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mississippi" 11. >> thank you for coming to the celebration, "ed king's mississippi" behind the scenes of freedom summer published by university press in mississippi which is publishing arm of the university of mississippi from our offices in jackson, mississippi each year, we bring to global market over 200 other creations in traditional print, print on demand, electronic book forms. it gives me great pleasure to introduce today reverend ed king, who was a major figure in the civil rights movement in mississippi, the chaplain, became a key leader in the mississippi freedom became a key leader in the mississippi freedom democratic party and a delegate at the 1964, and 1198 democratic national conventions. ed king ran for lieutenant governor and was on a ticket with famed civil rights leader aaron henry who ran for governor of the state of mississippi. one of the most wonderful things that he did during the civil rights movement was to carry a small camera, keep a great memory for very often, the only white mississippi in the room to hear what was going to happen next for freedom and the state of mississippi. an associate professor at american stud
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we spin the globe and today it has landed in laurel, mississippi mississippi. that is where stni w on wfam and she is joining us by skype. >> wo is there with us? >> oh, my god, we are so excited that melan is here, too, and stephanie, we will the tell you why you were chosen. they arb e y 4ah kid's school day, and they have a great husband and a dog and they love vol un unteer work. >> in the days of volunteering their time and carting their kid s have to dvr our show, she is like me and loves over to the top nail polish and franklin graham. >> and they love us so much that they gave each other our book. that is crazy. >> and now, you have to answer this question correctly to win. are you ready? >> yes. >> after we "give it away" at the end of the show on tuesdays what does kathie lee like the to do to hoda? braid her hair, give her a massage or play spanky tuesday. >> oh, look! they are doing it, too. >> you do it, too. >> why am i killing myself. you do to a fabulous regular vacation, and you and a guest and it ha has to be melanie, and saying four nights at
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mississippi. >> the mississippi lake? and you're shocked you don't have a point. the mississippi lake. hey, i'm the one who's not been sleeping. anyone else want to try? it's lake michigan. >> wow. >> michigan. all right, great job, everyone, except for tam ronlg ron tamron. up next, diane keaton, natalie catching up with the cast of love the (children laughing) he's so cute! what should we name him? (gasps) can we keep him? -please? mom, can we keep him? ahh! (both) pleaaaase? new pet? get scrubbing bubbles. kill 99.9% of germs, and destroy dirt and grime. you only need scrubbing bubbles disinfecting cleaners for 100% problem solved. we work hard, so you don't have to. sc johnson - a family company. fact you won't find the brand pharmacists recommend most for cold and flu relief at the shelf. advil cold & sinus is only behind the pharmacy counter. ask your pharmacist for fast, powerful advil cold & sinus. relief doesn't get any better than this. how you doing? hey! how are you? where are we watching the game? you'll see. i think my boys have a shot this year. yeah, especially with this
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mississippi state, at mississippi state, in the egg bowl. and they need auburn. >> verne: yeah. that's a first down. chad kelly. 20 seniors. for ole miss. 31 wins, and that 2003 class was led by a quarterback who with wears number 10. eli manning. and the first-class to make four straight bowl games being and the first to beat alabama in back-to-back games. >> gary: cannot talk about anyone in this league coaching who has done a better job coaching than hugh freeze since he came to ole miss. what he took over and what he's built is incredible. >> verne: a two-man committee essentially was enlisted to secure the new head coach at ole miss -- i've told the story before. i remember being in atlanta for the s.e.c. championship. one of those two was archie manning. we were on the bus going back to the hotel. archie said, "i think we've got our guy. i can't tell you who he is." and he didn't. but he said "i believe he's going to be a really good one." there is your man, right there. hugh freeze. >> gary: let's see if they can hold onto him. that's another factor here. >> verne: akeem judd. >> verne: eli 3,600 yards, chad kelly in a single season will probably pass eli in their next game. in starkville. >> gary: i have a lot of affection for bo wallace on that page, i have to tell you, he was the perfect guy to come to this program. he carried this team in that transition. a lot of the ole miss fans were very frustrated with bo wallace but he was the whole team for a couple years. he was the one that transitioned to where they are now. one of the great scenes we've ever had -- that ole miss-alabama scene. >> verne: my gosh. >> verne: perhaps you heard the public-address announcer congratulating chad kelly as the all time leader now in for the rebels of ole miss. >> verne: third down, 10. 3:13 to go after the last time out. taken by l.s.u. >> verne: ouch. oh, boy. >> gary: that's one guy you can't get hurt -- >> verne: ouch. >> gary: they've got to beat mssissippi state. that was an awkward hit right there. >> gary: he tries to slide. a big hit at the end of that by >> verne: fourth down and 12. >> verne: fourth down. ole miss about to give up the football. will gleeson. a deliberate line drive. >> gary: it was tipped. i think he got a hand on it. i think that's why it was so low. that would have been a big play pretty sure i heard it as it happened. >> verne: number 35. >> gary: yes. >> verne: absolutely. >> verne: or not. >> gary: i heard it, i thought, but he didn't touch it, did he? >> verne: at least the play is not under review. >> gary: yes. >> verne: incomplete. harris has thrown 42 passes in this game. he's completed 22. 2:49 to go. >> gary: verne, we're trying to find any replay that would i think we might have it. >> verne: that one is incomplete -- diarse. >> gary: i was wrong. it was not tipped. i was not the only one. watch the right side of your screen. head referee. watch this. he signaled "tipped" right there. kenny williamson was wrong two. that's two sons missed that one. >> verne: daniel and william-son. >> gary: you're sharp still. we've got 2:43 to go. >> verne: mercy. that one is incomplete. guess who. mike hilton. you could make an argument that mike hilton could win the star of the game. football game in the stadium. he's been asked throughout the season because of the injuries to tony conner, one of the stars of the defense with a bad knee to play a bunch of different positions and he's stepped up. hugh freeze said to us about mike hilton, when i walked in and met him i didn't think he could play. i thought i might want to get him out of here." >> verne: jawing with malachi dupre. >> gary: good thing he kept him. >> verne: yes. we told you earlier what he said to us. to grow up. >> gary: hilton is 5'9", 184 pounds. >> verne: 2:34 to go. 11 years. on the verge of lawing three in a row for the first time in his l.s.u. career. climbed back with 17 in a row to make it 24-17 tonight. but. >> gary: the answer drive by chad kelly, seven plays, two runs by kelly, he went five for five in that drive and that basically finished it. >> verne: second down. les miles had the unenviable task of replacing nick saban, but look what he did in his first three years. 11-2, 11-2, 12-2 then slippage. 8-5. 9-4. they rebounded. >> gary: remember were the 2007 team the national championship team we have there in red. he rebuilt it. he deserves a chance it bring it back but i'm not in charge. i don't write the checks. >> verne: one of those checks if they decide it part ways is for $15 million, we're told. >> gary: they have had another slippage in the s.e.c. try this one more time. are now 19-12. >> verne: third and 15. fr chad kelly. >> gary: got to get better quarterback play. got to upgrade it. the game has changed. ats more like the nfl now with the run-pass options. you've got to get the quarterback more involved. >> referee: time out, ole miss. >> verne: ole miss, time out. that's their last. every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families who've supported them, we offer our best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >> verne: we are back in oxford. just a minute and a half in game time from the "ram post game show." we'll take you back to new york. a couple of very interesting games played today. adam will lead our crew through scores and highlights from around the country. >> gary: there is going to be a lot of screaming. if michigan state wins out, do they go over notre dame or oklahoma? all these people are going to tell you you they know who is the best team. they're going to start telling you, "they know, i'mant an expert." "they know, i'm an expert." >> verne: sometimes you slay me. goodness. [laughing] we've got a lot of college football for you on thanksgiving weekend. on friday, and saturday. it all begins on saturday. it actually begins on friday, but on saturday, a special time of 2:30 eastern for "inside college football" and 3:00 for the "autotrader college football today" show. >> gary: all those players who paid the price this year, this team was obviously overrated, right? obviously. let's see if it will pay off next year for les and l.s.u. >> referee: five-yard penalty. remains fourth down. >> verne: i must say this is limping to a conclusion. the last five minutes seem to have taken half an hour. and for fournette, he got above 100 but just so. 25 for 108. he did have a 59-yarder on the first play from scrimmage wiped out by a holding call. >> gary: the play they're going to talk about on sunday -- the pitch on fourth down. >> verne: yes, fourth and goal and he and harris were -- as gary said, on different sections of the newspaper. >> verne: 52 seconds remaining. his per-game average has dropped considerably. remember the night we did the -- let's go back to the play that will be discussed sunday. fourth down. >> gary: this was obviously late with a 21-point lead but it just is an ugly finish to an ugly game. >> verne: first down, 10. coaches used to say about freshmen and sophomores? "they grow up a year later. they become sophomores and juniors." >> verne: this is tyron johnson. >> gary: a really good football game, mississippi state and dak prescott against this l.s.u. team. -- excuse me, ole miss team. that will be a fun game it watch. >> verne: yes. >> gary: love to watch dak prescott play. >> verne: pass complete. let's look at the updated s.e.c. west standings. winners in the game next week. ole miss's chance goes through starkville. they must win that and they've
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mississippi state, at mississippi state, in the egg bowl. and they need auburn. >> verne: yeah. that's a first down. chad kelly. 20 seniors. for ole miss. 31 wins, and that 2003 class was led by a quarterback who with wears number 10. eli manning. and the first-class to make four straight bowl games being and the first to beat alabama in back-to-back games. >> gary: cnot talk about anyone in this league coaching who has done a b bter job coaching than hugh freeze since he came to ole miss. what he took over and what he's built is incredible. essentially was enlisted to secure the new head coach at ole miss -- i've told the story before. i remembebe being in atltlta for the s.e.c. championship. manning. we were on the bus going back to the hotel. archie said, "i think we've got our guy. i can't tell you who he is." and he didn't. but he said "i believe he's going to be a really good one." there is your n, right there. hugh freeze. >> gary: let's'see if t ty can hold onto him. that's another factor here. >> verne: akeem judd. >> verne: eli 3,600 yards, chad kelly in a single season will game. in starkville. >> gary: i have a lot of affection for bo wallace on that page, i have to tell you, he was the perfect guy to come to this program. he carried this team in that transition. a lot of the ole miss fans were very frustrated with bo wallace but he was the whole team for a couple years. he was the one that transitioned to where they are now. one of the great scenes we've ever had -- that ole miss-alabama scene. >> verne: my gosh. >> verne: perhaps you heard the public-address announcer congratulating chad kelly as the all time leader now in for the rebels of ole missss >> verne: third down, 10. out. taken by l.s.u. >> verne: ouch. oh, boy. >> gary: that's one guy you can't get hurt -- >> verne: ouch. >> gary: they've got to beat mssissippi state. that was an awkward hit right there. >> gary: he tries to slide. a big hit at the end of that by >> verne: fourth down and 12. >> verne: fourth down. ole miss about to give up the football. will gleeson. a deliberate line drive. >> gary: it was tipped. i think that's why it was so low. to blockck punun there. pretty sure i heard it as it happened. >> verne: number 35. >> gary: yes. >> verne: absolutely. >> verne: or not. >> gary: i heard it, i thought, but he didn't touch it, did he? >> verne: at least the play is not under review. >> gary: yes. >> verne: incomplete. harris has thrown 42 passes in this game. . he's completed 22. 