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right now on "early start," a last minute deal extends the crews in gaza, but that is a big if. and legacy of henry kissinger, the revered diplomat dead this morning at 100 years old. and -- >> for many jewish people it is a matter of survival informed once again by history. >> stirring words from the high est ranking jewish leader in congress. good morning, i'm kasie hunt. it is thursday, november 30. 5:00 a.m. here in washington, noon in gaza where the truce with israel has now been extended for a seventh day. both israel and hamas confirming the news just minutes before the deal was set to expire at midnight. a senior adviser to benjamin netanyahu says that daily pause would only continue if hamas freed ten israeli hostages each day. secretary of state antony blinken met with netanyahu and his war cabinet earlier in tel aviv. blinken will also meet face-to-face with palestinian president mahmoud abbas today. families have been released of the new release of hostages. president biden says an israeli american woman was freed on wednesday. >> we have very good news to report. liat is safe in egypt, she's crossed the border. i talked with her mother and father. they are very appreciative. and things are moving well. she will soon be home with her these children. >> israel also released 30 palestinian women and children held in jails, many whom were never charged with any crime. but in the occupied west bank the palestinian ministry of health says israeli military incursions have cost more lives including two children yesterday. meanwhile another 200 aid trucks with food, water and basic supplies crossed in to gaza. the u.n. says over a million people now being housed in shelters. matthew chance is joining us live from tel aviv. matthew, good morning. good to see you. israel says that they are assessing this hamas claim that the youngest hostage, a ten month old baby and two family members of his, are no longer alive. bring us up to speed on that as secretary blinken travels to the region today. >> reporter: that's right, secretary blinken will be giving a news conference later on this evening here local time. but, yes, in the meanwhile the israeli governments say that they are looking into this claim that has been made, two of the youngest hostages held by hamas, a 10 month old baby, a 4-year-old child, and their mother were killed in what hamas says were israeli bombardments over the course of the past several weeks as they were inside gaza. they were meant to be released of course. now that is not possible. and it is something that the israelis say they are looking into. in the meantime, there is a new list of ten hostages who are alive that has been given by hamas to the israeli government via the mediators in qatar. and that process of release in exchange for palestinian prisoners and aid relief into gaza is expected go ahead for a seventh consecutive night tonight. and so that is very positive news. earlier hamas had said that israel had rejected a proposal to release seven hostages who were alive and the bodies of three more hostages. it is not clear whether that was this family or not. but israel has rejected that saying that under the firms of the current deal that they have, the ten hostages a day that need to be exchanged for a pause in the fighting and for that relief and release of palestinian prisoners, they have to be alive. about but obviously it raises questions about how sustainable this process can be because israel says that there are approximately 140 hostages still with hamas and other militant groups inside gaza. it is not clear at the moment what their condition is, how many to put it sfrait frankly ae and how many are dead. so that is a consideration moving forward. >> very difficult reality indeed. matthew chance, thanks for being with us this morning. now to this, former secretary of state henry kissinger died last night at the age of 100. almost as polarizing a figure in death as he was in life, kissinger was born in germany, he and his jewish family fled nazi persecution and came to the u.s. in 1938. he served in world war ii, earned a doctorate and taught at harvard eventually joining the nixon administration. kissinger dominated american foreign policy in the 1970s building u.s. relations with russia and china, negotiating important nuclear arms agreements. but no issue complicates his legacy like vietnam. critics say they needlessly expanded the war which ended for the u.s. with the fall of saigon at the cost of nearly 60,000 american lives. along with the deaths of hundreds of thousands of vietnamese civilians. here is kissinger's view of those events 35 years later. >> to me the tragedy of the vietnam war was not that there were disagreements. that was inevitable. given the complexity of the subject. but that the faith of americans in each other became destroyed in the process. >> let's bring in julian zelizer, i'm very grateful to have you here as this news was breaking overnight to talk about it. speaking of myths and legends, let's start with kissinger's accomplishments. what were they and what made him such a towering figure? >> i think what he will be remembered for most in a positive sense is his role in 1972 in working out the salt agreement which was an arms agreement with the soviet union at a really tense moment in the cold war. and opening relations with china and being a key figure in the nixon administration in allowing that to happen. both of which created a bit of a thaw in the cold war. so his supporters will be focusing on that element of his legacy. >> so then let's turn to the controversy because all of these years later, you know, i think "rolling stone" this morning is out basically saying good riddance the day after -- there it is -- war criminal beloved by the ruling class finally dies. that is a reflection of history that in the vietnam era, why this animosity and why the controversy? >> there is a long record. kissinger was part of a strategy that prolonged the vietnam war. it involved pretty ruthless bombing campaign against countries such as cambodia. kissinger is also an architect of policies that resulted in a coup, u.s.