west to the east, and take everything with it. but it'sgoing to take a little while tdo that once the frontal systemtomes hrough we're talking about shers and storms. we'll star tracking storms after 6:00 tonight. temperatures are going to go up. not everybody isoing to see warm temperatures today. let's talk about what you c expect for today and tomorrow ll when we' get sunshine coming up. >> lauryn, thank you. today the man accused of causing chaotic moments during capital pride festivities is set to be in court.vi cell phone deo captured the moments peopl took off running after someone saw a man with a gun and some people thought they
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heard gunshots. it turns out the man said he pull the gun on someone arguing with his ot significant er. others did not notice the chaos. >> i wasn't scared personally and no one i c saw in thewd seemed to be scared. itd seeme like everyone was here to celebrate the cause of lgbtq rights. >> there were no reported incidents. keep an eye on the nbc washington app for when the incint appears in court. we're llowing a developing story out of theca dominin republic. david ortiz is in the hospital after being shot in an bush style attack. ortiz is in stable condition after undergoing surgery. police there say last night two men approached him at a bar and shot him at nearly point-blank range. one of the suspects was captured and was beaten by a crowd at the
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bar. the other ran off. no word on a motive for the shooting. ortiz is from the dominican republic and is regarded as a national hero. he helped the red s win three world series titles and retired in 2016. when a cked about his be his ather said he will beround for a l gtime. right now a former maryland basketball player is in court facing charges for an alleged rape. >> prosecutors say he assaulted me woman he in 2017. >> we are at the courthouse where jury selection is underway.od molette, gomorning. >> reporter: good morning to you all. dodd has been able to leave the coury to play professional basketball overseas in poland until his trial. w, he has to be back here to focus on this rape case that goes back to his days at the
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university of maryland here in prince george's county. the jury selection process got underway about 1rn00 this moing in this case that dates back the fall of 2017. prosecutors allege that dodd ano a n left a bar near campus and dodd had sex with this woman at the terrapin row apartments. the victim reponced the ient five days later and also admitted to police at the time that she was inebriated.d dodd his attorney have maintained that the sex was consensual. dodd faces multiple charges in this case from second degree hape to second degree assault and of course, t process gets underway today as the trial gets underway for jury selection tat begins or began about an hour tho. that is e latest in up >> all right. thank you, molette. the son of maryland football
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coach michael locksley was arrested in texas over the weekend. he was arrested on saturday on multiplein charges uding driving while intoxicated, possession of marijuana, terroristic threatsnd unlawful possession of a weapon. he was supposed to be aqu arterback in el paso. the school suspended him from the te while the facts are sorted out. in st a few hours house democrats on capitol hill will begin hearings,eakey hngs on the mueller repo. first hearing is scheduled to start at 2:00 this morning and it's happening as lawmakers wrestle with whether to launch an impeachmentinquiry into president trump. here's news 4's tracie potts. >> repheor t setoouday's hearing is to educa the public about what's in the 448-page mueller report. >> we're going toet to the truth and we're going to
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demonstrate that this president must be accountable for his own conduct. >> five dozen democrats and one republicandy are rea tope imach president trump now. >> impeachment does not equal president trump's leaving e. offic >> special counsel robert muelle president tries to obstruct his investigation into rus an election interference. justice department rules prevented him from indicting mr. donald trump. one republican admits he when even read the report. >> i have a concern when you put the entire power of the united states justice department behind anything you can achie agenda. >> today's star witness john dean, president trump tweets he's a sleaze bag. the fbi called dean the master manipulator of the water gate >> i began by telling the president there was a cancer growing on the presidency. >> reporter: democrats want to kn if forr white house counsel don mcgahn has asked to play a similar role for
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president trump. toorrow the full house is voting on whether to hold mcgahn in contempt for not testify in the attorney general william barr in contempt for not turning over the full mueller report with the underlying evidence. tracie potts, nbc news, washington. a warni from iran this morning. whathe prompted t country's foreign minister to say the u.s cannot expect stay safe. >> also more flight cancellations. the summer trav season is underway and airlines are still dealing with the grounding of the 737 max. t latest on when the plane wl be allowed to fly agilaiti
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at children's naonal, stronger is caring for a baby's heart in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy. and a future when prenatal pediatrics leads to healthier children. it's being the number oneewborn intensive care unit in the country. and giving parents peace of mind. it's less recovering in our bed, and more jumping on yours. stronger is standing out and standing proud. hey babe, what's the parollerbladeking22.le bill? capital "k". ok... what about the phone bill? it's the entire alphabet backwards.