2:49 to go. >> gary: verne, we're trying to find any replay that would interest anybody, ok? i think we might have it. >> verne: that one is incomplete -- diarse. >> gary: i was wrong. it was not tipped. i was not the only one. watch the right side of your screen. headreferee. watch this. he signaled "t"tped" right there. kenny williamson was wrong two. that's two sons missed that one. >> verne: daniel and william-son. >> gary: you're sharp still. we've got 2:43 to go. >> verne: mercy. that one is incomplete. guess who. mike hilton. you could make an argumenthat he has played a tremendous last football game in the stadium. he's been asked throughout the season because of thehe injuries to tony conner, one of the stars of the defense with a bad knee to play a bunch of different positions and he's stepped up. hugh freeze said to us about mike hilton, when i walked in and met him i didn't think he could play. ihought i might want t t get him out of here." dupre. >> gary: good thing he kept him. >> verne: yes. we told you earlier what hsaid to us. to grow up. >> gary: hilton is 5'9", 184 pounds. >> verne: 2:34 to go. 11 years. on the verge of lawing three in a row for the first time in his l.s.u. career. climbed back with 17 in a row to make it 24-17 tonight. but. >> g gy: the answer drive by chad kelly, seven plays, two runs by kelly, he went five for five in that drive and that >> verne: second down. les miles had the unenviable task of replacing nick saban, but look what he did in his first three years. 11-2, 11-2, 12-2 then slippage. 8-5. 9-4. they bounded. >> gary: remember were the 2007 team t national chahaionship team we havee t tre in red. he rebuilt it. he deserves chance it bring it back but i'm not in charge. i don't write the checks. >> verne: one of those ccks if they decide it partays is for $15 million, we're told. >> gary: they have had another slippage in the s.e.c. try this one more time. are ngw 19-12. >> verne: third and 15. fr chad kelly. >> gary: got to get better quarterback play. got to upgrade it. the game has changed. ats more like the nfl now with the run-pass options. you've got to get the quarterback more involved. >> reree: time out, ole miss. >> verne: olemiss, time out. at's their last. every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families who've supported them, we offer our best service in rurn. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >> verne: we are back in oxford. just a minute and a half in game time from the "ram post game show." we'll take you back to new york. a couple of very interesting games played today. adam will lead our crew through scores and higigights from around thehe country. >> gary: there is going to be a lot of screaming. if michigan state wins out, do oklahoma? all these people are going to tell you you they kw who is e best am. they're going to start telling you, "they know, i'mant an expert." "they know, i'm an expert." >> verne: sometimes you slay me. goodness. [laughing] we've got a lot of college football for you on thanksgiving weekend. on friday, and saturday. it all begins on saturday. it actually begins on friday, but on saturday, a special time of 2:30 easternor "inside college football" and 3:00 for the "autotrader college football today" show. >> gary: all those p pyers who paid the priri this year, this team was obviously overrated, right? obviously. let's see if it will pay off next year for les and l.s.u. >> referee: five-yard penalty. remamas fourth down. >> verne: i must say this is limping to a conclusion. the last five minutes seem to have taken half an hour. and for fournette, he got above 100 but just so. he did have a 59-yarder on the first playay f fm scrimmage wiped out by a holding call. >> gary: the play they're going to talk about on sunday -- the pitch on fourth down. >> verne: yes, fourth and goal and he and harars were -- as gary said, on different sections of the newspaper. >> verne: 52 seconds remaining. his per-game average has dropped considerably. rememb the night we did the -- leles go back to the play that will be d dcussed sunday. fourth down. >> gary: this was obviously late with a 21-point ld but it just is an ugly finish to an ugly >> verne: first down, 10. >> gary: what did the old coaches used t t say about freshmen and sophomores? "they grow up a year later. juniors." >> verne: this is tyron johnson. >> gary: a really good football game, mississippi state and dak prescott against this l.s.u. team. -- excuse me, ole miss team. that will be a a fun game it watch. verne: yes. >> gary: love to watch dak prescott play. >> verne: pass complete. let's l lkt the updated s.e.c. west standings. winners in the game next week. ole miss's chance goes through starkville.
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mississippi state, at mississippi state, in the egg bowl. and they need auburn. >> verne: yeah. that's a first down. chad kelly. 20 seniors. for ole miss. 31 wins, and that 2003 class was led by a quarterback who with wears number 10. eli manning. and the first-class to make four straight bowl games being and the first to beat alabama in back-to-back games. >> gary: cannot talk about anyone in this league coaching who has done a better job coaching than hugh freeze since he came to ole miss. what he took over and what he's built is incredible. >> verne: a two-man committee essentially was enlisted to secure the new head coach at ole miss -- i've told the story before. i remember being in atlanta for the s.e.c. championship. one of those two was archie manning. we were on the bus going back to the hotel. archie said, "i think we've got our guy. i can't tell you who he is." and he didn't. but he said "i believe he's going to be a really good one." there is your man, right there. hugh freeze. >> gary: let's see if they can hold onto him. that's another factor here. >> verne: akeem judd. >> verne: eli 3,600 yards, chad kelly in a single season will probably pass eli in their next game. in starkville. >> gary: i have a lot of affection for bo wallace on that page, i have to tell you, he was the perfect guy to come to this program. he carried this team in that transition. a lot of the ole miss fans were very frustrated with bo wallace but he was the whole team for a couple years. he was the one that transitioned to where they are now. one of the great scenes we've ever had -- that ole miss-alabama scene. >> verne: my gosh. >> verne: perhaps you heard the public-address announcer congratulating chad kelly as the all time leader now in single-season total touchdowns. for the rebels of ole miss. >> verne: third down, 10. 3:13 to go after the last time out. taken by l.s.u. >> verne: ouch. oh, boy. >> gary: that's one guy you can't get hurt -- >> verne: ouch. >> gary: they've got to beat mssissippi state. that was an awkward hit right there. >> gary: he tries to slide. a big hit at the end of that by deion jones. >> verne: fourth down and 12. >> verne: fourth down. ole miss about to give up the football. will gleeson. a deliberate line drive. >> gary: it was tipped. i think he got a hand on it. i think that's why it was so low. that would have been a big play to block punt there. pretty sure i heard it as it happened. >> verne: number 35. >> gary: yes. >> verne: absolutely. >> verne: or not. >> gary: i heard it, i thought, but he didn't touch it, did he? >> verne: at least the play is not under review. >> gary: yes. >> verne: incomplete. harris has thrown 42 passes in this game. he's completed 22. 2:49 to go. >> gary: verne, we're trying to find any replay that would interest anybody, ok? i think we might have it. >> verne: that one is incomplete -- diarse. >> gary: i was wrong. it was not tipped. i was not the only one. watch the right side of your screen. head referee. watch this. he signaled "tipped" right ther kenny williamson was wrong two. that's two sons missed that one. >> verne: daniel and william-son. >> gary: you're sharp still. we've got 2:43 to go. >> verne: mercy. that one is incomplete. guess who. mike hilton. you could make an argument that mike hilton could win the star of the game. he has played a tremendous last football game in the stadium. he's been asked throughout the season because of the injuries to tony conner, one of the stars of the defense with a bad knee to play a bunch of different positions and he's stepped hugh freeze said to us about mike hilton, when i walked in and met him i didn't think he could play. i thought i might want to get him out of here." >> verne: jawing with malachi dupre. >> gary: good thing he kept him. >> verne: we told you earlier what he said to us. >> gary: this is where you come to grow up. >> gary: hilton is 5'9", 184 pounds. >> verne: 2:34 to go. 11 years. on the verge of lawing tee in a row for the first time in his l.s.u. career. climbed back with 17 in a row to make it 24-17 tonight. but. >> gary: the answer drive by chad kelly, seven plays, two runs by kelly, he went five for five in that drive and that basically finished it. >> verne: second down. les miles had the unenviable task of replacing nick saban, but look what he did in his first three years. 11-2, 11-2, 12-2 then slippage. 8-5. 9-4. they rebounded. >> gary: remember were the 2007 team the national championship team we have there in red. he rebuilt it. he deserves a chance it bring it back but i'm not in charge. i don't write the checks. >> verne: one of those checks if they decide it part ways is for $15 million, we're told. >> gary: they have had another slippage in the s.e.c. try this one more time. since that championship, they are now 19-12. >> verne: third and 15. fr chad kelly. >> gary: got to get better quarterback play. got to upgrade it. the game has changed. ats more like the nfl now with the run-pass options. you've got to get the quarterback more involved. >> referee: time out, ole miss. >> verne: ole miss, time out. that's their last. ♪ every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families who've supported them, we offer our best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. ♪ >> verne: we are back in oxford. just a minute and a half in game time from the "ram post game show." we'll take you back to new york. a couple of very interesting games played today. adam will lead our crew through scores and highlights from around the country. >> gary: there is going to be a lot of screaming. if michigan state wins out, do they go over notre dame or oklahoma? all these people are going to tell you you they know who is the best team. they're going to start telling you, "they know, i'mant an expert." "they know, i'm an expert." >> verne: sometimes you slay me. goodness. [laughing] we've got a lot of college football for you on thanksgiving weekend. on friday, and saturday. it all begins on saturday. it actually begins on friday, but on saturday, a special time of 2:30 eastern for "inside college football" and 3:00 for the "autotrader college football today" show. >> gary: all those players who paid the price this year, this team was obviously overrated, right? obviously. let's see if it will pay off next year for les and l.s.u. >> referee: five-yard penalty. remains fourth down. >> verne: i must say this is limping to a conclusion. the last five minutes seem to have taken half an hour. and for fournette, he got above 100 but just so. 25 for 108. he did have a 59-yarder on the first play from scrimmage wiped out by a holding call. >> gary: the play they're going to talk about on sunday -- the pitch on fourth down. >> verne: yes, fourth and goal and he and harris were -- as gary said, on different sections of the newspaper. >> verne: 52 seconds remaining. his per-game average has dropped considerably. remember the night we did the -- let's go back to the play that will be discussed sunday. fourth down. >> gary: this was obviously late with a 21-point lead but it just is an ugly finish to an ugly game. >> verne: first down, 10. >> gary: what did the old coaches used to say about freshmen and sophomores? "they grow up a year later. they become sophomores and juniors." >> verne: this is tyron johnson. >> gary: a really good football game, mississippi dak prescott against this l.s.u. team. -- excuse me, ole miss team. that will be a fun game it watch. >> verne: yes. >> gary: love to watch dak prescott play. >> verne: pass complete. let's look at the updated s.e.c. west standings. winners in the game next week. ole miss's chance goes through starkville. they must win that and they've got to hope that auburn can get itself together and knock off alabama. >> gary: i let the last time out pass but this one i don't get. taking a time out with 20 seconds to go? are they practicing? >> verne: chad kelly, 280 yards in the air. 81 rushing. four touchdowns.