-backed coup in chile for example in 1973 where a democratically elected official was replaced with one who was not because it served american interests. and again and again kissinger prioritized strategy, real poll teek, over issues such as human rights. so i think that is why so many people are talking about this very damaging part of what he accomplished during the 1970s. >> kissinger also remained kind of on the public stage and as part of our public life and the experience conducting a foreign policy well after these decades. what has his life and what are his contributions in the years since left the white house? >> he is one of the only figures from the nixon administration to really survive politically water gat gate. and he continued to be seen as a statesman, presidents from both parties consulted with him, he published many books and remained an ongoing presence in discussions of diplomacy. and so by doing that, by courting the media which is something he always did incredibly well, he maintained his public role in life. but at the time of his passing, this record that he left behind in the 1970s won't be forgotten. and so i think that it is the dual sides of kissinger that we're discussing today for that reason. >> for sure. julian zelizer, historian at princeton, thank you for being with us this morning. all right. still ahead here -- >> he was extraordinary. >> rare praise from republican mitch mcconnell for democrat chuck schumer. we'll show you why. plus what is triggering lawmakers to quit congress at a record pace? we'll talk to one of them live. after october 7, jewish americans are feeling singled out, targeted, and isolated. in many ways we feel alone. >> that was senate majority leader chuck schumer highlighting the alarm felt by jewish americans as anti-semitism spikes in the wake of the october 7 attack on israelis and the war that followed. schumer made those remarks in an emotional speech on the senate floor yesterday. h heist ranking jewish democrat in history, he was confronting progressives generally warning some of what is happening today is reinforcing currents of anti-semitism that go back centuries. max foster is joining us live from london. max, good morning to you. i want to show a little more of what schumer had to say yesterday to try to underscore the point that he was making about how jewish people are feeling, trying to remind many younger generations who perhaps are not as familiar with the history of what happened really not that long ago. take a look at more of what he had to say. >> you cancan you blame us for vulnerable only 80 years after lirt hitler wiped out half of the jewish population while so many countries turned their back. >> can you appreciate the deep fear we might have what hamas would be left to do? because long arc of jewish history teams us a lesson that is hard to forget. ultimately we are alone. >> italy we are alone. you can help us understand how a little bit how that history played out? a lot of it is european history and american jews have felt that they were able to come here as that persecution was playing out. but that they are now feeling unsafe here as well considering what is going on. >> yes, that loneliness, you often hear that from jewish people i think around the world off the back of these attacks. and then that is a feeling that stretches back in history for many of them. i won't pretend to be an expert, i'm not jewish, but this is what i've been hearing in terms of the conversations around this. and jewish americans are alarmed to see some of the fellow citizens characterize a brutal terrorist attack as justified because of the actions of the israeli government. they feel lonely. they show support for other groups but those other groups aren't necessarily showing support for them. and that has echos of the past for them. we're seeing similar sort of conversations in other countries. i'll point out germany for obvious reasons. but also yesterday we were hearing from the head of domestic intelligence in germany really warning about the rise in anti-semitic language there. it has happened there again. again stretching back to the same period in history and he's saying there is a very specific problem that he is worried about and that is the fact that there are extremist groups and did disparate groups in germany coming together off the back of what happened in israel because they are seeing anti-semitism, the jewish population, israel perhaps, as a common enemy. he is now worried that these extremist groups that don't have much in common otherwise are coming together and may cooperate in future in the face of anti-semitism off the back of anti-semitism. these things are very complex, they go back decades as you suggested. and we don't all understand them, but there is a strain there, i think very senior people like schumer and head of intelligence in germany are seeing here. >> and max, one of the things -- i should note republicans have praised schumer for the speech. mitch mcconnell had extensive praise for him. i've seen it from other conservatives that i follow. and i think one of the things here is just -- and i know you have kids who are on tiktok. i think about my own grandfather fought in world war ii, he fought in the pacific. but, you know, he is 97. and is of a generation that many of these younger people are not as exposed to. to me it does feel a little bit like this serves as a reminder to people maybe who are for getting some of what had happened. >> and you see this with some of the protests here in europe for example where a lot of people are coming out in support of palestinians, a lot of jewish people are feeling do you really understand the long arc of history that led us to this point. a big debate on social media amongst