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z y x w v... i got it. i got it... what about electric? shrimp. uh uh. lobster? it didn't work. try all see ood. rds "all seafood" or like different seafoods? no, just like work your way through the ocean. whrg? all your passwords. bill pay on the td bank mobile app keeps all your bills in one place. developing this morning, escalating tensions between the united states and tehran. the spokesman for oriran's fgn ministry spoke this morning during a regular briefing. this is a look at that. the spokesman said the u.s., quote, safe after starting what he
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called quote, economic war against iran. he directly blamed president trump for the ongoingtensions between the countries. iran says it will consider negotiating with the u.s. if it easeeconomic pressure on the iranian people. house speaker nancy pelosi is one of the most powerful women in washington, and one of the most influential women in the world.t buhe public doesn't see pelosi's personal side often. she's opening up now to our barbara harrison about mother hood, religion, and making history on the hill. i had a chance to sit down with nancy pelosi the other day and we talk about at of things. her personal and her political life. she is known around the country and indeed around the world as the speaker of the house, a member of congress in san francisco, but we've actually known each other a longe. tim we met when we both had children in the same schoolan back in s francisco several years ck. nancy at that time was already the mother of five, four girls and one boy.
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left for the washington area in 1981 to work here at nbc 4. she came about five years later elected to the house of represthtatives. as daughter of a former congressman, i asked her in the interview if her parents would be proud of where she is today. she said i wasn't the first person to ask that question. >> i remember when i was electee ser the first time by my caucus, nominated for speaker, and in the caucus room pople applauded as i came to the hair of the the clai committee said to me your parents would be so proud of you becoming speaker. and it jolted me, and i thought m, they didn't have any aspirations for to be speaker. they just wanted me to be holy. and that's what made them prou >> s says as devout catholics her mother would be mos proud, she believes of the way she has raised her family. but she thinks having gone from
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eitchen to congr would have been okay too. be sure to tune in for the rest of my interview on monday evening on news 4 at 5:00. the author who tweeted a photo of a black metro employee eating on a plane is suing her publisher. last month she tweeted this photo saying people aren't allowed to eat on metro. it is true, but the social media backlash against the awehor caused her california publisher drop her novel. the book was set to be released this tuesday. shed apologize and deleted the tweet. she said it caused her reputation to be permanently ruined. her publisher is not commenting on the more than $13on milli lawsuit she files. the nation's largest airline has announcedt will keep the boeing 737 max o 8 of service through early september nchts it was grounded earlier this year s after it wa involved in two
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deadly crashes. latest. the >> reporter: american airlines which had cancelled boeing's 737 max 8 flights throh august 19th will keep the planes on the ground through september 3rd. the statement from the nation's largesti ca said it would effect about 115 flights per day. in march the plane was grounded worldwide after two deadly crashes. one in indonesia. the other in ethiopia. the crashes claimed 346 lives. >> we feel the gravity of these events and recognize the devastatio to the familiesfrnd iends of the loved ones who perished. >> reporter: while crashes have been linked to the anti-crash software. boeing has yet to confirm a certification test flight and has training changes to the federal train administration. we were recently told there is no timeline for the max 8's return to the skies. >> i don't have septemb as a
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target. i don't have june as a target. i have safety of the 737 max. that's my only target. i>> reporter: boeing sa continues to work with global regulators to provide them the information they need to certify the max update and safely return the fleet to seice. nbc news. remember this video from last week? it was shared on social media and quickly went viral. itom shows a wan being rescued by helicopter and the stretcher she's on spinning out ofontrol on that stretcher was 74-year-old cat lin metro.>> er husband george is speaking out. george says he and his wife were hikinin arizona when she fell. she broke her nose and injured her left hand and leg. rescue crews decided to air lift her because of her hip pain.he but t stretcher began spinning. rescuers say she spun at least 150 tmes in two from
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the ground. >> i didn't know iv idifn'knowha t eawas she dwa happening. everything was spinsing sofast. the blood was going to her head and eyeballs. >> he said his wife is still feeling the effects o the spinning. phoenix fire officials say spinning like that is rare out of the 210 air rescues in the last six years, spinning has only happened twice. >> glad she's going to be okay. >> what an ordeal. over the weekend the washington nationals landed itself in the history books. >> they hit four straight home it's hard to do, and it's the second time in team history it's happened. no other team has accomplished this in more than one game. the magic happened in thenighth ing. they are celebrating there all hitting hme runs back to back. >> it led to a victory over the