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mississippi to lift up some of the points that i would like to make. this map on the left shows the counties in mississippi that are consistent with poverty. it's probably not surprising, but it's very start when you look at this map alongside maps that illustrate other indicators of economics and social well-being and demographic trends. mississippihas the highest percentage of african-americans in the nation. if you drill down a little bit more, 15% of the white children in mississippi live below poverty. they've had significant implications in several sectors. when you look at jobs they have the 45th highest unemployment rate in the country. the counties that are shaded by the jobs and unemployment map are one and half times the state average in a state that is already 45th in terms of unemployment. when you look at education, most of us consider the most clear pathway out of poverty. the darkened counties are the counties that have the poorest performing school districts that are rated c and d. the majority of white districts in mississippi, 81% r-rated air be whereas only 27% of the black counties are right rated air be. you look at indicators of health. the map shows a low birth rate in the you can also look at diabetes. mississippi is rated 49th. cardiovascular disease they are rated 50th. obesity is rated 49. infant mortal
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mississippi. >> in mississippi, the average weakly wage is $711, compared to a wage of $1,048. >> and, of course, when we think of the south, we are think the military, because federal spending on the military is a huge part of the gross domestic product of many states. >> take a look. in virginia, military spending accounts for 13.9% gtp. 8.6 in alabama. kentucky 8%, and mississippi 6% of the g.d.p. from of the defense department. >> a sector doing well, automobile manufacturing. that started in detroit. now, many countries are migrating down here. formerly small, sleepy towns like this, some 30 years ago population 6,000. now about 53,000. thanks to a nissan plan. south carolina, home to a b.m.w. plant. the north has the big three - ford, chrysler and general motors, but the south has new nonunion foreign owned assembly plants, much with a written affect on jobs, from parts manufacturers to autodealerships. >> more news from the south. an annual survey shows the top five best places to do business are down in dixie, one being texas, north carolina, tennessee and the peach state, georgia. why do c.e.o.s like to do business so much in the south. >> according to them, it's the mild weather, low taxes, good, corporate environment and business development. and here is the twist. when "the wall street journal" did an examination of where they live. the only state that
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in mississippi, the mississippi democratic party essentially did not get it together to run a major candidate for governor this year. so mississippi's republican governor phil bryant basically got to run unopposed. he did very well. the other governor's race in the south this week was very, very contested. that was democratic attorney general jack conway losing the kentucky governor's race to republican tea party businessman guy matt bevin. now, kentucky democrats, democrats across the country, really thought jack conway was going to win that race, both because they thought matt bevin was a very beatable fairly eccentric, fairly polarizing guy but also because the polling just told them that very clearly in fact democrat jack conway was going to win that race. he definitely lost that race and by a lot. and today in today's news, one very specific chicken came home to roost on that story. the lexington herald leader newspaper today in kentucky fired their pollster. that paper runs the bluegrass poll, which is supposed to be the gold standard poll in that state. but they completely blew the governor's race this year. so that paper has
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>> mississippi. >> mississippi, which has been a little warmer then the storms but we've been warm in new york city and we are going to stay that way. look close to really records in some places. chicago will be near 70 today. so will detroit. even warmer as we go toward friday. if you all are sticking around, new york city going to be well into the low 70s. so we'll flirt with a record, washington, d.c., almost 80. all right. it's also a big day for college football fans. the first playoff rankings of the season are out tonight. you'll want to tune in to espn at 7:00 p.m. to see where your team ranks because this will ultimately the determine the four teams that will play in theacross eastern iowa with many areas making it back to the 70s again. one thing we are watching is the potential for fog development over the southern half of the region this morning. should the fog develop, it will likely be out of here by 10am. plan on sunny sky once the patchy fog leaves the area >> and all that weather brought to you by ford. i just want to show -- somebody got our coat, lara. >> oh, nice.
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>> mississippi. >> mississippi, which has been a little warmer then the storms but we've been warm in new york city and we are going to stay that way. look close to really records in some places. chicago will be near 70 today. so will detroit. even warmer as we go toward friday. if you all are sticking around, new york city going to be well into the low 70s. so we'll flirt witith a reco, washington, d.c., almost 80. all right. it's also a big day for college football fans. the first playoff rankings of the season are out tonight. you'll want to tune in to espn at 7:00 p.m. to see where your team ranks because this will ultimately the determine the >> and all that weather brought i just want to show -- somebody >> oh, nice. all right, thank you, ginger. is with us live. like working with mom and dad. one more look at these cute pups maybe. >>> back here with aziz ansa. "parks and recreation" star getting rave reviews for his new show coming out on netflix called "master of none." he plays dev, an actor living in new york who has trouble making life. take a look. >> i'm sorry, man. i'm
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>> mississippi. >> mississippi, which has been a little warmer then the storms but we've been warm ingo will be near 70 today. so will detroit. even warmer as we go toward friday. if you all are sticking around, new york city going to be well into the low 70s. so we'll flirt with a record, washington, d.c., almost 80. all right. it's also a big day for college football fans. the first playoff rankings of the season are out tonight. you'll want to tune in to espn at 7:00 p.m. to see where your team ranks because this will ultimately the determine the four teams that will play in the >>> good morning, i'm meteorologist mike nicco. toe tal sunshine as we are going to be in the 70s. we'll have a slow warming trend through the weekend. the next chance for drops on sunday. >> and all that weather brought to you by ford. i just want to show -- somebody got our coat, lara. >> oh, nice. all right, thank you, ginger. >>> coming up here, aziz ansari is with us live. his big new role and what it's like working with mom and dad. one more look at these cute pups maybe. >> can't take this one. not t
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in mississippi, the mississippi democratic party essentially did not get it togethe
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mississippi. up ticket and down ticket from jim hood in mississippi, the republican govern nor of the state re-elected after running basically unopposed the mississippiratic party couldn't get it together to pick themselves a democratic candidate who anyone had ever heard of. mississippi also last night upped the size of the republican majority in the house. they're now at something quite close to a super majority in terms of republican rule in the state legislature. in virginia, democrats thought that they were going to win the state senate last night. they only needed to flip one senate seat to take control but they failed at that effort. virginia senate is still republican. houston, houston, texas, now the largest city in the country that does not have a nondiscrimination ordinance. also the only big city in texas without a nondiscrimination ordinance and led the human rights campaign to ask the nfl today to maybe rethink their plans to hold the 2017 super bowl in houston in a little more than a year from now. but today the nfl said they're not changing their plans. they'll keep the super bowl in houston in 2017 despite the city last night repeali
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mississippi state, at mississippi state, in the egg bowl. and they need auburn. >> verne: yeah. that's a first down. chad kelly. 20 seniors. for ole miss. 31 wins, and that 2003 class was led by a quarterback who with wears number 10. eli manning. and the first-class to make four straight bowl games being and the first to beat alabama in back-to-back games. >> gary: cannot talk about anyone in this league coaching who has done a better job coaching than hugh freeze since he came to ole miss. what he took over and what he's built is incredible. >> verne: a two-man committee essentially was enlisted to secure the new head coach at ole miss -- i've told the story before. i remember being in atlanta for the s.e.c. championship. one of those two was archie manning. we were on the bus going back to the hotel. archie said, "i think we've got our guy. i can't tell you who he is." and he didn't. but he said "i believe he's going to be a really good one." there is your man, right there. hugh freeze. >> gary: let's see if they can that's another factor here. >> verne: akeem judd. >> verne: eli 3,600 yards, chad kelly in a single season will probably pass eli in their next game. in starkville. >> gary: i have a lot of affection for bo wallace on that page, i have to tell you, he was the perfect guy to come to this program. he carried this team in that transition. a lot of the ole miss fans were very frustrated with bo wallace but he was the whole team for a couple years. to where they are now. one of the great scenes we've ever had -- that ole miss-alabama scene. >> verne: my gosh. >> verne: perhaps you heard the public-address announcer congratulating chad kelly as the all time leader now in single-season total touchdowns. for the rebels of ole miss. >> verne: third down, 10. 3:13 to go after the last time out. taken by l.s.u. >> verne: ouch. oh, boy. >> gary: that's one guy you can't get hurt -- >> verne: ouch. >> gary: they've got to beat mssissippi state. there. >> gary: he tries to slide. a big hit at the end of that by deion jones. >> verne: fourth down and 12. ole miss about to give up the football. will gleeson. a deliberate line drive. >> gary: it was tipped. i think he got a hand on it. i think that's why it was so low. that would have been a big play to block punt there. pretty sure i heard it as it happened. >> verne: number 35. >> gary: yes. >> verne: absolutely. >> verne: or not. >> gary: i heard it, i thought, but he didn't touch it, did he? >> verne: at least the play is not under review. >> verne: incomplete. harris has thrown 42 passes in this game. he's completed 22. 2:49 to go. >> gary: verne, we're trying to find any replay that would interest anybody, ok? i think we might have it. >> verne: that one is incomplete -- diarse. >> gary: i was wrong. it was not tipped. i was not the only one. watch the right side of your screen. head referee. watch this. he signaled "tipped" right there. kenny williamson was wrong two. >> verne: daniel and william-son. >> gary: you're sharp still. we've got 2:43 to go. >> verne: mercy. that one is incomplete. guess who. mike hilton. you could make an argument that mike hilton could win the star of the game. he has played a tremendous last football game in the stadium. he's been asked throughout the season because of the injuries to tony conner, one of the stars of the defense with a bad knee to play a bunch of different positions and he's stepped up. hugh freeze said to us about mike hilton, when i walked in and met him i didn't think he could play. him out of here." >> verne: jawing with malachi dupre. >> gary: good thing he kept him. >> verne: yes. we told you earlier what he said to us. >> gary: this is where you come to grow up. >> gary: hilton is 5'9", 184 pounds. >> verne: 2:34 to go. 11 years. on the verge of lawing three in a row for the first time in his l.s.u. career. climbed back with 17 in a row to make it 24-17 tonight. but. >> gary: the answer drive by chad kelly, seven plays, two runs by kelly, he went five for five in that drive and that basically finished it. >> verne: second down. les miles had the unenviable task of replacing nick saban, but look what he did in his first three years. 11-2, 11-2, 12-2 then slippage. 9-4. they rebounded. >> gary: remember were the 2007 team the national championship team we have there in red. he deserves a chance it bring it back but i'm not in charge. i don't write the checks. >> verne: one of those checks if they decide it part ways is for $15 million, we're told. >> gary: they have had another slippage in the s.e.c. try this one more time. since that championship, they are now 19-12. >> verne: third and 15. fr chad kelly. >> gary: got to get better quarterback play. got to upgrade it. the game has changed. ats more like the nfl now with the run-pass options. you've got to get the quarterback more involved. >> referee: time out, ole miss. >> verne: ole miss, time out. that's their last. every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families who've supported them, we offer our best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. >> verne: we are back in oxford. just a minute and a half in game time from the "ram post game show." we'll take you back to new york. a couple of very interesting games played today. adam will lead our crew through scores and highlights from around the country. >> gary: there is going to be a lot of screaming. if michigan state wins out, do they go over notre dame or oklahoma? all these people are going to tell you you they know who is the best team. they're going to start telling you, "they know, i'mant an expert." "they know, i'm an expert." >> verne: sometimes you slay me. goodness. [laughing] we've got a lot of college football for you on thanksgiving weekend. on friday, and saturday. it all begins on saturday. it actually begins on friday, but on saturday, a special time of 2:30 eastern for "inside college football" and 3:00 for the "autotrader college football today" show. >> gary: all those players who paid the price this year, this team was obviously overrated, right? obviously. let's see if it will pay off next year for les and l.s.u. >> referee: five-yard penalty. remains fourth down. >> verne: i must say this is limping to a conclusion. the last five minutes seem to have taken half an hour. and for fournette, he got above 100 but just so. 25 for 108. he did have a 59-yarder on the first play from scrimmage wiped out by a holding call. >> gary: the play they're going to talk about on sunday -- the pitch on fourth down. >> verne: yes, fourth and goal and he and harris were -- as gary said, on different sections of the newspaper. >> verne: 52 seconds remaining. his per-game average has dropped considerably. remember the night we did the -- let's go back to the play that will be discussed sunday. fourth down. >> gary: this was obviously late with a 21-point lead but it just is an ugly finish to an ugly game. >> verne: first down, 10. >> gary: what did the old coaches used to say about freshmen and sophomores? "they grow up a year later. they become sophomores and juniors." >> verne: this is tyron johnson. >> gary: a really good football game, mississippi state and dak prescott against this l.s.u. team. -- excuse me, ole miss team. that will be a fun game it watch. >> verne: yes. >> gary: love to watch dak prescott play. >> verne: pass complete. let's look at the updated s.e.c. west standings. winners in the game next week. ole miss's chance goes through starkville. they must win that and they've got to hope that auburn can get itself together and knock off alabama. >> gary: i let the last time out pass but this one i don't get. taking a time out with 20 seconds to go? are they practicing? >> verne: chad kelly, 280 yards in the air. 81 rushing. four touchdowns. 2-2. toughness. >> verne: he does. i agree. >> verne: second down, three. >> gary: got that kelly brother d.n.a. running through him. upon >> verne: jeter. >> verne: clock will start when they declare the ball ready for play. game over. >> verne: extended conversation. between hugh freeze -- >> gary: nobody more generous and friendly than les miles. >> verne: i agree. it's time