young people for example from what i've seen that, you know, what israel is doing is disproportionate to what hamas did to israel. these are very simplistic arguments. and that is what is frustrating so many jewish people around the world. so i think that people like schumer stepping up and a really explaining how jewish people are feeling, at least will inform that debate to some extent when there is sympathy on all sides here for the civilians who really suffered in a horrific way on all sides. >> of course. max foster, thank you very much for being with us this morning. appreciate you as always. all right. former president doubling down on his calls to replace obamacare. what? what he's promising instead if he is elected. and millions of americans facing a severe storm threat. areas facing the greatest risk, coming up. welcome back. quick hits across america now. an arizona grand jury is indicting two local officials for delaying certification of the 2022 midterm election results. peggy judd and tom crosby could both face up to 2 1/2 years in prison. former president trump planning to attend a super pac fundraiser instead of the fourth gop primary debate. his campaign set up a contest offering a chance to meet trump to anyone who donates. and vice president harris set to discuss the israel-hamas war with global leaders on the sidelines of the critical climate crisis conference cop 28 in dubai this weekend. she will also deliver a speech saturday. now let's get to weather. about 20 million people under severe storm threats in the south with possible tornadoes in texas today. heavy rain could also bring flooding from missouri to louisiana and of course here to break it down is our weatherman derek van dam. wonderful to see you. sounds like people are in for a tough spell. >> yes, we call this the severe weather second season. typically february, march and april across the great plains, the collision of air masses as seasons start to change. and think about what time of year it is. it is late fall, heading into winter, and we're getting kind of the opposite. but the collision of colder and warmer air masses create this potential for severe weather. and this time it lies over a population density that is over 4 million people. so just incredible. in all it encompasses about 20 million. and houston incorporated within the heist probability with that risk for tornadoes from the storm prediction center. very clever meteorologist there recognizing some of the ingredients necessary for severe thunderstorm development in and around the houston area. at the lowest levels of the atmosphere, winds out of the due south off the gulf of mexico. and just a few thousand feet above that, winds are moving in the north to northeasterly direction. so that provides the spin necessary for potential thunderstorms that could start to rotate and that means tornadoes. you can see the sporadic nature to the thunderstorm development later today and then another round of showers and thunderstorms for the day tomorrow. all in all a very wet weekend across the deep south and into the southeast. so be prepared. plan accordingly. >> plan accordingly. that is why we have you. thank you very much. coming up next, the truce between israel and hamas in gaza extended for a seventh day. details on the hostage released and where the negotiations stand. and we're remembering former secretary of state henry kissinger who died wednesday at the age of 100. a look back at his life dominating diplomacy. to really set the standard for everyone who followed in this job. few people were better students of history, even fewer people did more to shape history than henry kissinger. >> remarkable life. good morning, i'm casey hunt. tha secretary of state antony blinken who is in israel talking about the man who had his job 50 years ago, henry kissinger. a controversial giant in u.s. foreign policy, kissinger died at the age of 100 at his connecticut home last night. we'll have more on this in a moment. blinken's visit to the middle east comes as the temp anorary truce is extended for a seventh day. he met with benjamin netanyahu and president herzog in tel aviv earlier today. >> we have been focused relentlessly on trying to secure the release of hostages. this process is producing results. it is important and we hope that it can continue. >> blinken will sit down with palestinian authority president mahmoud abbas in a few hours. a senior adviser to netanyahu has said a daily pause would only continue if hamas freed ten israeli hostages open day and this as negotiations continue in qatar. joining us now former israeli ambassador to the u.s., michael oren. ambassador, thank you very much for being here. i actually want to start -- i understand you worked with henry kissinger. i'd like to start there with the passing of will just absolute giant, very controversial one, but a giant nonetheless. what are your memories of him? >> first of all, good to be with you and thank you for having me on. it is always an extraordinary experience to meet and work with somebody who you've read extensively and you've studied. i had studied henry kissinger. we read his m.a. thesis on bismarck, his ph.d. thesis. where he h we read his books. a book called "crisis" is simply the transcripts of his decisions during the 1973 war. literally you cannot put this book down. and i got to meet kissinger in an interesting way. first as historian, he was concerned about his legacy and very concerned that the people of israel, the jewish people, would remember him fondly because he had played sometimes controversial role in our history particularly surrounding the yom kippur war. he prevented israel from launching a preemptive strike. and he also pressured israel to give up territory in order ultimately to make peace with egypt. he should be remembered fondly for that. and he would discuss his role and wanted to clarify that he had worked honestly for the people of israel. and then later as ambassador, i got to