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padres. nice to have somene to celebrate with. >> yes. password security is but there hese days are reasons to share yours with a significant other. the court battle one man had to endure after his partner's . death and a crane collapsed in texas. the latest on the weather conditions at the time of t a hacident w
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this is surely not the way many thought their day at the amusement park would end. sm be from ash fire prompted evacuations at six flags magic e mountain n los angeles. the so-called sky fire spread to 40 acres. that's when six flags stopped letting people into the park and started asking people to leave. at one point the planes were dangerously close to the parking lot and exit road. no one washurt, fortunately. at least one person is dead
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aer a crane collapsed and crashed into anapartment building in dallas. >> cell phone video captured the terrifying moments. >> oh, my god. the crane is falling over oh, my god. >> strong winds and rain reported in the area around the time the crane toppled over. it ripped a large gash into the side of the building.fo and the rce of the crash was so powerful that several floors of parking decks fell on top of each other. >> right now our number one priority is the living area on the eastern most side of the building where it appears that all five stories at some point inside the structure have collapsed. >> there were more than 400 apartments in the complex all had to be evacuated. the crane company is sending representatives to help with the investigation. a rainy weekend took a toll on infrastructure in north carolina. rain led to flooding whichiped out several major roads. look at that. more than 7 inches of rain fell
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in some counties onaturday alo lone. while some of the damage will take days to repair. some of it will take weeks or months. no one was hurt.ow w how much rain have we gotten and how much more are we going to ? get >> we haven't gotten that much.h because wead spits of rain yesterday. and then the same today. moderate in spots. still about maybe a tenth of an inch. quarter of a inch. not a loen it's be light and on and off. tonht i think we could have thunderstorms that could bring heavy downpours to our area. we have so much moisture in the air, and it's goi to become more and more humid through the day. we haven't gotten there quite ye we will, and all this mois re has to go somewhere. it's going to come down form of some rain. right now we'reeeing the form of some fog out there. look at that. it's a dreary monday out there. what to expect. waves of rain this morning. there's plenty of dry times.
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we're also have rain and shower ttivity pushing through area. after 6:00 or 7:00, storms and isolated flooding events around the area. no flood watch from the national weather service informal we'll see if they post one.ou again, we cld have isolated flooding. ponding on the roadways when you wake up on tuesday more'ng. tha spread in temperatures. we barely moved at this point. temperatures --good. we jumped up a little bit. for me, i'm glad we have jumped up. one thing about me eorology, never trust a warm front. we have a warm front in the thuth. that brought flooding rain. the video in north carolina we showed you. the frontal system is going to norise. it's t going to clear the entire area. areas north cooler. areas south warmer. we jumped about 5 degrees in the last hour. we're on our way to 80 with lowers and storms and rain leading to thete overnight. this is the front i was talking about. and this is where it's going to set up shop. areas south and east of d.c.,
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lowo mid 80s. north and west, you're stuck in the 70s for daytime highs today before a cold front moves through and pushes everything out of here. but right now we're seei the influence of the rain from the warm front. here's the cold front that's going to push everything away. once that cold front comes through, that's going to bring us storms. but likely not until aboutm. 6:00 tonight. there goes the rain. not raining all day. but we'll have the st and drizzle. here comes the frontal system right here. but late. don't think any severe weather. no tornadoes or damaging winds. heavy downpours. let's talk about your tuesday and also morepo imrtantly next weekend. coming up in the next forecast. thanks, lauryn. thismorning the president was on twitter. he said tiffs on mexico can be reinstated. the latest on the immigration and security deal with that country. >> and a must-see mome from the tony awards. why her award for her part in w lahoma ok
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president trump has backed off hi threat to impose new tariffs on mexico after reaching a deal that came down to the wire. >> but "thnew york times" reports many components of the e new agrment were agreed uponmo hs ago. now some critics t accuse president of purposely creating a crisis so h could swoop in and appear to solve it at the lastminute. kristen welker has our ory. >> reporter: overnight president trump defending the 11th hoea dl he struck with mexico. the u.s. suspending its tariff threat in exchange for tougher border securityrom mexico. the president tweeti there is now going to be great cooperation between mexico and the u.s. mr. trump blasting is false. a new york times report that the terms of the deal had largly
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en agreed to even bere the tariff threat. under the deal me pcolans to deploy 6,000 pstr oo southern border to stop migrants. a senior administration official acknowledged mexico already planned to send 5400 troops butb few hadn deployed and now it's that's going to change. an administration says it's an expansion of mexico's commitment along the border. >> he brought mexico to the table again. and what they're talking about, they're going to be doing. it's a game changer. ts are rter: democ accusing the president of solving a crisis that he nelfactured. ho i u aakse staterementpe threats and temper tantrs are no way to negotiate foreign policy. that was kristen welker reporting. as for the president's twitter claim that the new york times report is false, "the times" is standg by the storynd has responded with a statement that says we are confident in our reporting and as with so my ther occasions, our stories