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mississippi, but that's a big river. al, exactly where are you? >> we are at cape gerardo, matt, here along the mighty mississippi in one of the fire boats, so we are on the mississippi, and monster monday became part of terrible tuesday because we didn't land here until about -- until about two hours ago, so we've taken one too many hits with the punchy stick but we're ready to go. >> which should make for a fun show. >> i was going to say that might have happened with you yesterday. let's start with our top story, the republicans running for president gearing up for the debate showtown in milwaukee tonight and all eight candidates have something to prove for the voters. we begin with national correspondent peter alexander. good morning to you. >> reporter: you said it. with only eight candidates on the main stage, four on the undercard and three on the sidelines, all together how will this go tonight? we expect to hear more from each candidates. among the biggest questions, will ben carson need to fend off attacks from donald trump, and how does jeb bush handle the for the republicans tonight poses another crucial test. front-runner ben carson dismissing growing sc
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mississippi homefront. >> mississippi's phil bryant is one of at least 22 governors. they'll do what they can to keep syrian refugees out of their states. denying them services usually offered to refugees. >> if there is even the slightest risk that the people who are come income from syria are not the types of people that we would want them to be, then we can't take that chance. >> reporter: the move drew criticism from some democratic governors like vermillion's peter shumlin. >> and i think the governors who are taking those actions are standing, stomping on the qualities that make america great. it's dividing lawmakers on capitol hill, too. arizona senator john mccain an other republicans said the refugees should not be allowed in. at least for now. >> we have to have a pause until we are absolutely sure that anybody that comes to this country as a reasonable has to be properly screened. >> reporter: here's how the screening process works. first, the state department collects biographical information on the applicant. the department of homeland security the national counterterrorism center and the pentagon then review it. next comes and in person interview with a homeland security official. plus a health screening and a cultural reorientation course. maryland senator ben carden says he doubts a terrorist would be able to slip through. >> no refugee comes to the united states without going through this vetting process. it can take 18 to 24 monthss. >> reporter: most of the republican presidential candidates say that refugees should not be let in. in fact, norah, new jersey governor chris christie said even orphans under the age of five should be kept out because they don't have family here. >> all right, nancy, thank you very much. and a ground breaking surgery gives a badly burned firefightary new outlook on life. >> so the fact that we were able to perform this and the patient was ain't i able to come out is a historic event. this is here to stay. it will not go away. we can do this safer. >> how incredible is that? what it took for surgeons to perform the most extensive face transplant in history. if you are heading out the door, go ahead and set your dvr to watch "cbs this morning" any time you like. you want to see the 12 living directors. this is the most incredible television program i have seen, documentary. we'll be right back. another day, and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may too. know your options. once-daily toujeo is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus . it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. diabetic ketoacidosis, r during episodes of low blood sugar, t or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens, even if the needle the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which can be serious and life threatening. it may cause shaking, sweating, fast heartbeat, check your blood sugar levels injection site reactions may occur. of insulin without talking to your doctor. tell your doctor if you take other medicines and about all your medical conditions. insulins, including toujeo, in combination with tzds (thiazolidinediones) may cause serious side effects like heart failure that can lead to death, even if you've never had heart failure before. don't dilute or mix toujeo with other insulins or solutions as it may not work as intended and you may lose blood sugar control, which could be serious. pay no more than $15 per prescription for 12 months. eligibility restrictions apply. learn more at toujeo.com/info or call 800-580-3421. also, 9 out of 10 medicare part d patients can get toujeo at the lowest branded copay. ask your doctor about the proven full 24-hour blood sugar control of toujeo >>> all right. you have the hairs standing up on the back of 94 neck. >> that is a sneak peek at her new song "when we were young." australia the sec track on her new album. 25. 25 will be released this friday i cannot wait. i actually think i like this song better than "hello. >> awas going to say hello again, adele. >> i like this song. i can't wait. >> gayle, it's so good. >> they're so good. >> i have been playing that "hello" again, my husband says, stop with adele there. >> this one's better. >> coming up, a ground breaking surgery for a mississippi fire fighter gave him the most extensive face transplant ever. they performed a 26-hour surgery in august. we have the remarkable results. good morning. >> good morning, patrick was 27-years-old, married and raising three children. he had been a volunteer fire fighter for seven years when he answered a call to a house fire. he was inside the home and the ceiling collapsed on his head and shoulders. somehow he made it to a window him out. he survived by suffered third degree burns on his head and chest. he endured 71 surgeries, but after 14 years, he still had only partial vision, no eyelids and prosthetic ears. he was waiting for what would be the most extensive face transplant ever attempted. >> i have been working hard every day trying to get the transplant done. so hopefully it's not much longer. >> reporter: they needed to find a donor matching his general appearance, blood type and tissue factors. >> he was a year on the wait list. he was the only person on that wait list, he was
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mississippi. >> in mississippi, the offering weekly wage is 711 he dollars compared with the national of 1,048. of course when we think of the south, we often think of the military, because federal spending on the military is a huge part of the gross domestic product of many southern states. take a look. in virginia, military spending accounts for 13.9% of g.d.p. 8.6% in alabama. kentucky i guess nearly 8%. mississippi gets 6% of its g.d.p. from the defense department. >> one sector doing very well in the south, automobile manufacturing. that start up in detroit in the beginning of the last century. now many companies are migrating down here. >> formerly sleepy towns, growing thanks to a nissan plant. june the north has the big three, ford, chrysler and general motors, but the south has new non-union assembly plants. much of those have a ripple effect on jobs from parts manufacturers all the way to dealerships. >> c.e.o.'s across the country show their top five best places to do business are down in dixie, number one texas, two, florida, three, north carolina. then there's tennessee, and of course number five, the peach state, georgia. >> why do c.e.o.'s like to do business so much in the south? >> according to them, the mild weather, the low taxes, the good corporate environment and the business development. here's the twist. when the wall street journal did an examination of where the c.e.o.'s liv
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mississippi -- we don't have too many of them nowadays. he went to grant and said that the klan is running amok and the election is going on, if you do not than federal troops into mississippi, we're going to lose mississippi and granted said, i can do that in centrist mississippi. i can save it, but then i would lose ohio. in other words, the public supports and the north was no longer there. so, we cannot totally blame rant for that. for that.- grant >> if people have questions that they were not able to ask, you can ask them afterward. the book contains two beautiful maps at the front, in which over 20 underground railroad locations or stations are marked. that includes wall street, and the wall street area, downtown, midtown manhattan, brooklyn heights, williamsburg -- you are writing the book, did you go to any of these places and you know which buildings are still standing? town, we turn things down every 20 years. all of this is below 34th street. most of it is below 14th street, city hall, all of that. only two or three of these places are still standing. i did try to look at the house something, gibbons. martha: are they marked? eric: some are, some are not. 90% of these are gone. there are parkin
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that if you travel tomorrow to the eastern side east of the mississippi, even along the mississippi there. and check your carrier that there will be delays, probably around 24 hours, maybe a little longer. there is our weather system and all in the pacific northwest. one northwest that they will get their share of rain and within that last week. they will continue to get rain with a little shower activity to the north of us, but that's it staying high and dry for most of this week. and that we do have a chance for some stuff coming up and that we'll show you in the five- day forecast. coming up with that beautiful sunset and i'm sure that you saw it, 57 in novado and santa rosa. slightly warmer than what it was yes. overnight lows, they'll be not as cool as what they were last night. we'll show you the cloud cover in the lower 40s to the mid-40s where it is warmer during the day. a little warmer overnight. when you look at their models you'll see the yellows, which are 70s. tomorrow is slightly warmer than today. today with plenty of 60s. tomorrow we'll see the lower 70s. 70, 71 popping u
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swallowed more than a dozen cars at a sinkhole in mississippi this weekend. meridian, mississippisaturday. it's huge. look how big it is and sounds like it was scary. luckily nobody was hurt but witnesses say that there were several loud booms and then the power went out and employees scream it was an earthquake and everybody ran outside. but we counted a dozen cars swallowed into this thing. >> we call it's sinkhole. looks like a drainage ditch. >> not technically a sinkhole i'm drainage pipe might have collapsed elm the ihope opened a eek ago and it had been raining -- >> looks brand new. >> but an exciting saturday night for people who were in the restaurant. >> mob got hurt. >> nobody got hurt. this -- had a bas saturday night, though. >> we had a bads -- saturday was a bad day but you beat lsu. >> that was good. it was not a good day. >> it is kind of -- i don't know. >> during the game, too. >> was that les' car? >> might have been. >> i don't think so. all right, thank you for the pictures. i guess. a british daredevil just released video that shows him climbing the eiffel
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mississippi. >> from mississippi which has been a little warmer then they had the storms but we have been warm in0 today, so will detroit even warmer as we go toward friday. if you are sticking around new york city well into the low 70's so we'll flirt with a record. washington, d.c. almost 80. all right, it's also a big day for college football fans. the first playoff rankings of the season are out. tonight you'll want to tune into espn at 7:00 p.m. to see where your team ranks. this will play the four teams that will play in the playoffs on new year's eve. >> temple has a shot at having a late season bowl too probably not the final four at this point. storm tracker6 shows you we're dry. very nice afternoon. staying in the 70's wednesday, thursday and as ginger mentioned friday. ford. i just want to show, somebody got our coat, lara. >> oh, nice. all right, thank you, ginger. >>> coming up here aziz ansari is with us live. his big new role and what it's like working with mom and dad. one more look at these cute pups maybe. >> take this one home. >> not this one. ♪ never been in love before >>> b