work with him again and would consult with him frequently about the nature of u.s.'s relationship. i'll never forget our first meeting when i said to him dr. kissinger, you always called him doctor, not professor, are you concerned that the united states makes a nuclear arrangement with iran, would america lose its position in the middle east. and he said what makes you think that anybody in the white house cares about continued american i nijemy in the middle east. >> and that is really just so remarkable. i think it also -- i'm glad you brought up his book and his role in those previous negotiations. because we're also hear talking about the news today about ongoing negotiations in the same region to try to extend a truce in a war between hamas and israel. and it really does seem as though kissinger, and i'm interested in your thoughts and reflections, the model that he built in 1973. it is one that is still in use today be it in a more modern way. >> he invented the whole system of shuttle diplomacy. he would go back and forth from jerusalem to cairo, from cairo to damascus. there was always that funny line every time he went to cairo, he would get kissed by anwar sadat and then go to damascus and get of syria. >> and so let's talk a little bit about what is going to unfold in the next 24 to 48 hours. because matthew chance was reporting at the top of the show that there had been some back and forth because one of the lists that hamas provided included people that were no longer living and israel said no, this deal is about making sure living people continue to come out of gaza, that is how we'll extend this truce. it does seem to be fraying around the edges. what are you looking for in the next 24 to 48 hours to see how we may or may not see resumption of hole tistilities in the regi? >> let me first say on a personal level, i'm delighted because i've heard the list includes a young woman named mi aca who i've been in touch with her mother since the first day october 8. and her mother was able to visit with the president of france and apparently this has paid off. because she is 22 years old and i just heard from her mother that she is getting out. so on a personal level, i'm very relieved. but yes, there is an end to this pro process. they can only release so many hostages. hostages are the ultimate human shield because hamas knows once it releases the last hostage, then israel can go and flood the hundreds of miles of tunnels, it can ignite them in some way and kill hamas. it may be the ultimate solution would be that hamas would give over the last of the hostages and israel would let hamas get on boats and go somewhere. that is what with did in plo in beirut. but barring that situation, there has to be at some point an end to the negotiations. israel's position is to get as many hostages particularly women and children out as possible, but keeping in mind that the ceasefire hamas wants means hamas literally gets away with mass murder and israel loses. people forget we have 250,000 refugees of our own, people moved away from the borders and can't go back to their homes as long as hamas poses this type of mortal threat and hamas says if it survives this, it will propose that moral threat. and so we won't be able to restore our internal security or certainly our even regional deterrence because iran will internalize that you can hit israel with immunity and when israel goes to defend itself, they will slap a ceasefire on us and we won't be able to defend ourselves. so israel will have to continue the battle at some point. every member of the israeli government says this. the question is at what point. and i think that we may be nearing that point. >> michael oren, thank you very much for your time this morning. i hope you come back. >> thank you. the expulsion saga continues for george santos after a scathing ethics report revealed his alleged misuse of campaign funds. a vote is supposed to be tomorrow. assume f support for his support seems to be growing. but speaker mike johnson remains hesitant. >> i want people to vote their conscience. this is the only appropriate thing we can do. i personally have real reservations about doing this. i'm concerned about a precedent that may be set for that. >> santos has already dodged two expulsion vote this is year. so is third time the charm. let's bring in julia manchester. lovely to have you here. let's talk a little bit -- pretty basic question, what is johnson's hesitation? there are a couple possible reasons for it. >> good morning, kasie. i think one of the possible reasons is that the idea that this sets a precedent. remember george santos would be the first member of congress to be expelled who hasn't been convicted of a felony or a crime or who supported the confederacy. he is neither of those. so going forward, this very well could set a precedence. and it is not only republicans who have voiced that. you also heard prominent progressive congressman jamie raskin earlier this month express reservations about that and vote against another motion to expel. it seems like many republicans are on board. but i thought it was interesting listening to mike johnson see comments. with him saying i have reservations or members should vote their conscience, i read that as he is not necessarily willing to give political cover down the road to the members that do ultimately vote to expel. we'll have to see how it plays poli politically. >> i read it as hey, i won't tell you not to vote to expel him. like they are not whipping against it which i think, look, there is a lot of districts that biden won in 2020 around this. and we'll hear from santos himself we expect later today. he has a press conference said for 8:00 this morning. it seems like he is definitely not going to resign, he will try to go down swinging. what is his ultimate end game here? >> yeah, and i'll pintoint out y of those biden districts are in santos's home state. in terms of george santos' end game, i think that he has