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stand up over time and the preside's denials of them do not. >> right now d.c. mayor bowser is nouncing a mortgage loanp gram for d.c. government workers. the presidentof eagle bank is part of the announcement. it's ao complement t programs such as the empler assisted housing programs. in this digital age we spend so much time online. what t happens our s moaledia we'reg one? nbc's jacob ward reports on how some eople preparing for the digital afterlife. >> when rick died in an accident de y ago, his husbanda wdihodle book.kedith ecio fam >> theiri mig v e. >> they are my children's history, and they have every right to them. they are the representation of
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their daddy who is now gone. >> reporter: nick fallyot into the account after taking apple to court for access. and he hopese oth can learn from his experience. >> it would never have dawned on me to say hey, put that in a universal space so that if god forbid anything happened, we would all be able tove access. >> reporter: in all careful planning before death or illness, these days the legacy you're most likely to leave would be online and totally off limits to your loved ones. it's not just photos. bank information, social media accounts, the contents of your laptop or phone. most of it behind an ever increasing number of pass words we have trouble keeping track of. digital consultants help families organize what she calls thir invisible stuff. >> it's not unlikeoing a will. it raises issues around mortality and being organized. > you have to acknowledge you're going todie.
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>> let's talk about the social media section. >> rethrter: she's working wi jiffy and howard page, empty nesters who kep everything in the cloud. after watching howard's parents get locked out of their own email, they decided to get more organized? >> to make it easier on loved ones, they suggest keeping a dst of pass words with end of lifeuments and decide what you want to happen to your social media accounts when you die. >> i was keeping pass words for me. i hadn't thought about what our children wer going to need to be able to take over after us. >> vital information for keeping loved ones in theoplost innewdsh mi good advice. >> indeed. it's a great story. you don't think about these sorts of things. >> a few of us do. >> and you require so much . planning you have to think about it.
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>> we're thinking now. well, broadway celebrated its best shows ands performance of the year at the 73rd annual tony awards. >> it was last night in new york city. earning best performance by an actress in a featur role in a musical was allie stroker for action oklahoma. she's the first wheelchair using actresso win a tony. she said her ♪ that is the music of a sax phone player. he is one of the musicians taking part in this year's d.c. jazzfest. and he is here with us this morning. along with executive director of the festival sunny sumpter.
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youre an al nis of howard university. we're all howard alumny. -- alumni. >> we were inlkabta g d.c. getss a jazz city. it's always had a huge presence of jazz, and now with a resurgence of jazz, andt's becoming more of a destination. so year around, you know, there's a great jazz scene hereu ing the jazz festival it's important to highlight the great talent in the city. >> and the festival has grown. >> that's right. it's grown. now we're 120,000 people to come to jazz fest. 160 concerts. 40 venues. 25 neighborhoods city wide. >>is this the biggest year for r? ev >> this is our 15th anniversary year. a big blowout year. we're doing all things jazz in u .
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>> you call the talent lineup us stupendo. >> first, i have to say come to the wharf on june 15th and 16 c. three outdoor stages. an anthem stage. michael franks free pad. it's just -- allen johnson. so much. and international stage with musicians from all around the world are coming to perform as . well > what better place to have a festival, a couple of nights like that? >> that's right. right on the water. >> right the water. there are aotsoofl with artists like you. >> uh-huh. >> you're playing is beautiful. will you get a chance to interact with the people or are you going to be playing that beautiful music? >> i'm easy toinf i'm on social media. usually i stick around after the concert. i was fortunate to play with chuck brown before he passed away. he always went to talk to the people. i try to dothat as artist, whkei
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for you to participate in something like this? >> the first time i came to the festival, is think it wa 2004. i got to watch some of my heroes perform. and then the next year i saw roy hargrove, rest in peace. >> you were a fan then? ev i was a fan then. over the next sal years i got to be part of the festival. now i think it's been a decade or so i i've been part of the d.c. jazz festival. >> when do we see you? >> i had a bunch of gigs this weekend, but i'll also play this saturday uptown, and then sunday father's day at the yacht club. those are both jazz performances. on sunday i'm particularly excited because it's in ward 8 where my mom resides right now. in fact, this year there's been a great presence of jazz east of the river which is really important. >> all right. sounds great. well, we know you're going to delight your fans. continue to do that.