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mississippi. hattiesburg, mississippi, about four hours away. they still don't know why this happened. the coroner for the parrish initially told reporters when he arrived on the scene, the two city marshals said they were trying to issue a warrant on few but the state police conducting an investigation says they found no warrants on few. they said that there was no reason for the city marshals to be chasing him apparently. they're still investigating that angle of the story. adding to this is a body camera. there's a third officer of marksville responded and wearing a body camera and supposedly shows exactly what happened. and according to one state police officer, who saw the video says it's the most disturbing thing he's ever seen. that video discussed today in a closed-door bond hearing for the two two men. the immediate i don't not allowed in but the attorney for the family was there and he says he believed the video shows that christopher few got out of the vehicle with the hands up before he was shot. all of this has not been confirmed by the state police. they're still holding that video. they're not expecting to release it any time soon. this case still has to go to a grand jury for charges against the two men. >> all right. >> kate? >> charles hadlock, thank you. >>> straight ahead, another developing story to follow this hour. two americans killed while training police recruits inside jordan. how it could impact the fight against isis. >>> plus, 100 students named in as is sexting scandal accused of trading nude photos like baseball cards with the help of secret apps. parents are asking when's a ghost app? >>> and scrutiny at the top of the polls. ben carson questions why watchdogs an critics are digging into the past. and enjoyable approach... compared to the alternatives. push! i am pushing! sfx: pants ripping how you doing eddie? almost there. small steps. at axa, we'll help you take the next steps, with more confidence. for advice, retirement and insurance, talk to axa today. hey! how are you?g? where are we watching the game? you'll see. i think my boys have a shot this year. yeah, especially with this new offense we're running... i mean, our running back is a beast. once he hits the hole and breaks through the secondary, oh he's gone. and our linebackers and dbs dish out punishment, and never quit. ♪ you didn't expect this did you? no i didn't. the nissan altima. there's a fun side to every drive. nissan. innovation that excites. ♪ everything kids touch during cold and flu season sticks with them. make sure the germs they bring home don't stick around. use clorox disinfecting products. because no one kills germs better than clorox. prge! a manufacturer. well that's why i dug this out for you. it's your grandpappy's hammer and he would have wanted you to have it. it meant a lot to him... yes, ge makes powerful machines. but i'll be writing the code that will allow those machines to share information with each other. i'll be changing the way the world works. (interrupting) you can't pick it up, can you? go ahead. he can't lift the hammer. it's okay though! you're going to change the world. some neighbors are energy saving superstars. how do you become a superstar? with pg&e's free online home energy checkup. in just under 5 minutes you can see how you use energy and get quick and easy tips on how to keep your monthly bill down and your energy savings up. don't let your neighbor enjoy all the savings. take the free home energy checkup. honey, we need a new refrigerator. visit pge.com/checkup and get started today. >>> the death toll rising from that attack in the middle east today. now six people confirmed killed including two americans, the u.s. contractors and a south african colleague along with two jordanians were shot and killed at a u.s. funded police training center in jordan. the gunman, a jordanian police officer killed at the scene. two other americans and three jordans injured in that shooting. president obama vowed a full investigation. >> we take this very seriously and will be working closely with the jordanians to determine exactly what happened. but at this stage, i want to just let everyone know that this is something we're paying close attention to and at the point where the families have been notified, obviously, our deepest condolences will be going out to them. >> for more let's bring in nbc news chief pentagon correspondent jim miklaszewski. hi, jim. >> reporter: kate, you know, a short time ago state department confirmed that the four americans, two killed, two wounded, they were working as private con r contractors as trainers and monitors at the police training facility. but the big question remains why did the shooter carry out this attack? was he specifically tar getting americans? did he have some kind of link to a militant or terrorist organization? or as reports have indicated to us, he was a former police officer, some kind of officer for the police force, there in jordan who's reportedly fired recently? did he conduct this attack on the police facility as some kind of vendetta for a grievance? whatever. that remains a mystery right now and under investigation, investigation which according to u.s. officials here and at the state department is just now beginning, kate. >> all right. jim, thank you so much. let's bring in foreign correspondent ayman mohyeldin for more on the training facility in jordan. >> reporter: this training facility where the shooting took place is reminiscent of many of the facilities that u.s. has around the region in which it actually trains members of other security forces from around the country. we understand according to jordanian sources that this was a training facility, training both palestinian security forces as well as iraqi police forces from neighboring countries. they're brought here jordan and relatively safer, more stable than some of these other countries and it is there that u.s. and other foreign contractors train these various security agencies an all kinds of tactics. in the past, we have seen u.s. trainers and military personnel in countries like afghanistan the subject of insider attacks. but this is really a rare situation the see in a country like jordan where there's a close working relationship between the united states and squl jordanian security personnel. nonetheless as we mentioned at this stage the investigation into the background of this individual is ongoing. though relatives, again, from this individual's family, tell nbc news in jordan they do not believe it to be a terrorist attack as of yet. kate? >> all right. ayman mohyeldin in cairo. thank you so much. let's bring in kevin baron of defense one and msnbc national security analyst joining us now. kevin, nice the see you. >> you, too. >> we have seen these kind of attacks in iraq, afghanistan. but now in jordan. i can't recall that happening before. when's the significance? >> well, it's significant that it's in jordan and the facility. this is a premier training facility for special operations and the joint police units like we saw and talking about that was built in part by the u.s. army, that's funded by the u.s. government, that many four-star generals have blessed and gone to visit it and see it. and as was just said, supposed to be a gathering point for the elite security forces of countries around the region and afghanistan to come and train. so not just infiltrate, you know, the larger training program that is are happening in afghanistan at the height of that war or iraq but to get into jordan, to be a local, national -- that's definitely concerning. >> some have called him a disgruntled former police officer. makes you think of what happened sometimes domestically and someone goes into a workplace and unfortunately shoots people because they're angry for losing their job. is it as simple as that? >> i don't want to read anything into it. if anything, there's several nationalities of victims. doesn't seem to be targeted against americans if that's an indication. i think let that information take its course. i would think, though, that highlights the jordan's importance for the united states as a hub for gathering regional elite forces to do counterterrorism work. this is the way the war is being fought. they have facilities there for practicing with hijackings and breaches urban buildings. if it's not secure, that's a problem. >> as you say, jordan a key ally in the fight against isis. does this risk hindering our relationship, the u.s. relationship, with jordan or not? >> oh, i can't imagine. king abdullah is a good friend of the pentagon, a frequent visitor. they roll out not just the red carpet but the full military parade. after the pilot last year was burned alive on the isis video, jordan came out fiercefully saying to get involved in the air war more than before and helped with intelligence and special operations forces. you know? there's no greater friend probably outside of israel right now than the jordans have been to some degree so i think you will see close cooperation if anything. >>> all right. by one count, 70% of u.s. teens, 70%, hide on online activity from their parents. up next, new details about the so-called ghost apps that help make it possible and what it has to do with a massive sectionting scandal rocking an american town. >>> the president checks in on facebook. what took him so long? 3 million lines of code, 40,000 sets of eyes, or a million sleepless nights. whether it's building the world's most advanced satellite, the space station, or the next leap in unmanned systems. at boeing, one thing never changes. our passion to make it real. ♪ so you don't have to stop., our passion to make it real. tylenol® 8hr arthritis pain has two layers of pain relief. the first is fast. the second lasts all day. we give you your day back. what you do with it is up to you. tylenol®. it's how i try to live... how i stay active. so i need nutrition... that won't weigh me down. for the nutrition you want without the calories you don't... introducing boost 100 calories. each delicious snack size drink gives you... 25 vitamins and minerals and 10 grams of protein. so it's big in nutrition and small in calories. i'm not about to swim in the slow lane. stay strong. stay active with boost®. like limiting where you earn bonus cash back.hings. why put up with that? 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>> exactly. and colorado legislators are already looking at how they can change the law. 20 states have already changed it to take sexting into account and give other options with misdemeanors and not making this a felony crime. >> talk to me about the ghost apps we are talking about. >> right. a lot of people asking, 100 naked photos, how could a parent not have seen that? the kids are hiding them. they have gotten very good. there are these apps disguised like something like a calculator and type in 60 plus 60 there's the proper answer. typing in your specific code that's when you get these vaulted pictures that are hidden. >> vault apps, ghost apps. you are hiding a certain amount of stuff on your phone where nobody can see it without a password. >> exactly. there's some with decoy passwords. if you get caught and ask for a secret app pass word, give them one coming up with pictures you are okay with them seeing. >> oh! >> it's deceptive. it's hard for parents and really from the people i have been talking to, the best advice, keep an eye on what they're doing, downloading and talk to them. tough have ra conversation. they have to understand the consequences here. and that in the end you're not staying on top of tech nlg. >> you are right. my 10-year-old and almost 13-year-old are way far ahead of me on apps and technology. so thank you, kristen. next hour we are going to be talking more about how parents can find and prevent those apps from getting on the kid's phones in the first place. thanks. >>> coming up, jeb bush looks to former 2016 rival scott walker to help boost his campaign and walker is not throwing the support behind anyone. >>> two big debates this week, first the republicans tomorrow in milwaukee. heading there live and the democrats take the stage saturday with the democratic forum hosted by rachel maddow could signal about the upcoming debate. financial services firms in the country? 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>> yes. >> that seems to be the implication. >> absolutely. i have given lots of speeches. we can spend every day from now until the election going through -- you said this. what about this? what about this? we can talk about important issues. i prefer to talk about important issues. the american people are speaking volumes saying they're tired of this garbage. >> joining me now from the debate site in milwaukee, nbc's chris jansing and conducted that interview with ben carson over the weekend. you covered a lot of ground in that interview. give us for people that missed it the highlights of where you see ben carson at right now. >> reporter: well, i think he is both on defense which you saw him saying he doesn't think this is fair. blaming it on the media. but when's also interesting is that his campaign and his superpac are going on offense and by that i mean if you look at the facebook page, it is up to 4.6 million plus friends. they are posting point by point rebuttals to what they see as unfair comments. now, some of them don't necessarily hold. one of the criticisms of his was that a class he talked about taking at yale didn't exist. they posted a syllabus and that syllabus from 2002. not when ben carson was in school. but this morning they posted an article from "parade" magazine and questions raised about the story that he had said where he almost or attempted to stab originally he said a friend and then a relative. nobody could confirm it. but there is an article from the late '90s in "parade" his mother talks about that very event. they're doing those kinds of things. meantime, the superpac has september out a fund raising letter looking for people who he operated on. they want to emphasize the positive parts of the resume which was his time as a neurosurgeon and they have hired some very impressive media folks who are going to shoot commercials with the people who as they say had their lives saved by dr. carson. a combination of him going on defense saying, listen, i think this is us versus them. that's the phase he used with me and the affirmative trying to get out the other side of the story. here's chris christie and mike huckabee both responding. >> i heard him this morning say he's more scrutinized than anybody in this race and unfair. is he kidding? a couple of days asked about something you put in the books, i have to tell you, i don't have a llt of sympathy. >> running for office you are put through the sausage grinder. i heard him say that, you know, people are looking into his personal life and they're going after him. i'm thinking, pal, you ain't seen nothing yet. >> chris christie going through bridgegate and so what do you expect tomorrow night at the debate? do you expect a lot of the same thing? >> reporter: well, that's going to be interesting, sint it? those two on the undercard and some of the people on the stage with him have not criticized him so far. in fact, have kind of joined him in criticism of the media. but i think there are a lot of people run for president or been president and take strong issue with what ben carson's contention was, that nobody has ever been vetted as strongly as he has. josh earnest talked about it at the podium at the white house today. i asked him specifically and the controversies, for example, with president obama's birth certificate that went on for not just months and years. he said, no, he is being vetted more than that. first read did an interesting look at some of the other portions of criticism that have come out from president obama. and the number of articles that were published on that, "the new york times" and "the washington post" stories on reverend wright and the former pastor who made controversial comments, 165. 