been doing all of this because he can. he's been able to tell a story that some people believe for some time, but going forward, look, i think he wants to stand his ground right now. he is not necessarily going to let himself, you know, resign at this point, but he wants to be seen maybe in a way as a martyr, somebody who has been kicked out of the house and he can turn to his supporters and say look at the republican establishment, look what they did to me. i thought it was interesting that george santos gave an interview and talked about how a number of members, you know, are heavy drinkers, you know, sort of implied that he had not so great information on his colleagues. and that he could be willing to reveal that. so i don't think that this is going to be the last we hear from him. >> and trying to turn a media opportunity into a paycheck, clearly santos is interested in having extra money. julia manchester, thank you very much for being with us this morning. and of course there has been no shortage of drama on capitol hill. and leaders are quitting congress at a record pace. what it means for the institution. i'll speak to one of the lawmakers who is leaving next. in order for small businesses to thrive, they need to be smart, efficient, savvy. making the most of every opportunity. that's why comcast business is introducing the small business bonus. for a limited time you can get up to a $1000 prepaid card with qualifying internet. yep, $1000. so switch to business internet from the company with the largest fastest reliable network and that powers more businesses than anyone else. learn how you can get $1000 back for your business today. comcast business. powering possibilities. welcome back. those of you who follow congress know the past term has been a chaotic one to say the least. there is the routine in-fighting but also the name calling and alleged physical altercations. the speaker saga and more now we're seeing the fallout from that chaos. lawmakers are leaving congress at a record clip. some retiring, some seeking higher office. and some are just simply saying i've had enough, i'm done with it, time too go. let's bring in one of the lawmakers who has decided that he doesn't want to stay in congress. democratic congressman dan kildee of michigan. he announced this month that he will not be seeking re-election. congressman, thank you very much for joining us. >> thank you, kasie. >> so i just have to ask you, what have the recent months been like for you and what role have they played in your decision to leave? >> well, certainly a part of my decision. it has been the toughest period that i've spent in congress in the 11 years that i've been here. but at the core, it is a personal choice. my close friends and family have known all along that it was never my intention to stay in congress for the rest of my work life, for my working career. my wife and i had some conversation, we said we'd do it for a decade and then take it a term at a time. by the time i leave it will have been 12 years. but it is impossible to erase the fact that this has been a chaotic period. and it is not just the last several weeks or months. but the last few years where the coarsening of political dialogue in this country has gone to a new low. and while my personal choice is more about my long term interest in doing something else for the remaining years of my work life, you know, it makes a difference the tradeoff that we make being away from family to be here and to be a part of an institution that i've known for a long, long time. and to see not just congress but sort of the institution of american political dialogue become so coarsened and so angry. it is a part of the calculation for sure. >> yeah, you told the "new york times" that this has been, quote, the most unsatisfying period of my time in congress because of the absolute chaos and lack of any serious commitments to effective governance. do you feel like congress like washington is capable of functioning anymore? >> well, we've lost one of the partners here. and i don't mean to be overly partisan. i've never been particularly overly partisan. but it is true that the republican party as i once knew it and as it existed when i arrived in congress no longer exists. when i got here, john boehner was speaker. i worked with him. i worked with speaker paul ryan. that seems like 100 years ago as compared to what we see right now. i don't agree with a lot of the tenants of the republican party, but i kind of wish that they would come back. i wish those people would take control of their own party so that we could have these differences but they would be serious policy differences as opposed to what we see now which is just a chaotic struggle, like a junior high struggle over who is the coolest kid at the table. it is destructive to american politics. and it makes it difficult for us do the people's business. >> president biden was out in colorado and he criticized lauren boebert, he was in her district, and she, you know -- you almost want to laugh about it, she got kicked out of beetlejuice because of the way they were behaving in the theater. so it feels like we're in a sh shame shame-free era as well. >> it does feel like there is a loss of shame. i don't really know representative boebert very well, but i know these not a serious legislator. i think it is fine when we have a handful of characters in congress, and you've been an observer of this place long enough to know there are always a handful of folks who are sort of caricatures of what the most extreme members of congress look like. unfortunately, there is a lot of them now and they are not just people on the fringe. they are folks like marjorie taylor greene for example who for a long time was the right hand person to the speaker of the house of representatives. so when i got here, jim jordan was considered sort of the fringey right. and suddenly he is mainstream in the republican party. so things have dramatically changed and