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elijah and sunny. through father's day? >> that's right. and quincy jones, nancy jones, and others honored. >that's right. dreams are what a number of retirees are following as they do somethinunnvenonal eye gongackg o school. tin mi the claesss room in their go years. >> reporter: no need for a double take when you see jim mccormick trucking across campus. >> remember what it was like to be young and idealistic. growin number of college kids who aren't exactly kids anymore. >> reporter: 500 retirees attending the university of minnesota for just $10 a crit. pa of the senior citizen education program attracting a growing number of baby boomers
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back to class. old t you a little bit too to go to school? >> hey, it's a gift. it's a gift to be able to go for $10 a credit. >> reporter: stephen and tom both signed up for creative writing. >> the chance to follow my dreams. it's a chance to learnwh le world of knowledge that i hadn't had any access to before. >> i'm a lot more optimistic about the now and the future now that i've been amongst my classmates than i would have been a year ago. >> reporter: they're teaching you something? >> absolutely. absolutely. >> reporter: so why not spend the golden years enriching yourself with knowledge? >> it's a great opportunity. not only to learn and grow and develop yourself. it's a way to learn from another generation. >> reporter: and tha other generation is just as curious. >> they're just like us. here to learn the same things and offer new perspectivhe. >> for t to learn these things about themselves at their age, it's a really -- it's a imagine yal moment. >> reporter: here knowledge is ageless. >> this is our opportunity to
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say the things we've spent a lifetime being curious about. .> this is a dream facto old to dream.ws nbc minneapolis. ahead a specialrpdate on a r colleague. >> how joe
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this weekend many of the ws 4 team took part in the de purple st walk to end can karatic cancer.
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ere are pictures from the event. friend colleague and joe kreb is with us. he's been fighting pancreatic cancer for nearly two years. we talked to him about his treatment and how he's doing now. >> how are you? >> good. >> i gotyour breakfast here. ate agaist paneatie prep for i th s cancer. next stop, the hospital's infusion center where he and his wife are now well acquainted with the staff.l >> al right. deep breath. >> reporter: this pa was easier than the bier pill our former news 4 colleague had to swallow two years ago when he first learned that what he thought was a stomach flu was actually a forboding diagnosis of perhaps the world's most feared cancer. >> almost evebody who gets agnosed with pancreatic is still diagnose of the disease. there are few people we cure of
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the disease. >> reporter: the scan will determine if radiation treatment hasworked. joe says this is relatively painless. the hard part is waiting for the results and trying not to second guess the outcome. back at the hospital a week later, mary lynn is hopeful they'll get good news this time because the doctor hadn't called. >> and one time when the news wasn't so goo he called immediately after the scan to let him know that was showing. but this past time he texted, so that in itself is good. >> every time a scan comes along, it's a moment of truth. so it's like i covered during my career, i covered a lot of trials. it's like waiting for the jury to come back with theverdict. there is incredible tension in the courtroom when that jury walkbe back into the roomuse you don't know what they're going to say. >> good to see you. >> it isd officially goo to see
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you. >> reporter: that sounded good, but wh would the scs ?shanng >> reporter: he pointed out an area that could have gotten >> we risk damaging the normal long. no new ones popping. >> reporter: the hope anday is the scans will continue to bring good news. meanwhile they continue to plan for the future. maybe a trip to alaska next year and before that, wedding for their daughter in the fall. >> it's going to be a happy, happy occasion. >> reporter: and joe, as aays, is never lost for laughter. >> after the wedding we'll go out to the garden in the back. we'llig up the bucket to see if there'symore moneyef l >> he never loses his sense of humor throughout anything. >> he's looking good. >> heeally is. we saw himy. saturda he and his wonderful faly were there. that wonderful strong fighting irit is going to help him through the treatment. >> our continued prayers. we love you, both of you.
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lauryn, final check on the weather. >> final check. scattered showers out there right now. a few thunderstorms popping up after about 6:00 tonight. they continue until 1:00 a.m.oo tuesdayng breezy. plenty of sunshine. we're looking good for tomorrow, any dry. dron wednesday. more rain by thursday.> >>ll right. thanks, lauryn. and that's news 4 midday. thank you for being with u we're back on the air first at f 4:00 this ernoon. >> and you can get news andth weaer updates with our nbc shington app. have a great day and we'll see you tomorrow morning.
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♪ three, t, one. ♪ ♪h a bang in vegas. welcome to "acss live" on this monday. >> i'm not mad atok it. . she

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