41 "the new york times" and "the washington post" stories on bill ayers, an anti-war activist that the president had an association with and people may take issue with that and interesting to see at a business debate and where they say they're going to focus on the issues how much tomorrow focuses on whether or not some of the stories that are in the biography of ben carson ring true, kate. >> all right. chris jansing in milwaukee waiting for the debate to begin there. thanks so much. >>> on the eve of that next debate jeb bush looking for a solid performance to calm donor anxiety. he's set to share the stage with wisconsin governor and former 2016 candidate himself scott walker. for the latest on the jeb bush campaign, i'm joined by msnbc political correspondent kasie hunt live in -- let me see if i'll say it right. wakeisha, wisconsin. >> reporter: waukasha, wisconsin. no problem. now, scott walker, of course, taking this step back out on to the national stage with jeb bush here in public and private with marco rubio. walker's taking his time endorsing someone else in the 2016 field. it's been reported that many of these candidates are courting him. rubio in particular. but he doesn't plan to make a decision until likely early next year. in many ways to potentially maximize his impact in the race. you have to remember when we started this six months ago we thought scott walker and jeb bush were likely going to be fighting it out between themselves for this nomination and now we have seen, of course, walker flame out very quickly. drop out of the race entirely and bush in search of a comeback narrative and while we won't see walker endorsed by -- excuse me, see walker endorse bush today, it will be an interesting possibility drama to see them on the same stage, kate. >> my apologies to the good walks of waukesha, wisconsin, my apologies. thank you. >>> hillary clinton filed to appear on the new hampshire ballot and secured the endorsement of a key environmental group ahead of an environmentalist for hillary campaign event due to get under way minutes from now. joining many sekelly o'donnell ahead of the clinton campaign in new hampshire. you're enroute to the event, right? >> reporter: well, she will be holding a town hall here at the high school a hit later. it's significant in part because the league of conservation voters and their pac don't typically endorse this early, no votes have been cast yet and certainly on the democratic side, when you look at senator sanders or former maryland governor o'malley, they, too, have strong records in the environmental community. so getting an endorsement for hillary clinton at this point is significant in part because it is intended to gal van size some of the voters for whom that's such a big issue so the group says it's time to act now. ahead of its normal pace because the stakes are high. concern that is if there were a republican elected in this next election that some of the steps the president has taken could be rolled back. so that's why the timing is significant. and a choice among three democrats who all have good records coming to the environment so that's the significance of this endorsement today for clinton. as you pointed out, she filed for her place on the new hampshire ballot. this was actually the fourth time she squeezed into -- we all squeezed into that little room and on behalf of her husband twice for the '92 and '96 campaign. in new hampshire in 2007 ready for her 2008 run and then today signing the paperwork, the throng of people very different. certainly when you add in the number of cameras and social media component, different than the first time doing that ballot filing here in new hampshire. kate? >> she was asked to respond to the bernie sanders' they adisagree on virtually everything. >> oh, no. of course not. no. look. i think we're in the political season and people, you know, they say all sorts of things but, of course not. i mean, that would mean he doesn't agree with me on equal pay for family leave and making sure incomes raise. that's obviously not the case. >> kelly, she is trying to keep the differences to a minimum and he is trying to play up the differences. >> reporter: and we have learned from bernie sanders' campaign he wants a sharper contrast with secretary clinton, especially going into the next debate where many people feel that perhaps he had a given a bit of a pass on the issue of e-mails with the now famous comment not caring about the damn e-mails and certainly secretary clinton is trying to take the position of being sort of embracing of -- referred to the three democrats in the race. she was also asked about just a simple notion of being a democrat because in new hampshire bernie sanders, who is an independent, in the senate did file as a democrat and clinton responded she's been a democrat for a long time and worked on behalf of many democratic candidates over the years. a sutd l but important point. kate? >> kelly, thank you so much. >>> hillary clinton was joined by bernie sanders and martin o'malley at the first in the south democratic candidates' forum hosted by rachel maddow. what did we learn about the candidates? for that we turn to steve kornacki. steve, hi. >> hi, kate. it was an interesting forum. on tv, it was interesting thing to watch and some of the -- we got a little bit of an ind wind into the thinking of the candidates. starting with hillary clinton. an interesting exchange of her and rachel maddow on the topic of foreign policy and something if you believe the polls and you believe hillary clinton's likely to be the nominee of the democrats, that's something republicans are already getting ready to attack her on in the general election. why? president obama's poll numbers particularly not strong when it comes to his handling of foreign policy and rachel maddow asked and kicked off a series of examples with hillary clinton, libya, syria, iraq, you have taken more hawkish positions than the president on these particular ibs stances. would it be fair to say you're more hawkish than the president? >> is it fair for people to expect that you would be a more aggressive commander in chief than president obama has been? >> no. and here's why. i spent a lot of time with president obama in the situation room, struggling over a lot of really difficult decisions. i think the next president's going to have the same and maybe different but continuations of some of the ones we currently have the struggle over, as well. however, i will not i think it's irresponsible to rule out force. i just will not do that. it should always be the last resort, not the first choice. >> really interesting moment there. a point-blank answer from hillary clinton. would you be more aggressive than president obama? she said, no. you can just imagine republicans in the fall if they get to face hillary clinton they want to make the argument that barack obama has been weak on foreign policy. now they have hillary clinton saying i will not be more aggressive. it was interesting window maybe into the strategic thinking on hillary clinton's part that she is still worried about giving away space on the left and ahead in the primary. speaking of that, just a minute ago, you were talking about bernie sanders and the stepped up attacks of bernie sanders from his campaign. this is a very awkward moment for sanders priding himself on always running positive campaigns, never running attack ads. now he finds himself 30 points behind nationally, behind in iowa and new hampshire. so as the people around him telling him, you have to draw a sharp contrast with hillary clinton and where the comment to "the boston globe" came from and he sounded conflicted. listen to this. >> i can't walk down a hallway in the nation's capitol without people begging me to beat up on hillary clinton. attack hillary clinton. tell me why. i resisted and resisted and resisted. all right? because i think unlike the republican friends there who think that politics is about attacking each other in incredibly stupid and destructive ways i think what we are doing is having a sensible debate on the important issues facing america. >> you could just see it's not bernie sanders sachl language, natural tone on the attack and making the argument if i say something negative, the media is forcing me to do it. this is not a natural attack dog politician and may have to assume that role to have a chance. it wasn't all heavy topics of conversation on friday night. an interesting and really fun thing with the envelope round and tried to get to know them better. listen to bernie sanders grapple with that. >> pick one. >> how many pair of underwear do i have? >> i would never ask -- if you care to voluntary the information -- >> am i really larry david? >> what do you most miss that technology made obsolete? >> whoops. >> paper books. >> paper books. i miss the fact that when i'm in a car or at home there are not all kinds of buzzes and noises going off making me a nervous wreck. i miss peace and quiet which i very much enjoy. >> do you curse? >> not on this show. >> very good. >> it did kind of lead to some of the more fun and interesting parts of the night. hillary clinton when she took an envelope, she was asked which gop candidate would she put on the ticket as vice president and had to pick a republican. >> it was interesting moment because she said, look, i could ruin a republican's career right now campaign right now so she recognized she had the potential to do that and didn't name any of them and classically you would call it classically clintonian answer, an extravert or introvert she called herself an extointrovert. >> thank you. >> sure. >>> what three congressmen are trying to mandate on the field. ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪ ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪ prge! a manufacturer. well that's why i dug this out for you. it's your grandpappy's hammer and he would have wanted you to have it. it meant a lot to him... yes, ge makes powerful machines. but i'll be writing the code that will allow those machines to share information with each other. i'll be changing the way the world works. 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take a look at what congressmen richman said about what he hopes congress can do to try to decline the death numbers. president's counsel on fitness and the center for disease control and other medical expert to look at it, study it, analyze the deaths over the last two years, and make us some hard recommendations on how we can do this. >> so that would mean that the centers for disease control would have a wide-scale study, trying to pinpoint what the focuses are and whether or not the game could be safe. better equipment, better technique, establishing better baseline tests, so there are ekgs for every high school, to figure out if certain individuals are more susceptible. but this is definitely starting a conversation and it's something they suspect will get a lot more focused as the year goes on and as more deaths occur in high school football. >> a lot more attention to concussions too. luke russert, thanks so much. >>> still ahead, looking for common ground. president obama welcomes israeli prime minister netanyahu to the oval office. is it a step toward fixing their fractured relationship? we head to the white house up next. meeeeee!!! greg. what should i do with your fish? gary. just put it in the cooler. if you're a fisherman, you tell tales. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. put the fish in the cooler! i tried depend last weekend. it really made the difference between a morning around the house and getting a little exercise. only depend underwear has new confidence core technology for fast absorption and the smooth, comfortable fit of fit-flex™ protection. get a coupon at depend.com hey! how are you?g? where are we watching the game? you'll see. i think my boys have a shot this year. yeah, especially with this new offense we're running... i mean, our running back is a beast. once he hits the hole and breaks through the secondary, oh he's gone. and our linebackers and dbs dish out punishment, and never quit. ♪ you didn't expect this did you? no i didn't. the nissan altima. there's a fun side to every drive. nissan. innovation that excites. if you're echances are medicare you're looking for a part d prescription drug plan. so here's a friendly reminder. medicare open enrollment is here, and ends december 7th. so now's a good time to look at an aarp medicarerx plan, insured through unitedhealthcare. there are two great plans to choose from, each designed to help meet the needs of people just like you. with the zero dollar deductible plan you could start saving with the very first prescription you fill. so call unitedhealthcare today and learn more with this free information guide. it has a summary of plans and benefits. aarp medicarerx plans offer many ways to help you keep costs down. like paying zero dollars for a 90-day supply of tier 1 and 2 prescription drugs with home delivery. if you're eligible for medicare, remember... the open enrollment period ends december 7th. so call unitedhealthcare now. ♪ >>> today president obama met with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu in the oval office for their first sitdown in a year. we'll go there live in our next hour for a full read-out. perhaps after this visit, obama and the prime minister will be friends on facebook. in lighter presidential news, that's right, president obama launched his very own personal facebook page today. he kicked it off with a walk through his backyard. >> a lot of what i do is just think about how i want to make sure that the beauty of this particular national park, but also national parks all across the country and our planet are going to be there for malia, sasha and their kids and grandkids, for generations to come. >> is it me, or is he a little late getting to facebook? you can check out more at facebook.com/potus. head to my page while you're there, tv kate snow. in the next hour, we expect to hear from mizzou football coach whose players helped spark the resignation of the university president. >>> and two americans killed in jordan. one of the state department's former counter terror experts joins us. >>> and how will world doping agency wants russian track and field athletes banned from competition. that and much more, still ahead. watching football together is great... ...but i think women would agree... ...huddling with their man after the game is nice too. the thing is, about half of men over 40 have some degree of erectile dysfunction. well, viagra helps guys with ed get and keep an erection. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. ask your doctor about viagra. now available in new single packs. ♪ everything kids touch during cold and flu season sticks with them. make sure the germs they bring home don't stick around. use clorox disinfecting products. because no one kills germs better than clorox. if yand you're talking toevere rheumyour rheumatologiste me, about a biologic... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain and protect my joints from further damage. this is humira giving me new perspective. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years. humira works for many adults. it targets and helps to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened, as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. talk to your doctor and visit humira.com this is humira at work >> hi, everyone. i'm kate snow. we're following breaking developments out of the university of missouri. that press conference expected this hour. let's catch you up. tim wolf, the president of the university of missouri school system resigned today and made a call for change in doing so. >> change comes from learning, caring and conversation. and we have to respect each other enough to stop yelling at each other and start listening, and quit intimidating each other. through our role or whatever means we decide to use. >> many on campus, including the football team had been calling on the president to resign. for the latest, i'm joined by sarah dallof who has been following the developments for us. >> reporter: good afternoon, kate. there have been a lot of dwea developments today. we've seen over 30 football players come out in support of removing the president. they said they would not play, not participate in any team activities until that happened. that put the pressure on, seemed to be a turning point in this push for change. it made national headlines, but the action began months ago, following a string of racist incidents at the school to which people said the president's response was woefully inadequate. from racial slurs shouted at students to a swastika drawn on a dorm wall. reaction to the news that the president would step down was emotional for students and faculty who had stepped out of the classroom who were doing a walk-out. there were cheers, some wiped away tears. there's been a lot of support from across the nation thrown behind these students, including from mizzou alum turned pro football player michael sam. earlier today he tweeted his support. and this afternoon i spoke to him about his reaction to the president's resignation. >> the students need a voice and they believe that he failed in his duties to accommodate or to educate and to make known these matters, and he had to leave. >> and the athletic department is holding a press conference shortly earlier this afternoon, they sent out a statement saying they will resume activities for the football team tomorrow. meanwhile, a graduate student, jonathan butler, who was on a hunger strike, on his seventh day, has tweeted that that is over. he's once again eating as students continue to say, this is just a first step, they want to seize upon this momentum and make policy changes, make staffing changes and make things in the future that will be real and lasting change. kate? >> sarah, thanks so much. we'll get back to that story as soon as there's any news out of missouri. >>> a scathing report out from the world anti-doping agency, rising russia's government and its athletes of widespread doping and cover-ups. it recommended a lifetime ban on five russian coaches and five russian athletes, including a former olympian. the 350-page report is part of a ten-month investigation by an independent commission that looked back as far as the 2012 london olympics. nbc's keir simmons has the latest from london now. keir? >> good afternoon. russia accused of cheating so bad that the olympics in london was sabotaged while there's corruption and bribery at the highest levels of international athletics, that's how a report described its conclusions while the world's governing body of athletics federation was also implicated, accused of widespread inaction. its president saying he will seek sanctions against russia. one of the authors of the report saying that the 2016 olympic games, our recommendation is that the russian federation be suspended. >> very dramatic report. >> what we hope is that russia will seize the opportunity to move forward and to take a lead in attacking a problem that has the potential to destroy sport. >> and his report recommends that five athletes and five coaches, all from russia, be banned for life, but it doesn't look, kate, as if russia is listening. the director of russia's anti-doping agency denounced the report as unprofessional. for more on the fall-out, i'm joined by our sports reporter mary. even when you read the summary of these 350 pages, it's a dramatic report with a lot of accusations in it. does it mean the russians don't go to rio next summer. >> mr. pound called this the nuclear option. so i don't think it's off the table. what's incredible about this report, doping rumors are part of sports and they have been for a long time. and the russians have been at the top of this. but this report doesn't just indemnify the athletes, it talks about the systems, the laboratories, the government, and paints a picture that it's state sponsored and this idea that a lot of how these teams are preparing has not changed since the cold war. this is something we haven't seen before recently. so having the athletes not in the games is also totally an option that we could see play out. >> we have some sound from dick pound, the commission chairman. here's the recommendation that he made today. okay, we don't have that sound bite. sorry, apologies, mary. but basically he said our recommendation is that the russian federation be suspended. and you said that's the worst case scenario. what's more likely to happen now given all the details of this report? >> i think there's going to be pushback. but more and more details will be coming out. what's noticeable about this case, is that it wasn't just a case told in drug test results. it was told in whistle-blowers. now that some people are out, the hope is that more people will talk and more information will come toward and the case against them, there could be tril charges. other countries are doing investigations as well. we're at the start of really trying to understand what's going on here. >> are we talking about other sports being affected too? because this report focused on track and field. could this be other russian sports? >> absolutely. and the report states that, that we don't know if this is exclusive to the russians, nor do we think it's exclusive to track and field. power lifting is another sport that comes to mind that could be really impacted at the rio olympics. the jamaicans, the kenyans, the americans. doping is pervasive in sport and there's a lot of different country with these anti-doping organizations that are often run with all these conflicts of interest, that could come to light as well. so that is part of the russian pushback here, why are you picking on us when there's cheating everywhere? >> actually, to be fair, the russian sports minister said, whatever we do, it's bad. and another one said, they're only coming under scrutiny because they're so good. >> right, but a lot of people are good at the olympic level. so all of these countries, i think it's a moment of sol soul-searching for the system. coaches, sports ministries, something that comes up in the russian case here, so looking at the structure of how we're policing this is going to come up naturally in these conversations, aside from the fact that these athletes, we don't know what the health consequences could be for them down the road. it used to be all about busting the athlete, and now we're seeing prosecutors take more of a look at the system at large. >> the organizations that support the athletes. mary, thanks so much. >>> we want to go back now to columbia, missouri, where university of missouri president tim wolfe resigned earlier today amid racial tensions and i want to bring in missouri student body president peyton head. thank you for being with us on a busy day. >> thanks for having me today. >> you've been so deeply involved in all of this. your reaction to the president resigning? >> i appreciate his commitment to students. i think it was very responsible on his part to acknowledge what is happening on this campus and acknowledge that his resignation is something that will help in healing the campus culture that we have here. >> you played a big part in all of this coming to the forefront, a lot of attention being paid to these issues. back in september, as i understand it, you said a man called you a racial slur as you were walking on campus. >> yes. >> and that wasn't the first time that's happened to you either. >> no. >> but this caught fire. describe to me what's happened on campus over these past few weeks, and where do you go now? >> yeah, so a lot has taken place on the campus. there's been walkouts, different demonstrations. the university has been in the news for a long time now for some of the things that are happening here because of the ineffective leadership that has been in place. and the decisions that were made, that were the result of ineffective leadership. we've seen a variety of different incidents, from my own incident on campus where a student yelled the n word at me multiple times. that's not an isolated incident. it's been happening to students for so long. we've had the black homecoming court, they were verbally assaulted in the heart of campus. we've seen a swastika drawn. we are by no means blaming mr. tim wolfe for systematic oppression, but what we say we're concerned with is he doesn't understand systematic oppression and how it relates to running a system. university of missouri was built in 1839 as the first public land grant west of the mississippihed until 1865. so there's oppression here in the system that we have to acknowledge in order to move forward. how to create a campus culture inclusive of students regardless of how they identify. >> so now that the president will step aside, saying he's doing it out of love, not of hate. he said, i want the campus to move forward and mend and heal. how does that happen, just given everything you just said and what a difficult time this has been? >> oh, yes. the thing that people need to understand, this was just one part of the process. and i really do appreciate president wolfe and his leadership for this matter. our campus culture right now is hurting. students are hurting right now. we need to be able to have adequate resources to attend to the students, their mental and emotional progress. and i think a lot of that starts in place with the efforts that need to be taken right now to create a more inclusive campus. let's talk about who are we hiring for our faculty? how do they repr
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mississippi people it was an outrage. that's the first time a black man had ever been allowed to appear on television in mississippi. certainly to argue against segregation. it made him, in some ways, a kind of marked way in mississippidemonstrating until freedom m comes to negros in jackson, mississippi. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ nothing artificial. just real roasted turkey. carved thick. that's the right way to make a good turkey sandwich. the right way to eat it? is however you eat it. panera. food as it should be. mariecan make any occasion feel more special. so she makes her pie crust from scratch, and sprinkles on brown sugar streusel. so that you can spend more time making special moments with your family. marie callender's. it's time to savor. >>> our guest today on "meet the press" is governor george c. wallace of alabama. his state is the only one in the country today whose schools are completely segregated. next week the issue heads for a climax when two negro students will seek to enroll at the university of alabama. governor wallace has been quoted as saying he will personally bar their entrance despite a federal court order and a threat of federal troops. >> can they be enrolled? >> we'll just have to wait and see exactl
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our c-span "road to the white house" bus stopped in jackson, mississippi this week. jackson, mississippi, mayor tony yarber speaks with boys and girls clubs aboard the bus. this is the jackson state university cheerleading squad posing for a photo in the bus visit. to track the travels of our bus, follow us on twitter and instagram using cspan bus. -- using atcspanbus. >> as the nation commemorates veterans day, saturday, starting at 11:00 a.m. eastern, american history will be live if the national world war ii museum in new orleans as we look back 70 years to the war's end and its legacy. we'll tour the museum exhibit and take your calls and tweets. starting this week and every sunday morning at 10:00, our gnaw program "road to the white house rewind" takes a look at past presidential campaigns through arkivel footage. this sunday, we feature ronald reagan's 1979 campaign announcement. on c-span, saturday night at 8:30, the steam boat freedom conference debate, the effect of legalized marijuana in colorado and other states around the country. sunday evening at 6:30, our road to the whit
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mississippi river. dana jacobson has the story. >> reporter: he spends six to eight hours a day six days a week swimming the mississippi river. chris will go down as the first american to swim the entire mississippiit is those gold star families and the memory of their loved ones that made it happen. though he is a former navy seal, chris doesn't kid himself a strong swimmer. every day except sundays since the sixth of june, this decorated combat veteran zips up. jumps into the mississippi river. and proves otherwise. >> that fst little chill going up your back. >> i couldn't imagine any better thing to do than to really raise awareness and honor the fallen heroes. >> chris' swim was inspired by a cross-country hike last year by army veteran mike vitti whose legacies alive organization, offers support for gold star families. >> hello. >> hi, chris. >> the survivors of fallen soldiers. >> thank you for coming out here. >> thank you so much. >> reporter: like jenny smith. and her husband eddie. jenny's son marine staff sergeant jason rodgers was killed in action 4 1/2 years ain afghanistan. >> he loved the marine corps. very friendly, young man. he loved basketball. he loved transformers. they neve