i think a member like lauren boebert is a good example of someone who was once considered sort of on the outer edge and now right in the middle of the republican party. and they seem to embrace her. >> congressman, did democrats try to talk you out of your dis one and the margin is so slim. >> a few of my friends asked if there was anything they could do to talk me out of it. i'm pretty close with hakeem jeffries. and when explained my decisions, that it was about wanting to be back home with my family, pretty hard to argue about that. so he said look, i would have tried to talk you out of it, but, you know, we're personal friends before we're anything else and he said look, you're making the right decision for your family. >> and i know this was a bit health related. i personally had a health scare as well. just briefly as we close here, how did that, understanding your own -- having that kind of impact on you, how did that affect your decision? >> it had an effect in the sense that when i was going through recovery from my cancer surgery, i was diagnosed back in march, a pretty serious surgery back in april, i'm healthy now and cancer free, but the time to reflect without a voice for a few weeks, can you imagine that, the time to reflect on what i want to do with the remaining years of my work life, which i hope will be a long final, that was a time that i wouldn't otherwise have in the sort of merry-go-round that congress presents. so it gave me a chance to think about what i want to do. and while i'm healthy, i do want to spend more time in michigan and maybe trying to effect conditions of the folks that i serve back home in a different way and not elective office. >> certainly i share your interests and i think all americans should their your interests in making sure that we have very good people in our congress. as you point out with all sorts of policy positions and differences. really appreciate the thoughtful conversation this morning, congressman. >> thanks, kasie. up next, jpmorgan chief executive jamie dimon weighing in on the 2024 presidential race. why he says democrats should boost nikki haley, ahead. and elon musk with a four letter word for advertisers fleeing what used to be called twitter. the power goes out and we still have wifi to do our homework. and that's a good thing? great in my book! who are you? no power? no problem. introducing storm-ready wifi. now you can stay reliably connected through power outages with unlimited cellular data and up to 4 hours of battery back-up to keep you online. only from xfinity. home of the xfinity 10g network. welcome back. elon musk not holding back at all at the "new york times" deal book summit. musk did apologize for the anti-semitic post on the platform formerly known as twitter. but he said this about the advertisers that pay money. >> if somebody is going to try to blackmail me with advertising, blackmail me with money, go [ bleep ] yourself. but go [ bleep ] yourself. is that clear? >> don't get me -- okay. the conversation went on to cover everything from presidential politics, artificial intelligence to his recent trip to israel which he said was not an apology tour. one of the most powerful men in the world. being on. let's go to sports because it makes more sense. jets quarterback aaron rodgers returning to the practice field taking another step ready to making an improbable comeback. andy, good morning. >> i'm not sure this makes more sense though. the jets are 4-7 on the season. basically would have to run the table in order to make the playoffs. so as incredible as it would be for aaron rodgers to come back after rupturing his achilles on the fourth play of the season, it doesn't really make a lot of sense. good segue. but nevertheless rodgers was back at practice yesterday just doing light work. the team now has 21 days to decide whether to activate him from injured reserve. >> i think that he has sacrificed so much already for the organization and himself and his teammates and he is doing it again. i think it is a testament to who he is as a human. obviously there is a bit of that drive where he wants to prove that it can be done faster than anyone has ever done it before. that is okay. that is part of his mental makeup. i think that he still runs with a clip hip on his shoulder. >> no one has come back from an achilles injury in less than five months and he is trying to do it in 3 1/2. he turns 40 on saturday. and arkansas hosting duke in front of a record-setting crowd last night. and they gave the fans their money's worth. it was neck and neck from the start before the razorbacks pulled away late to upset the blue devils 80-75 and all the fans having a grand old time rushing the court after that final buzzer sounded. on the women's side, angel reese finally back with the team after being mysteriously absent since november 14. the head coach never explained what was going on and she still didn't say what happened when announcing that reese would be back for tonight's big game against virginia tech. >> angel is back. and we are happy, happy, happy. she is happy, happy, happy. she is available to play thursday. i really think that angel will be like angel. i mean, she's just been good. she's been really good in practice. do you want to know how many hours, how many days, specifics? she's not going to show up tomorrow and play a game. what is in that locker room stays in that locker room unless it becomes something that is public. >> well, her absence was very public, but i guess the reason behind it will stay in that locker room forever. >> i guess so. you know, i have to say to go back to aaron, i didn't think that 40 years old -- it is not that old, but trying to heal an achilles in 3 and a half months? >> and the jets season is a lost season basically. that is why most people just think -- >> totally. all right. andy scholes, thank you very much. thanks to all of you for joining us. i'm kasie hunt. 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