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mississippi territory that is going to the mississippi and alabama, toward the south, florida is owned by spain but got matt is very recognizable. that was an imaginary map, the white man's map as i call it. there is a different matter that had more legal force headed been followed, it is the next map we will look at. i call it the indian map, legally recognize, you could see the states are different shapes, georgia is the different shapes, smaller, tennessee is a different shape, the territory doesn't exist at all. you can see it? i will keep pictures, i do it on the radio. i will keep talking. [applause] >> mississippi territory doesn't exist, georgia is a little sliver along the coast and along the river, tennessee is smaller, north carolina is smaller, mississippi doesn't exist at all and instead you cavs five indian nations including the cherokee nation and their land recognized by treaty, they were legally recognized by the united states, the white man's mad and the indian map were recognized at the same time by the united states and this book "jacksonland" bling is about how that was resolved so legally binding map, the indian map was slowly replaced by this imaginary map of the united states and that became the real map. >> have we lost his entirely? >> one last picture i want to ask you about, if you go to jacksonland today, what you might see representative, do you -- >> if you doubt that andrew jackson made the deep south, was the single most important author of the deep south just look around because there is jacksonville, fla. jackson, mississippi, jackson county, alabama, jackson county,
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well, it's looking a little on the snowy said as you make your way through the upper mississippi and lower mississippi riv >> jeremy: good morning. a few peeks of sunshine this morning. otherwise a lot of clouds. not as cold this morning as yesterday. rain gear not a bad idea. we are tracking showers. i think we'll hold off most of the showers until 4:00. and between 4:00 and 7:00 p.m. isolated showers. steady rain on the way overnight tonight. half an inch to an inch of rain possible. rain peels out of here early tomorrow morning. even warmer tomorrow morning. temps tomorrow morning near 60. developing sunshine through the day tomorrow in the upper 50s tomorrow afternoon. >> that's your latest weather. happy birthday, 70 years old. you look fantastic. >> thank you very much. >> happy birthday. let's go back inside to matt. >> oscar winner eddie redmayne is back on the big screen, getting an awful lot of attention for a role in "the danish girl," based on a true story. redmayne plays a prominent transitioning into a woman named lili. >> my husband, can you get him? >> i can't. >> i need to talk to my
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mississippi going west. mormons being forced across the mississippi river east. from the time they united in the mid- 1840s they cultivated a particular public image presenting himself as a mormon elder and the pair were married for eternity. although she was not yet claiming she had already existing 1st yourself as someone who had a peculiar fascination. she and her sisters and a number of other commerce thrive on the field with the referred to. she was drawn to the romanticized depiction of native people. claimed he had received prophecies of bringing them christ. still writing articles based on the belief. but later have one child which was aa very clever way to connect them to the man he claimed. this appeared on stage with them in the pint-size indian custom from time to time. but she also had three children from her 1st marriage. twelve nine. four years later when they hit the road for an eastern tour she left her older children in the care of her parents. she would not see him again for 19 years. the 3rd predominant only slightly wrong storyline is that th
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mississippi river. dana jacobson has the story. >> reporter: he spends six to eight hours a day six days a week swimming the mississippi river. chris will go down as the first american to swim the entire mississippi. but he says it is those gold star families and the memory of their loved ones that made it happen. though he is a forner navy seal, chris doesn't consider himself a strong swimmer. every day except sundays since the sixth of june, this decorated combat veteran zips up. jumps into the mississippi river. and proves otherwise. >> that first little chill going up your back. >> i couldn't imagine any better thing to do than to really raise awareness and honor the fallen heroes. >> chris' swim was inspired by a cross-country hike last year by army veteran mike vitti whose legacies alive organization, offers support for gold star families. >> hello. >> hi, chris. >> the survivors of fallen soldiers. >> thank you for coming out here. >> thank you so much. >> reporter: like jenny smith. and her husband eddie. jenny's son mamane staff sergeant jason rodgers was killed in action 4 1/2 years ain afghanistan. >> he loved the marine corps. very friendly, young man. he loved basketball. he loved tr
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mississippi, not in spite of being from mississippi. >> beautiful. beautiful. >> that is beautiful. >> one of my favorite actors and perhaps my writing candidate for 2016, viola davis. [laughter] said in an interview, i believe it was with charlie rose, that whenever she accepts a role, the first thing she does is look for the traps. what are the mistakes i could make in taking on rose in a august wilson -- [inaudible] when you realized, okay, i have the book, this is the beginning of a journey which is an investment that often is years, likely many years with all of the research you've been doing, what were some of the traps either anticipated or unanticipated that you had to deal with during the writing process? >> we can call it a trap, or we can call it sheer terror. [laughter] the terror stemmed from the fact that ota benga had no papers, right? so i can go into all these archives and find the records of, you know, all of the eminent men of new york city and around the country, and there was no way to get to his voice x. so that -- and so that was a source of great angst, and at some point i even wondered if i could do it. and then after digging for years, i was able to actually find ota benga, his voice and his spirit in the records of the people who held him. there he was being described and talked about and talking back, and, you know, if you lean in, you know, you can hear him, you can feel his resistance, you could -- so what began as something that was very intimidating because, you know, when you write about oppressed people, marginalized people, you have to find different ways to get at their voices. because they are rendered voiceless, without agency, right? and the people who have power are the ones who get to define them. so finding a way to define, to allow ota benga to allow me to find him was really challenging. >> i think that's true with any marginalized group. their around -- archives, their papers, conversations with them are not considered important, so they're not usually collected. so with alice and frieda, i had correspondence which is, you know, for women's historian an embarrassment of riches. [laughter] and as soon as alice goes into jail, she goes dark. and she goes on the stand. anything that comes through her lawyer, by that time i knew her quite well. i read her letters hundreds of times, so i could tell clearly what wasn't her voice or someone leaning into her. and then i have to do the same thing with the archival resources. you have to be really creative so it's not just newspaper articles. you have to look for a mention of these people. and one else who might have been in the area. >> exactly. >> you have to create all these situations in which intersectionalty feels like you're not just grasping at something and trying to make connections, but is actually there. and for me, that was one of the riskiest things was the chapter in which i brought together the chapter of ida b. wells and alice and frieda, but it felt really necessary. in no other circumstances would a white woman be in a small jail run by the founder of the kkk with three men who were arrested for economically threatening a white business that opened up in a densely-black neighborhood. and it was important to bring these stories together because of the way they were written about. in newspapers they publicly called for her lynching because of something she had written. but nobody wanted to see alice, a confessed murder rest with victims -- murderess, hanged for her crimes. so it's figuring out how to make these connections, feeling comfortable, but also giving in to the fact that you'll never know. memoirs are inherently flawed because they are driven by perspective, and it's the same when you're a historian. >> exactly. >> you hope to do the best you can, and by presenting, actually, these views that, you know, make your skin, you know, like that is -- >> right. >> -- a way to write in everyone's opinion. and sometimes you feel like you just have to present it. >> yeah. and there was one chapter where, you know, it's situated at the zoo, and all the spectators and what's going on, and there's, there are only four words from o, the a a -- ota benga, and the words are me no like america. and it said everything, right? >> it screams on the page. >> yeah. >> specifically my question for you, i often joke with friends that, obviously, white people are the only ones who want to time travel -- [laughter] and probably like only maybe straight white men, because i don't know about you, but for the rest of us, the idea of going back in time, i'm like, i'm good. i'm great here. [laughter] let's actually fast forward maybe. or not, i don't know. it's hard to tell. [laughter] so, you know, so i feel like time travel itself, it's a trap. what was it like -- [laughter] what was it like, you know, writing, you know, a wonderfully -- it's such a journey. you know, time travel for young black kids? >> that's a great question. [laughter] i think that's a great question because i think the four young black kids, the important part of that question and that statement, and i want to tie that question into a question that you asked earlier, the hardest part for me other than waking up every day and confronting a blank page and having to will yourself through it was pushing back against really new york editors who told me that that audience didn't exist and that there was nobody who'd want to read, you know, a book about a book about a book with two narrators and a young black girl who calls herself an i lend sis -- e lip cease. .. i wanted to time travel. [laughter] so kind of the last question before the q-and-a, when my book debuted last fall it has to do with violence on the black body. i was at a book party and i stood up to read and i couldn't ignore the fact that people were marching into was happening right then trying to keep up with what was happening. the books resonate. what has it been like writing about this particular american moment? >> i'm writing about an episode that occurred in 1906 when it was clear that the black lights didn't matter. the black lives matter movement at this time was the niagara movement that had happened just before and marked a new low of life in america. and here we are all these years later where many are looking at it as a sort of metaphor for black life today. this young innocent sweet boy that was kidnapped and captured and brought to this country and put in a cage. and i think the resonance is really powerful. >> i think it's wonderful that the panelists have books that speak to >> they seemed to have found their way. and everyone plays it safe. when i found the book that i was a graduate student and i wasn't an author and so i tried to turn people in publishing on to it but nobody was going to be interested in that so i thought when the book came out it would be great if some of it sold so it wasn't in the entire disaster that some of the things would be inexplicable so i thought that same-sex marriage shortly i would be able to talk about this being addressed for the rest of my life for this book tour that same-sex marriage was illegal and the book came out and i wasn't able to say that. they think that this will so and draw the crowds into movie theaters. [laughter] >> after my book came out i thought that there wasn't anything more joyful than having somebody that inspired your book in a situation there was an author in mississippi that was incredible to say my book inspired her and when i read that i thought that's crazy. and i did the tears and all that. [laughter] earlier this year we got a call from some of the most active organizers in the liberation movement and some of the active organizers in the black lives matter movement. and when up when i was talking to one of the dudes from the ferguson movement he said that the book spoke to me and then he settled on on for a second and he came back and said i'm trying to get some new tear gas masks. i was just grateful. i love what happened in this moment is that authors and activists sometimes are the same person and workers and writers are the same people and i just think we have these folks that are actually listening and we are created in this e-echo that is reverberating and pushing back against all kinds of homogenized power on the heels of the community. so i'm just really happy about that. >> beautifully said. >> now we have ten minutes. >> ten minutes fo
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here's a tornado watch in effect through mississippi and alabama and into parts of mississippi. and take a look at this. we compare it with what we showed you yesterday, the futurecast, and look at how it lines up. i mean, almost exactly the forecast has come to fruition. unfortunately, it's all part of this cold front pushing to the east. strong winds, rain sliding eve. the good news is we're going to get some rain we really need here in the northeast. however, we're going to see a lot of rain down through the southeast. look for airport delays from roanoke. rainfall rates 1 to 2 inches per hour and could be up to 5 inches of rain before it's all over and way up into boston. could be about 2 to 3 inches of rain and generally 1 to 2. look for airport delays from >> good morning. cold again, and mostly sunny skies, still cool this afternoon, and temperatures come out of the 20s and 30s this afternoon. upper 40s. and boston, 48 later on today. and framingham, 48 tomorrow. not as cold, but the tradeoff is more clouds, and rain showers arriving at 4:00 tomorrow. mid 50s tomorrow. an
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mississippi. that's a big river. >> we are a cape girardo along the mighty mississippi in the fire boats. we are on the mississippi. monster monday became part of terrible tuesday. we didn't land here until about two hours ago. so we have taken too many hits with the punchy stick. >> it should make for a fun show. >> i thought that happened yesterday. al, we will check in with you in a bit. the republicans running for president. gearing up for the debate showdown in milwaukee tonight and all eight on the main stage have things to prove to voters. we have this covered with nbc's peter alexander. peter, good morning to you. >> reporter: savannah, good morning. you said it with eight candidates on the main stage. four on the undercard and three on the sidelines all together. we expect to hear more from the candidates. among the biggest questions, donald trump and how does jeb bush handle the pressure? and for the republicans, poses another test. ben carson facing scrutiny over his life story. will carson's rivals or the tonight? his chief opponent donald trump is teeing off focusing on the youth. >> the only election
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